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02-19-2013, 10:04 AM | #61 | |
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02-19-2013, 11:23 AM | #62 | ||||
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[t2]For a child has been born to us, A son has been given to us. And authority has settled on his shoulders. He has been named "The Mighty God is planning grace; The Eternal Father, a peaceable ruler"[/t2] The NRSV is quite similar except for reflecting the more christianizing name: [t2]"Wonderful, Counselor, The mighty God, The Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace"[/t2] Note the fact that the verbs at the start are in the perfect forms, indicating that the child already exists. Some christian translations deliberately use the future to make the "prophecy" clearer. We are in fact dealing with a kingship statement and nothing about the messiah. Isaiah is contextualized in the reigns of Ahaz and his son, Hezekiah, this latter whose name means, not unreasonably, "mighty god" or "Yah is my strength". The text is a specific reference to the Davidic ruler. Once the one born has been seen as Hezekiah and the name has been clarified with reference to "mighty god" there is nothing that is not simple to understand from the context. The Davidic ruler is everlasting father to his people through the continuation of the royal line. Hezekiah is the ruler of peace because he sided with the Assyrians against aggression from Israel and surrounding realms, bringing peace to Jerusalem for some years. Text and context are no help to you. That leaves you with the task of finding something that I specifically asked for, a reference regarding the messiah in the Hebrew bible, not simply a christianizing interpretation of material taken out of context. So for a fourth time could supply a specific reference regarding the messiah in the Hebrew bible? Please choose more carefully next time. Quote:
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02-19-2013, 11:25 AM | #63 | ||
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That is why they combed through the OT for references to tag to Jesus. The new religion had to be the next step to Judaism or else it would have to start from scratch. A Roman savior would have needed his own roots. With a Jewish savior the back story was already there. Traditional Jews rejected the idea of God becoming man or sending a flesh/blood son, but obviously there were many Jews who were influenced to accept the concept. As you said, without historical Jewish theology, Christianity loses its meaning and probably its ability to spread. |
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02-19-2013, 12:29 PM | #64 | |||
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My eyes must be imagining this then:
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But when that illogic (and offensive position towards Jews) is highlighted, the tactic is to deny you are doing so. We note you do not actually make the positive statement "Christianity is not Jewish". If you start with that statement, then obviously you can't contradict yourself immediately afterwards by saying that Christians are the "real" Jews. What Christians need is Jesus to be validated by all the alleged Hebrew Bible prophecies. So they aren't interested in anything except propagating that hijacking of the Jewish scriptures. Quote:
And what will the symptoms be? The symptoms will be the inconsistencies between the original faith and the one laying claim to it. That is exactly what we have here. Otherwise Jews would be Christians. Quote:
Obviously it makes you uncomfortable to have this pointed out. So don't confuse a legitimate reaction to an extreme position with lying in order to evade debate. You've corrected that now, so thank you. |
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02-19-2013, 03:49 PM | #65 | ||
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02-19-2013, 04:32 PM | #66 | ||||||
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I think this is pretty close to the universal view of Christian theologians, and many lay people. It's perhaps the reason the US considers Israel to be a friendly ally. I can't imagine why the Jewish people would find that to be offensive in any way whatsoever. Quote:
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My OP started with 5 premises. I thought they were universally accepted. It still isn't clear to me which ones would not be, or the evidence against them. I then proceeded with 3 statements that I considered to be logical inferences from the 5 premises. It was THOSE that I thought would be under question/debate. Instead this thread proceeded to an amazing degree in a wholly unexpected direction. It really caught me off guard. Spin's claim that the hundreds of Messianic passages are Christian inventions despite being referenced in the ancient Jewish writings, and in many cases unambiguously referring to a future time of peace, etc.. completely threw me off guard as that was one of the 5 premises I thought was accepted by all. I still don't understand where he is coming from on that. |
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02-19-2013, 05:16 PM | #67 | |
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1. Christians are generally ignorant of the significance of the term "messiah" and its Greek translation "christos". 2. Christians routinely take the Hebrew bible out of context when dealing with the concept of the messiah, creating references to the messiah where there are no references at all. 3. Christians routinely aggregate references to kings (textually past, present and future) and various other figures as referring to Jesus, all of which is eisegesis. 4. Messianic Jews also repurposed biblical references when the context of the original statements was obscured. 5. Messianism is a late occurrence from towards the end of the previous era, certainly after the time of the Hellenistic period book of Daniel, so finding messianism in the Hebrew bible is anachronistic. Still don't know where I am coming from? Figures. I await your response to post #62 of this thread. |
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02-19-2013, 05:22 PM | #68 | ||||
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If you had a logical position you would not rely on argumentum ad populum that is wrong even if the fallacy were true. Quote:
The Jews are not Christians. It's as simple as that. The minute you start braying about them not understanding their own scriptures, you have attained a perch of arrogance that is not becoming for men of reason, logic, and consideration towards others. I understand though. At one time I was using Josh McDowell's "Evidence that Demands a Verdict" in speech classes. As an exercise though, I wonder if you could trouble yourself to read up on what the Jews have to say about Christian interpretations of their scriptures. |
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02-19-2013, 06:02 PM | #69 |
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02-19-2013, 07:11 PM | #70 | ||||||
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