canajan, eh?
Oct 20 2006, 07:37 PM
Jesus here.
Look. Here’s the deal. The Jesus all of you (well, most of you) profess to admire tried with all his might to start a new faith tradition, and this same Jesus was a tough, no-nonsense, highly educated, literate scientist who believed in an entirely different God than the God of the Old Testament. Those of you who have pulled away from the dogmatic religions you grew up in can surely grasp the idea that a similarly intelligent, literate, dedicated individual could pull away from the religion of his ancestors. It should not be hard to imagine that just as you pick and choose the best spiritual notions from many faiths, so could I. And so I did. I retained from Judaism only the most loving aspects, and I ditched the rest, just as so many of you have ditched values that don’t sit right with your souls. My mother was furious with me. Furious. Many of you have similar problems. What, you think because I was ripping apart ancient religious customs that my family would lift me up on their shoulders and celebrate me? You think adoring throngs greeted me at the gates of Jerusalem? No way, Jose. I was a shit-disturber, a muckraker, a disturber of smug racial superiority. I stepped on too many toes to count. I had a vision of God as being a He and a She, a divine and loving Father and Mother, who would no more put any of their children into hellfire than darken the sun. And I stopped talking about Chosen People, because I didn’t believe there were any. What, no covenant with Abraham? Right. No covenant. And no desire to celebrate a horrific calamity that took the lives of innocent Egyptian children, an event ostensibly engineered by God and God’s angels.
Bring on the Sabbath. I love the idea of a day of rest and spiritual reflection. Bring on the code of hand-washing before meals. It’s a great public health measure. Let’s have the idea of devotion to God, to service, to charity, and to law. All these things I embraced. But I had opinions – very strong opinions. And I acted on those opinions. Notice that I did not choose a holy place, and sit in it, waiting to be worshipped. I walked. And walked. And walked. I taught. I sang. I healed. And I did not stop till they dragged me away.
I did not choose a holy place. How many of you have noticed how radical this was? I did not brag to others of my personal wealth, but made all feel they were my divine equals . . . because they were my divine equals. Women, men, children. Jews. Gentiles. Wealthy. Impoverished. Enslaved. Healthy. Sick. The God I believed in (and still do) loved all these people equally.
I ask you to please be realistic about the hardships and problems of my ministry. Ninety-nine out of a hundred people didn’t believe a word I said. It’s no different today.
Walking a path of radical equality side by side with our Mother and Father takes guts.
Love Jesus
October 20, 2006
Blessed be, O beloved Mother and Father
JosephM
Oct 21 2006, 10:47 AM
Hello All,
It seems to me that a great error has been made when the Old Testament was incorporated as part of the New. Perhaps much of the Old testament was written by the Ego of Man that tries to make itself a God and therefore defined God as the Ego of mind attributing to God things that are only attributale to the mind of man. The New covenant on the other hand is based on a changing of thinking that sees a nature in man contrary to the nature of God and its defeat attainable only by a return to ones first Love.
It seems to me that even when a man writes a New last will and Testament, he is wise enough to tear up and destroy the Old to avoid confusion. Religion for whatever reason has failed to do this and is now in conflict over it. Old wine and new wine do not mix well.
Love in Christ,
JM
MOW
Oct 21 2006, 07:51 PM
Hi Joseph and Jen:
I agree with both of you totally. However I remember reading in the book," Lost Christianities" by Bart Ehrmann something that I hadn't ever considered. One of the reasons some the early Jesus movements thought it was necessary to link the Hebrew Bible(Old Testament) to the Christian religion was to make it appear "ancient". According to Ehrmann, people in the Roman era valued the new in things like military strategy , technology etc. But in religion , it was the old that was valued. . If a religion was recent and true , then why was it not known long ago ,the reasoning would go . How come Aristotle didn't know about,or Plato ,or Homer. By linking to the Hebrew writings ,Christians could trace their religion all the way back to Creation.
According to my readings, that's why the Christian Bible changes the order of the books of the Old Testament to end with Malachi instead of Chronicles. Malachi ends with a prophesy about God sending the prophet Elijah to the people ,who could seen as John the Baptist in the New Testament writings.
Nevertheless don't get me wrong. I agree with you both.
MOW
JosephM
Oct 21 2006, 09:43 PM
QUOTE(MOW @ Oct 21 2006, 08:51 PM)

Hi Joseph and Jen:
I agree with both of you totally. However I remember reading in the book," Lost Christianities" by Bart Ehrmann something that I hadn't ever considered. One of the reasons some the early Jesus movements thought it was necessary to link the Hebrew Bible(Old Testament) to the Christian religion was to make it appear "ancient". According to Ehrmann, people in the Roman era valued the new in things like military strategy , technology etc. But in religion , it was the old that was valued. . If a religion was recent and true , then why was it not known long ago ,the reasoning would go . How come Aristotle didn't know about,or Plato ,or Homer. By linking to the Hebrew writings ,Christians could trace their religion all the way back to Creation.
According to my readings, that's why the Christian Bible changes the order of the books of the Old Testament to end with Malachi instead of Chronicles. Malachi ends with a prophesy about God sending the prophet Elijah to the people ,who could seen as John the Baptist in the New Testament writings.
Nevertheless don't get me wrong. I agree with you both.
MOW
Greetings Mow,
Yes, Perhaps what you say had a great influence on the decision. It seems things like that happen when the politically 'religious' get involved. Sometimes we become more concerned with appearances, what is politically correct, and our concerns on how truth will be received rather than to let truth speak for itself.
Love in Christ,
JM
canajan, eh?
Oct 22 2006, 07:38 AM
Hi Joseph, Hi MOW,
Thanks for your thoughts.
MOW, I had to smile sadly when you wrote: "But in religion , it was the old that was valued. . If a religion was recent and true , then why was it not known long ago ,the reasoning would go ." I'm not sure this tendency has changed.
Interesting that you mention Aristotle, Plato, and Homer. My son is taking a Philosophy of Ethics course at university, and just had a mid-term on Aristotle. He keeps wondering why he has to study philosophers who died over 2300 years ago when there are, in his view, much wiser, more compassionate modern philosophers like Victor Frankl. Even many of today's fiction writers "get it" at a deeper level than Plato or Aristotle did.
You kinda have to love Homer, though, for getting the whole soap opera/adventure genre going. How could there be Lost today without the granddaddy of all bizarre, nail biting adventures, The Odyssey, umpteen centuries ago?
Love Jen
rivanna
Oct 25 2006, 08:31 AM
Joseph, canajen,
I'm kind of surprised that you would say that the Old Testament shouldn't have been "incorporated" into the new...it was the other way around, for one thing. Would you want to leave out the Psalms? Isaiah? Job? Ecclesiastes?
Marcus Borg and all Progressive theologians I ever heard of, are thoroughly convinced that Jesus' teachings were meant to be seen in contrast to the history of the scriptures. We need to understand what he was trying to change and what he was trying to keep about his context. So many sayings of Christ's echo the prophecies. The same God that tried to relate to his people in the first part of the bible, is the one who finally found the way to relate to them in the second. There are two "voices" that run through both testaments, one of conventional wisdom and one of radical wisdom.
I know very little about Judaism myself, and don't read the OT much because it does contain so much violence and long-discarded petty rules etc. (I do love Psalms though.) It's like keeping history books so we won't re-create history --[e.g. Viet Nam--?!] Sometimes I think people reject the OT and the whole Jewish aspect of Jesus because they are angry at what's happening in the middle east. We don't have to make that type of mental association though.
Mystical Seeker
Oct 25 2006, 12:02 PM
Jesus was a devout, practicing Jew. His prophetic religious message was very much in the tradition of the great Hebrew prophets. To take away the Hebrew scriptures would be to remove the context and the religion that Jesus was a part of.
Some of the most poignant, prophetic messages are found in the Old Testament. Turning swords into plowshares? That's in the Old Testament. Let justice flow like waters? That's in Old Testament, too. 23rd Psalm? Old Testament. That doesn't mean that everything in the Old Testament is admirable--obviously that isn't the case. But it does provide a record of an ancient people's efforts at understanding God, and as such it can be instructive and informative, just as the New Testament also provides a record of attempts after the life of Jesus to make sense of their experience of his life and death and teachings. The Old Testament is full of wonderful creation myths, great stories, interpretative histories of a monotheistic nation, erotic poetry (Song of Songs), musings on the meaning of life and suffering (Job and Ecclesiastes), and prophetic messages against injustice (Amos, Isaiah, and so forth). The Old Testament can be appreciated with a critical eye, and I think it is of immense value.
mystictrek
Oct 25 2006, 02:54 PM
Include me in the pro-Hebrew Scripture camp. The Hebrew scripture is inspirational and illuminating throughout with a few errors here and there like all scripture. It allows us to connect with an epic tradition going back 3000 years now. The Creation, Adam & Eve, The Burning Bush, Exodus, Prophets, Wisdom, Psalms. I love the Hebrew scriptures as did Jesus.
It does not need to be taken literally as some do. Its authority is found in its major themes and not in individual verses often taken totally out of context.
If each verse was seen as law, like a constitution, then some amendments would certainly be needed. Perhaps we can see the amendments in the Christian scripture and in the dynamic continuing tradition of the church as well as other wisdom traditions which are beginning to be integrated into ours.
This can not happen where and when people take the scripture literally. Like Borg says, we need to see it as historical, metaphorical and sacramental.
JosephM
Oct 25 2006, 10:31 PM
QUOTE(rivanna @ Oct 25 2006, 09:31 AM)

Joseph, canajen,
I'm kind of surprised that you would say that the Old Testament shouldn't have been "incorporated" into the new...it was the other way around, for one thing. Would you want to leave out the Psalms? Isaiah? Job? Ecclesiastes?
(snip)
Hi rivanna, mystictrek, and mystical seeker,
Thanks for your comments. To clarify I must say that both Psalms and Proverbs are very inspiring books and are excellent books for any religion and are included in many small New Testament Bibles I have seen. There is no doubt here that many of the stories in the Old Testament can be inspiring but the problem is that much of the Old Testament in my view paints a picture of God that is totally inaccurate and can be a stumbling block to Christians. It seems to me the New Testament contains the most accurate data and though it appears and seems to flow from the Old it details a God subject to the emotions and fraility of men which has been shown to me to be in error.
Things like God being jealous, demanding blood sacrifices, getting angry, being vengeful, having enemies, tempting people, changing his mind and ordering the death of men, woman, children and animals and a host of other ego attributes of men just do not fit into what God has revealed to me of himself nor does it agree with the majority of teachings of Jesus from the Gospels.
I respect all of your opinions as your current belief and your right to believe as you choose. I can detail individual writings for you that make my point but it is not my purpose to force my view upon you. Instead I pray that God will continue revealing himself to you daily and that your understanding of the spiritual things of God grows each day. Also I thank God for each of you and for any knowledge you have freely shared with me. If I am in error perhaps God will use you to bless me with your revelation of him.
Love in Christ,
JM
mystictrek
Oct 26 2006, 09:32 AM
QUOTE(JosephM @ Oct 25 2006, 11:31 PM)

Things like God being jealous, demanding blood sacrifices, getting angry, being vengeful, having enemies, tempting people, changing his mind and ordering the death of men, woman, children and animals and a host of other ego attributes of men just do not fit into what God has revealed to me of himself nor does it agree with the majority of teachings of Jesus from the Gospels.
We are evolving. The ancients figured out a lot and speculated a lot and made errors a lot. So do we!
If anything I would add some of the Greek epics and Hindu epics and the Qur'an and the Tao Te Ching and many Zen koans and Native American stories and more to the Bible and not take anything away from it. The more contradictions, the better!
Mystical Seeker
Oct 26 2006, 11:06 AM
QUOTE(JosephM @ Oct 25 2006, 08:31 PM)

much of the Old Testament in my view paints a picture of God that is totally inaccurate and can be a stumbling block to Christians.
True, but the Old Testament can also be a wonderful inspiration to Christians as well. I think that the Bible has a complex picture of the God that reflects the evolving culture and times of the people who produced it. Some of the Bible, including the Hebrew scriptures, can be a stumbling block; but some can be an inspiration to Christians. One of the Biblical passages that is identified with Martin Luther King comes from the prophetic book of Amos--in the Old Testament--which talks about letting justice flow like water.
The prophetic tradition of the Old Testament is full of language that condemns social injustice. The social justice tradition within the Old Testament helps to explain why Judaism has so often had a strong social justice component. Jesus himself, I would argue, was part and parcel of that Jewish social justice tradition by resisting the what Marcus Borg calls the "domination system" of the Roman Empire in his vision of replacing the Kingdom of Caesar with the Kingdom of God. Jesus's teachings and life were clearly informed by the Jewish religion that he practiced.
If we let ourselves be fettered by literalism, it is true that the Bible can sometimes be difficult to appreciate. But I strongly recommend that anyone who takes a negative attitude towards the Old Testament read Marcus Borg's book,
Reading the Bible Again For the First Time. Once we free ourselves from literalism, we can learn to appreciate the postive messages in both of the Christian testaments and not let ourselves be hampered by the negative passages.
JosephM
Oct 26 2006, 11:44 AM
QUOTE(Mystical Seeker @ Oct 26 2006, 12:06 PM)

True, but the Old Testament can also be a wonderful inspiration to Christians as well. I think that the Bible has a complex picture of the God that reflects the evolving culture and times of the people who produced it. Some of the Bible, including the Hebrew scriptures, can be a stumbling block; but some can be an inspiration to Christians. One of the Biblical passages that is identified with Martin Luther King comes from the prophetic book of Amos--in the Old Testament--which talks about letting justice flow like water.
The prophetic tradition of the Old Testament is full of language that condemns social injustice. The social justice tradition within the Old Testament helps to explain why Judaism has so often had a strong social justice component. Jesus himself, I would argue, was part and parcel of that Jewish social justice tradition by resisting the what Marcus Borg calls the "domination system" of the Roman Empire in his vision of replacing the Kingdom of Caesar with the Kingdom of God. Jesus's teachings and life were clearly informed by the Jewish religion that he practiced.
If we let ourselves be fettered by literalism, it is true that the Bible can sometimes be difficult to appreciate. But I strongly recommend that anyone who takes a negative attitude towards the Old Testament read Marcus Borg's book, Reading the Bible Again For the First Time. Once we free ourselves from literalism, we can learn to appreciate the postive messages in both of the Christian testaments and not let ourselves be hampered by the negative passages.
Hi mystical seeker,
Your analysis sounds valid to me. Yet for many Christians that are in literalism or have a belief that the Bible is more than just an inspired writing (believe it is literally the word of God) or that it is inerrant, it can be a real stumbling block and is. The New Testsment plus Psalms and Proverbs are more than sufficient for the Christian walk and there are many other books more accurate than the Old Testament concerning God and the spiritual life in my view. So why bother to inclusde it as a requirement to believe?
If you are not fettered by literalism as a Christian , it seems to me you are among a minority. The elements of the Niocene creed is required by many churches as a requirement to be called a Christian. Just because we can find some wisdom in parts of the Old Testament is perhaps an irrational justification to accept it as an integral part of Truth which of course is not found in any pages of a book.
Just some thoughts for consideration
Love in Christ,
JM
Mystical Seeker
Oct 26 2006, 01:20 PM
QUOTE(JosephM @ Oct 26 2006, 09:44 AM)

Hi mystical seeker,
Your analysis sounds valid to me. Yet for many Christians that are in literalism or have a belief that the Bible is more than just an inspired writing (believe it is literally the word of God) or that it is inerrant, it can be a real stumbling block and is. The New Testsment plus Psalms and Proverbs are more than sufficient for the Christian walk and there are many other books more accurate than the Old Testament concerning God and the spiritual life in my view. So why bother to inclusde it as a requirement to believe?
If you are not fettered by literalism as a Christian , it seems to me you are among a minority. The elements of the Niocene creed is required by many churches as a requirement to be called a Christian. Just because we can find some wisdom in parts of the Old Testament is perhaps an irrational justification to accept it as an integral part of Truth which of course is not found in any pages of a book.
Just some thoughts for consideration
Love in Christ,
JM
Some of the Psalms are magnificent, but many Psalms also invoke a vengeful God, or pray to a God of history who was intimately involved in Israel's fate as a nation, and in many cases these don't correspond to my view of God. But I find that I can overlook some of these aspects and appreciate them anyway for what they are. And Proverbs is, in my view, a mixed bag. Its praise of divine Wisdom (Sophia) makes for interesting theology, but the general tenor of the book is to suggest that if we all just do the right things, then our lives will be fruitful. That is why I like Ecclesiastes better than Proverbs. The author of Ecclesiastes is basically saying in response to Proverbs, "Hey, wait a minute! Good things happen to bad people and bad things happen to good people. It isn't as simple as you claim!" And so for me, Ecclesiastes is often more mature theologically than Proverbs is. And the book of Job, depressing and difficult in its theodicy as it is, also raises questions about whether the book of Proverbs is a bit simplistic in its view of the way the world is ordered.
Also, speaking for myself, I don't care for everything in the New Testament either. There are sexist passages in some of the Pauline and deutero-Pauline epistles, for example. To me, you have to regard all of the Bible with a critical eye, look at the historical circumstances that lay behind the writing of each of its components, and recognize the humanity that also lay behind the people who wrote them. The book of Revelation, with its own vengeful image of God and its images of a "lake of fire" is counterbalanced by its optimism and hope. I think the goal of progressive Christianity should be to encourage people to view the Bible with a more critical and mature level of appreciation. The Bible--New Testament and Old--is an imperfect work. Once we recognize that, we can learn to better appreciate it, in my view.
The Nicene Creed isn'
JosephM
Oct 26 2006, 01:37 PM
Thanks for your insightful input mystical seeker.
Love in Christ,
Jm
jamesAMDG
Oct 26 2006, 10:15 PM
This hasn't been touched on yet by anyone but Jesus did self-identify with God the Father (ie: God as the Jews understood Him through the OT), He referred to His fulfilling of OT prophecies about the Messiah (this is a theme which Paul develops quite well) and His crucifixion took place during the Passover, when the Jews traditionally offered a lamb in sacrifice to God and thanked Him for their deliverance from the bondage of Egypt. After all, this is why Jesus is called "The Lamb of God" by Saint John the Baptist.
And of course, all the earliest converts were Jews who saw the fulfillment of the OT covenants in Jesus. Surely the historical writings, and backgrounds, of the earliest Christians are necessary in considering this question.
mystictrek
Oct 27 2006, 09:40 AM
QUOTE(JosephM @ Oct 26 2006, 12:44 PM)

If you are not fettered by literalism as a Christian , it seems to me you are among a minority. The elements of the Niocene creed is required by many churches as a requirement to be called a Christian. Just because we can find some wisdom in parts of the Old Testament is perhaps an irrational justification to accept it as an integral part of Truth which of course is not found in any pages of a book.
Several responses:
1. You can take the Nicene Creed historically and metaphorically and sacramentally (Borg) as well as the Scriptures.
2. I think a Progressive Christianity which takes scripture and doctrine historically and metaphorically and sacramentally (Borg) is a minority now but could emerge as a majority if we worked at it. I would really love to see PCs get evangelical because we really do have the Good News.
3. The Daily Lectionary is currently going through the Book of Revelation. If you take this book literally, you are really into a vengeful and violent God as many literalists are IMO. Should we amend the Christian Scriptures to elimate this whole book or some of it?
4. As I said yesterday I can think of all kinds of great wisdom literature from many wisdom traditions which we should add to the Bible as we create a new global, integrated faith. There is no need to remove anything if we can see it all as the best attempts of humans in their contexts to understand God. Let's add good stuff!
JosephM
Oct 27 2006, 10:12 AM
QUOTE(mystictrek @ Oct 27 2006, 10:40 AM)

Several responses:
1. You can take the Nicene Creed historically and metaphorically and sacramentally (Borg) as well as the Scriptures.
2. I think a Progressive Christianity which takes scripture and doctrine historically and metaphorically and sacramentally (Borg) is a minority now but could emerge as a majority if we worked at it. I would really love to see PCs get evangelical because we really do have the Good News.
3. The Daily Lectionary is currently going through the Book of Revelation. If you take this book literally, you are really into a vengeful and violent God as many literalists are IMO. Should we amend the Christian Scriptures to elimate this whole book or some of it?
4. As I said yesterday I can think of all kinds of great wisdom literature from many wisdom traditions which we should add to the Bible as we create a new global, integrated faith. There is no need to remove anything if we can see it all as the best attempts of humans in their contexts to understand God. Let's add good stuff!
Hi mystictrek,
1. Yes
2. Yes, but..... actually everyone has the good news. They just are not quite ready for it.

It seems one has to grow tired of that which goes nowhere first.... to find that which is already present. Perhaps Evangelists will appear when it is time.
3. Yes.... Why not eliminate it? It is only a side track and detour for most Christians in my view.
4. Yes, it seems true to me that there are many great wisdom literatures in the world. However, please excuse me if I do not share in any attempt to create a new global integrated religion.
There seems to me to be enough of them. Truth is everywhere and perhaps less religion and more Love is better.
Just some thoughts to consider.
JosephM
Oct 27 2006, 10:38 AM
QUOTE(jamesAMDG @ Oct 26 2006, 11:15 PM)

This hasn't been touched on yet by anyone but Jesus did self-identify with God the Father (ie: God as the Jews understood Him through the OT), He referred to His fulfilling of OT prophecies about the Messiah (this is a theme which Paul develops quite well) and His crucifixion took place during the Passover, when the Jews traditionally offered a lamb in sacrifice to God and thanked Him for their deliverance from the bondage of Egypt. After all, this is why Jesus is called "The Lamb of God" by Saint John the Baptist.
And of course, all the earliest converts were Jews who saw the fulfillment of the OT covenants in Jesus. Surely the historical writings, and backgrounds, of the earliest Christians are necessary in considering this question.
Hello James,
The present day record is as you say. But perhaps it is not even necessary to consider the question from a spiritual standpoint. When one receives the New, why is it then necessary to consider the Old which was but a shadow of the New? Is God an intellectual understanding found in theology or is God a living Spirit to be experienced by his own?
Mystical Seeker
Oct 27 2006, 10:57 AM
QUOTE(mystictrek @ Oct 27 2006, 07:40 AM)

Several responses:
1. You can take the Nicene Creed historically and metaphorically and sacramentally (Borg) as well as the Scriptures.
Something I meant to point out in my earlier posting and I somehow ended it in mid-sentence was to note that the Nicene Creed is not in the New Testament. It is a formulation that came long after the books in the New Testament was written.
I know that Borg has no problem reciting the Nicene Creed in church. I just can't see it the way Borg does. A creed is, as I see it, by definition an affirmation of what one believes. To me, a creed is a lot different than a myth or story or biblical narrative, and I have a hard time treating it metaphorically as I might many of the passages that are in the Bible. To say that "this is what I believe" and not believe it seems to defeat the point of the creed in the first place. I realize that there is wiggle room in interpretation of what a creed really means, but I still think that if you are going to assert formally what you believe, it should be a literal formulation; otherwise, you are using the wrong formulation. Anyway, that's my take on it, and that is why I do not recite the Nicene creed.
DCJ
Oct 27 2006, 10:59 AM
QUOTE(JosephM @ Oct 27 2006, 10:38 AM)

Is God an intellectual understanding found in theology or is God a living Spirit to be experienced by his own?
Yes.
In order to have a genuine relationship with someone, you not only must experience him relationally, but you must get to know things
about him. It's not really a relationship if you experience someone without knowing anything about him, is it? In the same way, God has revealed certain things about himself so that we may know about him, and he also enters into intimate fellowship with his people.
JosephM
Oct 27 2006, 02:32 PM
QUOTE(DCJ @ Oct 27 2006, 11:59 AM)

Yes.
In order to have a genuine relationship with someone, you not only must experience him relationally, but you must get to know things about him. It's not really a relationship if you experience someone without knowing anything about him, is it? In the same way, God has revealed certain things about himself so that we may know about him, and he also enters into intimate fellowship with his people.
Hello DCJ,
Actually, since you ask, it seems to me that, yes it is a relationship without 'knowing about' God. In my view, to 'know about' is not to know at all. To know God is to be One with God and that cannot be done intellectually. Reasoning is as far as the intellect can go. God is beyond the intellect and can only be experienced. Only a cat can know a cat. You can know 'about the cat' but that is not the same as being the cat. Jesus said you can not even see the kingdom of God unless you are born again. He said he was one with the Father and that we who believe could also be one with the Father. That is a relationship and it must be in Spirit which is beyond the bounds of 'knowing about' which is of the flesh. That which is spirit is spirit and that which is flesh is flesh. Just a view to consider concerning your response.
mystictrek
Oct 28 2006, 11:11 AM
QUOTE(Mystical Seeker @ Oct 27 2006, 11:57 AM)

Something I meant to point out in my earlier posting and I somehow ended it in mid-sentence was to note that the Nicene Creed is not in the New Testament. It is a formulation that came long after the books in the New Testament was written.
I know that Borg has no problem reciting the Nicene Creed in church. I just can't see it the way Borg does. A creed is, as I see it, by definition an affirmation of what one believes. To me, a creed is a lot different than a myth or story or biblical narrative, and I have a hard time treating it metaphorically as I might many of the passages that are in the Bible. To say that "this is what I believe" and not believe it seems to defeat the point of the creed in the first place. I realize that there is wiggle room in interpretation of what a creed really means, but I still think that if you are going to assert formally what you believe, it should be a literal formulation; otherwise, you are using the wrong formulation. Anyway, that's my take on it, and that is why I do not recite the Nicene creed.
I guess I see the creed as simply a good summation of the myth we have embraced and nothing more.
QUOTE(JosephM @ Oct 27 2006, 11:12 AM)

4. Yes, it seems true to me that there are many great wisdom literatures in the world. However, please excuse me if I do not share in any attempt to create a new global integrated religion.
Don't put words in my mouth!
soma
Oct 28 2006, 01:41 PM
The intellect can give us a glimpse of the spiritual life inside ourselves, help us resist the exterior influences that blind us with passion and help us access thoughts about God that are totally new, unexpected and beyond our own capacity. The effect of these inspirations is to enable the soul to approach God beyond the material realm in pure consciousness where everything is one. I feel other literature and philosophies about God can help the intellect think outside the box. May we continue developing ways to access God and His spiritual experience.
JosephM
Oct 28 2006, 02:02 PM
QUOTE(soma @ Oct 28 2006, 02:41 PM)

The intellect can give us a glimpse of the spiritual life inside ourselves, help us resist the exterior influences that blind us with passion and help us access thoughts about God that are totally new, unexpected and beyond our own capacity. The effect of these inspirations is to enable the soul to approach God beyond the material realm in pure consciousness where everything is one. I feel other literature and philosophies about God can help the intellect think outside the box. May we continue developing ways to access God and His spiritual experience.
Hi Soma,
You make some very good points. The intellect can reason and gain understanding that helps to undo some of the things that might be obstacles to our spiritual journey. It has the ability through reason to lift us out of low levels of consciousness to a meaningful life view and understanding of abstractions. Of course in the end, in my view, one has to go beyond the intellect to experience Love, Joy, and deep peace. Perhaps if one places too much confidence or faith in it (intellect), intellect itself becomes a difficult impass or barrier to overcome in experiencing God's presence. Just my personal experience and some thoughts to consider.
soma
Oct 28 2006, 02:14 PM
Joseph, I agree we have to go beyond the intellect. I feel some people choose the path of knowledge to raise their consciousness as some choose the path of devotion to a diety and some service to humanity. I respect the philosophers who have chosen intelect. I am more eclectic because I jump from one path to another. Service to knowledge to physical exercise to devotion. I feel all are valid. The philosophers eventually come to the abstract which is very difficult to love so devotion to a diety helps and serving a diety is difficult so serving humanity helps and the vehicle to do this is the body which needs some attention to cater to all of the above.
The cosmic dance goes on I just hope I don't step on anybody's toes.
corinthian
Nov 6 2006, 07:26 PM
QUOTE(canajan, eh? @ Oct 20 2006, 06:37 PM)

Jesus here.
Look. Here’s the deal. The Jesus all of you (well, most of you) profess to admire tried with all his might to start a new faith tradition, and this same Jesus was a tough, no-nonsense, highly educated, literate scientist who believed in an entirely different God than the God of the Old Testament. .............
Walking a path of radical equality side by side with our Mother and Father takes guts.
Love Jesus
October 20, 2006
Blessed be, O beloved Mother and Father
Hmmmmm, for some reason I suspect this letter professing to be from Jesus is from an imposter instead! I'm just not sure this post is really from Jesus.

LOL! The reason I am saying this is because Canajan,eh/Jesus appears to know very little about Jesus.
Here's the first major error I spotted:
QUOTE
Jesus was a tough, no-nonsense, highly educated, literate scientist who believed in an entirely different God than the God of the Old Testament .
In your education, you seem to have missed the fact that
Jesus IS the God of the Old Testament, according to the New Testament, which provides the revelation that tells us the only thing that we know about Jesus one way or the other. Other than the prophecies of Jesus from the OT, and His pre-incarnation appearances there, such as the "one like a Son of Man" in multiple places in the Old Testament. As John 1 says: in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
and the Word was God, and the Word became flesh and lived among men. There are multiple other New Testament verses attesting to the fact that Jesus is the Creator God.
Next, Christ did not pull away from the religion of his ancestors, He simply fulfilled the religion of His ancestors, fulfilling all of the prophecies in the Old Testament regarding His first Advent. Once again, as Jesus said: He did not come to do away with the law, but to fulfill it (make it more full, demonstrate a fuller version of the law -- IMHO). So for you to decide that Jesus was a highly educated literate scientist who believed in an entirely different God than the God of the Old Testament, you'll have to come up with facts from a source other than the Bible. And I'm not sure where you would come up with such facts, other than from your own imagination.
Take, for example, your claim that you, Jesus, had a vision of God as being a he and a she. Your source for that fact? Certainly not the Bible. Ooops, I forgot. You are Jesus. So we have this information straight from the source. It's hard to argue against that kind of authority!

LOL!
And next, you were not dragged away. Rather let me say that Jesus was not. He went willingly, having become flesh and the left heaven, for the purpose of going to the cross for your sins and mine.
Next, He most certainly chose a holy place. He went there frequently during His ministry, and he kept the law to the utmost, including all of the animal sacrifices. Making Him the only human who ever lived to perfectly keep the law, qualifying Him as the perfect Lamb of God who was able to take away the sins of the world.
Certainly none of the others who interacted with Jesus were His divine equals, nor are any of us. They were instead His creations, whose bodies, with out His salvation, simply go back to the dust of the earth from where they came, at least until the resurrection and judgment. They, like us, or were/are only worthy to bow down to Him.
I would say the one who does not believe a word of what Jesus said is the one presenting himself here as Jesus. The Bible says Jesus said and did certain things, as recorded by His apostles, most of whom suffered death for spreading this Word. You, on the other hand, are claiming He said and did quite the opposite. Unless you really are Jesus having decided to post to this thread, I cannot imagine where you can get such wild ideas, other than possibly from hallucinations.
Love,
Bill (Corinthian)
canajan, eh?
Nov 30 2006, 04:26 PM
QUOTE(corinthian @ Nov 6 2006, 07:26 PM)

Take, for example, your claim that you, Jesus, had a vision of God as being a he and a she. Your source for that fact? Certainly not the Bible.
Sigh . . . I'm wondering who you think the Spirit is? The Spirit whom I loved and spoke of was the Mother. I talked of both the Father of Lights (God the Father) and the Holy Spirit (God the Mother).
I'm pretty sure that's in the Bible.
Love Jesus
canajan, eh?
Nov 30 2006, 05:04 PM
QUOTE(soma @ Oct 28 2006, 02:14 PM)

Joseph, I agree we have to go beyond the intellect. I feel some people choose the path of knowledge to raise their consciousness as some choose the path of devotion to a diety and some service to humanity. I respect the philosophers who have chosen intelect. I am more eclectic because I jump from one path to another. Service to knowledge to physical exercise to devotion. I feel all are valid. The philosophers eventually come to the abstract which is very difficult to love so devotion to a diety helps and serving a diety is difficult so serving humanity helps and the vehicle to do this is the body which needs some attention to cater to all of the above.
The cosmic dance goes on I just hope I don't step on anybody's toes.
Cool thoughts, Soma. Thanks.
Love Jen
canajan, eh?
Nov 30 2006, 05:39 PM
Click to view attachmentQUOTE(DCJ @ Oct 27 2006, 10:59 AM)

Yes.
In order to have a genuine relationship with someone, you not only must experience him relationally, but you must get to know things about him. It's not really a relationship if you experience someone without knowing anything about him, is it? In the same way, God has revealed certain things about himself so that we may know about him, and he also enters into intimate fellowship with his people.
I'm so glad you said this, DCJ. It's true. It's also the underlying basis of Jesus' teachings. The message of Jesus' Christianity (as opposed to Paul's Christianity) is
relationship. Relationship means experiencing others, as you say. It also means getting to know things about your friends and family. Both have in role in forging strong, lasting, healing relationships.
The Jesus I know is a real person, an individual with unique thoughts, interests, abilities, and quirks. He also has a unique appearance.
If Jesus were living as an adult in the year 2006, he would look like the man in the photo above. I had an artist PhotoShop the portrait for me.
His favourite colour is black. He loves up-tempo blues. He sings like Josh Groban. His Sun sign is Scorpio. Favourite game: Blackjack (without any betting). Favourite book: Hyperion/Endymion series by Dan Simmons. Favourite movie: It's a Wonderful Life.
He also loves small, sleek, expensive sports cars (not that he has a hope in heck of getting one!)
Love Jen
des
Nov 30 2006, 10:49 PM
Not to over do the point here, but I doubt too much that Jesus would have looked like the guy who
appears to be European or American (perhaps Canadian?). He certainly doesn't look of Jewish decent. Jesus was most certainly NOT European. If he came today, well who knows?
This young man is quite possibly a nice guy. Don't know him. But I don't picture Jesus having an interest
in sport's cars or faster mules. Those kind of interests seem consumeristic and wouldn't be typical of
any people of that day. I doubt someone with really true spiritual concerns would be too drawn
to them, then or now.
Also Jews are opposed to astrology, would he know his "sign" or care?
I think, though the book has many flaws, Anne Rice's "Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt" makes a more serious
attempt to describe a real person in a real environment. I don't think she quite succeeds on the "real"
part-- but at least it is a little more "real" than our photoshopped guy (just how Photoshopped I wonder?
This does look like a real person. Does he know his picture is up on the web? Does he know he is on the web as a modern day Jesus? ).
Yes, Jesus was a real person. A more serious attempt to imagine Jesus in the present day would be to think of people who have devoted their lives to serious spiritual work in the world, perhaps a Martin Luther King or Mother Theresa or The Christian Peace Team would be a better analogy anyway?
--des
mystictrek
Dec 1 2006, 09:39 AM
QUOTE(des @ Nov 30 2006, 10:49 PM)

Yes, Jesus was a real person. A more serious attempt to imagine Jesus in the present day would be to think of people who have devoted their lives to serious spiritual work in the world, perhaps a Martin Luther King or Mother Theresa or The Christian Peace Team would be a better analogy anyway?
--des
Or maybe Gandhi or the Dalai Lama or Thich Nhat Hanh or Jimmy Carter.
All 3 great ideas as well. It isn't so much who. It is the depth of spiritual vision, devotion to justice, that make us "Christ for each other".
--des
canajan, eh?
Dec 6 2006, 07:33 AM
Um, Des, MT, gotta say that your remarks above are a bit, um, not as well thought out as they might be. I mean, um, is there such a thing as looking Jewish? I don't really think so. As for whether he looks European or American or Canadian . . . well sure. People from all cultures and religions have moved to Northern Europe, the U.S., and Canada (as well as to Australia and to many other nations as well.) So what would be the problem with a modern-day Jesus looking as if he belongs in one of those multi-racial communities?
And, um, about the cars . . . A person who loves cars and who also loves God can combine those two loves by driving an ambulance. Or a police car. Or a fire truck. Or a delivery truck that carries medical supplies and educational materials to hospitals and schools. Or family van that carries a handicapped child to public school, or meals to a shut-in. Why is it a bad thing to love cars? Isn't the real spiritual issue what you do with what you've got? Why do you wish to hold everyone up to an unattainable standard -- Martin Luther King Jr. or Gandhi? Don't you think it's possible God the Mother and God the Father see serious spiritual work going on wherever individuals use their God-given talents to make the world a better place? Not many of us have the ability to be a Gandhi. But all of us have the ability to be our best selves, and make a difference to our families, communities, and nations.
I personally wouldn't want to go back to a point in history where we lacked technology, science, public education, and public health care. It seems to me that a great many individuals from affluent countries are spending a lot of time, energy, and money to bring technology, science, public education, and public health care to others in less affluent nations. Affluence in itself isn't a bad thing. Hoarding is the problem -- and hoarding can take place even when you don't have two nickels to rub together.
Love Jen
flowperson
Dec 6 2006, 08:54 AM
Well said Jen !
flow....
Perhaps I should have said Middle Eastern vs. Jewish, that might have been a better way of putting it. For instance, Sojo.net panned the recent film Navity for using a "Western white baby Jesus". I think it is a fair criticism. It's just awefully white you know. Why? We have enough blue eyed blond headed Jesuses around.
But ok, so Jesus arrives in middle America (or Canada) say. I'm not sure I see the point.
There is NOTHING at all wrong with liking cars. And certainly liking cars can lead to other things like driving an ambulance say. But there is NOTHING wrong with liking cars in and of themselves. The thing I did not
notice in your description was an seriousness of spiritual vision or purpose. It was a description of a typical guy, as I saw it. Nothing wrong with a typical guy at all. But nothing beyond one either.
You're worried about the standards of Martin Luther King, Gandhi, Jimmy Carter, Thich Nhat Hanh, the Dalai
Lama, Mother Teresa are too high for our would be Jesus. Hey this is Jesus we are talking about!!
Why are you worried about an unattainable standard? Even the above individuals aren't Jesus, but at least they show a seriousness of spiritual purpose that I didn't get from your Photoshopped boy.
Perhaps I misunderstood the purpose of your little exercise.
*IF* Jesus came to America or Canada in this century what would he be like? At least you can imagine someone who might seem unusual and who's behavior would NOT be so typical. So imagine beyond a liking for cars and the color black.
BTW, I don't quite buy the unattainable Jesus. I think Jesus meant his life to call to us. But I don't think that calling was describing an easy "typical life" either. And sure I believe we can "sample" a little bit of Christ, for want of a better expression. So you could just place anybody's picture in there, I suppose, for that. That doesn't do much for me, but if that's what you meant, ok.
So this is a picture of any man and any man (or woman) can be Christ or at least hold in him/her self some of the Christ?? Ok, I would buy that much of what you are offering here. Not that much, but a little. :-)
--des
canajan, eh?
Dec 8 2006, 07:32 AM
QUOTE(des @ Dec 7 2006, 11:59 PM)

The thing I did not notice in your description was an seriousness of spiritual vision or purpose. It was a description of a typical guy, as I saw it. Nothing wrong with a typical guy at all. But nothing beyond one either.
You're worried about the standards of Martin Luther King, Gandhi, Jimmy Carter, Thich Nhat Hanh, the Dalai
Lama, Mother Teresa are too high for our would be Jesus.
Des, Jesus here. I'm sorry if I didn't make my point more clearly. I wasn't talking about myself when I spoke of unattainable standards. I was talking about human beings in general. Human beings all around the globe. Human beings who are being taught (to their great misfortune) that some people are "better", "special", more worthy of being called spiritual than regular folk. But the tough spiritual truth is that every typical guy and every typical girl is considered by God to be an amazing and wondrous individual. A typical guy is beautiful in God's eyes, and he doesn't need to be a world leader to be considered a spiritual teacher by God. All he has to do is be the best person he's capable of being.
An important thought: there are many world leaders (including many living at this time) who are not in any way being the best persons they're capable of being. They're praised, admired, even worshipped by other people, but they don't deserve it. They don't deserve it because they do what they do in order to receive praise, admiration, and worship. They aren't listening to their hearts. They aren't listening to their souls. They're only listening to their big, fat egos. This is how wars get started.
The humble, penniless grandmothers of Africa, who have few resources and little education, are beginning to gather together as a group and share their formidable heart energy to look after the AIDS orphans of the continent. Who is considered by God to be a person with a more serious spiritual vision: the grannies, or the world leaders?
It's hard work to be the best person you're capable of being. You have to pay a lot of attention to what you're thinking and feeling at all times. You have to be conscious of how your particular talents fit into God's overall plan. You have to be in the Christ Zone. It's no cake-walk -- even if you like sports cars and your favourite colour is black.
P.S. I'm not blond and blue-eyed. My hair is very dark brown, as are my eyes. But that's somewhat beside the point, as genetics are a tricky subject, and there are pockets of fair-skinned, blue-eyed people in unexpected places around the world. Don't judge a book by its cover.
Love Jesus
December 8, 2006
Jenn, Not to judge a book by its cover but I did think you were talking about Jesus that this was some
20th C version of Jesus. So I guess I didn't get your point.
However, since I thought you were talking about Jesus, here was what I was trying to get across:
I teach in a "barrio" type school, and after listening to discussions on the Supreme Court, which will
probably reverse desegregation orders that have made schools more integrated (and hopefully eventually
society). I see a trend of wanting to see things "color blind" so to speak. Sometimes in an effort to be color
blind, we can actually set things back. If you ask, some black and Hispanic people will tell you they don't have quite the luxury that white people have of looking at the world "color blind", as it just doesn't happen
in the real world. So since I thought you were proposing this guy as Jesus, I thought it somewhat unfortunate that it be from the smallest racial minority on Earth as you representative, esp. since the original Jesus didn't belong to it. White priviledge takes a position that you don't need to look at or consider
race. Sadly, in this world, I think you do. Hence, for instance, I would want to see Jesus in film or in children's books represented as a person of likely Middle Eastern decent. And not, well we're all color
blind here, so let's make him white (and after all he could be from the middle east).
Of course, since I guess that wasn't your point, it doesn't exactly apply. But since it wasn't your point, why the Photoshopped image at all? Just think of yourself, a friend, a neighbor, a stranger, someone on tv, etc.
and imagine you, him or her? And why a fictionalized being? Just think of someone doing God's work in the world, take any of your examples, which I think are good ones. There are real people doing those things.
And if you want the message that we are all capable of being the best we can be ("be all that you can be?"
US Army slogan), then just look around too. Or that people in power aren't there yet, well just look
at the current occupant of the White House. ;-)
--des
canajan, eh?
Dec 9 2006, 09:49 AM
Des, you and I seem to be talking apples and oranges. You're talking about how Jesus "should" look, and how racial issues in the world today are very complex. I'm talking about the way Jesus does look when I'm channelling. His face and form are always the same. His hair is dark. His eyes are dark. His skin is tan -- maybe it's Middle Eastern, maybe it's Greek, maybe it's Native American. My point is that his race does not matter. God and God's angels don't classify human beings according to the colour of their skin. God loves all races and peoples and genders equally. Our spiritual task as human beings is to love each other the way God already loves us.
I posted a picture of a man. This is the closest approximation the artist could get when I described the man I "see" when I'm channelling. Jesus looks this way as an angel because this is the way God the Mother and God the Father made him as an angel. He shouldn't have to apologize to anyone because his features bring up cultural and spiritual issues for some individuals who see his portait. He is who he is. I could, I suppose, ask the artist to make a composite portrait of a person who has (to borrow from Star Trek) Klingon musculature, Vulcan ears, Ferengi teeth, a Bejoran forehead, and human clothes. This wouldn't offend anyone, I suppose. But it wouldn't be a real person, unless, after many generations of inter-marriage, such a person was born to loving parents with Klingon, Vulcan, Ferengi, Bejoran, and human ancestors.
We all are who we are. We can't be anyone but ourselves. No one should have to apologize to anyone else or be made to feel bad about their unique appearance. Des, I agree with you that, in the real world, racial issues cause a lot of real suffering. But we all have to strive to be colour-blind anyway. It's the best we can do.
Love Jen
> cultural and spiritual issues for some individuals who see his portait. He is who he is. I could, I suppose, ask the artist to make a composite portrait of a person who has (to borrow from Star Trek) Klingon musculature, Vulcan ears, Ferengi teeth, a Bejoran forehead, and human clothes. This wouldn't offend anyone, I suppose. But it wouldn't be a real person, unless, after many generations of inter-marriage, such a person was born to loving parents with Klingon, Vulcan, Ferengi, Bejoran, and human ancestors.
LOL! I would like to see that though. :-)
--des