Muhler
Imperial Majesty
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2010
- Messages
- 17,405
- City
- Eastern Jutland
- Country
- Denmark
Jesus did not commit suicide as such. It was rather a suicide by Romans he did.
Jesus sought death. According to the Bible he could have avoided being captured several times, yet he didn't. He chose to be captured, tortured and painfully executed, without giving up his convictions and his devotion to his ultimate overlord, God. - And for that he was rewarded by a direct route to Heaven.
Also, one of the most fundamental teachings in Christianity is that Jesus died for our (all humans) sins. He sought death as an ultimate atonement of shame. (I.e. human sins.)
All that would have made sense to a samurai anno 1580.
The bits about Jesus being of very humble origins, and associating with poor and outcast did not appeal to samurais and was actually one of the major stumbling blocks for Christian missionaries in Japan at the time.
But the same things made Jesus less appetizing in aristocratic circles in Europe at the time as well. Hence why there was such a strong cult around the Virgin Mary.
It was actually the Reformation and it's back to basic ideology personified by Jesus, that in many ways restored the importance of Jesus. IMO of course.
Helped very much by the church (both Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox) who worked hard on reducing the significance of Mary as a second deity, which she in many ways was. Without ever really succeeding, certainly not within the Catholic church. She remained popular. Albeit loosing ground to Jesus.
Jesus sought death. According to the Bible he could have avoided being captured several times, yet he didn't. He chose to be captured, tortured and painfully executed, without giving up his convictions and his devotion to his ultimate overlord, God. - And for that he was rewarded by a direct route to Heaven.
Also, one of the most fundamental teachings in Christianity is that Jesus died for our (all humans) sins. He sought death as an ultimate atonement of shame. (I.e. human sins.)
All that would have made sense to a samurai anno 1580.
The bits about Jesus being of very humble origins, and associating with poor and outcast did not appeal to samurais and was actually one of the major stumbling blocks for Christian missionaries in Japan at the time.
But the same things made Jesus less appetizing in aristocratic circles in Europe at the time as well. Hence why there was such a strong cult around the Virgin Mary.
It was actually the Reformation and it's back to basic ideology personified by Jesus, that in many ways restored the importance of Jesus. IMO of course.
Helped very much by the church (both Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox) who worked hard on reducing the significance of Mary as a second deity, which she in many ways was. Without ever really succeeding, certainly not within the Catholic church. She remained popular. Albeit loosing ground to Jesus.