Tis another of my blessings I suppose, past dozen years of Sundays, at my church, it would be none, unless as a reference for the talk.I don't personally believe in eternal heaven or hell. But the "carrot" of eternal heaven and the "stick" of eternal hell seem to be the main motivators for modern-day, mainstream Christianity. Almost seems like a marketing plan
I personally believe this world would be better served if the teaching of heaven/hell were omitted from Christianity. Followers of Jesus could then focus on truly helping others instead of being distracted with all this trying to get to heaven nonsense.
Next time you listen to Christian talk radio or a Sunday sermon, count how many times you hear the following words: "eternal" "heaven" "hell" or "saved", none of which matter in the present moment; and none of which help any of our fellow humans on this planet.
Divine Intervention v. Divine Inspiration
is it just me, or is there a difference here?
As I see it the Divine has a hand in EVERYTHING.
Not that heavy a hand, but is there.
So I see most as inspired.
In my level of understanding of all that is, I often do not understand how or where at the moment or even years later....but often, I can see the good in what I once perceived as bad.
But Divine Intervention, way to heavy a hand for me to imagine.
In a lot of ways I see the bible inspired by G!d, but written by man. This is akin to me to speaking quantum physics to a three year old and having them use crayons to carry save the knowledge for the next 2,000 years and despite having new information, refusing to go back and correct it.
Well that's the point I'm making.But the problem is Genesis, Exodus, Deuteronomy.......Revelation.
Sadly I think you're wrong. I see the arguments as not loving one's neighbour, not whether Jonah was in the whale or not.If all we had was the Shema, and love your neighbor, we could have sermons around the world on these topics.....and eliminate 99.999999% of the arguements....
The same goes for the Bhagavad Gita. And the Sutras. And all the sacred commentaries of every people on earth.But we don't, we've got this pesky bible, full of mythology, parables, metaphor, mistranslations, stories, hyperbole.....this tis the crux of the bisquit.
Divine inspiration can be of two kinds; one of the revelation type and this only happens to Prophets; another of the 'influence' type and this happens with a lot of people allways
e.g., when Allah had ordered the Prophet Moses [Pbuh] to take the message of Truth to the pharoan?, he said how is he to do this when he has a lisp problem, ALlah informed him, "you just open your mouth and We will bring out the words"
sometimes when i come to these forums i dont know what to write, so i just begin, and rely on ALlah to make the words flow outand it works!; this is the second type of inspiration
Allah having a hand in evertything and divine intervention are both true and do happen; the former is true in that everything litterally happens by Allah's will allthough the actions of people do have their own free-will involved too [that makes us responsible for our actions] and an example of 'divine intervention' is, when a tyrant king Namrud went to grab Sarah [the prophet ibraheem's wife] he got paralised with a fit of epilepsy; this happened a few times every time he tried to grab her and then he gave up!
Also, when the prophet Muhammad [saw] was once prostating to ALlah near the ka'aba, Abu-Jahel thought here is his chance to finish Muhammad [saw] off; he picked up a large boulder and was going to crush the Prophet [saw's] head with it but when he approached near, he turned back in a state of extreme fear; when asked by his friends why he did not go ahead with it, he said 'By Allah, i saw a huge camel standing there [that was not visible to anyone else] next to the Prophet [saw] snarling at me, if i took one more step closer then i was sure it would eat me'!
one more example: when Moses [pbuh] was set asail in the basket as a baby by his mum trying to save him from phaorans soldiers, Moses' [pbuh] basket went to the shore of Pharoah himself and was raised by Pharoahs wife in pharoahs house! [ALlahuakbar!; see what ALlah can do?] and Allah did not make it occur to Pharoah that that baby could be Moses [pbuh]!
"Imagine there's no heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today..."
- JOHN LENNON (1940-1980)
I don't personally believe in eternal heaven or hell. But the "carrot" of eternal heaven and the "stick" of eternal hell seem to be the main motivators for modern-day, mainstream Christianity. Almost seems like a marketing plan
I personally believe this world would be better served if the teaching of heaven/hell were omitted from Christianity. Followers of Jesus could then focus on truly helping others instead of being distracted with all this trying to get to heaven nonsense.
Next time you listen to Christian talk radio or a Sunday sermon, count how many times you hear the following words: "eternal" "heaven" "hell" or "saved", none of which matter in the present moment; and none of which help any of our fellow humans on this planet.
That is the ONLY type of inspiration. Fantasy stories about the "prophets" are just a form of idolatry, letting the words of humans be treated as if from God.sometimes when i come to these forums i dont know what to write, so i just begin, and rely on ALlah to make the words flow outand it works!; this is the second type of inspiration
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That is the ONLY type of inspiration. Fantasy stories about the "prophets" are just a form of idolatry, letting the words of humans be treated as if from God.
which arguments?Well that's the point I'm making.
Sadly I think you're wrong. I see the arguments as not loving one's neighbour, not whether Jonah was in the whale or not.
agreed... can you tell me how you read them?The same goes for the Bhagavad Gita. And the Sutras. And all the sacred commentaries of every people on earth.
Unless you know how to read them.
agree.The God of philosophy is the Good. The God of the New Testament is Love.
???? What, that I speak, where?Who is this god of whom you speak? He seems a cruel and capricious god to me. It's not the God I know.
God bless,
Thomas
Not a Christian church, then."Well you've come to the wrong place, here we teach you to realize you have to save yourself"
No Thomas in our church we do not believe that saying a platitude or providing a song and dance or some other method of ceromoniously claiming you've given your life to Christ is the way to salvation.Not a Christian church, then.
God bless,
Thomas
The 99.999% of arguments. (I don't think they're about Jonah).which arguments?
In the light of the tradition that wrote them.... can you tell me how you read them?
You say God 'has a hand' in atrocities.What, that I speak, where?
As I said then.No Thomas in our church we do not believe that saying a platitude or providing a song and dance or some other method of ceromoniously claiming you've given your life to Christ is the way to salvation.
But then if one truly loves God — the First Commandment which you seem to have overlooked — why would one want for anything else?We'll go back to those two commandments which order us to love everyone, no exceptions, and believe that G!d does as well.
I believe 'I am' to be the vine. I beleive abiding in him to be larger than him. I believe he said, without the father (I am) he can do nothing. I don't believe we take any of these on their own, but in combination with the rest of his words, that we are his family, we are also sons and daughters of the most high. It is upto us tor realize thisAs I said then.
"I am the vine: you the branches: he that abideth in me, and I in him, the same beareth much fruit: for without me you can do nothing." John 15:5
just? Just platitudes? What is a platitude? Something repeated so often and so long to be rendered meaningless. Yes I believe many 'in Christ' have rendered these meaningless as they don't walk the talk. They play lip service to being Christian and following Christ as the openly forget to love G!d, that heaven is in our midst and the Christ is available in all.... Jesus didn't speak in platitudes, but by his "followers" many of his words have become same.Unless, of course, you think Christ was just talking in platitudes?
me, how so, overlooked the Shema? I think not. Do I worship some big bearded white guy? Do I fear the unknown? No. But overlooked loving G!d...not this panentheistic nontheistic Christian...G!d is omnipresent, can't be missed or overlooked in my mind.But then if one truly loves God — the First Commandment which you seem to have overlooked — why would one want for anything else?
Ah, but Thomas, that is not the way it works for you. Because of what you choose to believe. That is your choice my brother. It is the way it works for me and mine that roll in the glory of G!d.You doctrine seems contradicted to me ... you want all the benefits you perceive Christianity to offer, but you want it on your own terms.
That's not the way it works.
Or think that this is not "Christ" speaking at all, but a later group asserting control: "You can't be saved without Jesus" has the subtext "And you can't get to Jesus except through US!"As I said then.
"I am the vine: you the branches: he that abideth in me, and I in him, the same beareth much fruit: for without me you can do nothing." John 15:5
Unless, of course, you think Christ was just talking in platitudes?
That's a very convenient escape clause though, isn't it?Or think that this is not "Christ" speaking at all, but a later group asserting control: "You can't be saved without Jesus" has the subtext "And you can't get to Jesus except through US!"