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The major problem I have with the doctrine of forgiveness is that I cannot figure out how God has the authority to forgive me for the crap that I've done to you. I can forgive you for what you've done to me. I can forgive God what He's done to me. God can forgive my trespasses against Him. But only you can forgive my trespasses against you.

Heck, even the Gospels indicate that we can forgive each other, as part of the Lord's prayer.

Isn't that what the Lord's Prayer asks of us - forgive us our trespasses Lord as we forgive those who trespass against us. Almost sounds like a requirement... If we refuse to forgive trespassers, why should God forgive ours. But I can see why a trespass against you is also a trespass against God, or the Jesus version of God. I dont know if that means God will forgive the trespasser even if you refuse to yourself. What if that trespasser forgives other trespassers? My head is starting to hurt...

For the OP:

How about the trans-dimensionality of Heaven? We currently think of Heaven as being within 'another' dimension, and apparently have little trouble thinking of it this way. Heaven isn't 'up'. Hell isn't 'down'.

When did this transition take place, or did it even take place? Was there a time when the people actually thought that Heaven was in the sky (or higher)? The question about the Qur'an is what made me ask about the history of this. The Qur'an is perfect, as you know, and it consistently thinks of things coming 'down' from Heaven. Rain comes down from Heaven. Angels come down from Heaven. etc.

And even the Mormons might think of God as 'out there' in 4D space.
What do you think Jesus, Paul, and other church leaders thought?

And I'd add a somewhat in-depth analysis of Dante and other concepts of a layered Heaven, if you might Plot.
 
Yes, you most certainly are supposed to seek atonement with your fellow man as well as from God. In the Old Testament, if when bringing a sacrifice to the temple you remembered having wronged someone you were required to leave your offering there and go make amends with your fellow man before being allowed to go through with the sacrifice. In the New Testament, it is considered sinful to take part in communion before seeking reconciliation with a brother.

The Lord's Prayer is not the only place that seems say that God's forgiving is is contingent on us forgiving others. That sentiment seems clearer in the parable of the unforgiving servant in Matthew 18.




The word heaven literally means sky, whether in English, Greek, and Hebrew. It is spoken of as being "above" and things are spoken of as coming down from it, but this is likely figurative language. It seems to convey more the idea of "up" and "higher" being "greater" and "better" than of physical directions.

The traditional concept of hell does not really fit scripture all that well, but Hades is literally down; it is any place hidden even slightly below the surface of the Earth. It does not have to be the location from Greek mythology where disembodies spirits went after death, it can be the physical location of the grave where bodies are buried. (While there is still some doubt as to the exact etymology of Hades, the most reasonable guess is that it means "unseen." Hades was God not only of the dead, but of mineral wealth and anything dug up from the ground. The name was first used to describe the god of death before he was god of death, when he used the Helm of Darkness to become invisible and gain an advantage against Chronos in the war against the Titans, and then extended to his unseen realm.) In the bible Hades is likely used as a translation of Sheol, literally The Grave or The Pit.



Dante drew almost exclusively from pagan sources, most obviously Virgil. His conceptions of heaven and hell do not have much merit. I do recall from my recent History of Architecture class though that some similar ideas were expressed in relief sculptures in some medieval church architecture. Such images may still bear more pagan than genuine christian influences though, as in Norse lands the doors of Christian churches typically bore images of Ragnarok.
 
Is the Secret Gospel of Mark, from the Mar Saba letter, currently believed to be authentic?
 
I've been wondering for quite some time, just what is a heresy? I can think of plenty of examples (say, Gnostics or Arians), but I'm not sure what makes them heretical, when other doctrinal disputes don't lead to the same sort of condemnations.

Is it A) just a matter of degrees of importance in the doctrines being discussed? B) Dependent on who the theologians involved in the discussion are, with some more ready to drop the Heresy Hammer? C) Is there some criteria that might be used to say that Gnostics are heretics but (say) Young Earthers (or theistic evolutionists) are in the fold, even if their beliefs are bizarre and wrong on many levels?
 
Technically a heresy is merely a school of thought (especially a dissenting one). The Greek term comes from a root meaning "to choose." The Greek term for heresy did not gain its negative connotation immediately, as the writers of the new testament it is used non judgmentally to describe not only the Pharisees and Saducees, but also the early Christians themselves.

Plotinus has said before that the Roman Catholic Church uses the term Heretic to denounce those they sees as willfully choosing to refuse to accept what the magisterium considers to be the clear and logical truth of their doctrine.

Technically the RCC does not have a doctrine pertaining to evolution or creationism. Most in the church prefer a form of theistic creationism, but the lack of a defined doctrine means that YECs are not automatically condemned as heretics. (I think I vaguely recall that one pope declared YEC to be "a pious belief" but refused to indicate if he considered it right or wrong.) Of course, most YECs are protestants, which in the view of Catholics are all heretics.
 
I have some questions.

1) Why, in Christianity, did God use the particular mechanism of Jesus to save humanity, as opposed to another mechanism or no such mechanism at all? Why not just save people by divine decree, without this rather peculiar method of coming down to earth and living a model life and being crucified? Why does it matter for our salvation that Jesus died, given that God was presumably good and therefore going to save some of us at least at his discretion anyway, regardless of whether the Jews chose to have Jesus crucified (which, surely, they might not have done if you take the position that free will exists)?

I think I answered this in my previous post.

2) Are people from before Christ's time supposedly all damned? How does this vary from sect to sect?

No; it is certainly an orthodox Christian belief that the Jewish prophets, for example, are not damned. And it is an article of faith that Adam is (or will be) saved. Tatian the Syrian was regarded as a heretic for denying this.

Of course, different people will have different views regarding who and how many from before Christ's time would be saved, but I would guess that these views would reflect their views on who is saved in general (from whatever time).

3) What is the theological basis of the Catholic principle up to recent times of using Latin in Church services? I mean, I know it's partly a matter of convenience and consistency and the use of a lingua franca, but given that they seemed to care about it so much and treated groups like the Utraquists who went against it as heretics, surely it must have a theological justification as well as a temporal one?

I don't really know about that, but as far as I know, there wasn't any particular theological justification.

Hi Plotinus,

I've got a question for you. I've been reading (a Dutch translation of) the Quran and one of the things I found remarkable is that Muhammed is constantly urging the people not to listen to false prophets but to listen to him. How are the people supposed to know that he is the true prophet, instead of all the others (I figure they'd be saying the thing)? This question holds for others prophets/faiths as well of course.

Also, I don't know if you're an expert on the Quran, but what do you think are the main differences between the Quran and the Bible?

I'm afraid I know virtually nothing about the Quran or the Muslim doctrine of prophets, so I can't answer that.

Fair enough. Though I can still see some objections to that. First, the story I know doesn't involve humans offering the sacrifice to God in order to be closer to him. What makes Jesus' martyrdom enable uniting with God, that doesn't apply to other martyrs who are 'sacrificed' in a similar way, such as Peter? If the difference is Jesus' divine origin, then how does that work? Who is actually offering the sacrifice? Second, I find the idea of a god that can't be united with without a sacrifice to be objectionable too.

Those are all reasonable points if you take "sacrifice" language literally, but the point I was trying to make is that you're not supposed to. To call Christ's death a "sacrifice" is merely to say that it is something that unites human beings to God, just as traditional sacrifices were supposed to. It's not saying that Christ's death literally is a sacrifice, let alone that it functions in the same way as traditional sacrifices. So to ask who is offering the sacrifice, and to whom, seems to me to be asking the wrong question.

Similarly, Christ's death is sometimes called a "ransom" in the New Testament - a very different sort of language. In late antiquity and the early Middle Ages a lot of Christians took this literally and supposed that Christ's death must be literally a payment that is made to somebody. They asked who it is who is making the payment, and to whom it is made, and the generally agreed answer was that it is God making the payment, and he makes it to the devil. The idea was that, because of our sin, the devil has acquired rights over us - we have literally become his property. God therefore has to buy us back, and to do this he makes the ransom payment of Christ's death. But this whole theory fell into disrepute later on (most especially after the publication of Anselm's very different theory, which I outlined in my previous post), and people came to realise that the "ransom" language is not supposed to be taken literally, or it leads you to absurdities. I'd say the same is true of the "sacrifice" language.

Possibly this is my own bias based on not believing in any sort of afterlife, eternal soul, etc. But I'd say other martyrs suffered to the point of death for something they believed in, and they hoped their beliefs were correct about what happened afterwards. Whereas Jesus suffered to the point of temporary death for something he knew.

You're making some big assumptions about what Jesus knew. There's no compelling reason, from a Christian viewpoint, to suppose that Jesus had any special knowledge about things like life after death, the resurrection, or anything of that nature.

Yeah, that makes more sense. But it seems to be just one part of how prayer is used today. The idea of praying for other people seems to be pretty widespread, and contradict that view of what prayer's for.

Yes, that's true.

Which to me, is another major objection. If a god didn't demand worship, I'd find that god much more worthy of respect.

Not necessarily. Surely God should command people to do what's right. If it is actually right that people should worship God, then there's nothing wrong with God commanding that; to do otherwise would be false modesty. So the question isn't really about God's arrogance or humility - it's about whether it actually is, or would be, morally incumbent upon us to worship God.

Is Jesus a necessary element of salvation coming through Christ though? It seems like it is, but it seems like there's not much consensus on why it is, on why salvation wouldn't be possible without Jesus' time on Earth. It seems like for a lot of groups, the answer is 'we don't know, it just is'.

Well - Jesus is Christ, so you can't have Christ without Jesus, at least not without some very heretical doctrines. But yes, the basic answer is "we don't know, it just is" - although obviously different Christians will nevertheless try to give a more comprehensive answer than just that.

I should have said seemingly arbitrary & capricious. Which applies to those alternative explanations as much as it applies to the idea that God actively listens to prayers and chooses which ones to respond to. Your examples of how it might not be arbitrary also applies equally well to those alternative explanations for prayer and to the idea that God actively listens.

Well, it's not a theological problem if God's actions seem arbitrary or capricious but in fact aren't, is it? It's only awkward from our point of view. I take it that it's orthodox to hold that at least some of God's actions appear to be arbitrary or capricious but in fact aren't, given that it's orthodox to suppose that we do not, and in fact cannot, understand God's motives for everything he does. That's a basic assumption in any response to the problem of evil, for example.

How about the trans-dimensionality of Heaven? We currently think of Heaven as being within 'another' dimension, and apparently have little trouble thinking of it this way. Heaven isn't 'up'. Hell isn't 'down'.

When did this transition take place, or did it even take place? Was there a time when the people actually thought that Heaven was in the sky (or higher)? The question about the Qur'an is what made me ask about the history of this. The Qur'an is perfect, as you know, and it consistently thinks of things coming 'down' from Heaven. Rain comes down from Heaven. Angels come down from Heaven. etc.

And even the Mormons might think of God as 'out there' in 4D space.
What do you think Jesus, Paul, and other church leaders thought?

I don't think that Jesus or Paul had much of a concept of heaven, except in the most basic sense of "wherever God is". They didn't have a concept of heaven in the sense of somewhere that the soul goes to after death, for example.

I'm not sure what you mean by the idea of heaven being "another dimension". Is that what people think? What does "another dimension" mean anyway? Does it mean something like another space, like ours, only not spatially related to it - like Narnia? I don't think that's the usual view of heaven, since as far as I can tell, the usual view is that it isn't spatial at all.

On the Narnia view, if anyone has ever held this, I don't think people did in antiquity. I don't think that the concept of another space which is not spatially related to ours would have made any sense to people in antiquity. When ancient people thought of God in physical or spatial terms - as at least some Christians, notably Tertullian, did - they thought of him as existing in our space. Thus, according to the Stoics, God is diffused throughout the universe (or is actually identical with the universe, depending on your point of view). The idea of a spatial God who isn't anywhere we could, in principle, travel to would have made no sense.

In Christianity, the idea of God as physical persisted for quite a while, and gave rise to the Anthropomorphite controversy in Egypt at the end of the fourth century. But we don't know much about the people who were attacked as "Anthropomorphites" or what they really thought about God, let alone where they thought he was.

The idea of God as non-physical, and non-spatial, became dominant from at least the third century onwards, I think (partly thanks to the influence of Origen). If you think that God is incorporeal, and you think of heaven as simply being wherever God is, then you will think of heaven as non-spatial. So there isn't anywhere that it is. I think that this is how people came to think of heaven, and why.

Also, under the influence of Greek philosophy, Christians developed the idea that your soul survives your death and goes somewhere to wait for the resurrection of the body. Where it goes is a sort of foretaste of its final destination. Virtuous souls therefore go to be with God. That is the origin of the later concept of "heaven" as a place that you "go to" when you die. Similarly, vicious souls get a foretaste of damnation, and that's the origin of the later concepts of both hell and purgatory.

EDIT: Just saw the note. I'm sorry I keep hijacking your thread Plotinus! To bring it back to the real topic: Plotinus, what's the general view on why worship of God is morally obligatory, in Christianity?

Simply put, there isn't one, as far as I know. It's generally just taken that a being with God's attributes would, necessarily, be worthy of worship, but there has been very little examination of this claim or indeed of what it means to be worthy of worship.

Tim Bayne and Yujin Nagasawa published an article entitled "The grounds of worship" in the journal Religious studies in 2006 considering this issue. They identified a number of possible answers to the question why it might be reasonable (or obligatory) to worship God:

(1) God created us, and so we have an obligation to thank him for this, which is manifested as worship.

Bayne and Nagasawa quote Richard Swinburne as a representative of this view. But they aren't convinced by it. First, it would imply that any being not created by God wouldn't have any obligation to worship him. Of course, theists think that all beings (other than God) are created by God, so there aren't any beings not created by him - but still, it seems an odd conclusion. Second, and more importantly, it's not clear that if A creates B, B has any obligations to A in virtue of this. Bestowing existence on something is not clearly a way of benefiting it. (Some might feel quite the reverse.) After all, if we really thought that bringing someone into being is a good thing, we'd feel morally obligated to have as many children as physically possible. And third, if being created by God obliges us to worship him, wouldn't this also mean we're obliged to worship our parents and others upon whom we depend?

(2) God is maximally excellent, and worship is the appropriate response to such an excellent being.

Bayne and Nagasawa object that, while a maximally excellent being might be worthy of admiration, it's hard to see how that is grounds for worship. They suggest that the theist might hold that one of God's perfections is holiness, and that a holy being is intrinsically worthy of worship. But it's not clear what holiness is supposed to be anyway, which means it's not very useful in explaining anything else.

(3) It is prudential to worship God.

There are two versions of this. First is the idea that if we don't worship God, he'll punish us. That's not very convincing as a reason for why it's right (as opposed to sensible) to worship him. The second version is better: we are created in such a way as to need to worship God, in the same was as we need to eat and drink. Our obligation to worship God is thus similar to our obligation to eat and drink: it's necessary to flourish as human beings. But Bayne and Nagasawa object that even if this is so, it doesn't show that we have an obligation to worship God, only that we benefit from worshipping something. Moreover, if our worship is ultimately motivated by self-interest, it's not really a moral matter at all.

(4) We just should worship God - this is a brute fact, not based on any property of God's or anything.

Bayne and Nagasawa point out that if this is the case, it would be impossible to tell whether or not one should worship God. Plus, of course, it doesn't really answer the question at all.

The following year, Benjamin Crowe published an article entitled "Reasons for worship: a response to Bayne and Nagasawa" in the same journal. He argued that there are two other possible justifications for there being an obligation to worship God, which Bayne and Nagasawa overlooked:

(5) If God commands us to worship him, we should worship him.

In other words, this suggestion appeals to divine command theory, holding that if God commands something, that in itself makes it right.

(6) God has redeemed us, and that is justification for our worship of him.

This is similar to (1), except that we're worshipping God in gratitude for salvation rather than for creation. This avoids the objections that Bayne and Nagasawa made to (1). Crowe appeals to Lancelot Andrewes (a major early Anglican theologian) in support of this view.

Bayne and Nagasawa published a response to this, which appeared right after Crowe's article. They argued that (5) doesn't really work, because divine command theories don't really explain why certain actions are right or wrong in the first place; we're still left asking why God would command that we worship him. And they're not convinced by (6), because it leaves unanswered the question why anyone should have worshipped God before he saved us. After all, isn't God supposed to be saving us from sin, and isn't sin supposed to be, in part, a failure to worship God as one ought? In which case, the concept of worship is prior to that of salvation, not vice versa.


So as far as I can tell, the question why worshipping God might be morally obligatory is still wide open.

Isn't that what the Lord's Prayer asks of us - forgive us our trespasses Lord as we forgive those who trespass against us. Almost sounds like a requirement... If we refuse to forgive trespassers, why should God forgive ours.

No, I don't think it's meant to be conditional. Both Jewish and Christian understandings of God's forgiveness have traditionally held it to be unconditional. In Christianity, at least, the idea that God will forgive you if and only if you forgive others would be bordering, at best, on Pelagianism.

And I'd add a somewhat in-depth analysis of Dante and other concepts of a layered Heaven, if you might Plot.

I'd really rather not!

Is the Secret Gospel of Mark, from the Mar Saba letter, currently believed to be authentic?

That depends on what you mean by "authentic". The letter in question, which quotes a couple of passages from the Gospel, is thought to be an authentic letter of Clement of Alexandria, so the Secret Gospel of Mark did exist at the beginning of the third century. But what relation it bore to the canonical Gospel of Mark is uncertain.

I've been wondering for quite some time, just what is a heresy? I can think of plenty of examples (say, Gnostics or Arians), but I'm not sure what makes them heretical, when other doctrinal disputes don't lead to the same sort of condemnations.

Is it A) just a matter of degrees of importance in the doctrines being discussed? B) Dependent on who the theologians involved in the discussion are, with some more ready to drop the Heresy Hammer? C) Is there some criteria that might be used to say that Gnostics are heretics but (say) Young Earthers (or theistic evolutionists) are in the fold, even if their beliefs are bizarre and wrong on many levels?

I think that something is technically a heresy if it's been condemned by a sufficiently authoritative body. What counts as a sufficiently authoritative body will obviously depend on who you are. From a Catholic point of view, if a doctrine has been condemned by a Pope or by an ecumenical council, that would make it formally heretical. There are of course lesser councils, but how authoritative they are is not quite so clear. So in the case of Young Earth Creationists, I don't think they have been condemned in such a way, so it's hard to make a case that they are formally heretics. However, one might make a case that their views entail certain other views that are formally heretical.
 
people came to realise that the "ransom" language is not supposed to be taken literally, or it leads you to absurdities. I'd say the same is true of the "sacrifice" language.

Fair enough, and certainly the absurdities it leads to is one of the things I dislike. Saying that Jesus' martyrdom was required to unite humans with God removes those absurdities, but then makes me ask just why God couldn't forge a link with humanity without needing to incarnate and be killed.

You're making some big assumptions about what Jesus knew. There's no compelling reason, from a Christian viewpoint, to suppose that Jesus had any special knowledge about things like life after death, the resurrection, or anything of that nature.

That's a new one to me. How does someone square the idea of Jesus not knowing he was God incarnate, of not knowing he had an eternal soul, of not knowing anything of a supernatural nature with the miracles reported in the gospels? If Jesus thought he was just another human, then how did the authors decide afterwards he was more than that? Just the resurrection story? If Jesus only discovered he was more than human after he died, then how does he have the authority to tell the two people getting crucified next to him where they're headed for? Why is there nothing in the post-resurrection stories of him talking about what he learned during those three days?

The idea of Jesus just being a human makes sense to me. The idea of Jesus actually being divine but thinking he was just a human is new to me, and doesn't make a lot of sense. Might have to read up on that stuff a bit more if I get around to it.


Not necessarily. Surely God should command people to do what's right. If it is actually right that people should worship God, then there's nothing wrong with God commanding that; to do otherwise would be false modesty. So the question isn't really about God's arrogance or humility - it's about whether it actually is, or would be, morally incumbent upon us to worship God.

Sure, but I'm yet to hear any good argument for why worship is morally right. Most of the arguments I hear boil down to 'God said so'. That's far from convincing to me, especially given the jealous God on display throughout the old testament.

As for the bolded bit, I don't think I agree with that either. But that might be my bias, especially my anti-authoritarian bias, showing again. If God created us, gave us free will, gave us the power to think for ourselves, make moral judgements ourselves, then why shouldn't we use those faculties? Why do we need to be commanded at all? If God's rules can be justified without divine authority, as most of the ten commandments can be, then we should be following them without needing God's command. If there's no good justification for a rule, then why should divine authority make a difference? To me, allowing that to happen leads to justifying what Abraham did. That Abraham was morally correct to ignore all logical & moral arguments about why murdering his son was bad, because divine command trumps them all. I find that morally repugnant.


Well - Jesus is Christ, so you can't have Christ without Jesus, at least not without some very heretical doctrines. But yes, the basic answer is "we don't know, it just is" - although obviously different Christians will nevertheless try to give a more comprehensive answer than just that.

If Jesus was Christ incarnate, then sure, I agree that connecting with Christ will also mean/require connecting with Jesus. What I want to know is where humanity would be without Christ incarnating? Why is it that we wouldn't have a proper connection with Christ? If Jesus was necessary & sufficient to enable that connection, then where would we be without it happening?

Well, it's not a theological problem if God's actions seem arbitrary or capricious but in fact aren't, is it? It's only awkward from our point of view. I take it that it's orthodox to hold that at least some of God's actions appear to be arbitrary or capricious but in fact aren't, given that it's orthodox to suppose that we do not, and in fact cannot, understand God's motives for everything he does. That's a basic assumption in any response to the problem of evil, for example.

Yep, I've run across it before. To me, it seems like a copout. We can't figure it out, but God knows more than us, therefore God must have a good reason for it. That line of thought can resolve any apparent contradiction, any apparent ethical problem with God's actions, with why the world is the way it is. As you said a few pages ago, Christianity is supposed to be founded upon reason. We were created able to think for ourselves, able to be intellectually curious. Why should we suspend that curiosity & reason when we run into hard questions about why evil exists, why God seems arbitrary & capricious, etc? If God wants us to think about stuff, use reason, surely he wants us to think about those things too? Maybe solving those apparently insoluble problems is the way for us to learn, grow, ascend towards God's level? Maybe saying we can't figure it out, we'll just trust it's part of the ineffable plan is exactly what God doesn't want us to be doing, because it's choosing not to use the thing that separates us humans created in God's image from the rest of his creation. Just a thought. I'm curious if any Christian groups have a similar viewpoint.


Tim Bayne and Yujin Nagasawa published an article entitled "The grounds of worship" in the journal Religious studies in 2006 considering this issue. They identified a number of possible answers to the question why it might be reasonable (or obligatory) to worship God:

Interesting read, thanks for that.
 
I think I answered this in my previous post.

Sorry; I don't know how I managed to miss that.

No; it is certainly an orthodox Christian belief that the Jewish prophets, for example, are not damned. And it is an article of faith that Adam is (or will be) saved. Tatian the Syrian was regarded as a heretic for denying this.

Of course, different people will have different views regarding who and how many from before Christ's time would be saved, but I would guess that these views would reflect their views on who is saved in general (from whatever time).



I don't really know about that, but as far as I know, there wasn't any particular theological justification.

Thanks! :)
 
Hi Plotinus,

I've got a question for you. I've been reading (a Dutch translation of) the Quran and one of the things I found remarkable is that Muhammed is constantly urging the people not to listen to false prophets but to listen to him. How are the people supposed to know that he is the true prophet, instead of all the others (I figure they'd be saying the thing)? This question holds for others prophets/faiths as well of course.

Also, I don't know if you're an expert on the Quran, but what do you think are the main differences between the Quran and the Bible?

Several of my friends in high school and college were Muslims, so I can give a common answer, although it might not be the official reason. The most common one was that Muhammad was known by his audience to have no education at all. But they heard him speaking the best Arabic poetry ever, when he was reciting what later became chapters of the Quran. This miracle was supposed to prove that Muhammad was getting his prophecies from God. Is there a Muslim out there who could explain this better and/or confirm the accuracy of my reporting?

Of course, from my perspective, there are a number of problems/alternative problems with this evidence, but that's to be expected: I'm not a Muslim. How do we know Muhammad was illiterate? Or that Quranic Arabic is so amazing, since (as far as I know) none of us speak Arabic? Or (given that there is little or no pre-Quran poetry for comparison) that it isn't a case of the Vulgate effect, where the text is so influential in later centuries, that it set the bar for medieval Latin and became the best text on principle? Or why must poetically super-giftedness be evidence of divinity? Many (most?) people think Shakespeare was the best English poet; hardly anyone thinks Shakespeare was divine or divinely inspired. And isn't poetic awesomeness a pretty subjective claim for a proof in any event?
 
I don't think that an interpretation of Jesus on which he didn't believe in God would be viable. God is absolutely central to his teaching as represented in all sources, especially the Synoptics with their emphasis upon the kingdom of God. So I don't know of any interpretations of Jesus as non-theist, although no doubt there have been some.

Well, I was thinking more along the lines that he wanted to help people in this life and teach them to become happier. He would have used the word "God" in order to be intelligible to religious people, or as a metaphor in the same way it's understandable for an atheist to say that we can find the kingdom of God by being nice to each other.

It of course wouldn't need to be exactly true that Jesus believed so to make this way of reading worthwhile: Whether you can learn a lesson doesn't depend on someone actually teaching it (Socrates & Plato for example), and on the other hand it could give new points of view for Christians too.
 
The major problem I have with the doctrine of forgiveness is that I cannot figure out how God has the authority to forgive me for the crap that I've done to you. I can forgive you for what you've done to me. I can forgive God what He's done to me. God can forgive my trespasses against Him. But only you can forgive my trespasses against you.

Heck, even the Gospels indicate that we can forgive each other, as part of the Lord's prayer

The reason is that sin by definition is violation of God's law. We often see sin as how it affects us not the way how it affect our relationship with God. Even though David did not sin against God when he commited adultery, since that was primarily against Urriah and Bathsheba, but in his confession to God, in both Psalm 32 and 51 he acknowledges that the person that he first and foremost is God is the one he sinned against.
 
Does Sin exist?
 
The reason is that sin by definition is violation of God's law. We often see sin as how it affects us not the way how it affect our relationship with God. Even though David did not sin against God when he commited adultery, since that was primarily against Urriah and Bathsheba, but in his confession to God, in both Psalm 32 and 51 he acknowledges that the person that he first and foremost is God is the one he sinned against.

Yeah, you're expanding on what I understand. God can forgive the 'sin' (i.e., forgive the trespass against Him). But there's no way that He's absolved the issue of the actual crimes against others.
 
Hence why he also made the Law of Moses and Commanded Governments to pass laws.

Think of it this way, which is worse, to kill a totally innocent person, or to kill someone who didn't deserve death, but just barely didn't? (Say he commits a crime you feel deserves a very long prison sentence.) Which is morally worse?

While this is an imperfect analogy, it makes the point that the penalty for harming another sinful person is finite, but for offending the sinless, the penalty is infinite.
 
Doing some random Googling, I came across this book. I'm looking into buying some theological volumes with my Christmas money, and the premise seems intriguing enough, but I have very little familiarity with it. Would you care to give me a foretaste of the sort of ideas the book might explore?
 
Doing some random Googling, I came across this book. I'm looking into buying some theological volumes with my Christmas money, and the premise seems intriguing enough, but I have very little familiarity with it. Would you care to give me a foretaste of the sort of ideas the book might explore?

I'll get to the other questions when I can, but I thought I'd say for now at least that I don't know what will be in that book but it looks extremely interesting! Definitely seems worth looking into.
 
Yeah, you're expanding on what I understand. God can forgive the 'sin' (i.e., forgive the trespass against Him). But there's no way that He's absolved the issue of the actual crimes against others.

Can you explain what you are trying to get across?
 
Hmmn, I don't know how to make it clearer. For any offense, there's a potential number of victims. Only the victim of an offense can forgive that actual offense against them.

Christians seem to think that Jesus has allowed all their sins to be forgiven. This is not true. God can only forgive the offenses performed against Him. Christ's sacrifice has no effect on whether someone is forgiven for the offenses that they've done to others. So, we run into this weird scenario where people think that their offenses have been forgiven, despite leaving a trail of victims in their wake, some of whom have not actually forgiven the offenses. They think they're entering Heaven with a clean slate, but the clean slate is only in regards to the offenses against God.
 
That is why forgiveness is also an inadequate metaphor for salvation. Perhaps it involves forgiveness, but if so, it must involve other things too. Or perhaps it doesn't really involve forgiveness (literally understood) at all, which is why it breaks down if you try to push it too far.
 
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