Also we should get a beer sometime, if you're ever in my part of Texas.
Ha! So you admit John and Phylo were similarly influenced!Quote:
Two powers in heaven preceded Philo in Second Temple writings. He didn't invent it. Philo was synthesizing two extant traditions - Plato, and the OT. Philo was a contemporary of St John - born in 30 BC, died in 50 AD. What's more likely, that they both were formed by the same tradition, or that St John read Philo and said "yeah this seems like the same stuff the Lord was talking about"?
I like beer. Beer is great. I have no idea where your part of Texas is, but feel free to hit me up if you're around the Ft Worth area. Hopefully you'll catch me in a work lullZobel said:
Also we should get a beer sometime, if you're ever in my part of Texas.
Do you have any other sources in that time frame talking about the Logos as the mediator between God and man besides Philo? I've never seen any other writings from that time period that are anywhere close to Philo's ideas about the Logos, but then again I'm not the best read person in the world either. When I read of Philo it just lines up so well with the Gospel of John, which was written at last 50 years after Philo's writings, and with later conceptions of the Word in Christianity. It seemed like a clear antecedent to me, and now I'm curious to see any related material dating earlier.Quote:
Yes, I agree that St John and Philo were similarly influenced - by the dominant understanding of a trinitarian view of Yahweh in the Second Temple Period. Philo chose to synthesize his Judaism with Platonic philosophy. St John did not. They're both referring to the same Hewbrew concept of Logos, the Word of the Lord. St John is saying he met and came to know the Word of the Lord as Jesus Christ. Philo is saying that the Word of the Lord is the same thing as Plato's Logos. It's not the same claim.
Language yes, comfortable with culture no. Culture was the point of contention in the Maccabean sense so this sentence reads as a bit of a contradiction. I don't think you can draw a hard line between religion and culture at all. St Paul is clearly Jewish, not Greek, in his thinking - regardless of his fluency in Greek.Quote:
He wasn't Hellenized in the Maccabean sense of attending nude gymnasiums and baths and eating pork, but he was clearly knowledgable and comfortable with Greek language and culture
No because Philo's ideas are a synthesis of Plato.Quote:
Do you have any other sources in that time frame talking about the Logos as the mediator between God and man besides Philo? I've never seen any other writings from that time period that are anywhere close to Philo's ideas about the Logos, but then again I'm not the best read person in the world either. When I read of Philo it just lines up so well with the Gospel of John, which was written at last 50 years after Philo's writings, and with later conceptions of the Word in Christianity. It seemed like a clear antecedent to me, and now I'm curious to see any related material dating earlier.
I get the same idea about language and culture. Like I said, we know Paul spoke fluent Greek, grew up in the Anatolia with a lot of Greeks and Romans, was a Roman citizen, was widely traveled, and he was very familiar with the Roman legal system. All of this bespeaks at least a familiarity and I would argue high comfort level of operating in that society. These qualities made him an excellent Apostle to the Gentiles as well as Romanized and Hellenized Jews. He was comfortable with their cultures and was not put off by it. Contrast that with the original Disciples, most of whom were young Hebrew agricultural workers who had never left Israel. We see the clear difference in Acts when other Hebrew Christians showed a revulsion to the gentiles and Paul clearly did not.Quote:
Language yes, comfortable with culture no. Culture was the point of contention in the Maccabean sense so this sentence reads as a bit of a contradiction. I don't think you can draw a hard line between religion and culture at all. St Paul is clearly Jewish, not Greek, in his thinking - regardless of his fluency in Greek.
You say this like the concept of the Logos of the Apostles and the concept of the Logos by Philo are different, but they seem pretty much identical to me. In fact, I don't really see anything about Philo's Logos that would be disagreable to even a medieval or modern theologian, other than it being somewhat unrefined. Is there something I'm missing there that makes Philo's Logos incompatible with the Christian Logos?Quote:
Once you fix all this background of scripture the prologue is clear - this Person who we see who is Yahweh but different (no one can see Yahweh and live but they can see the Angel, who is Yahweh and speaks as Yahweh) who Israel came to know, this Person - The Word - who became Flesh and was seen, known, touched, as Jesus Christ. Contemporary Jews had categories, shelf space, for these beliefs. Philo filled those shelves with Plato's concept of logos. St John and the Apostles correctly filled them with Jesus Christ.
I think this is just semantics perhaps but I don't think we need to oversell it. St Paul was probably used to living amongst gentiles, but their cultural practices (food, dress, worship, ritual, sex) were definitely off-putting to him. He doesn't mince words about them, they're not OK. But he clearly sees the difference between the people and the demonic influence and slavery (Ephesians 6:12) and is disturbed by the idolatry (Acts 17:6). Other Judaeans were not so quick to come to appreciate the once-for-all atonement through which God made clean the gentiles ("What God has made clean, you do not call unclean").Quote:
He was comfortable with their cultures and was not put off by it.
There's always been a debate between the compatibility of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy with Christianity. The fact that multiple times in history people have set out specifically to harmonize them shows that they are not inherently homogenous.Quote:
You say this like the concept of the Logos of the Apostles and the concept of the Logos by Philo are different, but they seem pretty much identical to me. In fact, I don't really see anything about Philo's Logos that would be disagreable to even a medieval or modern theologian, other than it being somewhat unrefined. Is there something I'm missing there that makes Philo's Logos incompatible with the Christian Logos?
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Jesus, when he came, came in a form that many, many Jews were expecting: a second divine figure incarnated in a human. The question was not "Is a divine Messiah coming?" but only "Is this carpenter from Nazareth the One we are expecting?" Not surprisingly, some Jews said yes and some said no. Today we call the first group Christians and the second group Jews, but it was not like that then, not at all.
Everybody then - both those who accepted Jesus and those who didn't - was Jewish (or Israelite, the actual ancient terminology). Actually, there was no Judaism at all, nor was there Christianity. In fact, the idea of a "religion," that is, one of a number of religions to which one might or might not belong, had not come onto the scene yet and would not for centuries. By the third century (or even earlier) Christianity became a name for what Christians called themselves, but Jews were not to have a name for their religion in one of their own languages until sometime in the modern period, perhaps the eighteenth or nineteenth century. Until then terms meaning Judaism as the religion of the Jews were only used by non-Jews.
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I wish us to see that Christ too - the divine Messiah - is a Jew. Christology, or the ideas about Christ, is also a Jewish discourse and is not - until much later - an anti-Jewish discourse at all. Many Israelites at the time of Jesus were expecting a Messiah who would be divine and come to earth in the form of a human. Thus the basic underlying thoughts from which both the Trinity and the incarnation grew are there in the very world into which Jesu was born and in which he was written about in the Gospels of Mark and John.
...One difference I expect this discussion to make is that Jews and Christians will need to begin to tell different stories about each other in the future. One one hand, Christians will no longer be able to claim that Jews willfully, as a body, rejected Jesus as God. Such beliefs about Jews have led to a deep, painful, and bloody history of anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism. Many ancient Jews simply accepted Jesus as God, and they did so because their beliefs and expectations had led them there. Others, while holding similar ideas about God, found it hard to belief that this particular, seemingly undistinguished, Jew was the one they were waiting for.
On the other hand, Jews will have to stop vilifying Christian ideas about God as simply a collection of "un-Jewish," perhaps pagan, and in any case bizarre fantasies. God in a human body indeed! Recognizing these ideas as deeply rooted in the ancient complex of Jewish religious ideas may not lead us Jews to accept them but should certainly help us realize that Christian ideas are not alien to us; they are our own offspring and sometimes, perhaps, among the most ancient of all Israelite-Jewish ideas.
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For moderns, religions are fixed sets of convictions with well-defined boundaries. We usually ask ourselves: What convictions does Christianity forbid or what practices does it require?...Such an understanding, of course, makes nonsense the idea that one could be both a Jew and a Christian, rendering it a contradiction in terms...this conception just doesn't always fit the facts, and specifically [it] doesn't represent well the situation of Judaism and Christianity in the early centuries at all.
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By now almost everyone recognizes that the historical Jesus was a Jew who followed ancient Jewish ways. There is also growing recognition that the gospels themselves and even the letters of Paul are part and parcel of the religion of the people of Israel in the first century AD. What is less recognized is to what extent the ideas surrounding what we call Christology, the story of Jesus as the divine-human Messiah, were also part (if not parcel) of Jewish diversity at the time.
I've never understood animal sacrifices, other than for the unusual fact that God seems to require the shedding of blood for the remission/forgiveness of sins. But I don't think that God or the Hebrews coopted the idea of animal sacrifices from other cultures, since it dates to the very dawn of mankind. God himself apparently killed animals in order to clothe Adam and Eve, and then God accepted Abel's offering of the firstborn of his flock but rejected Cain's offering of the fruit of the ground.Quote:
I think animal sacrifice is a good example. There's nothing particularly unique or necessary about animal sacrifice when it comes to worshipping God, but that system can be used to express worship for God.
Again, I'm not sure that God "coopted" the idea of monarchy. The idea was always there; God simply grudgingly allowed the Israelites to adopt it. Although I don't have the references at hand, and my memory may be incorrect, but weren't there prophecies of an Israelite king prior to Saul? Perhaps I'm wrong on that, though.Quote:
Later on, we see a similar example with the Kings. There's nothing particular godly about having a king. Samuel says on God's behalf that this is a pagan idea and they don't need it. They insist and then God works through David to fulfill his promises of conquest, and then he works through Josiah and Hezekiah. So God co-opted the idea of monarchy and used it to His purposes to the extent that those kings cooperated.
Some of the modern understanding of the OT sacrifices is a result of medieval theological framework being read backward into the text. I think it's a pretty clear case that at least part of this is just in error. When you strip away the theological accretions and read the text with fresh eyes - or better yet, when you have an alternative understanding to compare and contrast - you can see it in a very different light.Quote:
I've never understood animal sacrifices, other than for the unusual fact that God seems to require the shedding of blood for the remission/forgiveness of sins. But I don't think that God or the Hebrews coopted the idea of animal sacrifices from other cultures, since it dates to the very dawn of mankind. God himself apparently killed animals in order to clothe Adam and Eve, and then God accepted Abel's offering of the firstborn of his flock but rejected Cain's offering of the fruit of the ground.
God did not consider a kingship wrong. He was their king, and explicitly identifies Himself this way to Samuel. The people were rejecting the kingship of the Lord over them. This is the problem.Quote:
What I don't understand is why God considered a kingship wrong. Sure, it always turns to tyranny and evil, but the alternative wasn't working. The Israelites were being destroyed by a bunch of enemies, the Canaanites, the Philistines (who, interestingly, were most likely Europeans and showed up in Canaan just after the Israelites did), and the Amalekites who were moving into Canaan en masse. The old system of the prophets providing military leadership on a "just in time" basis simply wasn't working. The prophets were always a day late and a dollar short and had a difficult time unifying all of Israel to meet the existential threats that were facing Israel. Sure, Israel under the prophets could win a major battle or two, but they couldn't truly remove the enemy and resolve the threats. It wasn't until Kings Saul and David that the Philistines were finally defeated and removed as a threat.
My take from that is that if Israel had truly stayed faithful to God he would have delivered them from the Philistines, the Canaanites, and the Amalekites, even without any kind of centralized system of military defense. That makes no sense from a military or strategic viewpoint, but that was the whole point of what God was doing with the nation of Israel. He was showing them that his power was Supernatural and supreme and that relying upon what the other nations did, or even logic and common sense, was not what he wanted.Quote:
The story of the Judges is one of a spiraling descent into chaos and sin. Each time the people rebel, they suffer the consequences of this rebellion (cf Judges 13 "the people of Israel again did what was evil in the sight of the LORD, so the LORD gave them into the hand of the Philistines for forty years"). They then call out and repent, Yahweh raises a judge to rectify the situation (the scriptural understanding of judgment as restoration of the way things should be, righteousness versus a juridical understanding). But each time its worse and worse.
Another example is the story of Gideon in Judges 7 where God says "The people with you are too many for me to give the Midianites into their hand, lest Israel boast over me, saying, 'My own hand has saved me.'" and whittles them down from 32,000 to 300.Quote:
When you go out to war against your enemies, and see horses and chariots and an army larger than your own, you shall not be afraid of them, for the LORD your God is with you, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt. And when you draw near to the battle, the priest shall come forward and speak to the people and shall say to them, 'Hear, O Israel, today you are drawing near for battle against your enemies: let not your heart faint. Do not fear or panic or be in dread of them, for the LORD your God is he who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies, to give you the victory.' Then the officers shall speak to the people, saying, 'Is there any man who has built a new house and has not dedicated it? Let him go back to his house, lest he die in the battle and another man dedicate it. And is there any man who has planted a vineyard and has not enjoyed its fruit? Let him go back to his house, lest he die in the battle and another man enjoy its fruit. And is there any man who has betrothed a wife and has not taken her? Let him go back to his house, lest he die in the battle and another man take her.' And the officers shall speak further to the people, and say, 'Is there any man who is fearful and fainthearted? Let him go back to his house, lest he make the heart of his fellows melt like his own.' And when the officers have finished speaking to the people, then commanders shall be appointed at the head of the people.
And perhaps the story of Christians and the Church/church as well.Zobel said:
Which is right in line with the theme of Judges...circling the drain the entire time. Or really the story of Israel to begin with.
Exactly, and you too!Zobel said:
There is always a faithful remnant. I wouldn't be keen on judging who that is… better to just make sure you're a part of it.
Surely you don't think that is what Zechariah was really referencing?Yukon Cornelius said:
Read Zechariah chapter 12. Clearly what's described there hasn't happened yet. And it specifically talks about the House of David realizing they killed Jesus. Which again hasn't happened yet.
""And I will pour out on the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem a spirit of grace and pleas for mercy, so that, when they look on me, on him whom they have pierced, they shall mourn for him, as one mourns for an only child, and weep bitterly over him, as one weeps over a firstborn."
Zechariah 12:10 ESV
At some point in the future they will corporately recognize Jesus as their messiah
Israel does not include "Judah", not does it include "Israel".Yukon Cornelius said:
"So I ask, did they stumble in order that they might fall? By no means! Rather, through their trespass salvation has come to the Gentiles, so as to make Israel jealous."
Romans 11:11 ESV
So who are these are now jealous?
I think all of the ancient semitic peoples there intermarried/commingled over time, but the ancient people of Israel included the jews in Judah though the latter only later joined them as something of a state (ostensibly part of the 12 tribes?) eventually, as a nominal nation/culture, no? I don't think it matters much but of course that little section of land has been ruled by/governed by so many different nations/people/cultures since the 10th century BC it is really tough to define "ancient Israel" without a date range.codker92 said:Israel does not include "Judah", not does it include "Israel".Yukon Cornelius said:
"So I ask, did they stumble in order that they might fall? By no means! Rather, through their trespass salvation has come to the Gentiles, so as to make Israel jealous."
Romans 11:11 ESV
So who are these are now jealous?
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Isaiah 5:12-13 And the harp, and the viol, the tabret, and pipe, and wine, are in their feasts: but they regard not the work of the Lord, neither consider the operation of his hands. Therefore my people are gone into captivity, because they have no knowledge: and their honourable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst.
Isaiah 10:24 Therefore thus saith the Lord God of hosts, O my people that dwellest in Zion, be not afraid of the Assyrian: he shall smite thee with a rod, and shall lift up his staff against thee, after the manner of Egypt
Romans 11:1-4 I say then, Hath God cast away his people? God forbid. For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. God hath not cast away his people which he foreknew. Wot ye not what the scripture saith of Elias? how he maketh intercession to God against Israel, saying, Lord, they have killed thy prophets, and digged down thine altars; and I am left alone, and they seek my life. But what saith the answer of God unto him? I have reserved to myself seven thousand men, who have not bowed the knee to the image of Baal.