You were the one to make the claim, so it's on you to provide the evidence. — baker
it's not clear that "all religions" call for forgiveness and redemption, or what they actually mean by them. — baker
When "forgiveness" becomes a channel for contempt — baker
the view directly challenges Augustine placing the revelation of the 'Israelites' above the fruits of Athens. — Paine
In any case, it is clear from the NT text that, in Christianity, Jesus had the external appearance of a human, but in reality he was the Son of God manifested by the power of the Holy Spirit. — Apollodorus
As he sees it, the revelation of divine knowledge goes through Plato to Plotinus to Jesus. Conspicuously absent is the revelations of the Jewish prophets. — Fooloso4
Personally, I have no particular interest in demonstrating Greek influence on Jesus beyond language, as I believe that different cultures have sufficient elements in common as to not necessitate external influence in all cases. — Apollodorus
Olivier for one seems to find the idea "amusing". :smile: — Apollodorus
from then on until forever, "forgiveness and redemption" are going to be as powerless as they've always been. — baker
What evidence can you present that people wouldn't be killing eachother if they had "forgiveness and redemption"? — baker
Do you have actual real-life examples of that? — baker
But the kind spirit of the man, that's another thing altogether. — Amity
Who was I pleasing and why? — Amity
This raises the possibility or probability that the participants in Jesus’ last supper, for example, took their meal in a “Greek-style”, reclining position rather than sitting on chairs. — Apollodorus
People, including Jews, communicate and share ideas, beliefs, and customs. A Jewish artisan from Nazareth could perfectly well have discussed things with his Greek patrons in the nearby town of Sepphoris — Apollodorus
Don't you just love being both? :halo: et :naughty: — Amity
Not if he had no business with the Kittim. You learn a language for a reason. Jews in the diaspora had very good reasons to learn Greek, but not those in Palestine.
— Olivier5
What? You did say that there were Greek-speaking Palestinian Jews, didn't you? — Apollodorus
he could have been one of them — Apollodorus
if there were Greek-speaking Palestinian Jews in the 2nd century, there is no reason why there couldn’t have been Greek-speaking Palestinian Jews a few decades earlier, in the time of Jesus. — Apollodorus
Without judgment social structure would crumble. I do keep to the law, because I fear the punishment after breaking it. — god must be atheist
If Aramaic was the sole (or even main) language spoken and written in Roman Palestine, why would anyone turn to the Greek LXX instead of Aramaic or Hebrew texts? — Apollodorus
The scrolls used by religious leaders during that period of time were always in Hebrew, not Aramaic. It would have been sacrilege to any Jew to "quote" scripture only after translating it into the common tongue. Even today Yiddish is used to speak but Hebrew is used in prayer and worship. — SkyLeach
don't think somehow that forgiveness and redemption could be enforced. It is great to have it. My uncle has it — god must be atheist
Small damages are forgiven, large ones are punished... — god must be atheist
Literally every time he quoted scripture. You do know that all the gospels are written in Greek? Every time Jesus quoted the Torah it was a word-for-word quote from the Septuagint. — SkyLeach
There is no evidence (at least that I'm aware of) that he ever quoted Hebrew.
Why should there be charity? Can you provide an argument for charity? — baker
Social media definitely makes the shunning much easier, like an acceleration of social dynamics — InvoluntaryDecorum
think people are more and more actually organising. Unions, activism etc. And we can look at separate cases and find fault with some of them but I'm pretty confident that by-and-large what is happening is for the good. — Benkei
Daniel Wallace has praised Ehrman as "one of North America's leading textual critics"
When exactly was the Jewish Canon actually formalized or closed? I’ve heard that the Council of Jamnia in the 2nd century was the official date but some scholars debate this. — Dermot Griffin