Believe in Jesus, but why take the Old Testament for granted?
It's not logical. Think how impossible is for a christian to change his point of view, and they didn't even met God.
Now lets see what happened when Noah's family started to populate the world. They met Gods power in an unforgetable experience yet Shem, Ham & Japheth failled to transmit the knowledge of God to their descendants. How could that be? Monotheism only florished in Judea long after the universal flood, that's like less than 1% of the worlds population.
It look like it's easier to believe when you don't experience at all.
?2010-10-17T10:06:39Z
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I'm no theologian, but in my opinion, a series of books written centuries ago cannot govern the life of people today. Even attempting to apply the principles to daily life is impossible. And you can't just read the old testament or the new, and not even just the king james version- every biblical book has to be taken into consideration. Just the conflicts between the old and new testaments are hard enough to deal with. I strongly urge you find a new belief system- I did, and while people haggle me about not being certain about what happens when we die, I continue to live my life in a very Christ-like way. Let the pieces fall where they may- if there is an afterlife, how could you ever be positive through all the contradictions of the bible that you would attain it?
I am agnostic/deist/stoic. I pick Thomas Jefferson's view of Jesus. Like does he have got to be holy and participate in miracles simply in order that we will be able to concentrate to his message of affection and peace? (and we nonetheless become doing simply the reverse) Though a lot of his message is not precisely new or special, he does appear to be an amalgamation of the excellent guy as espoused by means of more than a few philosophies and ethics to be had in his day. Friedrich Nietzsche had a best view too, he would be one in every of Zarathustra's thinker of 1000 years. The hyperlinks to eldad9's put up gave me an extra suggestion. What if Jesus began out like zarathustra? Zarathustra is a being sprung out of friedrich nietzche's creativeness, and I do not see why, had it existed beneath an identical stipulations of early christianity, can it now not develop into its possess faith.