DocM
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Funny, Brendan, my brother and I were terrified of clowns as children. We used to have nightmares....but I digress.
First, I would like to say that the debate is likely not to end in everyone being of a unanimous opinion. Be that as it may, I find it disconcerting that despite thousands of hours of meticulous NAZI documentation in phtos, paper and film, that there are deniers of the Holocaust who have conferences about the most inane conspiracies (the latest comical one was that if Hitler had some Jewish blood in him -which has been postulated - than the Holocaust was his deliberate plan to establish the ste of Israel - I would be rolling on the floor laughing if it weren't so absurdly inhumane).
Now follow the thought here. The Holocaust happened in the 20th century, a mere six plus decades ago. If the historical accuracy of this can be brought into question, do you really believe that we will establish the historical accuracy of Jesus' full life 2000 years in the past? Of course not.
I would defend those of faith in their right to believe in him because those who reject him have no solid proof. I am Jewish by upbringing, however I feel strongly that the life, death and resurrection of Christ is a marvelous model and example for those who believe in the afterlife and yes, Don, New Age thought. In a very short period, by common accounts, he experiences tremendous suffering, doubt, (as we all do in life), the fear of being forsaken, followed by acceptance, death, and then the persistence of life beyond death with resurrection. Isn't that what we are all looking for in our search for knowledge about why there is suffering in the world, and what happens when we die?
I have come to my own beliefs over the past year through personal experience and thought; I am open to change as new experiences come my way. I believe our essence stems from conscious awareness. In following this essence I find that much of what is seen as polar opposites in the physical world melts away. Armies of light and darkness, black/white, whatever dualism appears then vanishes. This then leads me to the notion that there is a unity of all things (Don's labeling of me as monistic). We all have experienced this feeling of unity, but perhaps not on a daily basis. If you have ever been out on a perfect summer's day, and experienced pure joy in just "being," then you have glimpsed into this unity.
When looking at the arguments from this perspective, I have to say, I take Tim's view that I love having the D/D debate going on. Pass the popcorn. But just like the yin/yang sign (the place where the black fish starts and the white fish ends, is unknowable), I believe that there is a bigger picture here, beyond the historical reality of JC. Don/Tim alluded to it in saying "OOB Dude, try contacting him yourself when OOB." JC and christianity have been in the hearts and minds of billions of people now. Since, in my monistic model, conscious awareness is our essence, then the love and philosophy of JC have indelibly entered the mind of human consciousness and are part of us. Multiple sources confirm what both Christians and New Agers believe - that love is the driving force behind the godhead and all the planes of existence.
Incidentally, Dude, I'm surprised you didn't bring up the Essenes, a group who existed long before Jesus and who some believed JC may have had contact with. They shared many conceptual ideas with christianity, believed in the coming of a messiah, a form of baptism, and well, you get the point - there has been debate about the role of the Essenes for years in early christian thought.
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