God is love, the thing that brings to people together and makes them stay together for a lifetime supporting each other.
That's pretty much what we Christians think of Jesus... and of God in general, really.
But "love" is extremely vague, whereas Christianity pretty much always includes a lot of other ideas that are often stressed more strongly. Why is it so important to have any belief in the supernatural (Jesus himself being supernatural, God, the Holy Ghost, virgin birth, various miracles, the functions of prayer & worship rituals, etc. etc.)? If Jesus & God were simply abstractions that meant "love" (i.e., nothing magical there), then Christians could skip the whole church thing and just have group meetings periodically to talk about how to make their communities more loving. [Note: I know there *are* some groups who basically do this -- more power to them! -- but the tiny exception proves the rule]
Your right actually... there's more involved; I spoke too soon.
As for supernatural, I don't believe in it... everything is natural. :p
I think there are three important things in Christian life: your relationship with God, your relationship with other people in the faith, and your relationship with people outside the faith. You are right that God is more than just love - He is the beginning and the end, after all.
Oh and who made the universe? You could say the big bang, but who made the big bang? and if something made the big bang, who made that? :p
Well, if you accept God, He is His own reason. The only uncaused thing in existance. As I recall, it's part of the very definition of God.
I think we sort of agree on this. The only reason God is "the only uncaused thing in existence" is because we say he is; a long time ago, people put it in the definition of "God" and stopped there, with no logical support, just faith. The difference is that I don't think this is reason enough to agree with the definition.
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Well, the thing is any system of human thought has its foundation of assumptions that its built on. Mathematics has its axioms, science its methods, religion its God. These are all assumptions. Just one cast of something that truly contradicts a scientific theory is enough to throw most or all of it out.
Everything we do is ultimately based on an assumption. I personally believe that starting with the assumption that God is real is an excellent way to start looking at the world.
As to how to go about worshiping God, what He wants beyond a relationship with us, and how go about it... I have heard that this is the main reason God came down as Jesus. We couldn't reliably find God, so he found us, that it's through grace and the Holy Spirit that any kind of connection is made... it's kind of interesting, because that indicates that any kind of human prayer or worship is ineffective just by itself.
How do you even know He even wants a relationship with you, or wants your prayer or worship? And next: what do you actually know about Jesus? Where does that information come from? Can you double-check it? This is one of those things that seems to all unravel once you start pulling at the threads. [Extension question: if you use the Bible is a historical document proving these supernatural relationships, would you *also* accept other equally-supported ancient documents with supernatural claims?]
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1) Jesus, yes.
2) Ultimately, the bible.
3) What do you mean 'double-check'? There are four of them, and they agree on the important parts.
4) I don't think there are any equally-supported ancient documents.
Additions:
Well, if you accept God, He is His own reason. The only uncaused thing in existance. As I recall, it's part of the very definition of God.
Where is the evidence of this?
I can define "table" to be a thing which is un-caused. I can arbitrarily define things to be whatever I want them to be. We assign meaning to our own words, because we humans create languages.
Concerning the idea that "most of the stuff that's happening is nigh to impossible without some form of god or higher power" - we're trying to effectively reverse engineer what nature spent billions of years doing. How long have we had what we'd consider to be "good" science? A few centuries maybe? Some of the sciences are even younger than that. How long have general and special relativity been known about? When was the electron discovered? When were bacteria discovered to be one of the causes of illness? Things once attributed to "gods" are now within our ability to observe and explain, constantly pushing these deities back into the roles they've always held: Gods of the gaps.
If we don't know how something works, God did it. Once we find out how it works, and see that it's not God, oh well, God never did it.
And again, if you think this Universe is orderly or friendly to life (which really, it's downright hostile to life), then a creator entity would need to be even more complex and orderly, perhaps requiring an even more complex creator. Then from there, it's turtles all the way down.
* I've heard that said that the Universe is "tuned perfectly" for life. 99.99999......% of the Universe will kill us. The Sun is capable of generating massive coronal ejections which would pound Earth's magnetic field and strip away the upper atmosphere, allowing us to enjoy a lovely cleansing and sterilizing bath of unfiltered ultraviolet radiation. That aside, even the majority of our own "perfect" planet's volume is fatal to us. We only inhabit a very thin layer on the surface, and even some portions of that are deadly. Too much water, too little water, too hot, too cold, too toxic - take your pick. And there are organisms all around us which are constantly battling our own defense systems. Yes, we need an active defense system just to keep the planet from killing us.
Beyond this planet, there are other fun things like quasars, emitting immense amounts of radiation. Also out there are these gamma ray bursts. If one happened sufficiently close to Earth (I think something like <1000 light years away), a good portion of the atmosphere would get puffed away, and we might enjoy a healthy dose of gamma radiation poisoning.
Perfect for life? I want my money back.
You
can define a table as being uncaused, yes, but whats the point of doing that?
My intuition tells me that God is uncaused. I take it as an axiom... why should God have a cause, anyways? God is different from other ideas and thoughts that we have. Just put aside the whole is God real or not thing for a moment, and try to think of another human idea or thought which has the same kind of weight as the idea of God, the same kind of intuition that if God is real, God must be uncaused.
What I have read about the beginning of the universe reveals God, I think. Orderly does not necessarily mean friendly, and anything that science can uncover and fit into a basic framework is by definition orderly, I think.
And anyways, the parts we do live in are good for us.
God is love, the thing that brings to people together and makes them stay together for a lifetime supporting eachother.
That's pretty much what we Christians think of Jesus... and of God in general, really.
As I see it this is by far not the mainstream Christian view, Jezus was the personification of God yes, but most Christians still want to depict God as the wise old man with the beard sitting in the clouds watching over us. and I would make the pope faint if I told him Jezus was a woman or even a black man. I dont think a religion that would hold love as the most important characteristic from their God, could have such non loving point of views.
Jesus was from the middle east, so He probably looked like people from the middle east do. (Yay, obvious comments)
And... putting an image on God? I know this probably sounds hypocritical - I thought about it a lot myself - Jesus is the one that God came down as; trying to give God any other image or symbol is just... bad. He's not an old guy with a beard in the clouds.
The way that Christianity is carried out these days, the way it has been for years, shows that the church as a whole has degenerated some, I think. I'm not too surprised, because the prophets in the old testament are always talking about how the Israelites are not doing what God asked them to.
Same thing for us, I guess. As with any other group of people who believe something, you get those who are just hanging on. Not to mention that I have heard from plenty of people at my church that it takes a lifetime to even start to get it right.
Regarding those non-loving points of view? If you read the bible and asked questions, I think you'd be able to understand at least some of them better. Really id chalk most of it up to people only half understanding themselves, or being distracted, or not caring to understand, which, as I pointed out last night, is a big problem that was acknowledged way back by Paul, witting Romans.
What about:
Gospel of Judas, Gospel of Peter, Gospel of Mary, Gospel of Philip, Gospel of Eve, Gospel of Mani, Gospel of the Saviour (also known as the Unknown Berlin gospel), Gospel of the Twelve, Gospel of Bartholomew, Gospel of the Seventy, Gospel of the Four Heavenly Realms, Gospel of Perfection, Gospel of Marcion, Gospel of Basilides, Gospel of Andrew, Gospel of Apelles, Gospel of Cerinthus, Gospel of Bardesanes, Gospel of the Encratites, Gospel of the Gnostics, Gospel of Hesychius, Gospel of Lucius, Gospel of Longinus, Gospel of Manes, Gospel of Merinthus, Gospel of Scythianus, Gospel of Simonides, Gospel of Tatian, Gospel of Thaddaeus and Gospel of Valentinus?
and I can get you more, really dont question my knowledge of the Bible and stuff that the Catholic Church excluded when it's Canon was decided. You will never find a single Gospel written by a woman that is approved by the Church. (change might be coming though)
As I recall, the books included in the cannon were the ones that the early church used. From the Case for Christ, there were tree criteria. The book had to of been written by an apostle or a follower of an apostle. Second, it had to agree with what was in practice. Finally, the book had to of been in used by the church for some time.
I think those are pretty good rules.
And do you honestly believe that a story written 115years after the estimate birth of Jezus a man who lived to be in his 30's so roughly 80years after his estimate dead is realistic representation of events? Even if they were written by a person who travelled with Jezus (which they werent) you try and write down correctly what happened when you were ten years old?
A story that is told from mouth to mouth grows in each telling. Yes Jezus was a great man and he did good things, there is no denying that, he may even have performed miracles, but those miracles need not be taken so literally.
If I remember right, Jesus was crucified around 33 A.D., and the books started to be recorded around 70 A.D.? That's not enough time for legends to develop... people who actually saw the miracles happen would of still been around to counter any legendary growth.
And finally I'm quite shocked you would think I draw my theories from Dan Brown. I really dont like the writer and his books just paste together loose facts and theories to shape a view that he believes is true but shows serious flaws.
I do wonder if you're one of those people that say Jezus and Mary Magdalena never had intimate relations , Jezus was sent by God to be one of us, he was a man like every one of us, and seeing as how God stands for love, I would find it highly unlikely Jezus could not feel nor express the emotion love. One most keep an open eye on every angle to get a complete view, holding the Bible as the one and only truth severely hampers your view. Just the same as saying I dont believe in anything severly hampers your view.
Well Jesus was much more driven by the spirit than we are... love is not lust, remember.
God only knows what being fully divine and fully human did to Him.
God is love, the thing that brings to people together and makes them stay together for a lifetime supporting each other.
That's pretty much what we Christians think of Jesus... and of God in general, really.
But "love" is extremely vague, whereas Christianity pretty much always includes a lot of other ideas that are often stressed more strongly. Why is it so important to have any belief in the supernatural (Jesus himself being supernatural, God, the Holy Ghost, virgin birth, various miracles, the functions of prayer & worship rituals, etc. etc.)? If Jesus & God were simply abstractions that meant "love" (i.e., nothing magical there), then Christians could skip the whole church thing and just have group meetings periodically to talk about how to make their communities more loving. [Note: I know there *are* some groups who basically do this -- more power to them! -- but the tiny exception proves the rule]
well that's pretty much how I grew up, I dont got to church every sunday anymore since I was 12 but I have a deep informed opinion on the matter of religion, albeit be it not a purely christian one. I've also got my set of morals that I picked up from my time when I did go to church. B
Doesnt the Bible say that God is everywhere? So why would we need to go to church to find him then? we can find him by looking for him within ourselves, church is actually more of a place to learn about god, not to act out his beliefs or talk to him
You don't
need to go to church. I think the big thing is to stay in contact with the community of believers around you, with church and church groups being the best way to do that. Community with the people around you and with God are the most important things, I think.
After all, if your trying to live a moral life, its much easier to do that when your not alone in trying to live that moral life.
Edit: Eep, wall of text *crush*