The execution was clearly important, but for all Christians, I think, it's the Resurrection that matters, as it did back then. The Occupation had done its worst, and he got up and walked! Something must have happened, and I'm at a loss to explain what, but it would give people incredible confidence in all the 'Oh, yes, that would be nice' stuff. Revolutionary is the word, and most current Christians are reactionary in the extreme!I'm an agnostic (sorta)...but the matters presently called "the teachings of Christ" are pretty advanced for that age. Hell...they are pretty advanced for the present day. (Wish today's Christians felt about the "teachings of Christ" the way Christ did.) — Frank Apisa
The "Resurrection" should be little more than an antecedent to following his philosophy. — Frank Apisa
He didn't die on the cross.
— Qwex
The Bible is a whimsical tale about a sky God. — Qwex
It has so many stupid fans who like the book so much they interfere with intellectual discussion and institutions; please stop Christianity. — Qwex
What the fuck does 'He' mean? - Je'sus — Qwex
Not really, the man uses a strange method of communication.
He uses the pronoun 'He', in a strange way that assumes I must know the person (He calls Jesus) - I was merely addressing that. — Qwex
You use the pronoun 'He' in a stupid manner. — Qwex
I said Jesus didn't die on the cross - he doesn't exist.
You then said ' how do you know He didn't.' — Qwex
Skipping the argument of whether or not he exists, forcing religion down my throat. — Qwex
You first must prove he exists, merely assuming he did is stupid.
You said you didn't, and at the end you wrote a statement of how you did. — Qwex
So, before I continue, does Jesus exist?
My apologies. — Qwex
Where would Christianity be had Jesus not died on a cross? — Jacob-B
And they did not kill him, nor did they crucify him; but [another] was made to resemble him to them. And indeed, those who differ over it are in doubt about it. They have no knowledge of it except the following of assumption. And they did not kill him, for certain. Rather, Allah raised him to Himself. — Quran 4:157–158
Benjamin Urrutia, Latter-Day-Saint and co-author of The Logia of Yeshua: The Sayings of Jesus, agrees with a theory in biblical scholarship[15] which says that Yeshua Bar Abba or Jesus Barabbas may have been none other than Jesus of Nazareth, and that the choice between two prisoners is not historical. Despite this, early scholars, such as Origen, found it unlikely that the story was fictional, pointing out that the incident occurred with a decision between two people with extremely similar names, as having such a similar name to Jesus by appending Yeshua to Barabbas would have been heretical, which is evidenced in some manuscripts by the removal of the common name Yeshua from Barabbas in order to differentiate between him and Jesus Christ. — Wikipedia on Origen's forgery of the name 'Barabbas'
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