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Re: These things I believe, 1 year later
Posted By: Wolfspirit, on host 206.47.244.93
Date: Sunday, October 29, 2000, at 21:30:19
In Reply To: Re: These things I believe, 1 year later posted by Sam on Friday, October 27, 2000, at 21:57:23:

> > > To put it bluntly: if Christ did not arise from death, then my faith is worthless.
> >
> > No, your faith wouldn't be pointless. Even is Christ was just a carpenters son, and a wise Rabbi, his leasons still hold true 2000 years later.
>
> Wolf is right. If Christ wasn't the Son of God and rose from the dead, her faith is useless, and so is mine. [...]
If Christ were just a man, maybe it's still worth heeding his advice on life, but it certainly doesn't make him worth *worshipping*, committing one's *life* to, and putting the whole trust of one's eternal security into.


Yes; exactly. Thank you for showing what's at stake so clearly, Sam. I wasn't sure just how far to go into it. I know that a lot of people think of themselves as Christians in name only; I wonder how many of these nominal Christians would decide to depart completely from Christianity, and have nothing further to do with it, when they realize the degree of commitment required. It is, indeed, almost exactly like getting married. Without a deeper appreciation of Christ and his mission for the world, it is far too easy for 'Christians' to say and do all sorts of atrocities in Jesus' name.

If Christ were "just a man," why should we give any more lasting attention to him than to other "wise teachers" like (say) Leo Buscaglia, Carl Rogers, Gandhi, or Mother Theresa? Jesus would've been just another flash-in-the-pan local news item in ancient Palestine, another wannabe Messiah easily quashed by the civil authorities, and that would have been THAT. But he rose up to defeat death... and he had witnesses to his resurrection. He had witnesses who were willing to endure torture, and threats of death, and being torn apart by lions, rather than disavow that Yeshua was the Saviour. The Roman and Jewish authorities couldn't figure them out. It didn't make sense, and it doesn't make sense, that anyone could continue worshipping a romantic fool -- one who had gotten himself condemned and executed! -- unless He really *did* do something which transcended the cross after his death.

And Christ forever changed the shape of human civilization; there can be no doubting that. Many people had lived before him who said, "Respect your neighbour," and "Do the least amount of harm." Gautama Buddha said these things. His own Jewish contemporaries said these things. But until Christ put His authority behind the concepts, no one thought these ethical sayings were anything other the peculiar foibles of a regional code of conduct, for a bunch of isolated tribal communities (like the Jews). The rest of the 1st century world in which he walked and taught was not so forgiving. The Romans considered it a sign of personal weakness if one were stupid enough to show mercy to the poor; for the poor deserved to be worthless beggars. Likewise, the ancient arabic nomads had a rather revealing proverb among themselves: "If you see a blind man, spit on him; why should you be kinder to him than the gods?" So, you know, Christ shook up the very bedrock of cultural ideals -- away from a blasé and narrow self-centered standard, directly towards the concept of a greater community: one where mercy and compassion for the weak, and the friendless, was expected and desired. All of us were and are in the same boat -- weak and stupid and blind and miserable, and Christ's work really was needed to show how badly humanity is prone to treat its members.

So I'm saying, he really did come to save us from ourselves, because we can't do it by ourselves, alone... without the presence and grace of God.

Wolf "falls off soapbox, goes to bed" spirit

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