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Old 09-23-2008, 03:55 PM   #11
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What are your thoughts on these issues? For now, let's keep the discussion related to this second coming stuff in the gospels, and not talk other prophecies.

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The idea of "coming on clouds" with great power or a similar metaphor is used many times in the Hebrew Bible and elsewhere too probably (think of baal rinding clouds in Ugaritic texts)

Later christians interpreters changed the meaning of this metaphor to be some kind of physical second coming.
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Old 09-23-2008, 09:39 PM   #12
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If the Son of Man/Christ was yet to come, why does Mark (or the author thereof) write about him as talking, debating, walking the earth, being questioned at trial, and then executed on a cross? You mean to say that this "first Christ" is symbolic of the Christian community, and that the "second Christ" (the one whose coming is prophesied) was yet to come in Mark's view--right? But why would Mark speak about a symbolic fellow in the first case, and make a switch to a real flesh and blood character in the second?
Your question is a bit difficult to follow. In what way has Mark "switched" to a real flesh and blood character in the second? The expectation of the Christ which we find in the NT epistles is of a divine figure who is regarded as a part of God, and in the background to the Gospels (in Q) it is of a lesser divine entity known as the Son of Man. The two were quite distinct before they became merged. Neither one is "flesh and blood" in the human sense.

Mark created Christianity as we know it by merging two different religious expressions on the first century scene, originally unconnected. The Gospel story of the ministry of Jesus, involving the teachings, miracle-working and apocalyptic prophecy, was representative of a Kingdom of God preaching movement centered in Galilee. It had nothing to do with a savior figure who had undergone a sacrificial death and a resurrection, which is why those things are not to be found in the Q document.

The other element was the cultic Christ movement, as represented in Paul and the other NT epistles, along with several non-canonical documents of the first century. It believed in a spiritual Son of God who had undergone a death and resurrection in the spiritual world (you have to know something about the mystery cults and the Platonic cosmology of the period to understand how that worked). Mark took that separate element and brought it down to earth, adding the death-resurrection part of his story to the ministry part, setting it in recent history.

There is nothing mystical about it. It is a classic case of religious syncretism, embodied in a symbolic story which combined the two expressions in a piece of fiction, drawing on the beliefs and practices of the Kingdom-preaching community as the setting for the ministry and using scriptural passages to construct most of the portrayed events in both the ministry and the Passion, in a process known as midrash.

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Old 09-23-2008, 11:01 PM   #13
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Mark created Christianity as we know it by merging two different religious expressions on the first century scene, originally unconnected. The Gospel story of the ministry of Jesus, involving the teachings, miracle-working and apocalyptic prophecy, was representative of a Kingdom of God preaching movement centered in Galilee. It had nothing to do with a savior figure who had undergone a sacrificial death and a resurrection, which is why those things are not to be found in the Q document.
Nobody has found anything in the Q document, because nobody has even found Q, right? How do you know the death and resurrection wasn't found in Q? I guess I've heard that Q is the religious teachings of somebody (who in the mystical view was later interpreted to be Christ by Christians), but I don't know how limited its scope is.


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The other element was the cultic Christ movement, as represented in Paul and the other NT epistles, along with several non-canonical documents of the first century. It believed in a spiritual Son of God who had undergone a death and resurrection in the spiritual world (you have to know something about the mystery cults and the Platonic cosmology of the period to understand how that worked). Mark took that separate element and brought it down to earth, adding the death-resurrection part of his story to the ministry part, setting it in recent history.
And this view makes more sense than some historical guy inspiring the stories by actually dying and rising from the dead?
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Old 09-23-2008, 11:23 PM   #14
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If the Son of Man/Christ was yet to come, why does Mark (or the author thereof) write about him as talking, debating, walking the earth, being questioned at trial, and then executed on a cross? You mean to say that this "first Christ" is symbolic of the Christian community, and that the "second Christ" (the one whose coming is prophesied) was yet to come in Mark's view--right? But why would Mark speak about a symbolic fellow in the first case, and make a switch to a real flesh and blood character in the second?
Your question is a bit difficult to follow. In what way has Mark "switched" to a real flesh and blood character in the second? The expectation of the Christ which we find in the NT epistles is of a divine figure who is regarded as a part of God, and in the background to the Gospels (in Q) it is of a lesser divine entity known as the Son of Man. The two were quite distinct before they became merged. Neither one is "flesh and blood" in the human sense.

Mark created Christianity as we know it by merging two different religious expressions on the first century scene, originally unconnected. The Gospel story of the ministry of Jesus, involving the teachings, miracle-working and apocalyptic prophecy, was representative of a Kingdom of God preaching movement centered in Galilee. It had nothing to do with a savior figure who had undergone a sacrificial death and a resurrection, which is why those things are not to be found in the Q document.

The other element was the cultic Christ movement, as represented in Paul and the other NT epistles, along with several non-canonical documents of the first century. It believed in a spiritual Son of God who had undergone a death and resurrection in the spiritual world (you have to know something about the mystery cults and the Platonic cosmology of the period to understand how that worked). Mark took that separate element and brought it down to earth, adding the death-resurrection part of his story to the ministry part, setting it in recent history.

There is nothing mystical about it. It is a classic case of religious syncretism, embodied in a symbolic story which combined the two expressions in a piece of fiction, drawing on the beliefs and practices of the Kingdom-preaching community as the setting for the ministry and using scriptural passages to construct most of the portrayed events in both the ministry and the Passion, in a process known as midrash.

Earl Doherty
I thought Q was common to Matthew and Luke and excluded from Mark.
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Old 09-24-2008, 12:44 AM   #15
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Mark created Christianity as we know it by merging two different religious expressions on the first century scene, originally unconnected. The Gospel story of the ministry of Jesus, involving the teachings, miracle-working and apocalyptic prophecy, was representative of a Kingdom of God preaching movement centered in Galilee. It had nothing to do with a savior figure who had undergone a sacrificial death and a resurrection, which is why those things are not to be found in the Q document.
Nobody has found anything in the Q document, because nobody has even found Q, right? How do you know the death and resurrection wasn't found in Q? I guess I've heard that Q is the religious teachings of somebody (who in the mystical view was later interpreted to be Christ by Christians), but I don't know how limited its scope is.
We haven't found Q per se, but we have a document that very strongly supports the hypothesis, appears to be related, and gives us a good idea of what was in Q.
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The other element was the cultic Christ movement, as represented in Paul and the other NT epistles, along with several non-canonical documents of the first century. It believed in a spiritual Son of God who had undergone a death and resurrection in the spiritual world (you have to know something about the mystery cults and the Platonic cosmology of the period to understand how that worked). Mark took that separate element and brought it down to earth, adding the death-resurrection part of his story to the ministry part, setting it in recent history.
And this view makes more sense than some historical guy inspiring the stories by actually dying and rising from the dead?
Uh, yeah. Let's see. We know of plenty of other examples of different religious views merging and mixing together. Can you give us other known examples of dead people coming back to life and floating up to the sky?
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Old 09-24-2008, 01:54 AM   #16
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Please forgive me for butting in on this rather Americans only debate, but I have to tell you that if you were to mention any "second coming" to a member of the used-to-be-official Lutheran Evangelical Church of Sweden or to any other citizen hereabouts, you would probably just get a blank stare.
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Old 09-24-2008, 05:37 AM   #17
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To pick a verse as an example at random: Mk 13:23b "But in those days, after that time of distress, the sun will be darkened, the moon will lose its brightness, the stars will come falling from heaven and the powers in the heavens will be shaken". This does not refer to some very nasty pre-apocalyptic weather as the Rapture fruitcakes would have us believe. A reading of chapters of OT such as Isaiah 13, 14, 34; Ezekiel 32; Joel 2, 3; Amos 8; Zephaniah 1; reveals that it is extensively used as a prophetic idiom for the destruction of a nation (such as Babylon). Jesus was alluding to these passages and giving Jerusalem and the Judaic system as the latest for a Babylon style destruction. "Punch your lights out" is sort of there as equivalent.
I could go on and argue similarly for each verse of the passages, but space...
JW:
This is the type of nonsense that passes for scholarship at Tweeb.

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Mark 13:26 And then shall they see the Son of man coming in clouds with great power and glory.

Mark 13:27 And then shall he send forth the angels, and shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from the uttermost part of the earth to the uttermost part of heaven.


Mark 13:28 Now from the fig tree learn her parable: when her branch is now become tender, and putteth forth its leaves, ye know that the summer is nigh;

Mark 13:29 even so ye also, when ye see these things coming to pass, know ye that he is nigh, [even] at the doors.

Mark 13:30 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass away, until all these things be accomplished.
JW:
You need to deal with the Text and not avoid it. The context of "Mark" in total is clearly sooner rather than later. Giving all you have to charity in order to follow Jesus so that you have to get all you have from charity can only last for so long.

The simple explanation is that "Mark" has intentionally made his Jesus give a false prophecy. The External evidence indicates "Mark" is second century. At the Text level "Mark's" Jesus is clearly a Failure. His Mission is to convince the Disciples that he will be resurrected. They never believe that he will be and when he is actually resurrected they still don't believe it. How Ironic. If "Mark" is writing 2nd century than his audience would know that the prophecy of 13:30 was a Failure.



Joseph

http://www.errancywiki.com/index.php?title=Main_Page
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Old 09-24-2008, 08:36 AM   #18
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The simple explanation is that "Mark" has intentionally made his Jesus give a false prophecy. The External evidence indicates "Mark" is second century. At the Text level "Mark's" Jesus is clearly a Failure. His Mission is to convince the Disciples that he will be resurrected. They never believe that he will be and when he is actually resurrected they still don't believe it. How Ironic. If "Mark" is writing 2nd century than his audience would know that the prophecy of 13:30 was a Failure.
In your view, are Matthew and Luke trying to "correct" Mark or did they both miss the point?
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Old 09-24-2008, 01:14 PM   #19
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This is the type of nonsense that passes for scholarship at Tweeb.
Guessing…you’re not a Kim Possible fan, and you mean TWeb. Actually I’m more of a Ship of Fools poster, where they crucify bad Christian argument without a second thought.
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Mark 13:26 And then shall they see the Son of man coming in clouds with great power and glory.

Mark 13:27 And then shall he send forth the angels, and shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from the uttermost part of the earth to the uttermost part of heaven.


<snip>

Mark 13:30 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass away, until all these things be accomplished.
JW:
You need to deal with the Text and not avoid it. The context of "Mark" in total is clearly sooner rather than later.
I completely agree with both of those. Indeed my point is that rather than seeing this section as a prophecy of the end of the world, it was the immediate context of the destruction of the Temple/ end of Second Temple Judaism that was in view.

I’m not sure where you’re going with the two highlighted passages, but very briefly; 13:26 is a reference to Daniel 7, so Jesus is aligning himself with that prophecy there; 13:27 “angels” - “angeloi” can equally naturally be “messengers”. Jesus is speaking of spreading his message around the world. Deuteronomy 30:2-5 is the relevant allusion here.

Quote:
The simple explanation is that "Mark" has intentionally made his Jesus give a false prophecy. The External evidence indicates "Mark" is second century. At the Text level "Mark's" Jesus is clearly a Failure. His Mission is to convince the Disciples that he will be resurrected. They never believe that he will be and when he is actually resurrected they still don't believe it. How Ironic. If "Mark" is writing 2nd century than his audience would know that the prophecy of 13:30 was a Failure.


In what way is this explanation “simple“? It’s creative, for sure.

On dating of Mark, and an explanation of what I’m trying to say from a source you’re much more likely to trust:

http://web.archive.org/web/200502150....com/mark.html

It’s not just the atheists who valued that site…
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Old 09-24-2008, 01:31 PM   #20
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The simple explanation is that "Mark" has intentionally made his Jesus give a false prophecy. The External evidence indicates "Mark" is second century. At the Text level "Mark's" Jesus is clearly a Failure. His Mission is to convince the Disciples that he will be resurrected. They never believe that he will be and when he is actually resurrected they still don't believe it. How Ironic. If "Mark" is writing 2nd century than his audience would know that the prophecy of 13:30 was a Failure.
In what way is this explanation “simple“? It’s creative, for sure.
Joe and others here see gMark as some kind of fiction or allegory, rather than a straight account of actual events. Thus instead of victory, Mark is giving us a failed messiah, presented with irony rather than reverence [apologies if I've messed up the paraphrase]

R.G. Price has a similar take in his essay The Gospel of Mark as Reaction and Allegory
http://www.rationalrevolution.net/ar...ospel_mark.htm
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