lunamoth
Episcopalian
Hello Sassafras, interesting post. It seems that you expected the Christians on this forum to respond with indignant righteousness to the provocative tone of the opening post, and yet most replied with reasoned responses and many with interpretations that are close to your own. "End of the Days Cult" is a provocative term, and yet, don't you think that maybe Jesus was provocative in His life and teachings? It seems that by your criteria a Christian *can't win* either by reading the bible spiritually/symbolically, questioning the context or literal meaning (which you refer to as calling your religion "bunk") or by reading it literally, in which case, like the Pharisees, one would miss the true signs of the Return.
Baha'is believe that Christ has returned, in 1843 as predicted by groups such as the 7th Day Adventisits, and the signs of this are just as inscrutable to us now as they were to people in Jesus's and Muhammed's times. But how was the Babi movement unlike an end of the world cult? First let's neutralize the term cult, which in my dictionary simply refers to a religious system and/or its followers. And even if you add in the more outrageous and, again, provocative connotations, the Babis more than qualified as zealots and radicals, breaking social mores right and left (mostly for the better! I agree!).
And, like many of the posts above discussed, Baha'is believe that there really was an "end of the world" at the Dawn of each new Manifestation of God, but in a spiritual sense. My understanding is that Baha'is believe that the Bible is God's Word, that it is protected by God, and that Jesus meant what He said. Jesus referred to the end of days :
Now, Paul may really have thought that the material world was going to end in his lifetime, it's not clear when you read the Bible any way other than literally. But, the Babi movement, which later became the Baha'i Faith, started out very much like an end of the world cult, albeit in a more clearly spiritual sense.
If it seems like my ire is up, well, maybe it is a little. I have great admiration for the Baha'i Faith, but really, it's just not courteous or helpful to tell people that you understand their religion so much better than they do. I am now going to have to bring myself to account for this post!
Sign me, Going to h*** in a handbasket,
lunamoth
Baha'is believe that Christ has returned, in 1843 as predicted by groups such as the 7th Day Adventisits, and the signs of this are just as inscrutable to us now as they were to people in Jesus's and Muhammed's times. But how was the Babi movement unlike an end of the world cult? First let's neutralize the term cult, which in my dictionary simply refers to a religious system and/or its followers. And even if you add in the more outrageous and, again, provocative connotations, the Babis more than qualified as zealots and radicals, breaking social mores right and left (mostly for the better! I agree!).
And, like many of the posts above discussed, Baha'is believe that there really was an "end of the world" at the Dawn of each new Manifestation of God, but in a spiritual sense. My understanding is that Baha'is believe that the Bible is God's Word, that it is protected by God, and that Jesus meant what He said. Jesus referred to the end of days :
In Matthew, chapter 24, verse 3, Christ clearly says that what Daniel meant by this prophecy was the date of the manifestation, and this is the verse: “As He sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto Him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of Thy coming, and of the end of the world?” One of the explanations He gave them in reply was this (v. 15): “When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place, (whoso readeth, let him understand).” In this answer He referred them to the eighth chapter of the Book of Daniel, saying that everyone who reads it will understand that it is this time that is spoken of. Consider how clearly the manifestation of the Báb is spoken of in the Old Testament and in the Gospel.
(Abdu'l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 42)
Now, Paul may really have thought that the material world was going to end in his lifetime, it's not clear when you read the Bible any way other than literally. But, the Babi movement, which later became the Baha'i Faith, started out very much like an end of the world cult, albeit in a more clearly spiritual sense.
If it seems like my ire is up, well, maybe it is a little. I have great admiration for the Baha'i Faith, but really, it's just not courteous or helpful to tell people that you understand their religion so much better than they do. I am now going to have to bring myself to account for this post!
Sign me, Going to h*** in a handbasket,
lunamoth
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