So you were explicitly taught that people can gain salvation and entrance into heaven and FULL communion with God WITHOUT accepting Jesus as their Lord and Savior? How did your teachers reconcile that with verses like "Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me" (John 14:6)? Or were you taught that you should be tolerant of other people's belief systems? There's a big difference between the two. |
You can be tolerant and still think people are going to hell. |
Well, if you don’t want to have a relationship with Jesus, you don’t have to. “Heaven,” is not really the goal, relationship with Jesus is. Heaven is only MORE relationship with Jesus, forever and ever. So if you are not Christian, there is no reason for you to WANT Christian heaven. We don’t know what the alternative is. We assume “Hell” is a place of eternal suffering, but I don’t see a solid Biblical description of what that means. In the Bible “death” and “Hell” are sort of used interchangeably. Perhaps if you don’t believe, you die, and that is the end of the story. |
Franz Rosenzweig, a Jewish thinker who unlike most really did not want to say that Christianity (including John 14) was simply incorrect, attempted to square the circle by saying that Jews did not need to come to the Father, as they were already with Him. Christianity was "true" but was for the gentiles, not the Jews. |
Ok. I'll try as hard not to be gay as you try to not wear mixed fabrics.
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But the point is that, according to Christian doctrine, if you don't accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior, you are not going to have as enjoyable of an afterlife as those who do. Communion with God is supposed to be better than being distant from God. You can be a non-Christian and not care about Christian heaven, but if Christians are right, your afterlife will be worse than those who accepted Jesus, whether you think you care about Christian heaven or not. |
No- according to Christians, if you do not have a relationship with Jesus, EVERY moment of your existence will be worse- from this exact moment until the end of eternity. Heaven is communion with Jesus- the better your relationship with Jesus in this exact moment, the better your present will be. You can have heaven on Earth if you truly want it. Whether you are dead or not is largely irrelevant. Jesus is alive, right now, and if you reject him, you are automatically worse off than you would be if you had a relationship with him. That is how I was taught about Christianity. |
| What’s wrong with Jesus? |
You are automatically worse off because you judge others. |
NP. Plenty of Christians believe in salvation through works. The debate about “works vs. faith” has gone on for centuries, which should tell you that there have always been many Christians who think it’s about works. That’s why some (most?) of the mainline Protestant denominations believe that someone who doesn’t know Jesus but lives a “Christ-like” life can get into heaven. Jesus showed us how to live, and that’s how he “saved” mankind. |
I'm unaware of any Christian denomination that says you can have salvation by works alone. I thought it was either by faith alone or by faith and works. Jesus didn't just give a good example of how to be a good person. You have to accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior (and, according to some but not all Christian denominations, be a good person) to get into heaven. Anyone who says otherwise is just misunderstanding what Christianity says about salvation. |
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An article about salvation by faith alone, which seems to be the doctrine held by most Protestant denominations. Catholics, of course, believe in salvation by faith and works (both, not just works).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sola_fide |
I’m not judging; I’m explaining a point of doctrine and you are seemingly desperate to read judgement into it. If I said “everyone would be better off with an extra 100k of savings,” is that a judgement on people who don’t save? Or simply a statement of what I believe would be good? Is saying “vegetables are a healthy food” a judgement on people who hate vegetables? No. I don’t particularly care what you do. |
I’m so tired of non-Christians telling us what they think we should believe.... |
I know several Episcopalian ministers who disagree with this and say that a “good” in the sense of “Christ-like” person who doesn’t know Jesus can get into heaven. |