So, is a Christ necessary or not?huckelberry wrote: ↑Sun Dec 27, 2020 6:27 amHonorentheos you notehonorentheos wrote: ↑Sun Dec 27, 2020 4:14 amResurrection is a Christian-centric concept. This presupposes that Jesus is somehow more essential than any other potential source of wisdom teacher because only he is able to save us from...well. all the things I've pointed out in this thread since joining it.
So is that your answer, huckelberry? You believe only Jesus can bring about the resurrection promised by Christianity which you view as necessary? Buddhism doesn't teach resurrection but instead teaches reincarnation. And various groups within Judaism debated it at the time of Jesus.
The concept of resurrection imposes Christianity on other belief systems. And it's very much a concept based on a fallen, corrupt world needing to be consumed and replaced or reborn.
"resurrection is Christian concept and presupposes that Jesus is somehow more essential than other wisdom teachers." Of course it does , It normally presupposes he is divine eternal creator of heaven and earth. That well known Christian view is hardly a surprise. It is also no surprise that a cluster of concepts like a religious tradition does not always fit with every other system. I do not believe in reincarnation. so?
Of course the human family, and you and I, are not perfect. But th concept of being fallen isn't the same as being, well, fallible and human. Being fallen includes both separation from the divine as well as an innate need for divine intervention to be able to access ones potential. Good becomes a function of extra-human intervention and influence as opposed to something we have access to within ourselves.Resurrection will happen or will not happen> It does not depend upon a contest of belief systems or imposing the belief on folks. I do not see it as depending upon a "fallen world" though I am unsure what that means to you. I do see that any new development will start to replace things that are old. I admit to seeing the human family as less than perfect. I do not see why you view that as a horror when connected to Christ.
Now, both the idea of Jesus and Buddha can serve as vehicles for helping others tap into their better angels, which may even be a necessary part of human progress. I don't know. I lived too much of my life tapped into th a Christian worldview to be able to say one way or the other from my own experience. And I don't know how well it translates into our daughter's worldview and ethics since I've sought to give her a spectrum of examples and sources to pull from with a full expectation that life is for learning and striving. Home and family should be the safe space that serves to resist judgment and provide love with minimal conditions. Does that mean people who don't have that in their lives need to have something like belief in a saviour to be able to move past previous mistakes? I don't know. But I'm very certain that the idea the world is fallen, humanity is corrupted, and the champion of God will justify and raise the believers while judging the enemies of God to suffer is inherent to the Christ myth, and I am anti that. It seems to me that so are most people participating in this thread, but you aren't comfortable with the phrase anti Christ because...conditioning I guess.