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Old 01-15-2012, 12:47 PM   #21
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I guess I should have given this thread the title “how did Clement reconcile an impassable God with the Passion?”. But I would never have the participation we're seeing here
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Old 01-15-2012, 07:41 PM   #22
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Clement would have opposed the idea of God having any “passion” or feeling “passionate” including suffering of any kind. Impassibility means to be devoid of feelings, passion
The same may be said of Arius of Alexandria, whom Constantine quotes as saying:
“Away! I do not wish God to appear
to be subject to suffering of outrages ...
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Old 01-16-2012, 02:23 AM   #23
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600 years is crackers? jesus came more than 1000 years after moses, isn't that crackers ? jesus claims his new herectic judaism is right, the pharisees claim their ancient traditions were right, so according to you jesus was crackers.


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God on a cross is not of human origin. It's too strong.

God coming off a cross after 600 years is crackers. Deity cannot have allowed a fundamental error to go uncorrected so long.
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Old 01-16-2012, 03:44 AM   #24
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Clement would have opposed the idea of God having any “passion” or feeling “passionate” including suffering of any kind. Impassibility means to be devoid of feelings, passion
The same may be said of Arius of Alexandria, whom Constantine quotes as saying:
“Away! I do not wish God to appear
to be subject to suffering of outrages ...
Was that the deviancy of Arius, of Constantine, or of both? The natural tendency of those who feel the most guilt, who feel unable to give up their wrongdoing, is to describe what they well know to be the just judgment of deity as defective, delinquent behaviour on the part of deity. It's only to be expected from such persons.
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Old 01-16-2012, 05:28 AM   #25
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The real problem is explaining how God ended up on a Cross, why Muslims deny the crucifixion of Jesus from the get go, why the heretics denied Jesus was crucified in some form.
The Muslims deny the crucifixion of Jesus from the get go because they simply chose to follow the accounts of the heretics as your opening post adequately discloses. As for the vile Gnostic heretics, everyone knows that this abominable class of living creatures denied the integrity of the canonical books of the new testament, and as a result authored their own totally unofficial versions. (which the Muslims borrowed)

The only real question is therefore explaining how the canonical God, portrayed as a partial ascetic, ended up on a Roman Cross in downtown Jerusalem, ultimately triggering a mass zombie resurrection event, and many centuries afterwards, the Licona Zombie controversy.
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Old 01-16-2012, 06:25 AM   #26
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The only real question is therefore explaining how the canonical God, portrayed as a partial ascetic, ended up on a Roman Cross in downtown Jerusalem, ultimately triggering a mass zombie resurrection event, and many centuries
afterwards, the Licona Zombie controversy.
Nothing is easier to answer. One does not need to read history. One does not need to read the media. One needs only to examine conscience.
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Old 01-16-2012, 07:00 AM   #27
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Nothing is easier to answer.
I notice, though, that you don't actually answer it.
Just more vague mysticism-sounding allusions.

Where was that conversation, about unanswered question drive people away, even when something shaped like an answer is offered as a placeholder?
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Old 01-16-2012, 11:00 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by sotto voce View Post
Nothing is easier to answer.
I notice, though, that you don't actually answer it.
Just more vague mysticism-sounding allusions.

Where was that conversation, about unanswered question drive people away, even when something shaped like an answer is offered as a placeholder?
In the Republic of Plato, irrascible Thrasymachus demands of Socrates:
Rather (than turn a request for a direct answer into a game of "question and answer"), you yourself (i.e., Socrates) answer and tell, what is right/necessary, without (asking) what (is) beneficial, or what (is) profitable, or what (is) gainful, or what (is) advantageous, but express clearly and precisely whatever you say. (Republic, 1.336c-d)
As Origen said of Celsus:
[He is like] him who should admit the existence of sophisms and plausible arguments, which have the appearance of establishing the truth, although really undermining it, while denying that truth had anywhere a home among men, or a dialectic which differed from sophistry." (Against Celsus 2:51)
What does it all mean? Hell, I don't know ... :constern01:

DCH
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Old 01-16-2012, 10:53 PM   #29
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The "Passion" seems to appear in Acts....

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Originally Posted by Act 1:3

To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God:
What is the Greek word used, and does it appear in the earliest codices?

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1:3 οἷς καὶ παρέστησεν ἑαυτὸν ζῶντα μετὰ τὸ παθεῖν αὐτὸν ἐν πολλοῖς τεκμηρίοις δι᾽ ἡμερῶν τεσσαράκοντα ὀπτανόμενος αὐτοῖς καὶ λέγων τὰ περὶ τῆς βασιλείας τοῦ θεοῦ
"His passion" = τὸ παθεῖν αὐτὸν

τὸ (article, single accusative neuter) = the

παθεῖν (verb, aorist infinitive active) = to have suffered*

αὐτὸν (personal / possessive pronoun, 3rd person singular accusative masculine) = him

* from πάσχω: I am acted upon in a certain way, either good or bad; I experience ill treatment, suffer.

In this context, his passion means his suffering. The writer of Acts is talking of Jesus as someone who actually suffered on an actual Roman execution pole/cross.

Doesn't necessarily mean he died! In gLuke 24 he devours a piece of fish like a normal person who hasn't eaten for three days and during that time had been through... a lot.

Edit: Damn, I should have gone through the rest of the thread before clicking the "Quote" button. My bad. But the anecdote in gLuke 24 is still relevant.
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Old 01-17-2012, 01:48 AM   #30
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In line with the idea that it was Judas who was crucified, not Jesus:

gMatthew 27:5

Quote:
So Judas threw the money into the temple and left. Then he went away and hanged himself.
Acts 1:18-19

Quote:
(With the reward he got for his wickedness, Judas bought a field; there he fell headlong, his body burst open and all his intestines spilled out. Everyone in Jerusalem heard about this, so they called that field in their language Akeldama, that is, Field of Blood.)
In the other thread (stauros vs. xylon), I showed that regular Roman cucifixion was (at least sometimes) a form of impalement. Although the epigraphy indicates it was a "safe" impalement, could it have been that sometimes it was "unsafe"? That is, if one hanged down for too long, the spike, or projection / transgression of a seat as Tertullian called it, would punch through the abdomen and the condemned man's intestines spill out? In his book, Crucifixion, pg. 32 (footnote 25) Martin Hengel says that lines 543 through 547 of Lucan, The Civil War cover the subject.

Lucan, The Civil War (Pharsalia) 6.538-553 Link to English Link to Latin

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But those who lie within a stony cell
Untouched by fire, whose dried and mummied frames
No longer know corruption, limb by limb
Venting her rage she tears, the bloodless eyes
Drags from their cavities, and mauls the nail
Upon the withered hand: she gnaws the noose
By which some wretch has died, and from the tree
Drags down a pendent corpse, its members torn
Asunder to the winds
: forth from the palms
Wrenches the iron, and from the unbending bond
Hangs by her teeth, and with her hands collects
The slimy gore which drips upon the limbs.
Where lay a corpse upon the naked earth
On ravening birds and beasts of prey the hag
Kept watch, nor marred by knife or hand her spoil,
Till on his victim seized some nightly wolf;
Then dragged the morsel from his thirsty fangs
Quote:
Ast ubi servantur saxis, quibus intimus humor
Ducitur, et tracta durescunt tabe medullae
Corpora; tunc omnes avide desaevit in artus,
Immersitque manus oculis, gaudetque gelatos
Effodisse orbes, et siccae pallida rodit
Excrementa manus: laqueum nodosque nocentes
Ore suo rupit: pendentia corpora carpsit,
Abrasitque cruces: percussaque viscera nimbis
Vulsit, et incoctas admisso sole medullas.

Insertum manibus chalybem, nigramque per artus
Stillantis tabi saniem, virusque coactum
Sustulit, et nervo morsus retinente pependit.
Et quodcumque iacet nuda tellure cadaver,
Ante feras volucresque sedet: nec carpere membra
Vult ferro manibusque suis, morsusque luporum
Exspectat, siccis raptura a faucibus artus.
I am going to focus on lines 544b through 546 because the Riley 1905 translation hides something that was just too much for Edwardian tastes.

pendentia corpora carpsit, = she pulls off the hanging corpse. So far, so good.

Abrasitque cruces: = and rubs off the cross. And alternate and better translation would be: and 'shaves' the impaling stake.

percussaque viscera nimbis vulsit = and the entrails that have been thrust through she pulls out in clouds.

et incoctas admisso sole medullas = and the intestines have been boiled by being exposed to the sun.

So you see, sometimes crucifixion was a form of unsafe impalement: the crucified one hanged impaled, and once his legs were too weak to push up or were broken the spike would punch through the abdomen, possibly causing the intestines to fall out.

So if Judas were crucified in lieu of Jesus it would certainly explain two blatantly contradictory verses concerning his death. And also why in gLuke Jesus was able to eat the fish! And the Field of Blood would definitely be a more logical name for an excecution field in those days than Skull Place.

So yes, I can see a tradition that Judas was crucified instead becoming established long before islam came onto the scene.
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