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Old 08-20-2013, 09:06 PM   #51
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And log in under an account that is yours.
I guess you think this little joke of yours is funny. Not sure why..
Not funny. I don't think you are TedM.
Why? You have in the past accused me of being a Christian at least twice after I've told you I no longer believe. This inflexibility on your part I think explains why I have such a hard time trying to have a discussion with you.
You don't behave the same. You don't talk the same. You don't think the same.

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Well, if you want you talk about "churches of christ" feel free to make some point. As is, it isn't what we were talking about. You even highlighted it when you tried to change tack onto talking about "in christ". Which is it to be, faux TedM?
I suppose you see a MAJOR difference in meaning between "churches in Christ" and "churches of Christ". I don't.
You are trying to make a logical case, not fudge the evidence.

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and "churches ...in Christ" in 1 and 2 Thessalonians is not good enough.
Those dots hide your problem: churches of god which are in Judea in Christ Jesus. And do supply proper references so that your interlocutor doesn't have to guess what you are trying to talk about.
There is no problem. I just took out further descriptions. The concept is the same "churches ... in Christ"
All you need do is leave out enough and you can make any two statements that use a few words in common mean the same thing.

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And obviously you completely refuse to tackle Paul's meaning of being "in Christ",
Perhaps you are hard of reading. I responded to this change of subject, noting what it literally meant and noting the fact that Paul was talking about early moments in his beliefs.
So you claim Paul used it differently when referring to pre-conversion days? Do you have any evidence of that? Don't you think he would have qualified that since he was actually writing AFTER he was converted and was using "in Christ" only to refer to Jesus at that time?
So you think the rhetoric he used for his religion developed overnight?

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which he uses 88 times, always referring to Jesus -- with the exception of course (for you) of the verse in question!

Here's the 88 if you care to take a look: http://www.biblegateway.com/keyword/...=en&bookset=10
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Where does Paul talk about churches in christ? Oh, that's right, in Gal 1:22.
Atomist.
BS artist.
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Old 08-20-2013, 09:11 PM   #52
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My guess is that if you asked 100 biblical theologians if the destruction of the Jewish temple is a decent apologetic point in favor of the 'truth' of Christianity, you'd get at least 95 yeses.
Doubt it.

The "truth of Christianity" was ever changing, but its theology was already laid before the temple fell, busting your hypothesis in "truth"

Did it influence the gospel authors, sure. Not the core of the movement.
I don't understand. The comment I made to Toto had to do with how modern day Christian theologians and apologists would react to knowing about the temple destruction in 70AD. I think they would readily see it as symbolic of the NT wiping out the OT, salvation by faith and not by works. The temple destruction is a physical 'confirmation' of that so-called 'truth'. To be clear I'M not saying that's the truth, but I think today's Christian theologians would readily see the connection as a confirmation of the superiority of the NT over the old. Maybe few every-day Christians know or care about the temple though. That's all I was saying..just speculating of course..
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Old 08-20-2013, 09:20 PM   #53
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but I think today's Christian theologians would readily see the connection as a confirmation of the superiority of the NT over the old. Maybe few every-day Christians know or care about the temple though. That's all I was saying..just speculating of course..
I can see that apologetic connection being made by some.
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Old 08-20-2013, 11:08 PM   #54
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Ted - you've done a bait and switch. You originally wrote:
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The connection that I find interesting is the unmistakable fact that the physical temple was destroyed within 50 years of this origin of this 'new' faith. It would not be notable if the temple existed another 500 years, but 40 years is notable. It's clearly a BIG point that Christians would say is in their favor.
It is a commonplace that Christians believe that Jesus' body is a replacement for the Temple. (Most secular interpreters take this as evidence that the gospels were written after the destruction of the Temple.)

But you claimed that the destruction of the Temple within 50 years of the founding of Christianity is a point in favor of Christianity. I assume you mean to imply that since Christianity was founded, that the Temple was no longer needed, so god allowed it to be destroyed by his agents, the Roman army ??? Why did the omnipotent, omniscient god need to wait 50 years?

I doubt that the source you quoted would endorse this particular formulation, although it's possible.
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Old 08-21-2013, 12:58 AM   #55
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My guess is that if you asked 100 biblical theologians if the destruction of the Jewish temple is a decent apologetic point in favor of the 'truth' of Christianity, you'd get at least 95 yeses.
Doubt it.

The "truth of Christianity" was ever changing, but its theology was already laid before the temple fell, busting your hypothesis in "truth"

Did it influence the gospel authors, sure. Not the core of the movement.
I don't understand. The comment I made to Toto had to do with how modern day Christian theologians and apologists would react to knowing about the temple destruction in 70AD. I think they would readily see it as symbolic of the NT wiping out the OT, salvation by faith and not by works. The temple destruction is a physical 'confirmation' of that so-called 'truth'. To be clear I'M not saying that's the truth, but I think today's Christian theologians would readily see the connection as a confirmation of the superiority of the NT over the old. Maybe few every-day Christians know or care about the temple though. That's all I was saying..just speculating of course..
The NT is superior to the OT because a man was murdered as a sacrifice??

The Fall of the Temple according to the Jesus cult was because the Jews killed Jesus.

Please explain how would the killing of a man would produce Salvation by Faith when ONE MUST KILL first??

The Work--the Killing--must come first.

The Fall of the Temple is really irrelevant if Jesus was already murdered For the Salvation of mankind since the time of Pilate.
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Old 08-21-2013, 03:32 AM   #56
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To be clear I'M not saying that's the truth, but I think today's Christian theologians would readily see the connection as a confirmation of the superiority of the NT over the old.
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Adonai says – “I am fed up with olah-offerings of rams and the offals of fattened calves, and the blood of oxen, lambs and goats does not give Me pleasure. When you come to appear before Me – who asked this of you, to come trampling through My courtyards? Do not bring your meaningless min’ḥah-offerings any more – I find it a disgusting stench… Rosh Ḥodesh, Shabbat, even the Festival assemblies – I cannot tolerate crookedness mixed with ‘service’.

My soul detests your Rosh Ḥodesh and Festival observances, they have become tedious to Me; I can no longer put up with them. When you hold up your hands I will hide My eyes from you; I will not hear you no matter how many ‘prayers’ you say – because your hands are covered with blood! Wash, purify yourselves, remove the badness of your deeds from before My eyes, stop doing wrong! Learn to do right, seek justice, protect victims, treat orphans justly, support the claims of widows.

“Come, please, let’s discuss this rationally,” Adonai says – “even if your sins are like bright crimson, I will bleach them as white as snow: even if they are as red as tola I will make them like [the colour of] wool!” (Y’shayahu 1:11-18).


Yhwh wants people to hold a bloody cross and drink jesus' blood because it is superior than the message in isiah? he tells them to wash thier bloody hands and at the same time wants them to hold a bloody cross because a blood cross is superior than the message in isiah? jesus' murdered flesh on a stick is better than slicing the flesh of an animal? in the books of the prophets sacrifices are down played , there seems to be a disgust for sacrifices. what makes you christians think that murdered human flesh would be superior to animal sacrifices?
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Old 08-21-2013, 04:51 AM   #57
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There was a discussion here a few weeks ago about the death of Jesus placed at the time of the destruction of the temple by some early Christians.

I think the idea is that they moved the death of Jesus back a little to impress people like TedM.
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Old 08-21-2013, 05:05 AM   #58
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Ted - you've done a bait and switch. You originally wrote:
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The connection that I find interesting is the unmistakable fact that the physical temple was destroyed within 50 years of this origin of this 'new' faith. It would not be notable if the temple existed another 500 years, but 40 years is notable. It's clearly a BIG point that Christians would say is in their favor.
It is a commonplace that Christians believe that Jesus' body is a replacement for the Temple. (Most secular interpreters take this as evidence that the gospels were written after the destruction of the Temple.)

But you claimed that the destruction of the Temple within 50 years of the founding of Christianity is a point in favor of Christianity. I assume you mean to imply that since Christianity was founded, that the Temple was no longer needed, so god allowed it to be destroyed by his agents, the Roman army ??? Why did the omnipotent, omniscient god need to wait 50 years?

I doubt that the source you quoted would endorse this particular formulation, although it's possible.
50 years is nothing, esp 2000 years later. No bait and switch. The 'prophecy' (real or imagined) of destruction is one thing but the reality of its disappearance is 'by itself' something Christians can point to as confirmatory. Not saying I agree but I do think there is some validity to the idea that it appears confirmatory, just as does the very survival and re-grouping of the Jewish people all these years.
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Old 08-21-2013, 09:06 AM   #59
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50 years is nothing, esp 2000 years later. No bait and switch. The 'prophecy' (real or imagined) of destruction is one thing but the reality of its disappearance is 'by itself' something Christians can point to as confirmatory. Not saying I agree but I do think there is some validity to the idea that it appears confirmatory, just as does the very survival and re-grouping of the Jewish people all these years.
Ted - it's time to come clean. This attempt to invoke prophecy fulfillment just looks like stealth Christianity. You keep denying that you are a Christian, but you keep posting arguments that don't make any sense to anyone else.
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Old 08-21-2013, 12:22 PM   #60
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50 years is nothing, esp 2000 years later. No bait and switch. The 'prophecy' (real or imagined) of destruction is one thing but the reality of its disappearance is 'by itself' something Christians can point to as confirmatory. Not saying I agree but I do think there is some validity to the idea that it appears confirmatory, just as does the very survival and re-grouping of the Jewish people all these years.
Ted - it's time to come clean. This attempt to invoke prophecy fulfillment just looks like stealth Christianity. You keep denying that you are a Christian, but you keep posting arguments that don't make any sense to anyone else.
How can anyone NOT see that the destruction of the temple coinciding relatively speaking with the advent of Christianity, which claims to do away with the need for the Old Law, and thus the temple, is not at least an interesting turn of events? My OP simply noted that and provided a few likely viewpoints people might have toward it. A viewpoint I DIDN'T expect is a blatant denial that it is coincidental, if it is not related in some way. It appears to me to be a mental block, and frankly it takes the fun out of the spirit of discovery intended. No need to reply if you continue to feel the same way about it.
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