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Mosaic law still present?

oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
First century Roman coin

s-l1000.jpg


First century Shekel

248a4a4ca4fac0dfd21630f42a882170.jpg

The first coin is not a Temple Shekel, the second coin might be but it was NOT in circulation when Jesus lived, it looks like a coin struck by the rebels later on.

You need to review the Tyrian Shekel as struck after that (Tyre) mint closed (19BC) somewhere near Jerusalem./
 

sooda

Veteran Member
The first coin is not a Temple Shekel, the second coin might be but it was NOT in circulation when Jesus lived, it looks like a coin struck by the rebels later on.

You need to review the Tyrian Shekel as struck after that (Tyre) mint closed (19BC) somewhere near Jerusalem./

The first coin is Roman with the head of the Roman Emperor.

Production of the Tyrian shekel at the Tyre mint occurred 125 - 19 BC. This is the Pre-Herodian temple Shekel tax each Jew had to pay into the sanctuary treasury.

Jesus-coins-of-the-bible-Phoenician-Tyrian-mint-125BC-66AD-AR-Silver-Shekel-Tetradrachm-Inscription-Tyre-holy-inviolable-city-refuge-Heracles-Eagle-Temple-tax-Peters-Fish-Judas-30-pieces-Hendin1618-Year4-122BC-N2.jpg
 

oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
First century Roman coin

s-l1000.jpg


First century Shekel

248a4a4ca4fac0dfd21630f42a882170.jpg
Here you go......

This one looks like the Tyre Mint strike because it is more centred. The Jerusalem mint strikes were crude, but the silver purity and weight was exact, which is all that Rome cared about because it took a cut.

download.jpg
 

oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
The first coin is Roman with the head of the Roman Emperor.

Production of the Tyrian shekel at the Tyre mint occurred 125 - 19 BC. This is the Pre-Herodian temple Shekel tax each Jew had to pay into the sanctuary treasury.

Jesus-coins-of-the-bible-Phoenician-Tyrian-mint-125BC-66AD-AR-Silver-Shekel-Tetradrachm-Inscription-Tyre-holy-inviolable-city-refuge-Heracles-Eagle-Temple-tax-Peters-Fish-Judas-30-pieces-Hendin1618-Year4-122BC-N2.jpg

The head is that of Melgarth Heracles, known to the Jews as Baal, and the absence of KP or KAP on the reverse shows that this was a pre-19BC coin as you have said.
 

2ndpillar

Well-Known Member
According to the Big definition of liberal, the Pharisees would be conservative, not liberal, since they are so concerned with being traditional that they set up a fence around it lest anyone violate the traditions.

That is the problem. Making a fence around "traditions" is the problem. One is supposed to "keep the statutes and the judgments which the LORD your God has commanded me to teach you". The traditions of men, the pen of the scribes, is apparently not acceptable. (Isaiah 29:13)


Isaiah: 13 Then the Lord said,
“Because this people draw near with their words
And honor Me with their lip service,
But they remove their hearts far from Me,
And their reverence for Me consists of tradition learned by rote,

14Therefore behold, I will once again deal marvelously with this people, wondrously marvelous;
And the wisdom of their wise men will perish,
And the discernment of their discerning men will be concealed.”
 

2ndpillar

Well-Known Member
Jesus was a Pharisee so I doubt he thought ALL Pharisees were vipers. Perhaps Matthew was attacking the Pharisees for his own purposes.

You are reaching. Yeshua had no love for the Pharisees or the scribes. Matthew 23:25-27," Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! …. inwardly you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness". Are you saying that Matthew is lying, or that the Roman church changed, or added to what was written, or that the canon is not holy? You foundation of sand, is weak enough without creating greater quakes for your "house" (Matthew 7:27).
 

2ndpillar

Well-Known Member
First century Roman coin

s-l1000.jpg


First century Shekel

248a4a4ca4fac0dfd21630f42a882170.jpg

And yet the "Christians" of the 4th century still remained with the same Roman coin, with a different head of Caesar, and in the case of the 313 & 326 AD coin, the added advantage of having the sun god "Sol Invictus" on the coin also.

CONSTANTINE'S SUN GOD COIN: CHRISTIANITY AND THE CULT …
www.biblicalartifacts.com/items/1330548/CONSTANTINES-SUN-GOD-COIN...
CONSTANTINE'S SUN GOD COIN: CHRISTIANITY AND THE CULT OF SOL INVICTUS Catalog:Coins:Roman: stock #1330548 This bronze coin showing Sol, the sun god, was minted in small quantities between 313 and 326 AD by Saint Constantine (307-337 CE), the Great—the Roman Emperor known as the "Thirteenth Apostle" in the East.
 

Desert Snake

Veteran Member
Pharisees were very strictly religious people not necessarily of the Levitical tribe (e.g. Paul was a Pharisee and a Benjamite) who were attempting to follow the Scriptures literally.

The Sadducees were more religiously liberal, and tended to view the requirements of Scripture less literally.

Jesus was a Pharisee so I doubt he thought ALL Pharisees were vipers. Perhaps Matthew was attacking the Pharisees for his own purposes.
It wouldn't matter, because you basically have to argue the texts. In other words, you can speculate anything, then the texts are entirely up for speculation, and you can say there was no crucifixion, so forth. Anything goes if you do that.

So, that's great, however no one follows that, if they disagree with something, they use the texts.
 

sooda

Veteran Member
You are reaching. Yeshua had no love for the Pharisees or the scribes. Matthew 23:25-27," Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! …. inwardly you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness". Are you saying that Matthew is lying, or that the Roman church changed, or added to what was written, or that the canon is not holy? You foundation of sand, is weak enough without creating greater quakes for your "house" (Matthew 7:27).

You really think Jesus was condemning all Pharisees? That makes little sense.
 

sooda

Veteran Member
And yet the "Christians" of the 4th century still remained with the same Roman coin, with a different head of Caesar, and in the case of the 313 & 326 AD coin, the added advantage of having the sun god "Sol Invictus" on the coin also.

CONSTANTINE'S SUN GOD COIN: CHRISTIANITY AND THE CULT …
www.biblicalartifacts.com/items/1330548/CONSTANTINES-SUN-GOD-COIN...
CONSTANTINE'S SUN GOD COIN: CHRISTIANITY AND THE CULT OF SOL INVICTUS Catalog:Coins:Roman: stock #1330548 This bronze coin showing Sol, the sun god, was minted in small quantities between 313 and 326 AD by Saint Constantine (307-337 CE), the Great—the Roman Emperor known as the "Thirteenth Apostle" in the East.

So what?
 

metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist
Most of the Roman soldiers were garrisoned in Assyria.. Just a few at Fortress Antonia in Jerusalem.
There was significant Roman construction in the coastal area just west of Galilee, which created a large part of this disparity of wealth that was largely caused by the effects of inflation. If you had a job working on these Roman projects, you generally would reap benefits, but if you weren't then the effect of inflation ate away at what income you did have.
 

metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist
[ @2ndpillar ] really think Jesus was condemning all Pharisees? That makes little sense.
Exactly, especially since Jesus and Paul were operating from a liberal Pharisee perspective. Paul, upon his arrest, identifies himself as being a Pharisee, and being a Pharisee is a choice.
 

sooda

Veteran Member
There was significant Roman construction in the coastal area just west of Galilee, which created a large part of this disparity of wealth that was largely caused by the effects of inflation. If you had a job working on these Roman projects, you generally would reap benefits, but if you weren't then the effect of inflation ate away at what income you did have.

“To read Matthew in blissful ignorance of first-century Palestinian sociopolitics is to miss his point. This is the story of Jesus of Nazareth.”
 

IndigoChild5559

Loving God and my neighbor as myself.
It seems to me that the Pharisees of the early 1st century that were Levites and Priests were not too conservative, really. They didn't do anything about the insulting Temple coinage, many of of them were Hellenised, most of them were corrupt and the Baptist described them perfectly as Vipers.
This is a perfect example of straining a gnat while swallowing a camel.
 

IndigoChild5559

Loving God and my neighbor as myself.
That is an item that could be debated over and over again and was as other Jewish groups did not buy into the Oral Law, instead preferring their own "Oral Traditions". But either way, the "building the wall around Torah" was not implicit within the Oral Law itself, thus is more "liberal" in the context that it was not there to begin with.

Also, the interpretation of the Law all so often varied, thus leading to different schools with at least somewhat different approaches, such as the Shammai and Hillel schools. Most observant Jews today tend to lean more towards the latter, which is a more liberal position than the former.
All the competing versions of Oral Torah built a fence. Some fences were so far from the Torah that they placed a heavy burden on people, and some were closer in.

The phrase "to build a fence around the Torah" is itself part of Oral Torah. The opening verse of the Pirkei Avot says that the men of the Great Assembly commissioned their disciples to build a fence around the Torah. Many have said that the rationale for this comes from Deuteronomy 22:8, which states that when one builds a house, he must build a fence around the roof in order to avoid guilt should someone fall off the roof.

Jesus himself followed this tradition to "build a fence." For example, when talking about murder he forbade anger; when talking about adultery he forbade lust.

Speaking of Jesus, by his day, virtually all the Oral Torah was set, but a small part of it was still being debated, as you yourself note with your reference to Shammai and Hillel. However, Hillel was only liberal *when compared to Shammai. Objectively both were not liberal. Calling the school of Hillel liberal, is no different than looking at Republicans and neo-Nazis and saying that Republicans are liberal.

Jesus, btw, was also school of Hillel. It was the school of Shammai, which ruled the Sanhedrin, with which he argued.
 

IndigoChild5559

Loving God and my neighbor as myself.
That is the problem. Making a fence around "traditions" is the problem. One is supposed to "keep the statutes and the judgments which the LORD your God has commanded me to teach you". The traditions of men, the pen of the scribes, is apparently not acceptable. (Isaiah 29:13)


Isaiah: 13 Then the Lord said,
“Because this people draw near with their words
And honor Me with their lip service,
But they remove their hearts far from Me,
And their reverence for Me consists of tradition learned by rote,

14Therefore behold, I will once again deal marvelously with this people, wondrously marvelous;
And the wisdom of their wise men will perish,
And the discernment of their discerning men will be concealed.”
So its wrong to do business with hookers, but perfectly okay to hang out with them on the street schmoozing? Come now, even Christians understand building a fence. They just use different wording: "Avoiding the near occasion of sin."

There is simply no way to follow the Law of the Torah, without having Oral Law.

Let's start with the basics. You can't even read the Torah without Oral Torah. Ancient Hebrew Texts did not have vowels. Yet we know how to pronounce the words. How is that? It is because the knowledge is passed down orally. Christians have their translations from the Hebrew because of Oral Torah.

But its more than that. The Torah is simply silent on necessary details. It states that we cannot eat meat unless it is slaughtered in a particular way, but it never says what that way is. It is only Oral Torah that describes exactly how to slaughter meat in a kosher manner. How far can one walk on the Shabbat before it is work? What does it mean to bind the commandments on the arm and let them be a sign on our foreheads? On and on and on.

And God himself gives the manner for Oral Torah to form. In Deuteronomy 17:8-13 the Levites and Elders(Judges/Pharisees/Rabbis) are given authority by God to rules on matters which are not obvious. Not only are we to obey them, we are not even to go "to the right or to the left." Those who question their rulings are to be put to death.

Even Jesus himself told his followers that the Pharisees sit on Moses' seat, so do and observe EVERYTHING they tell you. (Matthew 23:23) Everything would include Oral Torah.

So it would appear that God, in some circumstances, SUPPORTS the "traditions of men." (Deut 17:8-13) If it's good enough for God, shouldn't it be good enough for you?
 

sooda

Veteran Member
And yours looks like a perfect example of a post that clearly has not studied the early first century Priesthood in Palestine.

Notice this telling comment by Jewish historian Moses Shulvass: “Unlike the Sadducees, the Pharisees opposed a rigid interpretation of the Pentateuch Law. To them, the Holy Writ was a 'living [i.e., flexible] Torah,' valid for all times and never in conflict with the time. By using the God-given power of reason and special methods of interpretation, various Pentateuch laws could be reinterpreted and modified to harmonize with the advanced ideas of each generation”

snip

At no time did Jesus question the scribes' and Pharisees' authority as occupants of Moses' seat—and He never condemned anyone for being a Pharisee. But He did challenge their self-righteous piety that lacked the appropriate corresponding works. Thus, Jesus cautioned His followers to shun the scribes' and Pharisees' self-righteous and hypocritical practices.

In fact, Jesus elsewhere warned that “unless your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees”—who were held in high regard by the Common People—”there is no way that you shall enter into the kingdom of heaven” (Matt. 5:20).

Christ's message was clear: True righteousness must be based on the heart, the inward spirit, and must spring from a genuine desire to obey God's laws fully, in both their letter and intent.

Chapter One - Religion in First-Century Palestine
 

2ndpillar

Well-Known Member
So its wrong to do business with hookers, but perfectly okay to hang out with them on the street schmoozing? Come now, even Christians understand building a fence. They just use different wording: "Avoiding the near occasion of sin."

There is simply no way to follow the Law of the Torah, without having Oral Law.

Let's start with the basics. You can't even read the Torah without Oral Torah. Ancient Hebrew Texts did not have vowels. Yet we know how to pronounce the words. How is that? It is because the knowledge is passed down orally. Christians have their translations from the Hebrew because of Oral Torah.

But its more than that. The Torah is simply silent on necessary details. It states that we cannot eat meat unless it is slaughtered in a particular way, but it never says what that way is. It is only Oral Torah that describes exactly how to slaughter meat in a kosher manner. How far can one walk on the Shabbat before it is work? What does it mean to bind the commandments on the arm and let them be a sign on our foreheads? On and on and on.

And God himself gives the manner for Oral Torah to form. In Deuteronomy 17:8-13 the Levites and Elders(Judges/Pharisees/Rabbis) are given authority by God to rules on matters which are not obvious. Not only are we to obey them, we are not even to go "to the right or to the left." Those who question their rulings are to be put to death.

Even Jesus himself told his followers that the Pharisees sit on Moses' seat, so do and observe EVERYTHING they tell you. (Matthew 23:23) Everything would include Oral Torah.

So it would appear that God, in some circumstances, SUPPORTS the "traditions of men." (Deut 17:8-13) If it's good enough for God, shouldn't it be good enough for you?

Your "shepherds"/judges/leader are to be judged and replaced because they didn't feed the sheep (Ezekiel 34:1-3) and there would be a new judge in town (Ezekiel 34:20-22), for "I will deliver my flock... I will judge between one sheep and another" and that judgment will be with righteousness. As for Deuteronomy 17:8-13, the priest and judges were to judge "according to the terms of the law" not the traditions of men. As for you taking from the script of Yeshua, as for the Pharisees and scribes, he said, do not do as they do, do as they say, for he called them "hypocrites" (Matthew 23:25-35), who will be held responsible for all the blood of all the righteous blood shed on earth. As for your referenced Matthew 23:23:

Matthew 23:23 King James Version (KJV). 23 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith: these ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone

As for schmoozing with hookers, I thought you were the one who went to the Netherlands to schmooze with hookers, and justify it by quickly visiting a shul.

As for keeping the Law, the Israelites did not have your oral traditions, the Talmud, under Moses. As for appointing judges, they were to judge according to the law. As for butchering beef, just drain the blood, because the life is in the blood. As for not working on the Sabbath, it is a sign between God and his people, whereas for 6 days one is to work, and not to work on the 7th. If your "work" is to go to the coal mines 6 days a week, you are to rest on the 7th day. Not brain science. Any targeted nuances were spelled out in the law of God (Exodus 35:3), not the law of man. Apparently, starting a fire for the Israelites was as hard for them as for those on the program called the "Survivors". But it is good that you are reading what Yeshua wrote, but it would be better if you read the entire context, but to be fair, your out of context reference was from Matthew 23:3, not 23:23.

Exodus 35:3 “ You shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath day
 
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