YesOh there's no hiding my affiliation with the Urantia Book, I talk about it all the time on RF.
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YesOh there's no hiding my affiliation with the Urantia Book, I talk about it all the time on RF.
Thanks. You make a good point about the Aramaic to Greek. Christians who get picky about translations from Greek to English overlook the Aramaic to Greek. Moses would have predated the Biblical Hebrew used in the books finalized during the Babylonian captivity by 1000+ years. He likely spoke a dialect of Palio Hebrew.If you are talking about Mosheh ben-Amram, let's just say he spoke the following:
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Calling what he spoke (עברית ישראלי) Ivrith Yisraeli and also the dialects of Kemetic would be an accurate description of the langauges of his time. And, again if we are talking Mosheh ben-Amram then this discussion in the below video would have been clear to him.
He likely spoke a dialect of Palio Hebrew.
It would be like us saying that the Allied Forces were war-mongering nations when they attacked German forces. Seems like a twisting to me and a lack of critical thinking. Now... "modern-day anti-Christian God view?" yes.. .that would nail it.
Palio-Hebrew is not a language. It is a script. It is also a modern western term.
1. You are the be all and end all authority on Jewish scripture and nobody that doesn't have the same level of expertise should have an opinion?
2. You are an expert because you can read Hebrew and anyone who can't is not an expert by definition?
3. You are only claiming expertise in the translation of the actual words?
What bothers me is that what you say about expertise is fair enough, but if we applied this approach to every subject, then there would be little discussion, just accepting the dictates of experts.
I receive a weekly Da'var (sp?) by Email from a Rabbi. In it he has claimed that "the Rabbis" say the following. The tablets on which the ten commandments were handed down were not two "gravestones" as often depicted, but a cube where the words went all the way through and could be read from both sides. This required two miracles. The words appeared the same from both sides, one side was not laterally inverted. And "dots" hung unsupported in the air. I challenged him (he will reply to friendly questions) as this seemed to be ridiculous, and he admitted that some of these statements were less likely to be literally true than others. My questions follow.
1. Was I, a relatively untutored person on this subject, entitled to an opinion?
2. Out of interest, what is your take on it?
And he continued... "Which reminds me, have I ever told you the one about the tall pharisee on shallow camel?"He once said to Thomas: “My people take themselves too seriously; they are just about devoid of an appreciation of humor. The burdensome religion of the Pharisees could never have had origin among a people with a sense of humor. They also lack consistency; they strain at gnats and swallow camels.”
There is a real psychological phenomenon known as bereavement hallucinations. It's actually fairly common.No I cannot prove it but I hear it is unreasonable from a phychological perspective to say that so many followers of Jesus experiences the resurrected Jesus and heard Him speak and say Him ascend etc.
Yet the Hebrew prophecies from what I see, do point to Jesus being the only possible candidate for the Messiah, and other having come too late. And of course I see Jesus having fulfilled prophecies with His dying and rising. But all this is just silly talk for a Jew who has learned that these things in the Hebrew scriptures have to mean something else.
What you wrote sounds like the same thing to me. The authors of the gospels appear to make it clear that jesus intentially stated things in order for them not to be understood.
This seems to be alluded to in the gospel of Thomas.
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Your assumption is interesting. Especially given I have made no assumptions about you.
Please be aware, it was an offer. You could have just said no thanks. You are not the first RF's that I offered this to who had their reasons they didn't want to do it. There was one RF who did a few years ago, and it was great experience.
BTW, if you read what I wrote you would know that I offered to go through ALL ancient Hebrew texts and not just Masoretic ones, Torath Mosheh Jews use all ancient Hebrew texts in a matter like this and not just one type. i.e. as we all know Masoretic means with vowel points and grammer marks added. This means that I have no problem going to the Torah Scrolls (w/o vowels and punctiation) Samaritan Torah, the Dead Sea Scrolls, etc.
The following may help.
When I say "lean unto my own understanding" I mean forming an opinion without consideration of others input. It seems at least for me that more often than not groups and books cross my path without me choosing the path that they cross that I happen to be on. Sometimes to my delight sometimes to my chagrin. The challenge is in paying attention with integrity to what has crossed your path.
I don't know that I would say admire. Many people leave their faith for the wrong reasons. Its too hard, too unrealistic, too against what I feel I want to do etc.
But I understand what your saying. It is an admirable thing to have the strength of character to be able to follow perceived truth where ever it may lead.
That is a gnositc gospel with secret knowledge that only the enlightened can understand.
However in the real gospels do say that Jesus spoke in parables so that some would not understand what He was on about.
However in the real gospels do say that Jesus spoke in parables so that some would not understand what He was on about.
Thank you for sharing your view.Well let's look at what the messiah is supposed to due, which is basically reign during the idyllic messianice era. He is to usher in an era of worldwide peace (Jesus didn't). He will bring all the Jews back to the Land of Israel (Jesus didn't). He will rule from Jerusalem (Jesus didn't). Is this making sense to you?
Hello my friend. Thank you for replying. Unfortunately, the two references you gave for messianic prophecies are not about the Messiah at all. The servant in Isaiah 53 is Israel, and Psalm 22 is talking about David. There is nothing in the Tanakh to indicate there are two messiahs (or one messiah coming two times). You don't find that idea until Christianity.Thank you for sharing your view.
Yes, it does make sense, except for the other prophecies that appear to reveal another purpose of the Messiah.
I am of the perspective that the messianic prophecies have dual fulfillment; first that He would come as the Lamb of God, be sacrificed for the sins of the world, and bring spiritual peace and atonement between humanity and God (Isaiah 53; Psalm 22, etc.)... then return again to bring all Jews back to the land of Israel, rule from Jerusalem, and bring in the millennial kingdom of world peace.
I assume that doesn’t make sense to you, though, so I’ll respect that and end there because this probably isn’t the thread for further discussion/debate about it.
Thanks again.
You have a legitimate point, clearly the NT gospels aren't documents of perfection, but religion itself develops in a realm of its own. It's not the product of historians, philosophers or scientist. All of the OT scriptures are retrospectives written long after the events depicted. What did Abraham write 5-6 centuries before Moses? What scriptures, customs, traditions and laws did the Israelites use for 400+ years in Egypt? Where are the stone tablets that God supposedly wrote with his own finger that were smashed and rewritten again??? If Moses wrote any of the scriptures, then who had possession of them for 1000 years before they became fixed in their present form???And who decided that it was to be defined as Gnostic gospel and that Gnostic was not an authoritative text? Also, what evidence do you have that the gospels currently found in the NT are not themselves Gnostic?
Who decided what was a real gospel and what was not? What are the names of the Jews who were involved in this process of deciding?
What did Abraham write 5-6 centuries before Moses?
What scriptures, customs, traditions and laws did the Israelites use for 400+ years in Egypt?
Where are the stone tablets that God supposedly wrote with his own finger that were smashed and rewritten again??? If Moses wrote any of the scriptures, then who had possession of them for 1000 years before they became fixed in their present form???
If you are speaking of Avraham ben-Terahh. What he wrote, during his time, exist today in the form of restatement of that information. It is found in a text known as (ספר יצירה). Since there was no requirement to maintain the original or even exact copies of, the main of the information is what Israelis/Jews preserved throughout our history.
There was no concept of a "scripture" in Israeli/Jewish culture during the time you are talking about. Again, you have to remember that that is a "western" term. An Israeli/Jew from ancient times would have used a number of words to describe what had been textually and orally received from previous generations.
In terms of customs and traditions, that is easy. From the time of Avraham ben-Terahh until the time when the Torah was given at Mount Sinai the customs/traditions of the Avraham ben-Terahh, his son Yitzhhaq ben Avraham ben-Terahh, Ya'aqov ben-Yitzhhaq ben-Avraham ben-Terahh, and the descendents of Ya'aqov ben-Yitzhhaq ben-Avraham ben-Terahh were the following:
A better way of putting it is, the the three above items were their "culture" and the the Torah was given at Mount Sinai the 613 mitzvoth of the written and oral Torah of Hashem became the culture of all Torath Mosheh Israelis.
- The 7 mitzvoth/Noachide laws.
- Brith Milah on the 8th day for males.
- Prayer during Shahhrith (morning), Minhhah (afternoon), and Arvith (night).
Because the tablets were not ever the central focus, and instead the entire written Torah, when the 1st Temple was destroyed there are some who claim the tablets were hidden with the Aron. Since the written and oral Torah were the required method for all generations, not matter the circumstances that was what was protected to make sure that the actions of the Torah would continue.
According to us Torath Mosheh Jews, Karaites, and Samaritans Mosheh ben-Amram didn't write the Torah, as you may mean. He had it dictated to him by Hashem and he "transribed" what was dictated to him. According to Torath Mosheh Jews and Samaritans Mosheh ben-Amram made 13 copies of the Torah he transcribed and gave a copy to each leader of each of the 12 tribes with one being kept in the MIshkan. From there, copies were made from those 12 and transmitted in every generation to every individual Israeli. Thus, the reason that modern day Torah scrolls are 98% to 99% the same when compared to Hebrew texts between displaced Jewish communities and Jewish texts from more than 2,500 years ago.
The following may help:
Do y'all get annoyed when Christians come in trying to explain your own holy scriptures to you? I see this happen all. the time. In discussions, in debates, it seems to happen a lot. I just know I'd get annoyed personally, but that's just me.