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03-10-2013, 05:15 PM | #31 |
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03-10-2013, 05:19 PM | #32 | |
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03-10-2013, 08:53 PM | #33 | |
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The messiah dying according to your scheme achieves nothing. He could have come and frolicked a while then left without all the stagecraft. Dying for people's sin makes no sense if the dying achieves nothing, is not necessary. Christianity works on the notion of redemption, ie something is paid to redeem. That payment is central to the religion, the emblem of Jesus dying on the cross. The sinless person acting as a proxy can redeem the sinner. The death of Jesus frees the sinner from the law. One can understand why Marcion did not like the lawgiver. If you disagree with the above, perhaps you can explain the purpose of the death of Jesus: what did the death itself do. |
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03-10-2013, 08:56 PM | #34 | |
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03-10-2013, 09:05 PM | #35 |
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03-10-2013, 10:42 PM | #36 |
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I posted this elsewhere, but perhaps in a different context, so here it is again.
Jesus came to pay a ransom for the souls of those who believed in him. In Romans 3:24, the word “redemption” (apolytrosis) means release, or deliverance on the payment of a price. (cf Eph. 1:7-8). One doesn't have to pay a ransom to another being over which you have complete power. Indeed, an all powerful God could simply forgive sins by divine fiat without anyone having to die. The ransom is an indication that Christian origins were fundamentally dualistic (and hence "heretical" by orthodox standards). The highest God was not conceived-at least in the current age--to have authority over the powers of darkness (i.e. the god of this world and his minions), and thus had to bargain with that entity in order to secure the release of those who believed in Jesus. But this doesn't work out too well for the orthodox Christianity theology. They must say God paid a ransom to himself to satisfy his requirements for justice or some such nonsense. That the very God who casts souls into hell (blaming the victim for something over which they have no control) would then kill himself, or his divine Son, or an innocent man, or some combination of all of these is incomprehensible. The proto-orthodox have a very hard time explaining to whom the ransom was paid. Clearly it was to the "god of this world" whether he be called the Demiurge or Satan. Did any early Christian sect(s) believe this? The answer is yes, absolutely. But they lost the doctrinal wars of the 2nd thru 4th centuries. Jake |
03-10-2013, 10:49 PM | #37 |
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But at the core of Judaism is the concept of redemption too. I don't follow how this proves 'dualism' at the heart of Christianity. Isn't a straight line the best way to travel from point A to point B.
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03-10-2013, 11:24 PM | #38 |
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03-10-2013, 11:44 PM | #39 |
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Obviously I don't know the answer. But I know that the Marcionite redemption rite is Jewish - lifted from the pages of Philo of Alexandria's treatment of Jacob at Bethel.
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03-11-2013, 12:04 AM | #40 | |
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I was never able to reconcile this with the idea of a death of God on the Cross but that's all that is left for me to explain Marcionitism as a development of Alexandrian Judaism. Here's what I wrote after I had my revelation here at this forum developing one of my many thousand otherwise inane threads:
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http://stephanhuller.blogspot.com/20...terest-in.html and then the aforementioned Marcionite doctrine of redemption as it came from Philo of Alexandria: http://stephanhuller.blogspot.com/20...ndria-was.html http://stephanhuller.blogspot.com/20...anity-and.html As I said, I am not sure death was ever a part of this understanding. I can't see how that comes from Philo. Maybe the death passages were later Catholic interpolations. Haven't looked at this stuff for a while. But I am sure you will see I got at least 75 % of core Marcionitism as developing from Philo or Alexandrian Judaism. |
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