4 Answers

  1. What does fate have to do with it? For Jesus Christ, this was a task from His heavenly Father, God:

    “I have glorified you on earth, and I have done the work which you gave me to do” (John 17: 4).

    For this purpose, Christ came from heaven on 33.5 g. Then God raised Him up and He returned to heaven. Now He is the heavenly King sitting at the right hand of God. What's so fatal about that?

    God does not describe life for people, does not recognize the concept of fate, otherwise there would be no question of any free will.

  2. A fatalist is just a person who does NOT know his fate and DOES NOT plan it – he, by virtue of faith in a blind lot (fatum), agrees to any one.

    And the meaning of the gospel parable (and the essence of the spiritual feat of Christ within the framework of Christian doctrine) is precisely in demonstrating that those who follow his path will inevitably be torn apart by the crowd, crucified.�

    Therefore, there have been many people willing to repeat this path since that time: “everyone, sooner or later, makes a compromise.

  3. Does it make you fatalistic to go to a production of the Cherry Orchard or Romeo and Juliet and know the end? Or someone spoiled the ending of the next season of Game of Thrones, will you drop it after that? The scene must be played out.

  4. Christ cannot be put under any philosophical category, because any philosophy is flawed, because it is born out of human consciousness, which has limitations.�

    Yes, to some extent, Christ went according to His purpose:
    22 however, The Son of Man goes according to His destiny, but woe to the man to whom He is betrayed.
    (Luke 22: 22)
    But on the other hand, His fulfillment of His destiny was not blind and without freedom, will, and His choice.
    17 Therefore the Father loves me, becauseI lay down My life to receive her again.
    18 No one takes it away from Me, but I give it Myself. I have the power to give it up, and I have the power to receive it again. This commandment I received from My Father.
    (Jn.10:17,18)

    Man is not only a creature that follows blindly along a pre-programmed path, he is also the creator of his own destiny, within the framework of the choice given to him..Well, the God-man all the more so. If a person is not responsible for anything, then there is nothing to judge him for. No, fatalism is a heresy, although it is based on some truth. As Berdyaev said, Any lie has some truth in it, it is strong with it, it holds on to it.

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