Mendalla
Happy headbanging ape!!
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
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Bingo. That's the one I meant when I posted:Actually, it was this one that I had in mind more so that then Oord (I'm not even ready to discuss ch. 1 of God Can't yet). It's a general discussion in R&F.
Pinga was into the Oord book when she started the general discussion about evil. Later she proposed God Can't for a book study which was a separate thread. Then the actual book study began.If I am thinking of the correct thread, @Pinga was inspired to start that one by her reading of the Oord book. There was some good discussion there.
My reading of the text had me thinking Jesus was not ready to tell anyone He was the Messiah. But maybe I am being influenced by all the "tell no one" stories we studied in Matthew and Mark.But these revelations Jesus stopped, since he desires no praise from Satan nor from those that've placed themselves in Satan's service.
My reading of the text had me thinking Jesus was not ready to tell anyone He was the Messiah. But maybe I am being influenced by all the "tell no one" stories we studied in Matthew and Mark.
Ahh . . . makes sense. Thanks for this insight.It could be a bit of both? He wanted his Messiahship known in his timing, not when Satan felt it should be made known.
The day for rest is more biblical.Sunday should be the day for communion with God.
The day for rest is more biblical.
That would be my idea of observing Sabbath as a spiritual practice in the present day.Yes, but rest on Sunday I believe isn't just any rest. Sunday's not a day imho to, say, go skiing or spend the day in bed. The rest is to be rest in communion with God.
That would be my idea of observing Sabbath as a spiritual practice in the present day.
But since we are discussing Luke here, I was thinking in terms of rest as Jesus and his followers would have understood it. Sabbath observance later becomes quite an issue in the early church, as we know.
Technically speaking the Sabbath as described in Scripture is our Saturday. And within Judaic tradition there are very firm limits (along with a long history of debate about same) on what can/can not be done on the Sabbath. IT does appear that when the Jesus movement was much more a Jewish group they community honoured Sabbath and then added in the celebration of the Resurrection on Sundays (I suspect that former with the rest of the Jewish community and the latter more in a home of one of the Jesus community members).The day for rest is more biblical.
Oh no, I am not saying that at all. I am just suggesting that Sabbath observance for Jesus probably carried the connotation of rest more than the idea of communion with God.Sorry paradox3, are you saying that you don't think Jesus and his followers understood the concept of communion with God? I certainly believe that Jesus, being God, understood that.
Oh no, I am not saying that at all. I am just suggesting that Sabbath observance for Jesus probably carried the connotation of rest more than the idea of communion with God.
Our present day values re: Sunday are not identical to the biblical commandment re: Sabbath observance. And the Jewish Sabbath is actually Saturday as @GordW has just posted.
Although as I think about it, some present day Jewish authors have suggested all 613 laws of the Torah serve to imbue the everyday with the holy. So if Jesus was a devout Jew (as I believe He was) He probably did not separate secular and religious life the way we do nowadays. Sabbath observance would be just one of many ways He experienced communion with God.
Here's where we got onto the track of modern day and ancient Sabbath observance:To be clear, I'm not saying, and did not say, that Jesus' times of solitude with God were necessarily on the Sabbath. And I'm aware that the Jewish Sabbath is Saturday. I worked one summer at a Jewish camp.
Sometimes these reflections of yours lose me. They seem to be a combination of summarizing the text, your interpretation of the text and your commentary about related matters.It would be of advantage to missionaries if they would withdraw and spend time after Jesus' example. We're liable to lose our balance if there's only work alternating with pleasure. Sunday should be the day for communion with God.
If you were just making a side note about what you think present day Christians ought to do on Sunday, that's fine.
unsafe says ------The Sabbath was given asactually a Sign -----God rested from His Work on the 7th day -----all was finished so He set the 7th day apart and made it Holy ----It was a sign that His creation was finished ---- He Rested ---