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that actually contradicts the christian idea of God not standing/tolerating sin.
)If God is born through a woman, she must then be sinless too, if not then God is fine to stay in the womb and then be born of a sinning woman.
If God is able to be among sinner on earth then whats the problem to do the same in Heaven
Take a breath. It is absurd to say that there is a "Christian" idea which contradicts God being a man.
Roman Catholics, who are about half
of the living Nicenes, believe that Mary
is sinless. Some Eastern Orthodox also
believe that, and all human beings are
born immaculate in Eastern
Orthodoxy. And, of course, Protestants think she was a sinner,
and bore Jesus anyway. So, it's between, say, 60:40 to 70:30
among Nicene Christians that she was
sinless, as you require, versus she
wasn't sinless
but God did what the
mission profile required him to do.
As we've already discussed, Christians
typically believe in an omnipresent
God. So, he is among sinners on Earth
24/7/365. "Heaven" is not a point on
which Nicene Chrisitans are
unanimous anyway, but it is easy to imagine that God might be more
selective about whom he spends
eternity with than whom he spends
any time at all with.
thanks but thats a thing i have been told by christians, God can't stand sin and God became a man. The theology just collapses on itself. ...
the disagreements regarding somethings so major is a pointer that all of it is conjencture and everyone tries their best to try and explain it.
thats a christian escape route not fitting for an agnostic.
So God is suffering still because of His omnipresence, also His coming on earth and dying din't make it good, neither for Him nor for the earth/humans.
There is some irony in your focus on this. Jesus in the Christian Gospels is notorious for hanging out with sinners, low-lifes, even - horrible to relate - women, who apparently are the very embodiment of Sin itself, according to some. Jesus doesn't deny the company he keeps, either. So, if some Christian told you "God can't stand sin," then you have obviously read something into the remark that the Christian did not intend. The name for that is "straw man." Convenient, too, isn't it, that you can't actually produce this Christian? Anonymous straw man, the very best kind.
If God's suffering in time and space opens up a possibility
of some eternal preferable state for
both him and his creatures, together
forever, then he might well see that
interval of suffering as worthwhile.
Other beings in love have been known to suffer for their beloveds' sakes.
So my point is Jesus pbuh was sure hanging out with sinners.
You say God did it as Jesus pbuh and also that God is near sinners due to His Omnipresence,...
So you try and reason that God is bearing it for few thousand years but ultimately wants a break from it?!!
Love with an expiry date?!!
After that God wants to stop suffering for the sake of love?
I say the Christian thinking is flawed by testing it against simple reasoning.
The idea of sacrifice is to give up something for the love of someone, but if there is prior knowledge that no harm will come then it ceases to be a sacrifice.
It's not me saying anything, I'm explaining to you the position of your typical opponent.
All three Abrahamic traditions
contemplate an eventual "end of
days." Regardless of what I "reason,"
if any of you is right, then at some
point, God will be "taking a break from
it."
You seem to be torn between
bafflement that God would willingly
begin to suffer for a creature, and
annoyance that he would ever stop.
Personally, I don't see why God
wouldn't be entitled to enjoy the fruits of what he sacrificed for.
This can hardly be a surprise. Rumor
has it that many Christians and Jews,
to name just two religious groups,
have only limited admiration for the
intellectual depth of Islam. So, trading
this sort of remark gets us nowhere.
I take it that you are speaking as
someone who has been flogged with
a Roman flaying whip and then nailed
to a board, and left hanging for three
hours, maybe more. That you
ultimately survived is no doubt a consolation, and your confident
expectation about that may have
sustained you through your ordeal,
but the experience itself would seem
to count as a sacrifice. Oh, that's not in your experience?
Then that explains your attitude about
the quality of sacrifice. As the Bard
wrote, he jests at scars who never felt
a wound.
ofcourse you are an agnostic, i'l tell you, you don't like to get pinned down by your own opinion. It has nothing to do with the topic but i mind when you chicken out from answering a difficult/impossible question by using that excuse.
So, in answer to my question: No, you don't have any actual rebuttal to the points I made, all you have is more ad hominem spew about my religion. If you ever want to discuss the topic, instead of discussing me, y'all know how to send me a message.
Does Islam teaches that a woman, or some part of her body, is unfit for God to be present there? Who created these places which are unfit for God's presence?
Well, the Old Testament is also in the Bible... the Old Testament religion does not support Christian ideas... ideas of a man being God / God becoming man / God being born of a woman etc. None of it is present in the Old Testament religion.
"My argument" doesn't need any help. John is in the Bible, there's no doubt about that.
I appreciate that you'd like some license for your cherrypicking, but there is no such thing. "Oh, that's not in quotation marks, so I can edit it out."
Nobody disputes that Jesus is Mary's firstborn, or that being Jesus' mother might reasonably be described as being favored by God.
That's your problem in a nutshell. Was this crucial insight invented or discovered? Yet another reason why you can't confine the investigation to a short list of books assembled for a different purpose, plus one other book composed centuries later by a hostile critic of Christianity.
Actually, Jesus' native religion ceased to exist in 70 CE when the Second Temple was destroyed as a casualty of war. Christians had nothing to do with that.
that actually contradicts the christian idea of God not standing/tolerating sin.
1)If God is born through a woman, she must then be sinless too, if not then God is fine to stay in the womb and then be born of a sinning woman.
2)If God is able to be among sinner on earth then whats the problem to do the same in Heaven. Why the dying to wash the sins so that christians can stand in the Glory of God?
i am talking about God dying as a sacrifice,
also there are people who have suffered worst physically.
Flaying and 3-6 hrs of suffering is enough to neturalise the sins of the world??
Originally posted by sk0rpi0n
reply to post by logical7
that actually contradicts the christian idea of God not standing/tolerating sin.
1)If God is born through a woman, she must then be sinless too, if not then God is fine to stay in the womb and then be born of a sinning woman.
2)If God is able to be among sinner on earth then whats the problem to do the same in Heaven. Why the dying to wash the sins so that christians can stand in the Glory of God?
Exactly.
They want us to believe we are all born as sinners because of Adam and Eves "original sin".
So then, Jesus was born in the womb of a woman who was also tainted by the so called "original sin"....meaning he too would have inherited the original sin through Mary. So he was not the "unblemished" sacrifice as Christians claim.
Also Jesus is the son of Mary and is seen as God... but Mary is not considered to be "the mother of God".
Then they say Jesus' sacrifice took away the worlds sin, but people still continue to be born tainted by the "original sin" of Adam and Eve... and that they need to accept Jesus sacrifice to be redeemed. Perhaps the sin sacrifice didn't work because Jesus was also blemished.
Like you said... the theology just collapses on itself.
edit on 16-3-2013 by sk0rpi0n because: (no reason given)
Mary is God's exception, He does make exceptions all Christians accept. Mary was born Immaculate, without the stain of original sin. Mary is sinless, she does not have our fallen nature.