That's all religion/belief is. We are all free to believe whatever we want. Beauty!
Even as one can believe there is no God. It's called free will.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
That's all religion/belief is. We are all free to believe whatever we want. Beauty!
If people try to take it literally, the contradictions can't be ignored. If we think about how texts were written back then, things were not meant to be literal. It gives an idea, not fact.
There are sites that explain "contradictions". One simply decides to believe what they want to believe and if one doesn't want to believe there is a YHWH, then any excuse is a good enough excuse.
Definitely.Even as one can believe there is no God. It's called free will.
Then we are in agreement.Yes, one does, doesn't one. If one wants to believe, then any excuse is good.
Most Christians should probably call themselves "Paulians" since they side with Paul over Jesus on the question of how to get to heaven.
Observe that Paul states:
Romans 10:13: "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved."
However, Paul directly contradicts the guy that he claims is his savior, since Jesus says:
Matthew 7:21-23: "NOT EVERYONE who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’
Clearly in Matthew 7, Jesus is stating that many people will call on his name and perform actions in his name, and yet, they will not go to heaven. Yet the majority of Christians (especially Protestants) believe Paul over the guy they claim is their savior. Why do I, as an agnostic, care? Well, it's amusing to me to watch Christians ignore all of the verses where Jesus clearly teaches that good works are necessary to go to heaven. Just another example of the intellectual dishonesty of many Christians. Not only do they willfully ignore the overwhelming scientific evidence for evolution, they also willfully ignore the words of Jesus himself. Strange, isn't it?
The NT gives you at least five Jesuses to choose from, Paul's, Mark's, Matthew's Luke's and John's.
Choose the one that says what you want to hear.
Or assemble your own Jesus from bits of all five. That's what most folk do.
I think the difference is in sincerity. Anyone can SAY they believe in Jesus but only those who really mean it and are willing to follow God's laws will be saved. So Paul is saying those who are willing to follow Jesus will be saved and Jesus is saying those who simply say the words but do not mean them will not be saved. It is not just about saying words but being willing to follow the way Jesus wamts you to follow.
I think you make a lot of sense there.I believe you can add to that the fact that Jesus is saying that those who do works that they want to do and don't do the will of God are not fooling God at all. So one can work one's *** off and not be saved. And it isn't even hard work. Jesus says His yoke is easy and His burden is light. Not to mention that He is actually the one doing the works.
I can claim no such ability. However, I'm capable of understanding documents, ancient and modern, and it's on the basis of that capacity that I point out there are at least five wholly distinct versions of Jesus in the NT.I believe a person who is not listening to the whole counsel of God is less likely to come to the truth.
I can claim no such ability. However, I'm capable of understanding documents, ancient and modern, and it's on the basis of that capacity that I point out there are at least five wholly distinct versions of Jesus in the NT.
For example, of those five, two pre-existed in heaven with God and made the material universe. Three did not pre-exist at all, and of them, one was born an ordinary Jew with two normal parents, and the other two were born as the result of divine insemination.
Those seem like rather basic distinctions, no?
One thing all five have in common, though, is that each of them denies he's God.
Ah, so you're saying the gospels aren't history, but four+Paul sets of parables that can only be unlocked by special syntheses known only to Insiders?I believe you wouldn't have a clue if you tripped over it backwards. Without the Holy Spirit a person is like one groping in the dark and never finding the exit.
Well, for outline, the Jesuses of Paul and of the author of John have a gnostic flavor to them. There are more than one versions of gnosticism, but the relevant one is where the Demiurge pre-exists with God in heaven, where God is perfectly pure hence pure spirit, untainted in any way by the material world. Thus it falls to the Demiurge to create the material world, something the Jesuses of Paul and of John are said to have done, and then to mediate between the material and the immaterial, earth and heaven, something which both Jesuses do, though the details vary.Hi @blü 2
You mentioned "I'm capable of understanding documents, ancient and modern, and it's on the basis of that capacity that I point out there are at least five wholly distinct versions of Jesus in the NT. For example, of those five, two pre-existed in heaven with God and made the material universe. Three did not pre-exist at all, and of them, one was born an ordinary Jew with two normal parents, and the other two were born as the result of divine insemination." (blü 2, post #90).
I also have an interest in ancient Judeo-Christian documents and also in your "5 versions" of Jesus. Can you offer more clarifying information regarding these 5 versions? Thanks so much in advance for the extra clarifying data.
Clear
ειζκτωτωω
Why is it when atheists and skeptics try to quote and criticize the Bible they get amnesia when it comes to the rules of Literature? Clearly read in context there is no contradiction on whats being said in both verses.Most Christians should probably call themselves "Paulians" since they side with Paul over Jesus on the question of how to get to heaven.
Observe that Paul states:
Romans 10:13: "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved."
However, Paul directly contradicts the guy that he claims is his savior, since Jesus says:
Matthew 7:21-23: "NOT EVERYONE who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’
Clearly in Matthew 7, Jesus is stating that many people will call on his name and perform actions in his name, and yet, they will not go to heaven. Yet the majority of Christians (especially Protestants) believe Paul over the guy they claim is their savior. Why do I, as an agnostic, care? Well, it's amusing to me to watch Christians ignore all of the verses where Jesus clearly teaches that good works are necessary to go to heaven. Just another example of the intellectual dishonesty of many Christians. Not only do they willfully ignore the overwhelming scientific evidence for evolution, they also willfully ignore the words of Jesus himself. Strange, isn't it?
Ah, so you're saying the gospels aren't history, but four+Paul sets of parables that can only be unlocked by special syntheses known only to Insiders?
And it doesn't matter that five distinct entities are called Jesus as long as they more or less, kind of thing, as it were, roughly speaking, act out the same basics?
If that's your view, fine. At least we can agree that each of the five explicitly denies he's God.
So you think it doesn't matter that the Jesuses of Paul and of John pre-existed in heaven with God and each created the material universe, just as the Gnostic demiurge did? And that the Jesus of Mark is born of an ordinary Jewish family, and unlike the other four isn't descended from David, and has no particular divinity until God adopts him at his baptism? And that the Jesuses of Matthew and of Luke didn't pre-exist but were the result of divine insemination (a Greek, not a Hebrew tradition) and were born amid annunciations and portents?I believe your five is total imagination similar to saying there are multiple gods based on the different attributes of God.
I don't believe that. It is more like I see things 20/20 while you see them through a kaleidoscope.
I believe you can think again. There are loads of verses indicating that Jesus is God and Jesus does not deny it but affirms it.
Yeah, no. It didn't come from Paul, it came from Joel 2:32, which Peter quoted first in Acts 2:21.Most Christians should probably call themselves "Paulians" since they side with Paul over Jesus on the question of how to get to heaven.
Observe that Paul states:
Romans 10:13: "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved."
However, Paul directly contradicts the guy that he claims is his savior, since Jesus says:
Matthew 7:21-23: "NOT EVERYONE who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’
Clearly in Matthew 7, Jesus is stating that many people will call on his name and perform actions in his name, and yet, they will not go to heaven. Yet the majority of Christians (especially Protestants) believe Paul over the guy they claim is their savior. Why do I, as an agnostic, care? Well, it's amusing to me to watch Christians ignore all of the verses where Jesus clearly teaches that good works are necessary to go to heaven. Just another example of the intellectual dishonesty of many Christians. Not only do they willfully ignore the overwhelming scientific evidence for evolution, they also willfully ignore the words of Jesus himself. Strange, isn't it?