brianbbs67 wrote:
I think you accept human characteristics to God or Jesus which don't apply. Mystery appears in the word by purpose. His will gets done whether certain characters do it or not.
I think I will invent a word here. Jesus/Yeshua was definitely Zealotenous. He sought to do what the Father instructed, regardless.
It has nothing to do with human characteristics.
Jesus could not fail in this religious paradigm without the God himself failing since it was God's plan to send Jesus to earth specifically for the purpose of human salvation.
Therefore Jesus could not have played any role in the outcome.
And of course, this is even more true if the Christians want to claim that Jesus was an incarnation of God himself, or part of a Trinity deity who's plan it was to have Jesus become the sacrificial lamb for the salvation of men.
There's no getting around this. At the very best
(i.e. assuming there really was a God behind this entire ordeal), the entire thing could not have been anything more than a drama played out by God himself without any possibility of failure to achieve precisely what this God had in mind. In other words, the whole thing would have been a scam created by this God himself. It would have been nothing more than a pretentious play played out by God himself. Basically a lie. Including the fallacy that Satan was tempting Jesus and that Jesus supposedly resisted those temptations.
At the very worst (for Christians) the whole thing was a man-made superstitious fairy tale. No doubt some guy named Jesus may very well have preached and called the Jewish Priests names and was ultimately crucified for his apostasy against the religious authorities of his day. But beyond that, there would not have been any God behind this entire thing.
The Christian story of Jesus is necessarily false as described in the New Testament. Especially because of the claim that Jesus was miraculously born of a virgin.
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Actually if Jesus had been a normal mortal man who never sinned and was crucified because of his devotion to God, then this story could have had some potential merit.
But that's not the story. The story is that Jesus was the virgin-born Son of God sent specifically for this mission. Remember in Christianity "God gave his only begotten Son". This is not a story about a mortal man who was sinless and thus saved mankind. This is about a virgin-born demigod sent by God himself to become the sacrificial lamb for men.
That's where it fails.
In fact, in Christianity you can't even have Jesus being a demigod, because the Christians won't stand for that. They have chosen to go with the idea of the Trinity where Jesus and God on both aspects of the same divine Holy Spirit.
But that paradigm cannot stand.