Divine or not, describing him as "picayune" is simply an aberration of reality. Sure, he was Jewish hobo..... a Jewish hobo who defied authority, inspired countless masses with revolutionary teachings, and supposedly started the largest religion on earth, known today as Christianity.
You gotta make up your mind, pal. Do you consider this guy God or not? This myth started the largest religion on Earth (due to massacres and infinite crimes, not only preaching), but the character wasn't exactly defying the Roman authority, only was supposed to create some local stir for the priesthood, and his "teachings" lead to no revolution at all.
Whether he was God, and whether he even existed is completely irrelevant. Point is, we have an entire book illustrating his teachings and feats. These teachings and feats have led billions into submission. Certainly worthy of discussion.
Christianity was imposed by force, politics and blood, sanctioned on the wings of a crumbling empire, imposed to the simple and the illiterate without any chance of rebellion. My point is that those "teachings" are no teachings at all. Not original, not intelligent, not organized. The ideas of stoics and previous oriental pacifists are far richer and meaningful. The only reason for taking notice of this fanatic cult is the horrible consequences. Without that, the whole corpus of ideas and acts contained in the NT is limited to an anecdote or a bad joke.
Maybe he was not perfect. So what? All people converge into hypocracy at one point or another. There is no reason to deny the general wisdom of his principles.
What wisdom? This is a tricky word indeed. What does wisdom mean exactly?

I think it was Nietszche who said that the only wise man in the whole NT is Pilates, because he is the only one that makes the big question: "What is the truth?"
trencacloscas wrote:
No. The "questionable" are literal, immovable as rocks.
You have not sufficiently shown them as such.
You kidding????
-"He that hath no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one"
-"Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace but a sword"
-"But those mine enemies, which would not that I should reign over them, bring hither, and slay them before me"
How much more literal do you want it?
Why would I acknowledge literal meaning in figurative scriptures?
OK, then it is only a literary text, no sacred value pleaded. Is this correct?
In your undying effort to smear this man's moral credibility you have developed the knack for picking and choosing interpretations that best fit your cause, regardless of contextual accuracy. All Greek/Jewish experts agree that the verses in question are metaphorical. If you were to take an unbiased stance on the issue you would probably agree.
You believe that Jesus is not divine, yet you continue to hold him to an impossible ethical standard. Such is the paradox of your position.
You don't seem to understand. It is not my paradox, it is yours. I don't believe in such character. I didn't even receive proper evidence of the existence of such person. If you consider him only a literary character, I can give my impressions on it, which happen to be not very flattering but in the end is like commenting on the personality of Othello, Tom Sawyer, Captain Picard or any other fiction character, and it only will have some subjective importance, no big deal.
But if you claim that he really existed and he is God, well... things change drastically. For his actions or words don't belong to a God, and that is easily proven.
The character depicted in the NT is definitely not a perfect one, as Christians pretended us to believe during centuries. He contradicts himself, and his "teachings" are pretty flawed. So, under what criteria should we measure his acts and words, as a fictional character or as an incarnated God?
trencacloscas wrote:
As we saw, Jesus himself is portrayed as violent and selfish sometimes, not only in sayings but in acts.
Who of us isn't?
We don't pretend to be gods, do we?
So a religious war is also limited by the gullibility of it's effectuators?
Not limited. But undoubtedly fueled!
Then it is a mere coincidence that religion appeared in direct correlation with the formation of independent thought?
Sorry, I don't think so.This is some big assertion, it requires massive argumentation and evidence. I gladly hear both, of course.
Anyway, no matter what religion represented in the past, now is synonim of massive enslavement.
Instinct. An inborn pattern of behavior that is characteristic of a species and is often a response to specific environmental stimuli. God(s) are an inborn characteristic of all human cultures.
That's pretty relative. The ignorance of the forces that moves around us, generates myths and these myths sometimes defy the definitions of "God", which are drastically different in the diverse cultures. Pantheism, naturalism or reconversion, for instance, are not religious forms that actually fit in the concept. Moreover, the idea of "inborn pattern" would require deeper argumentation. Probably the notion of "atavism" would be more suitable. Since man can actually abandon atavisms, no "inborn pattern" is needed to be claimed for certain structures of behaviour. Some anthropologists would even affirm that the mere existence of atheists is proof of the difference.
Interesting, huh? Why did they never tell me this in catechetical class?
