Phantom Posted January 9, 2007 Posted January 9, 2007 Well the answer is Jesus is a muslim. The term muslim means a person or anything that submits itself to the will of God. And Jesus did that, therefore he is a muslim. If we want to play word games, then sure. Every religious person would be a Muslim by that definition. A Muslim Jew? Poor Jesus. Talk about inner turmoil. Quote Blah.
ALLAH IS GREAT Posted January 9, 2007 Posted January 9, 2007 If we want to play word games, then sure. Every religious person would be a Muslim by that definition. Well No actually. Christians worship a man, Hindus worship idols, Buddhist cant see past themselves , Oh arent the Jews the ones God cursed? A Muslim Jew? Poor Jesus. Talk about inner turmoil. He wasnt a Jew in Character or Faith. Quote 'They intend to put out the Light of Allah with their mouths.But Allah will bring His Light to perfection even though the disbelievers hate it' ''Oh Allah!Make the best of my deeds my last deeds, and make the best of my life my last moments, and make the best day of my life the Day I meet You!''
RegisteredAndEducated Posted January 9, 2007 Posted January 9, 2007 Well No actually. Christians worship a man, Hindus worship idols, Buddhist cant see past themselves , Oh arent the Jews the ones God cursed? He wasnt a Jew in Character or Faith. This entire statement is ignorant! seriously... do you read anything besides your crap? Quote Intelligent people think... how ignorance must be bliss.... idiots have it so easy, it's not fair... to have to think... WHAT IT WOULD BE LIKE TO BE AMONG THOSE FORTUNATE MASSES..... Hey, "Non-believers" I've just got one thing to say to ya... If you're right, then what difference does it make, it wont matter when we're dead anyway... But if I'm right... Well, hey... Ya better be right...
fullauto Posted January 9, 2007 Posted January 9, 2007 Well the answer is Jesus is a muslim. The term muslim means a person or anything that submits itself to the will of God. And Jesus did that, therefore he is a muslim. You are all cattle! And beef is on the menu! Quote Liberals... Saving the world one semester at a time "I'm not a racist... I'm a realist! And if you don't know the difference, You're an Idiot!" -- Fullauto Present - 1. (Noun) The point that divides disappointment from hope
Phantom Posted January 9, 2007 Posted January 9, 2007 Christians worship a man They believe they worship the Son of God as well as God. You know, the one you think is the same as Allah. Hindus worship idols Right. The ones that represent their Gods. Buddhist cant see past themselves True. hehehe Oh arent the Jews the ones God cursed? Not permanently. Oh, but they still worship their God. The Muslim population of Earth just went from 1 billion to 5.75 billion according to your definition. He wasnt a Jew in Character or Faith. That's odd. Being that He was the one who came to fulfill Jewish law. Quote Blah.
phreakwars Posted January 10, 2007 Posted January 10, 2007 Then you are probably also a Deist. . . Quote https://www.facebook.com/phreakwars
hugo Posted January 10, 2007 Posted January 10, 2007 Unless you were a merchant people did not travel back then. Quote The power to do good is also the power to do harm. - Milton Friedman "I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents." - James Madison
ToriAllen Posted January 10, 2007 Posted January 10, 2007 To me it isn't a big deal. However, secular scholars use the theory of His supposed travels to pick up foreign religions, return to Israel, then teach said religion as something new in order to draw a following. So what? If there is one thing I hate worse than seculars trying to use crap like that to disprove Christianity, it is Christians who blindly disagree with any secular theory that might threaten their personal belief. Maybe he did spend time traveling or learning about other cultures and beliefs. So what? Wouldn Quote Smart men learn from their own mistakes; Wise men learn from others. I refuse to engage in a battle of wits with an unarmed man.
Phantom Posted January 10, 2007 Posted January 10, 2007 So what? If there is one thing I hate worse than seculars trying to use crap like that to disprove Christianity, it is Christians who blindly disagree with any secular theory that might threaten their personal belief. Maybe he did spend time traveling or learning about other cultures and beliefs. So what? Wouldn Quote Blah.
eddo Posted January 10, 2007 Posted January 10, 2007 If Jesus traveled, then frequent flier miles would be worth more. Quote I'm trusted by more women.
Anna Perenna Posted January 11, 2007 Author Posted January 11, 2007 I don Quote _______________________________________________________ I don't know how to put this, but ... I'm kind of a big deal. http://www.sucksbbs.net/data/MetaMirrorCache/da43a2f8a710897a421f74efa00eba9a.jpg I'm still here. I'm still a fool for the holy grail Not all gay men send me penis pictures. But no straight men do. And to date, no woman has sent me a picture of her vaginal canal.
builder Posted January 11, 2007 Posted January 11, 2007 Unless you were a merchant people did not travel back then. Yeah, non frequent flyer points, back then. Quote Persevere, it pisses people off.
ToriAllen Posted January 11, 2007 Posted January 11, 2007 I agree. We know he spent his toddler years in Egypt to escape the wrath of Herod, traveled to Jerusalem as a child, and also roamed the Israeli countryside during his ministry. If he traveled, so what? I don't feel Jesus was a Buddhist because the difference between Buddhism and Christianity have some extreme differences. The main one being Christianity/Judaism centers around a single deity while Buddhism has no deity- followers of Buddhism strive for "enlightenment," not the salvation of any god. Buddhism is more philosophy than religion. You can appreciate the philosophy and teachings without renouncing God. But it does call into question the (literal) claim that he is the Son of God. Not necessarily. Just because he was innately human, doesn Quote Smart men learn from their own mistakes; Wise men learn from others. I refuse to engage in a battle of wits with an unarmed man.
hugo Posted January 12, 2007 Posted January 12, 2007 Jesus may have been an Essene Philo's first account of the Essenes: (24.) "They do not offer animal sacrifice, judging it more fitting to render their minds truly holy. They flee the cities and live in villages where clean air and clean social life abound. They either work in the fields or in crafts that countribute to peace. They do not hoard silver and gold and do not acquire great landholdings; procuring for themselves only what is necessary for life. Thus they live without goods and without property, not by missfortune, but out of preference. They do not make armaments of any kind. They do not keep slaves and detest slavery. They avoid wholesale and retail commerce, believing that such activity excites one to cupidity. With respect to philosophy, they dismiss logic but have an extremely high regard for virtue. They honor the Sabbath with great respect over the other days of the week. They have an internal rule which all learn, together with rules on piety, holiness, justice and the knowledge of good and bad. These they make use of in the form of triple definitions, rules regarding the love of God, the love of virtue, and the love of men. They believe God causes all good but cannot be the cause of any evil. They honor virtue by foregoing all riches, glory and pleasure. Further, they are convinced they must be modest, quiet, obedient to the rule, simple, frugal and without mirth. Their life style is communal. They have a common purse. Their salaries they deposit before them all, in the midst of them, to be put to the common employment of those who wish to make use of it. They do not neglect the sick on the pretext that they can produce nothing. With the common purse there is plenty from which to treat all illnesses. They lavish great respect on the elderly. With them they are very generous and surround them with a thousand attentions. They practice virtue like a gymnastic exercise, seeing the accomplishment of praiseworthy deeds as the means by which a man ensures absolute freedom for himself." Philo's second account of the Essenes: (25.) "The Essenes live in a number of towns in Judea, and also in many villages and in large groups. They do not enlist by race, but by volunteers who have a zeal for righteousness and an ardent love of men. For this reason there are no young children among the Essenes. Not even adolescents or young men. Instead they are men of old or ripe years who have learned how to control their bodily passions. They possess nothing of their own, not house, field, slave nor flocks, nor anything which feeds and procures wealth. They live together in brotherhoods, and eat in common together. Everything they do is for the common good of the group. They work at many different jobs and attack their work with amazing zeal and dedication, working from before sunrise to almost sunset without complaint, but in obvious exhilaration. Their exercise is their work. Indeed, they believe their own training to be more agreeable to body and soul, and more lasting, than athletic games, since their exercises remain fitted to their age, even when the body no longer possesses its full strength. They are farmers and shepherds and beekeepers and craftsmen in diverse trades. They share the same way of life, the same table, even the same tastes; all of them loving frugality and hating luxury as a plague for both body and soul. Not only do they share a common table, but common clothes as well. What belongs to one belongs to all. Available to all of them are thick coats for winter and inexpensive light tunics for summer. Seeing it as an obstacle to communal life, they have banned marriage. They view women as selfish, excessively jealous, skillful in seduction and armed, like actors with all sorts of masks designed to flatter and ensnare men, bewitching and capturing their attention and finally leading them astray. They believe that where children are involved, women become audacious, arrogant, swollen with pride, shamelessly violent and employ attitudes dangerous to the good of the common life. The husband, bound by his wife's spells, or anxious for his children from natural necessity, is no more the same to the others, but becomes a different man; instead of a freeman, he becomes a slave." Quote The power to do good is also the power to do harm. - Milton Friedman "I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents." - James Madison
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