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Originally posted by kallisti36The "leaven" of the Pharisees is not doctrinal error, but unwarrented self importance and self righteousness.
If you care about my opinion, I believe that Yeshuah was so hard on the Pharisees because they had potential if they practiced what they preached.
the inability of the Roman theologians to provide any plausible evidence that the Doctrine of "resurrection" referred to a physical raising of a dead body from the grave.
Originally posted by JollyLlama
reply to post by Michael Cecil
the inability of the Roman theologians to provide any plausible evidence that the Doctrine of "resurrection" referred to a physical raising of a dead body from the grave.
If Paul lied.. Jesus was telling the truth, yet was crucified as a result of this, and didn't die for our salvation, but rather at the hands of a Doctrine He did not teach what does the resurrection Doctrine refer to? If Christ did not rise from the grave, physically, what happened?
What, more specifically then just the "Doctrine of 'Rebirth'", did Christ teach?
When you speak of the memories of past lives I can only think of the 'loop' in the Matrix trilogy, I'm sure you know to what I refer. If salvation wasn't the reason Christ came, certainly the only reason he did wasn't to expunge a false Doctrine?
Originally posted by Michael Cecil
Originally posted by kallisti36The "leaven" of the Pharisees is not doctrinal error, but unwarrented self importance and self righteousness.
And that is precisely what a Pharisee would say: that the Pharisees may very well have been personally flawed; but, that when it comes to doctrinal Truth, they were, like the pope, infallible. And that is why they considered it such a 'good idea' that Jesus be eliminated for contradicting their 'infallibility' about the Doctrine of "resurrection".
If you care about my opinion, I believe that Yeshuah was so hard on the Pharisees because they had potential if they practiced what they preached.
Not precisely. More along the lines of not understanding the Revelational basis of ethics in the first place
The 'good' Pharisees had the ethical dimension of the Torah and the Prophets down pat.
What they did not understand is that that ethical dimension originated in a Doctrinal Truth: the Doctrine of "resurrection" as a Doctrine of 'Rebirth'.
This is the 'Law that is written in the heart' of Jeremiah.
And how many acts of genocide, by the way, have been committed by Buddhists?
He who has the ears to hear, let him listen.
Mi cha el
Originally posted by Michael Cecil
The doctrine of a physical raising of a dead body from the grave has no roots in any Revelation.
It was held to by the pagan Egyptians, who certainly did not believe in Revelation.
Originally posted by adjensen
Originally posted by Michael Cecil
Although it was considered to be so by the proto-Nazi, idolator and Pharisee Paul;
Really? Your arguments are so weak that you need to call Paul a Nazi? Paul, who said that he would gratefully give up his own salvation if it would save his people, the Jews?