Doubling down on (incorrect) aspersions about another religion. Impressive. |
The above is another example of a person who cannot tolerate different points of view when it comes to religion. Christianity is right; anything else is wrong, in pp's opinion. Many religions, not just Christianity, promote that thinking. You must believe what dogma tells you to believe or suffer eternal consequences. |
Are you 12? You or someone else tries to get people to attack Christianity, Jewish pp steps up with specific examples of why she doesn’t like Christianity, and when anybody points out she’s wrong, you jump in with all fingers wagging. You sound very immature. |
DP here. I think that's a bit unfair. Really the only thing we know about Jesus is in Matthew, Mark, Luke and John and it's fair to say he did preach the things that pp. mentioned. Truly a far cry from the rape, incest, murder and genocide of the Old Testament. I'm not religious myself, but I can see why Christianity appealed to so many people. It started out with a few Jewish Christians and exploded in numbers exponentially over just the next two centuries. I have to believe a lot of that was due to the message itself that people found appealing. |
NP: PP didn't say Christianity is right. PP said the specifics point PPP made about elevation of the divine in Christianity is not what Christianity actually professes. Pointing out that PP's statement of a fact was incorrect is very different from saying Christianity is right and everything else is wrong. Look, on so many of these threads lots of people say "X religion says Y," and often that is incorrect information. Often is is even a stereotype or a bigoted remark (like your last sentence). It is important to correct these misstatements because a lot of people use those misstatements to develop misinformed opinions. The point was not to offer an opinion about PP's beliefs, or to change PP's mind about how she feels about faith or the faith she chooses, but to correct a mistake of fact that she asserted. |
PPP here (I think? I'm the Jewish one). I've expressly stated that I based my decision to leave Christianity on my experiences with it across different Protestant denominations. I'm not arguing "facts" about Christian theology. I don't ascribe to it and don't claim to be all that knowledgeable about the theological underpinnings of it. It never made sense to me when I tried to learn it. There is an element of faith to any religion and I just didn't have faith in Christian doctrine. What I'm saying is that in my life, I sat through many sermons and Sunday School lessons about Jesus being our Father superseding our own earthly family. I understand that may not be what Christianity is actually supposed to say and there are plenty of things people say and do in the name of religion that could be argued as counter to the religion's actual teachings; often it's a matter of interpretation and emphasis. While we're talking about misrepresenting the facts of a religion, 09/22/2022 10:16 said "Truly a far cry from the rape, incest, murder and genocide of the Old Testament." The Tanakh (the books that more or less make up the Old Testament) is replete with laws and commandments against those things. Love your neighbor as yourself, take care of the widow and orphan, do not murder, do not steal, don't marry your sister - all of those are in the "Old Testament." I'm so tired of the "vengeful God of the Old Testament" trope in Christianity, as if the only messages of love and caring are in the New Testament. |
DP. But the Tanakh God IS vengeful. Just ask the Canaanites, Amorites, and others whose land he wanted for his people. Just ask his chosen people, whom he punished again and again (Noah’s flood, temple destructions) and sent into exile in Babylon for not adhering strictly to his laws or even worshipping Baal. Pp’s are also saying that Jesus took the “be nice to your neighbor” commandment further into “love your enemy.” You may have sat through sermons and Sunday School as a kid, but as you say those are your individual experiences based on your particular church as a kid. Sunday School is pretty different from the adult education that goes on in churches, too. What I’m trying to say is that I agree with other pp’s that your understanding of Christianity is flawed. I wish you peace in your chosen faith. You would help yourself, though, if you stopped basing your choice on a flawed understanding and then kept trying to promote your flawed understanding. |
^ Hehe, in Saul 15 God orders Saul to kill all the Amelikites and their cattle and sheep too, and then gets angry when Saul actually spares a couple of the cattle. Thous shalt not murder, indeed ![]() |
Also a DP and a Christian, but this is honestly an anti-Semitic trope that Christians need to excise from how we talk about God. It fails on both counts, because 1) The God of the Hebrew Scriptures is loving and merciful; it's a big focus of a lot of the Prophets, paired with his judgment. Nehemiah calls him "ready to forgive, gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love," Isaiah says his "steadfast love will never depart from you." God's love and mercy is there throughout. 2) Jesus teaches to love your enemy, but he also teaches judgment and God's anger. He's very clear about the punishment of the unrighteous and it's weeping and gnashing of teeth in the outer darkness, eternal fire. There's genuine tension here and it takes some theological thinking to make it work, but Marcionism isn't it. |
Jesus offered grace to individuals who repent. He stayed out of the business of conquering foreign lands or sending entire generations into exile. |
If you're Christian, Jesus literally is the same God as the Old Testament God so actually very much was in the business of sending entire generations into exile. Meanwhile Israel was offered plenty of opportunities to repent and avoid exile. That the Babylonian Captivity is punishment for Israel's sins is very clear from the text of the Hebrew Scriptures. |
The Last Supper was about a new covenant between God and man. Among other things, God stopped sending his people into exile. |
Jesus’ new covenant between God and Man. Paul in Hebrews puts it well: “For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the Lord: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each one teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, 'Know the Lord,' for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the Lord. For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more." |
PS. I find this criticizing others’ religions to be really distasteful. The atheist who kept proposing it, and the Jewish poster who took it up, should be ashamed. But as another poster said, facts are important. |
As a Christian I don't deny that, but you're talking about God as if he changed. As if the God of the Hebrew scriptures is one thing and Jesus is another. That's both anti-Semitic, because it makes the God of Israel into the "bad" god and Jesus into the "good" God, and heresy. God is unchanging, and Jesus IS God, the same God who ordained the Babylonian Captivity is the God who gave us the covenant established at the Last Supper. His love for his people (and his judgment when they fall into sin) has never changed. (answering here purely as a question of Christian theology, so it won't apply if you don't believe it that) |