The Talmud says the Hebrew Bible depicts Messiah appearing in two different ways:
Alexandri said: R. Joshua opposed two verses: it is written, And behold, one like the son of man came with the clouds of heaven34 whilst [elsewhere] it is written, [behold, thy king cometh unto thee … ] lowly, and riding upon an ass!35 — if they are meritorious, [he will come] with the clouds of heaven;36 if not, lowly and riding upon an ass.
Rabbi Joshua quoted Daniel 7:13, where the Messiah receives a Kingdom from God.
Rabbi Joshua also quoted Zechariah 9:9, where Messiah comes to His people in humility.
According to Rabbi Joshua, the manner in which the Messiah appears depends on the conduct of the Jewish people.
Is there anything in the Hebrew Bible that indicates the manner of Messiahs coming has anything to do with Israel's behavior?
Messiah in the Talmud
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Post #61
[Replying to The Me's]
You may want to rephrase or retract.
Jesus IS equated with God, since the Council of Nicea established his OUSIA to be the same as God.Your idea that Jesus is equated with God is therefore a distorted view. You may want to rethink that one. Even for Trinitarians, Jesus might rise in importance to the level of God, but he never replaces him, and he's never treated as [alone] being God.
You may want to rephrase or retract.
Post #62
Since the messiah was not present at the council, and he was not allowed to speak for himself, I'm going to take his side and reject the council (as do many protestants).nothead wrote: [Replying to The Me's]
Jesus IS equated with God, since the Council of Nicea established his OUSIA to be the same as God.Your idea that Jesus is equated with God is therefore a distorted view. You may want to rethink that one. Even for Trinitarians, Jesus might rise in importance to the level of God, but he never replaces him, and he's never treated as [alone] being God.
You may want to rephrase or retract.
What are they to me?
If Jesus didn't teach it, it ain't Christianity by any stretch.
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Post #63
The Me's wrote: You have a habit of lying about what I post.
Moderator CommentThe Me's wrote: What is it with this web site and everyone's penchant to lie about other user posts?
It's best not to accuse others of lying. Just correct misinformation without saying others are lying.
Please review the Rules.
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Post #64
Goat posted,
No. Not at all. (This is coming from a Jewish person).
You are incorrect. While many do believe in an afterlife , there are many Jews that do not. The belief in the afterlife, in reincarnation,and things like that is highly variable in the Jewish faith. While traditionally, the belief in the afterlife/resurrection is prominent, it is not dogma or universal
Then some Jews have to be right and some have to be wrong. Jesus simply answered the question this way:cnorman18 posted,
The "afterlife" is not so much as mentioned in the Torah. There is no formal teaching in Judaism about an "afterlife." Belief in an "afterlife" is common among Jews, but it not required.
"...have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying,I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living." Mt.22:31-32
Makes sense, doesn't it?
Your objection hasn't been avoided. You simply keep making the mistake that what is written about Jesus in the NT isn't Jewish belief.cnorman18 posted,
And even if one believes in a general Resurrection, there is NOTHING -- ANYWHERE -- in Jewish tradition about a "special Resurrection" that concerns the Messiah.
And, of course, I note once again that the issue of a MAN being worshiped as GOD, a key component of Christian belief that is absolutely absent from and contradictory to everything in Jewish belief, teaching and tradition, is still being assiduously avoided here....
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Post #65
What is written about Jesus in the NT doesn't matter one way or another to the Jews. If Jesus existed, he was just a man. He was not the Messiah according to the Jews, End of story. The tasks required of the Messiah have not been accomplished. So, therefore the messiah has not yet come. THere is no tradition that the Messiah will come twice.Thruit wrote:Goat posted,
No. Not at all. (This is coming from a Jewish person).
You are incorrect. While many do believe in an afterlife , there are many Jews that do not. The belief in the afterlife, in reincarnation,and things like that is highly variable in the Jewish faith. While traditionally, the belief in the afterlife/resurrection is prominent, it is not dogma or universalThen some Jews have to be right and some have to be wrong. Jesus simply answered the question this way:cnorman18 posted,
The "afterlife" is not so much as mentioned in the Torah. There is no formal teaching in Judaism about an "afterlife." Belief in an "afterlife" is common among Jews, but it not required.
"...have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying,I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living." Mt.22:31-32
Makes sense, doesn't it?
Your objection hasn't been avoided. You simply keep making the mistake that what is written about Jesus in the NT isn't Jewish belief.cnorman18 posted,
And even if one believes in a general Resurrection, there is NOTHING -- ANYWHERE -- in Jewish tradition about a "special Resurrection" that concerns the Messiah.
And, of course, I note once again that the issue of a MAN being worshiped as GOD, a key component of Christian belief that is absolutely absent from and contradictory to everything in Jewish belief, teaching and tradition, is still being assiduously avoided here....
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�
Steven Novella
Steven Novella
Post #66
According to the Jews who knew Jesus, nothing you have said is true.Goat posted,
What is written about Jesus in the NT doesn't matter one way or another to the Jews. If Jesus existed, he was just a man. He was not the Messiah according to the Jews, End of story. The tasks required of the Messiah have not been accomplished. So, therefore the messiah has not yet come. THere is no tradition that the Messiah will come twice.
Post #67
Jewish rabbis continued writing about Jesus for a number of centuries AFTER Jesus' crucifixion (there are several dozen passages in the Babylonian Talmud mentioning him by name).Thruit wrote:According to the Jews who knew Jesus, nothing you have said is true.Goat posted,
What is written about Jesus in the NT doesn't matter one way or another to the Jews. If Jesus existed, he was just a man. He was not the Messiah according to the Jews, End of story. The tasks required of the Messiah have not been accomplished. So, therefore the messiah has not yet come. THere is no tradition that the Messiah will come twice.
Jesus most certainly did matter to them.
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Post #68
Please show that this is true. Prove it. Demonstrate that the Gospels were written by people who actually knew Jesus, rather than just claim it, or point to people who claim it.Thruit wrote:According to the Jews who knew Jesus, nothing you have said is true.Goat posted,
What is written about Jesus in the NT doesn't matter one way or another to the Jews. If Jesus existed, he was just a man. He was not the Messiah according to the Jews, End of story. The tasks required of the Messiah have not been accomplished. So, therefore the messiah has not yet come. THere is no tradition that the Messiah will come twice.
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�
Steven Novella
Steven Novella
Post #69
I just did.Goat wrote:
Please show that this is true. Prove it. Demonstrate that the Gospels were written by people who actually knew Jesus, rather than just claim it, or point to people who claim it.
At a minimum, the Pharisees were obsessed with Jesus of Nazareth and the Christian religion for at least 4 centuries after Jesus was long gone. (Of course part of the reason was Christianity's miraculous success as a world-changing religion.)
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Post #70
The Me's wrote:I just did.Goat wrote:
Please show that this is true. Prove it. Demonstrate that the Gospels were written by people who actually knew Jesus, rather than just claim it, or point to people who claim it.
At a minimum, the Pharisees were obsessed with Jesus of Nazareth and the Christian religion for at least 4 centuries after Jesus was long gone. (Of course part of the reason was Christianity's miraculous success as a world-changing religion.)
Well, they were concerned about the stories in the Gospels, which depicted the Jews in the bad light. Some of the stories the Christians claim to be about Jesus were not about the 'Jesus of Nazareth' figure. The one that can be narrowed down to that basically was written down, probably in response to the whole trial claim in Matthew. It basically was saying that the proper laws were followed.. and is most likely in my eyes a response to the Gospels, not to anything Jesus said or did.
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�
Steven Novella
Steven Novella