Ivory&Gold: But what do you know what happened while he was hanging on that cross? Maybe "he suffered for us all" means that he had to live through all the pain and sorrow that has ever been experienced and ever will.
There's literally no more reason to believe that than any other belief from that era, including the ones that involved Jewish people sacrificing animals to appease the desert devils (really not kidding here). If he was really reliving all our pain why did he need to be nailed up there, I mean he certainly wasn't the first or the last, he could have just felt the pain of thousands of others.
As far as I understand the historians there were dozens of whack jobs doing the John the Baptist and Jesus thing yearly, because they were occupied Rome and had such a strong messianic component to their religion. Seriously as much as the Jewish leaders hated the supposed Jesus, they hated Rome more. If anyone had half a thought he wasn't just another of their equivalent to a televangelist they wouldn't have helped the Romans execute him.
Ivory&Gold: Ah, Christianity has affected the core values of our Western society, which, despite our inability to live up to, I consider a good thing.
You've got this entirely backwards, religion is man-made and reflects our natural morals. This is why there is little difference in basic morality between any culture. Anthropology has backed this up for decades. Our western morality doesn't come from Christianity, Christianity merely reflects our innate sense of morals, just like so many other world religions do.
Obviously the evil and power hungry know to how exploit this to perpetrate evil, but we all know what went down so there's no use in repeating it here.
Ivory&Gold: Isn't the image of him hanging there nonetheless an incredibly powerful metaphor for human suffering, one that helps many, many people to come to terms with their own?
Not to me, the idea that some god will make up for the wrongs of this world and the people who needlessly suffer has been the cause of more inaction in the face of suffering, more willingness to punish those who only "might" be guilty, and other "god will sort it out" immorality than pretty much anything else I can think of.
I have never met people who think it's more of a travesty to let an innocent man rot in prison or even be executed than an atheist. I have never met more (in aggregate) people more concerned about people needlessly suffering than those who think this life is all we get. I have met many aid workers of all beliefs (or non-belief) and my experience is that their basic goodness has nothing to do with their religion or lack thereof and everything to do with them as people (and their privilege to be able to do something about it).
So no, I don't find the Christian myth to be all that motivating towards good, if it was we'd certainly have a better society in the US. I can inspire more people to do something by putting them in the same room as a disadvantaged person for 2 hours than years of preaching by their pastor.
Ivory&Gold: Some of your posts lead me to believe that you're a fan of Tolkien. I assume you're aware that he was a devout Catholic and considered his work an expression of his religious feelings. In a way, it is his gospel. What about that? Do these books mean anything special to you, or do you consider them just a bunch of exciting tales?
Tolkien's works are many things to me. One thing they are not is a Christian apology (one that would be is The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe series). I'm not sure there's a credible argument to be made that it is. I also think Tolkien would have made as good a writer if he'd been a Buddhist. Seriously, the dude was a scholar, most of his work was an excuse to play with languages, a great passion of his. He may have seen his struggle of good vs. evil from a religious perspective, I don't know, but good vs. evil is a universal human theme and in no way confined to Catholicism or Christianity in general.
Ivory&Gold: I find your summary dismissal of every aspect of Christianity off-putting and shortsighted. In fact, it strikes me as borderline anti-intellectual. To again mention Michelangelo's Pieta, I think it's one of the most moving depictions of love, empathy and suffering I have ever encountered. And it represents a direct depiction of a scene from the Bible. Don't you see worth there?
Did you not read how much I have studied Christianity in my lifetime? I assure you my dismissal is anything but "summary". If you want to judge it as anything else, that's up to you and your opinions, but calling it summary is simply silly, I've studied Christianity more than most Christians by several times.
And why is Christianity so damned special anyway? It's not special to me, I dismiss all religions equally. It shocks me to no end when I get into these apologist conversations and they're always about.... dun, dun, dun Christianity. Why not Judaism, Gnosticism, Islam, Buddhism, the Cult of Isis, or anything else? All of those could claim credit for every single apology that has been put forth in defense of Christianity in this thread.
So why Christianity?
Ivory&Gold: To again mention Michelangelo's Pieta, I think it's one of the most moving depictions of love, empathy and suffering I have ever encountered. And it represents a direct depiction of a scene from the Bible. Don't you see worth there?
Art has been inspired by any number of things, if the only redeeming quality of Christianity (which is hardly the only belief system to inspire art) is that it inspires us to make pretty art, then it stands in company with quite a lot of things including some the most base parts of human nature.