It’s pretty well known JeanMichel, at least on my journey. Jesus is more like a big brother to look up to. Like Steve Young knowing that some day he will take Joe Montana’s place and become a great star like him. It’s also a twist on the Fall of Man.
They see the desire to become a god like God as a good thing. Christians would see this as the Great Apostasy. The main reason we have Confessionals in our Churches. The battle line so to speak.
We as Catholics also battle with the same sin each day when we try to control our own will rather than giving each day up to Jesus, allowing Him to align His will with ours. He is the source of all that is good in us as for us Christians. He is our life blood. We will never be Great like Him although we can be great in love in Him and through Him. He is…we share in Him. We are the Body of Christ, He being the head. He is our Lord and God. Take away Jesus you would have nothing at all, not even empty space….nothing
Rich
Catholic-RCIA,
You have captured, by saying “we will never by like Him,” a key point of the Great Apostasy, in that the loving and compassionate Intercessory prayer and the repeated teachings of Jesus, plus the teachings of John including so many plain references in the book of Revelation, include the very thing that we are to seek to “be like Him” and that He brings humankind into the possibility, if they so choose, to “be like Him.” To be like Him means to be totally loving, totally unselfish, completely meek and humble, completely one with Heavenly Father’s will, a “servant of all”.
The adversary has a plan of deception to interrupt any thought of anyone that they should seek to “become like Jesus”, through building doubt and through encouraging scoffing at those who take the literal words of the Bible and know that those words were intended exactly as they were spoken by the Savior and written by John and the other gospel writers.
There are dozens of references to becoming “like Him” or to inheriting what He inherits, and those references are unmistakably clear and forthright. But it means a process of repentance and change and looking at the world through eyes of complete faith and trust in God’s promises, and eyes of love for all men and belief in their possibilities for change through Christ’s loving help, which the adversary interrupts with every tactic he can muster.