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December 13, 2015 at 3:34 pm (This post was last modified: December 13, 2015 at 3:34 pm by Whateverist.)
Lets find out! Here is an experiment you can do at home. All you'll need are some sturdy posts -but you can also use some pre-existing structure like a fence or part of a building you can drive a few long spikes into. Next you'll need some strong cord, possibly a gag and most importantly, a younger sibling. Once you have assembled all needed materials we'll get started. Go!
December 13, 2015 at 3:38 pm (This post was last modified: December 13, 2015 at 5:18 pm by The Valkyrie.)
I wish the whole "reinterpreting" and rewriting of the bible never happened.
It's like Chinese Whispers.
Judas gets Jesus Laid in Jerusalem becomes,
Jesus Gets Nailed in Jerusalem becomes,
Jesus is Crucified and died for your sins and you have to accept him as your lord and master or you'll burn for eternity.
(December 13, 2015 at 6:10 am)Vic Wrote: Because on one hand, you get christians acting like it's the single most horrible thing in the world to happen to anyone, that it's the most anyone could suffer (ignoring all the people before and after Jesus who died the same way because reasons) etc., with the RCC charging the entirety of Jewish people with deicide for a long time, but on the other hand, that was all god's plan, it was necessary and we should be grateful for it because it was the only way to go to heaven, it had to happen??
Which is it ffs??
No it is not a good thing. It is just a story, but as far as morals go it is bad. First off the God character set up the entire game without mutual consent from anyone, humans are basically his lab rats. Now while the idea of "forgiveness" in reality can be good without the superstition, the story takes your own autonomy away from you and puts it in the hands of a third party. Nobody has the right to tell me whom I have to forgive or that others have to forgive me. That does not mean revenge is a response, it just means I have the right to part company with someone if they hurt me.
On top of that not even being a real "sacrifice". According to the story, he doesn't stay dead, and not only subjects himself to the cross, does so for his own glorification, because God/Jesus are the same being. Alot like John Hinkley shot Reagan to get the attention of Jody Foster.
A "sacrifice" in reality is when you do something without expectation of attention, or fame or reward. The D-Day soldiers were a real sacrifice. They went in not seeking personal fame. Most served without gaining personal fame and those who died did not come back from the dead.
The way the death story reads reads more like a stalker con artist doing a parlor trick to gain attention. The reason Christians fall for this story is because it is sold as as an underdog story, that allows the believer to ignore the way the literary character is written.
December 13, 2015 at 4:24 pm (This post was last modified: December 13, 2015 at 4:25 pm by CapnAwesome.)
(December 13, 2015 at 2:16 pm)drfuzzy Wrote: The dying and rising god myth was ancient around the Mediterranean long before a scruffy little tribe of El worshipers who avoided eating pork ever came on the scene. Kersey Graves listed 16 crucified "saviors" who pre-dated Jesus of Nazareth:
Carrier challenged some of Graves' work but never managed to disprove it. The book claims that a number of these deities or god-men shared at least some traits of Jesus as described in the New Testament, drawing the strongest similarities with Krishna. For example, some figures had miraculous or virgin births, were sons of supreme gods, were born on December 25, had stars point to their birthplaces, were visited by shepherds and magi as infants, fled from death as children, exhibited traits of divinity in childhood, spent time in the desert, traveled as they taught, had disciples, performed miracles, were persecuted, were crucified, descended into hell after death, appeared as resurrections or apparitions, or ascended into heaven.
It was a story so old that everyone knew it. There is a report by an early historian (sorry, can't find it, will keep looking) about some people scoffing at early Christians, saying "we didn't believe that about ____, why should we believe the same thing about this Jew?" Crucifixion, virgin birth, miracles, etc., were all required by the story.
Oh, and yes, I looked up Graves' work on Wikipedia for the list and description.
I did a random checking of those links and didn't find a crucifixion story in any 6 or 7 I randomly clicked on, including Krishna, who supposedly was killed by an arrow shot by a hunter by mistake. Why claim something with links that don't even back up what you are saying?
The dying and rising god myth was ancient around the Mediterranean long before a scruffy little tribe of El worshipers who avoided eating pork ever came on the scene. Kersey Graves listed 16 crucified "saviors" who pre-dated Jesus of Nazareth:
Carrier challenged some of Graves' work but never managed to disprove it. The book claims that a number of these deities or god-men shared at least some traits of Jesus as described in the New Testament, drawing the strongest similarities with Krishna. For example, some figures had miraculous or virgin births, were sons of supreme gods, were born on December 25, had stars point to their birthplaces, were visited by shepherds and magi as infants, fled from death as children, exhibited traits of divinity in childhood, spent time in the desert, traveled as they taught, had disciples, performed miracles, were persecuted, were crucified, descended into hell after death, appeared as resurrections or apparitions, or ascended into heaven.
It was a story so old that everyone knew it. There is a report by an early historian (sorry, can't find it, will keep looking) about some people scoffing at early Christians, saying "we didn't believe that about ____, why should we believe the same thing about this Jew?" Crucifixion, virgin birth, miracles, etc., were all required by the story.
Oh, and yes, I looked up Graves' work on Wikipedia for the list and description.
I did a random checking of those links and didn't find a crucifixion story in any 6 or 7 I randomly clicked on, including Krishna, who supposedly was killed by an arrow shot by a hunter by mistake. Why claim something with links that don't even back up what you are saying?
You're right. I only read a few articles and scanned Graves' book, I did not fact-check ANY of the list. The Krishna arrow does surprise me, though - I thought that I had read a "pinned to a tree" story about him. I should have checked that list - I apologize to AF. Mistakes like that might lead some folks to discount the fact that the "dying and rising god" myth is far older than Judaism . . . not good scholarship on my part.
"The family that prays together...is brainwashing their children."- Albert Einstein
"Adulthood is like looking both ways before you cross the road, and then getting hit by an airplane"- sarcasm_only
"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable."- Maryam Namazie
Graves confused the dying/resurrected vegetation god of the Ancient Mediterranean with the later savior cults which came along...including jesusism. That myth - explaining why the plants die in winter and are reborn in spring was significant to an ancient farming culture...which all of them were perhaps with the exception of the Phoenicians who were traders but even they had to eat.
Things evolved slowly in the ancient world but they did change. This book might be of some help to you.
Starts on the second paragraph of the page and continues to the so-called "mystery cults." Carrier asserts that xtianity certainly began as one of them until they started writing shit down which can be attributed to the noted "heretic" Marcion.
(December 13, 2015 at 2:32 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Again, Judas was fulfilling the role appointed for him. Who the hell are YOU to sneer at Judas for his absolutely vital role in the salvation of mankind?
Judas - named, remember, for political reasons to condemn the whole Jewish people - is the bible's Jessica Rabbit: "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way."
At the age of five, Skagra decided emphatically that God did not exist. This revelation tends to make most people in the universe who have it react in one of two ways - with relief or with despair. Only Skagra responded to it by thinking, 'Wait a second. That means there's a situation vacant.'