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#91 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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#92 (permalink) |
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Oannes
Join Date: May 2006
Location: SW United States
Posts: 2,613
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
An excellent post Q. Some of us just pursue understanding the implications of what you wrote through differing pathways of seeking.
Thanks, and I might add that to me Jesus' primary message 2,000 years ago was to inform those who had gone before that they would involuntarily become more and more like Him (whether or not they liked it) as humans danced and fought their ways into the future. What do you think ? flow.... ![]() |
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#93 (permalink) | |
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Eugene, OR
Posts: 183
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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#94 (permalink) | |
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 5,787
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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#95 (permalink) | |
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,591
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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Very well put and perhaps an excellent explanation of our differing beliefs. If a Christian looks at Q they may see your physical body, your soul/spirit and your mind. When a Muslim looks at Q they see Q, as a single being and do not look for the parts that make up the person. I think where I struggle is when people put names to those parts and suggest they are independant of each other. Can your body or mind function without your spirit/soul? Can you see why I get confused? If you believe Jesus (pbuh) is G-d, then why would you have to go through him to get to G-d, because he is G-d. Why not just say G-d is G-d, made up of many aspects and worship G-d as a whole? ![]() |
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#96 (permalink) | ||
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Senior Member
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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This is a way I think of it (and I know the Bible does say this): to get to God we need faith in Jesus and his resurrection, once we do that God gives us his Spirit and he lives in us. I can completely understand how Jesus being both human and God is confusing. It is quite mysterious how that can be done. But then again we are fallen people with finite understanding. I don't believe we'll ever fully understand how such a thing can happen this side of heaven. But it is something God has revealed to us. |
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#98 (permalink) | |
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Eugene, OR
Posts: 183
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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#99 (permalink) | |
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,591
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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Yet I do not feel in any way 'dead' from G-d or unable to get to Him. If anything I feel closer to Him now I see Him as a whole and worship Him as the One True G-d. Maybe we just all have to find the path to G-d that feels right in our hearts and trust that G-d knows if we are genuinely seeking Him? Salaam |
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#100 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 1,401
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
if God his holy and righteous and unseen in the spiritual dimension of Heaven, how do you get to him? how does your inner thoughts from a corruptible, mortal body with its impulses of electricity within your brain reach this God? now the sun and the moon and the sea and all the forces of the universe obey the commands of God, but as humans we do not. Only God is pure, good and holy. So then how can unpure people purify themselves? how can paradise be obtained from good works when we are not good. how can any of us as sinners ever please God?
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#102 (permalink) |
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,591
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
By being the best people we can be, by worshipping G-d as He has commanded, by ensuring that our good deeds outweigh our bad. G-d accepts we are only human and does not ask us to be perfect, He asks only that we accept Him and worship Him alone.
Correct, G-d dictates the truth. Is this not from the Bible?: Matthew 4:10, "You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you serve." So by worshipping and serving G-d alone I believe I am doing as G-d has instructed in all the Scriptures. |
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#103 (permalink) | ||
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Senior Member
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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Yes, you are supposed to worship God. But as I was saying about us being spiritually dead until we believe in Christ and receive the Holy Spirit which gives us life is something Jesus said: Quote:
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#104 (permalink) | |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 1,401
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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#105 (permalink) | |||||
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The Dangerous Dinner
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 783
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Re: Jesus (pbuh) - failed Prophet
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If God were to communicate with us, what would he be like? Would He write a book? Would He be a king, religious leader or judge? How would He "act out" or "express" Himself? How would He show this was God interacting with the world? If you really think about it, it really doesn't have to have anything to do with the body or even the soul. There is no body. There is no soul. There must, however, be some agent somewhere acting out God's will. If God were to somehow communicate with us, it would have to be very political, as it always will be political. Thus, whoever plays out the role of God, demonstrating what God is like, has to be some politician. Jesus' life was a parody. A parody on God. It was like an act, a play. Quote:
Yes, people saw Jesus. But what did they see when they saw him? Did they see just another politician? Just another religious leader? Another funny comedian with jokes to tell? Another story-teller? . . . well maybe he was that. But maybe he was trying to show, or demonstrate, something much greater than himself. Quote:
It's not really Jesus at all. It's what he represents that matters. Quote:
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A long time ago, a bunch of people thought they could manipulate God into accepting them by following a bunch of rules. In one sense it was a direct path in that you thought you could get to God directly because following rules to manipulate was a shortcut to get to God. In another sense it was an indirect path in that you thought it was only possible to get to God by following those rules. Then along came Jesus, who said, no you don't have to follow these rules, you can get to God directly. If you believe me and believe what I say and believe in everything that I have lived for, the door is open for you. Nobody can stop you by condemning, criticising or judging you. Now, here's the tricky part. It depends on how you approach this concept. If you believe in what Jesus said and did, then you have direct access to God, but if you believe in a philosophy about what Jesus said and did then that is a barrier between you and God. Your relationship with God would be indirect. I'd have to take a Muslim's word for it, then the real purpose of Islam was probably not to put a barrier between Christians and God, but simply a response to the latter attitude, very much in the same way that Christianity was a response to the attitude that one could manipulate God by following rules or conforming to a particular philosophy. Jesus appears to make the relationship indirect, but actually, I believe he was just a reminder not to become a slave of a philosophy of what he said and did, but actually to internalise what he said and did. We are dead if we adopt a philosophy rather than a reality, based on what Jesus said and did. You have probably, indeed, discovered God through Islam. I believe that Christianity is just another way of getting to God, and that the two faiths are just different ways of expressing the same thing. Christianity looks like a Crooked Path from the outside, but it's just that the tradition is to believe in a God that plays hide-and-seek and therefore "hard to get" and therefore if we were sincere we would take the initiative and try and seek out a God that we can't easily find. Rather than taking the superficial, cop-out, most obvious, shortcut approach, trying to manipulate God, we try and probe deeper. In one sense, you may already believe in what Jesus said and did, implicitly. The trouble may be the semantics that have been built around Jesus' life and sayings. If you believe there is no barrier between you and God and that you don't have to be a slave of any philosophy, you are probably warm on the trails. I won't let the label of "Muslim" get in the way. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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