Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
What can you imagine as a suitable sacrifice for a god-man to make to redeem the souls of all humanity, who's natural penalty is said to be eternal torment? A long weekend break in Hell and some unpleasant wounding doesn't cut it, does it?
How much more redemptive and godly would it have been if Jesus suffered every day of an immortal life in human form. He could wake it the morning pristine and by tea-time he would have the wounds of a good flogging be hanging from the nearest tree covered in blood. What a testament to God's love for mankind that would be! (not really, it's barbaric, but no more than one poor sinner is supposed to face). Shouldn't a god endure perfect suffering? The wimp even passed out before the end of the day (some lasted for days on the cross, Jesus couldn't even manage one).
The whole crucifixion story is so damn petty in comparison to what it is supposed to redeem. Still, the people that came up with story had serious constraints. They only had a tale of an executed cult leader / faith healer to work with.
How much more redemptive and godly would it have been if Jesus suffered every day of an immortal life in human form. He could wake it the morning pristine and by tea-time he would have the wounds of a good flogging be hanging from the nearest tree covered in blood. What a testament to God's love for mankind that would be! (not really, it's barbaric, but no more than one poor sinner is supposed to face). Shouldn't a god endure perfect suffering? The wimp even passed out before the end of the day (some lasted for days on the cross, Jesus couldn't even manage one).
The whole crucifixion story is so damn petty in comparison to what it is supposed to redeem. Still, the people that came up with story had serious constraints. They only had a tale of an executed cult leader / faith healer to work with.
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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
Not under the court order, he can't.Thinking Aloud wrote:He can dream, surely?Bella Fortuna wrote:Believe me, vaginas play no role in pawiz's diary.Thinking Aloud wrote:We're discussing Bella's diary, Pawiz, not yours.pawiz wrote: Dear diary, today I put xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx up my xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx then I xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx which made me xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx so I xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx vagina xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
Which is why I didn't. Blame the Pope. He wrote it. (Well, the previous one, anyway.)klr wrote:If I attempt to read more than two sentences of that, I will surely turn into a zombie ...Thinking Aloud wrote:What confers on substitution its redemptive value is not the material fact that an innocent person has suffered the chastisement deserved by the guilty and that justice has thus been in some way satisfied (in such a case one should speak rather of a grave injustice). The redemptive value comes instead from the fact that the innocent Jesus, out of pure love, entered into solidarity with the guilty and thus transformed their situation from within. When a catastrophic situation such as that caused by sin is taken upon oneself on behalf of sinners out of pure love, then that situation is no longer under the sign of opposition to God. On the contrary, it is under the sign of docility to the love which comes from God (cf. Gal 1:4), and therefore becomes a source of blessing (Gal 3:13-14). Christ, by offering himself "as a ransom for many," put into effect to the very ultimate his solidarity with man, with every man and with every sinner. The Apostle Paul indicates this when he writes, "The love of Christ impels us, once we have come to the conviction that one died for all; therefore, all have died" (2 Cor 5:14). Christ therefore is in solidarity with everyone in death, which is an effect of sin. But in him this solidarity was in no way the effect of sin; instead, it was a gratuitous act of the purest love. Love induced Christ to give his life, by accepting death on the cross. His solidarity with man in death consists in the fact that he not only died as every man dies, but that he died for every one. Thus this "substitution" signified the superabundance of love which overcomes every deficiency and insufficiency of human love, every negation and contrariety linked with human sin in every dimension "interior and historical" in which this sin has weighed on the relationship of man with God.
I may have copied that from somewhere.
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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
A few days crucified is not fun .. Research the Bio-mechanics of crucifixion before you say "what did he suffer ?" 





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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
Surely the true intent, yes?klr wrote:If I attempt to read more than two sentences of that, I will surely turn into a zombie ...Thinking Aloud wrote:What confers on substitution its redemptive value is not the material fact that an innocent person has suffered the chastisement deserved by the guilty and that justice has thus been in some way satisfied (in such a case one should speak rather of a grave injustice). The redemptive value comes instead from the fact that the innocent Jesus, out of pure love, entered into solidarity with the guilty and thus transformed their situation from within. When a catastrophic situation such as that caused by sin is taken upon oneself on behalf of sinners out of pure love, then that situation is no longer under the sign of opposition to God. On the contrary, it is under the sign of docility to the love which comes from God (cf. Gal 1:4), and therefore becomes a source of blessing (Gal 3:13-14). Christ, by offering himself "as a ransom for many," put into effect to the very ultimate his solidarity with man, with every man and with every sinner. The Apostle Paul indicates this when he writes, "The love of Christ impels us, once we have come to the conviction that one died for all; therefore, all have died" (2 Cor 5:14). Christ therefore is in solidarity with everyone in death, which is an effect of sin. But in him this solidarity was in no way the effect of sin; instead, it was a gratuitous act of the purest love. Love induced Christ to give his life, by accepting death on the cross. His solidarity with man in death consists in the fact that he not only died as every man dies, but that he died for every one. Thus this "substitution" signified the superabundance of love which overcomes every deficiency and insufficiency of human love, every negation and contrariety linked with human sin in every dimension "interior and historical" in which this sin has weighed on the relationship of man with God.
I may have copied that from somewhere.
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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
Touché ...Bella Fortuna wrote:Surely the true intent, yes?klr wrote:If I attempt to read more than two sentences of that, I will surely turn into a zombie ...Thinking Aloud wrote:What confers on substitution its redemptive value is not the material fact that an innocent person has suffered the chastisement deserved by the guilty and that justice has thus been in some way satisfied (in such a case one should speak rather of a grave injustice). The redemptive value comes instead from the fact that the innocent Jesus, out of pure love, entered into solidarity with the guilty and thus transformed their situation from within. When a catastrophic situation such as that caused by sin is taken upon oneself on behalf of sinners out of pure love, then that situation is no longer under the sign of opposition to God. On the contrary, it is under the sign of docility to the love which comes from God (cf. Gal 1:4), and therefore becomes a source of blessing (Gal 3:13-14). Christ, by offering himself "as a ransom for many," put into effect to the very ultimate his solidarity with man, with every man and with every sinner. The Apostle Paul indicates this when he writes, "The love of Christ impels us, once we have come to the conviction that one died for all; therefore, all have died" (2 Cor 5:14). Christ therefore is in solidarity with everyone in death, which is an effect of sin. But in him this solidarity was in no way the effect of sin; instead, it was a gratuitous act of the purest love. Love induced Christ to give his life, by accepting death on the cross. His solidarity with man in death consists in the fact that he not only died as every man dies, but that he died for every one. Thus this "substitution" signified the superabundance of love which overcomes every deficiency and insufficiency of human love, every negation and contrariety linked with human sin in every dimension "interior and historical" in which this sin has weighed on the relationship of man with God.
I may have copied that from somewhere.

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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
Suffer all that bio-mechanics and then go up to daddy to sit on some throne and be God, big cheese over all? That is suffering, that is sacrifice - sufficiently so for us to grovel and bow for all our lives? Again - what did he really suffer !!Feck wrote:A few days crucified is not fun .. Research the Bio-mechanics of crucifixion before you say "what did he suffer ?"

So you are saying that the reason why God created the universe, including millions of years of human and animal suffering, and the extinction of most species, is so that at the end of all of that a select few humans could be with him forever. I see.
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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
He surely suffered from all his so-called supporters not getting him the hell off that cross.
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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
A few hours crucified, do you mean? He wasn't up there long.Feck wrote:A few days crucified is not fun .. Research the Bio-mechanics of crucifixion before you say "what did he suffer ?"
The two said to have been crucified with him where still going strong when JC passed out and was pronounced dead.
Crucifixion is a horrible torture, for sure, but nothing in comparison to just one person's eternal torment, and it is supposed to pay for all humanities eternal suffering. It doesn't come close to making sense.
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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
It's a wonder that theological types don't go insane reading/writing/thinking about this claptrap. But maybe they are all insane ...Thinking Aloud wrote:Which is why I didn't. Blame the Pope. He wrote it. (Well, the previous one, anyway.)klr wrote:If I attempt to read more than two sentences of that, I will surely turn into a zombie ...Thinking Aloud wrote:What confers on substitution its redemptive value is not the material fact that an innocent person has suffered the chastisement deserved by the guilty and that justice has thus been in some way satisfied (in such a case one should speak rather of a grave injustice). The redemptive value comes instead from the fact that the innocent Jesus, out of pure love, entered into solidarity with the guilty and thus transformed their situation from within. When a catastrophic situation such as that caused by sin is taken upon oneself on behalf of sinners out of pure love, then that situation is no longer under the sign of opposition to God. On the contrary, it is under the sign of docility to the love which comes from God (cf. Gal 1:4), and therefore becomes a source of blessing (Gal 3:13-14). Christ, by offering himself "as a ransom for many," put into effect to the very ultimate his solidarity with man, with every man and with every sinner. The Apostle Paul indicates this when he writes, "The love of Christ impels us, once we have come to the conviction that one died for all; therefore, all have died" (2 Cor 5:14). Christ therefore is in solidarity with everyone in death, which is an effect of sin. But in him this solidarity was in no way the effect of sin; instead, it was a gratuitous act of the purest love. Love induced Christ to give his life, by accepting death on the cross. His solidarity with man in death consists in the fact that he not only died as every man dies, but that he died for every one. Thus this "substitution" signified the superabundance of love which overcomes every deficiency and insufficiency of human love, every negation and contrariety linked with human sin in every dimension "interior and historical" in which this sin has weighed on the relationship of man with God.
I may have copied that from somewhere.

God has no place within these walls, just like facts have no place within organized religion. - Superintendent Chalmers
It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson

It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson



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Re: Simple question # 5214 - explain Christ's sacrifice
You just answered your own question. A certain amount of void in the sanity department is necessary to even embark on that career path.klr wrote:It's a wonder that theological types don't go insane reading/writing/thinking about this claptrap. But maybe they are all insane ...
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