Christianity

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Walker
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Re: Christianity

Post by Walker »

Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 1:26 pm See John 15:18-19.
That prompted a reading of the whole chapter for context. I never read it before and will return to it for comparison to what’s happening now, whatever that may be in the future. The chapter says a lot. Initial impression: It defines and outlines the appropriate relationship with God that causes right action, right being defined as naturally arising actions that do not conflict with man as the image of God *. Such naturalness only results from purification, and in the Christian sense, purification would be found in God’s light through Christian methods. And, because man is made in the image of God, God is found within as an aspect of humanness. It’s not by chance that Christianity persists throughout history, but because of human nature.


* Seems like someone recently mentioned the realization that oneself is God. May have been Roy.
Walker
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Re: Christianity

Post by Walker »

Nick_A wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 2:38 pm Jesus was master of himself.
This is a good objective for those who would not be ruled by their thoughts, but rather, are guided by trust in those who have been through the territory, and trust that the absence of thoughts yields knowledge of thought dynamics, for when thinking is necessary.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

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Harry Baird wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 5:12 pmHowever, when I examine the basis of your disagreement, it seems that we don't really disagree after all, unless I'm missing something. I wrote that we don't really know what Christ's teachings were, and that what we do have in mainstream Christian belief is contradictory and absurd. I was thus in no way endorsing religious fanaticism. So, we're not really in disagreement in that sense.
Christianity is, and this is more close to the truth, a wide assortment of ideas and admonitions and perspectives that come from a wide range of peoples, cultures, and if you will metaphysical perspectives. *Christianity* is really a conglomeration of ideas and perspectives.

It is not because I say this that I make it so, it is in fact that Christianity is a 'confusion of ideas' because there was a 'confusion of peoples' in those early centuries when the religion was, shall I say, accreted together.

I do not think this denies, or subtracts from, the fact that the early Christians were Hebrews and that the Christian idea came out of late-Judean movements:
[From a Jerusalem Post article:] "The Essenes were part of an internal struggle within Jewish society at the end of the Second Temple Period. Their customs and beliefs, their apocalyptic vision and rejection of accepted leadership not only created a rift between them and the rest of Jewish society; they provided elements for the beginning of a new religion.

"Both Christians and Essenes were eschatological communities -- expecting the imminent transformation of the world. Although drawn from Jewish prophetic texts that spoke about the Day of Judgment, the Essenes gave it immediacy; Christianity gave it urgency. The similarity of texts is striking.

"Both communities tended to be dualistic – dividing the world into opposing forces of good and evil, light and darkness. There are references in the New Testament (especially in Paul and John) to this distinction. For example, “I am the light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness” (John 8:12). And in the scrolls we read, “All the children of righteousness are ruled by the Prince of Light and walk in the ways of light, but all the children of falsehood are ruled by the Angel of Darkness and walk in the ways of darkness.” (Rule of the Community, 3) Even the famous beatitudes in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:3-12) and in the Sermon on the Plain (Luke 6:20-23) have striking parallels in the scrolls and apocryphal literature."
But when the Hebrew Christians amalgamated, philosophically, religiously, with the Greek world, and then later with other cultures and *worlds*, it was through that blending-processes that Christianity came to be.

And it is also necessary to point out that when that Christianity entered the European arena (Germanic Europe) it also went through significant modification.

I have noted previously that Immanuel Can's manoeuvre is to hop over all of this and, as an ultra-modern, turn back to the Hebrew-Essence version that he names *true Christianity*. He also can as a result declare all other Christianities false and deviant. Ultimatley, he desires (I think) to become a sort of Jewish Christian. And thus Christian Zionism can be examined from that perspective. The religious Torah Jew is his and their 'elder brother'. It is bizarre and not a little complex.
I think, however, that we legitimately do disagree in the sense that you object to the essentialist definition of Christianity: that Christianity is, in essence, the body of teachings of the man after whom the religion was named. Since you don't even view that man as an authority figure, this is necessarily the case, however, as I pointed out a while back in a post the rhetorical flourishes of which you both admired and found overdone, what you do in that manoeuvre is to gut the religion. Without Christ, there is no Christianity. That seems obvious to me. You, though, seem to seek a Christless Christianity. I find that kind of bizarre.
Christianity is much more -- much much more -- than the body of teachings of the figure Jesus Christ. I know that typical Christians see the figure of Jesus Christ, now returned to a *heaven-existence* (re-merged with God the Father I take it) from which he descended to Earth, as the focal point through which they receive God-influence, but yes, I regard that as 'story'. It is a pictorial representation that is needed so that people can hang 'belief' in such a way that it is believable.

But what happens when you subtract the 'picture'? Do the metaphysical truths just vaporize, as if they had no substantial existence?

I do note that many people do indeed see Jesus of Nazareth as the 'authority figure'. I acknowledge that. And I also notice that they imagine that when they are 'saved' that it is like God inserts into them a metaphysical-spiritual Apple AirTag. This tag then stays with them and 'justifies' them for all time. The Tag send up periodic blips to the Heavenly Divine Server and God sends down rays of help and succor to the soul stranded in a dangerous lower world.

I am not trying to be mocking, I am trying to be accurate. This is, in fact, how many Christians (especially Evangelicals) actually see it. That is, this is the 'picture' they work with.

If you 'believe in Christ' (and I don't think you do so our conversation on this theme has a bit of the absurd in it), I guess that 'without Christ there is no Christianity'. But my assertion is that -- and here I cite Johannine ideas -- the real 'truth' is that what is referred to as Jesus Christ is an eternal reality that is understood to be infused at a cosmic level into the very creation.

Clearly, I have been influenced by the likes of René Guénon who seeks out the 'background metaphysics'. He can therefore span the Christian tradition as well as the Vedic traditions and discern in them 'core metaphysical truths'. I do not see any way around this and especially for we moderns who are no longer capable of the same ease-of-belief that was possible in former times.
Last edited by Alexis Jacobi on Mon Aug 29, 2022 6:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Walker wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 5:55 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 5:52 pmIt has its own objective characteristics.
These characteristics are known
You're mixing epistemology with ontology.

What one "knows" and what "exists" are not identitcal. One "knows" only relatively. But what "exists" is absolute.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Walker wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 6:04 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 1:26 pm See John 15:18-19.
That prompted a reading of the whole chapter for context.
That's a very good idea.
I never read it before

Really? I'm surprised. It's an awfully important Christian discourse.
Walker
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Re: Christianity

Post by Walker »

Harry Baird wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 12:46 pm Let's talk about hair though. I have male pattern baldness. It totally sucks. Otherwise, my hair is shoulder length and my beard kicks butt. How about you?
I was thinking of a particular fair-haired Iconoclast, if you can integrate that without disruption to heady heights.
Walker
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 6:37 pm Really? I'm surprised. It's an awfully important Christian discourse.
Well, I may have read it without attention, as a youngster, before I put away childish things.

I would like to think the surprise is a positive affirmation of my commentary, as in wow, this dude "gets it." I think I picked up that getting it stuff from Roy, but as I recall from an ancient article, EST was also big on getting it, which is one of the few things I remember from the article. That, and the implicit suggestion that EST used tyrannical methods to force an awakening awareness of tyranny.

But, if I didn't get it and I'm wandering around in Christian left-field too ignorant to even know my straying from the proper interpretation according to Christian doctrine and tenets and such, I would consider it a Christian kindness to indulge my own ignorance for awhile and allow another to perhaps explore a fine-line of understanding that in fact, may parallel if not mirror my first impressions of the biblical chapter, an understanding which in all humbleness could conceivably change, as understanding of the unexperienced arrangement of pixels becomes more familiar, and contributes to shaping understanding of what's happening now *.


* public thinking
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Walker wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 7:00 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 6:37 pm Really? I'm surprised. It's an awfully important Christian discourse.
Well, I may have read it without attention, as a youngster, before I put away childish things.
Good heavens! You actually imagined that that discourse was a "childish thing"? :shock:

Well, better late than never, I guess. Time to read it seriously now, I would say. And maybe the only reason you missed it was that you were, at the time, a "youngster," and so didn't know the difference.

That discourse has absorbed theologians for centuries. There's a heck of a lot there.
Walker
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Re: Christianity

Post by Walker »

Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 7:18 pm
Walker wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 7:00 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 6:37 pm Really? I'm surprised. It's an awfully important Christian discourse.
Well, I may have read it without attention, as a youngster, before I put away childish things.
Good heavens! You actually imagined that that discourse was a "childish thing"? :shock:

Well, better late than never, I guess. Time to read it seriously now, I would say. And maybe the only reason you missed it was that you were, at the time, a "youngster," and so didn't know the difference.

That discourse has absorbed theologians for centuries. There's a heck of a lot there.
Well, I'm not exactly centuries old.

For all intents and purposes you may consider me an ignorant heathen at your disposal for honest feedback concerning proper Christian understanding of the bible.

Does the Christian reception detect any or all of the, "heck of a lot," in the form and/or content of these heathen transmissions?

:|
Walker
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Re: Christianity

Post by Walker »

Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 7:18 pm Good heavens! You actually imagined that that discourse was a "childish thing"? :shock:
Yikes, now I see how that sounds.

I meant no disrespect. What I meant was, I put away childish understanding and never read the chapter again, for whatever reason. Maybe because as a young adult I was working like a dog to keep body and soul together. When I was a child I lacked the capacity to comprehend, as I do now.

My sincere apologies.
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attofishpi
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 5:15 pm
attofishpi wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 4:26 pm Define SATAN.
The Hebrew term śāṭān (Hebrew: שָׂטָן) is a generic noun meaning "accuser" or "adversary",[7][8] and is derived from a verb meaning primarily "to obstruct, oppose".[9] In the earlier biblical books, e.g. 1 Samuel 29:4, it refers to human adversaries, but in the later books, especially Job 1-2 and Zechariah 3, to a supernatural entity.[8] When used without the definite article (simply satan), it can refer to any accuser,[10] but when it is used with the definite article (ha-satan), it usually refers specifically to the heavenly accuser, literally, the satan.[10]

--Source: Wikipedia.
What quotes from scripture do you have about SATAN/DEVIL - what terrible things did this dude do?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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Walker wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 7:28 pm For all intents and purposes you may consider me an ignorant heathen at your disposal for honest feedback concerning proper Christian understanding of the bible.
If you say so. I had the impression you had some knowledge of the specifics...but if you say so...
Does the Christian reception detect any or all of the, "heck of a lot," in the form and/or content of these heathen transmissions? :|
Well, let's start with this. John 15 is a middle part of a much longer narrative sequence, running from chapter 13-19, and a much more substantial piece of doctrine than is found practically anywhere else. On top of that, it is the final address given by Jesus Christ prior to His death, so it is accorded a status equivalent to what's called a "dying declaration" in court legal terms: that is, a super-serious bit of utterance, made all the more serious by the circumstances, which mitigate against frivilouos utterance.

So this is big and serious. And if one wants to know what Christianity teaches, it may not be the starting point, but it's certainly a major culminating point, since it outlines everything from the events immediately to follow, to Christ's own disposition toward His people, to the things impending following the Resurrection, and to things that have to do with the long term future of Christianity itself. And all of this, we have on first-hand utterance, transcribed by the very unassuming but closely involved person of John.

That's a big reason why we Christians take this passage very seriously.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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attofishpi wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 8:54 pm What quotes from scripture do you have about SATAN/DEVIL - what terrible things did this dude do?
Well, this guy's not exactly on the same page with me, but he gives a pretty good primer on the uses of that term in the Hebrew Scriptures. So if you want more, this is a place to start. He also gets into some of the remaining debate concerning this term, so you get a sense of what Christians are agreed on, and what they are still discussing. https://www.1517.org/articles/the-devil ... brew-bible.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Walker wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 7:28 pmFor all intents and purposes you may consider me an ignorant heathen at your disposal for honest feedback concerning proper Christian understanding of the bible.
Walker, I was going to offer you a place in my line for discipleship, but if after prayer and fasting *the spirit* moves you to tuck up under Immanuel's wing . . .I will accept it as the hand of Providence.

He is a harsh master however. 🙃
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 5:18 pm
Harry Baird wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 5:12 pm I am not sure how accurate this analysis of IC really is, so I'll simply say, "Maybe so; maybe not".
Alexis is feeling angry with me, because I shot his dog. :wink: 🦮🔫

I told him that speaking of "Christianity," while having no definition of what "Christianity" is, was futile. So he doesn't like me now.

But I can live with that. And it doesn't change any facts.
I propose that here, with this, you have a sheer lie. If it is true that such a lie is evil, then this is such a lie. This is not the truth. It is a lie (about my motives, my concerns, the reasons I have issues with certain expressions of Christianity).

What I say here, and this is important, is that when someone deliberately concocts a lie and disseminates it that they undermine their own position as a righteous intellect. As an upstanding participant in an important issue and conversation.

What I wish to suggest is that, and this is my own observation and conclusion, Immanuel regularly and consistently lies about the reason people oppose aspects of what he proposes. He says essentially:
"I am merely here as Jesus Christ's representative. I say what Jesus has said. If you oppose what I say you oppose Jesus Christ. And in just a little while you will be in hell suffering for it!"
That is it in a *nutshell*.

This fits, naturally, into the Christian scheme. If I oppose some aspect of Immanuel's doctrines, and of strictly interpreted theological Christianity, what am I doing? I am sataning (in the definition recently offered by a Wiki quote). If I oppose what Immanuel declares is right & true I am, according to the necessary logical of this style of Evangelical Christianity, opposing the truth. And what opposes Christianity's full ascent, full spread all around the world, to every man woman and child, is anti-Christian opposition.

You must bow down, you must bend your knee. If you do not do this you necessarily align yourself with the anti-christ.

It is a very convenient form of Hebrew mental imperialism. Now, what *happened* to me is something I think genuine and also organic: through a great deal of reading & study (consideration of varied and also opposing viewpoints) I conclude that this attitude cannot be right!

And what I oppose is the psychological orientation that makes such a mood and stance necessary and inevitable.

Further, right now and in our world Evangelical Christians have aligned, extremely perversely I believe, with terrestrial interests that manipulate people using Christian forms. Like "you are either with us or against us". The dimensions of this psychological manipulation seem quite extreme to me. Christianity has become a political tool for different forms of indoctrination, political control and manipulation. Unfortunately, most Evangelical Christians have become 'tools' in these processes.

Now, what happens is that so much of this (what I have referred to here generally and glossingly) completely turns many people off. And rightly so. And thus they push away what disgusts them. Also rightly so. Similarly, I am in a process of pushing away what disgusts me while very carefully working hard to preserve my 'conceptual links' to the Christian form. And I write about the way that I carry this out. Basically, I carry it out by attempting to isolate metaphysical principles that stand behind the Christian form. This should all be pretty obvious.

What I do is not un-creative and it is not destructive. And as you know Harry I am very concerned for those *acids* that eat away things that have tremendous value.
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