M
MartinJordan
Guest
However, Jesus also was a Jew (grew up according to the laws) and the Jews obviously knew what he meant. Whether they accepted his words and works was another thing.A lot of what Jesus said was perplexing.
MJ
However, Jesus also was a Jew (grew up according to the laws) and the Jews obviously knew what he meant. Whether they accepted his words and works was another thing.A lot of what Jesus said was perplexing.
…and Baha’u’llah stated that He was the unique “Glory of the Father”Except Jesus argued he himself was the unique son of God, see the parable of the wicked Tenants, the only son is the son sent at the end who dies, those before him (moses and the prophets) were messengers and servants. This sort of unique understanding is all throughout the new testament, so the sonship of Christ is one of uniqueness as opposed to this flat sonship which non trinitarians want to embrace. Everything is centered around jesus, not all the prophets.
We love these Beautiful Mirrors which God sends to us to reflect His Beauty. Sometimes we fall in love with a particular Mirror that we forget the Divine Purpose of that Mirror, which is to draw us away from ourselves and closer to God.…and Baha’u’llah stated that He was the unique “Glory of the Father”
…so where does this leave your thoughts Ignatian?
(since it seems you are having a competition)
I acknowledge and cherish your thoughts that the Son of God is a unique station, and I share in that uniqueness (He truly was unique in so many ways), yet the uniqueness of a Rose in bloom this spring, does not mean that an equally unique and beautiful, (or even more beautiful) Rose cannot bloom next spring…
Isn’t it beautiful that we have such beautiful physical realities to express the truth behind spiritual realities?
Heaven is a state of being and the only thing we can be sure of is that no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor mind conceived of what God has planned for those who love Him.
- Will we live on earth, or in heaven with this body?
Scripture tells us that there will be a new heaven and a new earth:
- If on earth, will the earth somehow also last forever, or will it be destroyed when the sun burns out billions of years from now?
Again, heaven is not a place but rather a state of being; a state of complete oneness with the Father, Son and Holy Spirit as His adopted sons and daughters. Space and time will no longer exist as we will live in eternity. As for our nature we will have a body like Christ, a spiritual body, but a human spiritual body as opposed to an angelic spiritual body. We will retain our individual identities and will be forever human, just in a glorified state. We will be what God created us to ultimately be. He never desired for us to be separate, but rather part of his family.
- If it will be in heaven, what is the difference between a glorified body and a spirit?
I have no idea. It’s fun to wonder, but that’s all we are really doing. Heaven is beyond human expression, not to mention neither of us have been there, so it is difficult to say. We only have our limited, finite mind with which to imagine the infinite and eternal glory of God.
- Apart from not needing food and air, what other advantages are there, will we still need to speak with words to communicate or will we be able to communicate spiritually?
When we are resurrected we will be in heaven. Our relationships will be more intimate than anything we can imagine on this earth. Marriage is a foreshadowing of our relationship with God. There is no purpose for marriage in heaven, except for the marriage of the Lamb with his Bride, the Church of which everyone in heaven is a part.
- Jesus said there is no taking in marriage in heaven, but what about while resurrected on earth?
Questions such as these are meaningless in light of the great mystery of God and the heaven he has planned for us. They simply don’t matter. Whatever happens to us, in whatever state in which we find ourselves, we will be purified and perfected. There will be no age in heaven, as if we are somehow frozen forever at the age at which we die. We cannot think of heaven in human terms.
- Jesus also spoke about the Kingdom of God on earth, as it is in heaven. Will this be with glorified bodies and no marriage? If with marriage, what about children?
- In fact, what about those who die as children, will they be resurrected as children or adults, and if as children, will they stay that way forever?
- Questions related to these come up when speaking with Jehovah’s Witnesses. How is the Catholic view different from theirs with regard to living forever on earth?
Thanks!
It’s meaningless to say he is unique when you refuse to qualify that statement, you would not accept Christ as being greater than Moses, the greatest of all, judge of all humanity, creator of everything that began to exist and etc, the one to whom everything is concentrated through. You would apply all those things equally to Mirza Hussain and the other manifestations which simply cannot be the case because the New testament doesn’t teach this about Moses.…and Baha’u’llah stated that He was the unique “Glory of the Father”
…so where does this leave your thoughts Ignatian?
(since it seems you are having a competition)
I acknowledge and cherish your thoughts that the Son of God is a unique station, and I share in that uniqueness (He truly was unique in so many ways), yet the uniqueness of a Rose in bloom this spring, does not mean that an equally unique and beautiful, (or even more beautiful) Rose cannot bloom next spring…
Isn’t it beautiful that we have such beautiful physical realities to express the truth behind spiritual realities?
Thankyou Steve for your comprehensive thoughts.Heaven is a state of being and the only thing we can be sure of is that no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor mind conceived of what God has planned for those who love Him.
Scripture tells us that there will be a new heaven and a new earth:
“Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away…” (Rev 21:1)
All of creation will be changed. What that will be like we don’t know, but we do know that it will be eternal and therefore will never end. We certainly won’t be worried about the sun burning out. The Son of God will be our light.
Again, heaven is not a place but rather a state of being; a state of complete oneness with the Father, Son and Holy Spirit as His adopted sons and daughters. Space and time will no longer exist as we will live in eternity. As for our nature we will have a body like Christ, a spiritual body, but a human spiritual body as opposed to an angelic spiritual body. We will retain our individual identities and will be forever human, just in a glorified state. We will be what God created us to ultimately be. He never desired for us to be separate, but rather part of his family.
I have no idea. It’s fun to wonder, but that’s all we are really doing. Heaven is beyond human expression, not to mention neither of us have been there, so it is difficult to say. We only have our limited, finite mind with which to imagine the infinite and eternal glory of God.
When we are resurrected we will be in heaven. Our relationships will be more intimate than anything we can imagine on this earth. Marriage is a foreshadowing of our relationship with God. There is no purpose for marriage in heaven, except for the marriage of the Lamb with his Bride, the Church of which everyone in heaven is a part.
Questions such as these are meaningless in light of the great mystery of God and the heaven he has planned for us. They simply don’t matter. Whatever happens to us, in whatever state in which we find ourselves, we will be purified and perfected. There will be no age in heaven, as if we are somehow frozen forever at the age at which we die. We cannot think of heaven in human terms.
“Heaven is the ultimate end and fulfillment of the deepest human longings, the state of supreme, definitive happiness” (CCC par 1024).
Can you say Jesus is the greatest by which all are made that are made, to whom all honour, glory and worship and respect is due to? Can you say is the end all of all existence? And do not reinterpret my words into something that is more to your liking, you know what I mean, please address what I mean.Actually the Bahai Faith acknowledges the different intensities of Revelation, and the different Messages that the Revelation pursues.
The exact quote is not memorized I’m afraid so can’t get it for you, but I’m certain someone else here will, but the passage essentially talks about the sun and how it provides light at the beginning of the day at dawn, GRADUALLY providing sustenance to life on earth, and as it rises and ascends the horizon it increases in intensity.
The same can be said about the same Sun of Truth providing spiritual sustenance to mankind GRADUALLY, through the differing Manifestations of God.
Though they are the same Sun, the INTENSITY of their light differs and gradually increases.
In that sense Jesus can easily be called the builder of the house while Moses was the house itself…they established different things and because Moses’ Sun had advanced His people to a certain extent, Jesus’ Sun needed to advance the world further still, hence a tremendous thrust in intensity in Jesus’ Sun, yet the Sun was the same Sun…different intensity that’s all…
Problem solved my friend![]()
Why would we limit this Divinity and exclude the possibility of It becoming Flesh again?Can you say Jesus is the greatest by which all are made that are made, to whom all honour, glory and worship and respect is due to? Can you say is the end all of all existence? And do not reinterpret my words into something that is more to your liking, you know what I mean, please address what I mean.
Baha’u’llah’s teachings are completely in agreement with this, in fact it is nearly a direct quote of some of His writings.Heaven is a state of being and the only thing we can be sure of is that no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor mind conceived of what God has planned for those who love Him.
To say a “new heaven and a new earth” pretty much implies that everything will have changed. But since you say we don’t know what it will be like, how can you say for sure that it is not as Baha’u’llah teaches? That is, the prophecy means there will be a new Revelation from God (heaven) and a new religion for mankind (earth),Scripture tells us that there will be a new heaven and a new earth:
“Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away…” (Rev 21:1)
All of creation will be changed. What that will be like we don’t know, but we do know that it will be eternal and therefore will never end. We certainly won’t be worried about the sun burning out. The Son of God will be our light.
We agree that heaven is not a place, and not limited by space and time, whereas our physical body is limited by space and time, would you agree with that? But the question remains, what is the difference between a spiritual body and a spirit? The New Testament seems to make that distinction, and certainly the Church teaches that.Again, heaven is not a place but rather a state of being; a state of complete oneness with the Father, Son and Holy Spirit as His adopted sons and daughters. Space and time will no longer exist as we will live in eternity. As for our nature we will have a body like Christ, a spiritual body, but a human spiritual body as opposed to an angelic spiritual body. We will retain our individual identities and will be forever human, just in a glorified state. We will be what God created us to ultimately be. He never desired for us to be separate, but rather part of his family.
I completely agree with you here.I have no idea. It’s fun to wonder, but that’s all we are really doing. Heaven is beyond human expression, not to mention neither of us have been there, so it is difficult to say. We only have our limited, finite mind with which to imagine the infinite and eternal glory of God.
I agree that there is no marriage in heaven, but what about on “earth as it is in heaven?”When we are resurrected we will be in heaven. Our relationships will be more intimate than anything we can imagine on this earth. Marriage is a foreshadowing of our relationship with God. There is no purpose for marriage in heaven, except for the marriage of the Lamb with his Bride, the Church of which everyone in heaven is a part.
I don’t believe that these questions are meaningless. There are great mysteries that we will never understand, and some that will be answered after we leave this life, but if we don’t examine the beliefs that can be understood, we are not living up to our potential as humans, with both spirit and mind as God created us.Questions such as these are meaningless in light of the great mystery of God and the heaven he has planned for us. They simply don’t matter. Whatever happens to us, in whatever state in which we find ourselves, we will be purified and perfected. There will be no age in heaven, as if we are somehow frozen forever at the age at which we die. We cannot think of heaven in human terms.
“Heaven is the ultimate end and fulfillment of the deepest human longings, the state of supreme, definitive happiness” (CCC par 1024).
. The Revelation, of which Bahá’u’lláh is the source and center, abrogates none of the religions that have preceded it, nor does it attempt, in the slightest degree, to distort their features or to belittle their value. It disclaims any intention of dwarfing any of the Prophets of the past, or of whittling down the eternal verity of their teachings. It can, in no wise, conflict with the spirit that animates their claims, nor does it seek to undermine the basis of any man’s allegiance to their cause. Its declared, its primary purpose is to enable every adherent of these Faiths to obtain a fuller understanding of the religion with which he stands identified, and to acquire a clearer apprehension of its purpose. It is neither eclectic in the presentation of its truths, nor arrogant in the affirmation of its claims. Its teachings revolve around the fundamental principle that religious truth is not absolute but relative, that Divine Revelation is progressive, not final. Unequivocally and without the least reservation it proclaims all established religions to be divine in origin, identical in their aims, complementary in their functions, continuous in their purpose, indispensable in their value to mankind.It’s meaningless to say he is unique when you refuse to qualify that statement, you would not accept Christ as being greater than Moses, the greatest of all, judge of all humanity, creator of everything that began to exist and etc, the one to whom everything is concentrated through. You would apply all those things equally to Mirza Hussain and the other manifestations which simply cannot be the case because the New testament doesn’t teach this about Moses.
Ignatian. This has been explained to you over and over and over again. That you reject the explanations reflects only upon you yourself, not upon Baha’u’llah, whom we believe to be the Promised One of all religions, including Christianity. It is clear that no man can contend with God and His words. The Jews contended with the words of Christ. You contend with the words of Baha’u’llah.I am talking about the eternal person of Jesus Christ. Now unless bahai think there is one manifestation, one eternal person who incarnates himself in different periods of history who perfectly reflects God your answers make no sense. Is that the case?
My central point of Jesus being the greatest is being avoided. My question to you Bahai is Jesus greater than Abraham, MOses, Muhammad and Mirza hussain (though the last two do not belong in a list with Abraham and Moses) ? Is Jesus the end all and be all of all that exists? To whom honour eternal is due to? I would like a clear answer not these attempts to answer around me.
For if you truely claim not to abrogate what has come you must accept that Christ is the greatest, he is God, to be worshipped, he only saved all humanity from itself, born of a virgin and rose again. But its not true that bahai don’t abrogate what has come before, they do it all the time when they deny Jesus as God (and do not claim he was divine I know you mean something else by that, that you do not consider JEsus of Nazereth God, you know what I mean in all of this, so please do not attempt to escape what I mean by redefining words to your liking).
Firstly…If Baha’u’llah does not describe who He actually is, why don’t you enlighten us with who you think He is, and the reasons behind that Ignatian?Servant when did I ever endorse patripassionism? Or Sabealianism? When did I ever say Jesus is the father? And you do realise the implications of saying “Jesus shares the same substance as the father?” You are saying essentially what constitutes Jesus, his existence, his very being, consistutes the father.Your almost there to trinitarianism, just say the same thing for the Holy spirit and you’ve abandoned Bahai.
Now I call him mirza Hussain because I believe the self given name he appropiated to himself is a lie, it does not describe whom he actually is, which to is a false prophet in the vein of Muhammad or Joseph smith.