Trying to weave the two threads together... this was posted on the other thread, but I think it may have more relevance here. Who knows.
I just stated that Jesus was more than a prophet because he forgave sins.
Brace yourselves for another heretical statement...
I am not sure that Jesus' point in stating others' sins were forgiving was to elevate himself to a status above other human beings.
Perhaps the point was that forgiveness flows from one being to another, that we are all capable of giving forgiveness (and in so doing, forgiving and healing ourselves as well), and that justice (necessitating forgiveness of sins) and mercy (providing for the forgiveness of sins) of which humans are capable comes from the Divine and can find its expression in the perfect human life.
That is, perhaps Jesus was demonstrating that each of us can be the expression of God's love for one another, culminating in our forgiveness. I often see that it is the barrier people
believe is present between themselves and God that keeps them separate from the Divine. It is the barriers people
believe are there between themselves and others that keeps us in states of separation, anxiety and pain. But I do not think, based on my own experience, that this barrier is real. It is a figment of our imagination. We imagine ourselves more than or less than, superior or inferior, and in so doing we abdicate responsibility for our highest potential and we remain ignorant of our capacity for baseness. In the space of honesty, of truthfulness, we can neither claim an inability to be perfect as Christ was, nor can we claim an inability to be profoundly sinful. But we see that in both cases... it is potential- and we create the reality we choose to experience. In each moment, we can open ourselves fully to the Divine, and thus to being a vessel for Christ in us... for being Christ's hands and feet and mouth on earth, for being God's love manifest in a human life. Or we can close ourselves to the Divine and become so selfish that we cause great suffering, that we sin against our fellow beings and, in so doing and in refusing the Divine Itself, we blaspheme and radiate the suffering we have chosen.
I believe Christ was a pure manifestation of God's grace and love in a human life. That is the closest I can come to an explanation. But the point is not explanation or definition or belief. The point of Jesus the Christ is an experience of human potential, of God's love, of mystery. Jesus is an invitation, a glimpse into what the union of the Divine and the human looks like. When we define God and ourselves, we limit both. I have great difficulty explaining how I relate to Christ, and I can freely admit that my spiritual journey is often uncomfortable. But to quote Huxley's "Brave New World:"
But I don't want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.