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knightrider7
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greater works than Jesus |
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why aren't christians doing greater works than Jesus since he himself said they would? (John 14:14). The context is clearly referring to miracles.
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Keith and Company |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #1 | ||
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I always thought that referred to prayer. A couple of places promise that IF you're a good little christain, and you keep my word, you get whatever you ask for. 'That _I_ will do,' would be God doing boon work for the pray-er.
One of them adds that what you ask for must be in accord with God's wishes...which kind of voids the whole thing, as far as i see it. Everything goes as god wishes it, that's why he's god. What point is prayer answered, if it was going to happen anyway? What point is prayer unanswered, if it was never going to happen? |
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gystex |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #2 | ||
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Last time I checked, Christ walked on water. Since then, we've walked on the moon.
I'd say we surpassed him in a few ways. |
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knightrider7 |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #3 | ||
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that's a cop out. getting to the moon didn't involve a "miracle" and is explainable using natural physical laws (no God in the gaps required). can you say the same for walking on water? i think not. if you, or any christian you know, can turn a glass of water into wine (make mine chardonnay, not too dry), well, now we're talking. what say?
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Keith and Company |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #4 | ||
Quote:At least one villain in Superman did it. And Peter Sellars. And i think Benny Hill? Quote:Bill Bixby used to do it all the time. Quote:And that's a poor response for anyone choosing to participate in your discussion. Ask Smelly how well we respond to posters with a chip on their shoulder. |
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gystex |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #5 | ||
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Why does something have to be miraculous in order to be great? It would be a miracle if I waved my hand over someone's skinned knee and cured it, but how much more great and impressive was Jonas Salk's invention of the polio vaccine? Given a choice between pointless miracles and genuinely wonderous feats of science and technology, I'll shrug the miracles off.
One of the major pitfalls in religion is the assumption that only divinely-inspired events are significant, and only miracles can inspire genuine awe. If I saw a man walking on water, I would consider it a fine parlor trick and wonder whether he could produce a rabbit from his hat. But when I see the images of Jupiter sent back by the Galileo spacecraft, that impresses me. Christ healed a few lepers. Science cured the entire world of smallpox. Forget for a moment which event was miraculous - which was greater? |
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raphjd |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #6 | ||
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David Allen also walked on water.
"If Homosexuals went back into the closet, then there would be no more Homosexuality in this world" - Tom DeLay, US Congressman R-TX "You can safely assume that you've created God in your own image, when it turns out that God hates all the same people you do." - Anne Lamott When I was a kid I used to pray every night for a new bicycle. Then I realised that the Lord doesn't work that way so I stole one and asked Him to forgive me. -- Emo Philips |
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knightrider7 |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #7 | ||
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gystex, i agree man has accomplished many significant things "scientifically" through rational thought in the past 2000 years. i think what you and i disagree on is whether this was the intended meaning of the text. you apparently do. i don't. going to the moon did not "require" the direct intervention of a supernatural being, unless, again you're going to argue that God "intervenes" every time one takes a breath of air. my take on the text is that Jesus was implying that christians WOULD invoke the power of God to perform great (supernatural) deeds? if all of mans great deeds are going to come from science (ie going to the moon) then, what need religion (a lot of non-christians worked on that project).
as far as great accomplishments are concerned, Hitler annihilated millions (through the practical application of science presumably without invoking God's assistance). How would you compare that with the parting of the Red Sea? a greater accomplishment by man? How about Darwin? his ideas changed the course of history forever. a great accomplishment according to John 14:14? |
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Keith and Company |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #8 | ||
Quote:I think that somewhere between the two extremes, there is still room for divine assist, theoretically. I know a lot of the people involved in the moon race prayed for success. That would seem, to me, to be what the verse is offering. Ask for help, you'll get it. Not quite the blatant divine interaction of a giant hand lifting astronauts to the moon, but one can't completely discount thepossibility that some of the calculations or breakthroughs were assisted. Of course, in the case of Jehovah, one would have to wonder why a man-built ziggurat threatened God's composure, while just building a Saturn Rocket didn't, much less launching men into the space previously marked 'Do Not Enter: Culture Fracturing Authorized.' |
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gystex |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #9 | ||
Quote: Well, if we're going to go in that direction, God once annihilated the entire human population of the Earth except six people, and every animal on land except for two of each species. Honestly, I'd say that's a lot worse than anything Hitler did, except that Genesis was just a story and Hitler was real. And neither event was Great, unless one has a pretty sick definition of the word. Interesting that you would bring up Exodus, because that's where God really got ruthless, torturing and murdering the Egyptians while preventing their Pharoah from doing anything to stop it. Then, when the Israelites finally packed up and went, God made Pharoah chase after them, and parted the Red Sea only to send it crashing back down on top of the Egyptian soldiers - soldiers that were ordered by a Pharoah under God's direct control. Some may see the parting of the Red Sea as a great event - I see it as yet another example of God's genocidal behavior. Quote: Darwin was brilliant and courageous; I'd say one could call his accomplishments great, though not according to John's definition. Of course, I don't consider John's opinion to hold much weight when it comes to measuring what's great. Finally, not all of man's great deeds come from science. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony was also a great accomplishment. |
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knightrider7 |
Re: greater works than Jesus | #10 | ||
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well, now we're getting more on the same wavelength. i agree, much of God's behavior in the Old Testament, IF taken literally, was inexcusable by any standard of HUMAN morality and/or decency. the story of Job is a good example. and here's where the problem comes. how much of the Old and/or New Testament can or should be taken as real historical events? i think, not much. |
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| greater works than Jesus | 10/27/05 17:35:22 | knightrider7 |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 10/31/05 13:57:14 | Keith and Company |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 10/31/05 20:05:22 | gystex |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 10/31/05 21:40:29 | knightrider7 |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 10/31/05 21:57:25 | Keith and Company |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 01:53:53 | raphjd |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 10/31/05 21:57:52 | gystex |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 05:07:07 | knightrider7 |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 05:33:10 | Keith and Company |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 12:34:30 | gystex |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 14:43:19 | Keith and Company |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 15:36:16 | Yark Hutprancer |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 16:30:36 | Argy Lacedom |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 19:50:34 | Yark Hutprancer |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 13:49:07 | knightrider7 |
| Re: greater works than Jesus | 11/01/05 14:44:57 | Keith and Company |