Ceeboo wrote:Ceeboo says......
What can be found at the very core of what Jesus taught while amongst us on earth?
Love
Compassion
Helping
Forgiveness
Humility
Humbleness
Patience
Understanding
For anyone trying to follow his example/teachings - the attempt to be Christ-like (yes, we all fail miserably at times), I would suggest that they are Christians.
for what it's worth, I have engaged several Mormons over the years who I consider my Christian Brothers and Sisters (I've told a few that I think Mormonism is Christianity on steroids). I consider them Christian not because of the church they go to on Sunday, but because of how they treat their fellow human beings. MercynGrace (over at the MDDB) is a great example of what I'm trying to suggest.
In short, I think the Christian churches/religions are loaded with people who loudly proclaim (demand in many cases) the personal privilege and authority of labeling who is Christian and who is not.
Unfortunately, in my opinion, the cement they often use to wildly apply these labels on and across individual human beings (as well as entire groups of human beings) is cement that they have mixed together, using ingredients that they chose to place in the wheel-barrel. Perhaps, this is why the cement is weak and thus has so many challenges in the binding process.
in my opinion, we "Christians" all ought to throw our cement and wheel-barrels away and replace them with water and wheel-chairs....just in case we cross paths with someone who is thirsty and/or could really use a lift.
Peace,
Ceeboo
As is so often the case, Ceeboo, I am on the same page with you.
While I understand something about why Christians engage in "boundary maintenance" and have done some of that myself in the past, I just can't and don't land there anymore.
As Tator wrote above, God looks on the heart.
Ceeboo, I love that you mentioned mercyngrace as an example of Christlikeness, as I've always seen that in her. And I have friends within the Mormon faith whose devotion to Christ I find beautiful.
To go along with your description of a Christ-follower I can't help but think of what to me are key biblical passages about what pleasing God is all about, found in Jesus' core teaching in the Sermon on the Mount (in Matthew and Luke) as well as:
Micah 6:8:
He has shown you, O man, what is good;
And what does the Lord require of you
But to do justly,
To love mercy,
And to walk humbly with your God?Jesus' own mission in his own words ... and surely our mission too! in Luke 4:18-19:
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
Because He has anointed Me
To preach the gospel to the poor;
He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted,[a]
To proclaim liberty to the captives
And recovery of sight to the blind,
To set at liberty those who are oppressed;
19 To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.”Just this past week (on another topic, but I see some relevance) we saw a clip of Tony Campolo in our Sunday service where he said something I want to take to heart: "Christians talk about loving the sinner but hating the sin. But Jesus didn't say that ... He said love the sinner and hate your own sin ... and only after that can you even begin to think about the sin of others".
I find that it's too easy to worry about (which usually means to be judgmental about!) what others think and do, when we really should be focusing on how we're doing ourselves with God's 2 great commandments .. i.e. loving the Lord with all our hearts, minds and strength and loving others as ourselves.
What a great distillation:
Love God.
Love people.