Thanks for that insight. I think that the gospels are written to humans, so we should expect there to be irony and all kinds of writing devices. Its not simple. Its a book written with the expectation that we have brains. Am I right?
"Your father the devil," is a complex sentence. I don't have the benefit of a catholic formation class, so to me it looks like something that has to be deconstructed. I translate devil to 'slanderer'. I do the best I can do, and I suspect all catholics. You are all nice people, but you are weird to me in a way. Sorry, but that's my background. You guys have a way of doing things which I am unfamiliar with. I don't know when to sit down and stand up and all of that. I did go to a Christmas dinner with a catholic family once, and it was awesome. I'll never forget how great that was. I don't think anybody does Christmas like you folks. I also visited a couple of catholic services.
You have a very broad knowledge of these early writers. I am jealous.
Indeed, the Bible is to me a human and divine document, so lots of writing devices and even mundane things (like someone asking for their coat be delivered to them) are in it. Not only that it is a high-context book where a lot is just not said, and it's context is the Church.
Mass can be confusing, during my first time (for I converted) a guy came up to me and told me how it worked. I have no idea what he said, but over repeated visits I eventually got the whole structure down. The Church is indeed weird when one looks at it, as always been from even Moses until now.
With "your father the devil," that is what the word means and the "father" bit meaning that they do the same thing. For the Lord Jesus said "
you are of your father the devil, and you desire to do the desires of your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and has not stood in the truth, because there is no truth in him. Whenever he might speak falsehood, he speaks from the own; for he is a liar, and the father of it." This contrasts with Him and His Father for He also said: "
truly, truly I say to you, the Son can do nothing from himself except what he sees the Father doing. For whatever that one does, these things also the Son does likewise."
To me this is a clue as to how it is associated with them, for St. Mark says "
the one named Barabbas was imprisoned with the rebels who had committed murder in the rebellion," and this whole event with the Lord Jesus was nothing else but a rebellion against God.
My knowledge is not that broad yet but thank you, but the way is accessible to all. Read
this book (or some equivalent, the word "Catholic" does not mean "RCC" in it, it was made by a Lutheran/Orthodox guy) which contextualizes them all accurately, then you can read them chronologically or in any order you wish while talking to people educated in them (who follow them, not others) and reading secondary material on them, while praying/fasting to God to give you their mind, which is none other than the mind of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:15-16). Over time knowledge increases and you begin to think like them, which is good because they themselves thought like Christ.
Where I got those quotes from was St. Thomas' Catena Aurea (Golden Chain, for the quotations form a chain/continuous commentary, golden for symbolism of many things), a commentary on the four Gospels made from quotes of the Fathers and those who followed them. Frankly the work is just divinely inspired and you should even
begin reading it today in my opinion, and a lecture (the divisions of it) of it daily in my opinion. A Gospel a day keeps the world, the flesh, and the devil away!
All the above said in my opinion of course.