Jesus Christ (What Christians, Jews, and Muslims Say About Him)

I can see why Christians (like me) can annoy non christians so easily. At least I know where Christians and Catholics have lawyered up.


all one has to do is type errors in the Koran - to see that your clerics have lawyered up on the meaning of words. It would be hard to prove an error if you redefine words to cover mistakes.

thats why they call it faith.

I think you just have to know where your faith begins and your facts end.
 
Quote from vhehn:

Was Isaiah 53 Even a Prophecy?

Be very careful with this stuff. Isaiah 53 is very tricky because it is such a tough one to crack. However, keep in mind that almost all the others are relatively simple. And the apparent "success" of Isaiah 53 would in no way make up for the monumental failures of the others. Isaiah 53 is a failure, to be sure, once you examine the nature of prophecy and see that it is not a prophecy at all and was never intended to be one: you must twist this thing all out of context to turn it into a prophecy. However, at first glance, Isaiah 53 looks pretty good! Remember, though, Isaiah 53 is just one passage out of 39 (currently canonized) books of Hebrew Scripture, and it says some things that have nothing to do with Jesus, and also omits some important elements of the Jesus story that you'd expect to see in something alleging to be a prediction about him.

The most crucial omission is even a hint -- a suggestion -- that this is intended to be a prophecy at all! It isn't a prophecy. At all. It has none of the elements of the classic Ezekiel "Thus Saith The Lord" if you don't do this, then such and so will happen. Isaiah even contains a prophecy just so we'll know what one looks like (assuming both sections were written by the same man). I shall retell the story based upon the famous commentary by United States Founder Thomas Paine: In Isaiah 7:14, the famous "Virgin shall conceive" passage is actually about Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz -- not Jesus -- and Isaiah gives this prophecy as a sign to Ahaz, the king of Judah, that he'd win the upcoming battle when Pekah, king of Israel would join himself to Rezin, king of Syria, to make war against Ahaz. In other words, the birth of this child would prove to him that these two kings should not succeed against him! And so, in order to "fulfill" the "birth of the child" section of this prophecy, what does Isaiah do? In 13:2, Isaiah says, "I went in unto the Prophetess, and she conceived and bear a son." Ah, okay! Well, there's a self-fulfilling prophecy if I ever heard one! In verse 18 he reiterates: "Behold I and the children whom the Lord hath given me are for signs and for wonders in Israel."



Was Isaiah Even a Prophet of God?

Oh, but even Isaiah is not fool enough to carry us through to the finish of this story. Another chronicler, one who was not working in league with Isaiah (and perhaps was unaware of this "prophecy"), tells us what became of this upcoming battle. In II Chronicles 28:1, the chronicler tells us, about Ahaz: "Ahaz was twenty years old when he began to reign. and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem, but he did not that which was right in the sight of the Lord." Okay, so we have a different picture: Instead of the Lord giving the king signs as a trusted servant, here he is disobedient and about to be punished.

But look very closely at the precise nature of this punishment, described in verse 5: "Wherefore the Lord his God delivered him into the hand of the king of Syria, and they smate him, and carried away a great multitude of them captive and brought them to Damascus; and he was also delivered into the hand of the king, of Israel, who smote him with a great slaughter." So, instead of things going according to the prophecy of Isaiah, they ended up happening in the exact reverse of what Isaiah is said to have prophesied!

You don't need to try to verify this one from outside sources, the whole thing is contained right here in the Bible itself. Also, the Deuteronomy 18 gives us a test to determine whether we're dealing with a false prophet:




[20] But the prophet, which shall presume to speak a word in my name, which I have not commanded him to speak, or that shall speak in the name of other gods, even that prophet shall die.
[21] And if thou say in thine heart, How shall we know the word which the LORD hath not spoken?
[22] When a prophet speaketh in the name of the LORD, if the thing follow not, nor come to pass, that is the thing which the LORD hath not spoken, but the prophet hath spoken it presumptuously: thou shalt not be afraid of him.





If the prophet makes a single mistake -- if the prophet predicts one thing that does not come to pass, then that prophet has not spoken with God. So, since the Bible god botched this one, we don't have to believe a word that the Bible god says, right? Well, no, it's a bit more complicated than that -- but we've at least nullified Isaiah's claim to having been a prophet of God! According to the Bible, Isaiah was a false prophet, and ought to have been put to death. Do not pay attention to what Isaiah 53 says, no matter how impressive it sounds.

http://www.positiveatheism.org/mail/eml8612.htm

Geez-O-Pete, what a bunch of dismal "scholarship" Mr. Walker has brought forth.

Mr. Walker should read on to Isaiah 7:9, and be admonished by the verse, as Augustin interprets it " Unless ye believe, ye shall not understand ".

You, of the no reason for faith persuasion, would do us dim eyed theists a favor, if you would do your own research to formulate your own arguments, and not rely on the various theoretical atheist web sites. I take each argument and do the rebuttal my self, which takes a lot of time. You guys are as bad as "Christians" who will not study on their own, but rely on paid clergy to tell them what and why they believe.

While Mr. Walker admits to "difficulties" in rebutting Isaiah 53, he is rather gleeful in the apparent "ease" of dissecting Isaiah 7, and indeed seems almost giddy in claiming to use a commentary on Isaiah 7 by Thomas Paine.

Mr. Walker postulates that the "virgin shall conceive" passage as actually being related too, and fulfilled by Isaiah 8:3 It is here that Mr. Walker falls flat on his understanding of the subject matter.

Isaiah 8 is speaking of a second child, and the mother of the child is none other than the wife of the Prophet Isaiah himself, and as commanded by the Lord, Isaiah named the child Maher-shal'al-hash-baz. I would assume that a third grader could understand this meaning of the 8th chapter. So, I would suggest that Mr. Walker re-think his flippant remark that chapter 8 is a self fulfilling function of chapter 7. Pure hogwash, to put it politely.

Finally, in a rather baffling blunder by Mr. Walker, he rather triumphantly states " .....Oh, but even Isaiah is not fool enough to carry us through to the finish of this story. Another chronicler, one who was not working in league with Isaiah (and perhaps was unaware of this "prophecy"), tells us what became of this upcoming battle. In II Chronicles 28:1, the chronicler tells us, about Ahaz: " Ahaz was twenty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem, but he did not that which was right in the sight of the Lord" Okay, so we have a different picture: Instead of the Lord giving the king signs as a trusted servant, here he is disobedient and about to be punished..."

Mr. Walker expounds on his above referenced remarks to state that the punishment of Ahaz was the "exact reverse" of what Isaiah is said to have prophesied (!).

If this statement was not so sad in its absurdity, it would be funny. Ahaz WAS disobedient in Chapter 7, versus 10-12 ! He was commanded by the Lord to ask for a sign, any sign that Ahaz desired, to prove that the Lord would keep the kingdom safe. Ahaz refused. Ahaz stated "I will not ask" when he was commanded " ask". Since Ahaz refused..The Lord Himself shall give you a sign........ 7:14. Isaiah 8 goes on to describe the judgement against the kingdom and Ahaz, which for some strange reason Mr. Walker fails to acknowledge.

Is Isaiah a prophet ? Of course.
Is Mr. Walker a competent exegete ?
 
Quote from riskfreetrading:

Not only it is accurate, but it is more accurate than science has discovered recently.

All what I care about is about the message in it. If I cannot contradict it, and the Quran asks its reader to contradict it, then I must listen or I must shut up.

I have not seen any religious book that tells you that if you think that the text you are reading is wrong, then provide a proof that it is wrong.

Since it contains descriptions of scientific natural phenomena, then we have multiple opportunities to have a shot at disproving the Quran. So could you read the Quran and find something that you can prove where the Quran is wrong based on science?


The Quran, like the Bible, is a shill for gOd, the maker of "the universe".
"The universe" is said to be "the universe", and nothing besides "the universe".
Likewise, the gOds of the book-people are said to be "the" gOd, and "no other" gOd besides.

The Bible and Quran assert there is "the universe" and claims there are "people" which can be divided into groups of male and female, believer and unbeliever.

But there is something very "wrong" with this. There is no "the universe", and there are no "people". So these books are shills for "the emporer who has no clothes". Those who say the emporer has clothes are just shills produced by books of memes. Bottom line, the Bible and the Quran are spell books, binding and blinding magical minds to mundane persuits.

Science is beginning to expose the farce for what it is...a farce. A cursory search of the www will begin to unearth some very inconvenient truths. Simply start your search by googling a word like "non-dualism", or, "universe not there". Follow the links.

Here is a taste of what you may find:

http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~sai/hologram.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nondualism
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=9052
http://www.kifa.org.uk/essay-5.htm
http://www.bedegriffiths.com/wisdom/christianity-asian-nonduality.htm
http://www.onewithlife.com/page1/page1.html
http://world.std.com/~aditya/Individuality.htm

This is just the tip of the iceberg.

2000 years ago, Jesus figured out the meaning of "advaita", and concluded that reality is non-dualistic, and therefore, there is no world. There is instead, Reality, which does not include "the world".

This leads to questions like, "What is the world?". And by means of question and answer and insight and willingness, Jesus threaded the needle that leads back to the one and only Reality. And that is what I call "Christ". One could argue that despite a long tradition of insight, Jesus was the first to thread the needle and return fully to Reality. What "we" saw and witnessed were his "last days" in time, leaving a trail of light to follow out of a dark [confusing] labyrinth we lovingly call "the universe". But "we" did not understand.

Note well: Jesus is no longer seen in "the universe". This is a sign for those who wish to understand. His teachings were not about staying and learning how to act in "the world". They were all about leaving what is ultimately not real, and does not exist.

Christ!
 
many of vhehn's - previous arguments have also been contradicted by fact.

He is running out of games. Soon he will start telling you the flood story is wrong because there was no worldwide flood

Interestingly, many jewish scholars deny that the words they used in the bible mean worldwide.

(which is why I was talking about lawyered up.) Its hard to pin down.



Another favorite is he tries to pin on believer is that he thinks believers must argue the earth is only 5000 years old.

I have never read anywhere in the bible that the earth is only 5000 years old.
 
Quote from jem:

I can see why Christians (like me) can annoy non christians so easily. At least I know where Christians and Catholics have lawyered up.


all one has to do is type errors in the Koran - to see that your clerics have lawyered up on the meaning of words. It would be hard to prove an error if you redefine words to cover mistakes.

thats why they call it faith.

I think you just have to know where your faith begins and your facts end.

I do not think that people are annoyed by christianity of Jesus. I think they are annoyed that the changes/removals/addition that churches have made in their description of what Jesus said.

In addition, how could you know the truth if you did not read the sources?

I read the sacred books of all three religions: christianity, judaism, and Quran (which is the only book in Islam to read so it takes comparatively less time).

My rankings in terms of truths in the books are:

1. Quran
2. Five books of Moses.
3. Rest of books.

The Quran is clearly a superior and amazingly precise book in terms of scientific facts, and laws. You have to read it to understand.

Thomas Jefferson reads it multiple times, and used it in his defense of trials of americans by the british, and in his thinking about the US constition.

Since the founding fathers (John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson) read it and had it in their libraries that are preserved to this day, don't you think that the Quran is worth reading?

From what you wrote, I believe you have never read the Quran.

Read the chapter about Mary amd Jesus (Chapter 19 if my memory does not fail me) to see the perception in the Quran of Mary and Jesus.
 
Quote from jem:

many of vhehn's - previous arguments have also been contradicted by fact.

He is running out of games. Soon he will start telling you the flood story is wrong because there was no worldwide flood

Interestingly, many jewish scholars deny that the words they used in the bible mean worldwide.

(which is why I was talking about lawyered up.) Its hard to pin down.



Another favorite is he tries to pin on believer is that he thinks believers must argue the earth is only 5000 years old.

I have never read anywhere in the bible that the earth is only 5000 years old.

If my memory does not fail me, in the Quran it is stated that God will preserve the body of the pharaoh who drowned during the crossover, so that mankind will have the evidence of the event, and that mankind will find his body in future generations.

Does anyone know if the body of that Pharaoh was found, and was the body preserved?

This is an example of questions posed in the Quran, where science can test whether the Quran contains mistakes or not. Since the Quran invites you to prove it wrong, then it is scientific in its approach.

In science when someone comes up with a theory, he asks the community to test whether the theory is wrong by testing predicions made in the theory.

That is the approach used in the Quran. The writer (God himself) tells you that if you think this book is wrong, then prove that it is wrong, and you have predictions and statements in the text that you can use to prove it wrong. There is a lot of such predictions and statements so that the sample is large enough to make conclusions. This is why I find the Quran appealing, and I want to study it more in depth.
 
Quote from riskfreetrading:

I do not think that people are annoyed by christianity of Jesus. I think they are annoyed that the changes/removals/addition that churches have made in their description of what Jesus said.

In addition, how could you know the truth if you did not read the sources?

I read the sacred books of all three religions: christianity, judaism, and Quran (which is the only book in Islam to read so it takes comparatively less time).

My rankings in terms of truths in the books are:

1. Quran
2. Five books of Moses.
3. Rest of books.

The Quran is clearly a superior and amazingly precise book in terms of scientific facts, and laws. You have to read it to understand.

Thomas Jefferson reads it multiple times, and used it in his defense of trials of americans by the british, and in his thinking about the US constition.

Since the founding fathers (John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson) read it and had it in their libraries that are preserved to this day, don't you think that the Quran is worth reading?

From what you wrote, I believe you have never read the Quran.

Read the chapter about Mary amd Jesus (Chapter 19 if my memory does not fail me) to see the perception in the Quran of Mary and Jesus.

So, RFT, which school of thought do you lean towards, Sunni, Sufi or Shiite ?
 
Quote from I am...:

It does not follow.

It's elementary Watson.

The only way there can be confirmation of sanity is if insanity is no longer present.

Don't give me any of your retreaded "rationality"...either.

The insane will not find solutions at the same level that causes problems. You've got to think outside the pandora's box.

If you are really the Son of God, and if your will is equal to GoD's, then GoD has no business taking away your right to go insane and deny the presence of GoD, however rediculous your methods achieve their ends.

Christ!

Guess what else. When a puddle dries up there is no longer any water. Who the fuck knew that?!??! Thanks for the enlightenment.

In two sentences how do you know there is a god?
 
Quote from NeoRio1:



In two sentences how do you know there is a god?

1. The probability that God (or higher intelligence) exists is higher than non existence (at least given out state of knowlege at this point in time).
2. Since we may be dealing with God who may reward and/or punish, it is safer to believe in God since if he does not exist we lose nothing, but if he exists we have a free insurance policy against hell, and free ticket to happy after life.
3. To "buy" the insurance policy, you need to follow a religion or religions. That is why you have to read the sacred books, and if you are not happy maybe even create your own to worship God. Since it costs only belief, then it is relatively risk-free.

Conclusion: believing in god has a infinite reward/risk ratio. One would be dumb not to take the trade,independent of the probability of existence of God.

:p

Believing in god is a long term investment. You should now be able to see that one should calculate even in matters of religion, which is in contrast with what general people may think of religious people. They think that they are religious because they are weak. Review you thinking one more time my friend if you happen to worship an atheist. Your risk/reward with the atheist is lousy, plus we know that the atheistism is created by humans who we already know cannot save themselves because they are rotting in a grave, and will not be back (at least in our life time on earth).
 
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