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04-11-2012, 11:00 PM | #21 |
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JonA: early Christians (and later ones) spent a lot of time arguing over whether Jesus was of the same substance as God, or a different divine substance, or other variations on the concept of the Trinity. These were the sort of arguments that gave "theology" a bad name.
Mythicism does not depend on whether those early Christians thought that Jesus was god, or an intermediary to god, or some other divine substance. |
04-11-2012, 11:01 PM | #22 | |
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Do you propose or assume gMark is written or dictated by Jesus? |
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04-11-2012, 11:51 PM | #23 |
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No, he's saying that the character of Jesus in Mark is depicted as perceiving God as a separate entity from himself ("not my will, but yours be done," for instance).
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04-12-2012, 12:19 AM | #24 | |
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04-12-2012, 12:43 AM | #25 | |
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The crucifixion was the sticking point. Clearly, Jews agreed with Christians that the Messiah was in their scriptures, but did not agree that the scriptures said the Messiah had to be crucified. Otherwise, Jesus himself would have been the stumbling block, for exactly the same reasons that led up to his alleged crucifixion. Just as people do not reject Hitler today because he died a shameful death in a bunker, and do not reject Mussolini today because he was hung upside down. |
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04-12-2012, 04:01 AM | #26 | |
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The whole point of the gospel attrib. Mark is that Jesus was 'God, with us'. |
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04-12-2012, 05:19 AM | #27 | ||
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Yes, In gMark, Satan, the God of the Jews, and Jesus, son of the God of the Jews are all considered Myths. Yes, Yes, Yes!!!! That is PRECISELY why there is an ON-GOING SEARCH for an HUMAN Jesus. Yes, the very fact that there is a QUEST for an historical Jesus by SCHOLARS is a most BLATANT CONSENSUS by SCHOLARSHIP that gMark's Jesus was NOT a figure of history. Please, join the SEARCH for a NON-DIVINE Jesus you may be lucky. Mark 15:39 KJV Quote:
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04-12-2012, 05:30 AM | #28 | |
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What early Christians believed or didn't believe is irrelevant to the issue of whether or not Mark described his Jesus character as being God. |
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04-12-2012, 06:02 AM | #29 |
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Mark thought it was blasphemy because he didn't know what the Messiah was and he didn't know what constituted blasphemy.
Just for the record, saying "I am" was not blasphemy (certainly not in Greek), and even verbalizing the Tetragrammaton (which Mark does not say Jesus did), contrary to popular belief, was not, per se blasphemy. "Son of God" was not a claim to divinity either. All kings were sons of God, and even thoufh the Messiah was sometimes referred to as the son of God, the Messiah still wasn't God, so it doesn't matter. Messiah Son of God Son of Man None of those things implied divinity in normal, 1st Century Palestinian Aramaic speech, in Hebrew scripture or in Jewish tradition. |
04-12-2012, 06:06 AM | #30 | |
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