Scotsman? I'm neither Scot nor a "man". I bet you thought you were witty too.sketerpot wrote:
Well, that disqualifies most of the Christians I know. Nice work, Scotsman.
sketerpot wrote:
That's not what Ravenclaw said. The definition I was responding to included some mildly controversial points:
1. Jesus is the son of God, sent down to earth by God. There's so much quibbling over this. Was Jesus literally descended from God? Was he just a really important prophet? What was the deal with the virgin birth story that backs up the son-of-God angle?
2. Resurrection. Many of the more liberal Christians treat this as metaphorical.
3. Believing in and submitting to Jesus is the only way to get to heaven. Most of the non-fundies I've talked to about this will, when pressed, admit that they don't actually believe it. They want God to give non-Christians some justice, so they believe that he does.
The thing about Jesus dying for sins so people could go to heaven is less controversial among Christians, but the question of what happens to people who never heard the Good News tends to make people believe that Jesus is not the only path to heaven -- just the only proper path to Salvation, whatever that means.
Most Christian beliefs are incoherent. That's why I favor hazy definitions based on how the word is typically used.
I'm aware of these controversies and one is never going to get the perfect definition that qualifies every Christian sect and church. My definition was what was taken from my years as a church-going fundie thus why it bears such fundie-like ideas, I suppose.
Gothic Christians believe that Resurrection is metaphorical.
As for the Jesus Ticket into Heaven, that's the biggest one that Christians I know tend to argue about. Some say that believing is enough. Some say you still need to go through Judgement by God. The bible doesn't help because it also says that you can only get in if your name is in the Book of Life, which is written in the beginning of time, which seems to mean that nothing you do matters.
The topic asked for a definition, so I gave one that I know. Whether I believe it for truth or not, is quite another thing. Whether or not, I'm still a Christian (even a liberal one) is a rather open question nowadays. But that's personal.