Except one claims that God was so drawn to us, so perfectly drawn to us, that he became incarnate ...Chizzang wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
I won't deny that there is profound wisdom in other philosophy and theologies; however, it is the idea that we are drawn to something, and at least in my mind, the necessary converse that this something must also be drawn to us which, in a nutshell, makes the Incarnation an inevitably, in my mind. Yes, I agree, we are made of it.
I also don't think we're being tricked down here. If there is a personal, loving God, he must be manifesting himself to us in the form of a major world religion.
All major world religions seem like the same thing to me...
In fact: Excluding the minutia and nit-picky divisive crap they all seem like exactly the same thing
Something quite remarkable happened 2,000 years ago. A man who lived 2,000 years ago, in a remote part of the Roman empire, who had but a handful of ardent followers, and who was put to death like a common criminal, has become the most remarkable figure who ever lived. Applying reason, his handful of followers should have just silently disappeared and gone back to their villages after the death of their leader. Instead, they became emboldened, and risked and lost their own lives, traveling the world, to spread a message. And even then they should have failed ...
No religion has ever had such an unlikely success story ...










