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#21
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#22
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"But He answered and said to them, 'An evil and adulterous generation asks for a sign. But no sign will be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah.'" -Matthew 12:39 |
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#23
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"Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled." Matthew 5:17,18 |
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#24
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as your icon for one of your previous posts, I'm guessing you feel the verse you typed is a rebuttal to keltic63's post. However, that's not the case. It supports it -- and very powerfully I should say.The radical Christ, the one who continually scandalized his Jewish brothers who were zealous for scripture, was fulfilling the law and the prophets by disregarding the law for the sake of love. We sometimes forget that Jesus was operating under the constant criticism of the Pharisees, scribes, and most of the religious leadership of his day. Their number one charge was that Jesus did not believe the Bible (I phrase it as such so it will register with today's Conservative christian rhethoric. Back then they would have worded it like, "This Jesus, a mere carpenter from Nazareth, obviously doesn't have a high view of the law of Moses like we do." They would (and did) work hard to falsely portray him as having a massive disregard for scripture. So Jesus shot back with the verse you quoted (much more so later in Matthew chapter 23.) Never apologizing for his radical ways, Jesus proclaimed that his ministry, his eating with the "sinners", his touching of those it was not lawful for him to touch, his healing on the Sabbath, his inclusion of women and Gentiles, his opposing the death penalty though it was biblical, all of these things, were the fulfillment of the law and the prophets. Then Jesus charged the people (and us) with doing the same. Love the Lord your God with all your heart, love your neighbor, and love yourself, he said. Do that, and you too will have done what God requires of you. |
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#25
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You know, I'm going to start placing an accompanying thought whenever I make reference to the greatest commandment. That passage really speaks to those of us who are liberal Christians and we are very fond of quoting it. There is nothing particularly difficult about our reciting the greatest commandment (and the one that was forever paired with it, "love your neighbor." These two are now one and what God has joined...)
But I think the greatest commandment also happens to be the greatest challenge -- for all of us in this life. |
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#26
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Hey Jamie Son of Daniel:
No. Christ did not "err on the side of humanity". He acted with mercy, yes. But compassion is not a exclusively human characteristic. Which was my point. |
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#27
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So is your point to engage in civil discussion, Legion? or are you here to stir up trouble and post your self-assured views that whatever you say is correct? |
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#28
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I was specifying to McDaniel which part of your post I disagreed with.
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