Terry Sampson
Well-Known Member
Ha! And I don't suppose that it is important to you to insist that my doctrines do not have their origin in Scripture but somewhere else, far from Israel and long after Jesus was dead, is it?it is important to you to insist that your doctrines have their origin in Scripture, and nowhere else.
For the record,
- Unlike most Christians who recognize and value a covenant with HaShem, I believe there are two covenants: one between HaShem and Israel and the other between Christians and the Resurrected Jesus Christ, who is the Mediator between our Father and me. That puts me pretty far outside of the "Calvinist" box that you may think I'm in. That also means that I do not believe that either covenant replaces or should replace the other. You ought to consider thinking about Christianity the same way: as a possible second covenant, ... for Gentiles only. It's quite liberating.
- As for the differences that exist and remain, they don't trouble me and here's why: [Bavli, Sanhedrin 105a] "The ministering Angels exclaimed before the Holy One, blessed be He, 'Sovereign of the Universe! If David comes, who slew the Philistine and gave possession of Gath to thy children. [and complains at Thy giving a share in the world to come to Doeg and Ahitophel], what wilt thou do with him?' He replied, 'It is My duty to make them friends with each other.'"
- Unlike most Christians who claim that the Resurrected Jesus Christ is Israel's long-awaited Messiah, I believe they are seriously mistaken and I defer to Israel to define who is and who is not the Messiah to come in this world. IMO, Israel's Messiah to come in this world is not the one I'm waiting for. I think that puts me pretty far outside of any "Protestant" and "Catholic" boxes that you may have in mind to put me in.
- I was intrigued by your Tanakh-lite version of atonement in your OP. We ought to run the fuller picture up the flagpole and see what folks think of two of the of examples that you gave in which you say "blood is not necessary for atonement".
- What do you think folks who don't know the whole story would say if they found out that the LORD's anger over the mutiny against Moses resulted in the earth opening up and swallowing Korah, Dathan, Abiram, their wives, their children, and everything they owned; and fire sent by the LORD that consumed the 250 community leaders who had sided with Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. And, the next day, when Moses sent Aaron out to atone for the grumbling of other Israelites who were unhappy about the events the day before, Aaron didn't run quick enough and the plague killed 14,700 people before it stopped.
- Or what do you think they would say about the consequences of King David's adultery (not, as you wrote, idolatry), i.e. when David confessed to the prophet Nathan: "I have sinned against the Lord", Nathan told him: "The Lord has taken away your sin. You are not going to die. But because by doing this you have shown utter contempt for the Lord, the son born to you will die" David sinned, repented, and lived, but the child of his adultery died.
- I note that the sinners in those stories "stood at Sinai". Christians didn't, apart from our Resurrected Jesus. If you take our Jesus away from us, you leave us without anyone to stand at Sinai for us.
- In post #37, I suggested that you might be comparing apples and pigs. In this post, I tell you bluntly: you're comparing apples and pigs and you seem to think you're saying something important when you point out that apples don't have feet.
- Your comparison is silly because, as I said, it compares two radically different revelations: Torah and Jesus.
- Your comparison is unwarranted because the Torah is not Jesus and Jesus is not the Torah.
- Your comparison is non-constructive because it adds puts another log on a smouldering fire.
- And your comparison is offensive because it's based on the premise that, if we Christians weren't so stupid, we'd realize that Jesus wasted his life, accomplished nothing substantial or beneficial to anybody, and he should have stuck to carpentry because at least then he might have done something useful for himself, his family, his people, and his God.
- The complaint your OP echos is over 2000 years old. The cause for your complaint is not going away until, IMO, HaShem, His Bat Kol, His Shekhinah, the Messiah to come in this world, and the Sabaoth put an end to it once and for all.
- Meanwhile, jackals move in and carry off Jewish and Christian lambs and weak sheep at an increasingly alarming rate.
- You say that you have taken the time to study Christianity. Good for you but, IMO, your time would have been better utilized by studying Torah, because your OP suggests to me that you're pretty committed to the notion that Jesus was and is not necessary. And I say: well and good; it's a little late to ask, but can I have him. Consider it a mitzvoth under the gleaning law [Leviticus 23:22; Deuteronomy 24:19). Let's strike a bargain here and now: You promise not to come back and take him from me and I promise not to ask, much less, demand that you accept him as the Messiah of this world.
- Your comparison is silly because, as I said, it compares two radically different revelations: Torah and Jesus.
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