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01-25-2013, 11:35 PM | #111 | ||||||||||
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It is clearly implied: Quote:
The existing priests on earth were operating under the old, inferior LAW, which didn't do the job of washing away sins once and for all. This difference is clearly highlighted: Quote:
The earthly priests were still operating under the old, inferior, Law-based covenant. THAT'S why it made no sense to have the new covenant High Priest come to earth to fulfill ongoing priestly duties alongside the priests who were under the LAW. This is true whether he was referring to a past or current hypothetical visit to earth. You object that a present tense meaning in 8:4 would be 'jibberish' in the sense that it would be obvious that Jesus wouldn't be a priest on earth now since he had already made his sacrifice once and for all. Why, you ask, would the writer even think of making such an unnecessary statement? Because Jesus was the High Priest sitting next to God (as just stated), and yet high priests still existed on earth! He may simply have been answering the question: Why isn't Jesus a high priest on earth now? Re the 'present' interpretation, you wrote: Quote:
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1. His name 2. Who the sinners were that were hostile toward him 3. The claim that it was 'evident' that he was of the tribe of Judah 4. The location of his suffering outside the city gate 5. Crucifixion as the method of his death Have I overlooked the OT sources in Hebrews for these? It seems to me that only #3 has a strong OT basis. Ted |
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01-26-2013, 02:43 AM | #112 | ||
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Thanks for this. IIUC Chrysostom is interpreting the passage to mean that Christ only became a priest after ceasing to be on earth. I.E. he was on earth but was not at that time a priest now he is a priest but is no longer on earth. Andrew Criddle |
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01-26-2013, 04:58 AM | #113 | ||
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01-26-2013, 08:28 AM | #114 |
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Andrew
I don't agree with the assertion that Jesus never came to earth. Nevertheless Chrysostom can be read to come very close to agreeing with parts of Doherty's interpretation of the material don't you think? |
01-26-2013, 09:20 AM | #115 |
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Greek is not my forte, but my understanding is:
The form used in Heb 8:4 with its two imperfect clauses is a text book example for present contrafactual case. I also noted, for the author, the present is pushed back in order to include the Sacrifice. For him, this is the NOW time. But that does not say Jesus was or was not on earth in the past. That was not part of the point the author was making. Correctly translated: "if he were on earth, he would not be a priest". For unambiguous statement about Jesus not being on earth in the past, the past contrafactual would incorporate aorist tense in the two clauses, and would be translated as such: "If he had been on earth, he would not have been a priest" Cordially, Bernard |
01-26-2013, 10:48 AM | #116 | ||||
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Earl Doherty |
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01-26-2013, 10:55 AM | #117 | ||
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Earl Doherty |
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01-26-2013, 11:16 AM | #118 | |
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Ambiguity resolves nothing. It is completely unacceptable that a self-admitted ambiguous statement in an anonymous text with unknown date of authorship and without attestation be relied on. |
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01-26-2013, 11:18 AM | #119 | ||
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1) Making any statement that Jesus could not be a priest on earth in the present--for any reason--would be a complete non-sequitur. A totally unnecessary statement. Gibberish. The very definition, which Chrysostom is alleged to have in mind, would simply rule any such idea out. Moreover, it would have nothing to do with whether there were priests active on earth already or not. 2) How could a crucifixion on earth in recent history NOT have been made a part of the sacrifice, rendering him in fact a "priest on earth." Who would leave it out in creating this scenario of a high priest sacrificial Christ? And if given the memory of Calvary he would surely have been seen as a priest on earth in the past, why would he deny that he could be a priest on earth in the present when the stated reason was also active in the past? Until questions like these can be satisfactorily answered (which they cannot), all the bleating and braying over grammatical rules is completely pointless. All that has to be established on the grammatical side is the equally legitimate application of the imperfect to past contrafactual situations, and thanks to Ellingworth and some grammarians, that has been done. Earl Doherty |
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01-26-2013, 11:32 AM | #120 | ||
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The ambiguity makes possible a consideration of other factors regarding the sense of the passage in order to come down on the side of the only option in that ambiguity which makes sense and must be adopted. Logic is logic. As far as I know, the rules of logic have not changed between ancient and modern times. Nor is the internal logic of a document or passage affected one way or the other by knowing or not knowing the date, the author or possessing a specific attestion to it. Earl Doherty |
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