lugha wrote: » Not exactly AFAIK. I thought the idea of the trinity explains this?
axer wrote: » Yes, jesus is god and god is jesus but jesus is not the holy spirit or the father. My point is that if jesus is god and god is jesus then god chose that jesus should die i.e. god/jesus committed suicide at least indirectly if not directly thus jesus/god was a sinner and a mortal sinner at that. So how does a sinner save mankind from sin?
lugha wrote: » Yes but the purpose of this was to save others. You would not describe as suicide a soldier giving his life to save others on a battle field. Would you consider such a soldier, if he were R.C., to be guilty of a mortal sin?
Anyway, as Jesus rose again you can hardly call it suicide.
Charco wrote: » Jesus went into the Jewish Temple at the most incendiary time of the year when Jerusalem was a tinderbox, he caused a violent disturbance against legitimate money changers who kept the Temple pure from idolatrous coins (albiet probably a minor disturbance), and he refused to deny that he made claims of himself that were a political offence in the Roman Empire. There is big differences between Jesus' planned actions and those of a soldier or a firefighter who act on the spur of the moment.
JimiTime wrote: » Just to be clear on your position, you too believe that if the biblical record is correct, then Jesus comitted suicide yeah?
Charco wrote: » I believe that Jesus was fully aware that his actions in the Temple would inevitably provoke a response from the authorities and were planned and carried out at the exact time of the year to ensure such a response, it wasn't just coincidental that he chose the Passover and Jesus was not an idiot, he would have known it wouldn't go unnoticed or unpunished. I also believe that he, like most sane people of the time, would have been aware that being accused of being a king in the Roman Empire when one was not an officially appointed client king was a capital offence which would not be treated lightly by the Romans. I also assume that Jesus would have been aware that Pontius Pilate had a reputation of being an extremely harsh prefect, one who at this stage may have been known to frequently execute troublemakers, often without trial as Philo described him. With all these things put together I believe that Jesus knew his violent actions and treasonous claims would very likely lead to his execution. I think this is a fair description of suicide by proxy.
Charco wrote: » Well Christians believe that everyone will be resurrected from the dead, including those who commit suicide, don't they? So I don't see what that matters.
Charco wrote: » With all these things put together I believe that Jesus knew his violent actions and treasonous claims would very likely lead to his execution. I think this is a fair description of suicide by proxy.
Wicknight wrote: » Out of curiosity do many Christians actually have an issue with that idea? Personally I don't see what the big deal would be over the idea that he committed suicide (in the form of death by cop), plenty of people have done so heroically and sacrificially, particularly if the person doesn't believe suicide is actually a sin.
kelly1 wrote: » Hello Charco, I think this is a distorted way to look at what Jesus came to do. What Jesus did was to tell the Truth and He was persecuted and put to death for doing so.
kelly1 wrote: » The Pharisees were more concerned with the law than with loving God and helping the common Jew to do the same. They put barriers between people and God and Jesus upbraided them for it. They gave a false notion of what God was about. Jesus gave a true picture of God and the Pharisees felt threatened so they reacted with violence.
kelly1 wrote: » Just on a general note, I haven't been following this thread, but I just want to say that Jesus didn't just come to save us from damnation. He came "that we might have life and have it to the full". And by full me meant a share in God's infinite divine life. A wonderful proposition if you ask me!
JimiTime wrote: » It was ABSOLUTELY NOT suicide. Having an issue with suicide is nothing to do with it. TBH, I wouldn't argue with Axer, Charco or your own position on it though.
axer wrote: » its hard to argue when you have don't have an argument.
kelly1 wrote: » Axer, that post isn't worth replying to.
axer wrote: » a bit too much harsh truth?
axer wrote: » god did kill his only son - christians believe that god sacrificed his only son. thus god is a killer. thus god is a mortal sinner. is this incorrect?
kelly1 wrote: » Time to take off the sh*t tinted specs....
kelly1 wrote: » No. Your view is horribly distorted, and a reply from me is not likely to make any difference to you.
kelly1 wrote: » God didn't kill Jesus. .... He sent His Son to die in our place!
axer wrote: » I didn't attack you so why are you attacking me?
axer wrote: » My view is based on logic. The same logic you used for below: Do you see where the point is being missed. You say it there yourself. god sent his son to die. That is killing someone. god killed his son thus that makes god a mortal sinner - I believe the punishment for mortal sinners is hell iirc. I wonder who is running heaven in his absence or does it just keep going without god.
axer wrote: » Can you see that you have agreed with me in your last post without realising it. Jesus, according to the bible, did not want to die but god killed him anyway.
axer wrote: » That is a mortal sin in christian's books - morally and ethically wrong in my book. How does someone like that then have the nerve to preach about sin?
lugha wrote: I don’t think you can discount the time frame completely. If a surgeon renders a patient clinically dead for a few minutes during an operation you would hardly accuse him of murder?
Plowman wrote: » This post has been deleted.
kelly1 wrote: » I'm not really. I just get pi**ed off/emotional when people try to make God out to be the bad buy when we're the ones who have done the wrong.
kelly1 wrote: » Strictly speaking God didn't kill Jesus.
kelly1 wrote: » What God did was an act of mercy, not a mortal sin as you put it.
kelly1 wrote: » You're accusing God of sinning when you should be searching your own heart. God's justice must be satisfied and there was no other way to achieve this. Huge crimes demand huge atonement. This talk of suicide is bull.
kelly1 wrote: » That's where you're wrong. Jesus willingly went to the cross out of love for us. He complained only one and then quickly agreed to do His Father's will anyway.
kelly1 wrote: » The mortal sins were those committed by His executioners and those who wanted Him killed.
Charco wrote: » I assume he is pointing out the Christian belief that Jesus is God. It is one entity and not seperate ones.
axer wrote: » god wanted jesus killed so again by your definition god committed a mortal sin. if god didn't want him killed then jesus would not have died.
kelly1 wrote: » Strictly speaking God didn't kill Jesus. The Romans did following the demands of the Pharisees. What God did was an act of mercy, not a mortal sin as you put it. You're accusing God of sinning when you should be searching your own heart. God's justice must be satisfied and there was no other way to achieve this. Huge crimes demand huge atonement. This talk of suicide is bull.
JimiTime wrote: » It was ABSOLUTELY NOT suicide. Having an issue with suicide is nothing to do with it.
Wicknight wrote: » I can certainly see how people would call that suicide.
kelly1 wrote: » God didn't kill Jesus. We humans did! The sinful men whom Jesus came to save and give eternal life, killed him because they felt threatened by the Truth! I was the Father's will that Jesus should die to save us but Jesus didn't commit suicide. He willingly did His Father's will and knew He would have to die in doing so. But looks what was achieved by Jesus' death! He saved billions of souls from Hell and what's more these souls now have or will have a share in God's very inner life and a share in Jesus' glory.