freelight
Eclectic Theosophist
Jesus is a Savior but in a different sense......
Jesus is a Savior but in a different sense......
It does NOT reject Jesus as 'Savior', but defines the term differently.
It exalts Jesus as our Creator Son, who is sovereign Lord and could be called our 'Savior' as well,...but not a 'savior' by the traditional-orthodox Christian definition of such a word, being a vicarious blood sacrifice or atonement for our sins. We've already covered this, and I've done many commentaries questioning the whole blood-atonement concept here and on other threads. Since the UB presents and exalts Jesus as our Creator and Lord who bestowed himself upon our planet to reveal 'God' to us (himself and the Universal Father),...it is fundamentally pro-Jesus. Now to who Jesus is in the divine hierarchy of the Sons of God in relation to God the Universal Father (and the Paradise Trinity) is another matter, revealed differently from the traditional-orthodox concept of the Trinity. We've covered UB Christology previously.
See: Michael of Nebadon
So you see, it presents Jesus in a new light as to his status and divine Sonship as a Creator-Son, of the order of Michael (Creator Son are also called Michaels)....hence one of the titles of Jesus being 'Christ-Michael'. - this has nothing to do with the traditional identification of an arch-angel named 'Michael'. Archangels are of a different class than Creator Sons. Michael-Sons are not archangels, but Creator-Sons. They go forth and create universes which include inhabitable worlds.
For all the places 'savior' is used in the UB go here.
Jesus is a Savior but in a different sense......
Er, it rejects the Lord Jesus Christ as Savior and rejects much of the Bible as wrong. That's a 'no dice!' in my book.
It does NOT reject Jesus as 'Savior', but defines the term differently.
It exalts Jesus as our Creator Son, who is sovereign Lord and could be called our 'Savior' as well,...but not a 'savior' by the traditional-orthodox Christian definition of such a word, being a vicarious blood sacrifice or atonement for our sins. We've already covered this, and I've done many commentaries questioning the whole blood-atonement concept here and on other threads. Since the UB presents and exalts Jesus as our Creator and Lord who bestowed himself upon our planet to reveal 'God' to us (himself and the Universal Father),...it is fundamentally pro-Jesus. Now to who Jesus is in the divine hierarchy of the Sons of God in relation to God the Universal Father (and the Paradise Trinity) is another matter, revealed differently from the traditional-orthodox concept of the Trinity. We've covered UB Christology previously.
See: Michael of Nebadon
So you see, it presents Jesus in a new light as to his status and divine Sonship as a Creator-Son, of the order of Michael (Creator Son are also called Michaels)....hence one of the titles of Jesus being 'Christ-Michael'. - this has nothing to do with the traditional identification of an arch-angel named 'Michael'. Archangels are of a different class than Creator Sons. Michael-Sons are not archangels, but Creator-Sons. They go forth and create universes which include inhabitable worlds.
For all the places 'savior' is used in the UB go here.
188:4.6 Jesus lived and died for a whole universe, not just for the races of this one world. While the mortals of the realms had salvation even before Jesus lived and died on Urantia, it is nevertheless a fact that his bestowal on this world greatly illuminated the way of salvation; his death did much to make forever plain the certainty of mortal survival after death in the flesh.
188:4.7 Though it is hardly proper to speak of Jesus as a sacrificer, a ransomer, or a redeemer, it is wholly correct to refer to him as a savior. He forever made the way of salvation (survival) more clear and certain; he did better and more surely show the way of salvation for all the mortals of all the worlds of the universe of Nebadon.
188:4.8 When once you grasp the idea of God as a true and loving Father, the only concept which Jesus ever taught, you must forthwith, in all consistency, utterly abandon all those primitive notions about God as an offended monarch, a stern and all-powerful ruler whose chief delight is to detect his subjects in wrongdoing and to see that they are adequately punished, unless some being almost equal to himself should volunteer to suffer for them, to die as a substitute and in their stead. The whole idea of ransom and atonement is incompatible with the concept of God as it was taught and exemplified by Jesus of Nazareth. The infinite love of God is not secondary to anything in the divine nature.