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06-23-2004, 02:29 PM | #11 |
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Another way to approach this is to look at Hebrews as a whole. I understood it is not written by Paul but it is not a forgery either.
My experience is probably very coloured by my Church upbringing - pentecostal Assemblies of God where Hebrews is seen as a key text - in some ways more important than the Gospels! The sacrifice of Christ was to me a very mystical thing, directly linked to communion and the concept that the High Priest has torn down the veil of the Temple. The Gnostic position of a mythical Christ fits with my memories of Church - a literal Jesus is something not quite right! TJM and sophia et al felt real to me because they were hitting my experience of xianity. |
06-23-2004, 04:29 PM | #12 | |
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Thanks. I wasn't aware Peter Kirby had already been there, done that. That meshes with my understanding of the verse exactly. It can't reasonably be construed to argue either Mythic or HJ. I 'preciate your post. d |
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06-23-2004, 04:36 PM | #13 | |
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I noted in another thread that you and I have similar reading interests/tastes. I, too, have read again and again that X "symbolized" Y in ancient culture Z. What I'm wondering is how we know that. It doesn't strike me that symbols' understood uses are so widespread so much as their repeated appearance in the books we read (along with the assumptions you note) is common. Whichever it is, it's beside the point to me. The point is, how do we know what the ancient cultures meant by these symbols? A "symbol" can mean whatever the interpreter sees in it. I don't see any of the things you listed when I see these "symbols," me. And I don't accept "because everybody knows it's so" as support, because my opponents wouldn't. There has to be some reason historians/archeologists/whatever said, "Ah! Obviously, the ram's head symbolized the sacred nature of the first born to these people!" I'm wondering what that reason is. d |
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06-23-2004, 04:37 PM | #14 | |
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06-24-2004, 04:11 AM | #16 |
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Thanks toto, that was kind of weird.
BTW, I didn't mean this to be only a deconstruction of Heb 8, but a discussion of the pitfalls of TJM in general, but oh well. |
06-24-2004, 08:28 AM | #17 | |
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I concur with your reading of the Greek. The translation "if he had been on earth" is just wrong. |
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06-24-2004, 11:17 AM | #18 | |
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χάÏ?ις σοι καὶ á¼?ιÏ?ήνη |
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06-25-2004, 08:00 AM | #19 | |
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06-25-2004, 09:34 AM | #20 |
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diana
I wasn't clear enough! I spoke about memories! I was arguing about when I was a xian, I went to a church that thinking about it was strongly gnostic and mythical, but I would now be excommunicated for pointing it out! There are probably lots of xians out there who are reasonably happy with mystical positions but feel funny about attempts to make a physical Jesus. The snag is fundies now speak the loudest. Pentecostals and calvinists used to hate each other. They have probably both been too infected by the other's ideas. As a pente I was taken to Billy Graham, but really they are antithetical to each other! |
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