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out of all the great things ghandi did....

cannondalejunky

ease dropper
Jun 19, 2005
2,924
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Arkansas
did he go to heaven....or did he go to hell because he wasn't a christian...i had a baptist priest tell me once that "ghandi, like my grandmother, was a great man, but he didn't belive in the right things" now which is worse the fact that this man just compaired his grandmother to ghandi or the fact that he said his grandmother went to hell

discuss
 

Old Man G Funk

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Nov 21, 2005
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cannondalejunky said:
did he go to heaven....or did he go to hell because he wasn't a christian...i had a baptist priest tell me once that "ghandi, like my grandmother, was a great man, but he didn't belive in the right things" now which is worse the fact that this man just compaired his grandmother to ghandi or the fact that he said his grandmother went to hell

discuss
If Ghandi blasphemed the Holy Spirit by not believing in Christianity, then yes, he would have gone to hell. Blaspheming the Holy Spirit is sin and sin is punishable by spiritual death. It's not like he can claim ignorance of the Bible since he went to university in England.
 

kinghami3

Future Turbo Monkey
Jun 1, 2004
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Here's a quote from CS Lewis' The Last Battle (Tash would be the equivalent of Allah or a Hindu god, and Aslan would be the equivalent of God/Jesus):
"But I said, Alas, Lord, I am no son of thine but the servant of Tash. He answered, Child, all the service thou hast done to Tash, I account as service done to me... Not because he and I are one, but because we are opposites, I take to me the services thou hast done to him. For I and he are of such different kinds that no service which is vile can be done to me, and none which is not vile can be done to him. Therefore, if any man swear by Tash and keep his oath for oath's sake, it is by me that he has truly sworn, though he know it not, and it is I who reward him. And if any man do a cruelty in my name, then, though he says the name Aslan, it is Tash whom he serves and by Tash his deed is accepted."

Although this is a children's book, I think CS Lewis had a lot of insight on the issue. The Bible clearly says that we are saved through Jesus Christ, but people interpret that differently. I believe his sacrifice covered the sins of all, not just those who know God. As a Christian, I believe I know the Way, the Truth, and the Light (Jesus), so that is why I devote myself to worshiping him and promoting the two central Christian ideas which Jesus himself laid out as key to salvation: love your neighbor as yourself, and love the Lord your God above all others. I don't know what happens to those who reject the message, but I have to have faith that God is the ultimate judge, who truly knows our hearts.
 

kinghami3

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Jun 1, 2004
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Old Man G Funk said:
If Ghandi blasphemed the Holy Spirit by not believing in Christianity, then yes, he would have gone to hell. Blaspheming the Holy Spirit is sin and sin is punishable by spiritual death. It's not like he can claim ignorance of the Bible since he went to university in England.
I don't see how not becoming a Christian is blaspheming the HS. I think you have your concepts muddled.
 

cannondalejunky

ease dropper
Jun 19, 2005
2,924
2
Arkansas
Old Man G Funk said:
If Ghandi blasphemed the Holy Spirit by not believing in Christianity, then yes, he would have gone to hell. Blaspheming the Holy Spirit is sin and sin is punishable by spiritual death. It's not like he can claim ignorance of the Bible since he went to university in England.

i just find it very hard to belive that of all ther great things he did, he went to hell for the pure sake that he wasn't a christian

I believe his sacrifice covered the sins of all, not just those who know God.
thats the same way i think about god...if god wont forgive a man like ghandi for not being a christian...then i want a better god
 

Slugman

Frankenbike
Apr 29, 2004
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cannondalejunky said:
...i had a baptist priest tell me once that "ghandi, like my grandmother, was a great man, but he didn't belive in the right things"
Obviuosly the Baptist priest is a moron... he just said his GrandMOTHER was a great man.
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
56,412
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Old Man G Funk said:
I've been there and you are pretty much on the nose. I call it the a-hole of America.
I only drove through but sped up to get out as fast as possible. If the car broke down I would have ran. It is more than the a-hole, it is a cancerous swollen bleeding colon.
 

Old Man G Funk

Choir Boy
Nov 21, 2005
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Westy said:
I only drove through but sped up to get out as fast as possible. If the car broke down I would have ran. It is more than the a-hole, it is a cancerous swollen bleeding colon.
Yeah, my brother used to work at US Steel. He was glad that they had their own exits off the highway.

I think that even Ghandi would dislike Gary, IN.
 

kinghami3

Future Turbo Monkey
Jun 1, 2004
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Old Man G Funk said:
It is blaspheming because he was well aware of the scriptures and yet chose to disbelieve in Jesus.
Then you're really confused about your terms; Jesus and the Holy Spirit are not the same persons of the Trinity.

(taken from Bible.com)
Mark 3:28
"28 I tell you the truth, all the sins and blasphemies of men will be forgiven them. 29 But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin."

Matthew 12:31:
"31 And so I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven."

Passage Luke 12:10:
"10 And everyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven."

These are in response to the Pharisees' claims that the Devil was driving out the Demons, essentially calling the Holy Spirit the Devil. Because the Holy Spirit is the transforming and saving power of the Trinity, this is such an utter perversion of what is right that their souls are beyond saving; they will reject all that is truly good. They are confusing good and evil, and once this has happened they will not accept the truth. A rejection of Christianity can happen for many reasons, not just the complete confusion of good and evil.
 

Old Man G Funk

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Nov 21, 2005
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lovebunny said:
id be interested to see what andyman has to say on this
Not to speak for Andyman, but he would probably say that hell is not an idea that Jesus would have believed in, coming from the Jewish tradition that he preached in. Also, he would probably say that Ghandi followed the most important commandments, whether he did it in god's name or not, and would be worthy of being saved.

Did I get it right Andyman?
 

Old Man G Funk

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Nov 21, 2005
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kinghami3 said:
Then you're really confused about your terms; Jesus and the Holy Spirit are not the same persons of the Trinity.

(taken from Bible.com)
Mark 3:28
"28 I tell you the truth, all the sins and blasphemies of men will be forgiven them. 29 But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin."

Matthew 12:31:
"31 And so I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven."

Passage Luke 12:10:
"10 And everyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven."

These are in response to the Pharisees' claims that the Devil was driving out the Demons, essentially calling the Holy Spirit the Devil. Because the Holy Spirit is the transforming and saving power of the Trinity, this is such an utter perversion of what is right that their souls are beyond saving; they will reject all that is truly good. They are confusing good and evil, and once this has happened they will not accept the truth. A rejection of Christianity can happen for many reasons, not just the complete confusion of good and evil.
Ah, but the Trinity is all one and the same at the same time. It's true that speaking against Jesus doesn't necessarily mean blasphemy, but disbelief and outright rejection does.
 

kinghami3

Future Turbo Monkey
Jun 1, 2004
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Old Man G Funk said:
Ah, but the Trinity is all one and the same at the same time. It's true that speaking against Jesus doesn't necessarily mean blasphemy, but disbelief and outright rejection does.
No, the Trinity is three separate persons in such intimate communion that they form one God. The three cannot be confused. Jesus is the logos, the Word of God. The Holy Spirit is the transformative and saving force of God, and because of that fact alone, blaspheming (and in that context, blaspheming means confusing it with evil, not rejecting it, and means nothing else) against the Holy spirit is essentially rejecting the salvation of God to such a degree that it can never be reversed because the mind the thoroughly corrupted. Rejecting Jesus is rejecting the Word of God, the logos or will, but it is still not rejecting the saving power of God.
 

Andyman_1970

Turbo Monkey
Apr 4, 2003
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Old Man G Funk said:
Not to speak for Andyman, but he would probably say that hell is not an idea that Jesus would have believed in, coming from the Jewish tradition that he preached in. Also, he would probably say that Ghandi followed the most important commandments, whether he did it in god's name or not, and would be worthy of being saved.

Did I get it right Andyman?
Well kinda……..LOL

Anyway, in the 1st century the concept of “hell” as we refer to it as today actually had two different aspects to it from the Hebraic perspetive. Ghenna, with reference to the land fill outside Jerusalem was more of a present reality rather than an eternal destination. The way one chose to live determined if they experienced hell here on earth right now. Sheol, is more like our Western/Greek understanding of hell as a place were “bad people go”…….LOL.

An interesting side note, many “fire and brimstone” types will say Jesus preached on hell more than any other subject. One must keep in mind which term Jesus was using, living in a way right now that resulted in a “hell on earth” presently or one’s eternal destination. The only instance in Jesus’ teachings we have in the Gospels is Luke 16 the rich man and Lazarus, where Jesus speaks of an actual person in an actual hell. Note: the rich dude is in hell because he did not take care of those in need when it was in his power to do so…..Jesus doesn’t say he was in hell because he rejected Jesus.

We also have to remember that Judaism was not an exclusive religion with regards to salvation. The Jews understood that they would participate in the world to come through faith in the Creator God, but that Gentiles would also have a part in the world to come if they adhered to the Noachide laws.

While not a universalist by any stretch, I tend to be inclusive rather than exclusive with regards to salvation, especially with Jews.

And as for the whole Trinity thing……………..oh don’t get me started……LOL
 

Old Man G Funk

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Nov 21, 2005
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kinghami3 said:
No, the Trinity is three separate persons in such intimate communion that they form one God. The three cannot be confused. Jesus is the logos, the Word of God. The Holy Spirit is the transformative and saving force of God, and because of that fact alone, blaspheming (and in that context, blaspheming means confusing it with evil, not rejecting it, and means nothing else) against the Holy spirit is essentially rejecting the salvation of God to such a degree that it can never be reversed because the mind the thoroughly corrupted. Rejecting Jesus is rejecting the Word of God, the logos or will, but it is still not rejecting the saving power of God.
So, you aren't monotheistic then? Good to know.

Edit: I really like how accepting and worshipping other gods (contrary to the very first commandment) isn't blasphemy, so long as the person is sufficiently said to be "good" like Ghandi.
 

Andyman_1970

Turbo Monkey
Apr 4, 2003
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An excerpt from "Theological Errors due to Seperation from Hebrew Roots"
By: Dan Rodriguez Posted: February 19 2004

Note: I tend to lean this direction.

I. The foundational truth of the Bible is the monotheism it presents in opposition to the polytheism of heathen religions. This concept of one God is "the foundational truth" espoused by Judaism.

The Scripture teaches that God is one, in opposition to the doctrine of Trinity in Christianity. Trinitarianism was not accepted by the Church as dogma until the fourth century C.E. Neither the word Trinity nor the explicit doctrine appears in the New Testament, nor did Jesus or his followers intend to contradict the Shema in the Hebrew Scriptures.

The doctrine developed gradually over several centuries and through many controversies. The council of Nicaea in 325 stated the crucial formula for that doctrine, which adopted the Homoousias (sameness of essence) position. Over the next half-century, Athanasius defended and refined the Nicene formula and, by the end of the fourth century, under the leadership of Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of Nazianzus (the Cappadocian Fathers), the doctrine of the Trinity took substantially the form it has maintained ever since. (Adapted from Enc. Brittanica, s.v., "Trinty.")

Monotheism is the God concept that separated the Jew or Hebrew from the pagan nations that surrounded him. In ancient times, the multiplicity of gods was the "in" thing. It was considered heretical to believe in one God, and especially one without an image. This idea of monotheism far surpassed the religious concepts of its day. It was a concept not created by man, it was the revelation of God Himself to man. Deuteronomy 6:4 became the foundational truth of Judaism--the Shema. It is the first thing the religious Jew teaches his child, and the last thing the religious Jew wants to say before he dies.

God has no counterpart. He is the all-powerful, omnipresent, omniscient God. His name is YHWH in the transliteration from Hebrew. It is not known how it was pronounced. What does this name mean? There are a few interpretations of this, but He said to Moses. "I am that I am." Literally this means, "I was, I am, and I will be." He is ALL in this sense that He is the only God there is, and He is all-powerful. All possibility of dualism is left out. Zoroastrian thought proclaimed the existence of two opposite gods in the universe; one good and the other evil. The one God concept excludes the polytheistic notions of a world where there are many gods.

What does Trinity really mean? In general, the interpretation is that God is one in substance, but three in "PERSON"; Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Then there is the school that teaches that there are really three, completely separate beings in the godhead. In all honesty, it is very difficult to call this latter theory anything but a modified polytheistic philosophy of God. The New Testament does not actually speak of tri-unity. The Spanish texts of the sixth century are the first to offer a clear-cut trinitarian formula in the so-called Comma Johaneum of I Jn. 5:7 ff.(TDNT,III:108). The word trias and trinitas, in this application to the Godhead, appears first in Theophilus of Antioch and Athenagoras in the second century, and in Tertullian in the third. (Schaff, History of the Church, III:6454)

Professor David Flusser has discussed another problematic text, Matthew 28:19. He said that all extant manuscripts of Matthew record that Jesus commanded his disciples to baptize all nations "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." But this trinitarian formula is missing from all the quotations of the passage in the writings of Eusebius composed before the council of Nicaea. The text before Nicaea reads, "Go forth and make all nations disciples in my name, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you." The texts Euseblus used from the library in Caesarea appear to have had this form. Other witnesses for this shorter form were found in a Jewish Christian source, and a Coptic text. (Judaism and the Origins of Christianity, pp. 380ff.)

By the fourth century there existed three main schools of thought concerning the nature of Christ and the nature of God. Homoousia was the doctrine of a similarity of essence in the godhead. Homoousia, taught the sameness of essence, while heteroousia believed in a difference of essence. Again, controversy raged for many years. In 381, after the council of Constantinople, Emperor Theodosius I published as law the homoousian position. In all the kingdom, every church was to be given up to bishops who ascribed to this doctrinal point of view. The public worship of those who did not ascribe to homoousianism was prohibited by law. (Schaff, History of the Church, III:618-698)

In a very enlightening scholarly work by Robert Grant of the University of Chicago, there's ample evidence of pagan influence in the Trinitarian concept of God.
"Numenius was the source for much of Plotinus' thought, according to ancient critics, but the Christian authors Clement and Origen knew him well.He evidently influenced both Neoplatonism and Christianity. In his thought, there is a combination of monotheism and polytheism, of the one and the many which is quite similar to what we find among Christians. Plato anticipated the Christian (Trinity) doctrine of God.... The doctrine of the trinty in unity is not a product of the earliest Christian period, and we do not find it carefully expressed before the end of the second century... This is to say that in beginning to develop the doctrine of the Trinity, Christians made use of methods already worked out among Platonists and Pythagoreans for explaining their own philosophical theology, in harmonious accord with pagan polytheism... As time went by, the logical implications of the faith were worked out on the basis of the leading philosophies of the time, often in ways remarkably similar to such workings out in other religions. The religious impulses and their expressions turn out to be much the same....

The upshot was that the development of the Christian doctrine of the Trinity was, to say the least, not alien to philosophical or even rhetorical statements made by pagans about pagan gods" (Gods and the One God, Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1986, pp. 150-175).

In other words; trinitarianism has roots that go all the way back to pagan religions. As an example, we can speak, of the Phoenician triad of El, Ashtarte, and Baal. Gerhaid Herm said that the Phoenician pantheon could have been easily adopted by any good believer in the Holy Trinity.

The concept of a triad of the gods was prominent in Tyre, Sidon, Arvad, Biblos, and Ugarit. (Die Phonizier: Das Purpurreich der Antike, Dusseldorf Vienna, 197.) We must understand that early Christian monotheism is confirmed rather than, shattered by the Christology of the New Testament, Monotheism is a firm part of the tradition and is established throughout the New Testament, beginning with Jesus' own declaration of the Shema In Mark 12:29-30 as being the first commandment of Scripture. (TDNI 111:101-102)

The question of the nature of God is still an issue in many quarters. The basic problem is a misunderstanding the nature of Christ. Yet, when Jesus spoke, he did not claim to be just the "Son of God." Once and again, he made the startling declaration that he was God. When he declared that he had come to seek and save those that are lost (Luke 19:10), he was alluding to Ezekiel 34, where it is God that is to seek and save the lost sheep. Again, this calls to mind Jesus' words in John 10:1-16, where he is the good shepherd that gives his life for the sheep. Listen to him as he states that he and the Father are one (John 10:30). "He that hath seen me hath seen the Father" (John 14:9). "The Word that was God became flesh and dwelt among us." (John 1:1,14). He was IMMANUEL, GOD WITH US. God was manifest in the flesh according to I Timothy 3:16.

Was this a problematic concept for people of a polytheistic background? How could Son also be Father? (Isaiah 9:6) It is understood only in its Hebrew context. The Pentecostal aberration known as "Oneness" theology is completely different from this. Oneness is the theology that believes that Jesus is God and God is Jesus; that ALL of God is Jesus.

Jesus' name in Hebrew is Yeshua. Today, the idea that the spoken language among Jews in Judea and Galilee was Hebrew is becoming more and more accepted. It is also being recognized that the original life story of Jesus was communicated in Hebrew. (See R. Blizzard and D. Bivin. Understanding the Difficult Words of Jesus; D. Flusser, Jewish Sources in Early Christianity; R.L. Lindsey, The Gospel of Mark, and others.) The angel tells Joseph, "you shall, calls His name Yeshua for He will yoshia His people from their sins" (See Hebrew New Testament). The word Yeshua is a play on the word yoshia, (from yasha) which means SALVATION. So Yeshua means Savior or Liberator, the Salvation of God. So Jesus was Yeshuat Elohim!
Who was he? He was, for the believer, God in human flesh redeming or saving. Just as Ruach Elohim or El-Shaddai is God, each revealing a different spect of deity, so it is with Yeshuat Elohim. Yeshua was God, but he was not all of God there is. Ruach Elohim is all God, but not all of God there is. Ruach Elohim is the aspect of God's nature that reveals his power. God is all we have mentioned and much more. He is beyond the capacity of human reason to understand his greatness. We can only know him by his names and his activity among men. Yet, God is beyond human description, description or discernment. He is beyond our imagination. Still, in all His varied ways and manifestations, he is the one supreme God. Maimonides best expressed this by insisting that trying to comprehend God adequately was so hopeless that it was impossible to describe him in positive terms. Language could never convey what God was, only what he was not, and that any intelligent discussion about his nature could only contain negatives. The consensus of Jewish thought can be summarized in this: the fullness of God is impossible to know.
In the New Testament we have an emphasis on God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit because of the unique features of the ministry and mission of Jesus. The one that was to come was to have a relationship with God as a father has with a son, and in some special way, he was to be the bearer of the spirit. In addition, we must remember that the Greek of the New Testament is at pains to express these Hebrew concepts in a language of pagans.
 

Andyman_1970

Turbo Monkey
Apr 4, 2003
3,105
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The continuation.......

Throughout this entire explanation we have maintained the integreity of Biblical monotheism for the believer in Christ Jesus. The trinitarian or Pentecostal Oneness doctrines put sever limitations on the Biblical concept of God. God is more than a mere manifestation of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. He is more than only Jesus. He is beyond anything we can ask or think, yet he is the ONLY God, and he can manifest himself however he chooses to do so.
 

Silver

find me a tampon
Jul 20, 2002
10,840
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Orange County, CA
He's in hell if the Protestants are right and Jesus (I'm using Jesus in the sarcastic sense, not the theologically correct way. I don't claim to know how God did his divine version of Powerball) didn't pick him. Of course, if you're not elect, it doesn't matter if you go to church anyways (and you also don't need to go if you are elect, you already won the lottery.) I've lobbed that one back at some Calvinists I know, and that really pisses them off...
 

Old Man G Funk

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Silver said:
He's in hell if the Protestants are right and Jesus (I'm using Jesus in the sarcastic sense, not the theologically correct way. I don't claim to know how God did his divine version of Powerball) didn't pick him. Of course, if you're not elect, it doesn't matter if you go to church anyways. I've lobbed that one back at some Calvinists I know, and that really pisses them off...
Actually, that's funny, because I thought part of their faith was that election was pushed onto the individual which made them want to go to church, etc. So, if you aren't one of the elect few, then you naturally want to sin and not attend church anyway.
 

Silver

find me a tampon
Jul 20, 2002
10,840
1
Orange County, CA
Old Man G Funk said:
Actually, that's funny, because I thought part of their faith was that election was pushed onto the individual which made them want to go to church, etc. So, if you aren't one of the elect few, then you naturally want to sin and not attend church anyway.
You're thinking of the irresistable grace tenet.

But, if you are elect, it doesn't matter if you're Hitler, you're still saved. (Conversely, you can be Gandi and not be saved if you aren't elect.) An elect person MAY exhibit the characteristics you listed, but since you were elect or not since before the earth was formed (6000 years, give or take, right? :) ) your actions now make no difference. Because once you're elect, you can't give it up.

It's really about as screwed up a philosophy as you can possibly get. It's also amazingly effective in making sure that you can rationalize any actions done in this life without guilt.
 

Andyman_1970

Turbo Monkey
Apr 4, 2003
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Speaking of Calvinism………..

One of my biggest problems with Calvinism and Reformed Theology (not to mention that both Calvin and Luther were raging anti-Semites……..and Calvin had countless people executed who disagreed with him….) is that they fundamentally misunderstand 1st century Judaism. With respect to the debate of God choosing us or us choosing God, the Hebraic way of thinking (referred to sometimes as 2 handed) is comfortable holding two seemingly contradictory truths to be simultaneously true. The Jewish way of thinking is “both and” rather than the Western/Greek way of thinking “either or” when encountering contradictory ideas. So from the Hebraic perspective with regards to “election” God chooses us, but we also choose God……….in the words of Rabbi Akiba “all is foreseen yet freewill is given”.

Anyway………..that’s my 2 shekels worth on the matter.
 

Connundrum1

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Mar 11, 2005
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most people here are on the wrong track. Ghandi wouldn't have gone to a "christian heaven" since only christians beleive in that heaven. Ghandi being a Hindu would have either been reincarnated or attained nirvana and become one with God. God is what you beleive in, it doesn't have to be in terms of christian beleifs but what he beleived in. WOuld he care that he didn't get into christian heaven? who knows? Hindus beleive that there is a greater being that is above us all but hindus also beleive that there are many paths to god and all are the correct way. Whether you believe in Allah, Bhuddha, Jesus Christ etc. they are all just different highways to the same end point.
 

kinghami3

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Jun 1, 2004
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Old Man G Funk said:
So, you aren't monotheistic then? Good to know.

Edit: I really like how accepting and worshipping other gods (contrary to the very first commandment) isn't blasphemy, so long as the person is sufficiently said to be "good" like Ghandi.
Me and the rest of the Christian world, if that's what you think Monotheistic means (who ever said a god has to be one person?). "One God, three persons" is an easier way of putting it, but it doesn't conform to our way of thinking or understanding; there have been numerous counsels held on this issue alone. Secondly, the Commandments are the Jewish code of Law, not the Christian. Although Christianity is a continuation of Judaism, the two cannot be confused.

(Andy's quote best explains the trouble in trying to define God)
 

stevew

resident influencer
Sep 21, 2001
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Old Man G Funk said:
I've been there and you are pretty much on the nose. I call it the a-hole of America.
Visit Newark, New Jersey.

Gary, Indiana will look better.
 

stevew

resident influencer
Sep 21, 2001
41,366
10,292
I'm going in the ground.

Beyond that, I could care less.
 

BurlyShirley

Rex Grossman Will Rise Again
Jul 4, 2002
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Whatever.

Ghandi got his ass kicked, and didnt even fight back. God hates a coward. Ghandi went straight to hell.
 

jaydee

Monkey
Jul 5, 2001
794
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Victoria BC
I believe Andy's quote illustrates how the "Christian" churches of today and their beliefs bear little if any resemblance to what Jesus/Yeshua (if he actually existed) was talking about. "Christianity" as a religion was apparently not in Christ's plan at all, and he wouldn't recognize much of his original message in the politically and financially motivated machinations and overt reconstructions that have been performed on it over the centuries. I'm sure he'll be back any day to disown all the various (per)versions of the bible and write it down himself this time and publish it as a read-only pdf. Just think, if he'd have published it in Word in the first place we'd have a record of all the pretenders who added their own bits.
 

ALEXIS_DH

Tirelessly Awesome
Jan 30, 2003
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Lima, Peru, Peru
i understand, that for religion and faith to exist, you have (in fact is required) to bend logic and that... but the whole "three and one at the same time" is just really pushing it. even by faith related standards.