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The Meaning of Jesus' Death (Read 22605 times)
Berserk2
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The Meaning of Jesus' Death
May 22nd, 2013 at 8:32pm
 
The New Testament understands Jesus' atoning death as the sacrifice that ends the legitimacy of all sacrifices.  His death signals the end of sacrifices in 2 senses: (1) The NT views the OT sacrifices as prophetic types pointing ahead to Jesus' fulfillment of the sacrifice cult.  (2) Jesus predicts that destruction of Temple, whose sacrifices expressed the heart of Jewish atonement theology.  Within 40 years of Jesus' death (70 AD), sacrifices were terminated by the Roman destruction of the Temple.


But why would God's plan employ a now culturally obsolete practice like sacrifices in the first place?  Divine revelation does not destroy culture.  If it tried to do that, it would never find acceptance. Speaking metaphorically, divine revelation "lisps" through cultural categories to express its truth, but as cultures vanish or evolve, the revelation needs continual restatement to prevent the kernal of truth from being confused with the cultural husk.


Thus, God declares through Jeremiah (chap. 7)  that He never established the Israelite system of sacrifice in the first place.   Elsewhere in the OT, God makes His true attitude to sacrifices clear when the Jewsh sacrifices no longer reflect true repentance and a desire for transformation.  Thus, God asks sarcastically, "Why would you imagine I want sacrifices?  Do you think I get hungry or thirsty?  Why don't you just eat your sacrifices yourself?"   The implciation is that God reveals "His" truth and prescription for living within the cultural structures provided by the sacrifice system.  God reveals His word not instead of cultural categories, but within them.  So God constantly reminds Israel that He really wants obedience, not sacrifice.


In another post (2), I'll address the question," What can anyone's death, even the Messiah's death, possibly have to do with my shortcomings?"  Two wrongs don't make a right.  So how can Jesus' death be anything more than an injustice to Him that compounds the Judaeo-Christian God's culpability?
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Rondele
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #1 - May 23rd, 2013 at 2:51pm
 
I don't understand why Jesus' death was necessary to save the world.

God didn't actually "give" his only begotten Son, in a sense he only lent him to the world since 3 days later Jesus returned to the Father.

Or am I misreading this?  Is the real message the fact that Jesus survived and overcame death, and by so doing the rest of us can look forward to survival also?

But we must believe in Jesus for salvation.  And that then raises the obvious question of all people who existed before Jesus' birth or people who never heard of Jesus.  What is their fate?

And what does believing in Jesus really mean?  Is it enough to believe Jesus was the Son of God and that he died for our sins and later rose up to rejoin God?

Or is belief something more deep?  Believing in a historical fact doesn't seem to me to be enough...

R
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Berserk2
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #2 - May 23rd, 2013 at 9:42pm
 
You're asking all the right questions, but they are tough questions and I'll have to answer them one at a time.  I'll try to do so with a minimum of Bible prooftexting, but of course you can always challenge me for more quotes if you wish.  Stay tuned.
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Berserk2
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #3 - May 27th, 2013 at 3:27pm
 
Rondele,

Sorry for the delay. I've been involved with very sick and dying people, including the need to walk their dogs!


The New Testament teaches that Jesus died for everyone, not just for Christians.  The first question is this: is it essential to believe in Jesus to inherit eternal life through Him?  Or does one merely need to develop the quality of consciousness His teachings are designed to produce and live the grace-based life He teaches?
Consider this concession made by Paul in a public address on his first visit to Athens.  "in the past God overlooked such ignorance.  but now He commands all people everywhere to repent (Acts 17:30)."  Prior to Paul's arrival, most Athenians know nothing about the Hebrew Bible and had never even heard of Jesus.  Paul is saying that God does not hold them accountable for  what they don't know.  This principle, of course, applies equally to modern pagans and people of other faiths who either have never heard of Jesus or, if they have, have no more than a superficial impression of what Jesus is like and what He stands for. 

Now consider what Paul says about the potentian of non-Christian faith traditions to be the vehicle for salvation:

"God will give eternal life to those who persist in doing what is good, seeking after the glory and honor and immortality that God offers.  There will be glory and honor and peace with God for all who do good--for the Jew first and also for the pagan [Gentile].  For God does not show favoritism (Romans 2:7, 10-11)."

These observations lead to many other questions, which I hope to address when I have time.  Right now, I have to pretend I'm a lawyer and write a letter to keep  a troubled seeker out of jail!

Don

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Rondele
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #4 - May 30th, 2013 at 1:41pm
 
<<In another post (2), I'll address the question," What can anyone's death, even the Messiah's death, possibly have to do with my shortcomings?"  Two wrongs don't make a right.  So how can Jesus' death be anything more than an injustice to Him that compounds the Judaeo-Christian God's culpability?>>

Don-

This is the one that really confuses me.  God sacrifices his Son, and by so doing gives us eternal life.  Except that He really didn't sacrifice Jesus, knowing all along Jesus would return to heaven.

So therefore sacrifice is tied to redemption.  Sort of like when Abraham was going to sacrifice his own son?  That was the prevailing culture at the time, and maybe made sense re. the crucifixion.  But how does it make sense today?

R
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #5 - Mar 17th, 2014 at 2:11am
 
    Source never wanted animal sacrifices.  This became involved with cultures and belief systems because of outside negative influences. 

  Re: Yeshua.  His life was not about sacrifice for our sins, but rather, he came to a sin sick world to reorient us back to a constructive, creative path so that we could become joyous and healed. 

   His life involved letting himself be falsely tried, tortured, and murdered, because he had to make his message as dramatic and memorable as possible, to have the greatest and farthest reaching impact he could. 

    Because, after his very human death, he did manifest physically to many for a time. 

  There was no teacher previous to him who fully overcame the illusion of death, especially as one who was born of a woman.  Now, we had Melchizedek who had manifested into this dimension (Earth) straight from Source Consciousness, and who did not die physically, but he was not born of a woman.  The "game" changes a bit when more fully subjected to the process of forgetting, being raised as a child, etc.   Btw, Melchizedek and Yeshua are part of the same "Disk" or "I/There" or Expanded self essence.  He has manifested a number of times here as a teacher, wayshower, and guide.  Some fully in human, and some direct manifestations from outside the ELS. 

     Think on this for a moment.  During the trial and crucifixion, and after same, many of those who followed him forsook him.  They were confused, many didn't think it would end like this despite Yeshua trying to prepare them (gave plenty of hints). 

    They scattered, lost focus, and despaired.  But after he showed up physically to them, it all changed again.  So much so, that many of these people went to their own tortures and deaths in his and his teachings name. 

    How many would give their freedom, their comfort, or their lives for a cause that they weren't totally convinced in?   What might it take, perhaps to experience first hand a Teacher who was so filled with Life, so filled with Light, with Love, that death had no power of them? 

   Without the crucifixion and resurrection, Yeshua would have just been another spiritual teacher preaching  concepts--there have been many of these in history, in many cultures.  Yeshua went beyond the Buddha and others.  He attained complete and full conscious Source Consciousness while in the flesh.  Others had gotten relatively close, but only he fully completed same. 

   There was some sacrifice involved on his part in a few ways.   One, coming into this world to begin with, especially during such a slow vibratory and negative cycle and in the area he grew up in.  Painful to such an aware and sensitive consciousness.

  Two, Yeshua like all of us, was operating from within a human.  There was a part of him, that had some trepidation about experiencing extreme physical torture, because he knew it wouldn't feel good and would be hard to bear physically.   It was not without physical pain as some sources would have us believe. 

   The human part of him, balked some at this fore knowledge, and so yes, there was sacrifice involved even though he knew that if he went through with it, he would raise the temple again in 3 days as he told the Pharisees etc before hand. 

  So, it's not that his torture and death was some kind of direct sacrifice for our sins, but rather it was an extension of his larger message and impact meant to reorient us back to Source's consciousness and livingness and away from our error filled lives, belief systems, etc. 

  All the meanwhile, encouraging others and telling them, what i am and can do, you are and can also be and do. 

  To fully understand his life and message, you have to understand the difference between life and death metaphysically and metaphorically.  Most of us know that death is kind of an illusion because we survive, and it's not the end of anything. 

  However, the real meaning of death is not that, but a discontinuity of conscious awareness.  Even for more mature individuals, when they die, there is a temporary loss of awareness and an adjustment phase.   Also, death is not a necessity to begin with. 

  We "die" here (provided it's not forced and allowed as in his case), because we live a life that is not completely LIFE in essence.  In other words, part of the reason why we die, is because of our lack of attunement to PUL and Source Consciousness.  In other cycles (many thousands of years ago), wherein the collective vibration of Earth and humanity was much higher, individuals tended to live MUCH longer in physical lives than current. 

    When there is full attunement to Source and PUL within, then there is full continuity of consciousness, no stuckness, no being limited by local dimensional 'laws' or trends, no loss in conscious awareness.   You realize the truth of Oneness and connectness, and you phase from one dimension or level to another simply by conscious will. 

  These truths will become more plain to humanity in the nearish future, when other individuals attain to similar attunement as he, as in-physical humans and demonstrate similar attunement.   Not necessarily exactly the same as he as in being killed and manifesting in physical after, but in ways similar to the various so called miracles he acted as a channel for. 
 
   He will also make public appearances again with the same body image he was born with some 2000 years ago.  A man 5' 11 1/2"-6" tall, weight around 174, fair of face, strong, athletic looking body (but not gym pumped by any means), light brown hair with strong reddish and golden highlights--fairly reddish overall with tendency to waviness and a little curl towards the ends, eyes a light and piercing blue gray or gray blue with some greenish tint at times, fullish lower lip, some almost Leonine appearance a bit.  Not much stereotypcially Hebraic looking, except for a very slightly prominent nose. 

    Course, those who know him, will know him better by his emanation than his looks.  The kind of powerful emanation that Bob Monroe talks about in relation to meeting He/She. 

  However, we can and should meet him before his public in physical appearances.  We can do so through raising up the Christ Consciousness within. 


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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #6 - Mar 17th, 2014 at 11:45am
 
Justin, if crucifixion meant making eternal life possible, I as a maker would at least admit to myself I made a mistake to avoid my own judgement concerning the ones dying prior to enabling it.

Walking on water equals attention. Enduring pain to get attention doesn't make sense to me because there are other options. I can think of a heart-shaped sky suddenly descending, stepping onto it while All You Need Is Love is playing through invisible speakers, and then ascending without blood and gore, maybe waving goodbye and blowing kisses to the crowd. If blood was needed for effect, pudgy red water could flow from the heart and still no harm done.
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #7 - Mar 18th, 2014 at 1:30am
 
  Well, as they say, Karma is a beeatch. 

  There is some back story here, that relates to other lives and karma, that makes Yeshua's life a little more understandable if you know the back story. 

   The Biblical person Joshua, leader and warrior-priest of the Israelite's, and Yeshua are part of the same Disk. 

  During Joshua's lifetime, as a warrior-priest, after attacking Jerusalem, he found the King or general of same hiding in a cave. 

Under Joshua's order, he had this man hung up in a tree to die.   

   Yeshua was meeting self and karma in the crucifixion.  Without fully meeting self and his karma, he would not have been fully re-Christed. 

  However, again, it also had the benefit of being an extremely dramatic and memorable account.  Man gets brutally tortured and crucified unjustly for different beliefs and preaching, experiences pretty sure physical death.  Yet, same man's body disappears from the cave 3 days later, and ends up showing up to friends and others and at times physically interacting with them....

  People were use to E.T. stuff previous to this.  Ships and lights coming out the sky.  ET technology had been shown in some pretty dramatic ways previously.  Look at Elijah's contest with the Priests of Baal.  Elijah was in communication with friendly E.T.'s and on his request, they shot a type of laser fire down in a dramatic show.

  No, people needed the purely human element of dramatics here.  No show in the sky or the like.  As mentioned, that had been done before.

  Yes, walking on water is dramatic too, but not much of a sacrifice for ones belief or others.  The Christ like life, is at it's essence, about the sacrifice of the selfish, little, willful self, to the will of Source/Creative Forces attuned with same and the good of Whole or larger self.

   In a sense, it's no different that being with another person--say a little kid, you have food, but you both are hungry and starving, and you give  your last bit of food to the child.  Why?   Why do something like that?  Because you feel their pain, their suffering, and in that moment their suffering for whatever reason matters more than your own?

  Well, from the Christ perspective, it's always about others.  It's a shift, an emphasis away from the little, seemingly separated self that we have become so accustomed to operating from.  In doing that, do you find or gain your real self, the little, individual self fully connected to the Whole. 
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #8 - Mar 18th, 2014 at 11:28am
 
It's always about others, yet giving away food to a kid doesn't mean it's always about others, and meeting self and the karma all about you.

This isn't purely dramatic, but down to earth: instead of two neighbours fetching each other's papers in the morning, for starters, fetching the paper on the respective porch works out very well.
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #9 - Jan 25th, 2017 at 5:35pm
 
Thank you for this thread Don. It has answered many questions I've had recently. Interestingly my spiritual practice and research into what is really happening in this world has led me to strongly consider Christianity.
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But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.
 
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #10 - Apr 28th, 2017 at 11:47am
 
Don:

Thank you for your explanation as to how the Bible says that God doesn't want sacrifices. It makes sense that he doesn't become thirsty and hungry.

I also believe that he doesn't desire to be worshiped in the way that some people try to worship him (some people act this way towards their guru).  His love is so complete that he doesn't need to be adored in the way a narcissist would be adored. I prefer to love him as I would love a father or a good friend.

A lady named Khartika Goe wrote a book called "The Multidimensional Traveler." She wrote of a temple in Kyoto Japan and found that lower dimensional beings were stealing energy from people that prayed to the metal statues that exist within the temple.

A while back Justin wrote that his wife's mother is a hardcore Christian fundamentalist. Justin's wife had a dream where she saw that Reptilians were getting energy from her mother's fundamentalist-like worship.

I don't believe that praising God and loving God are the same thing. I believe that God is the source of everything. I believe that God is a being of perfect love and wisdom. I believe that God has set things up so that an absolutely wonderful way of existence is possible, if we choose it. I believe that God used a very small portion of his own being to create me, and I am grateful that he did so. I feel committed to helping him accomplish what he is trying to accomplish. Sending worship like energy to beings that aren't interested in what he is trying to accomplish, doesn't go along with helping him. Having appreciation for God is much more sublime than what adoration entails.  It is closer to when two good friends really appreciate, respect and care for each other. I believe that one of the reasons God created us, is so that he would have somebody to share love with. We can love him completely without getting into a worship like mode.
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #11 - Apr 28th, 2017 at 4:58pm
 
Berserk2 wrote on May 27th, 2013 at 3:27pm:
The New Testament teaches that Jesus died for everyone, not just for Christians.  The first question is this: is it essential to believe in Jesus to inherit eternal life through Him?  Or does one merely need to develop the quality of consciousness His teachings are designed to produce and live the grace-based life He teaches?
Consider this concession made by Paul in a public address on his first visit to Athens.  "in the past God overlooked such ignorance.  but now He commands all people everywhere to repent (Acts 17:30)."  Prior to Paul's arrival, most Athenians know nothing about the Hebrew Bible and had never even heard of Jesus.  Paul is saying that God does not hold them accountable for  what they don't know.  This principle, of course, applies equally to modern pagans and people of other faiths who either have never heard of Jesus or, if they have, have no more than a superficial impression of what Jesus is like and what He stands for. 

Now consider what Paul says about the potentian of non-Christian faith traditions to be the vehicle for salvation:

"God will give eternal life to those who persist in doing what is good, seeking after the glory and honor and immortality that God offers.  There will be glory and honor and peace with God for all who do good--for the Jew first and also for the pagan [Gentile].  For God does not show favoritism (Romans 2:7, 10-11)."

These observations lead to many other questions, which I hope to address when I have time.  Right now, I have to pretend I'm a lawyer and write a letter to keep  a troubled seeker out of jail!

Don



I like this view, but I'm wondering what you make of verses such as the following:

“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son” (John 3:16–18).

“If you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved” (Rom. 10:9–10)

“Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains on him.” (John 3:36)
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But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.
 
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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #12 - Apr 28th, 2017 at 5:38pm
 
Dude:

The introduction to the Gospel of John in the "New Living Translation" says that the Gospel of John was written about 90 years after Jesus' death. As those 90 years passed it is possible that the accuracy of some of the details were lost.

Notice that you selected 3 versus that seem to make the point that Jesus is somebody other than God. These and many other Gospel of John versus (plus Matthew, Mark and Luke versus) contradict the few versus that say Jesus is God. Perhaps such inconsistencies show that one needs to use one's discrimination when one considers which Biblical  versus represent the truth.

I said this elsewhere, certainly God is wise enough to see into a man's heart and understand why he doesn't end up believing as you suggest people should believe with the three versus you provided.

Perhaps a more accurate way to consider this matter is, what would it take to be able to rejoin God in heaven? I figure that one needs to be ready to live according to the qualities that beings with God live according to. Qualities such as unconditional love, respect for others, humility and gratitude. A person can live according to these qualities regardless of what they do or do not know about Jesus. Whatever the truth about Jesus is, if a person has an open mind and humble attitude, he (or she) can find out when he is ready to find out.

Please remember what I shared about Howard Storm's NDE. Jesus showed him that Jews that were murdered by Nazis went to heaven after they died. This took place years after Paul wrote Acts 17:30. Perhaps it would be wise to consider what Jesus has told some people during more recent times. 

When I look within my heart I understand that God loves us so much that there is no way he is going to send people to hell because they don't end up becoming one of the small percentage of people who believe according to the 3 versus you provided. My heart also tells me that God and Jesus are extremists when it comes to being reasonable.

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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #13 - Apr 28th, 2017 at 5:48pm
 
Because of "A Channel's" ex-member status I am not able to edit my last post, so I will instead add to my last post.

I recommend the following when considering the three versus Dude asked about.

Tune into the depth of your soul to an extent where you love all people dearly. Consider the possibility that when you tune into that level of being, you tune into a level of being that is close to God. Then ask yourself whether the versus Dude asked about accurately represent how God considers things when determining who does or doesn't get to go to heaven. Perhaps Jesus' prodigal son story relates.

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Re: The Meaning of Jesus' Death
Reply #14 - Apr 28th, 2017 at 6:24pm
 
Dude, your reactions to my posts will help guide me in the creation of future threads.   More specifically, your last reply invites a discussion of the possibility of universal salvation and what can prevent the actualization of that possibility.  ES's revelations are helpful here because they neatly dovetail with NT teaching.  I need time to plan a thread on this (and the verses you quote); so stay tuned.

Don
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