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frangiuliano115
Guest
Very interesting points.I wonder why they don’t try to exegete John 1:42. All those stony excuses disappear.
And when they talk about Christ being the rock, I assume they are referring to 1 Cor 10:4, but that has got nothing to do with the building of the Church. It is just a proof text job to disprove Mat 16:18. Totally out-of-context. And Mat 16:18 precede Cor. So it is an anachronistic argument as well.
What does Mark Driscoll know about the humorous side of Christ? He couldn’t possibly know. He thinks it is a joke. And luckily for the rest of us, that is his personal opinion only. No other Christian writers thought that was a joke throughout the centuries. I am hard pressed to think of any NT Chapter or verse that is supposedly a joke. Perhaps he sees jokes littered throughout the Bible. Or perhaps that is his SOP when he couldn’t exegete his way out of it. Don’t have the answer? Laughter is the best medicine!
Get behind me Satan? That has got nothing to do with the building of the Church and there is a time gap between that and Mat 16:18. The subject of 16:23 is the ignorance of Peter and that ignorance is hindering Jesus fate with death. But we know that Peter loves Jesus and wouldn’t want any harm to fall on Jesus. Anyone reading that knows why Peter said what he said. He is not thinking of anything evil towards his Master. If anyone tries linking that to Mat 16:18 then they must also link John 21:15-17. Anyone knows how to cherry pick but not all audience is a dumb lot. A dense Peter is not an evil Peter despite Driscoll painting it as such. No one can point out one evil thing Peter said that deserves such a rebuke. Why don’t Driscoll threat that as a joke instead?
John 1:42 Cephas:
Cephas in Aramaic means rock. I also find “rock” in Young’s Literal translation from the greek. A protestant bible translates it “Peter” which is right too, but Peter does mean rock. So it’s a circle. Talk about circular reasoning!
I used to teach my catechism kids that his name was Simon Peter so they wouldn’t get mixed up with the name change. This was helpful to them - others in the bible too (Mathew).
Anyway, when Jesus met Peter, He said Peter would be called Cephas. So why don’t we know Peter as Cephas?
For the same reason we don’t call Jesus Emmanuel –
It’s a title, not a name. (it could be a name too, but not in these cases).
So you bring up a really good point!
Regarding 1 Cor 10:4. That’s kind of the same as Jesus being the rock in the sense of being the cornerstone. I wouldn’t argue with that too much. Just my opinion. Jesus IS the rock, in whatever circumstance you wish to place that idea - it does not take away from Peter, Pietro-pietra.
Yes. I agree that the “get thee behind me satan” has nothing to do with anything.
The chuch could be built on Peter - he’s still human and could make mistakes. Remember about consuming the meat sacrificed to idols? And circumcision? It was a new and fledgling church - much to be worked out.
Peter did seem to be the strongest willed of the apostles. I liked John the best. But he might have been too young and not “practical” enough. All I can say is: Jesus knew what He was doing - we have to trust that.
Thanks for the opportunity to whip out some bibles - that’s why I joined here - not to argue about the weirdest stuff!
Yeah. And I agree with what you said about Driscoll. Didn’t even watch the link for youtube. No time for nonsense.
Fran