Quote from: Julie Marie on March 03, 2007, 03:16:59 PM
or you will not be saved.
I've heard these words from born again family members and friends alike. I didn't get it then and I don't get it now. It just doesn't wash.
So if I don't believe Christ is the son of God I will go to hell? That's pretty much what I've been told by those who recite that to me.
That means if I live life giving and caring for others, if I love and help others, if my heart is good and I do good, I'll still go to hell if I don't believe Jesus Christ is the son of God. That really seems lame.
Bear with me if I offended your ego. It wasn't intended.
I believe God loves us unconditionally. I believe we were put here for a specific reason and we were given certain burdens to carry to help us find our purpose here. I believe in life after death and I believe I will be judged by how I lived my life here.
But I have a problem with this whole believing Christ is the son of God threat. I don't think God is so narrow minded or egotistical that She would say that. That's not the God I know.
Julie
Well, well, well... how could I resist this one?

So many "Christians" have said that. "You must believe..." and then they'll finish the sentence with some sort of dogmatic line that has been parroted down through the ages as if it's from God himself. You can fill that blank with any number of things:
... that God is a Trinity.
... that the Trinity is a false doctrine.
... that there's a rapture.
... that there isn't a rapture.
... that Jesus Christ is the son of God.
... that Jesus Christ is God.
... that God is masculine.
... that God is feminine.
... that Jesus Christ somehow never even took a dump. After all, if he did, it would have been holy ->-bleeped-<-, right?
You see the mindset. It's about dogma. It's about what a person thinks about a certain topic. This, my friends, is not Christianity. More to the point, it's not what Jesus ever taught. "You must think like me to be a Christian."
Theologically speaking, it's nothing more than self-centered, self-righteous, judgmental, egotistical excrement. So many of us in the Church have allowed ourselves to be distracted by petty doctrinal issues that we have lost sight of what Jesus DID say. He said to love each other. He didn't say we had to think a certain way. In fact, if we DO think that Jesus is "the Christ, the son of the living God," then that is revealed to us by the Father (or Mother), and not by our own ego or doctrines.
Maybe it's time for those of us who DO understand that faith is not mean to be a weapon to stand up and be counted. I don't know about you, but I'm a little more than irritated that my peaceful religion has been hijacked by a bunch of warmongering thugs over and over throughout history.
Historically, religion has been synonymous with power and corrupt controlling "authorities." We've seen it with everything from the Crusades on down to the prevailing sense of fundamentalist superiority that's common today. Without question, the Church has blood on its hands. The only way to wash it off is to recognize it and begin to treat people the way we were called to treat people:
With love. With respect. With love. And when that fails, with love.