Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 6:08 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 5:47 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 4:44 pm
Well, as far as I'm concerned, you have "permission." In fact, I don't see any way somebody could even use a word
without having some idea of what domain of meaning that word covered. So if you say "Christian," and use that label for some group of people, I'm sure you must have some conception of what makes them all "Christians."
I found this definition: A Christian is someone whose behavior and heart reflects Jesus Christ. Followers of Jesus were first called “Christians” in Antioch....I have no idea when a heart reflects Jesus Christ, so I can only take the word of someone who claims to be a Christian.
It's a pretty poor definition, isn't it, when it doesn't even give you enough information to decide one single case. I'd keep looking.
I suppose I would keep looking were it important and it mattered.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:What I said is based on conversations I have heard; some where I was present, and others on TV, etc.
Oh. So you're just going with whatever casual conversation or the mass media tell you about being a Christian?
Yes.
What makes you think the people to whom you were listening even know?
Know what; that the events described in the Bible are not factually true, you mean? I don't suppose they do know. They just have an opinion based on their own judgement, just like you do.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:As for identifying someone as Christian, my only means of doing that is by accepting the word of those who make that claim.
That's about the weakest definition yet. Even secular scholars of religion reject the "self-definition" criterion...
I'm not a scholar of religion, and thus not bound by their rules.
and not just in the case of Christians, but in any other ideology or religion as well. It just doesn't work. It's far too broad to be telling of anything.
But what the followers of any ideology believe is quite trivial to none followers, so I don't see any harm in a bit of self-defining. If someone believes in God, and they value what are generally accepted as Christian principles, isn't that all that really matters? I tend to think it is.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:I daresay there are many who would object to being stripped of the title, "Christian", by you, but that's not my concern.
Nor mine.
Nor theirs, beyond mere objection.
Nor do I concern myself with a man who wants the title "woman," and has been "stripped of it."
Actually, you seem to be concerned with men saying they are women a little more than seems healthy. It makes me wonder if you have been the unwitting victim of some kind of deception in the past that led to an alarming and embarrassing outcome.
Likewise, why should you or I cry over somebody who merely wanted the title "Christian" for some reason, but never bothered to consider what it takes to be one?
What does it take to be one? Does a proper Christian have to truly believe that Adam was the first human being, and was created as a fully formed adult by God? Does he have to believe that Noah built a boat and populated it with two of every living creature? I really hope you address that question, because I am very curious to see how you avoid answering it.