N
Noose001
Guest
Of course they are prophetic ‘writings’.They’re ‘writings’.
Of course they are prophetic ‘writings’.They’re ‘writings’.
The really clever thing about Jesus as Messiah is the remarkable ability to fulfil ‘prophesies’ that can be arrived at by text manipulation rather than real world events that would surround the arrival of Messiah.Of course they are prophetic ‘writings’.
You are going back to the NT writings; they are inconsequential to the fulfillment of what was prophesied. The events happened as per the prophesied timeline and that makes the NT writing even more credible.The really clever thing about Jesus as Messiah is the remarkable ability to fulfil ‘prophesies’ that can be arrived at by text manipulation rather than real world events that would surround the arrival of Messiah.
Not only that but, after over two decades of discussing religion with Christians, I’d suggest that ‘proof texts’ are about the most barren form of apologetics.
They’re the only ‘Christian’ evidence that anything, at all, happened.And the idea that NT is just a narrative is neither here nor there.
Again, the writings of the NT are inconsequential to the fulfillment of prophesy, prophesy still happens as per the prophesied timeline whether it is written or not.They’re the only ‘Christian’ evidence that anything, at all, happened.
You’re still assuming an awful lot about the origin or your ‘prophesy’ never mind its fulfilment (I blame Josh McDowell, by the way) perhaps reading up on the origins of Daniel might be instructive?Again, the writings of the NT are inconsequential to the fulfillment of prophesy, prophesy still happens as per the prophesied timeline whether it is written or not.
The only thing this shows me is your misunderstandings about the difference between the Resurrection and a temporal resuscitation of sorts.So is Lazarus God? Are all the dead who rose from their graves after the resurrection God?
Ha ha and the evidence you’ve provided for the idea that NT is a narrative is zero. It could be but doesn’t change what has happened or what will happen as far as prophesy is concerned.You’re still assuming an awful lot about the origin or your ‘prophesy’ never mind its fulfilment (I blame Josh McDowell, by the way) perhaps reading up on the origins of Daniel might be instructive?
FiveLinden . . .This is irrelevant. I don’t care what Bart Ehrman thinks.
Who is that?Then you don’t care about the thinking of one of the modern greats of New Testament scholarship . . .
I am not arguing against your faith, or your ability to believe in mysteries. And pleased to see you are not arguing against my facts!But even so, this doesn’t make Jesus God because the mystery is in how God creates
FiveLinden. What do you think a “mystery” is?I am not arguing against your faith, or your ability to believe in mysteries.
So only God could be resurrected permanently without the need to die again? How do you know Lazarus died? Could he not have been assumed into heaven with the Virgin Mary? And the hundreds of others who rose from their graves? And if they all had to die again what was the point of them doing so at the time of the resurrection?The only thing this shows me is your misunderstandings about the difference between the Resurrection and a temporal resuscitation of sorts.
I am using the word as it is used in Catholic tradition.FiveLinden. What do you think a “mystery” is?
No. Only God can Resurrect someone.So only God could be resurrected permanently without the need to die again?
What mysteries and what facts are you talking about?I am not arguing against your faith, or your ability to believe in mysteries. And pleased to see you are not arguing against my facts!
You’ve chosen a particular interpretation of Isaiah (after all, having decided a man was God, you can’t have him having a human father) which you’ve chosen to be about Messiah and added to it Micah and Bethlehem. So the NT had to come up with a story that got a woman married to a man she never has sex with from Nazareth to Bethlehem in order to have the baby - the thing is that there are real world consequences of Messiah turning up that won’t be reliant on constructed stories about place of birth.God will give a sign when the messiah comes and that sign is that a virgin will conceive and bear a son in Bethlehem . . . will still reject Him (Isa 53:3)
There does Dr Ehrman deny entropy and affirm perpetual motion? I have never seem him write on physics.people like Bart, are going to attempt to get their readers
to deny entropy, and
affirm perpetual motion with no reliable sources,
A prophesy finds its interpretation in the fulfillment and not on the prophesy itself, so saying that i have taken a particular interpretation of a prophesy is not really an argument and claiming that the NT text is a narrative also doesn’t cut it for me.You’ve chosen a particular interpretation of Isaiah (after all, having decided a man was God, you can’t have him having a human father) which you’ve chosen to be about Messiah and added to it Micah and Bethlehem.
In a smoke and mirrors sense where you determine what is prophesy, you interpret the prophesy and you decide whether it’s fulfilled or not.so the case about Jesus is a very tight case.
Correct, it is the fulfillment that is to be interpreted in light of the prophesy but saying that i have a particular interpretation of the prophesy itself is meaningless.In a smoke and mirrors sense where you determine what is prophesy, you interpret the prophesy and you decide whether it’s fulfilled or not.
Whether it cuts it for you, or not, is irrelevant.