doppelgänger;2830722 said:
By certain definitions. Not by mine. I think there's a lot more subtlety to that for some people. Such that it has no supernatural or superstitious element at all and functions purely on a psychological and philosophical level.
Well, if you defined the sky as something polkadot that you walked on would that make the sky something polkadot that is walked on? Of coarse not. The Webster definition of "christian" is
a : one who professes belief in the teachings of Jesus Christ. Here are a couple of those teachings.
Jn.3
16For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
Jn.14
6Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
If You don't believe that He is the only way to the Father then you are not a Christian.
doppelgänger;2830719 said:
I consider myself an agnostic Christian, and the way I view Christianity and its core philosophical teaching and myths, agnosticism appears - to me - to be a more natural fit than theism.
I don't understand your statement here. Agnosticism is an ambivalence towards the existence of God. Christianity, however requires a belief in Jesus as the Son of God and acceptance of His sacrifice for our sins. The two views are mutually exclusive.
doppelgänger;2830868 said:
As a pantheist, I don't have a problem with that one either, though I think about what it practically means in a very different way than any of the mainstream versions of Xtianity.
Now you say that you are a panthiest which is the view that God is in everything, another erroneous view, but a theistic view which you say you are not. I'm thinking that you don't know what you do or don't believe. Maybe this is the time to think about giving your heart to Jesus.