Verse:Irta/Remonitionist Multiversalism: Difference between revisions
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==Irta Protestantism== | ==Irta Protestantism== | ||
(from now on referred to as Irtaprotestantism) | (from now on referred to as Irtaprotestantism, or from a synonym of protest? rebel/revolt/resist-ants?) | ||
Already quite inclusive and liberal; the narrative has already changed in Irta from "non-Christians need salvation" to "non-Christians have equally valid paths to salvation"; Catholics like to joke that Irtaprotestants convert themselves rather than converting others | Already quite inclusive and liberal; the narrative has already changed in Irta from "non-Christians need salvation" to "non-Christians have equally valid paths to salvation"; Catholics like to joke that Irtaprotestants convert themselves rather than converting others |
Revision as of 06:03, 7 January 2022
Influences
Irta Protestantism
(from now on referred to as Irtaprotestantism, or from a synonym of protest? rebel/revolt/resist-ants?)
Already quite inclusive and liberal; the narrative has already changed in Irta from "non-Christians need salvation" to "non-Christians have equally valid paths to salvation"; Catholics like to joke that Irtaprotestants convert themselves rather than converting others
Irtaprotestants believe there have been several Christs throughout history (inspired by bodhisattvas); some are legendary and are worshipped like pagan gods especially in Hivantish societies.
Tricin
After migrating to Tricin, Irtaprotestants start to expand their universalism to other universes too -- one result is that there are three sacred texts that Irtaprotestants read in Tricin:
- Old Testament
- Foranloíd
- a "New Testament" specifically authored by Trician Irtaprotestants, very different from our New Testament -- it not only mentions many Christs, it has a "cyclical" eschatology very different from Revelation (addressed to churches in Earth, Tricin and many other universes).
Some MCC churches read the Imthumitil too. These texts are commonly read in a special "New Trician" translation, though other translations are read too in some churches. The New Trician translations are the work of a philologist, Rought ???, who studied ancient Hebrew, Greek, Windermere and Tigol and wanted to encapsulate her understanding of ancient texts in those languages in a new way which wasn't influenced by other Christian sects.
For Earthlings, MCC can appear very New Age-ish.