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There is a need to accept the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross for your sins but there is absolutely no need to accept the Resurrection to gain eternal life. I cannot even find a Christian website that says that. You have been duped.Again, Scripture speaks plainly: unless you accept the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross for your sins and His subsequent Resurrection, you will find no eternal life.
There is a need to accept the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross for your sins but there is absolutely no need to accept the Resurrection to gain eternal life. I cannot even find a Christian website that says that. You have been duped.
John 3:16: “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”
1 John 5:13 “I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God that you may know that you have eternal life.”
Those Christians holding an opinion that was at odds with what is generally accepted by Christianity were the real Christians who followed the teachings of Jesus rather than Paul. So the falsehood of the Christian Faith had moved on after Paul changed the course of Christianity.There were always certain individuals within Church history who sought to divert people’s hearts and minds. These people were called heretics. Over time, these people had passed on, their heresies dying with them, but the truth of the Christian Faith had moved on. So, I give heresies no regard.
No, every Christian does not know this, only Christians who believe like you do believe this.The Crucifixion and Resurrection are tied together inherently. Every Christian knows this, and will boast on this. “Jesus is alive! He has risen from the dead, just as He said!”, they will say boldly.
This was the ‘Fall’ of Christianity: that Paul with his ‘Gospel’, which became the core of Christian dogma formation, conquered the world, (237) while the historic basis of Christianity was declared a heresy, the preservers of the original branded as ‘Ebionites.’ As Schoeps puts it, the heresy-hunters ‘accused the Ebionites of a lapse or relapse into Judaism, whereas they were really only the Conservatives who could not go along with the Pauline-cum-Hellenistic elaborations’. (238) Schonfield comes to the same conclusion: ‘This Christianity in its teaching about Jesus continued in the tradition it had directly inherited, and could justifiably regard Pauline and catholic Christianity as heretical. It was not, as its opponents alleged, Jewish Christianity which debased the person of Jesus, but the Church in general which was misled into deifying him.’ (239) ‘Pauline heresy served as the basis for Christian orthodoxy, and the legitimate Church was outlawed as heretical’. (240) The ‘small handful of true Christians’ was Nazarene Christianity, which was already extinct in the fourth century.
(Udo Schaefer, The Light Shineth in Darkness, Studies in revelation after Christ)
Those Christians holding an opinion that was at odds with what is generally accepted.by Christianity were the real Christians who followed the teachings of Jesus rather than Paul. So the falsehood of the Christian Faith had moved on after Paul changed the course of Christianity.
This was the ‘Fall’ of Christianity: that Paul with his ‘Gospel’, which became the core of Christian dogma formation, conquered the world, (237) while the historic basis of Christianity was declared a heresy, the preservers of the original branded as ‘Ebionites.’ As Schoeps puts it, the heresy-hunters ‘accused the Ebionites of a lapse or relapse into Judaism, whereas they were really only the Conservatives who could not go along with the Pauline-cum-Hellenistic elaborations’. (238) Schonfield comes to the same conclusion: ‘This Christianity in its teaching about Jesus continued in the tradition it had directly inherited, and could justifiably regard Pauline and catholic Christianity as heretical. It was not, as its opponents alleged, Jewish Christianity which debased the person of Jesus, but the Church in general which was misled into deifying him.’ (239) ‘Pauline heresy served as the basis for Christian orthodoxy, and the legitimate Church was outlawed as heretical’. (240) The ‘small handful of true Christians’ was Nazarene Christianity, which was already extinct in the fourth century.
(Udo Schaefer, The Light Shineth in Darkness, Studies in revelation after Christ)
How Paul changed the course of Christianity
No, every Christian does not know this, only Christians who believe like you do believe this.
What many liberal theologians believe about Jesus' death
Today, these people are called ‘Messianic Jews’.
How did I know you were going to bring up Ebionites? Let’s re-establish this. Native-born Jews made up Jesus’s first believers, that is true.
Some believers held to a belief that Jesus was a human prophet. (Even Scripture attests to the fact that some people saw Jesus as being merely a prophet.)
The Apostles, however, had acknowledged and taught Jesus as the Son of God, crucified and bodily resurrected.
So, there were two kinds of Christologies here. The high one – the Apostles’ Christology – had become the orthodox position. I mean, to whom do you think ‘The Apostles’ refer in the creed of the same name?
As to Paul’s teachings, in the early church, there were also plenty of non-Jewish believers who came from (obviously) pagan backgrounds. Some of these were people who converted to Judaism first, others were ‘God-Fearers’ (Pagans who had become attracted to Judaism, observing things like dietary laws, feast days, other such things, but stopping short of full conversion which would require circumcision for males at least), others had no knowledge of Judaism at all.
The early Christians, again being Jews, had held differing opinions regarding what to do with these Gentiles. Certain of them were convinced that Gentiles ought to convert fully to Judaism. Meanwhile, The Apostle Paul had argued that this wasn’t necessary. In the Book of Acts, it is recorded that Paul’s argument had won out. Thus came the Apostolic Decree.
Sooooo fundamentally, your rebuttal is flawed.
EDIT: The Ebionites, actually, had no link to James the Just, nor were they the first Christians. These would have been called quite simply ‘Jewish Christians’ (Basically, Judaism + Jesus as the Messiah). Today, these people are called ‘Messianic Jews’. Meanwhile, Ebionites exist only as a historical group, perhaps with an internet presence.
I really get the sense from what you say that you have not actually studied the Ebionites.
No resemblance. The "Messiahic Judaism" movement which started in the 1960s is just Evangelical Protestant Christianity playing dressup. There is nothing Jewish about it, nor is there anything "Early-Christian" about it either. It's wholly Evangelical inside and out.
I know a bit about who they were and what they taught. Admittedly, I’m not too educated about them.
I would agree with this assertion in one sense, but I would disagree in another, especially regarding how it ties into early Christianity.
Well the two can't be even dreamed of being equated when one takes on all of the same assumptions, doctrines and baggage as the Evangelical Protestantism it is created from and propagated by (remember the people who created it are trying to make themselves the 'special ones' to fulfill prophecies etc), and the scriptures themselves used, let alone the initiatic aspect of the pre-Christians on the Jamesian side. These people had different books, different beliefs and a direct connection to Jesus historically.
Agreed.I believe when dealing with anything spiritual the facts tend to be amorphous so I believe it is true that spiritual things are spiritually discerned and I have the Holy Spirit as my guide. That is as good as it gets.
This points to Jesus.Oh no, my dear, He will return in His Body to bring forth the new Jerusalem. We know that it is He Himself who will return, as the vision in the book of Revelation clearly foretells:
“Every eye will see Him [Jesus], coming in the clouds, even those who pierced Him, and all the tribes will mourn over Him.”
Was Bahá’u’lláh pierced? No
Jesus.“Who is worthy to break the book and open the seven seals?” “The Lion of the Tribe of Judah, The Root of David”
Jesus.It goes on to extol the Lamb of God,
“Worthy are You to take the book and to break its seals; for You were slain, and purchased for God with Your blood men from every tribe and tongue and people and nation.
You have made them to be a kingdom and priests to our God; and they will reign upon the earth.”
Again, answer me plainly, please. Is Bahá’u’lláh called the Lamb of God?
A classic response.A new revelation from God from a person who boldly proclaimed himself to be the fulfillment of the prophecies of every major religion, some of which contradict each other irreconcilably?
Ha! Surely, you’re pulling my leg, madam.
Hmmm? Jesus rose in spirit? And why would that be unique?Jesus was resurrected bodily. Not in the Spirit, as there is no such thing as a resurrection of spirit, for spirit cannot die. Flesh does.
The resurrection is the climax of the story. It is the whole point of the story.Actually, there are many, many, many Christian websites which deal with the centrality of the Resurrection of Jesus. You must have one eye shut.
You say the Resurrection in the Bible was merely one of spirit. Oh, how the Scriptures and Church history prove you to be a liar, madam.
Some of us try to ignore. Many reject it. It's hard to believe. Taking it to the extreme, a Christian is expected to believe most everything in the Bible literally. Creation, Satan, Jonah and the big fish, walking on water, and the resurrection? Much easier to reject or ignore or, for those that still want to be "Christians", be liberal Christians. Deny and reject the things that they don't like. Baha'is too... they have a way to believe in God and Jesus and deny and reject all the things they don't like.You can accept His Message, reject it, ignore it...you can believe whatever you will, just don’t deliberately twist the New Testament.
A lot of that was Paul's. What do Baha'i believe about Paul?The Gospel of salvation for all who believe.
I found this from the Baha'i Universal House of Justice...As to Paul’s teachings, in the early church,
But that is not necessarily the "official" Baha'i view? So what do you think of Paul? And, what things do you agree with the Baha'i Faith... and are there things that you disagree with?Ace! Bullseye! With that
I believe that the gospel writers wrote stories that made it appear as if Jesus rose from the dead and millions of people got duped into believing that Jesus rose from the dead by reading those stories and believing what Christianity teaches unquestionably.Scripture is clear: Jesus was resurrected bodily. Not in the Spirit, as there is no such thing as a resurrection of spirit, for spirit cannot die. Flesh does.