Verse:Irta/Remonitionist Multiversalism: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
mNo edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
The Remonition was a schism from the Catholic Church which began with the observation that the Trinity is not explicitly taught in the New Testament. The First Remonition was an anti-trinitarian movement. The Second Remonition saw the influx of (Mahayana-like) Buddhist and yogic ideas and the rejection of the then-Christian God as ultimate; a Christ was superior to all Gods. The sole faction that rejected the Second Remonition was a quasi-Spinozism and eventually became something much like our Enlightenment. | The Remonition was a schism from the Catholic Church which began with the observation that the Trinity is not explicitly taught in the New Testament. The First Remonition was an anti-trinitarian movement. The Second Remonition saw the influx of (Mahayana-like) Buddhist and yogic ideas and the rejection of the then-Christian God as ultimate; a Christ was superior to all Gods. The sole faction that rejected the Second Remonition was a quasi-Spinozism and eventually became something much like our Enlightenment. | ||
By the time Remonitionism entered Tricin, it was already quite inclusive and liberal; the narrative had already changed in Irta from "non-Christians need salvation" to "non-Christians have equally valid paths to salvation" | By the time Remonitionism entered Tricin, it was already quite inclusive and liberal; the narrative had already changed in Irta from "non-Christians need salvation" to "non-Christians have equally valid paths to salvation". Catholics like to joke that Remonitionists convert themselves rather than converting others. | ||
Remonitionists believe there have been several Christs throughout history (inspired by bodhisattvas); some are legendary and are worshipped like pagan gods especially in Hivantish societies. | Remonitionists believe there have been several Christs throughout history (inspired by bodhisattvas); some are legendary and are worshipped like pagan gods especially in Hivantish societies. | ||