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09-02-2008, 06:03 AM | #1151 | |
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100% WHAT! |
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09-02-2008, 06:44 AM | #1152 | |
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The unspoken assumption seems to be "Well God punished the Jews for their sins, therefore the Jews no longer have exclusive right to interpret the Hebrew scriptures" or something to that effect. If Gerard Stafleu's approach to Mark is correct, there were Jews after the Revolt who rejected (with disgust?) the Messianic idea as misguided and dangerous. As double-a points out, apocalypticists don't care what happens to this world, they are focused on the next. Then as now such people aren't much use to those of us expecting the cosmos to survive for a few billion more years. |
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09-02-2008, 08:34 AM | #1153 |
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We certainly are hitting all the well-worn highlights in this thread: the authority of scripture, the eyewitness testimony, and now the question of fulfilled prophecies.
Ask 100 Christian apologists about the fulfilled Messianic prophecies and you'll get 100 different answers. Josh McDowell finds over 300 prophecies referring to the Messiah in the Jewish scriptures, some of which are a huge stretch. Apparently, quoting an OT scripture is a fulfillment of a messianic prophecy, according to McDowell. He commits the same mistake that the author of Matthew did--find a parallel between Jesus' life and some OT event, then call it a fulfilled prophecy. Other apologists claim that even prophecies that have yet to be fulfilled still count as a win, so long as their hero has said he will fulfill them in the future. Never mind that if a prophecy hasn't been fulfilled yet, then by definition it is an unfulfilled prophecy. And what's the importance with prophecy anyway? Some people want prophecy to turn their scripture into a magic book--and yet prophecy is easy if you phrase it right. "I prophesy that the United States and China will have armed conflict." There. Now all we have to do is wait long enough. If God were God and he really wanted us to enter into a relationship with him, there would be no need for prophecy at all. Prophecy is written to offer hope to the listeners: "Someday things will get better." Prophecy written hundreds of years ago is as dead as the people to whom it was given. Of what use is telling someone today that someday far in the future things will turn around? It would be like Rick Warren advising President Bush, "Don't worry, Mr. President, about the invading army on the horizon. Some day, Captain Kirk will save the Earth from Klingons." While that might be a valid prophecy and might even be fulfilled one day, I strongly doubt Bush would take any comfort in it. As for the Jewish messianic prophecies, rather than have a Christian apologist 'explain' Jewish writings to me, I prefer to go to the source--namely the people who wrote the scriptures and their prophecies. After all, they are the ones who wrote them, right? They should be the best ones to tell me what is or is not a messianic prophecy and what needs to be happened for them to be fulfilled, right? Jews and Christians only disagree on whether Jesus actually fulfilled who-knows-how-many prophecies, right? Well, according to Jews for Judaism, there are a bare eight messianic prophecies:
So that should be that for Jesus, then. Any disagreement should be taken up with Jewish adherents, not with skeptics, who think that pinning your hopes on a Jewish military conqueror to rule the world in peace are as silly as expecting an empty hole in the ground means a corpse was revivified. |
09-02-2008, 09:08 AM | #1154 |
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09-02-2008, 11:17 AM | #1155 | |
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So you need some sort of evidence that 1st century Jews respected the relationship and authority of a paternal parent and his child. Are you sure that is necessary? |
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09-02-2008, 11:30 AM | #1156 | |
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You claimed that there was a legal basis for considering Jesus to be the descendant of David through Joseph and I am asking you to be specific. What law do you understand to give Jesus Davidic descent through Joseph if he wasn't believed to be the physical father? |
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09-02-2008, 11:43 AM | #1157 | |
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09-02-2008, 01:08 PM | #1158 | ||
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09-02-2008, 01:19 PM | #1159 | ||
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There may be dispute as to how good a parallel this is. Andrew Criddle |
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09-02-2008, 01:45 PM | #1160 |
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Thanks, Andrew
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