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04-04-2010, 05:46 AM | #11 |
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'Dr Bradford has analysed the Bible's original Greek and Hebrew scriptures to try to establish the truth about Christ's background.'
How closely do you have to look at the Popeye cartoons before you discover the truth about Popeye? |
04-04-2010, 05:49 AM | #12 | |
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Joan of Arc, in 1430 after her capture, answering the charge she was the notorious Maid of Orleans. Jiri |
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04-04-2010, 10:18 AM | #13 | |||
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From the NT as we have it, he would have been poking a stick in the eye of the Jewish religious leadership. His choice of 12 apostles who followed him around would be seen unmistakedly as a statement that he was the leader of the '12 tribes'. |
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04-04-2010, 10:48 AM | #14 |
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Jesus of the NT was no radical.
Based on sources of antiquity it was the Jewish people who were Radicals. It is recorded that the Jewish people were the only ones who REFUSED to worship the Roman Emperors as Gods and were willing to die for their belief. Jesus of the NT did not make one single NEGATIVE statement about the deification of Roman Emperors and enslavement and oppression of people by the Romans. Jesus of the NT was no radical, perhaps a mad-man, an idiot or an agent of the Roman Empire. In the NT, Jesus virtually told the Jews to submit to Roman oppression, brutality and Slavery in the sermon on the mount In the NT, when Jesus was before Pilate, instead showing he was a radical by condemning the deification of the Roman Emperors and condemning Roman slavery and oppression, he made some crazy-like statement that he would come back in the clouds on the right hand of power. Jesus of the NT was no radical, perhaps a false prophet, a mad-man, an idiot, or an agent of the Roman Empire. |
04-04-2010, 10:51 AM | #15 |
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"Render unto Caesar what is Caesar's (tax)and to God what is God's."(donations). The ancient teaching in separation of church and state seems to be in the works.
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04-04-2010, 11:19 AM | #16 | |||
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Bradford's analysis sounds reasonable. The word translated "just" could also indicate that Priests were considered "justified" in their manner of ruling in their interpretation of Jewish laws. But is Jesus portrayed as a Pharisee Priest, a Sadducee Priest, or another Priest from a different sect? As with the Pharisee's and Sadducees, Jesus thought he had authority to speak concerning laws and tradition of Jews. It's difficult if not impossible to imagine a poor Jewish man in that ancient society being able to walk past fishermen with the greeting of "follow me" and they immediately just ship to join Jesus. Jesus most likely would have had a reputation long before he began his attempt to recruit students[disciples]. The poor fishermen would have heard about Jesus' wealth, his education(maybe while in Egypt), his father's business, etc. My idea is that Jesus was not middle class but a wealthy man with influence[power] and therein could argue with the Pharisees and Sadducees on their level. A poor Jewish man could not have gained any such audience with Priests and Rabbi's in those days. |
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04-04-2010, 11:58 AM | #17 | |||
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The religion of Jesus was a "Mystery" and not intended for everyone. Only his disciples were meant to know the Mysteries as predistination is given to them as their right of inheritance. This right of inheritance did not include everyone and certainly not Gentiles, (it's a Jewish story) as Jesus excluded Gentiles from the Kingdom of Mysteries - "I am sent to none but the lost sheep in the house of Israel". He wasn't sent to the righteous Jews, but those those Jews whom he thought needed awakening(raised from the dead). You can't believe what you read and must try to interpret from a parable structure. Even then you can't be sure of what the hell he was talking about. The blind were really not blind, the lepers were really not diseased, the dead were really not corpses.(Mt.11:5) So it's up for grabs, and speculation is welcome. The stumbling block is set in place when the character Peter the Jew decides to incorporate lawless and uncircumcicsed Gentiles into the Jewish inheritance. Robbery is commencing and theft of property rights in the balance. |
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04-04-2010, 01:07 PM | #18 | ||
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Well, then there was really no "mystery" to the Jesus character. This Jesus, the offspring of the Holy Ghost, came to warn the Jews that WHEN they rejected him as Christ that prophecy will be fulfilled, the Jewish Temple would fall and the Jews will suffer mass destruction. Jesus of the NT was no radical. He was either a false prophet, a mad-man, an idiot or an agent of the Roman Empire. We have the writings of Philo and Josephus that give indications of the situation on the ground in the 1st century with respect to Jews in Alexandria and in Galilee. A radical Jew was a person who would face down the Roman Gods called Emperors and publicly refused to worship them as Gods. The Jesus character in the NT wanted the Jews to believe he had power to forgive their sins and was lord of the Sabbath. This is more like blasphemy, madness, or stupidity rather than radicalism. Jesus of the NT appeared to be completely insensitive to the plight of the Jews and was not engaged in any protests against the Gods of the World, the Gods of the Roman Empire. The Jesus character was no radical, perhaps an egotistic blasphemer, a false prophet, a mad-man, an idiot or an agent of the Roman Empire. |
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04-04-2010, 02:11 PM | #19 | ||||||||
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04-04-2010, 04:34 PM | #20 |
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I have seen the NT version of JC as not being anti-Roman which in itself could have made him enemies.
However carrying it to the idea he was actulay an upscale educated man makes sense. Possibly a Jewish Vidkun Quisling of some sort? |
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