Buddhism, Hinduism and Christianity fitting together?

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Accepting the Holy Spirit (through the sacraments and faith I’m assuming?) leads to a Unity with God, for which we were created and for which we strive. This Unity is a love-bond between us and God, a covenant so to speak. The Greeks call this Theosis, and according to Catholic doctrine this is the ultimate purpose of humanity.
After death, and purgatory, when we enter into the glory and Divine Essence of God and escape the seemingly inescapable world of sadness and suffering, to Unite with God and to share in His Divine Life and Love, this could be placed in a parallel with the Buddhist idea of Nirvana. Although the Buddhist view is incomplete, it gives us a valuable perspective on the truth of the Gospel, believe it or not. And, Benedictus, if you noticed, the person whom you quoted did not say it leads to nirvana, but that it causes us to “glimpse” Nirvana. Put into Catholic terms, this is understanding or coming to a realization of the truth of heaven, and living that truth on earth.
Not quite. Nirvana is a mere escape from suffering (unless I got that wrong). It says nothing about the joy that this relationship with God brings. Christianity is relational, it is not just a shunning of the world for the grief that it brings.

The acceptance of the HolySpirit brings us deep into the love of God and yes it does lead to a transformation into an image of Christ - theosis. But theosis is so very, very much more than nirvana.

I think the point that Pope Benedict made has to be stressed here: The Gospel is the Person of Jesus Christ. This is Who we encounter, and in whose image we are to be conformed.
 
How do you know they weren’t the ones Jesus warned about?

Your friend
Sufjon
Because Jesus established a Church and He promised that the Holy Spirit will guide that Church into all truth.

That Church was guided into excluding the Gospel of Thomas.
 
The main point of my question is the veracity or your claim that the material world is deceptive or not 100% reliable.
I make no such claim. It is out perception of the world that is unreliable. Is your eyesight as keen as that of an eagle? Can you see polarized light as a bee can? Can you smell as sensitively as a bloodhound?

We have to work within the limitations of our imperfect senses.

rossum
 
I make no such claim. It is out perception of the world that is unreliable. Is your eyesight as keen as that of an eagle? Can you see polarized light as a bee can? Can you smell as sensitively as a bloodhound?

We have to work within the limitations of our imperfect senses.

rossum
Which takes me back to the same thing I have been asking your for some time? If this is so, then how do we know what is good or evil?

As I asked earlier, you cited a text that said follow the wise man. But how do we know if everything is deceptive that the wise man is indeed wise and thus leading us to the right path.
 
Look at his actions in previous lifetimes.

One of the Buddha’s principal disciples, Moggallāna, was killed by bandits. In a previous life he had killed his parents so in his last life (he was an arhat) he suffered the remaining consequences of his previous actions.

rossum
This then is where we part because there is no such thing as a previous life. We only have one life here on earth and after that it is eternity.
 
This then is where we part because there is no such thing as a previous life. We only have one life here on earth and after that it is eternity.
Benedictus, with all due respect, what is even the point of asserting that?

We can sit around all day trying to tilt each other’s metaphysical premises, but it will ultimately fail.

A person signs up to a creed/faith/philosophy precisely because they accept propositions which they consider to be self-evident (even if other people don’t).

Simply asserting that “there is no such thing as a previous life” to people who actually do believe in such a thing - i mean, its not exactly the height of persuasiveness.
 
Benedictus, with all due respect, what is even the point of asserting that?

We can sit around all day trying to tilt each other’s metaphysical premises, but it will ultimately fail.

A person signs up to a creed/faith/philosophy precisely because they accept propositions which they consider to be self-evident (even if other people don’t).

Simply asserting that “there is no such thing as a previous life” to people who actually do believe in such a thing - i mean, its not exactly the height of persuasiveness.
But that is exactly why I said this is where we part.

Rossum can explain the suffering of a just man as a punishment of past-life sins but since I don’t believe in past lives then I can’t buy that explanation.

What I will need to do is explain why re-incarnation is false hence does not explain the suffering of a just man.

I will make a humble attempt tomorrow.
 
It’s considerably less pluralist than other religions out there, but it’s not as unreasonable as it sounds when you take into account the fact that the Catholic Church has always acknowledged that saving faith in Christ - and union with His Church - can indeed be had on an unconscious level - i.e. a person who would believe in Jesus as Son of God, Christ, and Savior if (s)he knew the gospel were true due to his or her will to pursue truth and goodness wherever it may be.
I think that is a point that has to be stressed though - We are Less Pluralist, kind of goes with the idea of having a Covenant.

The whole dynamic of our religion is built upon the idea of a relationship with a being that we have identified as the Ground of All Being (Prime Mover, the Good, whatever you want to use to describe it).

Recognition of the Divine in other peoples faiths (as opposed to Hinduism for example) has not exactly been on the “to-do” list for members of the clergy regardless of the time period.
 
But that is exactly why I said this is where we part.

Rossum can explain the suffering of a just man as a punishment of past-life sins but since I don’t believe in past lives then I can’t buy that explanation.

What I will need to do is explain why re-incarnation is false hence does not explain the suffering of a just man.

I will make a humble attempt tomorrow.
Again, i mean no disrespect Benedictus - but I guarantee you it will be an ultimately disatisfying account to them. Anymore than an atheist’s attempt to show that the Resurrection could not have possiblly occurred.

That’s always been kind of the problem with Metaphysical questions in general.

This isn’t Empiricism - where you can knock out an argument’s validity based on the ability of demonstration.

All of us, the materialist included, are going to eventually hit a point where we come toward a set of premises which we declare to be self-evident…and the other party doesn’t.

So yeah you can construct an argument against reincarnation - its not like their traditions haven’t encountered such objections before via the Carvakas. And both Buddhism and Adaita Vedanta have responses to those objections which will look invalid to us not merely based on our faith commitments but also because of the central assumptions that are pushed into play for Western philosophy do not necessarily correlate to Indian philosophy’s framework.

And then what’s next? Stomp our feet on the ground, declare ourselves correct because the Magisterium/the Vedas/the Tripitaka says so?

I’ve never quite understood why people bother using a method of authority when the other person or group doesn’t acknowledge it as an authority… Forcefully asserting it will not change anyones minds.

This is heading nowhere fast…
 
Because Jesus established a Church and He promised that the Holy Spirit will guide that Church into all truth.

That Church was guided into excluding the Gospel of Thomas.
Hi again Benedictus: Jesus said that He would send the Holy Spirit to guide the apostles. The apostles went out and tended to what ministries they were given or assigned to. Meanwhile, numerous congregations took form in various locations based on t their teachings. They had diverse views and understandings on the nature of what the messages of Jesus were. This is supported by the diversity in the texts that evolved. Eventually, a particular view emerged that became predominant, but wasn’t necessarily a predominant view at the time of Jesus or during the lifetimes of the apostles.

In other words, Jesus sent the HS to guide the apostles. Also, churches developed, but at the time of the apostles, nothing like what you have now as a church existed. Nothing like what you had 200-300 years after Christ existed. You didn’t even have the creed that you have now until over 300 years later, and this was done specifically to pull everyone to heel. To draw a connection between what developed as churches or a church, any any guidance given to the apostles by the Holy Spirit is a heavy lift.

Your friend
Sufjon
 
Hi Fone Bone 2001,

I also typed: Panentheism-a valid way of seeing GOD into the search function and it brought it up.

Xuan
Hey, Xuan, I found the thread after running the search!

The thread gave the impression that it is valid to regard an emphasis on how the energies of God pervade all of creation as a form of panentheism. By that definition, it does seem to me at least that panentheism can be consistent with traditional/orthodox Christianity.

Still, I personally will avoid the term in Christian contexts, since without that crucial clarification it may give the impression that Christians can believe the world is actually part of God’s essence, which is not so.
Hi Fone Bone: I thought I’d mention that your posts are very well thought out and I appreciate your insights.
Thank you, Sufjon! Same to you - I’ve enjoyed and learned from your participation in this thread and always look forward to reading your replies.
I cannot deny that there is a unified picture of Jesus in the gospels that were generally accepted as canonical, however, these were the views of a particular school of thought.
Yes, I certainly acknowledge that.
That school of thought took great care to discredit the thinking of the many other schools of thought that are represented in the 30 or so other Gospels and assorted texts that paint a much more mystical view of Jesus. Being more mystical and less worldly than the views of people like Irenaeus and the like, they lost out. This might be because they were more spiritual, less aggressive and less dangerous to others with differing opinions than the folks who eventually won out, like Constantine, who was what he was - a blood thirsty and power hungry tyrant.
I don’t deny that the early Christian community that eventually won out vigorously attacked the views and writings of other early schools (docetists, gnostics, and others of whom I may not be aware).

Still, I don’t think it’s unfair to say that in many ways some of those movements shot themselves in the foot and contributed to their own demise. A lot of gnostic texts are - not surprisingly, given their doctrine of secret knowledge - absolutely impenetrable. It’s no coincidence that the group that triumphed was the one that proclaimed one set of teachings for everyone and hid nothing (well, they didn’t admit the unbaptized to their Eucharistic celebrations, but even so…).

Besides, as Contarini pointed out, the group that eventually triumphed was always considerably more countercultural and revolutionary than the other sects. More on this below…
That’s arguably a dangerous profile for a person starting a church.
It’s not really fair to say he “started” the Church, though he certainly solidified its political power and started the process by which it would become the state religion of the Empire.
He was very keen that one view and one view alone should come out of the Nicene council.
I have no objection to that objective, though. Clarifying and promoting correct understandings of the Christian faith has always been a goal of Church councils - even their forerunner that Acts 15 describes, the Council of Jerusalem.
Many of the texts that got thrown out had very legitimate ties back to Christ Himself.
You sure about that? The position Contarini takes below is the impression I’ve had from scholars, too (though admittedly I haven’t dug too deeply).
Jesus warned about people who could lead His followers astray. People like Irenaeus used that argument against others often enough to make me wonder if they themselves were the ones Jesus warned about. It almost seems to me an unavoidable question.

Your friend
Sufjon
A fair point, though my views on the matter - formed essentially by my experiences of both the Christian faith and my life in general - are best expressed by G.K. Chesterton in Orthodoxy. These two selections are a little long, but they get at something I find so critical to these matters:
 
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Chesterton:
The real trouble with this world of ours is not that it is an unreasonable world, nor even that it is a reasonable one. The commonest kind of trouble is that it is nearly reasonable, but not quite. Life is not an illogicality; yet it is a trap for logicians. It looks just a little more mathematical and regular than it is; its exactitude is obvious, but its inexactitude is hidden; its wildness lies in wait. I give one coarse instance of what I mean. Suppose some mathematical creature from the moon were to reckon up the human body; he would at once see that the essential thing about it was that it was duplicate. A man is two men, he on the right exactly resembling him on the left. Having noted that there was an arm on the right and one on the left, a leg on the right and one on the left, he might go further and still find on each side the same number of fingers, the same number of toes, twin eyes, twin ears, twin nostrils and even twin lobes of the brain. At last he would take it as a law; and then, where he found a heart on one side, would deduce that there was another heart on the other. And just then, where he most felt he was right, he would be wrong It is this silent swerving from accuracy by an inch that is the uncanny element in everything … An apple or an orange is round enough to get itself called round, and yet is not round after all. The earth itself is shaped like an orange in order to lure some simple astronomer into calling it a globe. A blade of grass is called after the blade of a sword, because it comes to a point; but it doesn’t. Everywhere in things there is this element of the quiet and incalculable. It escapes the rationalists, but it never escapes till the last moment.
In Chesterton’s experience (and mine as well), it is precisely the position that won out - what we now call orthodox Christianity - which best embodies this mysterious aspect of reality, which charges forward rationally and yet mysteriously anticipates all the seemingly unforeseeable twists and turns of human nature, the world, and spirituality.

My acceptance of orthodox Christianity is a leap of faith, but it is a leap of faith based on the fact that what I know of the experiential effect (on me) of the ideas of various movements now deemed “heretical” seems to corroborate Chesterton’s assertion:

Chesterton said:
[Orthodoxy is]
the equilibrium of a man behind madly rushing horses, seeming to stoop this way and to sway that, yet in every attitude having the grace of statuary and the accuracy of arithemetic. The Church in its early days … never took the tame course or accepted the conventions; the orthodox Church was never respectable. It would have been easier to have accepted the earthly power of the Arians. It would have been easy, in the Calvinistic seventeenth century, to fall into the bottomless pit of predestination … It is always easy to let the age have its head; the difficult thing is to keep one’s own … To have fallen into any of those open traps of error and exaggeration which fashion after fashion and sect after sect set along the historic path of Christendom - that would indeed have been simple. … To have fallen into any one of the fads from Gnosticism to Christian Science would indeed have been obvious and tame. But to have avoided them all has been one whirling adventure; and in my vision the heavenly chariot flies thundering through the ages, the dull heresies sprawling and prostrate, the wild truth reeling but erect.

Transcribing this quote has reminded me that, even on a factual historical level, the victorious tradition was occasionally politically overpowered. Constantine may have supported orthodox Christianity, but I’ve read estimates that at the height of the Arian crisis, 80% of the Church’s bishops were Arians. The triumph over that certainly deserves Chesterton’s label of a “whirling adventure.”
Only one of those–the Gospel of Thomas–is even remotely comparable to the canonical Gospels in terms of early date and possible faithfulness to what Jesus actually said and did. That’s the universal view of scholars. There’s a serious debate about whether the Gospel of Thomas may provide a genuine alternative look at what Jesus taught. There is no such debate about the other non-canonical Gospels.They were certainly the inventions of people who lived long after Jesus.
That’s my impression too.
I don’t think there’s much historical support for this claim. On the whole, I think most scholars would argue that the Valentinians and other “Gnostics” were more culturally conformist than “orthodox” Christians were, because they held such a spiritualized understanding of religion. Irenaeus’s version of Christianity, which affirms bodily resurrection and the goodness of creation, has much more countercultural implications for how we live.
Couldn’t agree more.
The “Gnostics” seem to have largely lost the battle to define Christianity before Constantine came along.
Also the impression I had from what I’ve learned of Christian history.
Yes, but he doesn’t seem to have cared too much which one did!
Another great point.
Irenaeus and others were trying to maintain the distinctive shape of Christianity rather than just letting it be assimilated to the general patterns of Hellenistic religion.
Yes, and to let it be assimilated in that manner would have been precisely what Chesterton describes: tame, obvious, etc.
 
Contarini;8005579:
Because they were unlike the canonical Gospels doesn’t make them wrong. It just makes them unlike the canonical Gospels. Thomas is now dated by scholars doing the most recent translations to be about 40 CE,
What scholars? The consensus seems to be that Thomas is late-first or early-second century. Stevan Davies puts it earlier–in the 50s. Helmut Koester apparently put it around 50. I have yet to see any example of a scholar who puts it around 40. Indeed, I know of no serious scholar who puts any Christian text whatever as early as that. Elaine Pagels puts it in the 90s, and that seems to reflect more of the scholarly consensus.

It’s a complicated issue, because most NT scholars think that all the Gospels are the result of a process of editing and may be “stratified” texts with earlier and later elements. So we have to distinguish whether we’re talking about the text as we have it or the earliest recension of some of the material.

Two debates I found online which are helpful in understanding Thomas scholarship are this one between William Arnal and Stevan Davies and this one between Ben Witherington and Elaine Pagels. If you have better sources, I would love to see them.
which is before Mathew, Mark, Luke or John.
Yes. If Thomas was written in the 40s or 50s it would probably be the first of the Gospels (though you can find folks who date some of the canonical Gospels very early as well). But this is a position held only by a tiny minority of scholars. Pagels, whom I would not call a conservative or even a middle-of-the-road scholar, puts it much later than that.
It more closely resembles other Nag Hamaddi codices than it does the canonical Gospels.
I’m not sure that’s true–I think that Stevan Davies, for instance, would disagree. Just because it was found with them doesn’t mean that it’s altogether the same kind of text. However, if what you’re saying is true, then that might point toward a later date for Thomas, since we know the other texts are late. (It might not, if by “resemble” you just mean “in the same way that Matthew or John resembles Irenaeus,” i.e., apparently standing within the same theological trajectory.)
He was more interested in pushing his agenda than He was in Christ.
I don’t see any evidence for such a judgment. I think you’re making a highly prejudiced judgment here–Irenaeus stands in the way of your desire to Hinduize Christianity, and so you make pejorative claims about his character. (And yes, that would be no different from how orthodox folks have treated those they deemed to be heretics! But that’s my point–you can fall into the error of calling your theological opponents bad people without being a bad person yourself.) Irenaeus believed that his “agenda” was the teaching of Christ. You assume this to be false, and then accuse him of being more interested in pushing his agenda than in Christ. But that would only be true if your version of Christ’s teaching were correct and his incorrect–and even then, it seems unfair to use such language if Irenaeus sincerely believed that he was defending Christ’s teaching, even if he were wrong. I would not say, for instance, that you are more interested in pushing your agenda than in Christ, even though I think you get Jesus badly wrong. I assume that you are sincere and deeply care about the truth and about Jesus, and I respect this about you even as I disagree with your conclusions.
He spent his life calling other people heretics.
But this is circular. Again, you’re assuming that he not only was wrong but ought to have known that he was wrong. If these people were distorting the message of Jesus, he was right to say so, and he was right to spend his life trying to keep the record clear. Even if he was wrong but was wrong in good faith, his efforts to defend orthodoxy are not to his discredit.
That’s true, but he gave it the strict structure, and the centralized machine like nature that it took on, complete with creeds by which one swears.
Certainly the imperial recognition of Christianity contributed to the development of ecclesiastical organization, but I think you’re ascribing way too much to Constantine. Christians had a fairly well-developed organization before that point, with bishops around the world consulting with each other on a regular basis. And many aspects of ecclesiastical organization were only developed later–the five-patriarch system, for instance, or the pyramidal structure of modern Catholicism.

Also, you find something approaching creeds in the early “orthodox” writers like Irenaeus and Tertullian. It seems to me that you’re collapsing a complex process, smearing the earlier folks by association with the “worldliness” of the Constantinian era even as you exaggerate how much of the structures of orthodoxy come from that era as opposed to earlier (or in some cases later).
 
I wouldn’t avoid calling what he was just because he’s dead.
You may suit yourself. I find it hard enough to make moral judgments about people who live in my own culture and whom I have met personally. I am going to be very slow to make such judgments about people who lived a long time ago.
June 326, Constantine had his eldest son Crispus, by Minervina, seized and put to death by “cold poison” at Pola (Pula, Croatia). In July, Constantine had his wife, the Empress Fausta, killed at the behest of his mother, Helena. Fausta was left to die in an over-heated bath.
Not disputing that Constantine did some horrible things. Just the sweeping judgment. But it’s not a point worth spending too much time on. (For where I’m coming from, see Herbert Butterfield’s essay “On Moral Judgments in History.”)
No, it is pretty much historically supported fact regarding the persecution by the promoters of the now canonical texts.
Supported by what evidence, found in which scholars? You make a lot of appeals to scholars, but you rarely if ever name the scholars or the sources.

I take both religious and non-religious scholars into account. A good scholar is a good scholar, and consulting scholars with various biases is the best way to go. But you seem to take a small minority of scholars at one end of the spectrum as the only folks worthy of trust. This is no different from the approach of many conservative Christians–you just favor different cliques of scholars. (At least that’s my impression from the claims you’ve been making–again, since you don’t name your sources, it’s hard to be sure.)
How do you know they weren’t the ones Jesus warned about?
I don’t. Nor do you know that they were. We have to establish what we think Jesus taught in the first place before we can make such a judgment either way, don’t we? (And, of course, I have to ask which Gospel texts you’re relying on for the view that Jesus issued such warnings in the first place. Generally those kinds of warnings are questioned by many scholars as possibly reflecting the concerns of early Christian communities more than anything Jesus himself was likely to have said. Yet, in spite of your declared preference for “non-religious” scholars, you choose to accept these warnings as having been really spoken by Jesus?)

Edwin
 
Hey, Xuan, I found the thread after running the search!

The thread gave the impression that it is valid to regard an emphasis on how the energies of God pervade all of creation as a form of panentheism. By that definition, it does seem to me at least that panentheism can be consistent with traditional/orthodox Christianity.

Still, I personally will avoid the term in Christian contexts, since without that crucial clarification it may give the impression that Christians can believe the world is actually part of God’s essence, which is not so.

Thank you, Sufjon! Same to you - I’ve enjoyed and learned from your participation in this thread and always look forward to reading your replies.

Yes, I certainly acknowledge that.

I don’t deny that the early Christian community that eventually won out vigorously attacked the views and writings of other early schools (docetists, gnostics, and others of whom I may not be aware).

Still, I don’t think it’s unfair to say that in many ways some of those movements shot themselves in the foot and contributed to their own demise. A lot of gnostic texts are - not surprisingly, given their doctrine of secret knowledge - absolutely impenetrable. It’s no coincidence that the group that triumphed was the one that proclaimed one set of teachings for everyone and hid nothing (well, they didn’t admit the unbaptized to their Eucharistic celebrations, but even so…).

Besides, as Contarini pointed out, the group that eventually triumphed was always considerably more countercultural and revolutionary than the other sects. More on this below…

It’s not really fair to say he “started” the Church, though he certainly solidified its political power and started the process by which it would become the state religion of the Empire.

I have no objection to that objective, though. Clarifying and promoting correct understandings of the Christian faith has always been a goal of Church councils - even their forerunner that Acts 15 describes, the Council of Jerusalem.

You sure about that? The position Contarini takes below is the impression I’ve had from scholars, too (though admittedly I haven’t dug too deeply).

A fair point, though my views on the matter - formed essentially by my experiences of both the Christian faith and my life in general - are best expressed by G.K. Chesterton in Orthodoxy. These two selections are a little long, but they get at something I find so critical to these matters:
Hi Fone Bone: I think I agree with most of what you’ve said. I need to correct what I said about having ties back to Christ Himself. I should have said ties to the time of Christ and very possibly to someone who had contact with some of the apostles.

Good catch - my mistake is wording.

Your friend
Sufjon
 
Not disputing that Constantine did some horrible things. Just the sweeping judgment. But it’s not a point worth spending too much time on. (For where I’m coming from, see Herbert Butterfield’s essay “On Moral Judgments in History.”)
I have made a sweeping judgement, but it would take me a year to write about all the things Constantine did to make me come to those conclusions. Thankfully, history has done for that for.
Supported by what evidence, found in which scholars? You make a lot of appeals to scholars, but you rarely if ever name the scholars or the sources.
Marvin Meyer, Elaine Pagels, Rodolphe Kasser, Gregor Wurst, Karen L. King, John Crossan, James M. Robinson to name the ones I am familiar with. I think they have very good credentials. These are about all I can name though - after all, I am a Hindu.
I take both religious and non-religious scholars into account. A good scholar is a good scholar, and consulting scholars with various biases is the best way to go. But you seem to take a small minority of scholars at one end of the spectrum as the only folks worthy of trust. This is no different from the approach of many conservative Christians–you just favor different cliques of scholars. (At least that’s my impression from the claims you’ve been making–again, since you don’t name your sources, it’s hard to be sure.)
Just named some of them. Forgot John Shelby Spong, but I know you guys hate him so I left him out. The other six or seven I named will probably suffice to support that what I have said is attended by some intellectual heft other than my own small intellect.
I don’t. Nor do you know that they were. We have to establish what we think Jesus taught in the first place before we can make such a judgment either way, don’t we? (And, of course, I have to ask which Gospel texts you’re relying on for the view that Jesus issued such warnings in the first place. Generally those kinds of warnings are questioned by many scholars as possibly reflecting the concerns of early Christian communities more than anything Jesus himself was likely to have said. Yet, in spite of your declared preference for “non-religious” scholars, you choose to accept these warnings as having been really spoken by Jesus?)
Good - my point is that we shouldn’t be so quick to discredit any of the scriptures of your faith simply because they may have more dimension to them than what is commonly accepted as canonical. The vetting process was biased, brutal and had a political and social agenda. Those factors in themselves, bring serious doubt into my mind as to the objectivity and especially the spiritual capacity of the people who decided what Christians would end up with as a faith. It doesn’t mean that they weren’t inspired or that they weren’t good people. It only means that I wonder about it. It boils down to this: I have been told by saints in my faith that Christianity is a perfectly acceptable path to God, and that it is contiguous with my own faith. I am simply trying to sort out in my mind how it fits. If I read the words of Jesus, then I see that they were right. If I look at Christianity though, I wonder if my saints were wrong. So by vetting what you believe, I am also putting what I believe to the test. It is a painful process for me, but one that I feel I have to do.

Your friend
Sufjon

Edwin
 
Hi again Benedictus: Jesus said that He would send the Holy Spirit to guide the apostles. The apostles went out and tended to what ministries they were given or assigned to. Meanwhile, numerous congregations took form in various locations based on t their teachings. They had diverse views and understandings on the nature of what the messages of Jesus were. This is supported by the diversity in the texts that evolved. Eventually, a particular view emerged that became predominant, but wasn’t necessarily a predominant view at the time of Jesus or during the lifetimes of the apostles.

In other words, Jesus sent the HS to guide the apostles. Also, churches developed, but at the time of the apostles, nothing like what you have now as a church existed. Nothing like what you had 200-300 years after Christ existed. You didn’t even have the creed that you have now until over 300 years later, and this was done specifically to pull everyone to heel. To draw a connection between what developed as churches or a church, any any guidance given to the apostles by the Holy Spirit is a heavy lift.

Your friend
Sufjon
Okay, so you accept (even just as a working hypothesis) that Jesus did say that He will send the Holy Spirit to guide the apostles into all truth.

In another chapter (Matthew 16) He says that the gates of heaven will not prevail and that He was building His Church upon Peter.

If the Church got the Bible wrong then how do we know that he did promise to send the Holy Spirit. Perhaps John’s Gospel should not be there.

Secondly, we have what we call the development of doctrine. As heresies arise, we see the Church countering these heresies and that is why we had the Councils to combat these heresies.

Thirdly the point about there being no churches like we have now is absurd. The Church that Jesus built was not mean to remain a seed, it was supposed to grow become a tree with many branches.
 
Again, i mean no disrespect Benedictus - but I guarantee you it will be an ultimately disatisfying account to them. Anymore than an atheist’s attempt to show that the Resurrection could not have possiblly occurred.

That’s always been kind of the problem with Metaphysical questions in general.

This isn’t Empiricism - where you can knock out an argument’s validity based on the ability of demonstration.

All of us, the materialist included, are going to eventually hit a point where we come toward a set of premises which we declare to be self-evident…and the other party doesn’t.

So yeah you can construct an argument against reincarnation - its not like their traditions haven’t encountered such objections before via the Carvakas. And both Buddhism and Adaita Vedanta have responses to those objections which will look invalid to us not merely based on our faith commitments but also because of the central assumptions that are pushed into play for Western philosophy do not necessarily correlate to Indian philosophy’s framework.

And then what’s next? Stomp our feet on the ground, declare ourselves correct because the Magisterium/the Vedas/the Tripitaka says so?

I’ve never quite understood why people bother using a method of authority when the other person or group doesn’t acknowledge it as an authority… Forcefully asserting it will not change anyones minds.
**
This is heading nowhere fast**…
Not quite. Depending on how you approach it. Besides, why so vehement in stifling the discussion? If you are not interested and you think this will run in the way you described, you don’t have to participate.

But let others do as they please.
 
Look at his actions in previous lifetimes.

One of the Buddha’s principal disciples, Moggallāna, was killed by bandits. In a previous life he had killed his parents so in his last life (he was an arhat) he suffered the remaining consequences of his previous actions.

rossum
Okay, here is my second reply.

If a just person who is undergoing suffering now is due to his evil deeds in the past, then don’t you think it is unfair since the person suffering now is not the same person who did the bad deed in the past?

A person is not the soul alone, he is both body and soul and you can’t split the two.

Furthermore, how can he be said to be paying for the evils done in a past life when when he doesn’t even know his past life.

At his stage, with earth being so many billion years old, every single living thing would already be at a stage of multiple re-births. Which means that we are all now paying for the errors in our past life, but what good is that when we don’t even know our past lives. We don’t even know the error we are supposed to have done and supposed to be paying for.

The only way it will make sense if it is the same person that suffers, but it isn’t.
 
I don’t see any evidence for such a judgment. I** think you’re making a highly prejudiced judgment here–Irenaeus stands in the way of your desire to Hinduize Christianity,** and so you make pejorative claims about his character.
And I think that sums it all up.
 
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