Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.
Trending News
If Jesus was still alive and was to be crucified next week what would you do? Knowing what you know now.?
It is interesting to see people of faith not completely sure what to do. Save him or not. Some would agree that is his fate. Death was his fate in order to save us to save us. Yet I have people of religion have problems with the word fate. Defined as such:
1) We follow a predetermined course and everything in our life has been decided for us.
2) We have a “final destination” fate, where we can make our own decisions but will eventually end up with the same finish to life.
I would definitely want to ask him one question: "Hey Jesus, do you believe that people who do not believe as you do are evil?" I wouldn't knock him, I'd have much respect and try to find out more about what makes him tick. I'd also like to know how he'd feel about the fact that in the future - churches would kill in his and his father's name. Kill those "God's children" who did not know of Jesus. And what he thinks about people who spoke in Old-English words even in the 21st century.
16 Answers
- Anonymous1 decade agoFavorite Answer
Jesus is still alive.
If you are saying he had never been crucified the first time? If so I would not stand in the way of his death, it was necessary for our sins. I would be there at all cost, I would wish to see him and would be happy to die with him. But his death was the only hope for all of us.
I wish their was another way. If their was I am sure God would have done it. Jesus was not put to death, he gave his life. Jesus came to earth as a sacrifice that had been prophesied thousands of years earlier.
But, Jesus is still alive.
- nancy joLv 51 decade ago
Whoa. What a great question. I'm assuming we wouldn't know about His Resurrection either yet.
No one really knows what they would do unless faced with it, so I'm guessing I would be like Peter and claim I'd never heard of Him so I wouldn't be next to hang. I don't think anyone loved Him more that Peter did, and human nature is human nature.
I would wish like I could be like david, above here. That was beautiful.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Theres only 2 people who can perform miracles nowadays.
that's David Blaine and David Copperfield.
Suppose Jesus was an illusionist back in those days, would his illusions be miracles?
im sure if david blaine prepared he could also walk on water infront of a live audience.
- 1 decade ago
i don't know what i would do..it's a very hard question.probably try to seek legal action since we're not in that era anymore and we do have to play by the rules.deep down i think i would try savin him because i believe he's good.history can repeat itself and maybe we will have the chance to save our Christ..as he saved us. that would mean that we will become the worst sinners again so i hope i never get the chance to make that choice (saving Jesus or not)
- How do you think about the answers? You can sign in to vote the answer.
- Cold FartLv 61 decade ago
Probably not defend or follow him because the religion who follows jesus are the ones who call anyone who doesn't follow that religion satanic or devil worshippers.
I'm Pagan and refuse to believe anything the bible says about life.
- 1 decade ago
I would get a picnic blanket, a bucket of extra tasty crispy, invite a couple of friends, have a few beers, set up a volleyball court, maybe get one of those big inflatable beach balls to knock around. You know, make a real day out of it.
- Anonymous5 years ago
Definition: The gadget on which Jesus Christ was once carried out is stated by means of so much of Christendom as a move. The expression is drawn from the Latin crux If you seek advice from the form, that is it is a directly Pole. The Greek phrase rendered “move” in lots of latest Bible types (“torture stake” in NW) is stau?ros?. In classical Greek, this phrase intended simply an upright stake, or faded. Later it additionally got here for use for an execution stake having a crosspiece. The Imperial Bible-Dictionary recognizes this, pronouncing: “The Greek phrase for move, [stau?ros?], competently signified a stake, an upright pole, or piece of paling, on which whatever possibly hung, or which possibly utilized in impaling [fencing in] a work of floor. . . . Even among the Romans the crux (from which our move is derived) looks to had been in the beginning an upright pole.”—Edited by means of P. Fairbairn (London, 1874), Vol. I, p. 376. Was that the case in reference to the execution of God’s Son? It is noteworthy that the Bible additionally makes use of the phrase xy?lon to spot the gadget used. A Greek-English Lexicon, by means of Liddell and Scott, defines this as that means: “Wood reduce and in a position to be used, firewood, trees, and so forth. . . . piece of picket, log, beam, publish . . . cudgel, membership . . . stake on which criminals have been impaled . . . of are living picket, tree.” It additionally says “in NT, of the move,” and cites Acts five:30 and 10:39 as examples. (Oxford, 1968, pp. 1191, 1192) However, in the ones verses KJ, RS, JB, and Dy translate xy?lon as “tree.” (Compare this rendering with Galatians three:thirteen; Deuteronomy 21:22, 23.) The guide The Non-Christian Cross, by means of J. D. Parsons (London, 1896), says: “There isn't a unmarried sentence in any of the countless writings forming the New Testament, which, within the usual Greek, bears even oblique proof to the end result that the stauros used when it comes to Jesus was once rather than an common stauros; so much much less to the end result that it consisted, no longer of 1 piece of trees, however of 2 portions nailed in combination within the type of a move. . . . It isn't a little bit deceptive upon the facet of our academics to translate the phrase stauros as ‘move’ while rendering the Greek files of the Church into our local tongue, and to aid that movement by means of striking ‘move’ in our lexicons because the that means of stauros with out cautiously explaining that that was once at any fee no longer the principal that means of the phrase within the days of the Apostles, didn't grow to be its principal signification until lengthy afterwards, and grew to be so then, if in any respect, simplest when you consider that, in spite of the absence of corroborative proof, it was once for a few motive or different assumed that the special stauros upon which Jesus was once carried out had that special form.”—Pp. 23, 24; see additionally The Companion Bible (London, 1885), Appendix No. 162. Thus the load of the proof shows that Jesus died on an upright stake and no longer at the conventional move. KEEP ON SEEKING THE TRUTH...
- 1 decade ago
That's a really stupid question. Why would anyone even want to cricify him. Also, isn't it against the law to crucify someone? That's why I would protest it. David is so sadistic. If you want to cleanse yourself of your sins, go die yourself! If we allow Jesus to die again, we would prove oursleves to be heartless beings. It is time that the world realise that peace is the answer, and not let someone die for our sins.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Anoint Him with perfume, spend every moment with HIm...watch every drop of blood come out of Him and cry because I know its for me.
I wouldnt try to stop it, He must die so we can live
Blessings
David