You got it wrong.godelian wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 2:05 amAs I have pointed out already, Christian doctrine has little to do with Christ or his ministry.attofishpi wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 1:41 am Christian doctrine is formed via the life of Christ per Gospel scripture. Clergy (men making up shite to other men) have sweet FA to do with what is ACTUAL Christianity.
Provide Gospel scripture where Christ is insisting on people killing each other.
That is ACTUAL Christianity, as it ACTUALLY exists today, for the vast majority of Christians.
What you are advocating, i.e. a branch of Christianity solely based on the Gospels, does not even exist in mainstream Christianity:The question is whether that would even be compatible with the ministry of Christ, who was first and foremost a Jew, and a staunch adherent of the original Jewish scriptures. What you are advocating, sounds pretty much like "abolishing the law", which is certainly not something that Christ was a supporter of.ChatGPT: A branch of Christianity solely based on the Gospels
A branch of Christianity solely based on the Gospels would focus exclusively on the teachings and life of Jesus as recorded in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. While no major Christian denomination adheres strictly only to the Gospels, some movements emphasize them above all other scriptures. Here are a few examples:
1. Red Letter Christianity – This movement prioritizes the words of Jesus (often printed in red in some Bibles) over other biblical texts. It focuses on Jesus' teachings about love, justice, and social issues.
2. Gospel-Only Christians – Some independent believers or small groups reject the Old Testament and even parts of the New Testament outside the four Gospels, arguing that Jesus' direct teachings are sufficient for salvation and Christian living.
3. Some Sects of Christadelphians and Other Restorationists – Some restorationist groups emphasize Jesus' teachings and may downplay or reinterpret the Old Testament and Pauline letters.
4. Certain Liberal or Progressive Christian Movements – Some progressive Christian groups focus almost entirely on Jesus' ethical teachings while disregarding other biblical texts that they see as outdated or contradictory.
If you were to establish a formal branch of Christianity based solely on the Gospels, it might reject Pauline theology, Old Testament law, and later church doctrines, focusing entirely on Jesus’ words and actions. Would you be interested in exploring what such a faith would look like in practice?
If you intend to abolish the Jewish Torah, your views are very much divorced from what Christ himself advocated.
Concerning the use of force, you will find that the Jewish Torah is not pacifist at all:
...
As a keeper of Jewish law, Christ was not a pacifist. On the contrary, he refused to change even one letter to Jewish law or to the Torah.
The use of force is not necessarily wrong in itself. Social order in human society actually depends on it. After all these centuries, we still have a police that will not hesitate to enforce societal rules. Violence is therefore a necessary ingredient of human reality. It needs to be regulated but that is exactly what the religious scriptures do. I do not believe in pacifism, if only because it is not compatible with human nature and the reality of human society.
You have committed a fallacy of conflation between the "essence of Christianity" and those who think they are practicing it accordingly.
The essence of Christianity is grounded on Christ and the Gospels only via John 3:16, where to be a Christian-proper a believer must enter into a covenant [NEW] with Christ/God; the covenantee therefrom must comply with all the terms of the covenant which is confined to the Gospels.
The point is Christianity is leveraged on the offer of Christ/God as in John 3:16 and elsewhere.
The overriding maxims of the covenant is pacifist.
As above, ChatGpt confirm there are Christians who focus solely on the Gospels.
That what is supposedly mainstream 'Christianity' does not focus SOLELY on the Gospels, does not absolve Christians [as covenanted] from the need to comply with the terms of the covenant with reference to John 3:16 in the Gospels.
While the majority of Christianity Institution do not focus solely on the Gospels, the majority [say 90%] of Christians are well aware of the need to comply with the pacifist maxim and they do comply with it implicitly or intuitively, i.e. they do not kill non-believers.
It is only the minority 10% [200 millions] who are ignorant that they are covenanted and thus likely to commit evil acts against the covenanted pacifist laws.
The point here is, ignorance is no defense on Judgment Day where God is omniscient, all knowing.
On Judgment Day, those who committed evil acts against the pacifist maxims as covenanted would have committed sins. It is then up to God to forgive them with grace if their 'evil' acts are justified, e.g. the Crusader did it for the greater good of the religion.
Jesus was a Jew, but he was sent by God to deliver and preach a NEW Covenant which is pacifistic thus abrogating the Old covenant in the Torah.
You have committed a fallacy of conflation between the "essence of Christianity" and those who think they are practicing it accordingly.
Therefore, Christianity proper as grounded on the Gospels only is not violent.
On the other hand, Islam is inherently evil and violent because the Quran has terms where Muslims are compelled [as covenanted] to commit evil acts upon non-believers as obligated in their covenant with Allah, where the terms of the covenant are confined to the Quran.
What is frightening is, if only 10% are evil prone, that is a whopping 150-200 millions