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Valke2
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The Talmud (Sanhedrin 107b) discusses an incident between Jesus and his teacher, Rabbi Joshua ben Perachya. They were staying at an inn. The teacher made a comment about how beautiful the inn was. He referred to it as an “acsania” which can also mean a female innkeeper. Jesus thought his teacher was making a leering comment about the innkeeper, and he replied in kind: “But Rabbi, her eyes are so narrow!”
This comment angered his teacher, implying that Jesus had a bad habit of making inappropriate remarks about women. The teacher threw Jesus out of his “school” and would no longer teach him. (I’m not asking any Christian to believe this of course, but it makes a certain kind of internal logic sense, when viewed against the story of the gentile woman who approaches Jesus for a blessing and is at first rudely dismissed by him).
Jesus repeatdly asked to be accepted back over time, but Joshuar refused. Finally, Joshua determined to take Jesus back as a student the next time he asked. But when Jesus came and asked again, Joshua was in the middle of prayers and couldn’t be disturbed. He made what he thought was a friendly hand gesutre, asking Jesus to wait. BUt Jesus thought he was being dismissed again.
After this Jesus began instructing others in his heretical ideas. His personal issues became political and theological. Rabbi Joshua eventually sought him out and begged jesus to return to the fold. But he refused, saying “I have learned this from you: everyone who sins and causes other people to sin will not receive the opportunity to repent.”
It is interesting that the Talmud blames, at least partly, Rabbi Joshua. It concludes that one should “always let the left hand push away while the right hand invites.”
The talmud ends the narrative with “Yeshua ha’Notzri practiced magic and led astray and deceived Israel.”
The Talmud portrays Jesus as going astray because of a character flaw and it criticizes his teacher for this treatment of Jesus.
This comment angered his teacher, implying that Jesus had a bad habit of making inappropriate remarks about women. The teacher threw Jesus out of his “school” and would no longer teach him. (I’m not asking any Christian to believe this of course, but it makes a certain kind of internal logic sense, when viewed against the story of the gentile woman who approaches Jesus for a blessing and is at first rudely dismissed by him).
Jesus repeatdly asked to be accepted back over time, but Joshuar refused. Finally, Joshua determined to take Jesus back as a student the next time he asked. But when Jesus came and asked again, Joshua was in the middle of prayers and couldn’t be disturbed. He made what he thought was a friendly hand gesutre, asking Jesus to wait. BUt Jesus thought he was being dismissed again.
After this Jesus began instructing others in his heretical ideas. His personal issues became political and theological. Rabbi Joshua eventually sought him out and begged jesus to return to the fold. But he refused, saying “I have learned this from you: everyone who sins and causes other people to sin will not receive the opportunity to repent.”
It is interesting that the Talmud blames, at least partly, Rabbi Joshua. It concludes that one should “always let the left hand push away while the right hand invites.”
The talmud ends the narrative with “Yeshua ha’Notzri practiced magic and led astray and deceived Israel.”
The Talmud portrays Jesus as going astray because of a character flaw and it criticizes his teacher for this treatment of Jesus.