T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1253.1 | | SLBLUZ::CREWS | | Wed Aug 07 1996 18:43 | 8 |
| "Then Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, said to them: ...It is by the
name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified but whom God raised
from the dead, that this man stands before you healed. He [Jesus] is 'the
stone you builders rejected, which has become the cornerstone.'
Salvation is found in NO ONE ELSE, for there is no other name under
heaven given to men by which we must be saved." (Acts 4:8-12)
|
1253.2 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Wed Aug 07 1996 19:04 | 4 |
| Hmmm... does your Bible actually have those letters all capitalized?
Or have you taken it upon yourself to place emphasis where none
existed before?
|
1253.3 | | SLBLUZ::CREWS | | Wed Aug 07 1996 19:14 | 10 |
| > Hmmm... does your Bible actually have those letters all capitalized?
Is that the sum of what you got out of the passages?
> Or have you taken it upon yourself to place emphasis where none
> existed before?
The intent is one of highlighting (to make easily seen) not emphasis.
|
1253.4 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Psalm 85.10 | Wed Aug 07 1996 20:01 | 6 |
| .3
Highlighting is frequently done for the sake of emphasis. :-}
Richard
|
1253.5 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Wed Aug 07 1996 20:17 | 45 |
| Micheal, I admire your zeal in this. And I thank you for what I believe
is a sincere interest in the spiritual well being of others. Really!
I ask you to try to understand a couple things:
First, if I knew that the text in .0 and .1 are representative of the
truth, the REAL TRUTH, then I'd be a believer in a heartbeat. But the
problem is that these messages come from the bible, a text which I do
not accept as the absolute, unquestioned truth. With that, can you
understand why simply quoting these passages is not enough? You have
to answer questions like...
- Why should I believe these passages while apparently false passages
appear in the very same book? (Arks, Rivers of blood, living inside
whales, etc...)
- If some of the more fantastic passages in the bible should be taken
as symbolic, then why should not the ones you cited in .0? How
literally can one take .0?
- What did Jesus REALLY have to say? The gospels were written decades
after Jesus' life and by people who might have cause to be something
less than objective. How much truth is there in the rest of the NT
being written, as it was, by people who were even ferther removed from
Jesus' life and with an even more biased view of matters?
- Why should I discard a system of analyzing the world that works time
and time and time again in my everyday life? It tells me that water
will freeze when it gets too gold, it gave us medecine and automibiles
and a sense that at least some of the bible is exaggeration and/or
fabrication. What makes the bible (or biblical passages in .0) the
exception?
Of course all of this is moot if there's a faith in the bible as being
truth. I'd say that you'd be hard pressed to find someone who believes
that the bible is fact and is not a devout christian.
Second, in .0 you said "Just ask Him". I did. Many times over many
years. To some this would indicate that there's no one listening. But
I'm still very open minded about it.
-dave
|
1253.6 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu Aug 08 1996 09:24 | 51 |
| > Is that the sum of what you got out of the passages?
No. It's just that I've recently been accused of selectively
editing. It was on my mind. I wanted to show I was in good
(yes, that's you :-) company.
Actually, I think the name of this notes string should be renamed
to "The exclusivity of Christianity."
I must admit I have trouble with these phrases. Part of me believes
that they were spoken to the people present - that indeed to those
there then Jesus was the only way out of the morass of institutional
religion of the time.
But still....
For about two decades Christianity didn't speak to me at all. For
the first few years it was a dark time. I then connected with
a mystical psychic (no, she didn't have a 900 number, she was
a student). What she said made *so* much sense that it gave
me hope. A few years later I started to follow a yoga based
on Hinduism. This gave me an even deeper connection with God
and has helped me form much of my faith.
As time went on this yoga fell away from me and I had no formal
connection to a religious organization. Then I started checking
out churches. I looked until I found one that spoke to me. If
I didn't know what I already believed, it wouldn't have spoken
to me.
Ultimately, I've come to Christianity through Hinduism. Without
it I doubt it would have happened.
My point is, how can I damn a tradition as being from the devil
after it has helped me out of my darkness and ultimately into
a Christian congregation that I adore? There is real love, real
growth and real faith going on in other places than just Christianity.
What I *haven't* done is looked at the Bible and decided that,
because I don't believe parts of it are true, that I'll dicard
the whole thing.
If you had the power to define who could be a Christian and who
couldn't and said that a Christian had to believe the Bible in
its entirety then I don't think I could do it. But that still
wouldn't keep me from loving God, Christ and my fellow wo/man.
But then again, no one here is the final word on what Christainity
is and isn't.
Tom
|
1253.7 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:01 | 2 |
| then again, how can you lay claim to a faith that exludes anyone born
outside of India? It was never intended to be a universal religion.
|
1253.8 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:21 | 13 |
| > then again, how can you lay claim to a faith that exludes anyone born
> outside of India? It was never intended to be a universal religion.
err... huh?
My understanding of Hinduism is that they hold the belief that
*EVERYONE* is Hindu. All the other religions are just part of
Hinduism.
In Hinduism all those gods are just different aspects of the
same, single, God. Only the ignorant believe otherwise.
Tom
|
1253.9 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:28 | 3 |
| Not according to the historical roots of Brahmanism and Hinduism. Even
PBS has shown specials on the subject where Indians basically laugh at
anglos in India seeking enlightenment.
|
1253.10 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:38 | 10 |
| Some 18 years ago PBS had a series on about all the different
religions. The one on Hinduism was called "The 330 Million
Gods". I base my previous statement mostly on that documentary.
As far as Indians laughing at anglos, who ever said that
everyone who claims to practice a religion "has it right."
We can't even agree what Christianity *is* in this file. :-)
Tom
|
1253.11 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Aug 08 1996 17:56 | 29 |
| I'd be very very cautious of western interpretations of eastern
theologies and philosophies. The english language is often inadaquest
to express many of their ideas. The transpations into western terms are
often appauling to the point of being outright wrong. They are very
often misleading. Read some of Alan Watts books. He's a westerner who
understands eastern thought and does a good job of conveying the ideas
to westerners in english. You'll find that the explanations can be
lengthy and often indirect (as there are no direct translations for
much of it). Ideas are sometimes described as what they are NOT of
described as a feeling one might have. After a time, you get a sense
of what he's trying to say and an apreciation for the differences in
culture and philosophies.
I believe that what Tom said is true. The various "gods" Hindus
"worship" are just manifestations of the same one god. Here again,
the english word "god" and "worship" are VERY VERY misleading. Buddhists
do not worship the Buddha, they strive to become like him. Over the
years, statues were made and the various "flavors" of the Buddha came
into existence, but these were all peripheral and really unimportant.
The core philosophy has not changed.
Claiming that buddhists worship many gods would be akin to claiming
that christians worship 3 gods (Father, Son, Holy Spirit). The claim
is incorrect in both cases. Claiming that Buddhists worship statues
would be like claiming that christians worship statue (Virgin Mary,
Crucifix, angels...) Again, it's incorrect in both cases and
inconsistent with their founding philosophies.
-dave
|
1253.12 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Aug 08 1996 18:21 | 7 |
| The one god theory in Hinduism didn't appear until at the very end of
the Rig Veda (Book X, hymn 129). See "A New History of India" by
Stanley Wolpert (History Professor at UCLA). It's on Oxford University
Press, ISBN 0-19-507660-5. It's considered to be the best work on
historical India.
Mike
|
1253.13 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Aug 09 1996 12:23 | 10 |
| Again, the Buddha is not regarded as a god. He is not worshipped.
He's regarded as a man who attained what translates to "perfect
unexcelled complete awakewning". Achieving this state is what true
Buddhists strive for. They "try" to become like the Buddha ("try" is a
poor work do describe this). The Buddha is not regarded as a man who
had any sort of supernatural power. The notion of worshipping the Buddha
(in the same sense that a christian would worship God) is completely
inconsistent with everything I've read and heard on this subject.
-dave
|
1253.14 | more on Pureland Buddhism | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Aug 09 1996 15:18 | 17 |
| Dave, your information conflicts with what I've been exposed to. I've
just finished a whole semester on Asian Civilizations at a local major
university taught by secular professors. Buddha is worshiped and on a
grand scale. One only needs to see the temples and monuments built for
Buddha all over India, China, and Japan to see this.
As for Pureland Buddhism, it hit Japan in 1000 A.D. (China was a big
influence on much of ancient Japan). By the 12th century, Pureland was
more dominate than Zen. In Japan, it separated into 2 major sects
known as Shinran and Nichiren. Shinran Buddhism emphasizes *TOTAL*
faith in Buddha for salvation with nothing coming from yourself. Sort
of a Calvinist view of Buddhism. Nichiren focused on the Lotus
scriptures as the key for salvation. Parallels the accusations of the
traditional Christians in here. Nichirens started the tradition of
Buddhist priests marrying.
Mike
|
1253.15 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Aug 09 1996 16:41 | 59 |
| I can't speak to every sect. I can relate what I've read and heard and
most of that is in line with Zen or fundamental Buddhism. These regard
the Buddha as being just a man "in touch with God". I hate to use the
word "salvation" or "saved" because of the christian definitions they
will conjure. Other sects may indeed worship statues, icons, or even
the Buddha as a god. But then again, I've heard of people who pray
to saints at the fet of their statues, build churches in the name of
other saints, etc... . IOW, appearances can be deceiving.
The word "worship" is key here. To the west, it might mean something
like praising and/or recognizing a diety. But Buddhists "worship"
Buddha by recognizing him not as a diety, but a common man who was able
to attain complete awakening. The statues remind the buddhist of what
to strive to "become" (gulp! that word "become" is inexact 2-B-sure).
The temples are not a place for worship, but a place for personal
contemplation or practice in striving for a state of awakening.
"Prayers" (another real bad translation) are more like mantras or
mental aids one uses in meditation to dissolve away distractions.
From what I've gathered (and I'm not sure this belongs inthis note or
conf)...
By definition, "Enlightenment" cannot be defined with words because it
cannot be conceived as an idea (sound familiar?). It's a state of
being where the individual is in touch completely with his/her TRUE
nature. The false notions of ego and self have dissolved away leaving
the person living completely in the present, unfettered and
undistracted by random thoughts or ideas (sufficient for the day...).
Nirvana! Someone in this state practices unconditional love,
forgivness, contentment, sacrifice... all the things which christians
claim to be signs of the Holy Spirit. An enlightened person behaves
this way for the same reasons and with the same effort as you just
demonstrated in taking a breath a few seconds ago! You didn't think of
doing it, you just did it. It wasn't intentional, it just happened.
I'm probably stretching too far here, but it might be like "dissolving
into the body of God". It's claimed that all of this is possible for
anyone and that it's right there, in front of your nose (the kingdom of
heaven is at hand). Everything you've learned and all your best
efforts will not help you. You need to throw all that away and just
let it happen (born again). You don't have to DO anyting (grace).
Just let it happen (salvation).
(pardon my injections of parallels to christianity. to me, they're too
striking to ignore.)
It's claimed that the Buddha was enlightened, completely. He was the
first. He was and is regarded as an example, maybe a guide. Maybe
some worship him for that, I dunno. But, again, from what I've read
and heard, I think that the Buddha would discourage this sort of thing.
He did not regard himself as being a god. What people did with his
image after he died is, well, what THEY wanted to do I guess. There
seems to be a human desire to worship something (Ra, Zeus, Thor... )
and maybe some sects decided that Buddha was a good candidate for
worship.
Sorry for rambling.
-dave
|
1253.16 | enlightenment | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri Aug 09 1996 16:51 | 10 |
| > Sorry for rambling.
You got your point across.
One thing that bears mentioning here. The state of enlightenment
is the complete dissolution of the ego which entails absolute surrender
to God. This, at least, is what the Hindu guru tradition believes.
"Not my will, but Thine" taken to the extreme.
Tom
|
1253.17 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Aug 09 1996 16:53 | 1 |
| Thanks for the info, but I respectfully disagree.
|
1253.18 | better watch out! | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri Aug 09 1996 17:01 | 4 |
| > Thanks for the info, but I respectfully disagree.
Hey, if we keep using words like that we might actually
start being nice to each other.
|
1253.19 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Aug 09 1996 17:28 | 17 |
| Re .16 (Tom)
Yes, the dissolution of self/ego is key. And the more one TRIES to
do this, the more ONE will fail.
Re .17 (Mike)
All I can suggest is to consider that the text you read was tasked to
describe eastern culture in wester terms without having to go into all
the gory philosophical details. So naturally a temple will be equated
to a church where one worships, a statue of Buddha would equate him to
be a diety, and mantras will be equated to prayers. Those are the closest
english/western synonyms (how ever distant they may be) and the ones
that were used.
-dave
|
1253.20 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Aug 09 1996 17:41 | 2 |
| Dave, I don't think so. The instructor and text went out of their way
to clarify possible misconceptions like that.
|
1253.21 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Aug 09 1996 18:07 | 6 |
| Well, I haven't taken the course or read that particular text, so, I
respect your interpretation of both. Just saying that my understanding
on this stuff from my sources are very different. Different to the
point of being genuyinely dissimilar. Something's missing here.
-dave
|
1253.22 | | ALFSS1::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Tue Aug 13 1996 10:45 | 7 |
|
Hi Folks,
I was in Asia recently and regardless of what the texts say, Buddha was
worshiped in grand style - temples, prostrations, offerings, etc.
jeff
|
1253.23 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Psalm 85.10 | Tue Aug 13 1996 14:34 | 7 |
| .22
It is not what the founder intended. The same might be said about much
of Christianity, you will doubtlessly agree.
Richard
|
1253.24 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 13 1996 16:26 | 2 |
| Worship of the founder of Christianity is mandatory. Every knee will
bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is LORD.
|
1253.25 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Psalm 85.10 | Tue Aug 13 1996 19:52 | 9 |
| .24
Yes, Jesus is LORD.
I'm at a loss, though, to recall the verses quoting Jesus as mandating
that he be worshipped.
Richard
|
1253.26 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Aug 13 1996 20:15 | 11 |
| > Yes, Jesus is LORD.
>
> I'm at a loss, though, to recall the verses quoting Jesus as mandating
> that he be worshipped.
If Jesus is LORD, and the LORD God has mandated throughout scripture and
history that he be worshipped, then Jesus has mandated that he be worshipped.
That was Jesus in the burning bush.
/john
|
1253.27 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Psalm 85.10 | Tue Aug 13 1996 20:35 | 5 |
| And worship means ritual animal sacrifices as Jesus prescribed to his
chosen people in Leviticus, doesn't it?
Richard
|
1253.28 | This do | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Aug 13 1996 21:10 | 5 |
|
That was the type and shadow of the new sacrifice,
made by Jesus himself upon the Cross,
and made present, bloodlessly, in the rite he left his followers.
|
1253.29 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:01 | 1 |
| Jesus was also worshipped in the book of Revelation.
|
1253.30 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:32 | 4 |
|
And he was worshipped at his birth in the Gospel according to Matthew
by the men from the East.
|
1253.31 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Psalm 85.10 | Wed Aug 14 1996 15:35 | 12 |
| .30
> And he was worshipped at his birth in the Gospel according to Matthew
> by the men from the East.
Yes. The light is often most clearly seen by outsiders.
God must have forgotten to mandate his own worship while occupying Jesus'
skin.
Richard
|
1253.32 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:23 | 10 |
| Well, He never refused worship from people like all the prophets and
angels did. He had plenty of opportunities too. Look when He asked
the disciples, "Who do you say that I am?" (btw - nice play on words).
Peter unhesitatingly called Him the Messiah, yet Jesus never corrected
it because it was true. The Tanakh is full of passages calling for the
worship of the Messiah. Yet God also says not to worship anyone but
Him. Obviously, and the ancient rabbis taught this, the Messiah is a
physical manifestation of God.
Mike
|