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10-16-2012, 08:58 PM | #41 |
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sometimes, all too often however, when both groups get to chanting Jesus! Jesus! Jesus!
that difference becomes too minuscule to detect. |
10-17-2012, 03:24 AM | #42 | ||||||
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So part of the picture of gJohn's christology is that God is working through Jesus, throught the "signs," to have people come to belief. That Jesus is God period! is a categorial simplification that belongs to the much later creeds of Christianity... In gMark it's obviously not the same as in gJohn, but Jesus also exercises the power of God in much the same way though perhaps not to the same end. Quote:
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10-17-2012, 08:13 AM | #43 |
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10-17-2012, 06:19 PM | #44 | |
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Most 'Christian scholars' will be found regularly attending Church services and singing their paeans of praise to Jebus. I seriously doubt that they walk out of that door free from any bias. I have never yet heard a Christian scholar that did not betray his religious biases. |
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10-17-2012, 06:37 PM | #45 | |||
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and if one has any education in this field, I would say it's all based on the work provided. it would be like me saying Price is a myther and has nothing credible to offer. fact is, because I think his arrow is off, doesnt mean despite that, he doesnt offer anything i can learn. Quote:
Some yes some no. If one knows the subject, one can spot the bias. Quote:
and in this case, others here are purposely confusing the two to promote mythicism, not holding the work for its own merit. i look at it as a ignorant mistake |
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10-18-2012, 04:10 AM | #46 | ||
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How else should Mark have written the dialogue of the High Priest with Jesus, so that Jesus replies to his question in the affirmative? Are you the fella that published "Quirks and Quacks"? I am How else does one reply to an inquiry seeking assurance of identity? |
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10-18-2012, 09:49 PM | #47 | ||
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In Mark 14:62, Jesus' response "I am" can indeed be taken as a circumlocution for the name YHWH, which in that period only the HP was supposed to utter on the Day of Atonement. The circumlocution is based on Exodus 3:14 Lxx ("ego eimi ho wn) = I am the Being), by using a part of the phrase as a substitute for the whole phrase. Obviously, had Jesus actually spoken God's name, the HP would have considered this blashphemy.
The circumlocution, which only works in Greek, not Hebrew, may have been introduced by the author of Mark, to downplay a real "blasphemy" on Jesus' part, because it could also mean simply "(Yes) I am (the Christ)." The section of Jesus' response following "I am" is in my opinion clearly based on Daniel 7:13, where "one like a son of man" approaches God himself (maybe they were on a first name basis ). The healed man in John 9:9 was not standing before the High Priest, just answering a question. In John 18:5, Jesus responds to the group seeking to arrest him with an "I am" which startles the group so much that they fall to the ground. This would be appropriate of they thought he was uttering the divine name, even in circumlocution. In Mark, Jesus, when before the high priest, could have just as easily said "Yes, I am the Christ". DCH RSV Mark 14:62 And Jesus said, "I am; and you will see the Son of man seated at the right hand of Power, and coming with the clouds of heaven." Quote:
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10-18-2012, 10:52 PM | #48 |
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I would even go one step further and theorize that the name Jesus might well be related to yesh ('being' in Hebrew, yahweh comes from a root which actually means 'to become'). But that's just speculation. I would add John 8:58 Peshitta to the list. Jesus is saying - I am the God who appeared in the burning bush to Moses, the Being of Plato not necessarily Yahweh - indeed according to the uber-Platonizing heretics (Marcion) certainly not Yahweh.
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10-19-2012, 04:26 AM | #49 | ||||
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And I think it can be argued that in Mark 6:50 is one such place. Another place is John 8:58, "Before Abraham was, I am" where "am" (ειμι) obviously should've been in a different tense than the present tense such as imperfect, or a different wording all together for it to make sense. But what is the sense? It's either a grammatical error on part of the evangelist and copyists or something else is at play, i.e. εγω ειμι is a phrase with extra meaning. "Before Abraham was, I am" can only refer to the divine in some way, cf. the Prologue. There are more examples in gJohn also, such as 8:24 and 8:28 among others, also Stephan mentions Peshitta's John 8:58. So if εγω ειμι has this extra meaning here, then it's certainly possible that Mark also has Jesus say alot more than just a flat "I am" to the high priest. Quote:
Also DCHindley has some good points. Stephan, I believe C.F.Volney (the original MJ!) also proposed this in his Ruins. Or maybe it was something similar, in the chapter Christianity, or the allegorical worship of the sun under the cabbalistical names of Chris-en or Christ, and Yês-us or Jesus. |
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10-19-2012, 08:34 AM | #50 | ||||||
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In gJohn, Jesus is introduced as the Word that was God from the very first verse. In gJohn, Jesus was God from the very beginning. John 1.1 Quote:
Jesus was the Only begotten Son of God in gJohn. John 3.16 Quote:
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John 10:30 Quote:
This is an excerpt of the final prayer of the Johanine Jesus. John 17:1 Quote:
The Jesus character was Son of God in the Entire NT Canon without a human father. |
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