My Answer: The sword of Jesus
SKIP DOWN TO THE BOTTOM if you have no wish to read any of the back ground info I have written. It is quite lengthly as I rushed through its writing in order to get all of the info and ideas out; so likely it is filled with very poor grammar, and some things may not make sense..
Before I begin, don't believe anything that I am writing, but also do not believe that it is false either; because none of us knows for certain. These are just ideas (mine, and others, even Jesus just had ideas), ideas that can be liked or disliked, adopted or ignored. There is no need to be correct or incorrect. I am only saying this because I know we have some people who claim to be Christian here; don't ignore ideas just because they offend you (as Nietzsche would say).
################BACKGROUND####################
Some background on Christianity; Christianity is based off of Judaism which is a religion that is archaelogically much younger than the story. Judaism is about as old as Buddhism, it borrows heavily from Zoroastrianism and Atenism. Zoroastrianism is archaelogically about the same age as Atenism, about 100 years older (dates to 1500 BC), traditions vary, Medieval tradtions date it to about 600-650 (which is very unlikely), some to as long ago as 10,000 BC, others to 6000, and 2000, but archaeologists place the birth of Zarathustra/Zoroaster at between 1800 and 1400 BC based on the languages used and the society described. Perhaps Zarathustra, like Homer, may have been multiple people, no one knows if Homer was one man or several.
Judaism speaks of Abraham making covenant with God about 2000 BC, and Moses again at 1400 BC. According to the tradition of the time (about 520 BC when Judaism first appears in archaeology) Zarathustra also lived in the ancient past about 2000; and Akhenaten lived 1400 BC (archaological evidence.). So it might be that Moses = Akhenaten and Abraham = Zarathustra; or that these people were based off of the story of those two people. Abraham has A LOT of similarities to Zarathustra, and Moses has a lot to Akhenaten, and it helps that they are dated to about the same time periods. Sigmund Freud suggested the Akhenaten/Moses connection. After much study, I believe that Ezra and his followers were a rebel sect of Zoroastrianism which was spreading rapidly around this time. There are other monotheistic groups, such as the Samarians. I would cast heavy doubt on Moses or Abraham as ever having walked the earth in the Jewish story at the very least.
The Assyrians captured the Samarian capital at about 721 BC and relocated their population. This is where I believe that the whole Babylonian captivity story comes into play. The Samaritans seemed to be another monotheistic sect, perhaps also joining in on the new thing to do at the time. There may have been other monotheistic religions, smaller ones that just aren't spoken of, or known to many. Anyways, this is what I highly doubt; that the Babylonians went to Israel, captured their entire population, relocated them, and then razed Jerusalem and all of the Israeli cities to the ground. If they were going to destroy Israel's cities, why not the people? Anyways, the Capiti9vity according to the story ended when the Persians conquered Babylon. The figure of Ezra had this story to tell them as to why they should own the land that is Israel. They speak of a great Kingdom of David (which makes no appearance in archaeological records) and traditions that spread back 1500 years.
Archaeology is certainly not on the side of the Jewish story, as they speak of trading in Myrrh using camels, and marriage with Aramaic women, now take into account this was around 2000 BC. Myyrh was an incredibly popular item among the ancients for perfumes and religious ceremonies. Especially in Egypt and the Middle East, and Greece. Yet, it was not traded until about 720, during the Assyrian period. Camels were not domesticated until about 1000 BC, and the Aramaic language began developing about 1100 BC (as a result of connecting city states) and there was no real Aramaic identity until about 700 BC. So how is it that Rachel was Aramaic in the year 2000 BC?
Anyways, Ezra, by this, founded Judaism around 537 BC. Ezra was the first, historically, to write down the Torah; The Nevi'im and the word sort of emerged between Ezra and to about the time of Jesus (those are the Prophecies and the Word are the books such as Psalms, which is actually likely based off of older scrolls from various religions)..
So now we advance to Jesus, and in short.
Jesus the teacher challenged the many Jewish traditions, told people to reject their faith, reject what their parents have said, reject the traditions around the books that have been read. Reject many things, do not trust your parents, they are your worst enemy as they bring belief to you; belief should be rejected.
Of course, Jesus is killed for spreading this kind of disorderly "nonsense", but he had a lot of impact. he had followers, not many, but it was Paul who came and said "Hey, this guy is the Messiah" and he sort of created Christianity, and his followers became part of Paul's new religion. We have the institution now which redefined what Jesus was. They turned a teacher, revolutionary, and messenger of love into The Messiah, the bringer of judgement, and the founder of a new religion.
Getting on, people are most often coming to the conclusion that there is no way we can know if any of this is real, so that doubt is there, and they become agnostic as a result. There are many reasons why people become agnostic. Anyways, it seems that most practicing Christians are actually agnostic nowadays, they go to Church, but they doubt; they are not true Christians because Christians must believe in Jesus, these people do not quite believe that Jesus was the "Messiah" anymore, they put faith in God, and God isn't even human anymore, but rather an entity or divinity. The word Christianity itself is derived from the word Christ, if one does not believe that Jesus was the Messiah, then one is not Christian.
Of course this does not mean that people do not like the teachings of Jesus any longer, he is still an important figure in their lives. They still go to Church, and listen, and take to heart what is spoken. Yet even this is dying, people aren't going to believe in the stories forever; morality in the Christian definition will likely be the last to go. So I believe that Christianity will die; even though Jesus may remain as a figure in the future; he will be the teacher and not the Christ.
###################THE POST#####################
So now with that said above, my actual post.
I would like to say that Christianity is dead, but that isn't quite the case yet. There are still a lot of believers remaining in the world. However, It does seem that Christianity has lost hundreds of millions of followers in recent decades, and the rate of its decay is only speeding up. Many who no longer believe in Christianity still go to Church.
There are people who claim to be Christian, just out of convenience. Agnosticism is the dominant religion iin North America; this is what I am going to say. People do not look to institutions any longer. In fact, people may have stronger faith now than before (when I say faith, I am leaving out the belief part, rather I will use the term to mean "value placed on an idea" than its traditional form). The God they believe in does not judge, the God they believe in is not human. The Jesus they know is a teacher who is misunderstood. Jesus has become a prominent figure, but is human, and teachings from Socrates, Plato, Einstein, Darwin, and others become equally as valid as his (Jesus). So is this still Christianity? No Messiahtic Jesus, no this is the beginning of a new religion. Should we continue calling it Christianity as the early Christians still called their religion Judaism? We could call it Agnosticism instead.
What is killing Christianity though? Is it Reason? Is it Science? Is it Logic? How about Archaology? Or maybe it was Luther? Is it our free speaking society? Is it our free religion?
All we have to do is disagree with Paul's assessment, and see Jesus as who he was, a teacher. Perhaps it was that Jesus would dislike the idea of leading a quest of doubt to destroy belief only to replace it with a new belief system. If he wished his followers to reject the techings, then they should also reject Paul and Christianity. So with that in mind, is Jesus the wielder of the sword which will slay the beast that is Christianity?
SKIP DOWN TO THE BOTTOM if you have no wish to read any of the back ground info I have written. It is quite lengthly as I rushed through its writing in order to get all of the info and ideas out; so likely it is filled with very poor grammar, and some things may not make sense..
Before I begin, don't believe anything that I am writing, but also do not believe that it is false either; because none of us knows for certain. These are just ideas (mine, and others, even Jesus just had ideas), ideas that can be liked or disliked, adopted or ignored. There is no need to be correct or incorrect. I am only saying this because I know we have some people who claim to be Christian here; don't ignore ideas just because they offend you (as Nietzsche would say).
################BACKGROUND####################
Some background on Christianity; Christianity is based off of Judaism which is a religion that is archaelogically much younger than the story. Judaism is about as old as Buddhism, it borrows heavily from Zoroastrianism and Atenism. Zoroastrianism is archaelogically about the same age as Atenism, about 100 years older (dates to 1500 BC), traditions vary, Medieval tradtions date it to about 600-650 (which is very unlikely), some to as long ago as 10,000 BC, others to 6000, and 2000, but archaeologists place the birth of Zarathustra/Zoroaster at between 1800 and 1400 BC based on the languages used and the society described. Perhaps Zarathustra, like Homer, may have been multiple people, no one knows if Homer was one man or several.
Judaism speaks of Abraham making covenant with God about 2000 BC, and Moses again at 1400 BC. According to the tradition of the time (about 520 BC when Judaism first appears in archaeology) Zarathustra also lived in the ancient past about 2000; and Akhenaten lived 1400 BC (archaological evidence.). So it might be that Moses = Akhenaten and Abraham = Zarathustra; or that these people were based off of the story of those two people. Abraham has A LOT of similarities to Zarathustra, and Moses has a lot to Akhenaten, and it helps that they are dated to about the same time periods. Sigmund Freud suggested the Akhenaten/Moses connection. After much study, I believe that Ezra and his followers were a rebel sect of Zoroastrianism which was spreading rapidly around this time. There are other monotheistic groups, such as the Samarians. I would cast heavy doubt on Moses or Abraham as ever having walked the earth in the Jewish story at the very least.
The Assyrians captured the Samarian capital at about 721 BC and relocated their population. This is where I believe that the whole Babylonian captivity story comes into play. The Samaritans seemed to be another monotheistic sect, perhaps also joining in on the new thing to do at the time. There may have been other monotheistic religions, smaller ones that just aren't spoken of, or known to many. Anyways, this is what I highly doubt; that the Babylonians went to Israel, captured their entire population, relocated them, and then razed Jerusalem and all of the Israeli cities to the ground. If they were going to destroy Israel's cities, why not the people? Anyways, the Capiti9vity according to the story ended when the Persians conquered Babylon. The figure of Ezra had this story to tell them as to why they should own the land that is Israel. They speak of a great Kingdom of David (which makes no appearance in archaeological records) and traditions that spread back 1500 years.
Archaeology is certainly not on the side of the Jewish story, as they speak of trading in Myrrh using camels, and marriage with Aramaic women, now take into account this was around 2000 BC. Myyrh was an incredibly popular item among the ancients for perfumes and religious ceremonies. Especially in Egypt and the Middle East, and Greece. Yet, it was not traded until about 720, during the Assyrian period. Camels were not domesticated until about 1000 BC, and the Aramaic language began developing about 1100 BC (as a result of connecting city states) and there was no real Aramaic identity until about 700 BC. So how is it that Rachel was Aramaic in the year 2000 BC?
Anyways, Ezra, by this, founded Judaism around 537 BC. Ezra was the first, historically, to write down the Torah; The Nevi'im and the word sort of emerged between Ezra and to about the time of Jesus (those are the Prophecies and the Word are the books such as Psalms, which is actually likely based off of older scrolls from various religions)..
So now we advance to Jesus, and in short.
Jesus the teacher challenged the many Jewish traditions, told people to reject their faith, reject what their parents have said, reject the traditions around the books that have been read. Reject many things, do not trust your parents, they are your worst enemy as they bring belief to you; belief should be rejected.
Of course, Jesus is killed for spreading this kind of disorderly "nonsense", but he had a lot of impact. he had followers, not many, but it was Paul who came and said "Hey, this guy is the Messiah" and he sort of created Christianity, and his followers became part of Paul's new religion. We have the institution now which redefined what Jesus was. They turned a teacher, revolutionary, and messenger of love into The Messiah, the bringer of judgement, and the founder of a new religion.
Getting on, people are most often coming to the conclusion that there is no way we can know if any of this is real, so that doubt is there, and they become agnostic as a result. There are many reasons why people become agnostic. Anyways, it seems that most practicing Christians are actually agnostic nowadays, they go to Church, but they doubt; they are not true Christians because Christians must believe in Jesus, these people do not quite believe that Jesus was the "Messiah" anymore, they put faith in God, and God isn't even human anymore, but rather an entity or divinity. The word Christianity itself is derived from the word Christ, if one does not believe that Jesus was the Messiah, then one is not Christian.
Of course this does not mean that people do not like the teachings of Jesus any longer, he is still an important figure in their lives. They still go to Church, and listen, and take to heart what is spoken. Yet even this is dying, people aren't going to believe in the stories forever; morality in the Christian definition will likely be the last to go. So I believe that Christianity will die; even though Jesus may remain as a figure in the future; he will be the teacher and not the Christ.
###################THE POST#####################
So now with that said above, my actual post.
I would like to say that Christianity is dead, but that isn't quite the case yet. There are still a lot of believers remaining in the world. However, It does seem that Christianity has lost hundreds of millions of followers in recent decades, and the rate of its decay is only speeding up. Many who no longer believe in Christianity still go to Church.
There are people who claim to be Christian, just out of convenience. Agnosticism is the dominant religion iin North America; this is what I am going to say. People do not look to institutions any longer. In fact, people may have stronger faith now than before (when I say faith, I am leaving out the belief part, rather I will use the term to mean "value placed on an idea" than its traditional form). The God they believe in does not judge, the God they believe in is not human. The Jesus they know is a teacher who is misunderstood. Jesus has become a prominent figure, but is human, and teachings from Socrates, Plato, Einstein, Darwin, and others become equally as valid as his (Jesus). So is this still Christianity? No Messiahtic Jesus, no this is the beginning of a new religion. Should we continue calling it Christianity as the early Christians still called their religion Judaism? We could call it Agnosticism instead.
What is killing Christianity though? Is it Reason? Is it Science? Is it Logic? How about Archaology? Or maybe it was Luther? Is it our free speaking society? Is it our free religion?
All we have to do is disagree with Paul's assessment, and see Jesus as who he was, a teacher. Perhaps it was that Jesus would dislike the idea of leading a quest of doubt to destroy belief only to replace it with a new belief system. If he wished his followers to reject the techings, then they should also reject Paul and Christianity. So with that in mind, is Jesus the wielder of the sword which will slay the beast that is Christianity?
-Insert Inspiring Quote-