I think Jesus used the sheep analogy because sheep follow the shepherd. The characteristics of sheep as animals did not enter into the analogy.
I think the fishers of men analogy was also very simple. All it meant was that his disciples were fishing for the individual souls of men.
Yes, as I said, I don't believe Jesus intended those analogies the way I described them. I was qualifying what a bad analogy is by comparison to my own.
So would I. I do not tend to be a follower; I think for myself and blaze new trails. I am a trailblazer. If I was a follower, I would have a religion that has a lot of followers.
You do.
I am certainly not the evidence that Baha’u’llah was who He claimed to be, not at all. I am just a follower of Baha’u’llah. You should never take my word for it. Baha’u’llah said we all have the capacity to recognize the Beauty of God in the Person of his Messenger:
“.... I have perfected in every one of you My creation, so that the excellence of My handiwork may be fully revealed unto men. It follows, therefore, that every man hath been, and will continue to be, able of himself to appreciate the Beauty of God, the Glorified. Had he not been endowed with such a capacity, how could he be called to account for his failure?” Gleanings From the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, p. 143
Granted, taking your word for it will not be happening. But you are still evidence.
I understand that you just won’t trust anyone speaking for God, in which case you will never know anything about God.
So be it. If I am required to rewire my brain such that it is no longer skeptical and cynical in order to learn about God then I guess I'll just wallow in ignorance.
You are dead wrong if you think any real Messengers of God were attempting to get something for themselves. There is absolutely no evidence to support this in the history of their missions on earth. All the Messengers suffered at the hands of their enemies and those who were in power (government and clergy) persecuted them when they appeared on earth and made their claims. Some were even put to death (Jesus and the Bab). No real Messenger of God had anything to gain for Himself.
Except the validation and justification of their peers, of course. You may be surprised to find how valuable that can be to some of us. Worth more than gold, I assure you.
How could we know it is true (that God only communicates using Messengers) if that someone did not know anything about God? How could they know anything about God if they never heard from God?
They dont know anything about God.
How could you come to a conclusion about someone if you do not even know anything about him? I only came to a conclusion after I read a lot about him and about the religion he established, because it is all related.
Granted, but some things are easy to dismiss. Speaking on God's behalf is one of those things in my book.
I learned by reading what he wrote. If I explained that to you, I would just be paraphrasing what he wrote, and he wrote 15,000 Tablets, so how would I be able to tell you all of that? If you had a specific question I could answer it though.
That last bit is why you are better than any messenger.
He wrote what God told Him and His Revelation is not private:
The Works of Bahá'u'lláh is online and fully downloadable:
I don't get to know that's why it is private. I must take his word for it.
That does not make sense. If you do not care what I have to say, why would you discuss anything with me?
I meant that I don't put him above you. Tricky wording I used there, my apologies.
I have no idea what you mean by good act and bad act.
I mean that good people do bad things and vice versa. Telling me someone is honest doesn't mean they can't lie. Your messenger may have great things to say about how one should live, etc. The doesn't add any strength to his claim of divine communication.
I beg to differ with you. The Bible is evidence. The Qur’an is evidence. All scriptures are evidence. Moreover, the religions that were established by the Prophets are clear evidence that they were more than just ordinary men.
“The greatest bestowal of God in the world of humanity is religion; for assuredly the divine teachings of religion are above all other sources of instruction and development to man. Religion confers upon man eternal life and guides his footsteps in the world of morality. It opens the doors of unending happiness and bestows everlasting honor upon the human kingdom. It has been the basis of all civilization and progress in the history of mankind.......
But when we speak of religion we mean the essential foundation or reality of religion, not the dogmas and blind imitations which have gradually encrusted it and which are the cause of the decline and effacement of a nation. These are inevitably destructive and a menace and hindrance to a nation’s life,—even as it is recorded in the Torah and confirmed in history that when the Jews became fettered by empty forms and imitations the wrath of God became manifest.......
What then is the mission of the divine prophets? Their mission is the education and advancement of the world of humanity. They are the real teachers and educators, the universal instructors of mankind. If we wish to discover whether any one of these great souls or messengers was in reality a prophet of God we must investigate the facts surrounding His life and history; and the first point of our investigation will be the education He bestowed upon mankind. If He has been an educator, if He has really trained a nation or people, causing it to rise from the lowest depths of ignorance to the highest station of knowledge, then we are sure that He was a prophet. This is a plain and clear method of procedure, proof that is irrefutable. We do not need to seek after other proofs.”
Bahá’í World Faith, pp. 270, 272, 273
Evidence, yes. Empirical, no.
You are projecting your own thoughts and feelings onto Baha’u’llah and getting them all mixed up with who He was, attributing motives to him that were not there based upon your own thoughts and feelings. You also have a clear bias, a prejudice.
I did warn you about that.
What really matters is the content of what He wrote and its usefulness for humanity. Some of it is mystical, and some of it is practical and both have their place. To uplift the souls of humanity a revelation has to have a mystical component. But what differs about the Revelation of Baha’u’llah is that it has new social teachings and laws that are needed in this new age, and it has a practical component in that it has a clearly laid out plan for the building of a new world order, the kingdom of God on earth.
And all of that would have mattered just as much as it matters now without divine revelation. But since it began there (with something I can't accept as true) then the rest becomes suspect very easily. Your messenger would like divine authority to come before intelligence.
That is a possibility but the evidence does not support that. I mean if you read about the Life of Bahaullah it would become apparent that there would be no reason for Him to lie and there is no evidence that he was insane. An insane person could not do what He did or write what He wrote.
No reason at all for him to lie? You don't see an inherent gain in speaking with divine authority?
I did not say I thought you would be convinced. I was just explaining how we go about gathering information about a man who claims to be God’s Messenger. Some people are convinced by it and others are not. But if you are already convinced that no man can speak for God then there is no way you are going to be open to that possibility. I had no preconceptions before discovered the Baha’i Faith, no confirmation bias, so I had no issue with a man speaking for God. It just made sense to me that is how God communicates because there really is no other logical way.
There are uncountable logical ways. You are most certainly falling victim to confirmation bias in this case.
Why do you think they fought? They wanted to be famous and important. That is what arrogant ungodly people do, especially when they are jealous. That has nothing to do with Baha’u’llah.
One of them won and 'took over' after the messenger's death. He was called Abdul baha. Do you not consider this man to be Bahaullahs successor?