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RebeccaJ
Guest
I have to say, you have an awesome grasp of Christian mythology, albeit one that is very Buddhist!Well, basically I understand that Jesus was the avatar of the jealous creator God, Yahweh. Yahweh created Jesus to be a final sacrifice to replace the animal sacrifices demanded in the past because only blood could appease Yahweh. In honor of this, Christians symbolically drink the blood of Jesus and eat his flesh during communion, typically in front of an image of Jesus dying during his torturous execution by the Roman government. Jesus also taught some compassion, like that people who are not Jewish can also be accepted by Yahweh. However, this also means that those who reject the teachings of Jesus will be tortured in hell, I think eternally. (I think Revelations says something about them eventually being destroyed in hell.) Also, Yahweh will eventually judge the world and those who reject him will be crushed in a giant winepress of blood as described in Revelations.
In all honesty, I think someone coming from an Eastern religious background can understand incarnation better than most Westerners.
The first being, Jesus is not an avatar. Jesus is God, made man.
The Catholic understanding of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ has already been explained to you. But, I am assuming (or hoping) that you are able to grasp the mystical aspects of Catholic belief. It should be understood however, when we say mystical, or mysterious, we aren’t describing something that cannot be known. We are describing what God has revealed, therefore, it is known.
God has revealed His Flesh and Blood as a Real Presence in the Holy Eucharist. Therefore, it is something we know by reason. The clearest description of this is found in the Gospel of John. You can read it online here.
For Christians, our sins are expiated permanently and irrevocably by Jesus Christ. Of course, we can and do fall into sin again. We aren’t reborn and there is no such thing as karma. Rather, we rely on Jesus Christ who has paid the price for our sin. We find our Salvation in Him.This is very different from the Buddhist idea that, even if you fall into hell (for things like hatred or jealousy) for eons, one’s karma will eventually be expiated and it will eventually be possible to be reborn as a human and ultimately attain enlightenment. Or that “sinning” or “missing the mark” is ultimately doing things that are unwise for our own well being and that of others (Buddhism teaches that we are all interconnected as manifestations of the eternal Buddha and through ichinen-sanzen) as opposed violating a divine fiat.
Philosophically speaking, I had a philosophy teacher in college who I think explained a difference between Buddhism and Christianity as well as I had ever heard:
- Buddhism is an infinite cycle that is seeking to end
- Christianity is a finite life seeking the infinite