Well, I've never been baptized, in big part because my parents thought it should be my choice. I'm still not quite sure what Confirmation is. I think most of the churches I go to do not do it. At most they have the Eucharist once in a while.
There are many areas where Genesis is quoted as if literal, but I nevertheless do not think it's literal.corpselight wrote:but the idea of through one man sin came into the world, and through one Man we are all reconciled, which boils down to original sin in some fashion, appears to be important to universalism (though i still feel the meta-narrative carries the day).
That's one way to look at it. Definitely valid considering the various analogies in the NT.corpselight wrote:or maybe it's less simple and Adam and Eve are symbols rather than people. in which case original sin in my life is the first time i sinned, personally. Paul could have believed in a literal Adam and Eve, and used them to build his idea that sin and death are in us all, and it still follows that the same "all" is redeemed later.
Yes. I think the core message of "all have fallen short" is that we should not obsess with being perfect. We can't be perfect, and we aren't. Too many people forfeit many things and cut of relationships because someone had a problem. Life is extremely unideal.corpselight wrote:the difficulty is that the best choice is not easy to find without foreknowledge! so all we can do is our best...and really i think that's all we can be expected to do, which again blurs the line of what sin is.
BirdOfTheEgg wrote:There are many areas where Genesis is quoted as if literal, but I nevertheless do not think it's literal.corpselight wrote:but the idea of through one man sin came into the world, and through one Man we are all reconciled, which boils down to original sin in some fashion, appears to be important to universalism (though i still feel the meta-narrative carries the day).
It is similar to the "man is to die once, then judgment". It's making a point. Heck, sometimes I think Paul tries way too hard to draw analogies like these and I do not believe all of them. I similarly do not take "Adam was created first, then Eve, Eve ate the apple, so now all women should be in permanent submission and have pregnancy issues" very seriously, either. God was, in my view, describing a reality that will occur, not a reality that should occur (where Paul seems bent on perpetuating it).
To me, the biggest Universalist message is "I came not to condemn the world but to save the world", "love your enemies", etc. And the general fact that I consider God to be far more moral, good, and loving than any of us. "My ways are not your ways".That's one way to look at it. Definitely valid considering the various analogies in the NT.corpselight wrote:or maybe it's less simple and Adam and Eve are symbols rather than people. in which case original sin in my life is the first time i sinned, personally. Paul could have believed in a literal Adam and Eve, and used them to build his idea that sin and death are in us all, and it still follows that the same "all" is redeemed later.Yes. I think the core message of "all have fallen short" is that we should not obsess with being perfect. We can't be perfect, and we aren't. Too many people forfeit many things and cut of relationships because someone had a problem. Life is extremely unideal.corpselight wrote:the difficulty is that the best choice is not easy to find without foreknowledge! so all we can do is our best...and really i think that's all we can be expected to do, which again blurs the line of what sin is.
Of course, one can wonder what is really the purpose of the Church, and which Church. Is it supposed to be a microcosm of God's kingdom? I seriously do not believe that anymore. I think early Christians had their special place where they were to spread Christianity and its morality for a few hundred years, but now it's on all people, and we're to bring it all on all earth, not keep the light locked up in a church somewhere.
BirdOfTheEgg wrote:There's some confusion with the whole perfection issue. John (Peter) says "be without blemish when I come", and "it's difficult for even the righteous to be saved". In fact, those 3 epistles sort of undermine the whole saved-by-faith and saved-imperfect issue a bit, and summon a lot of "do I have the Spirit???" issues. I asked an ETC friend of mine and he believes that those things were said for effect, but in reality it is not as strict.
I also wonder if "be without blemish" is an indication of when Jesus will actually come back. It said in some other verse "I may take 10 years or 1000 years. It is not because I am slow, but because I am patient with you lot and want you all to become saved" (this seems to not make much sense considering that more people are unsaved than not, though. People do not live that long).
BirdOfTheEgg wrote:I do not believe everything people do is filthy rags. I think that keeps being taken grossly out of context. I think it's a discussion of works-based salvation specifically (similarly to the "Now to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift but as his due"). I.e., doing things to gain salvation. Paul makes the point that those won't work (I would argue because they do not come from the heart. There's a big emphasis on "freely given" in the Bible).
On the other hand, whenever a person did something out of the goodness of their heart, Jesus commended them (the Samaritan, the confused sheep at judgment). There's nothing wrong with good works, "against such things there is no law", but if you do them out of a selfish interest only, it won't do anything because it doesn't change you and it's not God working. Yet "he who does the will of my father is my mother and my sister and my brother".
This is, of course, a very thin line to walk. For me, adopting Christianity was a very strong mental shift, and much of it was "I should do this because I should". And in big part, many things are "fake it until you make it". But I very early tried to throw salvation out the window. It makes one very selfish and clouds a lot of issue - you always think in terms of what will save YOU or what will damn YOU. It breeds a lot of that legalism. And all the Christians I speak to seem obsessed with the idea. When one mentions something negative they do, instead of worrying about its effect, they say "thank God for grace". One of the reasons I like Universalism because it kinda does throw that out the window. You are free to serve God because you want to, not because you feel cornered or blackmailed. And prior to Universalism, because I held Jesus's teachings to be true, right, worthy of following, I lived via something similar to Paidon's "better to be damned doing God's will than saved doing nothing". To me, that's really the Universalist manifesto. On this issue, I cardinally disagree with Origen/MacDonald. If one requires ETC to be compelled to follow God, show them the door.
BirdOfTheEgg wrote:But I very early tried to throw salvation out the window. It makes one very selfish and clouds a lot of issue - you always think in terms of what will save YOU or what will damn YOU. It breeds a lot of that legalism. And all the Christians I speak to seem obsessed with the idea. When one mentions something negative they do, instead of worrying about its effect, they say "thank God for grace". One of the reasons I like Universalism because it kinda does throw that out the window. You are free to serve God because you want to, not because you feel cornered or blackmailed.
corpselight wrote:i'd argue alot (certainly not all!) of what we as humans do is self-motivated in some way. this may or may not be the sin of selfishness, but more of a behavioural pattern that we're born into. i think God urges us to break free of that pattern, and He promises to give us the strength to.
Sobornost wrote:That's very interesting and chimes with seomthing I half remembered early in the thread that an Orthodox theologian had written. (I only joined the site last November and have missed Richard Beck's thread on the site homepage - in case anybody else is as dumb as me. Yes he's got seriously interesting things to say that relate to first things as well as last things).
All the best
Dick (and I hear that you are a fan of Gerrard Hughes)
johnnyparker wrote:Hi Dick
Thanks very much to you - and to all the other participants in this thread - for raising some really interesting and challenging ideas. But I do agree with your suggestion that this thread be broken down into its 'component parts' as it were. It is already long, and covers a lot of ground, so I suspect anybody coming to it for the first time, like me yesterday, might find it a bit of a challenge to 'catch up'. (Or maybe I'm just slow! )
There was also a post regarding this idea on Experimental Theology. Little did I know, though, that this was also be supported in the Bible:Melchizedek wrote:I think the view in general is similar to Stephen Jones' view; that it is actually the state of being mortal that has passed on the propensity to sin, sort of like a generational curse or genetic disease that is passed down. We are enslaved by the fear of death, and it is only the resurrection provided to us that can free us from that.
I don't really work with children, I'd rather say that I observe parents a lot instead. Particularly, what they say, how they speak of their children, how they behave around them when they go visit someone, relative to what the children themselves are. Obviously this is rather anecdotal. As far as studying psychology and such is, I generally do case study, i.e., looking at one person at a time and seeing how things developed, instead of collecting data.Sobornost wrote:You obviously have the knoweldege and experience on this one (do you work with children adn/or have qualifications related to child development?). Can you think of a title for a thread that could look at this subject and have a title that somehow flags that it is intimately connected with the other Original Sin threads (because it is)?
BirdOfTheEgg wrote:I wouldn't be particularly surprised if 90% of ancestral sin was, in fact, simply being exposed to life on Earth in one way or another.
Tbh, I think this sounds... stupid. It's the same as Divine Comedy rubbish. I also heard a different version (from someone's book I think) where he said there was some wicked woman, who never did anything good ever (I am seriously doubtful such people even exist but w/e) except give someone an onion. So she is given the onion to hold on to while being thrown in the Lake of Fire, and whoever is already in the Lake of Fire is pulling her down, while an angel is pulling her up by the onion. And when she tried to kick off the arms that were pulling her down (because she was wicked, no less), the onion crumpled.Sobornost wrote:‘Aerial toll houses refers to a controversial teaching held by some Eastern Orthodox Christians, about the immediate state of the soul after death. According to this doctrine, "following a person's death the soul leaves the body, and is escorted to God by angels. During this journey the soul passes through an aerial realm, which is ruled by demons. The soul encounters these demons at various points referred to as 'toll-houses' where the demons then attempt to accuse it of sin and, if possible, drag the soul into hell."
BirdOfTheEgg wrote:It again comes back to these negative descriptions on God where God tries to keep man in terror and trip him up at every point. There are two reasons one can do such a thing: the evil way, where he trips people up to screw with them and send them to Hell; the good way, where a coach would trip you up to make sure you're in good shape and ready to go. I believe in the God of the latter. The God who made humans just to scare them for no reason to me seems unspeakably evil.
johnnyparker wrote:Perhaps the scripture which resonates the most with me on this subject is Paul in Romans 7 (my emphases):
"We know that the law is spiritual; but I am unspiritual, sold as a slave to sin. I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do. And if I do what I do not want to do, I agree that the law is good. As it is, it is no longer I myself who do it, but it is sin living in me. For I know that good itself does not dwell in me, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out. For I do not do the good I want to do, but the evil I do not want to do—this I keep on doing. Now if I do what I do not want to do, it is no longer I who do it, but it is sin living in me that does it."
johnnyparker wrote:James
Regarding your 'off-topic' remark about your girlfriend, two of the many things I love about this forum are that:
a) You can go off-topic whenever you like, it's all good!
b) People are as a rule so unjudgemental. Judgementalism is one of the most unattractive traits of Christians generally - certainly Christians of a certain type, and that type tends to be (but isn't always, of course) the ECT-believing type. I think this is one of the fruits, and one of the proofs, or UR.
Shalom
Johnny
PS Check out Ravi Holy's introductory post here, and his Facebook profile, if you want to see the epitome of the ex-punk Christian!!!
Sobornost wrote:P.S. The saying 'Keep your mind in hell, and despair not' comes from the Russian Orthodox Saint Staretz Silouan. Of him I know nothing, he could have been an absolute terror for all I knowBut I've seen his saying quoted twice - and it spoke to me.
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