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01-26-2013, 12:09 PM | #121 | |
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It is not expected at all that Hebrews 8.4 would be about a never on earth Jesus and was always known to be so and was left without manipulation. It is just not logical at all that when the supposed redaction and interpolations were introduced and Jesus was supposedly Fleshed out in the Gospels that Hebrews was NOT also manipulated. Why does the Church need to Canonise a Celestial only Jesus while arguinng that Jesus was on earth in FIVE Canonised Gospels?? It is clear that your theory makes very littlke sense. |
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01-26-2013, 12:58 PM | #122 | |||||||||||||||||
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You cannot label the crucifixion as "the actual sacrifice." That is not how the writer presents it. "The actual sacrifice" is not the cross, it is the action in the heavenly sanctuary. You are doing what generations of scholars have done: attempting to force the crucifixion to be part of the "sacrifice" as presented by the writer of Hebrews. It is not, even though given the Gospels that would have made complete sense. The trouble is, of course, that it would have screwed up the writer's Platonic parallels and he would have had to style his entire scenario differently. The slaughter of the animals by the high priests on earth is NOT part of the "sacrifice" they offer to God. That is the act of placing and burning that blood on the altar. This is in perfect harmony and parallel with Hebrews' own presentation of the "sacrifice", Jesus' offering of his own blood on the altar of the heavenly sanctuary. My point has always been, how could the writer construct such a picture in harmony with the earthly counterpart, if in disharmony with the earthly picture, part of the sacrifice, let alone the "actual sacrifice" itself, was NOT in parallel with the earthly sacrifice? IOW, if Calvary had happened and Jesus' sacrifice constituted his death on the cross, this does not fit in parallel with the earthly sacrifice, which was not the slaughter of the animals, but the offering of their blood. Listen, fellas, there is a limit to the amount of time and effort I am going to put into this. I have got four or five people all throwing things at me at once, and I can't be expected to keep responding to all. It might be another matter if they weren't mostly tediously repetitious, or (like Ted) more and more bizarre counter-interpretations which clearly do not work. So I make no guarantees as to how much more I am going to contribute here. But I will finish off this posting of Ted's. Quote:
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That's it. I'm done. (Another problem is that in a complex posting like this, it's damned hard to get all the tags properly matched, I must have spent an hour having to check through it multiple times to get them right. I almost gave up and trashed the whole thing.) It's going to have to take some really meaningful and perceptive rebuttal in future for me to bother making any answers which require any more than a few moments. Earl Doherty |
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01-26-2013, 12:59 PM | #123 | ||
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There is nothing tiresome here except you trying to control what other people post. :deadhorse: Earl, I am merely seeking information. My two questions were for all readers, not just you. But you have deigned to answer anyway, you must think you have something of importance to offer. For question #1, aside from your claim of convenient ignorance, I understand your answer to be that the aorist would be less ambiguos for your "smoking gun" than the imperfect. Now, please answer the second question. If the writer had wanted to say, that Jesus was not on earth now, but had been so in the past, what tense would he have written? This is not a trick or a trap. I really want to know what readers of this thread think. Jake |
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01-26-2013, 01:02 PM | #124 | ||
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Earl Doherty |
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01-26-2013, 01:17 PM | #125 | ||
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You could have answered the question in the amount of time it took you to refuse. It doesn't take 8 pages to answer. The question is quite simple: which tense would the write of Hebrews 8:4 have used if he meant to say that Jesus was not on earth now, but had been so in the past? But if you feel it is not in your best interest to answer, I will read nothing into your silence. You have already shown the patience of Job, and I thank you for your time. Best Wishes, Jake Jones IV |
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01-26-2013, 01:37 PM | #126 | ||
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The only "best interests" which are applicable here relate to the preservation of my sanity! Even Job was not subjected to the piling on, usually lacking in rational comprehension, that I have been. What this all shows me is not that there are legitimate rebuttals to my position, only that certain people are a priori determined that they are going to at all costs invent whatever they can come up with to disagree, to not give an inch. Ted's first interpretation of 8:4 (the "kind" of sacrifice) didn't work, so he went off and came up with an entirely different one, incompatible with the first one (not "according to the Law"), which equally didn't work. This is honest or reasonable debate? It's another form of apologetics, even if the motivations are different. Get Doherty, beat him down, no matter what the recourse. Even Stephan says he doesn't get on board with my interpretation, but does he offer an argumentative rebuttal to the case I've made? Earl Doherty |
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01-26-2013, 05:17 PM | #127 |
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I think this is part of that thread because Heb 7:14 would prove or disprove what is meant by Heb 8:4.
Doherty wrote, regarding Heb 7:14 (without providing any evidence): “Melchizedek was traditionally seen as part of pre-Abrahamic (thus Canaanite) dynasty of priest kings, a line that continued through David when he conquered Jerusalem, and thus Melchizedek's line became associated with the tribe of Judah.” I object: this Melchizedek (Melch), not even an Israelite, could not be associated with the tribe of Judah. And in the OT, he is never associated with any tribe, and never said part of the same line as the one of David. Then Doherty followed through this unevidenced (and illogical) assumption later: “The scriptural Melchizedek has provided this new High Priest [Jesus] with a tribe, that of Judah” Then Doherty wrote about some Qumran scrolls, 2 Enoch, other little known Jewish texts (not in the OT) and associated scholarly speculations who would have Melch as a messianic, possibly angelic figure and a priest in Heaven. He wrote next: “Beside, if a Melchizedek in Heaven could be identified with the tribe of Judah, there seems little reason to deny that convenience to the High Priest Jesus” The problem here is that the author of 'Hebrews' never described Melch (beside not identified with the tribe of Judah) as operating as a priest in heaven. Instead, in 7:1-10 (except for priest forever), he kept very close to the OT description, with Melch being always a human (even if described as a priest forever, because, I think, his death is not stated in the OT). That would render null most of Doherty's argumentation. The point that the author was making is that Melch, just like Jesus (7:13, 14), was not from the Levite tribe (7:6, 10) and therefore both were rather unique (not associated with those who made Jewish animal sacrifices for centuries) “you are a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek” (7:17) And that Jesus from the tribe of Judah was evident (according to 'Hebrews'). But Doherty wrote "it is evident" (prodelon) of 7:14 needs to be seen as a reference to the clarity bestowed by scripture.” What scriptures? Sectarian ones (that is later not classified as canonical) that the author cannot be proven to know or follow? And no OT scripture has Melch associated with the tribe of Judah, which did not exist yet. So what is left is that Jesus was known to have been a human being on earth (as any member of a Jewish tribe), and also as believed for Melch. Cordially, Bernard |
01-26-2013, 06:04 PM | #128 | |
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01-27-2013, 07:54 AM | #129 | |||
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Effectively, Jesus of the NT was a Mythological character WITHOUT a human father and was from the beginning. A single ambiguous verse in Hebrews 8 cannot ever overturn the NT CANON, the hundreds of Apologetic writings of antiquity and those of the Church of Rome. Hebrews 4:14 KJV Quote:
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Jesus, Son of God and High Priest in Hebrews was WITHOUT father, mother and without END of Life. The Hebrews Jesus was Pure Myth. |
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01-27-2013, 10:07 AM | #130 | ||
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The reason I put forward this objection at all is not to denigrate you. It is because these repeated attempts to come up with something, no matter how off the mark and unworkable, require me to answer them, to point out the obvious flaws and fallacies. And that takes time and energy. Earl Doherty |
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