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| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Beginning Anew
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 172
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Gandhi
Hey, this is my first thread!
I enjoy having conversations about him. For I am fascinated by his life! Well, I consider Mahandas Gandhi to be a follower of Christ, yet the majority of the Christians that I discuss him with say that he was not, and that he rejected Christ, because he was a Hindu. Later the discussion usually ends by labeling him away as a false teacher and prophet, because he did not proclaim that Jesus Christ is Lord. However I see that claim in the way he lived his life. In your opinion, was Gandhi a follower of Christ? Well, this is if you consider Christ to be God. If you do not, I would like to hear your opinion on him anyway. Anybody have any thoughts? |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,389
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Re: Gandhi
Hi, Thabrownbaptist---
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I have a Baptist background, and I am still technically a member of a Baptist congregation, which I love very much. But as you may know, there are many different kinds of Baptists, and if the conventions tell us anything, there are certainly many differences of opinion! I have decided that, since there is so much bickering about what is correct between and among religions and their respective denominations and schools of philosophy, that one must ultimately decide, with the guidance of the Holy Spirit, just what is true and what may not be. I see no better way. Interesting that many Christians also condemn Mother Teresa. If Gandhi and Teresa are not examples of practical and spiritual devotion to God; if they were not working according to the teachings of Christ and the will of the Father, then I guess we are just supposed to talk a great deal, but not follow up with our actions. Makes no sense to me. InPeace, InLove |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Sleeping member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Bradford-on-Avon, England
Posts: 280
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Re: Gandhi
Agreed. I think Gandhi understood Christianity better than most Christians. Remember when in England he was asked "What are your impressions of a Christian country?" he replied "I think it would be a good idea".
Gandhi read the bible all through and debated with clerics and scholars. It seems that his interest was genuine, but in the end he was put off by the rampant hypocrisy. I think he embodied the teachings of Christ. I see this also in the present Dalai Lama. IMHO it's the embidiment that counts - not the blathering. -cliff |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Westmorland, California
Posts: 733
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Re: Gandhi
No, Gandhi was not a Christian. As we all know, he chose not to accept Jesus as his personal savior. As a result, according to Christian teachings, Gandhi is now burning in Hell.
Such belief is the very reason I am not a Christian. |
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#10 (permalink) | |
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Beginning Anew
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 172
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Re: Gandhi
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But, did Gandhi read the whole bible? I have his book "The Story Of My Experiments With Truth," in which he said that the book of Numbers bored him. . .maybe he skipped over some chapters, lol. Wow, I can not believe everybody agrees and this is not even a Christian forum. Nobody on here disagrees, I suppose. Thanks for the responses. |
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#11 (permalink) | |||
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The Dangerous Dinner
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 765
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Re: Gandhi
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I don't see the idea itself (that there are no rules, or even the "personal saviour" thing) as the problem. There is no rule that says we can't follow rules, and with regards to the so-called "personal saviour" concept Jesus may simply be a symbol, paradigm, metaphor or example to follow. There is no rule saying we must always uphold a symbol or paradigm, just as there is no rule saying you have to be nice to people and love them all the time. It is just helpful to do it. It is often helpful to stray from time-honoured rules, or to keep in mind symbols and paradigms that we see as important in our lives. The actual concept may really just be a natural, spontaneous yearning that we have. The problem is making rules on how to approach the concept. Rules set limits and boundaries on things. That is what you see happening in many churches today -- they have made rules, set limits and boundaries on the whole idea -- they have built whole philosophies around it. I see this as wrong as rules don't always reflect people's true attitudes. A person may fall outside the boundaries of those rules but still be true to the purpose of a religion. Whoever believes in following rules is a slave to rules, so if you are a rule-follower you are not truly liberated. I can't help then, but think that maybe all those "non-Christians" who reject traditional/conventional Christianity and believe God accepts them as they are have probably come closer to "the truth" than conventional/traditional Christians. It's like to be "truly Christian" you have to go against everything you are taught about Christianity. If you think about it, it's really supposed to be a simple idea. We've just piled heaps of rubbish around it to turn it into trash. Jesus turns up 2,000 years ago to tell people that they don't have to follow the rules taught by their religious leaders, that God can accept them even if they can't. Now, 2,000 years later, we have the same thing happening with churches telling people they can't be accepted by God if they don't follow their rules or see things their way, that we have to approach the very same idea their way. Sounds like a case of deja vu. Traditional/conventional Christianity often operates and functions as the same kind of thing Jesus himself opposed. This of course will probably sound ironic. The same people saying they are "saved" and "liberated" are probably those who are least "saved" and "liberated" -- and what's worse, Jesus is not really their "personal saviour" even though they claim that they see him that way. It's a world turned upside down. The situation here is where a concept that is meant to liberate people actually enslaves them. Reverse psychology. |
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#12 (permalink) |
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ex-member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 641
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Re: Gandhi
Your post, Saltmeister, reminds me of an excerpt from On Eastern Crossroads:
THE QUESTIONER OF CINEDRION |
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#14 (permalink) | |
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Exercises in futility
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Re: Gandhi
Quote:
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#15 (permalink) |
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that's my Boss in the pic
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: England
Posts: 209
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Re: Gandhi
I read a quote regarding Gandhi that:
"among politicians he was a saint, and among saints he was a politician" In one of his books I've vaugely remember Gandhi saying that he saw Jesus's Sermon on the Mount as essentially delivering the same message as that given by Krishna in the Bhagavad-Gita, only that the Bhagavad-Gita was (for him) somewhat clearer? He certainly wasn't a Christian in the exclusive use of the term (i.e following Only Jesus), but maybe in the inclusive (following Jesus as well as others). ... Neemai ![]() |
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