naturalplastic wrote:
blitzkrieg wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Why would anyone want to be someone's disciple?
Eeeek.
I'd rather make my own religion.
I suppose being a disciple would have been more of a normal thing back in those days, and especially if, as a disciple, you were following somebody who was meant to be the son of God. If you'd have believed that, at the time.
Are you kidding?
Its normal in
every age.
Strictly speaking a "disciple" is someone who just follows X and studies and subscribes to the thing. An "apostle" is like a missionary...someone who goes out to actively spread the belief.
The original 12 were disciples. Some later also became apostles. And two millenia later we still have both disciples and apostles for Christ.
Someone can be a disciple of Karl Marx. And many still are despite the fall of Communism. And some...like Lenin, and Che Guavara, became actual apostles of Marx during the 20th Century. Not alien to our time at all. Folks today become discliples and even apostles of all kinds of creeds (religious, secular, ancient, modern, and modern variations of ancient creeds).
Well, I live in the UK which nowadays is mostly a secular society, with very few people who genuinely believe in the teachings of Christianity, or who care about Jesus or the bible.
So from my neck of the woods, I think it would be fair to say that today, it is not common for people in general to be disciples of any sort.
I suppose if you apply the meaning of the word disciple to a school of thought or ideology, then yes, there are many of those today in every country.
When I implied that disciples weren't that common
today, I specifically meant in a religious context and within the geography of the UK.
Pardon me for not specifying.
_________________
“I was ashamed of myself when I realized life was a costume party and I attended with my real face” - Franz Kafka