The recognition of the reference connecting modern theories of influence to ancient texts is illuminating. — Paine
Well yeah, I mean it's both -- in engaging with a society you're helping shape it. — Moses
Jews have always had an idea that fixed societies are inherently evil, as if you're closer to God if you're detached from cities and able to dwell in the desert, free from the corruption that inevitably creeps 8nto city life.
— Tate
This idea was put forward in The Protocols of Zion. — Paine
He said they were like whitewashed tombs: appearing upright and clean on the outside, but full of decadence on the inside. Don't take it personally. He wasn't attacking all Jews, just the ones who pay more attention to how they appear than whether they show love, mercy, and ensure justice.The Pharisees give to charity, JC just criticizes the manner in which they give — Moses
There's a lot of material on your question in the NT but in short he envisions a society where people flex by asking "how can I help you?" as opposed to "look how many people I have under me. — Moses
It is a society of righteous people where outside behavior is apparently pretty rigidly constrained. It's kind of strange vision — Moses
He definitely envisions a radically different type of society. — Moses
JC paints a picture of a certain type of society, it's up to us to accept or reject that picture. — Moses
"In the beginning was the word" is false. — Srap Tasmaner
Does the screw example make clear that the truth is up to us? — Luke
Michael Trouble is you would also have to agree that "snow is white" is true because the kettle is boiling. — Banno
The rejection of correspondence does not imply the acceptance of truth as will to power. — Banno
And as said elsewhere, the power of truth derives from its illocutionary force, while the topic here has been the logical structure of true statements. — Banno
SO are you going to argue that what makes a statement true is one's willing it to be true? That might be fun. — Banno
As long as you deflate that, you agree with Nietzsche.
— Tate
What? — Banno
I'm interested in the idea of dropping the will to truth
— Tate
You hush your postmodern mouth! — Srap Tasmaner
I agree, so long as you do not conclude that there are no true statements. — Banno
You want the kettle's boiling to be true yet uninterpreted. — Banno
There is no outside, nor inside. That terminology is fraught. — Banno
Always, already, interpreted. — Banno
And why do statements have the truth value they do? Why is it “the kettle is black” which is true and not “the kettle is red”? Some non-linguistic feature of the world has to be a certain way. The object referred to by the phrase “the kettle” has to have the colour property referred to by the word “black”. — Michael
The smallest letter and stroke of the pen refer to what is written. He goes on to discuss several specifs regarding the Law and how it is to be obeyed. He does not say to ignore all that written stuff. He says: — Fooloso4
What’s the mystery about it? — Michael
There's more to the world than just language. Those other things in the world are often what make a statement true. — Michael
I think I prefer charity as it is more obviously a virtue, and assessable in public terms. — Banno
Read him. Best book - Did Jesus Exist. He is not a mythicist - Richard Carrier is your guy for this position. Ehrman says there was likely a guy the myth was based upon but we don't have access to what he taught. — Tom Storm
I generally take Professor Bart Erhman's lead on the historical Jesus. — Tom Storm
What pisses me off about threads such as this is that, from a philosophical vantage, if Jesus is a great moral teacher, then we ought be able to cite his great moral teachings. Hence my comment about charity. — Banno
Doesn't change my view on JC. There's really nothing much for us to consider. — Tom Storm
Confirmation bias is a powerful force. — Banno
Hm. Sounds like some, if not all, of the portraits are fictional. — Art48
The stories it and other gospels contain are influenced by Paul and the schism that led to the separation between Jews and Christians. — Fooloso4
Truly I tell you, it is hard for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of heaven. (Matthew 19:23)
The circular relationship refers to Jesus 'using' words from the Old Testament to establish his connection to prophecy and continuity with Yahweh. The New Testament makes frequent use of the Old Testament to establish Jesus' credentials. — Tom Storm
It's interesting that you sought to tell me that the scriptures cited in the OP was only OT when two NT quotes - Jesus purported words - were included. — Tom Storm
His authority derives from prophesy in the Old Testament - kind of the point of the narrative. — Tom Storm
Hence the circular relationship between testaments — Tom Storm
It's about Jesus' authority and there is this: — Tom Storm
For God commanded, ‘Honor your father and your mother,’ and, ‘Whoever reviles father or mother must surely die.’ Matthew 15:4 — Art48
Maybe so, but I'm not talking about what caused the financial crisis. I'm talking about the Fed's response, and why it cannot be compared with what the Fed is doing today. — Tzeentch