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Old 02-18-2013, 12:34 PM   #11
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Some, like Mary, have expressed disgust in the idea that Jews found salvation value in a human sacrifice. So much so, that she claims the Jews would never have done so--ie Christianity could not have begun with a human founder crucified.

On the contrary, I see this as a highly reasonable idea given the context the Jews found themselves living in 2000 years ago. So, I've opened this up for comments.

Here's the Jewish context:

1. Belief that sin results in man's death. Since Genesis 1.
2. Animal sacrifices for sins for many centuries.
3. Sacrifices during Passover. Since Moses.
4. OT prophecies of a Messiah who would save Israel from their sins. Throughout OT.
5. Desperate for the kingdom of God to arrive

Slow down Ted, you have that just backwards here.

Gen. 1 only says that whatever God created was good.
You're right. It was a chapter or two later where God punished man's sin by death. As to your other comments, I don't have the patience today..
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Old 02-18-2013, 12:43 PM   #12
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A Jewish convert to christianity has to justify his turning his back on Judaism somehow. The usual Jewish understanding of the suffering servant is that it is Israel.
And I've shown that your ideas are too simplistic by giving you evidences from a source that finds the very passages you say aren't Messianic WERE seen as Messianic in ancient Jewish writings.
Rehearsing apologetics is not showing anything.

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I don't see any good way for you to get around the evidence, spin.
Cut the bullshit, TedM. Apologetics is not evidence. Christians have had to face this issue for almost two millennia and they haven't come up with anything better than smoke. You just don't have any meaning for your term, "messiah". You may as well talk of Jesus Flezpik for the amount of meaning you can adduce from the term. (Incidentally, "pik" means "superfantastic-majestic-non-essential quasi-being of unlimited supply of adulation" and "flezzu" is "shitkicker" in Bath-Reumatoid and word order indicates a genitival relation. Make of that what you must.)

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Assertions to the contrary aren't good enough. Neither is your appeal to the 'usual Jewish understanding'.
I tell you what TedM, show me a surefire Jewish reference to a messiah in pre-christian times that fits the bill of Jesus and I will know that you have discovered rocking-horse shit.

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It is obvious that there wasn't 100% agreement on what was and wasn't Messianic..the passages themselves don't lend them to agreement as they portray sometimes conflicting views, and of course will be subject to interpretation.
Well, why don't you provide your evidence for a pre-christian Jewish messiah description that is appropriate for your beliefs. That doesn't mean a suffering servant or a recently enthroned king or whatever else christians dragoon into the discussion for lack of anything tangible. I want something that must be taken as a description of the messiah.

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I think I'll go with the evidence.
And nothing comes from nothing.

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The fact is that my OP has outlined the context of the times which is supportive of Christianity arising from a crucified Messiah claimant during Passover. No arguments provided so far have shown my outline to be incorrect or unlikely.
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Old 02-18-2013, 12:44 PM   #13
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So far as the official dogman of the RCC, the Orthodox Churches and many Protestant cults are concerned, partaking of communion means LITERALLY consuming the flesh and blood of a human being. Sounds like cannibalism to me, and that isn't easy to do without some sacrificing along the way.
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Old 02-18-2013, 12:56 PM   #14
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What part of this do you find to be 'smoke' spin, and why? Seems to me that this guy might know a bit more than you on the subject of Messianic passages. In fact he has given hundreds of references and all you have given is your empty assertions:

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THE following list contains the passages in the Old Testament applied to the Messiah or to Messianic times in the most ancient Jewish writings. They amount in all to 456, thus distributed: 75 from the Pentateuch, 243 from the Prophets, and 138 from the Hagiographa, and supported by more than 558 separate quotations from Rabbinic writings. Despite all labour care, it can scarcely be hoped that the list is quite complete, although, it is hoped, no important passage has been omitted. The Rabbinic references might have been considerably increased, but it seemed useless to quote the same application of a passage in many different books. Similarly, for the sake of space, only the most important Rabbinic quotations have been translated in extenso. The Rabbinic works from which quotations have been made are: the Targumim, the two Talmuds, and the most ancient Midrashim, but neither the Zohar (as the date of its composition is in dispute), nor any other Kabbalistic work, nor yet the younger Midrashim, nor, of course, the writings of later Rabbis. I have, however, frequently quoted from the well-known work Yalkut, because, although of comparatively late date, it is really, as its name implies, a collection and selection from more than fifty older and accredited writings, and adduces passages now not otherwise accessible to us. And I have the more readily availed myself of it, as I have been reluctantly forced to the conclusion that even the Midrashim preserved to us have occasionally been tampered with for controversial purposes.

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A Jewish convert to christianity has to justify his turning his back on Judaism somehow. The usual Jewish understanding of the suffering servant is that it is Israel.
And I've shown that your ideas are too simplistic by giving you evidences from a source that finds the very passages you say aren't Messianic WERE seen as Messianic in ancient Jewish writings.
Rehearsing apologetics is not showing anything.

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I don't see any good way for you to get around the evidence, spin.
Cut the bullshit, TedM. Apologetics is not evidence. Christians have had to face this issue for almost two millennia and they haven't come up with anything better than smoke.
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Old 02-18-2013, 01:07 PM   #15
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What part of this do you find to be 'smoke' spin, and why? Seems to me that this guy might know a bit more than you on the subject of Messianic passages. In fact he has given hundreds of references and all you have given is your empty assertions:

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THE following list contains the passages in the Old Testament applied to the Messiah or to Messianic times in the most ancient Jewish writings. They amount in all to 456, thus distributed: 75 from the Pentateuch, 243 from the Prophets, and 138 from the Hagiographa, and supported by more than 558 separate quotations from Rabbinic writings. Despite all labour care, it can scarcely be hoped that the list is quite complete, although, it is hoped, no important passage has been omitted. The Rabbinic references might have been considerably increased, but it seemed useless to quote the same application of a passage in many different books. Similarly, for the sake of space, only the most important Rabbinic quotations have been translated in extenso. The Rabbinic works from which quotations have been made are: the Targumim, the two Talmuds, and the most ancient Midrashim, but neither the Zohar (as the date of its composition is in dispute), nor any other Kabbalistic work, nor yet the younger Midrashim, nor, of course, the writings of later Rabbis. I have, however, frequently quoted from the well-known work Yalkut, because, although of comparatively late date, it is really, as its name implies, a collection and selection from more than fifty older and accredited writings, and adduces passages now not otherwise accessible to us. And I have the more readily availed myself of it, as I have been reluctantly forced to the conclusion that even the Midrashim preserved to us have occasionally been tampered with for controversial purposes.
There is nothing in it but assertions. We aren't interested in rabbinical literature because it is post-christian origins. That means we look at the torah, prophets and hagiographa--which I hope means non-biblical Jewish religious works of the epoch. Of course, neither the torah nor the prophets deal specifically with the messiah (unless of course you want to talk about Cyrus). One has to bring baggage to the text in order to insert references to the messiah into it. That leaves us with the few tangible references in the inter-testamental literature--and the DSS, which were not available to the writer, if this is still Edelsheim.
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Old 02-18-2013, 01:20 PM   #16
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So far as the official dogman of the RCC, the Orthodox Churches and many Protestant cults are concerned, partaking of communion means LITERALLY consuming the flesh and blood of a human being. Sounds like cannibalism to me, and that isn't easy to do without some sacrificing along the way.
And what comes across like canibalism to you is like transformation to the RCC where they look with their eyes but see with their mind, and would call your the canibal in opposite to which they are the saint.
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Old 02-18-2013, 01:44 PM   #17
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I don't understand the attaching of Christianity to Hebrew faith on this board. It is so superficial that even a junior varsity player like me can see through it. A hijacking of sorts, but in the main a rejection of the Hebrew faith.

In terms of more general practice, sacrifice (even human sacrifice) was widespread enough within and without the Empire so as to have no need of attaching the concept to any specific progenitor. A lot of the cook kids were doing sacrifice.

Look how the Aztecs and Mayans on this continent developed that independently. But in the Christian vicinity you have the Sumerians, Greeks, Romans, Germanics, Celts, and across Asia too in one form or another historically.

Christians did it in a unique way though, by abolishing the need to sacrifice through the ultimate sacrifice. That sacrifice was conceptually involved is nothing particularly Jewish, but that the Messaiah dies in such ignominy - that is most especially not Jewish.
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Old 02-18-2013, 01:48 PM   #18
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There is nothing in it but assertions. We aren't interested in rabbincal literature because it is post-christian origins.
That's a sweeping statement. We can't even find a reference to Jesus that is clearly the Gospel Jesus in the rabbincal literature, can we? As such, why would we think that they are highly compromised by Christian hands? All 558 references?

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That means we look at the torah
He did. 75 references

Quote:
, prophets
He did. 243 references

Quote:
and hagiographa--which I hope meaning non-biblical Jewish religious works of the epoch.
He claims 138 references.


Quote:
Of course, neither the torah nor the prophets deal specifically with the messiah (unless of course you want to talk about Cyrus). One has to bring baggage to the text to insert references to the messiah into it.
I agree. Many of the passages seem to be about a known figure in history. Others however seem to be talking about a 'hoped for' future figure.

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That leaves us with the few tangible references in the inter-testimental literature--and the DSS, which were not available to the writer, if this is still Edelsheim.
This seems to betray the actual facts of history. Just why do you think Christian sources saw the need to comb the OT for references to Jesus as the predicted One? Why did gMark fill his book with prophetic references? Why introduce a Jewish Savior at all if nobody Jewish was buying the story?
Why not a Roman Savior instead?

And again, why did the Jews who bought the story, buy it, if the concept of a Suffering Servant -- which the early Christian writers alluded to frequently -- was not applicable in the Jewish culture to the Messiah?

Is it the word 'Messiah' that you are objecting to? Would a different word have been better to use -- like 'the Chosen One' or something like that?

The fact that this Savior came from Jewish origins and was considered to be 'the One' they had been awaiting, should be all the evidence you need, spin, to conclude that the culture was flexible enough to accept the idea of a Messiah-like Jewish crucified Savior. What is it about that which you have such an objection to? Isn't the evidence in the method chosen? If not, why portray this Savior as the long-awaited Jewish Messiah at all, if such a portrayal was absolutely impossible to be conceived by them?

It makes no sense to do that if they weren't open to the idea. And, you can't just get away with calling it a 'Roman' religion when we know that the Jews were spread throughout the Roman empire. Were early Christian Romans just taunting the Jews by making fun of their Messianic expectations and coming up with a whole other one? Makes no sense spin.
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Old 02-18-2013, 02:13 PM   #19
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I don't understand the attaching of Christianity to Hebrew faith on this board. It is so superficial that even a junior varsity player like me can see through it. A hijacking of sorts, but in the main a rejection of the Hebrew faith.
Christianity came out of Judiasm. Without historical Jewish theology, Christianity loses all meaning. Christians see Christianity as the completion of Judiasm----the extension of God's plan, and not as a rejection of it. This has nothing to do with a rejection of the Hebrew faith and I don't really see why anyone here feels the need to defend the Hebrew faith anyway. Is this a Hebrew board or an atheist board? The Hebrews should be about 1000 times more offended by atheism than Christianity!


Quote:
In terms of more general practice, sacrifice (even human sacrifice) was widespread enough within and without the Empire so as to have no need of attaching the concept to any specific progenitor.
And yet, Christianity arose out of a crucified Jewish man/being. Why a Jewish one? There is no escaping that fact.


Quote:
Christians did it in a unique way though, by abolishing the need to sacrifice through the ultimate sacrifice. That sacrifice was conceptually involved is nothing particularly Jewish, but that the Messaiah dies in such ignominy - that is most especially not Jewish.
Yet it caught fire with the Jews. How could that happen if you are right?
And, if you say --no it was a Gentile religion-- then why even bother with making it an extension of Judiasm?
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Old 02-18-2013, 02:27 PM   #20
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There is nothing in it but assertions. We aren't interested in rabbincal literature because it is post-christian origins.
That's a sweeping statement. We can't even find a reference to Jesus that is clearly the Gospel Jesus in the rabbincal literature, can we? As such, why would we think that they are highly compromised by Christian hands? All 558 references?

Quote:
That means we look at the torah
He did. 75 references

Quote:
, prophets
He did. 243 references
Fuck, this is so hard for you, isn't it? There are no references to the messiah in the Hebrew bible. If you don't believe me, show me the examples as I requested in my last post.

And no-one is interested in fraudulent crap like Isa 7:14 or Ps 22:16.

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and hagiographa--which I hope meaning non-biblical Jewish religious works of the epoch.
He claims 138 references.
Apologetic bullshit. Try to demonstrate 138.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
Quote:
Of course, neither the torah nor the prophets deal specifically with the messiah (unless of course you want to talk about Cyrus). One has to bring baggage to the text to insert references to the messiah into it.
I agree. Many of the passages seem to be about a known figure in history. Others however seem to be talking about a 'hoped for' future figure.
We are talking about the messiah, not just some hopeful stuff.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
Quote:
That leaves us with the few tangible references in the inter-testimental literature--and the DSS, which were not available to the writer, if this is still Edelsheim.
This seems to betray the actual facts of history. Just why do you think Christian sources saw the need to comb the OT for references to Jesus as the predicted One?
Justification for misappropriating Hebrew literature.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
Why did gMark fill his book with prophetic references? Why introduce a Jewish Savior at all if nobody Jewish was buying the story?
Why not a Roman Savior instead?
There's no argument here, just wish-fulfillment.

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And again, why did the Jews who bought the story, buy it, if the concept of a Suffering Servant -- which the early Christian writers alluded to frequently -- was not applicable in the Jewish culture to the Messiah?
You want me to theorize about your confusion? That's a waste. I'll wait for some real evidence for the Jewish messiah.

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Is it the word 'Messiah' that you are objecting to? Would a different word have been better to use -- like 'the Chosen One' or something like that?
It is the misappropriation of the term "messiah" that I'm trying to communicate to you. That is what interests me. Your blindness to it.

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The fact that this Savior came from Jewish origins and was considered to be 'the One' they had been awaiting,...
If by "they" you mean the Jews, you are stitching together a fabric of fantasy, assuming that the various references across the Jewish literature refer to the same figure.

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...should be all the evidence you need, spin, to conclude that the culture was flexible enough to accept the idea of a Messiah-like Jewish crucified Savior. What is it about that which you have such an objection to? Isn't the evidence in the method chosen? If not, why portray this Savior as the long-awaited Jewish Messiah at all, if such a portrayal was absolutely impossible to be conceived by them?
I have no problem with the fact that Jesus is represented as a savior, nor the story that he was crucified, nor that he was supposed to be Jewish. It is that you can unashamedly call him the messiah, an act of religious disinheritance of the Jews, while showing no understanding of the actual term.

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It makes no sense to do that if they weren't open to the idea.
If we have a religious nutter like Paul who felt that he understood how salvation was attained, all your rationalizations are for nothing.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
And, you can't just get away with calling it a 'Roman' religion when we know that the Jews were spread throughout the Roman empire.
I don't know where you got that idea. Christianity was a cuckoo in the Jewish nest.

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Were early Christian Romans just taunting the Jews by making fun of their Messianic expectations and coming up with a whole other one? Makes no sense spin.
What goes against dogma doesn't make sense to a credent.

Christianity stole the cultural heritage of the Jews--you know, what you facetiously call the old testament--, while not understanding much of it.
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