K
Kaninchen
Guest
Err, no, but I’ve found that Christian fora are not the place for internecine wrangling, Christians are quite adept enough at that themselves.So you’re Reform?
Err, no, but I’ve found that Christian fora are not the place for internecine wrangling, Christians are quite adept enough at that themselves.So you’re Reform?
I smiled. A guten chodesh!I expect most of us aren’t really that bothered but tend to be diplomatic.
I looked up the area on your ancestry - Caucasus Mountain region, Mountain Jews or Caucasus Jews. You have a very interesting background! How long did it take you to trace it? I can imagine the stories that you heard from your grandparents considering the routes? And is your background Sephardi? Are you in the States? I hope you’ll share a little more of the background, if its not asking to much?My ancestors were German Jews who immigrated from the Caucasus Mountain region. Their descendants then went to England, and finally to Brazil. Study has always been very important in my family, but my grandmother and mother were first rate cooks and bakers, too. I inherited the “study gene.” I have several bookcases filled with books of commentaries, history, the Hebrew language, etc.
One can wholly reject his claims and still respect him a misled child or G-d. Are we not to respect ALL of G-d’s creation, even if we don’t approve of it? I may be wrong, but I think we are. I respect an autistic child even if that child is screaming in a movie theater and causing me to enjoy the movie less than if the child were not present. He or she is a child of G-d, a part of G-d’s creation.Which I think is profoundly ignorant on the part of Jews. To respect a man who claimed to be the Messiah as a good Rabbi is tantamount to affirming his claim to be the Messiah. I would think such claims demand a thorough investigation, leading to a conclusion that either wholly embraces or wholly rejects the man’s claims.
I know my family originally came from Azerbaijan. Some immigrated to an ancient town near the German-Swiss border called Waldshut, and changed their name to Herzog. Later, when they immigrated to England, they anglicized Herzog to Hartsough, though once they reached Brazil, they went back to Herzog. They have always considered themselves Ashkenazi. I was actually born in Los Angeles.I looked up the area on your ancestry - Caucasus Mountain region, Mountain Jews or Caucasus Jews. You have a very interesting background! How long did it take you to trace it? I can imagine the stories that you heard from your grandparents considering the routes? And is your background Sephardi? Are you in the States? I hope you’ll share a little more of the background, if its not asking to much?
Richard Carrier has written a book showing why the marginalized Jews of the first century were primed and ready to accept and believe in a crucified and risen messiah, even though Jewish teaching, as you know, has always been that the messiah will not be divine, and he certainly won’t be crucified!I found it interesting because it changed my understanding of a civilisation already in decline for its own reasons (which included reaction to hostile environments, obviously, but that wasn’t the whole picture).
So what needs to be explained, then, is why Jesus was crucified at the instigation of the Sanhedrin? What precisely did he do that merited execution in the eyes of the Jewish Council? The charge was blasphemy. If he didn’t claim to be G-d then how did the Council settle on blasphemy as the charge that merited his execution?meltzerboy2:![]()
I accept all you wrote, except that the only apostles I accept as historical figures are Peter, James, and John. And Paul, but he was not one of the original twelve. Paul mentions Peter, James, and John in his letters, but none of the others. I believe Jesus and his followers were more akin to one of the mystery cults that were around during that time. There were other crucified men who claimed to be the messiah or the Son or G-d. I believe Jesus’s cult flourished for several reasons when the others did not, but I certainly don’t believe it was because he was G-d.I think most Jews accept that Jesus was a historical figure as were the Apostles, He was a rabbi, and He was crucified. But that’s about as far as Jews go. They do not accept Jesus as a prophet, nor the Messiah, and certainly not G-d. The Gospels are taken as literary narrative, no doubt some parts of which are true; but they are not taken as Holy Scripture inspired by G-d. I’m sure Rabbi can add more to this.
For people who do not see the NT as either scripture or reportage, this is a ‘literary criticism’ question, like asking about a sequence of events in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.So what needs to be explained, then, is why Jesus was crucified at the instigation of the Sanhedrin?
I suppose people are free to imagine whatever they wish to imagine, but that doesn’t change the evidence from history. That Jesus existed and was crucified by Rome at the instigation of the Sanhedrin is about as verifiable as anything in history, so to simply assert an unfounded historical sentiment as a premise in a reply is an option, although one not deserving of much serious consideration.HarryStotle:![]()
For people who do not see the NT as either scripture or reportage, this is a ‘literary criticism’ question, like asking about a sequence of events in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.So what needs to be explained, then, is why Jesus was crucified at the instigation of the Sanhedrin?
Yes, you can find their names here:Can you name the other men who were crucified merely for claiming to be the Messiah?
You know quite well that the only evidence for any of this lies in a the text itself, rather like the evidence of Hamlet’s actions lies in the text of the play.I suppose people are free to imagine whatever they wish to imagine, but that doesn’t change the evidence from history. That Jesus existed and was crucified by Rome at the instigation of the Sanhedrin is about as verifiable as anything in history, so to simply assert an unfounded historical sentiment as a premise in a reply is an option, although one not deserving of much serious consideration.