St. Nicholas of Myra was also a great one, he physically assaulted a man for denying the deity of Christ. Much better than the fables now told about him.
What's the truth of the story for developed, sophisticated people? I've tested all the alternatives and found that Christianity is also fully satisfactory for every awakened sovereign and independent responsible thinker.
The new testament is a repackaged version of the old testament, which in itself is a repackaged version of many other, older religions and belief systems.
The story of "christ" in the latest reboot, the Bible, is an allegory for the sun.
Bro, I just called out the alchemists. OP is all about getting the timing wrong, and I just explained that falling for that trick is just as bad research as accepting the pastor or priest uncritically. The reality is that the sun is an allegory of Christ.
So did you find the real God or are you still searching.
The reality is that the sun is an allegory of christ
This is actually a very profound statement and I think any disagreement about who christ was would be semantics.
So did you find the real God or are you still searching.
I did. I truly did.
And western religion only scratches the surface then misdirects into a collection plate. There are eastern religions that are paths to him, but they aren't the only paths.
any disagreement about who christ was would be semantics.
OK, now we're talking. I'm talking about a Jewish guy who died by getting hung out on a stake by the human government on charges of opposing it, about 33 CE. He said he and the Father-Creator of All were one, and he accepted being called God and receiving the worship due only to God. Either he was right (and thus he made the sun to reflect himself), or he was wrong (and thus deserved worse than he got). I have some respect for eastern paths but there is only one goal a path to God can lead to if there is only one God: there is no both-and about inherent contradictions. But you're still not spinning me your own fairy tales (perhaps you think I'm not open-minded).
If I don't link up fast I still hope to return to the subject this Good Friday.
St. Nicholas of Myra was also a great one, he physically assaulted a man for denying the deity of Christ. Much better than the fables now told about him.
What's the truth of the story for developed, sophisticated people? I've tested all the alternatives and found that Christianity is also fully satisfactory for every awakened sovereign and independent responsible thinker.
The new testament is a repackaged version of the old testament, which in itself is a repackaged version of many other, older religions and belief systems.
The story of "christ" in the latest reboot, the Bible, is an allegory for the sun.
Bro, I just called out the alchemists. OP is all about getting the timing wrong, and I just explained that falling for that trick is just as bad research as accepting the pastor or priest uncritically. The reality is that the sun is an allegory of Christ.
So did you find the real God or are you still searching.
This is actually a very profound statement and I think any disagreement about who christ was would be semantics.
I did. I truly did.
And western religion only scratches the surface then misdirects into a collection plate. There are eastern religions that are paths to him, but they aren't the only paths.
OK, now we're talking. I'm talking about a Jewish guy who died by getting hung out on a stake by the human government on charges of opposing it, about 33 CE. He said he and the Father-Creator of All were one, and he accepted being called God and receiving the worship due only to God. Either he was right (and thus he made the sun to reflect himself), or he was wrong (and thus deserved worse than he got). I have some respect for eastern paths but there is only one goal a path to God can lead to if there is only one God: there is no both-and about inherent contradictions. But you're still not spinning me your own fairy tales (perhaps you think I'm not open-minded).
If I don't link up fast I still hope to return to the subject this Good Friday.