Jim Parker
Member
Please!Are you aware that the event happened twice, and that is the reason for your "discrepancy"?
That's a total cop-out and circular reasoning.
Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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Please!Are you aware that the event happened twice, and that is the reason for your "discrepancy"?
Cyberseeker,Did you see the example I gave to Oz in post #4?
Another example is how the synoptic gospels puts the cleansing of the temple at the end of Christs ministry, just before his death. John places the temple cleansing at the beginning of his ministry, 3 years earlier. How do you explain that? I know how I explain it, but how does the breezy "what me worry" Christian explain it?
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.Also, IS this apologetics??
From Wikipedia:
Christianity[edit]
The Scutum Fidei, a diagram frequently used by Christian apologists to explain the Trinity.
I read that book a long while back!How about
Who Moved the Stone
Frank Morris
Hi Jim,Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
FYI: The diagram you have posted is from the Western (Roman) Church after the addition of the filioque to the Creed which was officially accepted by the popes after 1014. The words "and from the Son" (Latin: filioque) were added to the Nicene/Constantinople creed changing it from: "I believe in the Holy Spirit......Who proceeds from the Father" (Jhn 15:26) to "...Who proceeds from the Father and the Son..."
This was a unilateral change to the creed. The creed, with reference to the Holy Spirit, had already been established by the counsel of Constantinople in 381which was called to refute attempts by neo-Platonists to make the Holy Spirit less than fully God as they had done previously when Arius of Alexandria began to teach that Jesus was an lesser being than the Father. (neo-Platonism again)
The council of Constantinople was an ecumenical council of bishops from the entire Church as were all the 7 great councils. The unilateral addition of the filioque to the creed by the Roman church was a departure from the precedent of the entire church coming together to decide issues of doctrine and was part of the East-West controversy which eventually split the Church into what today are the Roman Catholic and Eastern Catholic Churches.
The problem with the filioque is illustrated by the diagram you posted. The Holy Spirit is subordinated to the Father and the Son. The proper arrangement, which more accurately reflects the Trinity, would be a triangle with the base at the bottom and the point at the top.
http://generationword.com/images/bible_school/maps/theology/trinity_diagram.gif
BY this arrangement, the proper relationship between the Father and the Son (begotten of the Father [Jhn 1:18]) and the Holy Spirit (proceeds from the Father) is illustrated.
Just a little church history FYI.
iakov the fool
(beaucoup dien cai dau)
DISCLAIMER: By reading the words posted above, you have made a free will choice to expose yourself to the rantings of iakov the fool. The poster assumes no responsibility for any temporary, permanent or otherwise annoying manifestations of cognitive dysfunction that, in any manner, may allegedly be related to the reader’s deliberate act by which he/she has knowingly allowed the above rantings to enter into his/her consciousness. No warrantee is expressed or implied. Individual mileage may vary. And, no, I don't want to hear about it. No sniveling! Enjoy the rest of your life here and the eternal one to come.
I want to comment on this post but want to be sure I am understanding correctly. Firstly, I assume you mean by cop-out is the position that the temple cleansing happened twice. I don't see how that is a cop out. Most apologetic sites I've visited put it this way. It's pretty clear to me that this is what happened. And why not? Jesus likely visited the temple more than once and who is to say He didn't clear it more than twice?!Please!
That's a total cop-out and circular reasoning.
For anyone reading along...I read that book a long while back!
I truly doubt Jesus would have cleaned out the temple at the beginning of His ministry. I do believe that during Holy Week He did visit the temple more than once.I want to comment on this post but want to be sure I am understanding correctly. Firstly, I assume you mean by cop-out is the position that the temple cleansing happened twice. I don't see how that is a cop out. Most apologetic sites I've visited put it this way. It's pretty clear to me that this is what happened. And why not? Jesus likely visited the temple more than once and who is to say He didn't clear it more than twice?!
I'm at a total loss as to how the post to which you are giving comment is circular in reasoning.
First up: There are many who see the Gospels as history. Something doesn't have to be stated chronologically to be historical. The account of Jesus' crucifixion is history. It happened in history. To record it is to record history. It doesn't mean that the Gospel were meant to be written as history but certainly we believe they are historical. The following are interesting and I just listened to them recently:
http://podcast.comereason.org/2017/03/why-gospels-are-history-part-1_5.html
http://podcast.comereason.org/2017/03/why-gospels-are-history-part-2.html
http://podcast.comereason.org/2017/03/why-gospels-are-history-part-3.html
You can also go here: http://podcast.comereason.org/ and find all three together. I post this just to show that there are others who view the Gospels (correctly in my view) as History.
Next: The recording of the Temple cleansings is a historical account of two separate events. Here's how one apologetic site explains it: https://www.gotquestions.org/temple-cleanse.html
Bart Ehrman says of the two accounts: “Historically speaking, then, the accounts are not reconcilable.”
But is that true? The Gospel writers did not provide an exhaustive account of everything that Jesus every said or did. This is perhaps the best explanation I have read: http://www.apologeticspress.org/apcontent.aspx?category=6&article=660
IMHO it's uncharitable to characterize such explanations as cop-outs or circular reasoning (unless I'm misunderstanding you in which case I apologize ahead of time). True John wasn't that concerned with chronology but it doesn't follow from that that he'd put something at the beginning of Jesus' ministry when it was stated by others to be at the end. On the contrary, it's clear to me that John is interested in chronology to some degree as evidenced by how he puts this story where it belongs: in the beginning of Jesus' ministry. I've no doubt that Jesus had to clear out the Temple of wrong doings more than once. That makes perfect sense and is the best explanation given the evidence.
I alway enjoy reading your insights and thoughts. Gives me more to think about. I think we approach this from two different angles but I like how you think about it. I like especially this: "So the N.T. contains history, but it is not about history. It's written for Jesus' followers, to teach them how Jesus was, what He expects of them, and the story of His death and resurrection." I'd probably say it a tad differently but I think in the end, we're in agreement here.I truly doubt Jesus would have cleaned out the temple at the beginning of His ministry. I do believe that during Holy Week He did visit the temple more than once.
Because something is mentioned as happening only once, does not mean it didn't happen another time also.
This is why I hate to classify the N.T. as history.
History must be exact, or it becomes non-reliable.
This is a perfect example. I don't expect history, so I don't care as to John's chronology, if it happened once or twice. It is good to know these things when speaking to others - but those we witness to most probably would not know something of this nature.
OTOH, those who do view the N.T. as being historical, will be very interested and maybe even disturbed at the fact that this discrepancy exists, or other alleged discrepancies.
So the N.T. contains history, but it is not about history.
It's written for Jesus' followers, to teach them how Jesus was, what He expects of them, and the story of His death and resurrection.
1 John 1:1-4
What your apologetic sites apparently missed is that the Gospels do not purport to be a precise, chronological, report of the ministry of Jesus.I want to comment on this post but want to be sure I am understanding correctly. Firstly, I assume you mean by cop-out is the position that the temple cleansing happened twice. I don't see how that is a cop out. Most apologetic sites I've visited put it this way. It's pretty clear to me that this is what happened. And why not? Jesus likely visited the temple more than once and who is to say He didn't clear it more than twice?!
They are mistaken. They are not histories; they are Gospels. Those are two very different types of literature.There are many who see the Gospels as history.
And that's as far as I need to go. I can stop at "historically speaking" because a Gospel is not a history.Bart Ehrman says of the two accounts: “Historically speaking,
Why not? John had very specific issues that he addressed in his Gospel which were not clearly addressed in the synoptic.True John wasn't that concerned with chronology but it doesn't follow from that that he'd put something at the beginning of Jesus' ministry when it was stated by others to be at the end.
And that is a demonstration of circular reasoning.it's clear to me that John is interested in chronology to some degree as evidenced by how he puts this story where it belongs: in the beginning of Jesus' ministry.
It makes sense only if you misapply modern western standards of history and reporting to ancient, middle eastern, Gospels. And since such an application it completely illogical and inappropriate, your "best explanation" fails to explain anything at all.I've no doubt that Jesus had to clear out the Temple of wrong doings more than once. That makes perfect sense and is the best explanation given the evidence.
Not quite.In your diagram, both the Son and the H.S. proceed from the Father.
That is false.The Gospels are either historical (and therefore history - not as in genre but as in the fact they detail historical events) or the events are made up.
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
That is false.
What we call "history" today, in the West, is a specific kind of literature which has as it's purpose the recording of events as they happened in time.
An ancient, middle eastern, Gospel is an entirely different kind of literature. It's purpose is not to present a blow-by-blow account of what happened but to present an important event (Jesus' passion, death, and resurrection) and include supporting and introductory material such as, healing the sick, casting out demons, walking on water, raising the dead, and cleansing the temple. Those events most assuredly took place but, the chronology of them in the Gospels is not important. What is important is THAT they took place, not WHEN they took place.
You are insisting on inserting modern western concepts into ancient, middle eastern literature. As long as you persist in doing so, you will arrive at false conclusions.
iakov the fool
(beaucoup dien cai dau)
DISCLAIMER: By reading the words posted above, you have made a free will choice to expose yourself to the rantings of iakov the fool. The poster assumes no responsibility for any temporary, permanent or otherwise annoying manifestations of cognitive dysfunction that, in any manner, may allegedly be related to the reader’s deliberate act by which he/she has knowingly allowed the above rantings to enter into his/her consciousness. No warrantee is expressed or implied. Individual mileage may vary. And, no, I don't want to hear about it. No sniveling! Enjoy the rest of your life here and the eternal one to come.
You said: "The Gospels are either historical (and therefore history - not as in genre but as in the fact they detail historical events) or the events are made up."You are now talking past me, refuting things I never said and disagreeing with positions I don't even hold.
Likely our views have more in common than they do differences.Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
You said: "The Gospels are either historical (and therefore history - not as in genre but as in the fact they detail historical events) or the events are made up."
Either they are History or they contain Historical Facts.
I hold that they are Gospels which contain historical facts.
But they are not "History" in that they are not a presentation of the facts, chronologically, as each event took place.
It seemed to me you were having it both ways.
Now I see that is not what you meant.
(OOooooops! :dunce)
Looks like we may agree.....kinda......sorta......maybe.......
iakov the fool
(beaucoup dien cai dau)
DISCLAIMER: By reading the words posted above, you have made a free will choice to expose yourself to the rantings of iakov the fool. The poster assumes no responsibility for any temporary, permanent or otherwise annoying manifestations of cognitive dysfunction that, in any manner, may allegedly be related to the reader’s deliberate act by which he/she has knowingly allowed the above rantings to enter into his/her consciousness. No warrantee is expressed or implied. Individual mileage may vary. And, no, I don't want to hear about it. No sniveling! Enjoy the rest of your life here and the eternal one to come.
There is no disharmony with the 3 synoptic gospels and the Book of John. Each one has a purpose to the nature of Christ unto mankind. Matthew presents Christ as King and son of David to Israel. Mark reveals Christ as a servant to mankind.(written for the Romans) Luke presents Christ as the Son of man,(written for the Greek, Gentile), and John gives proof of His deity. (He is God and Savior) (John 20:31). The above map is explained better in the "The Chronological Gospels" By Michael John Rood.It has been exceedingly difficult to harmonise the gospel of John with Matthew, Mark and Luke during the time of Jesus' early ministry. This is because the synoptic gospels miss out the time from his temptation unto his Galilean ministry. They jump straight from in the wilderness in Judea to Galilee. John, on the other hand, details several months between in Judea and Samaria.
Here is a diagram that is easy to follow. (man I looove the new svg format) I hope it helps anyone who might have problems with so-called contradictions in the New Testament.
and you know this how?Yes, there were 2 cleansings of the temple, one in April AD 27 and the next on 3rd April AD 30.