I can accept that.the Qur'an, which states that it appeared as if he died on a cross.
The Qur'an does not give details
In all cases it is against the nature of Jesus to deceive.
There is no end to this.
let it be
I can accept that.the Qur'an, which states that it appeared as if he died on a cross.
The Qur'an does not give details
I can accept that.
In all cases it is against the nature of Jesus to deceive..
But there are no fine details, are there?It is mankind who have misunderstood a fine detail of what happened to Jesus
But there are no fine details, are there?
As you say, it all revolves around a very short and unclear passage from the Quran that has led to a lot of speculation about what really happened to Jesus. That's all there is to go on. So it's a choice of whether or not to accept it.
In all cases, whether to protect Pilate or whatever else, it implies Jesus whom the Quran accepts was an elevated being of virgin birth either did not know Pilate would rescue him, or allowed the deception to happen and to be covered up from everyone. It is all a bit like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole, imo.
It depends entirely in a fixed belief in the inerrancy of the Quran, which non-Muslims do not accept.
Although the discussion is not about the resurrection, but the death on the cross, it would be helpful for you to list the particular apocrypha passages to which you are referring here, as many of the apocrypha documents are considered suspect by scholars?It doesn't. There are other texts that don't imply the divinity of Jesus through resurrection..
eg. Apocrypha
Although the discussion is not about the resurrection, but the death on the cross..
This has to do with the gospel accounts of the resurrection. There is a lot more to it than what you say, Christ was not recognised until he revealed that it was him, also walking through walls, deliberately manifesting the wounds to satisfy 'doubting Thomas' etc. This requires a working knowledge of the gospels for proper debate.Let's say that he WAS crucified i.e. he was killed by putting him on a cross
It can be shown that Jesus appeared in public after this event.
..so God "made him again" at exactly the same age, along with healing wounds.
That is easy for God, It wouldn't make him "God's only son"
It also sidesteps the request for details of the apocrypha passages mentioned above?
Agreed then..
Yes. According to Islam.In Islam, Jesus was neither crucified nor raised from the dead, and according to the Qur’an,
he was rather saved by God and raised to Heaven.
did not die on the crossNo , I don't agree that the Qur'an is the only evidence that Jesus did not die
This requires a reasonable knowledge of the gospels, Christ's resurrection.I would have thought it pretty obvious that if Jesus had not ascended [ or moved to a different country ],
there would have been trouble.
Have just picked up this late edit.and you haven't answered
"What is the reason for the ascension, in YOUR opinion?"
@Grandad
Thank you for your explanation of the Quran passage quoted above.
If you wish it may be preferable to copy and paste your intro post to a new thread in the Introductions Forum
https://www.interfaith.org/community/forums/introductions/
When it safely appears there, we can delete it from this thread
I tried moving it myself, but the post then appeared under my own avatar, lol
No pressure
Great to have you here
@Grandad
..................etc …
Assalamuwa'alaikum my brother.
I can imagine how hard it has been for you.
I was in my twenties when I became a Muslim, and found it very hard socially.
I was living in Birmigham UK at the time [ the early 80's ], and became a Muslim alongside many Rastas from Jamaica.
My English friends "fizzled out", as we were treading different paths. [ I am an English convert who was raised in Bournemouth ]
Must be even harder for you.
Are you living in Rhonda valley these days?
Belated greetings to you, @Grandad.
Just noticed this ...
A Catholic, I am also something of a 'Traditionalist' in line with the Sophia Perennis as presented by René Guénon, Frithjof Schuon and latterly Seyyed Hossein Nasr.
I had the pleasure of seeing the late Dr Martin Lings, Abū Bakr Sirāj ad-Dīn, talk twice in London. He was a Shadhili.
Frithjof Schuon, who was for a while the most influential Traditionalist in my studies, was initiated into the Shadhili Tariqua, although later started his own, and seems somewhat clouded in scandal.
I haven't replied to your posts, but I do return to a reread them, and they have given me food for thought ... maybe I'll pick something up later.
God bless, and hopefully see more contributions down the road ...
+++
When my first grandson came along, the question arose as to how we should be addressed. My other half settled on Nonna, and I was to be 'Pops'. As it turned out, said g-son could not at first pronounce his 'p's, so I became Tops. Then one day he called me 'Topsey', and that stuck ...
Thank you for that.Good morning, RJ. Sorry for the delayed reply.
Concerning Pliny the Younger:
We are agreed that Pliny the Younger was governor of the Roman province of Bithynia, in what is now northwest Turkey. Before that, he had been a lawyer for several decades; then Praetor of Rome, and one of Emperor Trajan’s legal advisors.
In 112 CE, Pliny wrote to Trajan concerning a group of accused (and outlawed) Christians; two of whom (females) Pliny had tortured, in order to learn the nature of their beliefs.
All defendants were given the opportunity to renounce they Faith, and to offer sacrifice to Trajan. All who did so were released. Those refused were executed.
Unsure as to the acceptability of his actions, Pliny sought advice. Trajan reassured him that he was right to execute those who had refused to renounce their Faith; but that he was not to persecute the ‘cult’ as a whole.
Bart Ehrman writes:
The first time Jesus is mentioned in a pagan source is in the year 112 CE. The author, Pliny the Younger, was a governor of a Roman province. In a letter that he wrote to his emperor, Trajan, he indicates that there was a group of people called Christians who were meeting illegally; he wants to know how to handle the situation. These people, he tells the emperor, “worship Christ as a God.” That’s all he says about Jesus. It’s not much.’ (‘Jesus Interrupted – Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (and Why We Don’t Know About Them); my emphasis).
What value should we give to one who has to torture his Christian prisoners in order to learn the basics of their religion?
Concerning Tacitus:
We are agreed, that Cornelius Tacitus is remembered as Rome’s greatest historian. This is the passage you refer to:
‘In order to put an end to this rumor, therefore, Nero laid the blame on and visited with severe punishment those men, hateful for their crimes, whom the people called Christians. He from whom the name was derived, Christus, was put to death by the procurator Pontius Pilate in the reign of Tiberius. But the pernicious superstition, checked for a moment, broke out again, not only in Judea, the native land of the monstrosity, but also in Rome, to which all conceivable horrors and abominations flow from every side, and find supporters...’ (‘Annals 15; Chapter 44’).
Why would this be taken as reliable evidence for the crucifixion? Tacitus is merely repeating the beliefs of Christians who lived in Rome at the time of the ‘Great Fire’; and he does so as a footnote to his principal theme; the history of the Roman Empire.
The exact date of authorship of the ‘Annals’ is unknown; but it has been suggested that the work was well progressed by 116 CE; some fifty years after the Great Fire, and around eighty years after the life of Yeshua (ʿalayhi as-salām).
As a senator, Tacitus would have had access to the Acta Senatus – the Senate Records – however, we know that the Roman’s did not retain meticulous records of the countless crucifixions they carried out; let alone records of executions carried out by Pilate some eighty years before the Annals were written. If Tacitus had even wanted to examine the records of ‘Christus’, where would he have looked? Would he even have bothered, when he could so easily have asked a colleague; or a passing Christian?
David Fitzgerald writes:
‘Again, considering how the Church latched onto a bit of writing like this and preserved it as evidence for Christ merely because of an incidental mention, think of how they would have gone absolutely gangbusters over anything that Pontius Pilate himself had written that specifically talked about Jesus! So we can rest assured that there aren’t any reports from Pilate that have been overlooked for the last 2000 years.
‘And would even a hypothetical Roman record ever really have said “Christus” (in other words, “the Messiah”!) was executed instead of Jesus Ben Joseph of Nazareth”, or at least the Latin equivalent?
‘“Christ” is the Greek translation of a Jewish religious title, not the surname of a condemned criminal. To suggest that “Christus” would have been the name found on a Roman police report is ridiculous.’ (‘Nailed – Ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed at All’).
Concerning Suetonius:
Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus was a Roman administrator, historian and secretary to the Emperor Hadrian; best known for his ‘Lives of the First Twelve Caesars.’
He is regarded as a ‘historical witness ‘ for Yeshua (who he at no time mentions by name) because of as single line – written at around 120 CE – in his biography of the Emperor Claudius:
‘As the Jews were making constant disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus (impulsore Chresto), he (Claudius) expelled them from Rome.’
By using the expression ‘impulsore Chresto’, Sueonius is identifying Chrestus is an ‘impulsor’; one who ‘instigates’ a particular event; and not one who is the reason (or the inspiration) for that event.
Claudius ruled from 41 CE to 54 CE. We would need to demonstrate how Yeshua (ʿalayhi as-salām) – who supposedly died around 30/33 CE – could possibly have been the instigator – the rabble rouser – Chrestus.
According to Act 28: 17-30, the Jews of Rome – having received no letters from Judea concerning Paul –wanted to know his views about Christianity. Paul is said to have witness to them from ‘morning to evening’, trying to ‘persuade’ them about Yeshua. Some were convinced, and others not.
Paul is said to have first visited Rome in the winter of 61 CE, in the reign of Nero, well after the events related by Suetonius.
We would need to explain why Roman Jews – knowing little of Christianity – would riot on its behalf, or that of its founder.
We seek credible confirmation of the crucifixion narratives; but we do so – in every case – without first questioning the veracity of the narratives themselves.
If the narratives are true – and the crucifixion a fact – then the search for external corroboration can be justified. On the other hand, if the narratives are false – and the crucifixion a lie – then such corroboration has nothing to offer.
May the Exalted bless you and keep you safe.
He tortured them to learn if their Christianity involved cannibalism or other depraved practices of which they were accused on account of their eucharistic ritual of the body and blood of Christ, I believe -- and he goes on to assure the Emperor he could find no such evidence, but only the communal sharing of 'normal' food and communal concern for one another.What value should we give to one who has to torture his Christian prisoners in order to learn the basics of their religion?
It is independent historical evidence of a sort, while the only evidence against Jesus's death on the cross remains the one single line from the Quran..