In order to get through all the dogmatic crap that has been superimposed over Jesus' real teachings you have to cherrypick in my opinion. As far as the hellfire thing, look at the context of the language in the hellfire verses vs. the parable/teaching type verses. It is easy to tell that one or the other was added in, as for which I agree there is no way to know. I just choose to think the hellfire verses were added in, it aligns much better to state controlled religious doctrine to that of a rogue rabbi.
So basically you're choosing to believe what you want because it feels right to you. You want Jesus to be a certain way so you choose to ignore the parts that you personally don't like. Why? What is the point of that? Instead of creating a personal patchwork Jesus, why don't you just throw out the whole thing and look for better inspiration? There's much better choices out there. There's real people to look up to who actually wrote their own words.
Can you quote some verses where Jesus says if you don't follow me you'll burn in hell? And the petty temper tantrum when people don't agree with him verses. Where he promotes the end of the world. Where he says he is the ONLY truth, light, and the way.
The examples are listed in the links I posted.
As far as the leaving the families, it wasn't neccesarily that he said for them to leave their families, but more so not to worry about their old lives. I agree with you it is a little audacious, I never said he wasn't audacious. I don't think his philosophy was follow me or else, it was more akin to follow me and your life will change. Do not follow me and your life will most likely stay the same, the choice is yours. The culture and time period was very different at that time. You can't compare it with the life that American's live today in any way, shape, or fashion.
That is just your opinion. Nowhere in the text does it say that. The Jesus character, or whomever was putting the words into his mouth, could've made him clarify whatever it was he was really saying but they didn't. The writer chose to leave him saying vague things that we still can't figure out to this day. I wonder why they was.
Totally agree. But are you really exposing them, if you are just bashing the ideals that have been attributed to them over the years by the elite and the masses, ideals they may not have even held themselves? I think exposing them would be portraying them for who they were most likely to be, and if you find the person to actually be that which has been attributed to them, and not care for it then so be it. But simply bashing the "idol" because of the representation that has been given to him that may or may not have been his own is not exposing the idol, but simply giving in to the status quo, by accepting that the idol was actually that way.
Unlike you, I'm looking at the Jesus character as a whole and not as I'd like him to be, which is what you are doing.
What's more LHP than presenting a logical assertation, that the main western centerpiece of the RHP was nothing more than a good ole fashion LHP adherent lol.
Choosing to ignore aspects of this character that you personally don't like while others dump the parts that you like and make use the ones that you don't like and harm themselves and others because of it, isn't a solution. It's the same games that people have been playing for centuries - patchwork Jesus in conflict with each other. "Oh, you have your Jesus and I'll have mine", "Oh your Jesus thinks I should burn in eternal hell because I'm a wicked person who doesn't believe". The Jesus character did say that he was going to bring division. He tears apart families all the time. Kids get kicked out of their homes all the time over the words of Jesus. But you just want to play games and ignore the nasty part so you can cling to your idol.
I don't blame the religion, I blame the herd. The religion, nor the man that it was based upon, cause people to join the herd. People cause people to join the herd. I totally agree that is prudent for one to criticize cults that banish critical thinking and harm many, and to question and chisel away at the power that and "idol" has over society.
You're contradicting yourself. You say not to blame the religion or the man but to blame people and criticize cults? Where exactly do you think these cults are getting their teachings from? What is Christianity based on? Jesus! Jesus is the foundation of Christianity. When you criticize Jesus, you're getting at the root of the problem.
That's not my point, my point is, did the idol actually possess the ideas of harming people, and suppressing ideas himself. If I started a movement tomorrow about free thought and self impowerment, and someone took it and made it a religion of oppression and control, would you accuse me being a patron for these ideals, because others used it as a tool of oppression?
The reason why Christianity has been able to stand as a religion of power and control over the masses is because it presents a savior and a god who has a split personality. That makes it convenient for the leaders of the religion to emphasize certain aspects when the situation calls for it. It also has an atrocious side effect of causing people to psychologically link violence and punishment with love. You have a god that kills people and tortures them eternally yet this same god is said to be a god of love, mercy and compassion. So people link the two. By punishing and mistreating people, you're actually "loving" them.
I highly doubt that if you started a movement and made yourself completely clear about your intentions and thoughts, you wouldn't have that problem. Jesus never made himself clear.
Nice accuser reference there .
Thanks.
But what if in all actuality, these people preached for humanity, human spirit and the human will? What if their image has been used over the years to oppress these ideas. Would you hold the person responsible for how their image was used, or would you hold the people that perverted their image responsible? Then if you accuse the person of holding these ideals, when in actuallity they didn't, does that mean that oppose the ideals they held of promoting humanity, human spirit, and human will as well?
You're just repeating yourself. Those points have been addressed above.
LOL, indeed I agree that you should call it into question. But what better way to call it into question than to logically promote the idea that Jesus promoted personal growth, human liberty, and growth of mind and spirit, rather than reliance of an outside entity to provide these things for you?
Because there's no reason to believe that he did, if you would actually bother to read the gospels. It's time to stop twisting the Jesus character into something we think is palatable. It's been 17 centuries. It's time for us as a society to move on to new inspirations instead of looking to a 2,000 year old dead Jew who never wrote anything down and whom we can't be sure actually said or did anything attributed to him in the Bible and who may not have even existed.