what, exactly, is the suffering for, and for what purpose if it is necessary? — tim wood
Christ is considered to have himself suffered, but being a God and knowing it makes that problematic. — tim wood
No doubt, but the question goes to the suffering in the text, or more generally of "suffering for Christ." It does not seem to be suffering-for because Christ suffered, but rather because Paul suffered and was suffering because of his preaching, that is, as a consequence of what he was doing, which is presumably also what Christ suffered, although I cannot think of when he did, except at the end.My view is that suffering is an inevitable aspect of life , — Wayfarer
I don't find this. In any case the Greek word is soteria, σωτηρίας (of salvation), which makes life difficult, because Greek just often does not seem to easily translate and preserve meaning. Near as I can tell, soteria is salvation-from, from earthly problems, and not salvation-to, to some other place.Note the etymology of 'salvation' - it is related to 'salve', which is to soothe or balm. — Wayfarer
That to degree, which is interesting. But was it their teaching that you must suffer?aware of a tension between the extent to which one was meant to suffer. — Jack Cummins
Hmm. Martyrs, it seems to me, choose martyrdom for the sake of martyrdom. I am pretty sure neither Christ nor Paul nor any of the apostles were "in it" to be martyrs.especially the martyrs. The whole idea of 'take up your cross and follow Christ'. — Jack Cummins
Which is what we're challenging here. I suspect relevance here - doesn't happen too often. Go for it!I find it very interesting in the way in which it challenges the whole view that Christianity is meant to be about suffering. — Jack Cummins
Being witnessed as the one who suffers is the point Paul is making here. The idea that steadfast faith will be recognized by someone (even more important than Paul) who could notice the effort is combined with observing that "opponents" will be destroyed by seeking to destroy you who stands firm. Since everybody invited to the party will suffer, the emphasis upon who will benefit or not becomes the critical question. — Valentinus
The question here: whether it is necessary to suffer for Christ to be a Christian — tim wood
so what, exactly, is the suffering for, and for what purpose if it is necessary? — tim wood
The point of the commandment of having no other gods before Jehovah is that the believer is willing to have no other gods before Jehovah even when it's not particularly convenient or popular to do so.Paul, on the other hand, did indeed suffer - so what, exactly, is the suffering for, and for what purpose if it is necessary? — tim wood
Paul, on the other hand, did indeed suffer - so what, exactly, is the suffering for, and for what purpose if it is necessary? — tim wood
My difficulty as well. The notion - any notion - of "ought" or "should" outside their correct grammatical usage, is imo fraught. And to suffer for Him? How does that work?The rationale behind the acceptance of suffering is, I think, simply that, as Jesus was prepared to suffer for you (i.e. 'mankind') then you should be prepared to suffer for Him (which seems to me to be elemental to Christianity.).
That's all there is to it as far as Biblical interpretation goes, but I feel your question is deeper than that. But I still don't quite understand what it is. — Wayfarer
That is, I do not consider the Bible the inerrant word of God (I think the idea absurd). But I am aware that some people do, and their reasoning on that basis cannot be my reasoning, nor their conclusions; their criteria being the text, mine reason and judgement as best I can manage. This "use" of religion I surmise yours as well. All of which is to say that the problems themselves appear to transcend religion. — tim wood
The religious person perceives our present life, or our natural life, as radically deficient, deficient from the root (radix) up, as fundamentally unsatisfactory; he feels it to be, not a mere condition, but a predicament; it strikes him as vain or empty if taken as an end in itself; he sees himself as homo viator, as a wayfarer or pilgrim treading a via dolorosa through a vale that cannot possibly be a final and fitting resting place; he senses or glimpses from time to time the possibility of a Higher Life; he feels himself in danger of missing out on this Higher Life of true happiness.
If this doesn't strike a chord in you, then I suggest you do not have a religious disposition. Some people don't, and it cannot be helped. One cannot discuss religion with them, for it cannot be real to them. It is not, for them, what William James in "The Will to Believe" calls a "living option," let alone a "forced" or "momentous" one.
I end up concluding that indeed you ought to suffer for Christ, but only if you choose to, the choice itself being unnecessary. — tim wood
The notion - any notion - of "ought" or "should" outside their correct grammatical usage, is imo fraught. — tim wood
Buddhist discipline always had a component of cognitive skill understood in terms of the attainment of insight into the various emotional afflictions (kilesa) and taints (āsava) which are the cause of suffering (dukkha). This ‘path of insight’ is distinctly different to reliance on faith or belief as the expedient factor in the attainment of the goal of the Buddhist path.
The sense in which this is a ‘religious’ view is a difficult question. As Paul Williams says:
In the Indian context it would have been axiomatic that liberation comes from discerning how things actually are, the true nature of things (yathābhūtaṃ). That 'seeing things how they are' has soteriological benefits would have been expected, and is just another way of articulating the ‘is’ and ‘ought’ dimension of Indian Dharma. The ‘ought’ (pragmatic benefit) is never cut adrift from the ‘is’ (cognitive factual truth).
Michael Fuller points out that the ‘is/ought’ distinction is a modern one, originating with Hume. The ‘is/ought’ distinction is now, however, very much a part of modern life, and it is generally taken for granted that science assumes a Universe which is inherently devoid of value; values are internal to human minds and are ultimately derived from, and reducible to, the requirements of survival.
I do not consider the Bible the inerrant word of God — tim wood
In essence seeming to say that you, in your beliefs and practices, or rather that your beliefs and practices, are constitutive of what you believe. — tim wood
A Christian with questions and problems! How capital!My difficulty as well. The notion - any notion - of "ought" or "should" outside their correct grammatical usage, is imo fraught. And to suffer for Him? How does that work?
At bottom, if the Bible were just any book I would agree with you 100%. But for a Christian it is not just any book (and just what exactly for a Christian it is has changed over the past 200 years). I am a default Christian — tim wood
I think Paul would have agreed with that. In describing it as a struggle with others who did not agree with that dynamic, there is a political element Paul developed that was central to the efforts of the first "Church Fathers" to keep the flock together. If the solidarity being called for so clearly in the Letters has no bearing upon the ideas being promoted, it is fair to ask why not. — Valentinus
Inevitable? If inevitable, then suffering for nothing is just suffering, not in this context a problem.I will say first of all that suffering of one kind or another is a necessary aspect of living. — Possibility
The Greek reads, "that/because for/to you it is given." No granting, no privilege, those the sin of eisegesis, reading into, instead of reading out of. And my knowledge of Greek is thin, but enough to come to distrust and hate translations. I have zero fear of being contradicted if I say that a dependence on translation means such a person does not know the Bible.It is a privilege granted, — Possibility
So I guess my question is, does this trick identified as such seem accurately described, ultimately a bit of mysticism, like a rope ladder attached to nothing that one may think to climb up? — tim wood
Thus shall you think of this fleeting world:
A star at dawn, a bubble in a stream,
A flash of lightning in a summer cloud,
A flickering lamp, a phantom, and a dream. — Diamond Sutra
I will say first of all that suffering of one kind or another is a necessary aspect of living.
— Possibility
Inevitable? If inevitable, then suffering for nothing is just suffering, not in this context a problem. — tim wood
It is a privilege granted,
— Possibility
The Greek reads, "that/because for/to you it is given." No granting, no privilege, those the sin of eisegesis, reading into, instead of reading out of. And my knowledge of Greek is thin, but enough to come to distrust and hate translations. I have zero fear of being contradicted if I say that a dependence on translation means such a person does not know the Bible. — tim wood
My own experience, fwiw, with Christianity is that in terms of external substance it is a game of three-card monte, and never ever the right card chosen, because the trick is that when it comes to choose, the right card is never on the table. — tim wood
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