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Thread: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought

  1. #1
    Petrus Guest

    Default Re: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    > so for those who want to keep faith with christ i think keeping to his
    core teachings as he made to people in simple parables and you will follow
    christ even if
    > you have never heard of the bible, i.e. if you do unto others as you would
    have them do unto you, live a christian life and you follow christ. i
    believe jesus
    > wanted most of all to keep it simple.

    "'this is the covenant i will make with the house of israel after that
    time,' declares the lord. 'i will put my law in their minds and write it on
    their hearts. i will be their god, and they will be my people. no longer
    will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, 'know the
    lord,' because they will all know me,
    from the least of them to the greatest,' declares the lord. 'for i will
    forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.'"
    (jeremiah 31:33-34)

    "for not the hearers of the law are just before god, but the doers of the
    law shall be justified. for when the gentiles, which have not the law, do
    by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law, are a
    law unto themselves: which shew the work of the law written in their
    hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the mean
    while accusing or else excusing one another."
    (romans 2:13-15, kjv)

    "but the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
    goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. against such things
    there is no law."
    (galatians 5:22-23)


  2. #2
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    Default Re: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    you wrote:
    >so for those who want to keep faith with christ i think keeping to his
    >core teachings as he made to people in simple parables and you will follow
    >christ even if you have never heard of the bible, i.e. if you do unto
    >others as you would have them do unto you, live a christian life and you
    >follow christ.

    hans de boer, a german christian who to this day spends every day of his
    life campaigning (lecturing schoolchildren etc.) for true christianity,
    anti-hitler/fascism etc. (he is now c. 80 years old) wrote a wonderful book
    in about 1957 covering his trip around the globe where he visited south
    africa, india (where he met the gandhi family) and many other countries to
    see what christians were up to in these various hot spots where lots of
    injustice reigned... among other experiences, he was tortured (first under
    hitler, then in korea i think) and his son was killed... now among many
    things that moved me to tears or to laughter in his book, hans relates the
    following (paraphrased):

    "nowhere have i found so many true followers of christ as in india... and
    these are men that have never ever even heard of jesus christ - but the way
    they choose to live their lives perfectly exemplifies what a true christian
    is asked to do and to act like (but so few 'christians' in the west do)"...

    to my mind, the only thing that matters is to act like a christian is asked
    to act (and a true buddhist, muslim, hindu etc., for that matter)... one of
    the most christian-acting people well-known today imo is the dalai lama...
    (there is a bit of english-language info on hans de boer on the net.)

    ulla
    www.paradisenow.net


    [non-text portions of this message have been removed]


  3. #3
    John Michael Roods Guest

    Default RE: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    a good take on the bible, free will, oneness and jesus is gary r renard's
    book ......the disappearance of the universe.


    mike
    as i do to others, i do to myself
    forgiveness is for giving and is forgiving


  4. #4
    David Gray Guest

    Default The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    i a lot of people have been told to take the bible verbatim / infallible that
    the words are protected by god and must be taken literally, my comment on this
    the passage pointed out (i think it is in matthew ) where it says something to
    the effect ' that any man who changes or adds or deletes from the words written
    be cursed.

    this is the primary defense of the bible as being gods word perfect. however
    though it says 'the man would be cursed' it does not say that it cannot happen.

    another point is that jesus from what we see in the bible never wrote anything
    down. i have to believe he did not want to be taken literally.

    also the conversion / translation from verbal tradition to the first written
    words in aramaic happened at least a century after the events. it is impossible
    to accurately translate some words from one language to another as there is
    often no exact equivalent in english.

    so for those who want to keep faith with christ i think keeping to his core
    teachings as he made to people in simple parables and you will follow christ
    even if you have never heard of the bible, i.e. if you do unto others as you
    would have them do unto you, live a christian life and you follow christ. i
    believe jesus wanted most of all to keep it simple.

    ra's teachings of service to others is no different to my mind, there is no
    contradiction. if you try to take the bible literally as written then confusion
    will be an inevitable result, hence so many people take a charismatic television
    evangelist's word as 'gospel' then they don't have to think for them selves.

    if man could not change the bible , twist and tweak it a bit to suit the times
    this would be a violation of free will, take away free will and the entire
    edifice collapses.

    just a thought;

    peace ... david


    [non-text portions of this message have been removed]


  5. #5
    marijnclarie Guest

    Default Re: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    i posted a document that makes some comparison between eastern and
    western cultures, regarding the moral domain and the feeling
    of "order" etc

    see files

    <a href="http://f6.grp.yahoofs.com/v1/eao5q1keott2-egmc2jxokrlxfgmtsfyi6zdht6tuy4qtq1km8qu5snip5yzr3w mnzle49ocnlhwsvn_pou9xajuluzo--4bfmi/balu%20-%2021%20-%20moraldomains.doc">http://f6.grp.yahoofs.com/v1/eao5q1k...6tuy4qtq1km8q\
    u5snip5yzr3wmnzle49ocnlhwsvn_pou9xajuluzo--4bfmi/balu%20-%2021%20-%20moraldomain\
    s.doc</a>

    friendly greetings
    marijn


    > hans de boer, a german christian who to this day spends every day
    of his
    > life campaigning (lecturing schoolchildren etc.) for true
    christianity,
    > anti-hitler/fascism etc. (he is now c. 80 years old) wrote a
    wonderful book
    > in about 1957 covering his trip around the globe > to my mind, the only thing
    that matters is to act like a christian
    is asked
    > to act (and a true buddhist, muslim, hindu etc., for that
    matter)... > ulla
    >


  6. #6
    amilius2001 Guest

    Default Re: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    --- in asc2k@yahoogroups.com, "david gray" <davidgry@m...>
    wrote:
    > i a lot of people have been told to take the bible verbatim /
    infallible that the words are protected by god and must be taken
    literally, my comment on this the passage pointed out (i think it is
    in matthew ) where it says something to the effect ' that any man
    who changes or adds or deletes from the words written be
    cursed.
    >
    > this is the primary defense of the bible as being gods word
    perfect. however though it says 'the man would be cursed' it
    does not say that it cannot happen.

    > also the conversion / translation from verbal tradition to the first
    written words in aramaic happened at least a century after the
    events. it is impossible to accurately translate some words from
    one language to another as there is often no exact equivalent in
    english.
    >
    > so for those who want to keep faith with christ i think keeping
    to his core teachings as he made to people in simple parables
    and you will follow christ even if you have never heard of the
    bible, i.e. if you do unto others as you would have them do unto
    you, live a christian life and you follow christ. i believe jesus
    wanted most of all to keep it simple.
    >
    > ra's teachings of service to others is no different to my mind,
    there is no contradiction. if you try to take the bible literally as
    written then confusion will be an inevitable result, hence so
    many people take a charismatic television evangelist's word as
    'gospel' then they don't have to think for them selves.
    >
    > if man could not change the bible , twist and tweak it a bit to
    suit the times this would be a violation of free will, take away
    free will and the entire edifice collapses.

    david, your post reminds me of the story mollie ivins tells about
    the texas state senator arguing about bilingual education in the
    legislature with the comment, "if english was good enough for
    jesus christ, it's good enough for texas schools." many have
    forgotten or ignore the challenges posed by the puzzles of
    context, syntax, and translation. i hope this isn't too 'off topic' for
    asc2k, but i've given some of these things some secular
    humanist thought that may shed light on a different perspective
    than is found in popular culture but resonates with ra and
    cayce.
    one of these observations follows from the contemporary use
    of the word 'perfect'. perfect has only recently been attached to
    notions of 'ideal'. [i think it has something to do with the
    american notion of '... a more perfect union.' ] during the
    enlightenment, concepts were appreciated in mathematical
    terms: i.e., 'perfecting' an equation, solution, or proof meant
    showing all the details, 'completely'. 'perfect' makes more
    sense when regarded as 'complete'. this in turn suggests that
    something, say, the bible, is 'perfect', as in complete, for the
    purpose served in any given moment. with this understanding,
    whether applied graciously or not, the bible is and has been
    'complete' for creating the diverse experiences shaping both
    circumstances and opportunities humanity faces today. the
    bible has been 'perfect' for all the ways it has been both used
    and abused to gift us with our present 'now' moments. might it
    also be that 'appreciation', rather than 'worship', is all that was
    ever intended about god, the bible, jesus, and the many facets
    of life as well. even if one does not religiously limit one's
    appreciation of the bible, one might still regard it as 'complete
    for purposes to which it is turned', or 'perfect'.
    as for the admonition by matthew, might his intent be to strongly
    suggest that one be cautious with a written work so
    conspicuously ripe for ungracious distortion? might this result
    from failing to regard the bible's theme? your citing of the
    golden rule aligns completely with this theme begun in
    genesis that informs one about the nature of the one creator.
    not many notice this theme. religions, for the most part, claim
    power by obscuring it. the theme that might be appreciated in
    the tale of the eating of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of
    good and evil is that, like 'sweet' and 'sour', good and evil are
    not opposites. the opposite of 'good' is 'bad', words best
    appreciated as assessments about one's choices for one's self
    for future guidance. the opposite of 'evil' is 'gracious'. i observe
    that grace is the awareness that all choice generates benefit for
    purposes of appreciation. gracious is the demonstration of this
    awareness. gracious choices generate benevolence.
    ungracious is its denial. ungracious choices generate
    instructive consequence reminding one that a more gracious
    choice was missed in the taking. all choices might thus be
    appreciated for their benefits. [ and it was good.] this is the
    nature of graciously organized design. evil is, in fact, an
    ungracious assessment of ungracious choices, inviting
    compound consequences. adam's separation inspiring notion
    was assigning blame, shifting responsiblity for his experience,
    to eve, an ungracious choice that metaphorically set the roller
    coaster of events in motion. appreciating these things, jesus
    taught the golden rule, saw the unity of man within graciously
    organized design, and cautioned against the use of evil and
    judgment. the dire caution from matthew came as much from
    observing how the talmud had been twisted by the pharisees,
    sadducees, and sanhedrin as any sense of divine inspiration.
    the bible is abused when the theme is ignored so that the text is
    twisted to justify ungracious choices and their consequences.
    the bible and all histories support these understandings. it
    operates this way because we are all one. we chose for it to be
    this way before engaging illusions of individuation, separation,
    and forgetting-the-fullness-of-being. it's all in there. one might
    just simply regard it from the context, " how might one have
    designed the game of life so as to generate the diversity of
    experience that would eventually re-mind one of the true nature
    of one's being through the appreciated observation of the history
    of its process?" david, it really is this simple, just as you have
    always thought it might be. if one thinks about sto and sts as
    gracious performances with this perspective of evolving
    awareness, one sees how it all serves the purposes of the one
    creator just as ra and so many others have suggested we will
    soon remember. we are all one. namaste, amilius


  7. #7
    Lynn Guest

    Default Re: Re: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    "perfect has only recently been attached to notions of 'ideal'. [i think it has
    something to do with the american notion of '... a more perfect union.' ]
    during the enlightenment, concepts were appreciated in mathematical terms: i.e.,
    'perfecting' an equation, solution, or proof meant showing all the details,
    'completely'. 'perfect' makes more sense when regarded as 'complete'. this in
    turn suggests that something, say, the bible, is 'perfect', as in complete, for
    the purpose served in any given moment."
    ***************************************
    amilius, perfect post, point for introspection. thank you for another gracious
    addition to the discussion, compliments david, chris, ra, cayce,
    overmind\oversoul, all connecting us with source, pulling our pieces together
    into one. teach\learn, universal\unique . . . perfect\imperfect,
    mankind\divine?

    we are one, now.


    the examined life is worth living!

    tell congress: don't abandon pets in disasters!
    http://go.care2.com/50041

    http://www.care2.com free e-mail. 100mb storage. helps charities.


  8. #8
    Petrus Guest

    Default Re: Re: The Bible and Jesus ...a thought


    > david, your post reminds me of the story mollie ivins tells about
    > the texas state senator arguing about bilingual education in the
    > legislature with the comment, "if english was good enough for
    > jesus christ, it's good enough for texas schools." many have

    *violent fit of coughing* i knew politicians could be stupid at times, but
    that really takes it to the next level! ;-)


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