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Godi
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Don’t forget When Jesus asked God his Father, He always prayed, “not as I wish but according to YOUR WILL.”:knight1:Yes, God is the greatest, he sacrificed his son for us, who did die on the cross.
Don’t forget When Jesus asked God his Father, He always prayed, “not as I wish but according to YOUR WILL.”:knight1:Yes, God is the greatest, he sacrificed his son for us, who did die on the cross.
How can Christians believe that the words “MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAVE YOU FORSAKEN ME?” can come from Jesus (pbuh) since it is so obvious that the Psalm verses above is the lamentation of someone who has sinned and is praying for salvation from his Lord…It is not blasphemy because it is the way that God has taught us to pray:
Psalm 21
1Unto the end, for the morning protection, a psalm for David.
2O God my God, look upon me: why hast thou forsaken me? Far from my salvation are the words of my sins.
Laudatur Iesus Christus.Is it against Catholic theology to believe that Christ did, in some sense, experience a kind of separation from the Father on our behalf?
This is how I always interpreted this passage. In order for Christ to truly and fully unite Himself to the sinful condition of humankind he had to actually experience the feeling of being forsaken that we have all experienced in the midst of our own sins.
Is that considered heretical?
Jesus was without sin, HE IS THE SON OF GOD OUR FATHER. He died for man’s sins. Christians wonder how Muslims can believe in someone as monsterous as Mohammad was? Talk about SIN! Mohammad seems to be a character out of a Stephen King novel. How can you believe a pedophile? A murderer? A Thief?:knight1:How can Christians believe that the words “MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAVE YOU FORSAKEN ME?” can come from Jesus (pbuh) since it is so obvious that the Psalm verses above is the lamentation of someone who has sinned and is praying for salvation from his Lord…
Do Christians believe that Jesus committed sin that he should utter these words of someone praying for his salvation when he was allegedly dying on the cross?
David wrote that Psalm, and he *had *sinnedHow can Christians believe that the words “MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAVE YOU FORSAKEN ME?” can come from Jesus since it is so obvious that the Psalm verses above is the lamentation of someone who has sinned and is praying for salvation from his Lord…
Montalban, my brother, to interpret “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?,” I think it would be useful to consider two other verses:then you’re arguing that Jesus felt abandoned by himself - for Jesus is God…
…And as Jesus never sinned how did he feel alieanted from God, who is Himself?
2 Cor 5.21: For our sake he [God] made him [Christ] to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
Jesus “becoming sin” does not mean that Jesus ever sinned. Clearly, the word “sin” cannot always be taken to mean “the sin we commit.” Sometimes it can mean “the state of alienation from God that results from the sins we commit” or, in the case of Original Sin, “the state of alienation from God that we inherit from our first ancestors who commited sin.”Gal 3.13: Christ redeemed us from our sins by becoming a curse for us – for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree” – in order that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.
One of which can be written as God made him to be an offeringMontalban, my brother, to interpret “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?,” I think it would be useful to consider two other verses:
How can God be alienated from Himself?Jesus “becoming sin” does not mean that Jesus ever sinned. Clearly, the word “sin” cannot always be taken to mean “the sin we commit.” Sometimes it can mean “the state of alienation from God that results from the sins we commit” or, in the case of Original Sin, “the state of alienation from God that we inherit from our first ancestors who commited sin.”
Montalban, my brother, I suspect that your understanding of the nature of the Trinity is deficient (the Trinity whose internal workings are something which cannot be understood by relying too heavily on analogies with human psychology).One of which can be written as God made him to be an offering
How can God be alienated from Himself?
That’s an insult. You assume because I question YOUR concept of the Trinity that I don’t understand ‘the Trinity’.Montalban, my brother, I suspect that your understanding of the nature of the Trinity is deficient (the Trinity whose internal workings are something which cannot be understood by relying too heavily on analogies with human psychology).
The whole notion of ‘sacrifice’ however is based on the misunderstanding that God needs for something - in this case, to make up for the slights we have given him - it’s called “Satisfaction”It is in that quote that you see a sacrafice that is done everytime you go to mass. A real sacrafice occurs when you partake in the Holy Eucharist. Jesus asked why his Father had forsaken him; it was because the sacrafice of his only son paid for the sins of the world. In that way, Jesus’ life on Earth had been forsaken, to pay for the sins of man, and to place Jesus in heaven at the right hand of the Father. Jesus asks God why he did this, not necassarily because he didnt know (he most certainly understood), but for eyewitnesses to reflect on the meaning of his crucifiction.
Thats my 2 cents.
I agree, but Catholic teaching’s all about God being ‘satisfied’.It is not what God needed but what man needed
Okay, but I agree with you that it’s what man ‘needed’, but Catholic wording has it it’s what God needed.Im not really a Catholic im a Gnostic.
When you say “Catholics” are you refering to the Apostles or the rest of Christ’s disciples?I agree, but Catholic teaching’s all about God being ‘satisfied’.
1494 The confessor proposes the performance of certain acts of
“satisfaction” or “penance” to be performed by the penitent in order to
repair the harm caused by sin and to re-establish habits befitting a
disciple of Christ.
scborromeo.org/ccc/para/1494.htm
Because Christ Himself was a sacrifice to satisfy God…
616 It is love “to the end” that confers on Christ’s sacrifice its value as
redemption and reparation, as atonement and satisfaction. He knew and loved
us all when he offered his life. Now “the love of Christ controls us,
because we are convinced that one has died for all; therefore all have
died.” No man, not even the holiest, was ever able to take on himself the
sins of all men and offer himself as a sacrifice for all. The existence in
Christ of the divine person of the Son, who at once surpasses and embraces
all human persons, and constitutes himself as the Head of all mankind,
makes possible his redemptive sacrifice for all.
scborromeo.org/ccc/para/616.htm
The ever-changing God of Catholicism?God was injured by Adam’s sin, and needed satisfaction! The ‘ever-changing’ God of Catholicism. Here’s more (from the Catholic Catechism)…
1494 The confessor proposes the performance of certain acts of “satisfaction” or “penance” to be performed by the penitent in order to repair the harm caused by sin and to re-establish habits befitting a disciple of Christ.
I’m referring to CatholicsWhen you say “Catholics” are you refering to the Apostles or the rest of Christ’s disciples?
1 Corinthians 3:2As these quotations show, the Church Fathers had a lively understanding of the role of penance in the Christian life (cf. Matt. 6:16-18, Mark 2:18-20, Acts 13:2-3, Jas. 4:8-10), an understanding we need to recover.
I don’t deny that one can benefit through fasting or prayer, etc.The ever-changing God of Catholicism?
Notice in the previous post that the Old Testament Pharasees were fasting! and look at this link,and the early christians writings at the end, and tell me that penance is some invention of 1494.
catholic.com/thisrock/2000/0011frs.asp
I’m going to try and bring this conversation back to the original quesion. As I understand it, Muslims don’t see Jesus as the Messiah, and don’t think that Jesus actually died on the cross and was resurected.I don’t deny that one can benefit through fasting or prayer, etc.
What I object to is the notion that God needs to be satisfied.