historia wrote: ↑Sun Feb 20, 2022 11:42 am
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Fri Feb 18, 2022 11:35 am
I really have in mind a belief in the basics of the Bible, (Faith in Jesus as Saviour from sins, effectively)
theophile wrote: ↑Fri Feb 18, 2022 3:19 pm
Nor is it a matter of membership in a specific group or belief-system. Rather it's a matter of being in the Spirit (whether you know it or not).
cms wrote: ↑Sat Feb 19, 2022 12:40 am
In my mind, Christianity = Jesus, a person who loved others as himself.
My question for those who offered this type of a response: Do you do the same thing for other religions?
When you picture Islam, for example, do you think it's just a belief in the basics of the Quran, or a matter of remembrance of Allah, or 'Islam = Muhammed'? Or do you picture other religions differently than Christianity?
Before answering the question, I think there is an opposition in the responses you bundled here. I don't think Christianity (or any religion for that matter) is a matter of belief if belief means intellectual assent to a set of basic propositions (e.g., Jesus saved us all from sin). Belief / faith should be thought of more in terms of relational fidelity. It's about faithfulness to a cause or way, what I before called 'Spirit', which is evinced through who we are and what we do.
While believing something to be true may help us achieve this union and fidelity, such a belief is neither necessary nor sufficient in itself (to be called Christian, Muslim, or anything else).
So to that end, yes, I think other religions are the same, and as a result may in fact share a lot of common ground. A Buddhist is a Buddhist not because they believe in the four noble truths but because of how they comport themselves in the world (whether based on such a belief or not). Some days I may very well (and rightly) pass for a Buddhist, just as a practicing Buddhist may very well be in the Spirit.