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- Xref: sparky sci.skeptic:21953 alt.messianic:3821 talk.religion.misc:25002
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic,alt.messianic,talk.religion.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!blaze.cs.jhu.edu!jyusenkyou!arromdee
- From: arromdee@jyusenkyou.cs.jhu.edu (Ken Arromdee)
- Subject: Re: Will the -REAL- Christians please stand up? Was: What did Judas betray?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.202758.13949@blaze.cs.jhu.edu>
- Sender: news@blaze.cs.jhu.edu (Usenet news system)
- Organization: Johns Hopkins University CS Dept.
- References: <1993Jan1.185039.13759@hfsi.uucp> <1993Jan2.000003.16316@blaze.cs.jhu.edu> <1993Jan3.035433.18021@hfsi.uucp>
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 20:27:58 GMT
- Lines: 88
-
- In article <1993Jan3.035433.18021@hfsi.uucp> ata@hfsi.uucp (John Ata - FSO) writes:
- >>Every time I ask how you can tell what something is, since Christians don't
- >>seem to agree on it, you refer me to something else--and without fail, the
- >>something else has had exactly the same problem. This is another one. Just
- >>like you won't agree on "Christian", "core beliefs of Jesus", "what the
- >>gospels say", you won't agree on this one either: different groups of
- >>Christians will tell me that they "look at the actions in their context and
- >>totality" and come up with different answers. This response is no more useful
- >>than any of the other ones!
- >1) I gave you a clear, concise technical definition of what a
- >Christian was. If you choose to ignore it, what more can I do?
-
- You can give me a useful one?
-
- The definition you gave me is _totally_useless_. It requires that I make a
- decision on something that you yourself cannot agree on. If Christians cannot
- themselves get consistent answers when they "look at the actions in their
- context and totality", how do you expect me, not even a Christian, to do it?
-
- >>Well, I have no idea what the basic values of Jesus are (since when I take my
- >>best guess you tell me I'm wrong). So I suppose you must mean something like
- >>"which things have people fought over that they _thought_ were basic values
- >>of Jesus". In which case, things like which church's doctrine is the correct
- >>one, which religions should rule, whether Jesus should be worshipped at all,
- >>that sort of thing.
- >1) Which Church doctrine was the correct one - My favorite is the split
- >between the Eastern Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Church on the doctrinal
- >question of whether the Holy Spirit proceded from the Father AND Son, or just
- >from the Father. Of course, this wasn't the only reason for the split, but
- >it was the question of doctrine that was in hot contention. I won't answer
- >the question, but will leave it up to you to decide if the basic teachings
- >of Jesus were in question here.
-
- I have no idea what the basic teachings of Jesus are, so I cannot say if they
- were _really_ disputing basic teachings. But they certainly _thought_ they
- were. Any disagreement that produces a complete schism between churches
- looks pretty basic to me.
-
- >2) Which religion should rule - This has nothing to do with any of Jesus's
- >teachings and everything to do with power and control of men.
-
- Why of course. It is not a basic teaching of Jesus because it has nothing to
- do with any of Jesus's teachings. Circular.
-
- The churches did _think_ that it was a basic teaching of Jesus, when they
- fought over it.
-
- >3) Whether Jesus should be worshipped - so you mean the question of whether
- >Jesus was divine or not. I'm sure that there were people who held to the
- >negative, but do you know who they were and how much divisiveness this
- >teaching actually held? I don't see many Christian denominations today
- >teaching that Jesus was not divine, but perhaps you can let me know?
-
- No, I mean the issue of how non-worshippers should be dealt with. Christians
- don't disagree on whether or not Jesus was divine, mostly, but they do, or at
- least did, disagree on how to deal with people who refuse to worship him.
-
- >Even the simple teaching that murder is wrong has a lot
- >less than 99.9% following it since many people will allow murder under
- >different conditions which vary greatly from culture to culture as well as
- >from person to person. So again, which teaching do you know that has
- >virtual unaniminity.
-
- Despite your bluff here, there are a lot more people who agree about murder
- than who agree about Christianity. Go around and ask 100 people if they
- believe murder is wrong. Now ask 100 people what a Christian is. I'll bet
- you'll get a lot more agreement on the first one.
-
- >>Yes. According to the definition that you just spelled out, a torturer who
- >>is motivated by a sincere feeling of sympathy for someone's immortal soul is
- >>being "compassionate".
- >I think that you are making the assumption here that given:
- > It is desirable that people's actions be tempered with compassion.
- >that it necessarily follows that
- > All compassionate acts are right or desirable.
-
- The purpose of this definition was to define "compassionate" for the purpose
- of telling if someone is a real Christian by checking if they are
- compassionate. If not all compassionate acts are right or desirable, then your
- check seems to allow Inquisitors, for example, as "real Christians".
- --
- "On the first day after Christmas my truelove served to me... Leftover Turkey!
- On the second day after Christmas my truelove served to me... Turkey Casserole
- that she made from Leftover Turkey.
- [days 3-4 deleted] ... Flaming Turkey Wings! ...
- -- Pizza Hut commercial (and M*tlu/A*gic bait)
-
- Ken Arromdee (arromdee@jyusenkyou.cs.jhu.edu, arromdee@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu)
-