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The broke his legs so he couldn't pull himself up.In my CCD classes, the priest told us that he didn't bleed to death, but he suffocated. His upper body was slumping over until he couldn't breathe anymore. Sounds good, but I don't know that's what happened during the crusifixions.
During a normal crucifixion, the legs would be broken to cause this. I'm not sure how the legs being broken would cause this alone though. After all, it would be extremely painfull to do so, but you could still support yourself. Maybe we should ask Mythbusters?His upper body was slumping over until he couldn't breathe anymore. Sounds good, but I don't know that's what happened during the crusifixions.
During a normal crucifixion, the legs would be broken to cause this. I'm not sure how the legs being broken would cause this alone though. After all, it would be extremely painfull to do so, but you could still support yourself. Maybe we should ask Mythbusters?
The broke his legs so he couldn't pull himself up.
I don't recall this either, I but the borrowed this answer from another member on another site (if inerested, PM me for the denomination). If this is true, than it would make it impossible for Jesus to keep lifting himself up and even more difficult for just his hands to support the upper part of him. If I can I will try to get a definitive scriptural source from this member.When was this? From what I recall they did not break Jesus Christ's legs.
Nothing in the Bible says that His legs were broken.
XXXXXXXXXX writes: No, his arms would probably also have been tied to the crossbeam, and his feet would have had something to rest against. Crucifixion was intended to be a slow, agonizing death from hunger, thirst and exposure over a period of days. The longer the victim was on the cross, the more labored his breathing would become as his lungs / chest cavity filled with fluid. The victim would need to pull himself up by his arms (most victims were usually just tied, not nailed, to the cross), and pushing himself up with his feet to allow him to expand his chest in order to breathe. That is why the Jewish elders asked that Jesus' legs be broken -- so that he wouldn't be able to push himself up to ease his breathing, and thus expire more quickly.
Check out the following site, which contains the text from an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association published in 1986, "On the physical death of Jesus Christ."
http://www.catholicculture.org/docs/doc_view.cfm?recnum=252
They didn't, and it's commonly used for a supportive reason on the "Jesus survived the crucifixion" debates.When was this? From what I recall they did not break Jesus Christ's legs.
Nothing in the Bible says that His legs were broken.
His legs could not have been broken or He would not have fulfilled scripture as being the sacrificial offering for sin. The offering had to be without spot or blemish.
It is interesting to note that in early christian artwork Christ was portrayed as having the nails though hands and feet. At this same time period recorded incidents of stigmata (manifestations of the wounds of Christ) appeared in the same locations. Later when the artwork changed to manifest more likely events the location of the stigmata changed to mach. This seems to imply a psychosomatic cause for stigmata as real manifestaion should not have chaged as the truth is fixed.
His legs could not have been broken or He would not have fulfilled scripture as being the sacrificial offering for sin. The offering had to be without spot or blemish.