Christian Philosophy
Today's Story on ADAPTING TO CHANGE: Is change an important part of your life? It is integral! It is like the wind in nature; let me explain: GREAT BARRIER REEF Most people would be aware of the Great Barrier Reef, stretching some 1, 800 miles from New Guinea to Australia. Tour guides regularly take visitors to view the reef. On one tour, the guide was asked an interesting question. "I notice that the lagoon side of the reef looks pale and lifeless, while the ocean side is vibrant and colourful, " a traveller observed. "Why is this?" The guide gave an interesting answer: "The coral around the lagoon side is in still water, with no challenge for its survival. It dies early. The coral on the ocean side is constantly being tested by wind, waves, storms - surges of power. It has to fight for survival every day of its life. As it is challenged and tested it changes and adapts. It grows healthy. It grows strong. And it reproduces." Then he added this telling note: "That's the way it is with every living organism." (Unknown Author). That's how it is with people. Challenged and tested, we come alive! Like coral pounded by the sea, we grow. Physical demands can cause us to grow stronger. Mental and emotional stress can produce tough-mindedness and resiliency. Spiritual testing can produce strength of character and faithfulness. If you want to feel the wind through your hair a little more often, then be ready for the changes in life. These changes are more certain than even the very things we expect to happen. "Be good at dealing with problems and with change. Little is more certain to happen, both today and tomorrow!" QUOTE: "Within you right now is the power to do things you never dreamed possible. This power becomes available to you just as soon as you can change your beliefs." (Dr. Maxwell Maltz, 1899 - 1975, Author).
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Christian Philosophy News
Romney Not Precisely Familiar With Questioning Obama's Faith, But Stands By I...
18 May 2012 at 6:17am ![]() The Guardian | Religion Dispatches Also, without question, the legal code in this country is based upon Judeo-Christian values and teachings, Biblical teachings, and for the president not to understand that a wide array of religions and a conviction that Judeo-Christian philosophy is an ... Mitt Romney Says Bain Attacks Are Part of Obama's 'Character Assassination'ABC News (blog) all 2,662 news articles » |
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Mitt Romney Defends His Wright Quote: 'I Stand by What I Said, Whatever It Wa...
17 May 2012 at 4:30pm ![]() ABC News (blog) | ABC News (blog) In the clip, after Hannity played a sound bite of Obama saying, ?Whatever we once were, we are no longer a Christian nation,? Romney said he believed Obama didn't understand ?that Judeo Christian philosophy is an integral part of our foundation. and more » |
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Mitt Romney, Reverend Wright, Mormon Religion, Christian Evangelicals and Wom...
17 May 2012 at 3:50pm ![]() Tucson Citizen | Tucson Citizen Also, without question, the legal code in this country is based upon Judeo-Christian values and teachings, Biblical teachings, and for the president not to understand that a wide array of religions and a conviction that Judeo-Christian philosophy is an ... and more » |
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Has anyone read Marcus Aurelius, Meditations?
Don't you find many similarities with the Christian philosophy?
Is it a matter of contemporary ideas or something else?
I know he was a stoic.
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Does the following Christian philosophy make sense to most atheists?
1. The concept of God is, by definition, the concept of a
being than which nothing greater can be conceived.
2. God certainly exists in the mind: even atheists have this
concept of God.
3. It is greater to exist in reality than in the mind alone.
4. Suppose, for a reductio ad absurdum, that God exists
in the mind alone.
5. Then there would be a concept of a greater being,
namely, a concept of a being just like God but also
existent in reality (by (3)).
6. But there cannot be a concept of a greater being than
God (by (1)).
7. Therefore, our supposition in (4) was false.
8. Therefore, God exists in reality as well as in the
mind.
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downside to christian philosophy?
I have a current theory please help discuss -
I live in an extremely christian part of the world. I find that people here are almost totally buttoned up, all the realness is in outsiders.
. My thinking so far is that there is a fear of not being 'good' transmitted throught the priests and pastors so people here are divided and disown their 'bad' parts to the point where they have to push the bad out onto others. Subception -projection.
It is seriously hard to be an outsider here.
is this a known phenomenon of the philosophy of religion?
Also the archbishop of canterbury said in a recent radio prog that the church hasnt been good at teaching people to pray.
My thoughts are that the church doesnt do well at teaching people how to love.
For all of its holiness and giving to charity and looking 'good this is the most loveless place i have ever lived. It is like the stepford wives just going through the motions of living well.
I think that the underlying concept of just doing 'being good' rather than being and making a relationship with the shadow side and incoporating it is the flaw in christianity. The thing that means no one will ever get to be good becasue they are divided and just dump their rubbish outside onto others.
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Why were there two covenants?
In the New Testament, Jesus is alleged to have made the rather bold claim that the old covenant was ended and a new one began. I really don't understand the theological reasoning behind this. Politically, it makes perfect sense that a radical (Jesus) would move from a prescriptive, dogmatic, slightly contradictory ethical code to a more interpretative, humanist, rational one. Theologically, however, this seems to fly in the face of the supposed 'omniscience' and 'omnipotence' of God. How does Christian philosophy answer this question?
I'm reasonably happy with the new covenant - I disagree with the notion of salvatian, but find the ethical code generally to be pretty reasonable. My problem is with the old covenant. The only interpretation I can find of its existence is that God got it wrong first time.
Thanks to Ernest for your reply, but you don't seem to have addressed the crux of the issue, namely that while the covenant of Christ is essentially humanist and rationalist (albeit with a supernatural element and high standards), the former covenant simply *is* so prescriptive as to be internally self-contradictory. This fact is in by means addressed by questioning my intelligence!
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What would be a Christian way to run x-factor?
Secular TV and other media outlets have for a long time loved competitive shows with "winners" triumphing over "losers" which run against the grain of Christian philosophy which holds everybody is ultimately equal. (We all live and die, breathe, need sustenance and love, etc.) Obviously the media make a lot of money for running these shows and that is the only reason why they do them, apart from the voyeurism of exposing defenceless people to ridicule.
But how would Christians run as an entertainment a programme like x-factor or is this kind of thing best left to the atheists? They don't feel guilty hurting people as others do.
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