It seems as if there is there are some recent attempts on this forum to convert people to Christianity.
I'm all for Jesus, but I don't believe that he was a Christian. I figure he was a Christ consciousness type.
When it comes to the new testament, the stories of Jesus were passed along by word of mouth for years before they were written down, and then men decided which stories would be included in the Bible, and which wouldn't, and how they would be translated.
Therefore, when I read Biblical stories and words that are attributed to Jesus, I use my discrimination. Some of the words sound fine, but I doubt that Jesus said all of the things the Bible gives him credit for. If we have a place for Jesus in our heart, perhaps we want to take care about what he gets credit for.
I have read some wonderful NDE accounts that didn't include a meeting with Jesus. They didn't have some sort of confirmation, but the depth of what was experienced made confirmation unnecessary.
I'd be surprised if Jesus is concerned about NDEs that include him being given more credit than those that don't. Perhaps some experiences include him because very wise spirit beings understand that not everybody will accept what NDEs say if they don't include Jesus. There is no need to minimize the value of NDEs that don't. Each person receives grace in the way that is appropriate for he or she.
1796 wrote on Jan 28th, 2015 at 2:01am:recoverer wrote on Jan 27th, 2015 at 2:05pm:Perhaps it is loving to allow each person to determine what source of information helps them grow in love.
1796 wrote on Jan 27th, 2015 at 1:28am:Love, I believe, is the key. Love is not easily understood though; it gets confused with affections, with desires, wants, needs, preferences, and all sorts of warm fuzzy feelings, and even unpleasant feelings too, like hurt, jealousy, anger. I think the best teachings on love are in the New Testament. I am not aware of any other source that teaches love clearer. The NT teaches what love is and what it isn't. The distinction is important.
The differences between fakery and truth, between emotional and genuine love, between false service and true service, hypocrisy and sincerity, are not as easily noticed as they might first seem. It is easy to cross the line. Otherwise JC would not have emphasised the differences and provided examples of each, and Paul and John discussed these too.
There seems to be an insinuation there. Though I do not know what it is.