Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
digisexuals? I suppose if it works for some, then it works. Mostly, I would think, for those less endowed with people skills. But then, the technology seems to be bent on perfecting the virtual real, and then, one could spculate that fantasy will become reality. I actually envy future generations for what may be a very interesting brave new world.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
There is a very dualistic aspect to it, though. The greatest pleasures can come as relief from the worst deprivations; 'hunger makes the best sauce'. Great pleasure, great pain. 'Tis better to have loved and lost ...' vs 'steady as she goes' :)
Ultimately, what we are is what has been effective at surviving so far. As the tempo of change increases, those old qualities will be less useful. So there will be a sorting, an acceleration of natural selection pressures. Those who are best positioned and adaptable, and the luckiest, will prevail.
I too would like to see how the future pans out but I'm pretty sure I'd hate it. I have a little "theory" that the future would always feel like a straitjacket to denizens of the past. I had an odd little "moment" some years ago while walking to the shops. I saw a man walking a dog coming the other way and suddenly it was as if I was seeing them through the eyes of a cavewoman - and that impression is that they looked inhumanly smooth and slick and perfect, like two little androids. No matter what we do, the future leads us to robots!
Consider the fictional, musical and sporting heroes that people aspire to be like. What are the qualities they most admire, that they themselves would want? Steely, inhuman nerve and control. To be calm and focused under the pressure of the crowds, the cameras, the lights etc. To get out there and get things done under any level of duress. To be unbreakable. Without significant error. Without being hindered by fear or self consciousness. Without being distracted. Without losing control. Basically, being minimally human.
The trend is all very strange and, as you pointed out, interesting, although I expect we'd find the (post climate change mayhem) future confusing, restrictive, sterile and bizarre.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
While we have any biological components I expect we'll continue to have animal natures. However, if over time we replace bit by bit of brains until we achieve a completely synthetic human, then you basically have a lithotrophic or electrophilic species emerging from us omnivores. If there was any residual animal nature, it would be in echoes of the evolutionary path that brought them about.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
It does, doesn't it? But death on a stick, the crucifixion, is a mighty reminder of human suffering and mortality. Curious that Jesus would do this, knowing how bad it would hurt. Of course, he was nuts, one might say. There is a fine line between being nuts and being enlightened, though.Jklint
The very idea is disgusting! It reeks of ancient sacrifices where something always had to die to make up for something else. It's one of the most idiotic theories to ever pollute the West.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
More than twenty claims of this kind—claims of beings invested with divine honor (deified)—have come forward and presented themselves at the bar of the world with their credentials, to contest the verdict of Christendom, in having proclaimed Jesus Christ, "the only son, and sent of God:" twenty Messiahs, Saviors, and Sons of God, according to history or tradition, have, in past times, descended from heaven, and taken upon themselves the form of men, clothing themselves with human flesh, and furnishing incontestable evidence of a divine origin, by various miracles, marvelous works, and superlative virtues; and finally these twenty Jesus Christs (accepting their character for the name) laid the foundation for the salvation of the world, and ascended back to heaven.
1. Chrishna of Hindostan.
2. Budha Sakia of India.
3. Salivahana of Bermuda.
4. Zulis, or Zhule, also Osiris and Orus, of Egypt.
5. Odin of the Scandinavians.
6. Crite of Chaldea.
7. Zoroaster and Mithra of Persia.
8. Baal and Taut, "the only Begotten of God," of Phenicia.
9. Indra of Thibet.
10. Bali of Afghanistan.
11. Jao of Nepaul.
12. Wittoba of the Bilingonese.
13. Thammuz of Syria.
14. Atys of Phrygia.
15. Xamolxis of Thrace.
16. Zoar of the Bonzes.
17. Adad of Assyria.
18. Deva Tat, and Sammonocadam of Siam.
19. Alcides of Thebes.
20. Mikado of the Sintoos.
21. Beddru of Japan.
22 Hesus or Eros, and Bremrillah, of the Druids.
23. Thor, son of Odin, of the Gauls.
24. Cadmus of Greece.
25. Hil and Feta of the Mandaites.
26. Gentaut and Quexalcote of Mexico.
27. Universal Monarch of the Sibyls.
28. Ischy of the Island of Formosa.
29. Divine Teacher of Plato.
30. Holy One of Xaca.
31. Fohi and Tien of China.
32. Adonis, son of the virgin Io of Greece.
33. Ixion and Quirinus of Rome.
34. Prometheus of Caucasus.
35. Mohamud, or Mahomet, of Arabia.
These have all received divine honors, have nearly all been worshiped as Gods, or sons of God; were mostly incarnated as Christs, Saviors, Messiahs, or Mediators; not a few of them were reputedly born of virgins; some of them filling a character almost identical with that ascribed by the Christian's bible to Jesus Christ; many of them, like him, are reported to have been crucified; and all of them, taken together, furnish a prototype and parallel for nearly every important incident and wonder-inciting miracle, doctrine and precept recorded in the New Testament, of the Christian's Savior. Surely, with so many Saviors the world cannot, or should not, be lost.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
It's extremely unlikely that the real Jesus would have anticipated the event. But in order to die for ours sins the manufactured Jesus would have known and surrender to it. The story is so bogus it makes Santa Claus look real!Hereandnow wrote: ↑November 20th, 2018, 8:50 pmIt does, doesn't it? But death on a stick, the crucifixion, is a mighty reminder of human suffering and mortality. Curious that Jesus would do this, knowing how bad it would hurt. Of course, he was nuts, one might say. There is a fine line between being nuts and being enlightened, though.Jklint
The very idea is disgusting! It reeks of ancient sacrifices where something always had to die to make up for something else. It's one of the most idiotic theories to ever pollute the West.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
Now it's fine for Jesus not to make sense in sacrificing himself for my sins. But if we accept that it doesn't make sense then we don't need to worry about whether he needed to or not, we can just accept that he did.
What I am trying to say is that you can't expect to make sense of something which doesn't make sense. God can proclaim that up is down but that will be of very little practical use to us.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
I can't think of anything more philosophical than asking simple questions like 'what is sin'.Like,what IS a sin?? Does this have any grounding in serious thought at all?
I would claim that religion attempts to own the concept of sin. Perhaps we can agree to call one religious sin and the other could be called secular sin? How I would like to define sin is take everything that secularists and religious both consider a sin.
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
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Re: Did Jesus really need to die for our sins?
Clear thinking.Belindi wrote: ↑November 22nd, 2018, 7:26 pmThe Jesus of history whoever he was did not die for our sins. The Christ of faith did die for our sins. One way by which the allegory may be used today is as a myth about a life totally given to serve the good. I daresay that other ancient stories may be reinterpreted for modern use.
The sacrifice of oneself for the common good in itself is worth checking rather than accepting as good. After all, that would have been motivation for kamikaze pilots and modern suicide bombers. Given the kinds of destructive and amoral policies currently in play, especially regarding climate change denial, one may wonder whether the common good is superior to the individual good, or simply one more vested interest.
Certainly it's easy for survival-loving people to cheer on martyr "suckers" who willingly sacrifice themselves for the wellbeing of the many. I'm sure the recipients of such largesse (the sacrifice of an entire life) would provide many posthumous compliments towards the martyr/victim for their suicidal efforts. One has the impression that suicide bombers and the like valued their lives less than most anyway, so that their deaths were in part a suicide and thus subjectively less of a sacrifice than if performed by those who love life.
In many cases, topping oneself for one's tribe is so approved of that many make the ultimate sacrifice, knowing that it will bring money to their families. The message here to the martyr is that they are worthless alive but valuable as a dead political pawn; all they are thought to be good for is cannon fodder. The arrangement reminds me of spiders and how they sacrifice their lives for their offspring, usually with the mother (who's already eaten the father) being eaten by her hungry hatched spiderlings.
I'm not much keen on, or convinced by, any of this need to sacrifice other than a smart hedonist's sacrifice of today's pleasures for tomorrow's greater ones.
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