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Religion/spirituality

If you want to ask a question

(272 Posts)
soontobe Sat 10-Jan-15 18:32:19

A thread if you want to ask me a question about christianity. Mine, or in general.

I am getting asked questions about my christianity across different threads.

So if you want to ask me a question, ask here.

If no one does, fine. Great.
But if you do in future, I suspect that gransnet would like it dealt with here rather than questions popping up on other peoples' threads, for the forseeable.
Thanks.

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 11-Jan-15 10:18:09

I might be back to the thread later - grandchildren day for me. Got to go and sugar some strawberries. shocksunshine

soontobe Sun 11-Jan-15 10:16:32

arrgh, I tried to do that post right.
My first happy word should read happening

Agus Sun 11-Jan-15 10:16:08

Very clever but after once trying to have a discussion with you when it was obvious you had no idea of the facts you ended up with sympathy as the injured party! I won't fall for it a second time.

soontobe Sun 11-Jan-15 10:15:25

Gransnet HQ have now replied to me and say that the only rule they have for the topic is that it is not used for sermoninsing but as thats not what is happy here, we are happy for the thread to stay.

I will be back to this thread hopefully later today.

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 11-Jan-15 10:15:13

The New Testament is so beautiful. Perhaps that's the simple reason why Christianity has survived so long.

Ariadne Sun 11-Jan-15 10:14:11

But isn't the thwory that the NT God saw that the retributional, patriarchal system needed reforming, and that therefore Jesus was sent to suffer for all our sins, so that we didn't have to be punished. And that therefore, since we do not need to fear divine retribution, we must lead our own moral lives and make our own decisions? Which is actually, a difficult thing to do!

But I tend to agree that the bible is, as rosequartz and elegran say, is "a series of historical records carefully chosen....."

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 11-Jan-15 10:13:17

rosequartz it's definitely nothing to do with an insurance policy. It could be a "love that wilt not let me go", or it could be childhood influences. I hope it's the former.

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 11-Jan-15 10:08:37

I can't believe God was behind some of the stuff in the Old Testament.

Ariadne Sun 11-Jan-15 10:04:08

It wasn't a knee jerk reaction, Lilygran - I gave some thought to my post, and my annoyance was with what I saw as an assumption that one person could try to dictate how GN should run. There is also the question of proselytisation on a public forum, which I understand, from the GN guidelines, is to be discouraged, be it political, religious or whatever.

I feel strongly about this, but would never deny the need for explanations and debate, rather than blanket assertions about knowing God's will. Indeed, you were one of the thoughtful Christians to whom I was referring - those who explain, consider others and demonstrate their faith in their intelligent and considered responses and actions. I enjoy reading these.

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 11-Jan-15 10:03:36

I understand it doesn't mean mansions as we understand the word. But does it mean we have to believe in the resurrection of the body? I can see the possibility, even the probability of the spirit continuing to live in some way, but not the body. Perhaps Jesus was just speaking in terms the two robbers on either side of him could understand.

It's a beautiful phrase anyway. I heard it again on the Sunday Service on R4 this morning, in connection with the awful shootings. "in my Father's house are many mansions. If it were not so I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you".

Words that stay with you.

Juliette Sun 11-Jan-15 09:58:48

'Love one another as I have loved you' always a useful quote to have to hand Especially when discussing anything with my 'radicalised' Christian brother-in-law. I believe that the bible is open to interpretation, a verse for every occasion to be quoted ad-infinitum, you can make it be whatever you want whether for good or evil.

rosequartz Sun 11-Jan-15 09:50:37

I asked questions because I wanted to know what thinking lies behind soontobe's posts on some other threads. She said people keep asking her about her christianity on other threads (I was not one of them) and she thought she would answer them on one thread. I think that is reasonable. However, if someone claims to be the fount of knowledge on all things christian then I can see that that will cause controversy.

elegran is quite right in what she says about the bible.
It is a series of history books carefully chosen to follow an agenda.

Lilygran Sun 11-Jan-15 09:42:16

I think it's hardly fair to complain about soon offering to answer questions about her faith! Anyone who professes to be a believer on GN finds they are asked to explain what or why they believe. And as she says, she has been asked these kinds of questions on a number of threads. This kind of complaint just highlights the knee-jerk antagonism of some posters on GN to anything to do with faith.

kittylester Sun 11-Jan-15 09:21:43

I agree with Ariadne and mcem. And I found the op very patronising.

thatbags Sun 11-Jan-15 08:49:54

Because they are, by their very nature, controversial. It's the controversy that makes them endlessly interesting and discussable.

ninathenana Sun 11-Jan-15 08:13:04

Politics and religion, two topics guaranteed to cause controversy.

absent Sun 11-Jan-15 01:05:15

FarNorth I thought it was a joke. That was a serious comment. In fact, I still think it's a joke. Why would anyone think otherwise?

Elegran Sat 10-Jan-15 23:58:06

Silly questions? They sounded quite reasonable to me. Jings was asking what the mechanism was behind the Bible being God's word, as it was filtered throgh human brains and written down by human hands, in human language. And the mansions question was reasonable too, given that conspicuous consumption by Christians is frowned on.

Elegran Sat 10-Jan-15 23:52:28

Jings - My mother used to quote that about many mansions, meaning that there was room in heaven for people of many shades of doctrine and belief, and for those who fell into the "those who love their fellow-men" camp as well. As the family contains people of all or no denominations, including a JW, we mentioned it to the minister who was conducting her funeral. We had also mentioned her early life, which was pretty hard, and he managed to put quite the wrong meaning on the quote - that she would live in luxury in a heavenly mansion. Not at all what she would have said!

Elegran Sat 10-Jan-15 23:42:45

Eye-witness accounts - I thought the accounts were not written down until many years after the events, by which time the human brain tidies up all memories.

The books that make up the New Testament Bible we have today were selected several hundred years later (by humans) as the preferred version at that time, and in those particular circumstances, from many accounts, some differing wildly from others, and some were subversive - such as a book about the life and work of Mary Magdalene, who seems to have been far too active in the affairs of the church immediately after the crucifixion for the male hierarchy that later developed to approve of.

There was The Gospel of Peter for example, and www.earlychristianwritings.com/apocrypha.html a whole lot more.

The Old Testament would be better described as a whole library of books on different subjects, most of which were not religious at all, but historical, genealogical, legal, poetic and erotic. Some of the laws were barbaric, and some of the exploits of the heroes would make the recent atrocities look like vicarage teaparties.

jinglbellsfrocks Sat 10-Jan-15 22:51:59

It's a bit late at night for it though. moon

FarNorth Sat 10-Jan-15 22:48:56

(not meaning you, jingls)

FarNorth Sat 10-Jan-15 22:48:27

soontobe started this thread with a serious intent.
If you find it funny, it would be polite to ignore it rather than make silly comments.
Oh well....

jinglbellsfrocks Sat 10-Jan-15 22:46:29

What did Jesus mean when he said "In my Father's house are many mansions. I go to prepare a place for you."

absent Sat 10-Jan-15 22:40:08

Ana But it is. Funny, that is, or at least laughable.