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Old 04-26-2012, 06:36 AM   #21
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The essence of Christianity is found in just seven words:

'We love, because he first loved us.' 1 Jn 4:19

The word 'first' is important. Christianity is not for everyone. It is for people who are concerned about their own bad conscience more than they are concerned about anything else. The love of God is considered to be shown by atonement via Jesus, who, according to pre-existing as well as his own evidence, saves from the consequences of a bad conscience after death of the body. So Jesus, 'while we were still sinners,' took the blame due to the sinner, and made him/her an 'heir' with him, not merely wiping out the consequence of wickedness, but rewarding with benefits beyond imagination. It is that motivation that is the 'engine room' of the Christian, what makes him/her 'tick'.
The epistles of John is NOT regarded as the ealiest epistles so they cannot be considered as the essence of Christianity.

The claim that God loved people and sacrificed his Only Son is a LATE development in the early Jesus movement.

In the earliest Jesus stories there is ZERO mention of God's love for people. It was the complete opposite. Man MUST first love God, that is, God only loves those who first love him.

Examine Sinaiticus gMark
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28 And one of the scribes came forward as he had heard them disputing, and seeing that he had answered them well, he asked him: Which is the first commandment of all?

29 Jesus answered him: The first is: Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord;

30 and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart, and with thy whole soul, and with thy whole mind, and with thy whole strength.
There is virtually NOTHING about God's love for people in the earliest Gospels. In Sinaiticus gMark, the word Love is found only about FOUR times and it relates to the claim that People Must Love God.

It is LATER in gJohn that we see that God SUDDENLY becomes a Lover of people and the word Love is mentioned about 57 times

Sinaiticus gJohn 15
Quote:
12 My commandment is this, that you love one another as I have loved you.

13 Greater love has no one than this
, that he lay down his
life for his friends.
You will NOT see any verse in the earliest Jesus stories like John 3.16. It is clear that God as a LOVER of People because he sacrificed his Son is a Late Invention.

Sinaiticus gJohn 3
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16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes on him might not perish, but have life eternal....
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Old 04-26-2012, 06:40 AM   #22
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Step four, close the deal. Just believe what I believe about the dead guy and you get pie in the sky bye and bye. No surgery required and you can still eat pork chops. What a deal.

The essence of Christianity.

Steve



Part four was essential, but it goes beyond the dead guy. You not only get the dead guy as your best buddy and spiritual advisor, you also get God, holy scriptures, and the Kingdom of God. Basically, you get everything Judaism offers without having to convert to Judaism. Irresistible to a lot of people.
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Old 04-26-2012, 09:31 AM   #23
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The essence of christianity?

Eau de not so frank incense mixed with the afterburn of an altar wine. The effect is popularly called Brain Damage.

"You lock the door
And throw away the key
There's someone in my head but it's not me."
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Old 04-26-2012, 09:32 AM   #24
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I really don't know why people like Pete have to define Christianity in entirely negative terms. Surely the majority of Christian converts and Christians in general in antiquity were ATTRACTED to something essential about the tradition. The point if this thread is to determine what that was. I would appreciate if these negative definitions were kept to a minimum. People in early antiquity were not compelled to become Christians so let's try and determine what Christianity was, what the 'myth' of Christianity was - that made the religion so attractive to people.
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Old 04-26-2012, 09:36 AM   #25
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spin,

Well certainly there is some truth to there being a superstitious undercurrent. Nevertheless I have always been attracted to the writings of Clement of Alexandria. The level of sophistication there is as profound as any neo-Platonic writer of the age (Maximus of Tyre for instance). I am not sure that Clement was 'brain-damaged.'

Moreover I also have to admit - on a personal note - that I am profoundly indebted to Christianity insofar as the work it accomplished developing pure, chaste and ultimately virtuous women. I don't know what pagan model there is for what Goethe called das Ewig-Weibliche. I don't think this occurs naturally.

Whether or not it is a myth that is responsible for this - or delusion as you would say - doesn't really interest me. I think women in particular are only tolerable in long term relationships if they were raised in a convent. Very seriously. Maybe women would say the same thing about religious men. I don't know.
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Old 04-26-2012, 09:49 AM   #26
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Would you go to a brothel to ask what the joy of chastity is?
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Old 04-26-2012, 10:04 AM   #27
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spin,

Well certainly there is some truth to there being a superstitious undercurrent. Nevertheless I have always been attracted to the writings of Clement of Alexandria. The level of sophistication there is as profound as any neo-Platonic writer of the age (Maximus of Tyre for instance). I am not sure that Clement was 'brain-damaged.'
Sorry, I was just ruminating on the notion of the "essence of christianity". The essence of an old woman I knew was Estee Lauder. I went to a town called Antakya once and everybody seemed to eat lokum, so you could say the essence of the town was rose water. That's why I thought of (not so frank) incense and altar wine as the essence of christianity, which made me think of a similar combination in France called absinth. The result was, well, brain damage. There's a wonderful painting by Cezanne called the Absinth Drinker. He captured the afflicted woman wonderfully.

I wouldna said Clem was brain damaged, unless of course he'd guzzled too much incense and wine... or wormwood and wine.

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Moreover I also have to admit - on a personal note - that I am profoundly indebted to Christianity insofar as the work it accomplished developing pure, chaste and ultimately virtuous women. I don't know what pagan model there is for what Goethe called das Ewig-Weibliche. I don't think this occurs naturally.
I was going to say that you've made your bed and now you have to lie in it, but you'd probably be only too willing. So, instead, I'll give you Old Possum (the old tart)'s "sty of contentment, meaning death".

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Whether or not it is a myth that is responsible for this - or delusion as you would say - doesn't really interest me. I think women in particular are only tolerable in long term relationships if they were raised in a convent. Very seriously.
You need Emma Goldman virtue.
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Old 04-26-2012, 10:05 AM   #28
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Iskander,

The closest I've ever come was being present at a black strip club with a Samaritan arguing over whether Numbers 12:1 really says that Moses's wife was black. I think I was assisted in making my friend see the appropriateness of the suggestion of the Masoretic text (= the wife was black) and that it wasn't entirely at odds with the original reading (= she was beautiful = Samaritan recension).
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Old 04-26-2012, 10:09 AM   #29
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spin,

on yet another tangent the Samaritans use wormwood as a kind of truth serum - the ancient equivalent of drowning the witch. The practice is referenced in one of the oldest and most widely used hymns of Marqe which is read at the start of every Samaritan gathering. I've cited the material here more than once.
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Old 04-26-2012, 10:10 AM   #30
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Iskander,

The closest I've ever come was being present at a black strip club with a Samaritan arguing over whether Numbers 12:1 really says that Moses's wife was black. I think I was assisted in making my friend see the appropriateness of the suggestion of the Masoretic text (= the wife was black) and that it wasn't entirely at odds with the original reading (= she was beautiful = Samaritan recension).
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