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Roy5
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CompSciGuy
** As for the physical resurrection of Christ, that is accepted by most mainline Protestants, true, though some would see that and other such accounts as symbolic rather than historic.** Paul Tillich, for example, a leading Protestant theologian who was a prominent seminary professor of theology, taught that idea.
** Yes, the Bible is a treasury of spiritual wisdom, but parts of its are bloodthirsty** accounts of genocide and other forms of brutality, all committed in the name of God.
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**The Virgin Birth is questioned by many mainline Protestants.** My guess would be that as many as, say, well - at least half of all UCC, Methodist, Presbyterian and Episcopal clergy would not view it as a required belief. Why do both genealogies of Jesus (which disagree with one another, by the way) trace his ancestry through Joseph? Virgin mothers were commonplace in the religions and folklore of the ancient Middle East. It was a way of honoring a god or goddess in that time and place..
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**One does not understand Protestantism until they realize that it contains large numbers of Christians who seek to follow the teachings of Christ but are skeptical when it comes to many things in the Bible.** They would doubt, for example, that a loving God ordered Joshua to kill all the inhabitants of Jericho once the walls fell or commanded Saul to murder every remaining Amalekite, including infants born and unborn. They certainly would object to verses like Ex. 22:18 and 20, and would consider II Kings 2:23-25 as a ridiculous slander against God. They would even have questions re Jesus driving demons into a herd of pigs who then rushed down a cliff to their death. Or, Paul's statement that women should keep silent in the churches.
** We could go on and on. Millions of mainline Protestants are 'selective' when it comes to the Bible, heavily influenced by what is called 'higher criticism'.** Unlike fundamentalist Protestants they feel free to pick and choose what they regard as reasonable passages and set aside or leave open for discussion many scriptural passages that they feel contradict the message of love, the central theme of Christianity. How can one talk about love while shouting with joy "Saul has killed his thousands but David has killed his ten thousands!"? And how can they accept the Biblical salute to the revered wisdom of Solomon when he had 700 wives and 300 concubines?
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**Evangelical Protestantism is much more aggressive, so it often is seen as the 'face of Protestantism', especially in the South. Millions are not evangelical in that sense.** Their devotion to Christ is strong, but they don't feel the need to believe the unbelievable. Because they are not dogmatic, they have less enphasis on converting others, even respect non-Christian traditions, and certainly do not believe that non-Christians cannot gain salvation. Christ, after all, is forgiving and merciful. He lifted up a despised and heretical Samaritan as an example of one going on to eternal life, and Matt. 25:31ff says nothing about doctrine or church affiliation when it divides the sheep from the goats. Many former Catholics who want a more open church fellowship, where differences in belief are respected, end up in mainline Protestant churches.
**But God bless everybody **- of all creeds, colors, cultures and countries. Let us stribe to make religion a bridge rather than a barrier!