natasha levchenko
Member
some say they have heard of people celebrating the birth of Jesus at Christmas and his resurrection at Easter, but have never heard of anyone commemorating his death. is there any difference?
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some say they have heard of people celebrating the birth of Jesus at Christmas and his resurrection at Easter, but have never heard of anyone commemorating his death. is there any difference?
Im guessing that the focus would be his resurrection. Catholics start the easter with going through His whole life, death, resurrection by replaying the passion of christ through the stations of the cross. They die by repentence, live through His passion, resurrected by penance, and saved by Eucharist and baptism.some say they have heard of people celebrating the birth of Jesus at Christmas and his resurrection at Easter, but have never heard of anyone commemorating his death. is there any difference?
some say they have heard of people celebrating the birth of Jesus at Christmas and his resurrection at Easter, but have never heard of anyone commemorating his death. is there any difference?
They do celebrate it in a many of speaking through a very somber service on Good Friday. I think it's rather morbid but that is me.some say they have heard of people celebrating the birth of Jesus at Christmas and his resurrection at Easter, but have never heard of anyone commemorating his death. is there any difference?
Very interesting observation considering that the birth and resurrection have zero impact on the doctrine of salvation. It was the death of christ, and the availability of his blood for bathing that supposedly provided salvation. The resurrection was given as an undeniable, incontrovertible, proof, of his divinity.some say they have heard of people celebrating the birth of Jesus at Christmas and his resurrection at Easter, but have never heard of anyone commemorating his death. is there any difference?
Pretty much the same in Catholicism. I actually haven't been to the Good Friday service but my mom has and it is very sorrowful and intense.Good Friday is a a very important day in Syrian Orthodox Christianity. Indeed way more important than Christmas. Church services last for 6-7 hrs.
How did christ die, if death is the consequence of sin?According to the scriptures death is the consequence of sin and everyone sins and faces death. Jesus as the eternal Son of God, came to the earth, paid for the sins of the world, conquered death, and rose victoriously over the grave as only He could. This is worth commemorating from the perspective of all who who have found new and eternal life in Him.
We all know thatI'm not. Tonight is Erev Shabbat & Pesach.
"Bathing in his blood disguises you as christ, so god doesn't see the filthy, disgusting (perfect creation) you really are. He sees his perfect son." Close, but no cigar. That describes forensic or imputed justification that was invented by Martin Luther. Before he came along, it was never a xtian doctrine. The birth, life, death, resurrection and ascension has everything to do with salvation, and should be seen as an organic whole, not compartmentalized or dichotomized.Very interesting observation considering that the birth and resurrection have zero impact on the doctrine of salvation. It was the death of christ, and the availability of his blood for bathing that supposedly provided salvation. The resurrection was given as an undeniable, incontrovertible, proof, of his divinity.
Yet, it is denied all the time. According to xtian doctrine, believing christ rose doesn't get you into heaven. Bathing in his blood disguises you as christ, so god doesn't see the filthy, disgusting (perfect creation) you really are. He sees his perfect son. The resurrection is nothing more than incontrovertible, undeniable proof of his divinity.