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08-24-2008, 05:38 AM | #1031 | ||
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The winner takes it all. The victor writes the history, not the vanquished. Had Constantine adopted Apollonius and his followers instead of christianity, perhaps millions of people would be atheist already by now. |
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08-24-2008, 09:56 AM | #1032 |
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In fairness to Steve, I think it is reasonable to conclude that the author of Luke intended his two suddenly appearing and shining men to be understood as angels. Even if he had not had the women later describe them as such, I would still be inclined toward that conclusion due to the sudden nature of their appearance and their shining garments.
Unlike Mark's young man in white, suddenly appearing out of nowhere in shining garments does suggest something supernatural about the men. The fact that Mark mentions a similarly anonymous (albeit naked) young man during the arrest scene is yet more ammunition against Steve's baseless assumption about the young man in white in the tomb. The rather obvious possible connection between the naked, fleeing young man who followed Jesus and young man clothed in white who recalled Jesus' repeated instrucitons has been noted by several scholars, I believe. |
08-24-2008, 12:27 PM | #1033 | ||||
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No, they are all wearing immaculately white robes. Matthew says their countenance is shining in the same way that Stephen when stoned in Acts had the countenance of an Angel. Quote:
However, the only miracle I am interested in is the empty tomb next to the young man. I am not suggesting it is an Angel because it has to be. I am sugesting that the young man is supernatural because he is announcing the resurrection. If you read the young man to be a man, that is fine with me. It is unlikely that is the authors intent. Matthew and Luke both concur they are Angels, Luke also refers to the Angels as young men so their is a precedent for that. Mark is obviously saying the same thing because the young man is wearing white robes and announcing a resurrection. ~Steve |
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08-24-2008, 12:39 PM | #1034 | |
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I will take any fairness I can get. As far as Marks young men. One young man... (Mark 14:51) A young man was following him, wearing only a linen cloth. They tried to arrest him, (Mark 14:52) but he ran off naked, leaving his linen cloth behind. The other young man... (Mark 16:5) Then as they went into the tomb, they saw a young man dressed in a white robe sitting on the right side; and they were alarmed.What do you propose are the similarities and the meaning behind them? |
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08-24-2008, 02:04 PM | #1035 | |
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Anonymous Young Male Followed Jesus/Recalled Jesus' repeated central instruction/prediction = close association Stripped naked/clothed in white = purity? I don't know whether they really are supposed to be the same guy and I don't know what the varying descriptions of him meant to Mark or his audience, if they are the same figure, but I do know there is nothing supernatural about the description of him in the tomb. |
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08-24-2008, 02:05 PM | #1036 | |||
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08-25-2008, 05:25 AM | #1037 |
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Of course it's a story that developed over time. Corpses don't suddenly revive and walk out of their tombs.
If it was so, it would have been the single most spectacular miracle to have ever happened since the Big Bang, and would be written in each and every historical book of that period. All over the known world writers would make mention of it. That apart from the gospels, there is not a whisper anywhere about such a stupendous event can only prove that it's a myth. |
08-25-2008, 07:00 AM | #1038 | ||||||
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Now I think you are embellishing. Mark doesn't say "immaculate" and immaculate can have a non-supernatural meaning. Quote:
So then, if angels take on the appearance of men, and if men sometimes look like angels, on what basis do we conclude that Mark's young man is really an angel? Quote:
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Remember, Mark's young man said, "He is risen." He didn't say, "I saw him rise from the dead." As far as we know, no one saw Jesus' eyes flutter open, nor saw him sit up and walk away. When I walk through a graveyard and see an open grave, the first thing that I conclude is NOT that a resurrection must have occurred, not even if some strange man tugs my sleeve and swears the corpse is walking around somewhere. But this thread is not about the absurdity of a resurrection, but about contradictory elements in the stories. And you yourself have begun referring to Mark's single young man, which contradicts Luke's and John's pair of individuals. Here's a question: if a long lost gospel were suddenly discovered that said it was three angels that announced the resurrection, would you then adjust your thinking to have three young men sitting in Mark's tomb with only one as spokesman? What about four angels, all sitting in an increasingly crowded tomb? What about a heavenly host to parallel Jesus' birth? Is there any number that would disqualify Mark as a reliable chronicler? After all, that's what happened already, isn't it? Mark's gospel was first with his single young man. One or two decades later, Luke says it was two men (later identified as angels) and every apologist had to adjust his/her thinking. Suddenly Mark really meant two men/angels--he only wrote about the one because the second didn't actually say or do anything. Most apologists have been able to make this adjustment without even breathing hard. So with that precedent, isn't it possible that Mark really meant three angels--provided another legitimate gospel said so? Or four? On the other hand, if Mark's story can be retconned to turn one character into two--all thanks to the latecomer Luke' story--then why couldn't that character turn from a man to an angel for the same reason? |
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08-25-2008, 08:34 AM | #1039 |
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I don't understand your confusion. According to Strong's, the word optasia means, in this context: a sight, a vision, an appearance presented to one whether asleep or awake. What other word would you expect?
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08-25-2008, 09:53 AM | #1040 | ||
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It is at least prima-facie plausible that an early 3rd century text with significant similarities to late 1st century texts has been influenced, directly or indirectly, by the earlier works. Andrew Criddle |
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