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Old 09-16-2010, 02:12 PM   #121
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Gday,

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Spam:
You have gone to a lot of effort to win a concession that I would have made at the outset if you had just asked. For the record:
Rubbish.
You argued specifically AGAINST that point for most of this thread.


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Spam:
It is possible that Matthew got the Nazarene prophesy from an unknown source other than the Hebrew Bible or the Septuagint.
Which is exactly what I pointed out from the begining - which you rejected :

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Second, my statement was that there is no prophesy which says the Messiah would be called a Nazorean in the Hebrew Bible. Do you agree with that statement? If so we must discard the theory that this detail about Jesus came from the Hebrew Bible.

Third I argued that it is unlikely that the author of Matthew would choose the village of Nazareth as the place to which Jesus returned after Egypt to fulfil a nonexistent prophesy.
You argued that being no such prophecy in the OT meant there was NO such prophecy at all.

Now you've changed direction 180 degrees but pretend you always believed it anyway !


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Old 09-16-2010, 02:15 PM   #122
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Gday,

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Spin:
As I indicated earlier on this thread I don't read Greek. Do you? In any event I have no explanation for what you describe, if in fact it is the case.
Why don't you favor us with your explanation?
Steve
spin HAS presented information that shows you wrong.

Your answer :
1. it MIGHT be true (what an insult to spin)
2. I dunno what it means (!)

Steve - it IS true, and it shows you are wrong.
Why ask for it, if you will just wave it away?


K.
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Old 09-16-2010, 02:17 PM   #123
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As I indicated earlier on this thread I don't read Greek. Do you? In any event I have no explanation for what you describe, if in fact it is the case.
This basically indicates you are talking about Nazareth and its implications without having enough information to do so meaningfully.

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Why don't you favor us with your explanation?
Have a look at my blog here for some information on the subject.


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Old 09-16-2010, 02:20 PM   #124
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Kapyong:

It's hardly worth bickering about these things but I stand by what I said in what you quoted me saying. There is no prophesy about a Nazorene in the Hebrew Bible. I said that the prophesy was nonexistent and as far as you can demonstrate it is.

Now, is it possible that in some writing no one has seen such a prophesy might exist. I don’t see how anyone could exclude that possibility. I also don’t see how anyone with a functioning brain could base an argument on a prophesy no one can document.

Steve
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Old 09-16-2010, 02:22 PM   #125
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Spin:

Post a link to your blog and I will give it a look.

Thanks

Steve
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Old 09-16-2010, 02:33 PM   #126
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Spamandham:

To answer your question it is my contention that the Gospel writers and particularly the author of Matthew expected to find references to Jesus in the Hebrew Bible and looked for him there. Matthew in particular was guilty of distorting what was in the Hebrew Bible to make it fit Jesus as best he could. His effort to make his home in Nazareth a fulfillment of prophesy is one of a number of examples.

I don’t know if that’s a yes to your question but it accurately states my contention and the contention of others as well.

Steve
They were all guilty of distortion. Its real simple really if you look at it. Contemporary evidence for this Nazareth does not exist. Why? Who the hell knows? Same goes for Sky Daddy this save the world fellow existed only in the minds of the mythological writers of the time period. Now, if they wrote this junk to pull the sheeples closer together thats fine.
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Old 09-16-2010, 02:35 PM   #127
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...Apologists for Jesus today do the same thing. They mine scripture looking for Jesus somewhere in the Hebrew Bible. They don’t find him there because the Hebrew Bible does not speak of Jesus or anyone like Jesus. That doesn’t stop them from trying though.

Steve.
Well, exactly. Apologists today are doing the same as the authors of the gospels.

Since apologists cannot find any historical records for Jesus they must use so-called prophecies as history.

No amount of rhetoric can mask the fact that:

1. There is NO so-called prophecies that a Messiah called Jesus would live in a CITY called Nazareth.

2. There is NO mention of a CITY called Nazareth in Hebrew Scripture.

3. Josephus lived in Galilee and wrote about CITIES and villages and did NOT mention a CITY called Nazareth.

The theory that a City called Nazareth did exist during the time of the governor Pilate is extremely weak since those who wrote that Jesus lived a CITY called Nazareth are KNOWN fiction writers.
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Old 09-16-2010, 02:43 PM   #128
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Spin:

Post a link to your blog and I will give it a look.

Thanks

Steve
Look at spin's last post, on the left side, where it says "spin" - you will see "blog entries 6". Click on the 6

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Old 09-16-2010, 02:43 PM   #129
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Juststeve View Post
...Apologists for Jesus today do the same thing. They mine scripture looking for Jesus somewhere in the Hebrew Bible. They don’t find him there because the Hebrew Bible does not speak of Jesus or anyone like Jesus. That doesn’t stop them from trying though.

Steve.
Well, exactly. Apologists today are doing the same as the authors of the gospels.

Since apologists cannot find any historical records for Jesus they must use so-called prophecies as history.

No amount of rhetoric can mask the fact that:

1. There is NO so-called prophecies that a Messiah called Jesus would live in a CITY called Nazareth.

2. There is NO mention of a CITY called Nazareth in Hebrew Scripture.

3. Josephus lived in Galilee and wrote about CITIES and villages and did NOT mention a CITY called Nazareth.

The theory that a City called Nazareth did exist during the time of the governor Pilate is extremely weak since those who wrote that Jesus lived a CITY called Nazareth are KNOWN fiction writers.
Good luck convincing them of that....
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Old 09-16-2010, 02:49 PM   #130
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I don't think either is very likely, neither your hypothetical source nor mine. When we start to deal in hypothetical sources either of us can make up anything we like. That is as you say pointless.

Steve
I don't there's much point in continuing, so to summarize:

1. We both agree Matthew used Jewish scriptures, to include the Septuagint.

2. I am inclined to accept the scholarly consensus that he also used the book of Enoch, you are reluctant to accept that unless you can see an exact quote

3. We both agree he used a minimum of 1 other written source outside the Septuagint

4. We both agree he used oral tradition

4.5 Though we haven't discussed it, I contend Matthew used many other sources as well, to include probably Josephus and the Didache. I also contend that since Jewish orthodoxy wasn't established at the time Matthew wrote, there isn't any reason to presuppose significance of the Septuagint over noncanonical Jewish writings, many of which are mentioned by name in the Bible but are sadly also lost.

5. We both agree Matthew attributes Nazareth to prophecy, and even directly quotes that prophecy

6. I contend that Nazareth is not mentioned merely in passing in the gospels, but is an important part of the story, mentioned repeatedly by the authors where it could easily have been ignored or at least downplayed if there were no theological significance to it. I'm not sure if you agree with that.

I conclude from this that the simplest position is "He shall be called a Nazorean" really was a commonly accepted prophecy at the time, or at least Matthew thought it was. I don't see how he could have expected to get away with directly quoting a prophecy no-one had ever heard of and which wasn't recorded in any Jewish text (to include the entire corpus of Jewish texts, not just the Septuagint).

You think this is a speculative conclusion.


Is this a fair summary?
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