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11-03-2005, 06:24 AM | #11 | ||||
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11-03-2005, 07:45 AM | #12 | |
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11-03-2005, 08:09 AM | #13 | |
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11-03-2005, 09:49 AM | #14 | |||||||
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11-03-2005, 11:53 AM | #15 | ||||||
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The requirement that the passage is to be read completely literally is a false requirement. What Paul DOES write suggests that it isn't literal. What Paul DOESN'T write would be unusual if it were literal and referring to current opponents viewpoints. There are non-literal issues that those who knew Jesus would not have been able to resolve with certainty. ted |
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11-03-2005, 03:05 PM | #16 | ||||
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IIUC from the Blue Letter Bible, Paul uses a different word for "another" with "Jesus" than he does with either "gospel" or "spirit". For the latter, he uses heteros which means "another" either in the sense of numbering or in the sense of quality. It seems to me that Paul intends the latter. For the former, though, he uses allos which just has "another" as the definition but I looked at the examples of it elsewhere and it seemed to always be used to mean "different". Mt 8:9 and 2:12 are examples of what I'm saying. It seems to me that your argument would have obtained support had Paul chosen to use the same word for all three since heteros appears to carry precisely the implication you want for the other reference. Absent any other reason for Paul to make this choice, I would say this pretty well establishes that he intended it to mean exactly what it appears to mean (ie a different Jesus). Quote:
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11-03-2005, 03:26 PM | #17 | |
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11-03-2005, 08:40 PM | #18 | ||||
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We've encountered this extreme literalism now in several of our discussions. When I propose a different interpretation which is commonly used, you tend to dismiss it or minimize it. And round and round we go. Quote:
I think also it is quite possible that Paul saw his opponent's viewpoints about Jesus (maybe the risen Jesus?) as so different from his own that he considered their Jesus to really be like a completely different "other" Jesus. The one commentator I looked at the Blue Letter Bible site you referenced suggested that the "other" Jesus may have been one who was more like a "super Jesus"--one who didn't really suffer, etc.. That, of course, could be either a different conception of an imagined heavenly Jesus (like two different persons named Jesus), or it could be a different conception of the same earthly Jesus based on one's own ideas about how his divine nature was manifested in his human form. I just think you are trying to make a case based on a phrase that can easily be interpreted in many different ways, and I don't think the fact that Paul used different greek words does much to change that fact. Quote:
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I keep coming back to "where's this other Jesus" in Paul's writings? If there was some other Jesus I'd expect a heck of a lot more than a reference (that may even be hypothetical) to this person/being and the utter and compete absence of any rebuttle to any description or authority attributed to him. I don't know what more to say. Once again we seem to have different opinions because we apply different criteria to determinie the meanings of words or phrases, yours being more strict than mine. ted |
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11-04-2005, 10:19 AM | #19 | ||||||||||||
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smack: 3. To strike sharply and with a loud noise. blast: 7. A powerful hit, blow, or shot. Quote:
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11-04-2005, 10:35 AM | #20 | |
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To me we can't know which is more likely. Therefore, "another John" has no one plain meaning. If you can answer this in a way that helps me see it differently, maybe I'll learn something. If you can't, we might as well hang this one up. ted |
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