Yeah... heh-heh... that would be nice, wouldn't it.
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'Once they are Christians?' If the choice is God's, when does THAT happen? If they're already'in', why bother to repoent or change, if it makes no difference in God's previously- determined decision?
The idea of a wedding-- a time of joy, yet a time of transition, a beginning, yet a continuation (a rite of passage); an event (or process) that does not destroy everything old, but transforms it into new things. Certainly a time of celebration,and out of the ordinary joy. Days may come when joy may seem distant, but the wedding, the marriage, the new creation is still there.Why would Jesus use the allegory of a wedding to refer to his time with the disciples or his ministry? Because it is something to celebrate? Something out of the ordinary? This story falls very early in his ministry. . . maybe the church as it is later established could be considered the actual "marriage."
While fasting as a spiritual discipline is mentioned many times in the Hebrew scriptures, the Law only requires fasting on Yom Kippur or the Day of Atonement. So Jesus might be a rebuking the false piety of the Pharisees more than their view of the Law.I am not entirely sure about the teaching on fasting. Jesus seems to be saying that his presence is cause for celebration and that overrides the requirement to fast. Which, if one accepts that he is God incarnate, might make sense. Certainly, it seems to once again be a rebuke to the authorities strict legalistic approach to the law.
The sayings about old cloth and new garments and new wine in old skins seem a easier. He is saying that old ways must be abandoned completely or you risk damaging/contaminating the new ways. Given that there are no references to covenant here, it's speculation to say that's what it refers to. It could also refer to a new way of living the law versus the one being taught and enforced by the temple authorities.
You could take it broader, too, by reading it as a message about the need for a "clean start" rather than carrying bit of the past into our new life, perhaps after we are "born again".
Let's give it a go!Yeah... heh-heh... that would be nice, wouldn't it.
Let's give it a go!
I really like this focus on transformation and new creation. Jesus might also be saying there is a time for everything. . . a time for celebration and a time for mourning & fasting.The idea of a wedding-- a time of joy, yet a time of transition, a beginning, yet a continuation (a rite of passage); an event (or process) that does not destroy everything old, but transforms it into new things. Certainly a time of celebration,and out of the ordinary joy. Days may come when joy may seem distant, but the wedding, the marriage, the new creation is still there.
For such a plain spoken guy, Jesus can certainly be enigmatic at times.
Mark's style so far of short, pithy stories with "punchlines" doesn't help. They are almost like Buddhist koans at times, existing more to force mindful contemplation than to directly teach.
Jae ---your quote ------ First, to "declare" something need not mean "to speak with words" unsafe.
This is the Greek word used in the scripture I posted Jae -------your back peddling Jae -----
HELPS Word-studies
3670 homologéō (from 3674 /homoú, "together" and 3004 /légō, "speak to a conclusion") – properly, to voice the same conclusion, i.e. agree ("confess"); to profess (confess) because in full agreement; to align with (endorse).
[3670 /homologéō ("confess") means to speak the same thing, i.e. "assent, agree with, confess, declare, admit" (Vine, Unger, White, NT, 120).]
unsafe says ---no matter how you look at it no infant can do these things ----and you have written on this sight that your sins were forgiven and your saved when you were an infant ----this is False Doctrine and Wrongly dividing God's word ----Period ++++++++++
The idea of a wedding-- a time of joy, yet a time of transition, a beginning, yet a continuation (a rite of passage); an event (or process) that does not destroy everything old, but transforms it into new things. Certainly a time of celebration,and out of the ordinary joy. Days may come when joy may seem distant, but the wedding, the marriage, the new creation is still there.
That is our thoughts now about a wedding. But is it an accurate description of a wedding in biblical times?
A wedding was also seen as a joining of two families. Or as a transaction, bride and dowry sold to groom. A way to financially improve the families.
It is quite possible that bride and groom did not meet. Quite possible no love at the wedding. But the expectation th bride would care for the groom. Often a young bride and an old groom
Just throwing out the thought that we read the story through the eyes of our time
Agreed that weddings would have been seen differently than we view them today. This something to consider for sure as we contemplate the meaning of the passage.That is our thoughts now about a wedding. But is it an accurate description of a wedding in biblical times?
A wedding was also seen as a joining of two families. Or as a transaction, bride and dowry sold to groom. A way to financially improve the families.
It is quite possible that bride and groom did not meet. Quite possible no love at the wedding. But the expectation th bride would care for the groom. Often a young bride and an old groom
Just throwing out the thought that we read the story through the eyes of our time
That is our thoughts now about a wedding. But is it an accurate description of a wedding in biblical times?
A wedding was also seen as a joining of two families. Or as a transaction, bride and dowry sold to groom. A way to financially improve the families.
It is quite possible that bride and groom did not meet. Quite possible no love at the wedding. But the expectation th bride would care for the groom. Often a young bride and an old groom
Just throwing out the thought that we read the story through the eyes of our time