Yes, it is impossible to believe the 'faith in Christ' is truly the thing that helped him.
It seems to me that the process of "faith in Christ" as a change agent in someone's life does not preclude faith in TFSM (or your own-most-potentiality) from changing your life: Maybe you're assuming that I'm arguing that there's one-true-right-way to have faith?
That said, I've done a LOT of research on the power of narrative and story when it comes to identity and, from that perspective, I can say that the messianic narrative is a useful way to re-story one's lived-experiences.
If you look at my argument, i'm saying the one-true-right-way of being, is being exactly who you are: unless you are unhappy with that, and if you are then I know of a way to change that (If someone of some other path would like to lay-claim to similar knowledge then I do not begrudge them that).
Is it possible to be a moral person (by your standards) yet still be a nonbeliever?
Not only can you be, but MOST of the time "non-believers" are more moral people. The pompous asshole-ness that comes from being a "christian" that's not honestly had any deep-need for Christ is probably the cause of many of our social ills.
Society and Christendom would be better off if the default assumption was non-theism but there was no ridicule from society if someone converted to whatever faith they found resonated best for them.
No scources...no validity.
No arms no coockie.
I knew you would bring on excuses, but not soruces....typical intellectual dishonesty in action.
you offer no sources as well; The difference is that when you presume something to be common knowledge I give deference to your point and make it incumbent upon myself to counter the best formulation of your argument that I can find.
Doing otherwise is what's intellectually dishonest.
no sources from year zero to year 30ish...gotcha
Jesus died about 30AD; so there wasn't much to write about until around then. After that doctor Luke conducted semi-structure interviews with the various parties involved and went forward with document analysis of his own so as to formulate his double-book of Luke and Acts.
It is likely that many of these documents, while lost, are preserved in the historical-narrative form (using different historiological motifs than we do) created in these two books. A minority of scholars place the creation of this book at 4 years after the death of Jesus, though it is more likely that the books simply draw on texts that surfaced about that time and was written about 40 years after the death of Jesus.
After about 100AD we find chuck-norris level hyperbole in books written about Jesus; most likely because it is around then, some 67 years after the death of Jesus, that the bulk of the eye-witnesses to the events died off and thus were unable to keep in-check the mythology.
It is for this reason that I dismiss texts written after 100AD.
bibliography
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Boje, D. M. (1995). Stories of the Storytelling Organization: A Postmodern Analysis of Disney as" Tamara-Land". Academy of Management Journal, 997-1035.
Esler, P. F. (Ed.). (1989). Community and Gospel in Luke-Acts: The social and political motivations of Lucan theology (Vol. 57). Cambridge University Press.
Kelber, W. H. (1983). The oral and the written gospel: The hermeneutics of speaking and writing in the synoptic tradition, Mark, Paul, and Q. Indiana University Press.
Marcia, J. E. (1966). Development and validation of ego-identity status. Journal of personality and social psychology, 3(5), 551.
Tannehill, R. C. (1994). Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts: The Acts of the Apostles: A Literary Interpretation (Vol. 2). Fortress Pr.
Weick, K. E. (2006). Faith, evidence, and action: Better guesses in an unknowable world. Organization Studies, 27(11), 1723-1736.
White, M., & Epston, D. (1990). Narrative means to therapeutic ends. WW Norton & Company.
Yolles, M. (2007). The dynamics of narrative and antenarrative and their relation to story. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 20(1), 74-94.
Braznor said:
There's a lot to be accepted and admired regarding what you're saying.