Peace to you,
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Nov 20, 2020 12:58 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 10:24 pmIgnore, dismiss, call it what you will: you take a single verse that you want to be true (one that you believe supports your case) and you ignore or dismiss all the many verses and examples that dispute or even refute your case.
I see I'm repeating myself again. I've read the entire Bible. I am well aware of all those Bible passages you have posted, and I know that the word "love" appears in the story of Christ.
OK? Are you with me so far?
Now, it's important to understand that if I'm not convinced by what you say or disagree with what you say, then it does not logically follow that I'm dismissing or ignoring what you say.
You dismiss or ignore (call it what you will) the many verses and examples
from what is written which disputes or even refutes your case.
Hence, you have been accused of cherry-picking.
Yes, I've been accused of cherry picking. Does that mean I'm guilty of cherry picking?
You questioned someone on why you were accused of cherry-picking. The above explanation is a reason for that.
As far as I can recall, you have also provided no evidence to support your 'smile on the crocodile' hypothesis, other than your own opinion and supposition.
What you're saying here is flat-out false. On numerous occasions I've posted evidence to back up my case that Christ was a hateful and harmful figure.
So who's dismissing and ignoring evidence now?
I will repeat: you have provided opinion and supposition.
Tam, according to the Christ myth one of the apostles of Christ engineered Jesus' arrest and subsequent execution. His name, you should know, means "Jew." So Judas basically symbolizes the murderous Jew who killed Christ. Christ said that this "Jew" had a devil.
This is incorrect.
First - The name Judas (a form of Judah) means praised.
Sorry, Tam, but I think you just flunked etymology. That's one meaning of Judas, but by the time the New Testament was written, the word "Juda-" became associated with Jews in some way. Judah, for example, started out as a person and later a tribe and then a kingdom of Israelites. So by the time the gospels were written, the name
Judas was understood as a person closely associated with all things Jewish.
Why do you write this as if I did not also state:
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https://www.babynames.com/name/judas
https://www.behindthename.com/name/judah
Jews are the people who are descended from the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin (who made up the two-tribe southern Kingdom of Judah, after Israel split into 2 kingdoms).
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So a) I provided you the link to the etymology of the name Judas; and b) I wrote right there that Jews are associated with Judah - since Jews are descended from the two-tribe southern Kingdom of Judah (made up of the tribes Judah and Benjamin).
But let's deal with your claims:
Sorry, Tam, but I think you just flunked etymology. That's one meaning of Judas,
I provided you the links that support what I said. Ignore or dismiss it if you will, but the information is there for anyone to see.
but by the time the New Testament was written, the word "Juda-" became associated with Jews in some way. Judah, for example, started out as a person and later a tribe and then a kingdom of Israelites.
1 - Obviously Jews are associated with Judah, since Jews are descended from the southern Kingdom of Judah (made up of the two tribes: Judah and Benjamin). I wrote that in my original post to you, so there is no merit to your accusation of confirmation bias.
2 - Judah did start out as a person (as did Benjamin, Gad, Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Joseph, Dan, Naphtali, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun) and his descendants formed the tribe of Judah (as did the descendants of Benjamin, Gad, Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Joseph, Dan, Naphtali, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun, form the other eleven tribes according to their names). But the Kingdom of Israel was formed
not just from Judah, but from
all twelve tribes. Later, after Solomon died, the united Kingdom of Israel (all twelve tribes) split into 2 kingdoms:
the Kingdom of Judah (made up of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin)
from which the Jews are descended.... and...
the Kingdom of Israel (made up of the
other ten tribes; many considered to be lost, but from whom Samaritans were descended).
So by the time the gospels were written, the name Judas was understood as a person closely associated with all things Jewish.
Again (from my previous post):
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Second - Christ, in speaking to all twelve (Jewish) apostles, said:
"Have I not chosen you, the Twelve? Yet one of you is a devil!"
So it makes no sense for you to try and suggest that Judas somehow symbolized all Jews, or that Christ was calling all Jews 'devils', when the text states just the opposite of this.
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Of course, I know full well that in the Christ myth the apostles were Jews. It appears that if anybody forgot that detail, it was whoever wrote the Gospel of John. When people create works of fiction, they often get parts of the plot in conflict with some of the details of the story. I think that's what John did.
Is that your expert opinion?
It appears to be a very plausible explanation for John's bizarre negativity toward Jews. John was the last of the four canonical gospels to be written, and by that time the Christian sect may have given up on converting Jews. "If you can't join them, then beat them."
Again, from my previous post:
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Because, you know, it makes a lot more sense that you are the one in error here. The evidence is certainly not on your side; in fact it refutes what you have just said. The author knew full well that the apostles and earliest disciples - including the disciple Christ loved (the author) and Mary and Martha, were all Jews... because he wrote them as such.
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I'm going to also point out that first, you say that the author of John forgot the apostles were Jews because he was writing fiction (an absurd claim, for the reasons already stated in italics above); then you turn around in the same breath and enter in a 'real - world' scenario when you claim that it may have been a matter of 'if you can't join them, then beat them' since the Christian sect may have given up on converting Jews at that time.
None of this is evidence. ALL of this is supposition and opinion. And it is all over the place.
Do you also believe that Martin Luther King JR. hated black people; hated everyone who stood with the civil rights movement? Because, you know, some were murdered for standing up for civil rights (theirs or others). What about Harriet Tubman or anyone else who fought to free slaves and who inspired others to help in those movements?
In those cases the leaders in question had the laudable goal of freeing people from slavery. In Christ's case he just wanted to have people worship him and see him as their savior. None of his goals were worth dying for.
What you have said about what Christ wanted is false (and opinion being asserted without evidence).
Again,
Christ also freed people - from subjection to death, from lies (including religious lies), from the heavy burdens that the Pharisees and others had(have) loaded upon the people; from fear; etc. Those things might not matter to you, or you might not believe that He did these thigns, but obviously these things matter to us who love Him and His Father, and who are loved by Him and His Father... and who have been set free by Him.
If His story is true, then He saves people from Death (and the other things mentioned above); He sent His disciples out to bear witness to the truth, to invite people to come to Him (to Life) and to the Kingdom, to be reconciled to God, and to have life (eternal life even) to the FULL.
He also healed many Jews out of compassion for them. Defended the (Jewish) people from the Pharisees who judged and condemned them, laying heavy burdens on them, etc.
And lets not forget your claim (and this is the claim that I was disputing):
If Christ thought so little of the lives of his followers that he knowingly led them into situations in which they might get killed, then he did not love them. - unknown soldier
Replace Christ with Martin Luther King Jr (or someone similar) and see how that claim holds up.
In fact, just one of the great gifts that I have received from my Lord (the Truth) is the freedom to love, to forgive, to be merciful - to anyone, everyone, even my enemies.
Tam, you were always able to forgive, love, and show mercy. We're all able to do so. Christ is irrelevant in that regard.
Christ is not irrelevant in that regard, especially not when religion and religious leaders (and others in this world) teach people to judge and to hate, etc. Something you agree that "Christianity" (and its leaders) has done. Despite the words and example of Christ.
If His story is true, then He saves people from Death (and the other things mentioned above); He sent His disciples out to bear witness to the truth, to invite people to come to Him (to Life) and to the Kingdom, to be reconciled to God, and to have life (eternal life even) to the FULL.
Do you really think anything in that merits being persecuted or murdered?
It might well get people murdered.
This did not answer the question I asked.
Peace again to you, and to you all,
your servant and a slave of Christ,
tammy