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Old 05-11-2003, 09:21 PM   #21
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Because, Captain Context, it's a prophetic vision, as the narrative clearly and unambiguously states.
Oh yeah, of course I wouldn't expect somebody else's dream to make sense. But you've just conceded my point: this isn't a case of a misnomer, this is a case of the text actually not making sense. Doh.

As for the Aramic part: I don't know the first thing about Aramic, so others are invited to tell me if he's making sense here or not.

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That would depend on the context.
Okay, the context is I had a huge fucking trip the other day and in it there was this beast which knocked about a third of the stars down to Earth and stomped on them. Only problem is, I apparently told a few others about it, and now it's become part of a religion, in spite of the fact that it makes no bloody sense and I was trippin' at the time. Wierd what people will believe.
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Old 05-11-2003, 09:48 PM   #22
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For the Aramaic, see here. and here.

As for this...

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Oh yeah, of course I wouldn't expect somebody else's dream to make sense. But you've just conceded my point: this isn't a case of a misnomer, this is a case of the text actually not making sense. Doh.
The dream incorporates symbolic language, and is explained with crystal clarity in the verses which follow.

Thus:
  • Daniel 4:19-26.
    Then Daniel, whose name was Belteshazzar, was astonished for one hour, and his thoughts troubled him. The king spoke, and said, Belteshazzar, let not the dream, or the interpretation thereof, trouble thee. Belteshazzar answered and said, My lord, the dream be to them that hate thee, and the interpretation thereof to thine enemies.
    The tree that thou sawest, which grew, and was strong, whose height reached unto the heaven, and the sight thereof to all the earth;
    Whose leaves were fair, and the fruit thereof much, and in it was meat for all; under which the beasts of the field dwelt, and upon whose branches the fowls of the heaven had their habitation:
    It is thou, O king, that art grown and become strong: for thy greatness is grown, and reacheth unto heaven, and thy dominion to the end of the earth.
    And whereas the king saw a watcher and a holy one coming down from heaven, and saying, Hew the tree down, and destroy it; yet leave the stump of the roots thereof in the earth, even with a band of iron and brass, in the tender grass of the field; and let it be wet with the dew of heaven, and let his portion be with the beasts of the field, till seven times pass over him;
    This is the interpretation, O king, and this is the decree of the most High, which is come upon my lord the king:
    That they shall drive thee from men, and thy dwelling shall be with the beasts of the field, and they shall make thee to eat grass as oxen, and they shall wet thee with the dew of heaven, and seven times shall pass over thee, till thou know that the most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever he will.
    And whereas they commanded to leave the stump of the tree roots; thy kingdom shall be sure unto thee, after that thou shalt have known that the heavens do rule.
Therefore:
  • The tree = Nebuchadnezzar and his kingdom.
  • Hewing down the tree... till seven times pass over him = Nebuchadnezzar would be humbled for a certain oeriod of time.
  • The stump remaining = Nebuchadnezzar would not lose his kingdom entirely.
All of which is explained by Daniel himself, in the verses which follow the king's account of his dream. So yes, it does indeed make sense.

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Okay, the context is I had a huge fucking trip the other day and in it there was this beast which knocked about a third of the stars down to Earth and stomped on them.
It's another vision; this time, of the apostle John.

As he tells us in his preface to the Apocalypse:
  • Revelation 1:1.
    The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him, to show unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass; and he sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant John:
Revelation is one huge prophetic vision, in which symbolic language is used to represent the events of the future.
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Old 05-11-2003, 09:55 PM   #23
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You Atheists just pick and choose what you don't want to hear, and make up lame contradictions with no studying or understanding whatsoever, just so you don't have to possibily accept an authority with supreme sovereignty over you. Atheists don't want to be held accountable for the little transgressions they committ, so you block out the possibility of God and assume He doesn't exist. It keeps you in your little world where you don't have to accept God as reality and can do whatever you want with no consequences.
[Derailment] I hold MYSELF accountable for my transgretions, as does society. Why do xtians have to rely on having something else do the hard work for them? [/Derailment]
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Old 05-11-2003, 11:12 PM   #24
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Originally posted by Magus55
Islam is based on man made rules, created by Mohammed. If you seriously think, a god creating a paradise of whores and little boys for sexual pleasure for all eternity is in line with a perfect, holy being - you really don't understand holiness at all.
I see how this works. You claim that your man-made religion isn't a man-made religon because everyone elses religion is man-made religion and therefore is invalid. nevermind that Jews, Christers and Islamics all worship the same "God" just under different names.

:notworthy I bow to your educated viewpoint on Islam.

And to be "holy" by YHVH's standards you have to throw temper tantrums and drown 99.99999996% of the worlds population to be considered a "true" deity. Nothing beats genocide for proof of existence.

Haha ha! stupid humans you want me to show you my true power? I love you! *Deluge* I love you so very much! *Deluge* And you too little girl! *Rain thunder Deluge* Muahahah! I haven't felt this good since I created HELL!!! Burn little girl!!! I drowned you, now you can BURN!!! Fry!!! Crispify!!! Trogdor! Burninate them!

*drown gurgle blub roast rotisserie barbeque bacon sizzle*

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ALL other religions support doing works to reach God. As if you could ever earn your way to be in God's prescence. Christianity is all about God offering the way for us to be with him. Its His love and mercy that brings about eternal life, not some stupid little works we can attempt to do to appease God.
Okay if it is so much better to be with god, and you are sure that you are going to make it, then why don't you hurry up and meet him?
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Old 05-11-2003, 11:15 PM   #25
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Therefore:


* The tree = Nebuchadnezzar and his kingdom.

* Hewing down the tree... till seven times pass over him = Nebuchadnezzar would be humbled for a certain oeriod of time.

* The stump remaining = Nebuchadnezzar would not lose his kingdom entirely.


All of which is explained by Daniel himself, in the verses which follow the king's account of his dream. So yes, it does indeed make sense.
And then it was all written down hundreds of years after the fact.

Self fulfilling prophecy.
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Old 05-12-2003, 11:53 PM   #26
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The initial objection was "this doesn't make sense", not "this prophecy isn't true."

My pupose was not to vindicate the prophecy, but to prove that the passage does indeed make sense. Which it does.

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And then it was all written down hundreds of years after the fact.
You're entitled to your opinion, of course.
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Old 05-13-2003, 02:24 AM   #27
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Again, wrong Mark - Mat 24:34 is talking about the end time events and Jesus said - this generation [that sees the end times signs, not the Apostles] will not pass away until these things have come to pass. Jesus was referring to the generation that will see the end times signs, and since Jesus was dictating to the Apostles - thats why he said it that way, for those who see the end signs, to know they are the generation that won't pass away.
Actually, since you assume the Bible and Jesus cannot be factually mistaken, you must interpret that passage as such. This is a silly game. The pious pastor wants to harmonize everything and the village atheist wants to point out as many contradictions as possible.

But as serious historians will tell you, either Jesus was mistaken on the timetable (see Sanders, Fredriksen and others) or this belief about a second coming did not originate with Jesus but started in the very early church (see John Dominic Crossan and I beleive John Meier). None of them use the hermeneutic of harmonization like you or other conservatives. Paul's urgent eschatology, the shaken converts in Thessalonians and all the gospel back-peddling ending with the redaction of GJohn and 2 Peter in ca 130 ad on this issue all lean in against your interpretation.

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You can disagree with it all you want, doesn't make it wrong - and doesn't change didly.
You can disagree with what I just wrote all you want but it won't make it wrong--and honestly doesn't change diddly.

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Jesus specifically said, no man knows the time when Jesus will return - so how can He be late, if no one knows when He is supposed to return? Could be tomorrow, could be 100 years from now.
I could pose three problems with this, the first being the most petty and weakest.

1. I'm not the literalist so maybe we can know the minute and the year if not the day and the hour Sure I may be reading it with wooden literalism but so are you since you naively dismiss number 2:

2. Why is "no man knows the day nor the hour" inconsistent with an imminent return expected within the lives of Jesus close followers? He could very well have thought it was soon but didn't know exactly when. He may have thought it would occur during his own lifetime for all you or I know. There is nothing inconsistent here.

3. Demonstrating that Jesus actually said the latter may prove difficult, indeed. You cannot just assume Jesus said everything the Synoptists attribute to him and use it to create your own harmonized Jesus action figure (tm).


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Unfortunately, you won't be owing us anything if you are wrong. You will be standing before God and will have to explain your rejection to Him before he sentences you.
Ah, the good old cruel omnipotent deity who punishes his children for not believing problematic facts to be historically true reaches the limelight once again

Don't your realize that this nonsense makes people not believe in God and for good reason?

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If Jesus comes before you die, you better hope you survive His wrath on the world.
Assuming a second coming, maybe he will be mad at you for misrepresenting him to the lsot whom he died for?

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Once your dead, your fate is sealed for all eternity. As the saying goes: an eternity is a long time to be wrong.
Most intelligent Christians do not accept the nonsense that 'it is appointed for men to die once and then face judment'. Salvation is not limited to this life. Eschatological Evangelism and Inclusivism are two more tenable 'wider-hope theories' that are held. If you want more info on them just ask.

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And i could say the same thing to you - I gaurantee Jesus will return and He isn't late, because he never told us when he would definately return. He said keep watch, and He will come like a thief in the night. No one will expect it.
Either Jesus or "the Bible" is wrong on this. Choose your poison.

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You Atheists just pick and choose what you don't want to hear,
A inerrancy advocate has no business making accusations like this. Your time would be better spent picking and choosing which harmonizations you subscribe to in light of the large amount of obvious contradictions in the Christian canon.

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and make up lame contradictions with no studying or understanding whatsoever, just so you don't have to possibily accept an authority with supreme sovereignty over you.
Lacking total understanding, you make up lame harmonizations where Jesus and 'the Bible' are off the hook for a mistaken timetable....

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Atheists don't want to be held accountable for the little transgressions they committ, so you block out the possibility of God and assume He doesn't exist.
I think that can be true to an extent. I block out God in the same regard. I feel shame but this is not the same as the "atheists don't believe in the facts like me so they are evil" line that you are espousing here. Atheism is largely a direct reaction against supernatural theism (ST). As a panenetheist, I share this rejection of ST. To be quite honest, ST is ridiculous and very easy to dismiss.

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It keeps you in your little world where you don't have to accept God as reality and can do whatever you want with no consequences.
It very strange how you blame non-Christians for failing to accept the problematic facts that you strangely, believe in. Just because you believe it to be true does not mean everyone else has to accept nonsense as factually true.

Whats moreis that your belief would have us sentenced to hell for rejecting certain facts. This is a perfect example of the reasoning behind the first stop here section on my website:

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Being a follower of God has very little to do with believing forty-nine impossible things before breakfast. Unfortunately for many of us, this is exactly what today's popular religions seem to require from us. Faith today is largely preoccupied with the dynamic of believing or not believing. For many people, believing “iffy” claims to be true has become the central meaning of their faith. As protested by Marcus Borg, "It is an odd notion—as if what God most wants from us is believing highly problematic statements to be factually true."1 It is an odd notion, indeed!

This gravitation towards "believing" in many of today's religions places entirely too much emphasis on the head and not enough on the heart. I do not wish to caricature how many conservative believers see their own views but to many of us on the outside it looks like, "Believe in the factuality of X, Y, and Z and you'll be saved. Believe it not and you will consciously suffer for all eternity in this most unimaginably horrendous place created by this most unimaginably loving God." It presents quite a paradox that many of us are unwilling to accept. Thinking that many of our family members and friends will spend eternity in a lake of burning sulfur is morally revolting and mentally disturbing to us. Even more disturbing is the notion that they will end up there for not believing "problematic" or "iffy" claims to be factually true! It seems as if intellectual knowledge has become a soteriological criterion (a requirement for salvation)!
I hope you don't call this witnessing as it will do no good here. Finding a nice choir to preach to might suit you a little better.

Vinnie
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