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KUAN » Sun Aug 14, 2016 1:09 am wrote:Jesus was quiet well off apparently, so was fuckin Buddha
OP ED » Sat Aug 13, 2016 12:39 pm wrote:This strategy didn't work out so well for Jesus either.
All it got for him was his system being coopted as just another mechanism of control. I'm not one of his worshippers so I don't personally feel inclined to regard submission to my executioners as a virtue.
[S.G.F. Brandon]'s most celebrated position is the controversial one, that a political Jesus was a revolutionary figure, influenced in that by the Zealots; this he argued in the 1967 book Jesus and the Zealots: A Study of the Political Factor in Primitive Christianity. The Trial of Jesus of Nazareth (1968) raises again, amongst other matters, the question of how the Fall of the Temple in 70 CE shaped the emerging Christian faith, and in particular the Gospel of Mark.
According to Mr. Aslan, Jesus was born in Nazareth and grew up a poor laborer. He was a disciple of John the Baptist until John’s arrest. Like John, Jesus preached the imminent arrival of the kingdom of God, which would be an earthly, political state ruled by God or his anointed, a messiah. Jesus never intended to found a church, much less a new religion. He was loyal to the law of Moses as he interpreted it. Jesus opposed not only the Roman overlords, Mr. Aslan writes, but also their representatives in Palestine: “the Temple priests, the wealthy Jewish aristocracy, the Herodian elite.”
In the last week of Jesus’ life, Mr. Aslan writes, he entered Jerusalem with his disciples in a provocative way that recalled royal entrances described in Jewish scripture. He then enacted a violent cleansing of the Temple: something like radical street theater, except that it took place in a site of supreme holiness.
Provoked by that action and his other rantings against the Temple and its caretakers, the authorities arrested Jesus. The Romans crucified him as a rebel, a zealot and a pretender to the Judean throne. The charge on the cross is historical: the Romans took Jesus as claiming to be the messianic king of the Jews. Since only the Roman Senate could appoint kings within the Empire, claiming to be a king was treasonous and punishable by the worst kind of death: torture and crucifixion.
Belligerent Savant » Sun Aug 14, 2016 6:16 am wrote:.OP ED » Sat Aug 13, 2016 12:39 pm wrote:This strategy didn't work out so well for Jesus either.
All it got for him was his system being coopted as just another mechanism of control. I'm not one of his worshippers so I don't personally feel inclined to regard submission to my executioners as a virtue.
Actually, there are alternate views that Jesus was in fact quite the revolutionary, and did not shy away from confrontation with his (and his people's) oppressors.
This is impressive sounding, but I'm afraid I don't know what it means. "mercantile nature"? What the hell is that? Ancient Rome?
somebody? anybody?
Elihu » Sun Aug 14, 2016 7:03 pm wrote:Luke 22
31And the Lord said, ‘Simon, Simon, lo, the Adversary did ask you for himself to sift as the wheat, 32and I besought for thee, that thy faith may not fail; and thou, when thou didst turn, strengthen thy brethren.’ 33And he said to him, ‘Sir, with thee I am ready both to prison and to death to go;’ 34and he said, ‘I say to thee, Peter, a cock shall not crow to-day, before thrice thou mayest disown knowing me.’
35And he said to them, ‘When I sent you without bag, and scrip, and sandals, did ye lack anything?’ and they said, ‘Nothing.’ 36Then said he to them, ‘But, now, he who is having a bag, let him take [it] up, and in like manner also a scrip; and he who is not having, let him sell his garment, and buy a sword, 37for I say to you, that yet this that hath been written it behoveth to be fulfilled in me: And with lawless ones he was reckoned, for also the things concerning me have an end.’ 38And they said, ‘Sir, lo, here [are] two swords;’ and he said to them, ‘It is sufficient.’
The further comment of Jesus explains in part the surprising statement, for he says: "It is necessary that the prophecy be fulfilled according to which I would be put in the ranks of criminals" (Luke 22:36-37). The idea of fighting with just two swords is ridiculous. The swords are enough, however, to justify the accusation that Jesus is the head of a band of brigands. We have to note here that Jesus is consciously fulfilling prophecy. If he were not the saying would make no sense.[2]
Elihu » Mon Aug 15, 2016 1:28 am wrote:This is impressive sounding, but I'm afraid I don't know what it means. "mercantile nature"? What the hell is that? Ancient Rome?
somebody? anybody?
Ancient and Current
“There was and still is a tremendous fear that poor and working-class Americans might one day come to understand where their political interests reside. Personally, I think the elites worry too much about that. We dumb working folk were clubbed into submission long ago, and now require only proper medication for our high levels of cholesterol, enough alcohol to keep the sludge moving through our arteries, and a 24/7 mind-numbing spectacle of titties, tabloid TV, and terrorist dramas. Throw in a couple of new flavours of XXL edible thongs, and you've got a nation of drowsing hippos who will never notice that our country has been looted, or even that we have become homeless ourselves.”
― Joe Bageant, Rainbow Pie
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