This is the claim, the generalization, which I contend is not supported with sufficient evidence to believe. If you are correct, you should be able to produce multiple examples of these extraordinary words and how they modified lives for the better. This is the part that's always missing, which comes up frequently in the Baha'i threads. We're told that his life, his mission, his character, and his message confirm his claims for channeling divinity, but then ask for a few examples of any of those, and it's crickets.
It's the same with the spiritual wanderers and their journey to spiritual truth. Ask about a few of these truths, and the answer is the same, often including some type of scoffing about others not seeing as far due to having standards for belief, but still empty.
This is the same. "Jesus's life was extraordinary." "What part?" "All of it, all together." Produce something of substance if you have it, or recognize that you are not going to be believed without it.
I agree with most of Buddha's words and few of Jesus' words.
"I am the one who brings people back to life, and I am life itself. Those who believe in me will live even if they die. Everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe that?" - Jesus
"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conductive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it." - Buddha
But I don't have that attitude toward any of the others. My cynicism regarding Christianity and monotheism in general is based in direct experience as well as a lifetime of examining Christian and Christianity.
That's an endorsement? That's a warning. Others have told you what the adherents of Koresh, Jones, and Applewhite "endured" for their faith.
Disagree. Faith is the path to unjustified belief, becomes dangerous if acted upon. It's fine to believe that angels guard you as you drive about, but if it causes you to drive drunk or without a seatbelt, well, bad ideas both as was the path taken to arrive at them.
Really? I hold zero unjustified beliefs to my knowledge, and if you revealed one to me that I still held even after examining all that I believe and why upon my return to empiricism and
apestivism - the rejection of faith as a path to truth - I would reject it thereafter.
We see this same thing with moral issues - the faithful stumped by how one could have moral direction without a god belief.