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12-06-2011, 10:42 AM | #21 | |
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The author of gMark wrote a story AFTER the Fall of the Temple and people of antiquity BELIEVED it. It appears that it was the gMark's story that was BELIEVED because it seemed to give a PLAUSIBLE explanation for the Fall of the Jewish Temple and the destruction of Jerusalem. If Jesus was actually human he could NOT have performed a single miracle as described. As a mere human, he could NOT have fed the hungry Jews, could NOT walk on water or Transfigure. In gMark 2.23, the disciples of Jesus were so hungry and probably broke they were basically "stealing" corn from the corn fields. It was the gMark story itself that appears to have been initially BELIEVED in antiquity and then ADDITIONS were made afterwards to include Universal Salvation and that Jesus was a Jewish Messiah. |
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12-06-2011, 12:22 PM | #22 |
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Is this supposed to make a point? For approximately 1800 years the Christian church established the correct interpretation of Scripture, based on its dogmatic authority and the power of the allied secular kings who ruled by the grace of the Christian god. It is only in the past few centuries that anyone outside the church hierarchy has been able to read the Bible and try to understand what it actually means.
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12-06-2011, 02:07 PM | #23 | ||
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I know. Who do you think you are typing too? Some sort of clown or something? |
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12-06-2011, 02:16 PM | #24 | ||
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12-06-2011, 02:21 PM | #25 | |||
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12-06-2011, 02:27 PM | #26 | |
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It’s not like Mark is sitting back wondering what qualities Jesus has. It like Mark is sitting back and giving Jesus the characteristics he wants to give him. |
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12-06-2011, 02:32 PM | #27 | ||
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Like Jesus, as it happens. |
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12-06-2011, 02:37 PM | #28 | |
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It looks to me like somebody combined these passages into a single idea: That the ‘Son of Man’ would raise a bunch of dead people on the third day. |
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12-06-2011, 02:52 PM | #29 | |
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To this end we have a Catholic version of Mark which is plainly aware of a heretical version of the same text. The 'openness' of the interpretation may well have been the design of the Catholic redactor not Mark. As such the ambiguity here may well be uncharacteristic of Jesus uncharacteristic of Mark and only result from sabotage on the part of the founders of our ecumenical tradition - i.e. to make the text 'agree' with the emerging consensus of the 'great Church' in the third century. |
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12-06-2011, 03:00 PM | #30 |
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But Mark's account of Jesus' character is precisely that he wanted to let people decide for themselves. They ran off and disobediently told others about him— except at the very end, when the penny dropped, and they realised what he was about. Irony. Not that Mark explicitly tells the reader that, of course.
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