This answers the OP's quesion. — Tom Storm
claim to be an astronomer. I don;'t know what a tensor equation is. Answers the OP?
I claim to be an adherent Buddhist, but I compete in Jiu jitsu, having broken several limbs and am somewhat proud of that fact. Answers the OP?
Self identification must be the weakest defence for someone meeting a criteria which others must share. — AmadeusD
But the issue with a religious belief is that there is no clear way to identify what's valid and what's not. — Tom Storm
not just some dead shit who likes the sound of a particular word — Tom Storm
... you have to believe that Jesus rose from the dead to be a Christian, because that's what other Christians believe. — Brendan Golledge
So is it with the resurrection of the dead. What is sown is perishable, what is raised is imperishable. It is sown in dishonour, it is raised in glory. It is sown in weakness, it is raised in power. It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body.
(1 Corinthians 15:42-44) — Fooloso4
...According to Mark:
This is the Good News about Jesus the Messiah. It began just as the prophet Isaiah had written:
“Look, I am sending my messenger ahead of you,
and he will prepare your way.
He is a voice shouting in the wilderness,
‘Prepare the way for the Lord’s coming!
Clear the road for him!’”
This messenger was John the Baptist.
(1:1-4)
Later on, after John was arrested, Jesus went into Galilee, where he preached God’s Good News.“The time promised by God has come at last!” he announced. “The Kingdom of God is near! Repent of your sins and believe the Good News!”
(1:14-15)
The good news is that the kingdom of God is near. It is the beginning of a new beginning. Those who heard the good news did not know that Jesus would be crucified. That could have nothing to do with the good news according to Mark.
In addition, according to Mark, forgiveness of sin came with repentance:
He was in the wilderness and preached that people should be baptized to show that they had repented of their sins and turned to God to be forgiven.
(1:4)
Forgiveness of sin is not part of the good news and does not require the death of Jesus. — Fooloso4
The general consensus among Christians is that the resurrection is the good news. If that's not it, then most Christians are mistaken. — Brendan Golledge
That's not an accurate statement of the matter. It's extremely complex, because it's hard to say if even the Jewish beliefs of the Torah were completely "in force" until around the time of the Maccabees (160s BCE).. But AT LEAST since the Maccabees, the Torah was "in force" in Judea and presumably for Jews around the Mediterranean/Babylonia. — schopenhauer1
As an aside, I had a few people, particularly middle aged Christians, talk up Peterson to me in glowing terms. — Count Timothy von Icarus
For instance, he opens with a narrative about lobsters. Male lobsters who are big and strong have more "feel good chemicals," in their nervous systems. With more feel good chemicals, lobsters act more assertive and aggressive. By doing this they get to consume more resources and have more sexual partners. Therefore, we should act to boost our feel good chemical levels, that we might consume more and sleep with more women. Such wisdom... — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's possible that Joseph had children from a prior marriage (nothing is said about this), and also the term for "brother" is used frequently in the NT for people who do not share a biological relationship. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If Jesus did keep kosher, then presumably statements like Matt.15:11 are early Christian beliefs retrojected back to Jesus. — BitconnectCarlos
If Jesus did keep kosher, then presumably statements like Matt.15:11 are early Christian beliefs retrojected back to Jesus. — BitconnectCarlos
After all, why would Peter need his revelation in Acts where all foods are declared clean if Jesus had originally taught it? — BitconnectCarlos
Hand-washing and kosher are two different things. — Leontiskos
Has he broken the Law? Sort of. — Leontiskos
The answer is simple. Paul on his own authority, and over the objections of Jesus' disciples declared it so. Paul gives an account of this. — Fooloso4
2 Maccabees recounts an old Jewish man choosing death rather than eating pork during the persecution of Antiochus IV Epiphanes. Hard to imagine he choose death over a tradition which had just now become "in force" in the 160s BC.
And then of course there was the martyrdom of the seven sons and Hannah. — BitconnectCarlos
Do you consider Peter's revelation a lie/a Pauline invention then? — BitconnectCarlos
I didn't expect that someone claiming that Mary was born of Elizabeth would be persuasively misleading — Leontiskos
First off, historians don't take everything in religious texts at face value — schopenhauer1
Secondly, not eating pork and following (or even knowing about!) every tittle of the Torah that we know of today, isn't the same thing. — schopenhauer1
was probably not the full and complete Pentateuch as we know it — schopenhauer1
Also, if I was to give some credence to the "conservative view", one can say that it wasn't that there was NO group that did not "know about" Torah, but that it was during the Maccabees that it became THE dominant form of Judaism (no longer Henotheistic like First Temple period, no longer heterodox, and with a formal written understanding of the ancestral "Law"). — schopenhauer1
If we acknowledge that Antiochus IV engaged in a repressive Hellenization program and that the Jews violently resisted it is it crazy to think that there were martyrs? Or did it only start in Roman times? Do you believe there were martyrs then or is that also not historical? — BitconnectCarlos
My concern is more whether they kept the basic elements. Whatever exact form it took, I do believe Jews were willing to die to preserve their ancestral customs at this point in the mid 2nd century BC. — BitconnectCarlos
I'd figure by this point the Torah was quite stabilized. It had already been translated into Greek a century earlier. — BitconnectCarlos
Maybe. Most of the First Temple era kings and Israelites come out looking pretty bad except Josiah and Hezekiah. It's hard to get solid info about the life of the average Israelite from this era. But yes, Judaism as we know it really forms in the 2nd temple period. — BitconnectCarlos
Actually recent scholarship from Christiaan Kappes has shown that the NT is explicit that they are not Jesus' siblings. There have always been very good arguments for that position (even apart from tradition), but Kappes co-authored a book in which he shows that the syngeneusin of texts like Mark 6:4 literally means "relatives of some other womb" (link). In any case, the Magisterial Reformers are all in agreement that Mary was ever-virgin (Luther, Calvin, Zwingli).
I didn't find that book overly interesting, either, but what he is doing at the beginning is trying to establish the primordial nature of dominance hierarchies (which he will later relabel as "competence hierarchies"). The idea is that hierarchical competence generates self-confidence and health (which at that lobster-level is seen primarily through serotonin). A large part of his point is that, pace Feminism, hierarchical orderings have been around as long as lobsters, and are not going away anytime soon. I see Peterson as correcting important cultural errors, but at a relatively superficial level. "Make your bed, do the right thing, be an effective communicator, do not fall into feminist traps, etc."
But I find the whole topic of "Christianism" interesting (a term that some use for cultural Christianity). Roger Scruton, Jordan Peterson, and even Richard Dawkins to a minor extent hold up Christian culture as an important value, yet without professing Christianity.
The general consensus among Christians is that the resurrection is the good news. If that's not it, then most Christians are mistaken. — Brendan Golledge
the idea of authority in Plato for instance, why he elevates the authority of reason — Count Timothy von Icarus
And anyhow I think historically, it's hardly chiefly feminism that has allowed for incompetence at the top. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, I will add that much criticism of Peterson, "how dare anyone assert that hard work and discipline might be good," is entirely off base. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The definition of human flourishing that makes Boethius or St. Maximus torture/mutilation and death (or most of the Apostles') "worthwhile" and even "choiceworthy" needs to be dramatically different. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So I suppose my objection is more to the narrower range of cases where "Christianity" is advanced as a sort of set of principles for temporal success, as generally defined by secular culture. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yes. But when Jesus says "it is not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person, but what comes out of the mouth; this defiles a person" he would seem to be saying that even if e.g. a Jew were to eat pig or shellfish he would not be defiled in clear contradiction to the Levitical laws. Then again maybe my analysis is superficial/I'm misinterpreting him. — BitconnectCarlos
Then Pharisees and scribes came to Jesus from Jerusalem and said, "Why do your disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? For they do not wash their hands when they eat." — Matthew 15:1-2
Entering a state of ritual impurity is not the same thing as breaking the law. We will all be in states of ritual impurity at one point or another. Sometimes it's beyond our control/just nature taking its course. — BitconnectCarlos
Do you consider Peter's revelation a lie/a Pauline invention then? — BitconnectCarlos
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