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Differences between Christianism and Christendom

Eli G

Well-Known Member
Thousands of different religious sects that call themselves "Christian" today can teach beliefs totally contrary to those that original Christianity truly preached.

Have you considered that a modern "Christian" sect may actually be "anti-Christian" from the point of view of what the original Christians taught in the first century?

PS: For greater understanding I separate Christian sects as part of modern Christendom, and only consider Christianity (or Chistianism) what was taught by the followers of Jesus in the first century and recorded in the Christian Scriptures that we can consult today.
 

Samael_Khan

Goosebender
Thousands of different religious sects that call themselves "Christian" today can teach beliefs totally contrary to those that original Christianity truly preached.

Have you considered that a modern "Christian" sect may actually be "anti-Christian" from the point of view of what the original Christians taught in the first century?

PS: For greater understanding I separate Christian sects as part of modern Christendom, and only consider Christianity (or Chistianism) what was taught by the followers of Jesus in the first century and recorded in the Christian Scriptures that we can consult today.
Christianity is always evolving so probably no group follows exactly what is taught in the bible. Also the difference between groups is dependent on the foundation scriptures they use for their beliefs and what they interpret all other scriptures around.

I think christians project so much of what they wish the bible to say into their interpretation that we cant even understand fully what the original christians believed unless we refer to scholars.

Also many christians just believe the interpretations dictated by their leaders and just accept what they say as true. So biblical interpretation is distorted with tribalism and self interest.
 

Eli G

Well-Known Member
Christianity is always evolving so probably no group follows exactly what is taught in the bible. Also the difference between groups is dependent on the foundation scriptures they use for their beliefs and what they interpret all other scriptures around.

I think christians project so much of what they wish the bible to say into their interpretation that we cant even understand fully what the original christians believed unless we refer to scholars.
If Christianity is evolving, why there was not any inspired book after those John wrote at the end of the first Century?

What is changing is Christendom, its modern human parody. This modern Christendom is rejecting the Scriptures and inventing a new light version of "Christianity" that conforms to people's desires, instead of educating them in biblical principles. Do you think that has anything to do with the teachings of Jesus, or is it more of a modern invention?
 

Samael_Khan

Goosebender
If Christianity is evolving, why there was not any inspired book after those John wrote at the end of the first Century?

What is changing is Christendom, its modern human parody. This modern Christendom is rejecting the Scriptures and inventing a new light version of "Christianity" that conforms to people's desires, instead of educating them in biblical principles. Do you think that has anything to do with the teachings of Jesus, or is it more of a modern invention?
Inspired books dont matter. People dont even know who wrote the original new testament books besides what the rumour mill says.

Also many people would say they do have inspired books and prophets. An example is Ellen White and the books she wrote.

What you call "modern christendom" is really the only thing that exists these days. Every christian group from the catholics, greek orthodox and beyond have injected their own beliefs into the religion. The fundamentalists fall into that as well and they believe in Sola scriptura. Christianity from its outset tried to appeal to peoples desires: the desires to be part of an elite, freedom from a sinful world, making people believe they have a special connection with god. To continue that trend is just following the original script.
 
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IndigoChild5559

Loving God and my neighbor as myself.
Thousands of different religious sects that call themselves "Christian" today can teach beliefs totally contrary to those that original Christianity truly preached.

Have you considered that a modern "Christian" sect may actually be "anti-Christian" from the point of view of what the original Christians taught in the first century?

PS: For greater understanding I separate Christian sects as part of modern Christendom, and only consider Christianity (or Chistianism) what was taught by the followers of Jesus in the first century and recorded in the Christian Scriptures that we can consult today.
There is no word in English, Christianism. The correct term is Christianity. I think we may have discussed this once before, and you had given Chrsitianism a unique definition, in order to label a concept that had no real word. That's fine, but when you use a made up word like that, you need to include your definition when you say it.
 

Left Coast

This Is Water
Staff member
Premium Member
Thousands of different religious sects that call themselves "Christian" today can teach beliefs totally contrary to those that original Christianity truly preached.

Have you considered that a modern "Christian" sect may actually be "anti-Christian" from the point of view of what the original Christians taught in the first century?

PS: For greater understanding I separate Christian sects as part of modern Christendom, and only consider Christianity (or Chistianism) what was taught by the followers of Jesus in the first century and recorded in the Christian Scriptures that we can consult today.

Your version of Christianity is not even two centuries old. What "original Christianity" are you talking about?
 

Sgt. Pepper

All you need is love.
Your version of Christianity is not even two centuries old. What "original Christianity" are you talking about?

As a former Christian evangelist, I know that there are many Christians who believe Jehovah's Witnesses aren't true Christians and are a misguided cult who hold false beliefs, distort and misinterpret the Bible, and teach unbiblical doctrines (e.g., "Who are the Jehovah’s Witnesses and what are their beliefs?").

I believed the same about them when I was still a Christian. In fact, I considered them to be among the least knowledgeable of the Bible during my years as an evangelist and street preacher. It became evident to me that their knowledge of the Bible was restricted to the approved interpretation of the Bible and sanctioned teachings of their church. I witnessed to some when I was a street preacher. These particular JWs tried to challenge me and my evangelism team while we were street preaching. They loudly heckled us as they tried to hinder our evangelistic message and challenge our scriptural interpretation.

However, despite their determined efforts to derail our message, my team and I successfully countered every argument they challenged us with. Most of them eventually gave up and left the area once they acknowledged that their argumentative challenges had failed. The others who remained behind also gave up, but they stayed and listened to us. They also talked to us after we had finished our preaching. A few of them converted to evangelicalism at that time or some time later, and among these, some were trained to street preach. I personally taught and mentored them in an effort to reconcile with them.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
Thousands of different religious sects that call themselves "Christian" today can teach beliefs totally contrary to those that original Christianity truly preached.

Have you considered that a modern "Christian" sect may actually be "anti-Christian" from the point of view of what the original Christians taught in the first century?
I have not only considered it, I believe that is the case.

I believe that the early Christians, those in the first centuries, followed Jesus' teachings, but ultimately Christianity became the religion of Paul, not the religion of Jesus: As noted in the quote below, the small handful of true Christians’ was Nazarene Christianity, which was already extinct in the fourth century…

Below is an excerpt from the section of a book entitled The Light Shineth in Darkness, Studies in revelation after Christ by Udo Schaefer which explains how Paul changed the Christianity of Jesus. You can read the entire section of the book which includes the references on the link to my thread below.

How Paul changed the course of Christianity

"That the figure of the Nazarene, as delivered to us in Mark’s Gospel, is decisively different from the pre-existent risen Christ proclaimed by Paul, is something long recognized by thinkers like Kant, Fichte, Schelling, Herder and Goethe, to mention only a few. The distinction between ‘the religion of Christ’ and ‘the Christian religion’ goes back to Lessing. Critical theological research has now disputed the idea of an uninterrupted chain of historical succession: Luther’s belief that at all times a small handful of true Christians preserved the true apostolic faith. Walter Bauer (226) and Martin Werner (227) have brought evidence that there was conflict from the outset about the central questions of dogma. It has become clear that the beliefs of those who had seen and heard Jesus in the flesh --- the disciples and the original community--- were at odds to an extraordinary degree with the teaching of Paul, who claimed to have been not only called by a vision but instructed by the heavenly Christ. The conflict at Antioch between the apostles Peter and Paul, far more embittered as research has shown (228) than the Bible allows us to see, was the most fateful split in Christianity, which in the Acts of the Apostles was ‘theologically camouflaged’. (229)

Paul, who had never seen Jesus, showed great reserve towards the Palestinian traditions regarding Jesus’ life. (230) The historical Jesus and his earthly life are without significance for Paul. In all his epistles the name ‘Jesus’ occurs only 15 times, the title ‘Christ’ 378 times. In Jesus’s actual teaching he shows extraordinarily little interest. It is disputed whether in all his epistles he makes two, three or four references to sayings by Jesus. (231) It is not Jesus’ teaching, which he cannot himself have heard at all (short of hearing it in a vision), that is central to his own mission, but the person of the Redeemer and His death on the Cross.

Paul, however, did not pass on the revealed doctrine reflected in the glass of the intellectual categories of his time, as is often asserted; he transformed the ‘Faith of Jesus’ into ‘Faith in Jesus.’ He it was who gave baptism a mysterious significance, ‘so as to connect his mission with the experience of initiates in Hellenic mystery cults’, (232) he turned the last supper into a sacramental union with the Lord of those celebrating it; (233) he was responsible for the sacramentalization of the Christian religion, and took the phrase ‘Son of God’--- in the Jewish religion merely a title for the Messiah --- to be an ontological reality. The idea of the Son of God, come down from heaven to earth, hitherto inconceivable to Jewish thought, (234) was taken from Paul from the ancient religious syncretism of Asia Minor, to fit in with the need at the time for a general savior. It is generally accepted by critical scholarship that the godparents were the triad from the cult of Isia (Isis, Osiris and Horus) and also Attis, Adonis and Hercules. Jesus, who never claimed religious worship for himself was not worshipped in the original community, is for Paul the pre-existent risen Christ……..

This was the ‘Fall’ of Christianity: that Paul with his ‘Gospel’, which became the core of Christian dogma formation, conquered the world, (237) while the historic basis of Christianity was declared a heresy, the preservers of the original branded as ‘Ebionites.’ As Schoeps puts it, the heresy-hunters ‘accused the Ebionites of a lapse or relapse into Judaism, whereas they were really only the Conservatives who could not go along with the Pauline-cum-Hellenistic elaborations’. (238) Schonfield comes to the same conclusion: ‘This Christianity in its teaching about Jesus continued in the tradition it had directly inherited, and could justifiably regard Pauline and catholic Christianity as heretical. It was not, as its opponents alleged, Jewish Christianity which debased the person of Jesus, but the Church in general which was misled into deifying him.’ (239) ‘Pauline heresy served as the basis for Christian orthodoxy, and the legitimate Church was outlawed as heretical’. (240) The ‘small handful of true Christians’ was Nazarene Christianity, which was already extinct in the fourth century……

The centerpiece then, of Christian creedal doctrine, that of Redemption, is something of which—in the judgment of the theologian E. Grimm (244) --- Jesus himself knew nothing; and it goes back to Paul. This is even admitted by some Catholics: ‘Christianity today mostly means Paul.’ (245) And Wilhelm Nestle stated—as noted also by Sabet—‘Christianity is the religion founded by Paul who replaces the Gospel of Jesus by a gospel about Jesus.’ (246) So also Schonfield: ‘Paul produced an amalgamation of ideas which, however unintentionally, did give rise to a new religion.’ (247)……

Measured by the standard of Baha’u’llah revelation, the Pauline doctrine of Justification, the doctrine of Original Sin, the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, the sacramentalisation of the Christian religion, the whole Church plan of salvation — which not only contradicts the Jewish understanding of God (255) but was also strongly repudiated by the revelation of God which succeeded Christianity (256) — these are a deformation of Jesus’s teaching. Some critical theological scholars have confirmed that these deformations in Christianity started very early, in fact with Paul, and that the arch-apostle, without whom Marcion would not have been possible, was the arch-heretic in Christianity—as Tertullian very rightly saw. (257) Years ago, when I became acquainted with the founder of the Christian religion in the faith of the original community through H. J. Schoep’s Theologie und Geschichte des Judenchristentums, (258) the standard work on the subject, I was deeply impressed. Here Jesus was not the only-begotten Son of God come down from Heaven, crucified and resurrected, nor the unique Saviour, but the messenger of God to whom the Quran testifies and who is glorified by Baha’u’llah. (259)"
 

Glaurung

Denizen of Niflheim
Thousands of different religious sects that call themselves "Christian" today can teach beliefs totally contrary to those that original Christianity truly preached.
This narrative is simply false. Christian division is overwhelmingly Protestant. The most ancient forms of Christianity: Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy still exist and comprise the majority of the world's believers. Ancient Christianity has never been lost. It's just not what you believe to be.

Have you considered that a modern "Christian" sect may actually be "anti-Christian" from the point of view of what the original Christians taught in the first century?
The ancient Christian writings still exist. You can read the Church Fathers today and they will tell you what the most ancient Christians believed. But of course, you won't like what you find. Because you'll never countenance the possibility that you're the one who is in error.

PS: For greater understanding I separate Christian sects as part of modern Christendom, and only consider Christianity (or Chistianism) what was taught by the followers of Jesus in the first century and recorded in the Christian Scriptures that we can consult today.
It's really convient that you can just handwave away the vast corpus of ancient Christian writings for a cultic interpretation of a 19th century Protestant offshoot. You decry the "sects" but your version of Christianity is itself but the interpretation of a particularly cultic (and rather modern) sect.
 
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metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist
I believe that the early Christians, those in the first centuries, followed Jesus' teachings, but ultimately Christianity became the religion of Paul, not the religion of Jesus:

If that supposedly is the case, then why did the Twelve have anything to do with him, including when he visited them?
 
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