Just don't discuss it. Your beliefs are yours. However, if you continue to attend a Christian church, you will most likely have to choose between staying and living a lie or leaving the church.
Well, that brings up a very interesting topic that can never truly be discussed with Christian fundies.
For example, let's say that I personally believe in "Jesus". In fact, I do! I do indeed believe that a man named Jesus actually lived, preached better morals than had been taught in the Torah, and was crucified for his views.
So in that sense I may be "drawn" to Jesus. I see the truth in his wisdom, etc. I might even be inclined to believe that it was indeed "divinely inspired knowledge". After all, I believe in shamanism and the validity of shamanic visions. Perhaps Jesus was indeed connected to the spiritual source in a profound way. I have no problem with that at all.
So in that sense, I might be tempted to acknowledge this via "Christianity" which appears to be the religion that supposedly reveres Jesus.
However, I do not believe that the Torah (or Old Testament) represents the "Word of God". Nor do I believe that Jesus ever implied that it does. As far as I can see from the Gospels Jesus renounced many of the moral values that had been taught in the Torah, and he ever referred to the Torah as "Your Laws" when speaking to the Pharisees whom he also decreed to be hypocrites.
I actually see the teachings of Jesus as being far more in line with the philosophical and moral views of Mahayana Buddhism (which as prominent at that point in history).
So I renounce, the idea that Jesus was born of a virgin, I renounce the idea that Jesus was the sacrificial lamb of the God of the Old Testament used to pay for the sins of mankind, and I personally don't believe that Jesus rose from the dead. Although he may have made shamanic or spiritual appearances to certain people after his death. That must be left open as a possibility to anyone who believes in shamanism or spiritual communique of any kind.
So this leaves me with a bit of a dilemma.
Do I recognize the wisdom of the moral teachings of Jesus?
Oh absolutely. The moral values he supposedly taught were just common sense from my point of view. And they are in total harmony with the moral teachings of Buddhism which I also agree with. They only thing they conflict with it the previous teachings of the Torah.
So how do I show my support for the teachings of Jesus when the Christians feel that they OWN him? And the fact that they have nailed him to the Old Testament far more tightly than he was ever nailed to the cross.
According to the Christians, it's not sufficient to believe in the moral teachings of Jesus, or to recognize that he may have been aligned with the divine consciousness in some mysterious way (i.e. through spiritual divination and shamanic visions and communique).
But instead the so-called "Christians" are holding Jesus up as the sacrificial lamb of the God of Abraham who was crucified to pay for your sins!
That isn't what Jesus was all about, IMHO. And I totally renounce all of that.
So the Christians are like the Grinch the stole Christmas.
They are the hypocrites who stole Christ for their own agenda.
Except it's even wrong of me to refer to Jesus as "The Christ", because that's the very notion right there that nails Jesus to the Torah (or Old Testament).
One thing that finally became clear to me is very simple. I asked myself the following two questions:
#1. Do I agree with the moral teachings of Jesus, and do I feel that he may potentially have been divinely inspired. or at least closely aligned with divine consciousness?
Yes I absolutely believe that. I believe that Jesus was a Mahayana Buddhist Bodhisattva. He would have been very much in harmony with divine consciousness.
Be the second question is quite different:
#2. Do I believe that Jesus was the sacrificial lamb of God who was sent to be crucified to pay for the sins of mankind? Do I believe that he was born of a virgin, supported the teachings of the Torah as the "Word of God", and rose from the dead?
No, I don't believe any of that. In short, I do not believe that Jesus was "The Christ" as the "Christians" claim.
I don't believe the Christian version of the story. And by that, I'm mean that I don't believe the authors of the New Testament for they are the only REAL "Christians". Everyone else who calls themselves a "Christian" is really nothing more than a "believer" in what the original "Christians" (i.e. the authors of the New Testament) wrote.
So do I believe in the Bible verbatim? No.
Do I believe that Jesus was "The Christ"? No.
Do I believe that Jesus even supported the Torah as the "Word of God"? No.
Therefore it would indeed be a lie for me to claim to be a "Christian".
And I think this is true for many people who actually want to follow the teachings of Jesus, but don't necessarily agree with all the other crap that is associated with Christianity.
But yet it's next to impossible (actually is impossible from a Christian point of view), to hold Jesus up as anything other than "The Christ" (i.e. the only begotten son of the God of Abraham).
Anything short of that is heresy as far as the Christians are concerned, because that's what Christianity stands for (the idea that Jesus was "The Christ")
So this leaves people who would like to support the moral teachings of Jesus without having to support the hypocrisy of Christianity with nowhere to turn.
Trying to hold Jesus up as a Mahayana Buddhist Bodhisattva who actually renounced the teachings of the Old Testament, isn't going to fly in the face of "Christianity".
So am I a "Christian"?
Absolutely NOT!
Do I support the moral teachings of Jesus?
Absolutely.
So I'm betwixt a rock and a hard place when it comes to Jesus.
At least as far as the "Christians" are concerned.
Fortunately for me, I don't give a damn what the Christians think.
Their opinions are the least important thing on the planet.