Hi Simon,
Or it's like the Watchtower writing its own history.
Doug
at this moment, we are in the jewish month of tishri.
it is the first month of the civil calendar and is the 7th month.. research quickly shows its deep religious significance, including solemn feasts such as the day of atonement, gedaliah, etc.:.
https://www.bible-history.com/the-sacred-year-of-israel/the-sacred-year-of-israel_tishri.htm.
Hi Simon,
Or it's like the Watchtower writing its own history.
Doug
at this moment, we are in the jewish month of tishri.
it is the first month of the civil calendar and is the 7th month.. research quickly shows its deep religious significance, including solemn feasts such as the day of atonement, gedaliah, etc.:.
https://www.bible-history.com/the-sacred-year-of-israel/the-sacred-year-of-israel_tishri.htm.
Not one NT writer either saw or heard Jesus.
Paul, the earliest, died in 64 CE. He received his "information" through visions.
The writers of the Gospels are unknown. The earliest, attributed to Mark, is not claimed to be by a Disciple. It was written about 40 years after Jesus lived.
The anonymous Gospel attributed to Matthew was written about 15 years after "Mark". By then, the Jerusalem Jews had been defeated and dispersed. "Matthew" might have been written in Alexandria or in Syria.
"Luke", also not a Disciple, evolved up to as late as 120 CE, along with Acts (a recognised fiction).
"John" was created by the Johannine Community late in the 1st century, following its expulsion from the synagogue over their High Christology.
1 Peter was written by a follower of Paul late in the 1st century.
2 Peter was composed in the middle of the 2nd century.
Doug
at this moment, we are in the jewish month of tishri.
it is the first month of the civil calendar and is the 7th month.. research quickly shows its deep religious significance, including solemn feasts such as the day of atonement, gedaliah, etc.:.
https://www.bible-history.com/the-sacred-year-of-israel/the-sacred-year-of-israel_tishri.htm.
At this moment, we are in the Jewish month of Tishri. It is the first month of the Civil calendar and is the 7th month.
Research quickly shows its deep religious significance, including solemn feasts such as the Day of Atonement, Gedaliah, etc.:
https://www.bible-history.com/the-sacred-year-of-israel/the-sacred-year-of-israel_tishri.htm
I am fully aware that I am swimming against the mighty tide, but I suggest that symbolically for Christendom, that the "sacrifice" of Jesus relates to the Jewish festivals of Tishri (Sept/Oct) more than it does to the Passover at Nisan (March/April).
Terms such as "propitiation", "mercy seat", "high priest", "atonement", all reference Tishri. And palm fronds would be available for the crowd at the end of Summer.
Also: did any "Last Supper/Memorial" actually take place, let alone in Nisan (March/April)?
Apostle Paul was the earliest NT writer. He claims that he obtained his information directly from "the Lord", not from any human source. It is he, therefore who introduced the idea of this "Final ('Memorial') Meal". It is he who described events taking place at that Meal. The later writers of the Gospels copied and embellished Paul's creative imagination.
Not one NT writer was present at that Meal yet they were able to recount events in some detail.
Doug
i am putting this out as an idea, as something to think about.. this assumes that the death and claimed resurrection of jesus has soteriological significance.
i am not seeking comments on the veracity of that position, nor with endeavouring to identify any model that provides an "explanation".. i am simply asking, did jesus die in nisan (march/april = "easter") or would it have had proper soteriological significance if the events took place in tishri (september/october)?.
is it possible - and i doubt there is any way of knowing - that the early christians found it useful to incorporate existing pagan "spring" festivals, as this enabled them to differentiate themselves from the jews' heavy focus on tishri?.
I am putting this out as an idea, as something to think about.
This assumes that the death and claimed resurrection of Jesus has soteriological significance. I am not seeking comments on the veracity of that position, nor with endeavouring to identify any Model that provides an "explanation".
I am simply asking, Did Jesus die in Nisan (March/April = "Easter") or would it have had proper soteriological significance if the events took place in Tishri (September/October)?
Is it possible - and I doubt there is any way of knowing - that the early Christians found it useful to incorporate existing Pagan "Spring" festivals, as this enabled them to differentiate themselves from the Jews' heavy focus on Tishri?
Yom Kipur/Day of Atonement, celebrated in Tishri, would seem to better represent the claimed soteriological significance of Jesus' death than a Passover lamb, which served only to mark those who were about to endure pursuit by Egypt, privations in the wilderness, and ongoing persecutions by powerful neighbours.
Doug
documents produced during the second temple period included writings such as 1 enoch, jubilees, and sirach.
apostle paul lived during the very late stage of that period.the first century jews, including those who accepted jesus as the promised messiah, regarded these writings very highly.this list provides the locations in the new testament documents that either cite or allude to these second temple writings.. http://www.jwstudies.com/nt_citation_and_allusions_to_apocrypha.pdf .
Documents produced during the Second Temple Period included writings such as 1 Enoch, Jubilees, and Sirach. Apostle Paul lived during the very late stage of that Period.
The first century Jews, including those who accepted Jesus as the Promised Messiah, regarded these writings very highly.
This list provides the locations in the New Testament documents that either cite or allude to these Second Temple writings.
http://www.jwstudies.com/NT_Citation_and_Allusions_to_Apocrypha.pdf
wikipedia article on jehovah's witnesses:satanjehovah's witnesses believe that satan was originally a perfect angel who developed feelings of self-importance and craved worship.
satan influenced adam and eve to disobey god, and humanity subsequently became participants in a challenge involving the competing claims of jehovah and satan to universal sovereignty.
other angels who sided with satan became demons.jehovah's witnesses teach that satan and his demons were cast down to earth from heaven after october 1, 1914, at which point the end times began.
Satan was invented when the 6th century BCE Monotheists gained ascendancy.
Before then, by far the largest number of people accepted the existence of several gods. The monotheists are responsible for the Hebrew Bible that we read today, and they freely acknowledge that the people worshipped several Gods, including theirs (Baal, Asherah, etc.)
When the monotheists came to power, they ran into the problem of the existence of "badness". Previously, the people had any number of gods who could be blamed, so now they had to invent a scenario that put YHWH at arm's length from "badness". Check the www for the word: Theodicy
Gradually, this "son of God", Satan, became personified in writings such as 1 Enoch and Jubilees.
I take issue with any idea that Satan was in the Garden of Eden story. That idea was invented in the 2nd century CE, after the writing of the Scriptures.
When the Septuagint was written in the 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE, they imported the Greek word Diabolos (meaning: Devil).
Satan was never known in the Scriptures as "Lucifer". That word means the planet Venus, the Bright Morning Star (the name given to Jesus in the Book of Revelation).
Doug
many people over many centuries have been involved in deciding which documents were scripture.
there has never been unanimous agreement, including today.
only the church of rome took a vote on the canon.
Hi doubtful,
I posed the same situation to a JW at a cart on Monday.
He trotted out 2 Timothy 3:16 and I asked him, "When was 2 Timothy written and when was any Canon first recognised?"
I pointed out that 2 Timothy was written centuries before any Bible, to which he responded that it was talking about "Scriptures". So I asked him: "Who determined what was Scripture?"
He responded with: "That's a good question".
It is pure circular reasoning to say that whatever the Bible says is true because the writers said it was true.
Doug
many people over many centuries have been involved in deciding which documents were scripture.
there has never been unanimous agreement, including today.
only the church of rome took a vote on the canon.
Many people over many centuries have been involved in deciding which documents were Scripture. There has never been unanimous agreement, including today. Only the Church of Rome took a vote on the Canon. Protestants rely on Tradition.
The lists of books that today are considered to be Scripture vary between Protestant, Roman Catholic and the various iterations of the Orthodox communities.
http://www.jwstudies.com/The_people_who_decided_the_Scriptures.pdf
a short while ago, jw83 made a request in support of her australian research.. i have now located my list of the dates of articles in the "smith's weekly" in the state library of victoria, melbourne in its constant attack on the watchtower's australian head office:.
http://www.jwstudies.com/smith_s_weekly_references.pdf .
doug.
A short while ago, JW83 made a request in support of her Australian research.
I have now located my list of the dates of articles in the "Smith's Weekly" in the State Library of Victoria, Melbourne in its constant attack on the Watchtower's Australian head office:
http://www.jwstudies.com/Smith_s_Weekly_references.pdf
Doug
when i started investigating "the temptations" at matthew chapter 4, i had no idea that i would develop the ideas contained in my study paper.
so it cannot honestly be said that i set out to prove the conclusions i arrived at.. it is available at:.
http://www.jwstudies.com/the_devil_who_tested_jesus.pdf .
Phizzy,
I highly recommend the book "Crucible of Faith" by Philip Jenkins. It discusses the sources of Christianity and of that other Abrahamic religion, Islam. This is the book's publicity:
Doug
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In “Crucible of Faith: The ancient revolution that made our modern religious world”, Philip Jenkins describes how the Judeo-Christian tradition we know today was born between 250–50 BC, during the turbulent “Crucible Era”—a time when Jews grappled with overwhelming forces of Hellenization and globalization. As a result, Judaism produced new religious ideas that responded to a changing world.
The revolutionary politics of the 160s BC created an apocalyptic world-view where earthly struggles reveal a cosmic significance, a universe dominated by angels and demons. By the time of the fall of the Temple in 70 AD, concepts that might once have seemed bizarre became normalized—and thus passed on to Christianity and later Islam.