JanH
Please don’t feel I do not appreciate your research and opinion, but I must disagree.
Your said:
“I cannot but say it is an amazing display of intellectual dishonesty to call it a "technicality", when the whole point of Jesus' statement was that David entered the House of God, and in fact he did not! As you can see in my commentary, Jesus screwed up practically every possible detail in the story. Names, numbers, events, what happened, everything.”
The “whole point of Jesus’ statement” was NOT “that David entered the House of God”. The whole point was giving examples of God’s liberality compared to the mindless insistence on technical errors coming from the Pharisees. They were saying:
“Look here! Why are they doing on the sabbath what is not lawful? Mark 2:24
These experts at legalities were critical of anyone who did not live up to their extremely technical interpretation of the scriptures. Jesus was not only expressing a more liberal approach to the scriptures but by your estimation he demonstrated it. That’s the lesson I like.
As to his audience not objecting, you say:
“We're talking a simple, backwards group of followers of a religious conman, and this was 2000 years ago! Those were the mest credulous of the credulous, in a world full of superstition.”
He was addressing the educated law minded Pharisees who later killed him for his teaching. It appears to me either they did not challenge his points about David and the bread because:
1 They could not challenge the accuracy on technicalities.
OR
2 He had make his point about being legalistic so well they saw it was counter productive to their argument to make a response.
I can see we are 180 degrees on this subject. I hate to differ with anyone but I must when a beautiful teaching point is lost upon technical scrutinizing. Jesus stood for tolerance, compassion, and love. He was attacked by those obsessed by righteousness and legalism. It seems ironic that down to today he is attacked for failure to be technically accurate in the very context of defending his own disciples for not being technically accurate. As said, I like the lesson he was teaching. Its worth imitating.
Jst2laws