Jamie Gigliotti
New member
Atheists judge 'Christ' by people who are not living out the faith.
That question doesn't make any sense to me. 'Christ' is a way of being, not a religious dogma. I trust in that way of being. I don't much care about the religious dogma associated with it. Some people care about the religious dogma, and that's OK if it works for them. It doesn't work for me that way.
Actually, what we want it to be is also a part of what it is. That's how faith becomes actualized.
The "holy spirit" is the spirit of God that exists within us as part of God's creation (God expressing God's self). I don't "have fellowship" with it, because it's already a part of me. I can manifest (embody) the spirit of God, as a human being, and I believe doing so is partly why I exist. So I want to encourage this aspect of myself, in myself.I'm confused. You don't want to have fellowship with the Holy Spirit, ...
I believe lots of things "Jesus said", but not because Jesus said them. Jesus is a character in a religious story, intended to convey an idea to us. I believe the idea is valid because I have found that it works in my own life.… and you don't believe in anything Jesus said?
God determines both objective and subjective reality through us. Creation didn't stop with the 'Big Bang' ("let there be light"), it started with it. And it's been a continuing process ever since. Everything that is, is God expressing God's 'self' (through the creative act of being/becoming). Including us. Including our thoughts and desires and behaviors.How is the way of being actualized then? So God doesn't determine objective reality?
When someone testifies. It is either believed or it isn't. Im testifying to His real love and presence. You don't believe me. Just like many did not believe the testimony of Jesus's disciples who say they witnessed the resurected Jesus with their eyes. So they were either crazy, liars or truthful. You've made the same choice about my testimony. Because you don't believe it does not mean it is not evidence of the truth. Personal love of God through Jesus whose truth is self evident as the creator is not like any other religion. The choice is yours to seek and find or wait until you face Him at the end when it is too late. May His Grace find you!
When someone testifies. It is either believed or it isn't. Im testifying to His real love and presence. You don't believe me. Just like many did not believe the testimony of Jesus's disciples who say they witnessed the resurected Jesus with their eyes. So they were either crazy, liars or truthful.
You've made the same choice about my testimony. Because you don't believe it does not mean it is not evidence of the truth.
Personal love of God through Jesus whose truth is self evident as the creator is not like any other religion.
The choice is yours to seek and find or wait until you face Him at the end when it is too late. May His Grace find you!
Only the true Christian would put salt on his/her porridge.I am saying, "Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love." 1 John 4:8
And just because someone claims to be a Christ follower or Christian, does not mean they are.
How small a number of Christians are true Christians in your opinion then? What about if you exclude those who don't regularly go to church? Because unless you're claiming a really small number you should still expect to find a subgroup with a large affect if your good is as potent in people's lives as you claim.I am saying, "Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love." 1 John 4:8
And just because someone claims to be a Christ follower or Christian, does not mean they are.
The "holy spirit" is the spirit of God that exists within us as part of God's creation (God expressing God's self). I don't "have fellowship" with it, because it's already a part of me. I can manifest (embody) the spirit of God, as a human being, and I believe doing so is partly why I exist. So I want to encourage this aspect of myself, in myself.
We don't 'disagree', I just view it differently than you do.
I believe lots of things "Jesus said", but not because Jesus said them. Jesus is a character in a religious story, intended to convey an idea to us. I believe the idea is valid because I have found that it works in my own life.
God determines both objective and subjective reality through us. Creation didn't stop with the 'Big Bang' ("let there be light"), it started with it. And it's been a continuing process ever since. Everything that is, is God expressing God's 'self' (through the creative act of being/becoming). Including us. Including our thoughts and desires and behaviors.
Some Christians claim that if Jesus was not physically resurrected then our faith is in vain. And that resurrection is then evidence that we will all be resurrected in that same way. I do not agree with that. My faith has always been in what Jesus ministered about in this life, and how it is an effective way to bring positive change and enlightenment. I do not need certainty about a proposed afterlife to see the value Jesus ministry offers in the here and now. Those people who think Christianity with no resurrection is worthless, cannot/do not speak for me on that matter.
His grace is in the here and the now. If it continues for me in some manner after my death, then that is good. But I do not require that. And I certainly will not use the hope for that to blind myself from the reality of the here and now.
Or maybe stories written by anonymous authors and compiled by a canon with an agenda should be treated with scepticism first. You would know this if you had the guts to take a critical look into the origins of your magic book.
Nor does your preaching make it evidence of the Truth tm either, just because you believe it by faith. Without hard (extra Biblical) evidence your testimony should be taken with a pinch of salt. If you were really interested in genuine truth you would critically examine the origins of the texts you so rely on. What are you afraid of? Biblical Criticism It won't go away.
Just declaring something true because you wish it does not make it so. And no, your religion is not unique amongst competing religions. Had you been born in Pakistan you would be saying the same about Islam, as do fundamentalist Muslims across the planet. Without hard (extra Biblical) evidence your testimony is no better than theirs.
That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence - Christopher Hitchens. I am not deterred from seeking genuine truth by thinly disguised threats so don't wast your time.
Only the true Christian would put salt on his/her porridge.
How small a number of Christians are true Christians in your opinion then? What about if you exclude those who don't regularly go to church? Because unless you're claiming a really small number you should still expect to find a subgroup with a large affect if your good is as potent in people's lives as you claim.
More likely you are simply experiencing confirmation bias, when things go well people attribute it to God but when it doesn't no one notices.
There are plenty of evidentiary proofs of the bibles Historicity, including manuscripts from the 1 century. Other Historical documents don't have age or number of documents yet are more widely accepted. Predjudice no doubt.
Islam does not have the same witnessed accounts, nor message of love and Grace.
You ignore the fact that witness testimony is evidence. That is a fact.
We all hold beliefs that are not provable, and defining when these beliefs cross the line and become psychotic delusions is not easy. It’s clear that such a line does exist, however: every town has its share of people whose religious beliefs fall sufficiently far outside the conventional that they are declared psychotic - See more at: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/epiphe...ents-with-religious.html#sthash.7oJYqoTN.dpuf
There is no extra Biblical, contemporary evidence to corroborate the extraordinary stories in the Bible, including the alleged resurrection. Nor is there any "contemporary" evidence for Jesus as an historical figure outside of the Bible. It was all written decades after the alleged events by anonymous authors. You would know this if you had the guts to critically study your magic book
There is no extra Biblical, contemporary evidence to corroborate the extraordinary stories in the Bible, including the alleged resurrection. Nor is there any "contemporary" evidence for Jesus as an historical figure outside of the Bible. It was all written decades after the alleged events by anonymous authors. You would know this if you had the guts to critically study your magic book
I suspect you know very little about Islam. Maybe you should take it up with them since they believe it is they who have the true religion and yours that is at fault.
Religious preaching is unreliable testimony so your alleged fact is in error.
Are you familiar with the term Religious Psychosis?
Scholars usually considered Jesus is a historical figure as mentioned by Josephus Flavius.
.Human history as whole has no evidence. It's a kind of truth can only be reached by witnessing. For an example, no one knows what George Washington was doing on Jan 01, 1740. No human can access such a kind of truths unless another human wrote it down in a document called history books. Even when it is written down, you need faith to choose to believe it or not
The very nature of history (as a kind of truth) is that , it cannot be evidenced. The more distant history is the more it is so.
Flavius was not a contemporary. Scholars may considered whatever they wish. Extra Biblical evidence is something else.
Heard it all before. There is tons of contemporary evidence from an a array of sources for George Washington.
Then scepticism is reasonable where extraordinary claims are made.
when is Jesus thought to have died and when is Flavius thought to been born? I think you'll notice a problem.Scholars usually considered Jesus is a historical figure as mentioned by Josephus Flavius.
Fortunately then that no one is claiming to know not just what happened but also that it defied known science and we should base or lives, philosophy and beliefs about everything on this claim... Oh wait, that's Christianity (among others)For an example, no one knows what George Washington was doing on Jan 01, 1740.
That is not only false but watering down the word faith to include basically everything other than a few reliably reproducible personal experiences. Just labelling something faith is not an argument, particularly when it involves bastardising the standard original usage.No human can access such a kind of truths unless another human wrote it down in a document called history books. Even when it is written down, you need faith to choose to believe it or not.
On the contrary if a day of battle is claimed to have occurred we can go look for its remnants on the field, corroborate with independent sources, infer from indirect impact on other events etc. Even then we generally have valuing degrees of confidence that either the event happened or it happened as described. Also these events all obey known science, no claims of Caesar raining the thunderbolts of Zeus on his enemies for example.The very nature of history (as a kind of truth) is that , it cannot be evidenced. The more distant history is the more it is so.
You twist the facts to your own agenda, prejudice. Bible authorship has been intensely scrutinized and very few books have any question to the authorship.
Biblical criticism is an umbrella term covering various techniques for applying literary historical-critical methods in analyzing and studying the Bible and its textual content.
As a hypothetical; if the supernatural existed and was beyond scientific proof that you clamor for. It would thus be unprovable and also it could not be proven that it doesn't exist, hence atheism is based on no proof. You can't prove the supernatural doesn't exist as much as you don't want it too.
The only evidence could be people's experiences with it, or not with it. You won't even consider that because you don't want it to exist.
when is Jesus thought to have died and when is Flavius thought to been born? I think you'll notice a problem.