Jesus Mortal |
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body Christians are uniquely connected to the body of their God and founder. They partake of his flesh and blood. As a curse, they refer to his “bloody” wounds. From the earliest years, Jesus’ bodily resurrection and ascension to heaven have been a point of orthodoxy against those who wanted to see Jesus and his followers escaping the bonds of matter. This focus on the body results from Jesus’ crucifixion. The shocking ending to Jesus’ ministry left his disciples at something of a loss. They found a way to make sense of their master’s scourging and horrific death by turning his passion into part of God’s plan. For Jesus’ bodily suffering to be part of God’s plan, Jesus’ body had to also be part of God’s plan. It’s from Jesus’ bodily defeat that we get the Christian attachment to Jesus’ body: the flesh and blood of the new covenant, doubting Thomas’s finger in Jesus’ wound, the bleeding stigmata of countless saints, Latter-Day Saint Christology, and Mel Gibson’s violent film The Passion of the Christ. Evil: For Jesus, the LORD was capable of doing evil, which he thought of as more like destruction than like a fundamental principle of unholiness. In the materialistic thinking of the ancients, evil suggested not moral intent but rather physical destruction. The same goes for other key concepts that Jesus took as about bodily man but that the west considers to be spiritual: love, hate, afterlife, and perdition.
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contents table of contents you're already looking at it introduction for the inquisitive reader biographical overview who he was and wasn't
afterlife not Jesus' concern animal sacrifice bloodless religion apocalypse did Jesus preach hellfire? baptism sin wash for Jesus and others beatitudes Jesus' words and others' words beloved disciple witness for the un-gospel bible scripture old and new bishop the unjesus body focus on the physical Buddha Jesus' close kin charity key Christian virtue and legacy of Jesus The Da Vinci Code secret (and false) messages divorce women's status dreams convenient literary device Elijah Jewish prophet with his own second coming equality ancient source of modern egalitarianism exorcist Jesus and demons failure reinterpreting Jesus as a failure faith from trust to blind belief father Jesus on titles of honor Francis of Assisi the most Christlike Christian Gandhi the 20th century's most Christly holy man Galilee Jesus' inauspicious homeland gentiles Jesus' inadvertent audience god how Jesus became god golden rule key to Jesus' success gospels competing accounts heaven from sky to spiritual home hell revenge fantasy humanism Jesus' legacy inerrant Christian treatment of scripture Thomas Jefferson ethics of Jesus Jewish guilt Christian libel John's gospel the un-gospel John the baptist, see John the washer John the washer Jesus' apocalyptic mentor Judaism libeled religion of Jesus kingdom of god what Jesus promised Lao Tzu poet of the cosmic way logos jesus as the word of god C. S. Lewis famous, flawed trilemma little drummer boy Luke beats Matthew logos Jesus as the divine word LORD Yahweh transitioning to the one god of all Luke's gospel the all-around best gospel Mark's gospel the gospel that lost its point Mary of Magdala women, visions, and sex massacre of the innocents bloodshed starts early Matthew's gospel best gospel for church reading Mormon, see Joseph Smith Moses Jewish lawgiver Muhammad a prophet who got it right mystery Orpheus and transubstantiation oppression origin of Jesus' compassion The Passion of the Christ Luke as buzzkill Paul revealer of the revealer private and public public Jesus and secret Christ relativism the secret power of the golden rule sacrifice Jesus' death and Christian sacrament Albert Schweitzer Jesus as a failure sheol dark pit of death show Jesus' deeds as put-ons slavery abolished by Jesus' efforts Joseph Smith flesh-and-blood Jesus Socrates secular Jesus son of god on close terms with the man upstairs soul, see body synoptics three gospels that agree temple center of Jewish religion trinity unifying and divisive doctrinre vision, see dreams Yahweh, see LORD Zoroaster Persian dualistic holy man
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