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twb1621
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At its very depth… its core, this question applies to our society today more than ever before. Moreso than when Pilate asked Jesus. When do we turn back to the Truth?
Truth is an absolute (either universal or individual) independent of personal preferences and unswayed by relativism. In John 14:6 Christ declares Himself “the Way, the Truth, and the Life…” Therefore, it can be said that God is Truth in the most absolute and fullest sense imaginable.At its very depth… its core, this question applies to our society today more than ever before. Moreso than when Pilate asked Jesus. When do we turn back to the Truth?
Suppose the answer would be now.At its very depth… its core, this question applies to our society today more than ever before. Moreso than when Pilate asked Jesus. When do we turn back to the Truth?
I saw someone speculating that He did respond. I have mislaid the Latin wording but the Latin question “What is truth” is an anagram of the Latin “It is the man before you.” Probably not true, but an interesting word play.Just as an aside, I have always wondered why Christ did not respond to Pilate’s loaded question: “what is truth?”. . . …
Found it.I saw someone speculating that He did respond. I have mislaid the Latin wording but the Latin question “What is truth” is an anagram of the Latin “It is the man before you.” Probably not true, but an interesting word play.
In Latin, the words of Pilate are Quid est veritas?
But to the original question, “What is truth?” It applies to each and every human of every generation. In effect, it asks “can I decide what constitutes reality, or is it outside and independent of me”? Am I its master, or is it master over me? And we use our senses to observe, our minds to evaluate, and our testing and reasoning ability to find the answer to this question “what is truth?”. It is not just an intellectual exercise, rather it is a fundamental expression of our understanding of reality itself. It takes our own existence as granted (at least for the time being), and it challenges us to explore whether our existence is really all there is. As government, law, science, technology, power, entertainment, physical comforts, pagan beliefs, money fail us (as they always do), the question comes back to us, louder than ever: WHAT IS TRUTH!?!!? “What” indeed. It is only and always a “what” if you put yourself at its center. Truth is a who, a relationship with the Almighty, with God at the center, and me as nothing, completely and utterly dependent on Him. From now until the last seconds of my earthly existence.These words take on a special quality in Latin, because they are actually an anagram. If you re-arrange the letters you obtain the following sentence: Est vir qui adest, “It is the man who is here.”
In a volume of Believe It or Not, Ripley quotes Pilate speaking in Latin, “QUID EST VERITAS?” (“What is truth?”) and adds that an anagram of this is “EST VIR QUI ADEST”–“It is the man who stands before you.”I saw someone speculating that He did respond. I have mislaid the Latin wording but the Latin question “What is truth” is an anagram of the Latin “It is the man before you.” Probably not true, but an interesting word play.