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Reply to "If Jesus wasn’t a real historical figure, where did Christian theology come from? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I haven’t read the whole thread, but what I have heard makes sense. His geographic location was in the crossroads of east and west. He most likely was exposed to eastern philosophy, think India at the time. If he had lived in a different time perhaps he would have become a philosopher like Karl Marx or Kiergegaard. He certainly upset the status quo by becoming a reformist like Martin Luther. His death was not that unusual, plenty of people were crucified and continued to be for a long time [/quote] Jesus was also exposed to Greco-Roman philosophy because they ruled the Middle East in his time. [/quote] No, only the most wealthy Jews were exposed to Greco Roman scholarship. It’s possible that Paul and Matthew had been exposed to such teaching, but Jesus would have received only traditional Jewish teaching. Exposure to Greco Roman mythology would explain why Matthew, and only Matthew, described a Virgin Birth. The idea of God impregnating a human woman was common in Greco Roman mythology. Such an idea would be repulsive to Jews. [/quote] Isaiah 7:14 (Jewish) prophesied a virgin birth. “Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.” If she was a virgin, the impregnation must have been supernatural. No need to fall back in Greco-Roman mythology. [/quote] Wrong. Isaiah never said that. That’s a Christian mistranslation. The Hebrew word is “alma.” “Alma” means young woman,” not “virgin.”[/quote] What other words are mistranslated by Christians, in your view?[/quote] How much time have you got? There’s a reason that Jews teach their children to read the Bible in the original and Christians do not. [/quote] I have a lot of time. And I am interested. Please proceed.[/quote]
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