Born Again?

Exploring the details of Christianity

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Zzyzx
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Born Again?

Post #1

Post by Zzyzx »

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Born Again?
Easyrider wrote:Going to church for 1 week or 50 years doesn't make anybody a Christian. YOU MUST BE BORN AGAIN from above. They may be sincere in thinking they were once Christians, but if they didn't have the born-again experience and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit to the degree that they knew it was real, then I don't believe they were ever real Christians.
Is ER speaking for Christians generally, or is this a reflection of the beliefs of some sects or individuals?
In Christianity, born again means rebirth — namely, spiritual birth into the family of God with Jesus Christ as personal Lord and savior. This is contrasted with the first birth everyone experiences in the flesh (physical world). In the Bible, Jesus stated that only those who are born-again shall see Heaven - "Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." (John 3:3).

The term is frequently used by Evangelical, Fundamentalist, Pentecostal and some Mainline branches of Protestant Christianity. It is sometimes associated with non-denominational individuals, groups and churches.

Outside of Christianity, the term "born again" is occasionally used to describe beliefs characterised by renewal, resurgence or return.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Born_again_Christianity
It appears as though only certain sects place great emphasis upon "born again". Does that mean that all others are "not Real Christians"?
Easyrider wrote:They would have never left the faith.
Is it true that once a person is "born again" they "NEVER leave the faith"?

How can anyone be certain that they or someone else is "born again" and will never leave the faith?
Easyrider wrote:I have grave reservations about the legitimacy of so many people around here claiming to be former Christians, for the same reason I mention above.
Can the clear statements by members about being Former Christians be credibly dismissed with "I have greave reservations" by someone who knows nothing about the other person's situation? Or is that a presumptuous platitude?
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ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence

Flail

indoctrinated

Post #2

Post by Flail »

Despite years of 'training' in Christianity, I was never visited by the Holy Spirit and never had the born again experience ER and others mention.....so I guess that is it for me....done deal...over...

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czollers
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Post #3

Post by czollers »

the concept of being "born again" is a powerful on, and while i wouldn't argue against it, i wouldn't use it, either. primarily because its over used by "religiuos" types and just teh term carries a lot of negative baggage.

however, the term does describe the action one inevitably takes as they become followers of jesus. jesus' teachings sort of turn conventional login on its ear, it's pretty much an entirely new way to look at decisionmaking, philosophy, life. it would be impossible to follow him, and not make drastic changes. and those changes are your "new life".

so if we insist on using the term, its not really that you have to be born again to be a true christian, it's that if you're a true follower of jesus, you're born again by the nature of those beliefs.

Flail

jesus vs Christian

Post #4

Post by Flail »

czolles ....I would disagree with your inclusion of followers of Jesus with mainstream Christianity....IMO, and based upon my reading and research,Christianity is an invention of Paul and his concept of Grace and his focus on religiousity would be rejected in toto by Jesus.... I dont see any need to have some 'born again' experience to follow the common sense ideas and teachings of Jesus or a Lao Tzu or Bhudda etc etc...when it comes to Pauline Christianity and the Church,you are in with some very dangerous and sick dogma....original sin...salvation thru membership...come on...

Jesus is not a Christian

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czollers
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Post #5

Post by czollers »

ha!

thanks for the reply flail. and i wholeheartedly agree jesus was not a christian. neither, for that matter, was paul. if you're studying pauline theory, you know that already. paul was a jew, working to fulfill the torah.

and i also agree that you don't need to have "some born again experience" to follow jesus. what i was trying to communicate was the notion that if a person gets to know the same jesus i got to know via the bible, and makes an honest to god decision to live the remainder of his life doing his best to model himself after jesus, his life will take an altogether new direction. the jesus of the NT is just that radical. that new direction is the "born again" i think people rever. but i will stipulate that there is *far* too much emphasis in many [protestant] christian cirlces on teh conversion experience, and not nearly enough on the lifestyle change. in any case, as i mentioned before, i detest the term.

as for dangerous & sick dogma, there is no shortage of it, i freely admit. most of the christians i have met in my life are a mess. even jesus saved all his strongest language for the religious leaders. and salvation through membership... nice. never heard that before. if someone preaches it, they're full of crap.

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Post #6

Post by Goat »

czollers wrote:ha!

thanks for the reply flail. and i wholeheartedly agree jesus was not a christian. neither, for that matter, was paul. if you're studying pauline theory, you know that already. paul was a jew, working to fulfill the torah.
No, Paul was hardly a Jew. He might have claimed he was 'to a jew, he was a jew', but his theology was hardly Jewish.
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�

Steven Novella

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Post #7

Post by Dragon »

czollers wrote:and i also agree that you don't need to have "some born again experience" to follow jesus. what i was trying to communicate was the notion that if a person gets to know the same jesus i got to know via the bible, and makes an honest to god decision to live the remainder of his life doing his best to model himself after jesus, his life will take an altogether new direction. the jesus of the NT is just that radical. that new direction is the "born again" i think people rever.
OK, you have found a role model (Jesus) upon which to base the way you lead your life from now on. That's cool. I'm guessing but I would think that this boils down to being 'a good person' (whatever that might be) roughly in the way that Jesus seems to have been 'a good person'.

Well, I don't have a role model like you but I would be interested to know what you perceive are the qualities of Jesus that you admire so much so that I can compare them to the moral qualities that I try to live up to. In what way do you think they might be different, given that you are a believer and I am an atheist? Or maybe they are very similar - in which case why do you follow a religion and I follow none?
Desire for such a deity sprang from infantile yearnings for a powerful, protective father, for justice and fairness and for life to go on forever. God is simply a projection of these desires... - Sigmund Freud

byofrcs

Re: indoctrinated

Post #8

Post by byofrcs »

Flail wrote:Despite years of 'training' in Christianity, I was never visited by the Holy Spirit and never had the born again experience ER and others mention.....so I guess that is it for me....done deal...over...
Did you get your money back ? Shouldn't there be consumer protection laws that apply to this ?

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Post #9

Post by Zzyzx »

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Dragon wrote:OK, you have found a role model (Jesus) upon which to base the way you lead your life from now on. That's cool. I'm guessing but I would think that this boils down to being 'a good person' (whatever that might be) roughly in the way that Jesus seems to have been 'a good person'.
Many of us can cite role models in life. In some limited ways my father was that for me. In a letter to him during his final days I said, "Others patterned after fictional characters but I had a real man from whom I could learn".

At the time, I was thinking about typical heroes of children – celebrity characters, superman and other comic book or movie heroes, etc. However, the concept can just as well apply to other characters of fiction, legend and storybooks – including religious heroes (of all religions).

Later, my role models were identified as mentors – and there were several; an outstanding woman who was a biology professor, a brilliant researcher, an "ethical beyond reproach" real estate broker, a very wise Episcopal minister, an outstanding attorney – and several others from whom I learned.

Is there any disadvantage in learning from real, living people rather than people one reads about in a book?

Could I learn the same valuable lessons in detail with nuances from a storybook character?
Dragon wrote:Well, I don't have a role model like you but I would be interested to know what you perceive are the qualities of Jesus that you admire so much so that I can compare them to the moral qualities that I try to live up to.
Interesting point. What can one learn from Jesus that cannot be learned as well or better elsewhere?
Dragon wrote:In what way do you think they might be different, given that you are a believer and I am an atheist? Or maybe they are very similar - in which case why do you follow a religion and I follow none?
In my observation, any "good person" responds much the same to many life situations – regardless of background or role models. I would venture a guess that faced with a deserving person in critical need of assistance Cnorman, Jester, Bernee, Cathar, Joey (and probably Czollers and Dragon) and I would react similarly – and help as appropriate (without asking for a religious commitment as a condition).
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Post #10

Post by czollers »

goat wrote:No, Paul was hardly a Jew. He might have claimed he was 'to a jew, he was a jew', but his theology was hardly Jewish.
well, certainly by today's jewish standards, you're right. and maybe even according to some of the jewish political/religious leaders of his day, there may have been disagreement. but paul definitely thought of himself as a jew. he simple believed that jesus was the messiah they had been waiting for, despite the fact that he wasn't the kind of messiah they were waiting for. when paul taught, he believed he was teaching the law in its fulfilled state. perhaps he was a radical, or a new-wave jew. but he definitely thought of himself as a jew, and of "the way" (the earliest name for the teachings of jesus) as a more complete version of his jewish culture.
Dragon wrote:OK, you have found a role model (Jesus) upon which to base the way you lead your life from now on. That's cool. I'm guessing but I would think that this boils down to being 'a good person' (whatever that might be) roughly in the way that Jesus seems to have been 'a good person'.

Well, I don't have a role model like you but I would be interested to know what you perceive are the qualities of Jesus that you admire so much so that I can compare them to the moral qualities that I try to live up to. In what way do you think they might be different, given that you are a believer and I am an atheist? Or maybe they are very similar - in which case why do you follow a religion and I follow none?
if you're really interested to know, you'd need to read the new testament. the qualities and teachings i admire are too rich & numerous to realistically portray in a single conversation. but a few important ones are humility- that is, putting myself second; grace- forgiving others even when i don't feel like they deserve it, because i know there have been times i have been in shoes similar to theirs; gratitude- if god did create the world then everything in it & about it is his, and i owe him a debt of gratitude for the gift of it... theres so much more.

i have atheist friends who live out morals that in the end look similar on the outside. it's the emotions and relationships behind the morals that matter. wanting to have laws against child abuse isn't all that morally impressive if you want them because it's a smarter way to run a healthy society. we respect those laws because we love our kids, or at least can relate to people who love their kids. the reason behind is everything...
Zzyzx wrote:What can one learn from Jesus that cannot be learned as well or better elsewhere?
given our ability in 2009 to download any book we want, it's easy enough to spread that these teachings out enough to where anyone can write them down and make them look like their own. and in reality, it's not important that they come from jesus. in fact, jesus may have argued that they came from god, and whoever teaches them is doing god's work. claiming copyright was not really jesus' thing.

that said, its been my experience that if the motivation for living this way is not centered on a desire for a relationship with god, then it begins to feel hollow and hypocritical pretty quickly, and less selfless desires begin to take precedence pretty quickly.
Zzyzx wrote:In my observation, any "good person" responds much the same to many life situations – regardless of background or role models. I would venture a guess that faced with a deserving person in critical need of assistance Cnorman, Jester, Bernee, Cathar, Joey (and probably Czollers and Dragon) and I would react similarly – and help as appropriate (without asking for a religious commitment as a condition).
fist, let me say that if anyone needs confirmation of religious affiliation before they do any sort of kindness, they are evidentially wholly unfamiliar with god in general, and jesus especially.

next, i'd probably like to address the term "good person". i realize this derails the forward motion of the thread, but i feel it needs to be dealt with before we can proceed. exactly what makes a person good? where is the line of good? is it good to save a woman from a burning building? is it still good if that woman has had 6 abortions? is it still good if she is a drug addict and a drain on society? if she was going to kill her children the next day is it still good? i bet the men flying planes into building on 9/11 would have described their actions as good.

the problem with trying to be a good person is that you just don't know how good is good enough, or who's version of good is the right one. it is for this reason that there is nothing in the bible that calls us to be good. the two greatest commandments are love god, and love others. thats it! badda-friggin-bing. the notion of being a good person is too broad, and open to interpretation. what kind of god would demand that you be a good person in order to get into heaven, and then not provide you with a detailed list of what that is? not a very loving one i would think. instead, the god of the bible calls us to love him, seek him, and follow him, knowing that if we do, the behavioral issues follow suit.

love your comments -thanks!

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