My days are.numbered...
I wish my posts were
I wish my posts were
Thank you.
I have a massive problem with a flat denial of the crucifixion, especially substitution theories (let alone conspiracies). Whatever way I look at it, I cannot see anything but a monstrous deception, and one that Christ Himself would have necessarily colluded in, unless it was against His will, and He was kept under house arrest somewhere ...
Nor can I see Islam, in all its wisdom, and with its high regard for Jesus, passing over such questions. I have asked for an answer, but none is forthcoming, nor can I find a Muslim commentary on that point.
The modern Muslim reading, which itself references traditional streams, makes much more sense.
Is there anywhere else we find it recorded? Other than in the stories?I have a massive problem with a flat denial of the crucifixion
That would be the wayOr l could return later and try to go through what has foregone on this thread
Indeed why not. No need to repeat it hundreds of times over multiple threads. Heard it the first timeso why not just say: ok we just don't believe that.
HereIs there anywhere else we find it recorded? Other than in the stories?
Own thoughts:
By 64AD there were already Christians living in Rome. They were distinct from the Jews and they did not call themselves ‘Yeshuans’. They apparently believed in the crucifixion and resurrection of the Christ, and celebrated the memorial Eucharistic partaking in the body and blood of Christ, for which reason they were accused of cannibalism.
This is attested historically by Tacitus.
Following from this it is difficult to accept that these earliest Christians were merely the ‘Yeshuan’ followers of a good man miracle worker Jesus.
The writings of St Paul around the same time, clearly express a faith centred around the belief in the crucified and resurrected Christ, moving away from the Judaism of the Old Testament into completely new territory. Jesus did not merely preach and heal, but he forgave sin and sacrificed himself as the last blood sacrifice, to correct the old order, and as the new Adam.
He was not just a preacher and miracle worker. His life and death and resurrection was itself the message.
The temple in Jerusalem was still intact when Peter declared in conference with other apostles that kosher and circumcision were no longer necessary for followers of the resurrected Christ, whom the NT scripture says had manifested himself for 40 days to people, before His ascension.
One can discuss the exact details of how Christians explain the divinity of Christ in Jesus fully God and fully man. But it is not reasonable to argue that early Christians did not accept the Incarnation -- and the crucifixion and the resurrection – as very different from the earlier ‘messenger’ prophets or 'sons of God'.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitus_on_Christ
"The Roman historian and senator Tacitus referred to Christ, his execution by Pontius Pilate, and the existence of early Christians in Rome in his final work, Annals (written ca. AD 116), book 15, chapter 44.
The context of the passage is the six-day Great Fire of Rome that burned much of the city in AD 64 during the reign of Roman Emperor Nero. The passage is one of the earliest non-Christian references to the origins of Christianity, the execution of Christ described in the canonical gospels, and the presence and persecution of Christians in 1st-century Rome.
The scholarly consensus is that Tacitus' reference to the execution of Jesus by Pontius Pilate is both authentic, and of historical value as an independent Roman source. Paul Eddy and Gregory Boyd argue that it is "firmly established" that Tacitus provides a non-Christian confirmation of the crucifixion of Jesus. Scholars view it as establishing three separate facts about Rome around AD 60:
(i) that there were a sizable number of Christians in Rome at the time,
(ii) that it was possible to distinguish between Christians and Jews in Rome, and
(iii) that at the time pagans made a connection between Christianity in Rome and its origin in Roman Judea."
… Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judæa, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular …
Did NOT know that. Thank you and will avoid the spellingThe "Moslem" variant is on the face of it no issue but as you know, it is often used by white supremacists, neo-nazis and K.T. romanticisers to signal that one isn't well disposed to Muslims. This is common knowledge, if you didn't know it before then please understand the connotations now. I didn't even realise the connotations until it was told to me via mainstream press. Beats me why it is so , but it is so, l'm afraid.
Blows the mind, doesn't it? Not what anybody was expecting. There are libraries about ithis death was determined to be a peaceful one with a wife and maybe offspring in a time when the lion and lamb sit down together. Not on a cross on a rainy day next to some shopflifters or whatever crimes the other 2 did.
Did NOT know that. Thank you and will avoid the spelling
Same question to the Qur'an then ... how does it justify the deception?
Jesus's face had been transfigured before
1. Transfiguration (yes i know, not the transfiguration that you celebrate, but concept is proven yes?)
Have you read the transfiguration passages in the NT? Do you know the context? Am I required to provide the links, to enable at least a first level Wikipedia understanding of the context?As already stated:
The point being: you can accept that a face can be transfigured. Try to figure out how your opponent might be correct then jump on that.
Have you read the transfiguration passages in the NT? Do you know the context? Am I required to provide the links, to enable at least a first level Wikipedia understanding of the context?
Anyone's face can be transfigured with a baseball bat ...
Why would He lie to everybody and let somebody else die in his place? Christ was a liar?The Quaran is very limited edition of the full NT account if the life and death if Jesus the Christ. The two accounts differ considerably.
Post edited. Will talk tomorrow. PeacePlease read what l wrote, it's all in there. Peace. For one thing, Jesus didn't lie. He could have done, to save his life. But he didn't. Nowhere did l say that. Nor is it our beliefs. Nor would l have an issue with it if it were our beliefs.
It seems that Moslem commentaries on the Incarnation have always been dogged by contradiction.
See the discussion at length here
Most Islamic traditions categorically deny that Jesus physically died on the cross or otherwise. Most traditions instead teach substitution, or the idea that another person was crucified in Jesus' place. However, some modern Muslim scholars believe that Jesus did indeed die, and references to his survival are angogical.
Disagreement and confusion on the nature of Jesus' death is found within the Islamic canon itself, with the earliest Hadith quoting the companions of Muhammad saying that Jesus had died. Meanwhile, the majority of subsequent Hadith and Tafsir argue in favor of the opposite.
-- from wiki --
(Modern Moslem scholarship makes more sense to me, as @muhammad_isa has said, we're not in the Middle Ages any more)
It seems the substitutionist theory originated with 2nd century Gnostics, and the Quran and Hadith have been clearly influenced by (heretical) Christian sources that prevailed in the Arab peninsula.
Muslim commentators have been unable to convincingly disprove the crucifixion, the problem compounded by their substitutionist theories.
Most Western scholars, Jews and Christians believe Jesus died, while orthodox Muslim theology teaches He ascended to Heaven without being put on the cross and God transformed another person, Simon of Cyrene, to appear exactly like Jesus who was crucified instead of Jesus.
Disagreement and discord can be traced to Ibn Ishaq (d. 761), reporting that Jesus was replaced by someone named Sergius, that His tomb is in Medina.
John of Damascus highlighted the Quran's assertion that the Jews did not crucify Jesus being very different from saying that Jesus was not crucified, explaining that it is the varied Quranic exegetes in Tafsir, and not the Quran itself, that denies the crucifixion, further stating that the message in the 4:157 verse simply affirms the historicity of the event.
Subsequent scholars of the 10th century on affirm the historicity of the Crucifixion, reporting Jesus was crucified and not substituted.
More recently, Mahmoud M. Ayoub, a professor and scholar, provided a more symbolic interpretation for Surah 4 Verse 157:
The Quran, as we have already argued, does not deny the death of Christ. Rather, it challenges human beings who in their folly have deluded themselves into believing that they would vanquish the divine Word, Jesus Christ the Messenger of God. The death of Jesus is asserted several times and in various contexts. (3:55; 5:117; 19:33.)
Early interpretations of verse 3:55 ("I will cause you to die and raise you to myself"), attributed to Ibn 'Abbas, used the literal "I will cause you to die" (mumayyitu-ka) rather than the metaphorical mutawaffi-ka "Jesus died". Wahb ibn Munabbih, an early Jewish convert, reportedly said "God caused Jesus, son of Mary, to die for three hours during the day, then took him up to himself." From Ibn Ishaq: "God caused Jesus to die for seven hours", while at another place reported that a person called Sergius was crucified in place of Jesus. Ibn-al-Athir forwarded the report that it was Judas, while also mentioning the possibility it was a man named Natlianus.
Al-Masudi (d. 956) reported the death of Christ under Tiberius.
Mahmoud Ayoub furthers modern Islamic scholars' interpreting the historical death of Jesus, the man, as man's inability to kill off God's Word and the Spirit of God, which the Quran testifies were embodied in Jesus Christ. Ayoub continues highlighting the denial of the killing of Jesus as God (my emphasis) denying men such power to vanquish and destroy the divine Word. The words, "they did not kill him, nor did they crucify him" speaks to the profound events of ephemeral human history, exposing mankind's heart and conscience towards God's will. The claim of humanity to have this power against God is illusory. "They did not slay him ...but it seemed so to them" speaks to the imaginations of mankind, not the denial of the actual event of Jesus dying physically on the cross. Islamic reformer Muhammad Rashid Rida agrees.
-- from wiki --
So it seems that:
The narratives of Jesus are derived from various Christian sources, orthodox, heterodox and heresiarch. The nativity (primarily Luke) with additional speculation about Mary and Joseph's 'backstory'. The infancy narratives are apocryphal and were regarded by the Fathers as post-era fictions.
The crucifixion – clouded by conflicting commentaries – can be seen as utilising Gnostic speculation to interpret a metaphorical reading of the Qur'an as literal. Read metaphorically, it does not contradict that orthodox Christian understanding – that Christ was crucified, died, rose again and ascended into heaven.
Modern Islamic scholarship makes the most sense to me.
There's no mention of some a 'Pilate conspiracy', which frankly sounds a bit like some 'Dan Brown' nonsense.