purex wrote:We must believe that Christ has paid our sins and He has given us the free gift of salvation through Christ Jesus. No man can enter into the Father but by me (Christ)
I will share some views that might make somebody uncomfortable, but for me they are valid explanation and can reconcile the past with the present. They come from a respected Lutheran theologian.
It's correct that Christ = salvation. But Christ does not necessarily mean Jesus. Christ, from Greek, means "unointed" and is just a title, not a proper name. Priests, mystics, and every Christian with Confirmation receive the oil. The oil represents enlightenment, or rebirth, since it's the fuel of light (oil lamp). Moreover, there are many accounts of mystics that, when they receive the influx of the Holy Spirit, feel like a pot of hot oil was poured on their head.
Thus, the condition of being Christ (receiving the holy oil) is the path to rebirth and salvation. The term Christ refers to the "enlightened condition" that was present in Jesus, which let him act the way he did. But the term Jesus represents the human being, the mortal part. Being Christ is not an exclusive of Jesus, as it was common for every prophet at his time and before to be called Christ.
"Receiving the Christ" means just receiving enlightenment. It has nothing to do with Jesus, except for the fact that we are using the example of him as our reference.
Theoretically, Christians (Christ - Christians) should be the ones who receive the oil of enlightenment, and thus are the only one who are saved. In reality, getting the material oil is not enough for one's transformation. It must happen in the spirit too. So, there are many Christians who appear everything except what they should be.
However, even non Christians who receive the holy (spiritual) oil can have their share of the Christ condition, even if they are not Christians. Christians only applied something that already existed before and may be called by different names. Jesus has no exclusive of the process. But there is nothing wrong to take him as one of the many examples. The term Christ, instead, is one for everybody.
Another nuance: We are called Christians, not Jesuites...
"The real opposite of love is not hate, but indifference" (Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz)