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Old 03-05-2006, 09:37 AM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Half-Life
It is quite funny how atheists say you need to read the chapters in full context rather than citing a few sentences like apologists do. Well, why do the atheists only post the single sentences when they give their list of contradictions? Why not take the full chapter in context to see there is no contradiction?
How is this relevant to the thread discussion?
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Old 03-05-2006, 10:07 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Half-Life
It is quite funny how atheists say you need to read the chapters in full context rather than citing a few sentences like apologists do. Well, why do the atheists only post the single sentences when they give their list of contradictions? Why not take the full chapter in context to see there is no contradiction?
I take the entire context of every contradiction into account (as do most of us). That context rarely encompasses more than a few verses. I've never seen a contradiction which could be resolved by reading the full chapter. Can you offer an example?
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Old 03-06-2006, 12:49 PM   #13
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Not so. The Messiah was never conflated with the suffering servant.
perhaps you could provide some support for this statement because what i have read is the exact opposite.



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As has been pointed out already the passage refers to the nation as a whole,
as i stated earlier, there are some passages that might superficially refer to the nation of israel. some clearly do not fit that mold.



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Originally Posted by mikem
which was to be purified through suffering, and as a result of which a remnant would be blessed. Isaiah 9: 5 - 10 is more appropriate as a description of the Messiah. The expected Messiah expected was to be a regal figure, a descendent of King David, who would restore the fortunes of the nation and make it the centre of world rule.
not from a materialistic standpoint. that passage is just one of many that refer to the messiah so it is not a complete picture



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The "deeper symbolic" reference to a Messiah is one that has been read back into the passage by later Xtian apologists.
no, the idea originally came from the jews.



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Since Jesus did not fit the Messianic type,
for some jews.



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his role was reinterpreted in the light of the servant passages in Isaiah,
no such reinterpretation was necessary. some jews recognized Him while He was living. some even heralded His arrival, such as John the baptist.



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so as to make it appear that his death was not an unmitigated disaster for his fledgeling movement.
if Jesus did not match up at all to the messianic expectation, there would have been no reason for anyone to have followed Him as messiah. they might have acknowledged Him as a prophet, as some did.
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Old 03-06-2006, 12:54 PM   #14
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There is no proof that anyone did believe Jesus was the Messiah during his lifetime.
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Old 03-06-2006, 06:31 PM   #15
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Originally Posted by John Kesler
The burden is not on me to "show such a connection"; it is upon you to show that Isaiah, who consistently referred to Israel as Yahweh's servant, suddenly changed the servant's identity to Jesus of Nazareth.

the problem with this statement is that isaiah did not "consistently" refer to israel as the suffering servant. there are references to israel, but not as the ultimate redeemer. isaiah did not "suddenly" change the identity.



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So your argument is that the use of the pronoun "he" instead of "you" means that the servant is Jesus, not Israel? Maybe you should flip a page in your Bible to Isaiah 42: Do you still want to argue that the servant, even when referred to with male pronouns, was Jesus of Nazareth?

even if 42 does refer to israel, it doesn't preclude the fact that such references can't possibly refer to the messiah.
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Old 03-06-2006, 07:02 PM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
I take the entire context of every contradiction into account (as do most of us). That context rarely encompasses more than a few verses. I've never seen a contradiction which could be resolved by reading the full chapter. Can you offer an example?
I have. Plenty of supposed contradictions can be resolved by reading the whole context.

Of course, plenty more can't be, so it isn't especially relevant.

@Half-Life
Everyone interested in accurate hermaneutics looks at context, both Christian and atheist. Doesn't matter if it's a contradiction, a prophesy or a doctrine... whatever it is, always look at the surrounding verses to see what's being talked about. I always try to -- do you? From the example prophesy you cited in GRD I somehow doubt it.
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Old 03-07-2006, 01:59 AM   #17
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Isaiah 53 clearly doesn't refer to Jesus. Perhaps the most obvious problem is 53:10, ""the Lord chose to crush him by disease, that if he made himself an offering for guilt, he might see offspring and have long life". Jesus had no disease, no offspring, and a short life.

the word disease does not exist in verse 10.
Yes, it does (in the Hebrew). This is a good example of Christian distortion in translation. Check out the meaning of the verb xlh (chet lamed he). See how it's used in Genesis 48:1, or Deuteronomy 29:22, or 2 Kings 20:1.

Disease is also mentioned in Isaiah 53:3 & 4, where the KJV translates it as "grief". Compare with Deuteronomy 7:15 or 28:61.

Christian apologists simply cannot be trusted: and this generally includes the Christian apologists who translate the Bible. Though I note that Young's has "made him sick" in verse 10, and both Young's and the HNV use "sickness" in verses 3 and 4, and the NLT has a footnote for verse 4.

All of this reinforces the notion that if Isaiah DID have a specific person in mind as the "personification of Israel", it was probably King Uzziah (king in Isaiah's time), who died of leprosy.
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Old 03-07-2006, 07:17 AM   #18
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Originally Posted by bfniii
the problem with this statement is that isaiah did not "consistently" refer to israel as the suffering servant. there are references to israel, but not as the ultimate redeemer. isaiah did not "suddenly" change the identity.
You are begging the question.

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Originally Posted by bfniii
even if 42 does refer to israel, it doesn't preclude the fact that such references can't possibly refer to the messiah.
I'm still waiting for your proof that Jesus of Nazareth was in view.
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Old 03-07-2006, 10:35 AM   #19
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From bfniii:
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some jews recognized Him while He was living. some even heralded His arrival, such as John the baptist
And the vast majority of us couldn't give a shit about one more crazy, failed prophet -- until his followers started killing us.

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Old 03-07-2006, 10:59 AM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Yes, it does (in the Hebrew). This is a good example of Christian distortion in translation. Check out the meaning of the verb xlh (chet lamed he). See how it's used in Genesis 48:1, or Deuteronomy 29:22, or 2 Kings 20:1.
that word has a broad meaning and would not be translated "diseased" in the context of 53:10.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Disease is also mentioned in Isaiah 53:3 & 4, where the KJV translates it as "grief".
further support for my above point



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Christian apologists simply cannot be trusted: and this generally includes the Christian apologists who translate the Bible.
those christians you are referring to got their ideas from first century jews who recognized christ as the messiah based on texts such as isaiah.

this has nothing to do with apology. this has to do with non-christians trying to retroactively change the meaning of the context.
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