[This was written in response to Post 46. I spent quite a bit of time on it and now I see Ratanya replied in the meantime. I guess I will post it for what it's worth.]
Ratanya said:
We very quickly learn as infants to manipulate our parents. We are born needing *worldly* comforts.
I find a serious contradiction in these two sentences. It is the infant's need for physical care that demands parents attend to them. Infants do not intentionally manipulate their parents. The cry is the infant's only means of communication.
I have seen parents who responded to an infant's first whimper. That child uses the cry only to alert/inform the parent of a need, as a means of communication. That child knows that the parent will respond and has no need to develop a full-throated cry.
I have also seen a tiny baby left to cry itself hoarse. That child never again did a normal cry; it was always a hopeless wail. This proves to me that how a parent responds to an infant determines to a large extent how an infant uses its only means of communication.
We need to feel secure, we need to eat, most of us need to feel loved, and from this stems most of the worlds *sin.*
It is not a sin to have needs.
From my learning and own experience, it would appear it is not the sin itself so much that keeps you from God, it is the *knowing* of it being wrong that does.
We feel guilt only as a reaction against a perceived violation of ethics. If we as infants are made to feel that it is a sin to have needs, then we will spend much time feeling guilty. Much negative behaviour can grow out of this feeling of guilt.
When we learn that we are okay as we are--right along with all our needs, we can let go of the guilt and express our needs. The concept of divine forgiveness allows us to feel okay as we are with all our needs.
I believe this is why some people experience such enormous relief when they "commit themselves to Jesus," or "accept Jesus as their personal Saviour." They have finally found a way to be "okay" with their neeeds.
To me, Jesus died for the original sin.. in the sense of all mans unavoidable sin.. (ick.. how to explain it)
I do not believe in original sin. I know humans are fallible. To me, there is a huge difference between "original sin" and fallible human nature. The first presumes to label motivation; the second simply describes reality.
But I don't think Jesus came to die any more than you or I came with the express purpose to die. A guy who behaves like Jesus did in his time and place automatically ended up on a cross.
If these things are factual history, then I must presume that the miracle stories and virgin birth, etc. are thrown in for effect rather than as actual facts. If he actually claimed to be the Christ, then it logically follows that his followers had to find meaning in his failure in succeeding to set up a visible kingdom of God.
I am more inclined to believe that the Jesus story is a collection of myths from various sources, and that these formed the basis for a mystery religion practiced by a certain group of Jews in the middle of the first century. After it spread among the Gentiles or non-Jews, someone wrote up both the extant teachings (i.e. Paul's letters) and the stories (i.e. gospels). Much later all of this was put together into a closed canon.
It is not surprising to me that the Christians attracted imperial attention. They caused a serious amount of trouble for governors with their continued civil disobedience. First there was this Jesus guy, whether real or imagined. Then there was Paul or a series of writers masquarading as a man named Paul.
So powerful was the movement that Rome itself could not stop it. Is this evidence of its basis in factual reality? Not in the least. All major world religions started with similar tales. As they say, "If you can't fight them, join them." That is what Constantine did. He legalized the religion. Ever since it has existed as a force to be reckoned with on the social and political levels.