TheLightWithin
...through a glass, darkly
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Meaning in alignment with prophecyWait....the bombing of Hiroshima is a spiritual event? Without making me watch your video....how ? Why? In a few sentences?
Meaning in alignment with prophecyWait....the bombing of Hiroshima is a spiritual event? Without making me watch your video....how ? Why? In a few sentences?
With biblical prophecy in mindSo milestones in human history with apocalyptic.significamce are responded with happenings of spiritual significance?
This hypothesis falls apart when you realize there was never a FIRST COMING of Yeshua the Nazarene.Greetings brothers and sisters,
Please consider the spiritual message of this YouTube video offering a new interpretation of the Second Coming of Christ, based on events of the mid-twentieth century. I would be very interested any comments you may have.
In peace,
Autogenes
The Second Coming of Christ 1945
This sounds like it is leading into another instalment.But suppose a Buddha had appeared among the contemplative cave dwelling ascetics of Qumran. How would they have responded?
Clearly the larger Jewish society rejected Jesus because He didn't meet their messianic expectation of Devine deliverance from oppression. This expectation made the Jews ungovernable in the eyes of the Romans, resulting in their expulsion from the promised land. Ironically, the Jews became a people without a homeland as a direct result of their worship of Yahweh. But Jesus became the most important figure in all of human history; a teacher of peace, love and compassion. A man who washed the feet of his disciples, and taught them to turn the cheek when assaulted. What a shame it would be if he never really existed at all. Rest assured, that's not the case.
The problem here would be that the gnostic writings came much later than the gospels themselves, and even the gospels were still taking form while Paul the first Christian writer was already speaking about the resurrection and the Sacrifice of Christ.Thank you LightWithin
Your words of encouragement were all I needed.
Here’s my next message…
I believe Jesus was among a circle of contemplative ascetics who splintered off from the Essenes at Qumran under the leadership of John the Baptist, forming a new baptismal sect attaining higher states of consciousness and enlightenment through contemplative practice and the baptism of the five seals. Jesus rose to prominence and began His own ministry after the arrest of John, delivering his teachings to village dwelling Essenes and mainstream Jewish society. These teachings spread quickly among a diverse group of followers who circulated his sayings after his arrest and excecution by the Romans.
The truly enlightened Gnostic disciples dwelt in the transpersonal spiritual realm beyond time and space known as nirvana to Buddhists and Brahmin to the Hindu. They transcended bodily existence and became spiritually immortal. Recall the first saying in the Gospel of Thomas: “Whoever finds the meaning of these sayings shall not taste death.” But physical immortality captured the popular imagination and became the Orthodox doctrine. His execution came to be interpretated theologically as a sacrifice of atonement for original sin. Jesus’ Gnostic disciples didn’t accept this theology. The Gospel of Thomas taught salvation through understanding and following the teachings of Jesus. This teaching became eclipsed by the Orthodox kerygma of death and resurrection however, and Jesus returned in His Second Coming to restore the teaching to us, and to reveal the nature of the apocalypse we face.
May your journey lead you to the Light Within.
Well, but who DOESN'T cherry pick? Different denominations have forever and always emphasized different things and minimized other things.Ok, but when a person kicks off their post by disputing that any given passage of John's Gospel 'more likely reflects the theological views of the evangelist than the actual words of John (the Baptist)' it leaves the field open, as always, for anyone to cherry-pick the parts of the New Testament that support their own theory, and reject whatever does not as corrupted or interpolated, or whatever.
Possibly, we can't be certain.Jesus speaks of Thomas as his twin. He is the doubting Thomas of St. John’s gospel.
Whilst Pagels is a renown scholar, her reputation was somewhat tarnished by The Gnostic Gospels, in which reviewers saw a rather partisan approach to the materials, and some clearly dubious conflations of the texts to validate her points.Elaine Pagels in her book Beyond Belief, theorizes the communities behind St John’s gospel and the Thomas tradition held rival theologies.
However they could be. John has been arrested and languishes in jail. Two of his disciples go to Jesus to inquire of Him, and ask the question – it may well be that the question is theirs, rather than the Baptist's, and if He is indeed the Messiah, why does He leave His servant languishing in jail? Did the Baptist send them, or was the decision to approach Jesus their own?After baptizing Jesus: The next day he saw Jesus coming toward him, and said, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” - John 1:29
Spoke when John was in prison: “Are you he who is to come, or shall we look for another?” – Matthew 11:3
It would be hard to imagine both statements could be historical.
I see no evidence of competition?At the time the gospels were written, the followers of Jesus and John the Baptist formed two different communities competing for converts. John 1:27 is essentially saying “Our teacher is greater than their teacher” in my opinion.
It may well be that the proto source might well have been an oral tradition from Thomas – that Thomas collected the sayings and used them in his preaching, but the Gospel as we find it has been redacted and edited by a disciple of Thomas along the way.Are you suggesting “Didymos Judas Thomas” who compiled the original collection of sayings in the Gospel of Thomas was not a disciple of Jesus, and another “Thomas (also known as Didymus),” was the doubting Thomas in the Gospel of John? That seems unlikely to me.
Well Q yes, but in two-source of three-source theories, Thomas doesn't figure as one of the sources. Rather, its a common belief that Thomas drew from these sources.It’s interesting that two sayings collections circulated in antiquity; the Gospel of Thomas and the Q Source, used to compose the dialogues of Jesus in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke.
Indeed ... it does solve a lot of problems, but its acceptance is not universal ... and Thomas is way more problematic.No manuscript of Q has ever been found, yet the Q source is one of the most successful theories of New Testament scholarship.
That would put Q as an older tradition source than Thomas.Thomas is more esoteric and sapiential, Q has a more apocalyptic focus.
Here’s evidence first century Christians were actively converting followers of John the Baptist:{/quote]
I don't doubt they were – but John, who had an intuition about Jesus, did not understand the totality of His mission any more than the disciples, right up to the Resurrection.
And Acts 18:25: "He (Apollos) had been instructed in the way of the Lord, and he spoke with great fervor and taught about Jesus accurately, though he knew only the baptism of John." – which rather suggests John was preaching Christ. and that the 'baptism of John' was not a baptism in the Holy Spirit.
"He began to speak boldly in the synagogue. When Priscilla and Aquila heard him, they invited him to their home and explained to him the way of God more adequately." (18:26) So Priscilla and Aquila (dare I say deacons?) instructed him in the Pauline gospel.
"Christianity has always been a proselytizing religion. Why wouldn’t they be converting followers of John? It this case it was a bit tricky though, given that John baptized Jesus."
I don't think Jesus and John were competing, that's all. I think John always knew his mission, and was preparing disciples for Christ.
I rather think, if they were competing, then the Gospels would have said so ... as they did regarding other members of His broader family ... ?
My pleasure.Greetings Thomas,
Thank you for your interest and engaging in discussion with me.
Indeed. Two interesting strands.Thomas was more esoteric and sapiential; Q has a more apocalyptic focus.
I see the Q as older because it's age can be strongly argued from the synoptics.Why? Do you believe the apocalyptic says in Q are older and more likely to be authentic to Jesus than the wisdom says in Q? What about the Sermon on the Mount? Is it not wisdom?
I don't think that's the schematic.To say that Thomas is later than Q, and therefore less reliable, because it is a wisdom collection strikes me as too schematic, especially if one accepts that Jesus was a wisdom teacher. I believe both contribute to our understanding of what Jesus taught.
I would agree with that.The parallels between Thomas and the synoptics are due to a common shared oral tradition ...
Interesting. The same is argued of the Gospel of John.1) Close, detailed comparison of sayings contained in both Thomas and the synoptics reveals that Thomas preserves them in a form that is more primitive than the synoptic form. In some cases, the Thomas form of a saying shows signs of later development, but lying behind it is a form that is more basic than the synoptic form. In either case such evidence indicates that Thomas did not rely on the synoptic gospels but on traditions, whether written or oral, that antedate them…”
OK.3)…Thomas belongs formally to that early period of collecting sayings of Jesus, a time contemporaneous with Q… This evidence has convinced most current Thomas scholars that the Gospel of Thomas is basically independent of the synoptic gospels.”
"... his (Koester's) sole preoccupation being with source criticism. This provides him with explanations for the secondary elements in, for example, the Gospel of Peter and the Gospel of Thomas: they are later additions to earlier (but hypothetical!) sources, and it is the earlier source which often stands behind the canonical gospels."Helmut Koester from the Nag Hammadi Library in English:
“If one considers the form and wording of the individual sayings in comparison with the form in which they are preserved in the New Testament, The Gospel of Thomas almost always appears to have preserved a more original form of the traditional saying... More original and shorter forms are especially evident in the parables of Thomas."
OK, but thinking about it, the question is:Thomas is sapiential, Q is more apocalyptic.
I'd say both.Is His kingdom a present reality, or something to become manifest in the eschaton?
I'd say salvation through faith – gnosis is in the very nature of Revelation, but it's not the path for everyone. I see his teaching addresses humanity as such, encompassing all the spiritual types – if we take the traditional understandings of the gnostic, the esoterist, the jnani, etc., then they represent only a small portion of humanity.In my opinion, Jesus was both a wisdom teacher who taught salvation through Gnosis ...
Well, always a possibility, but I think an environmental extinction event is more likely.who could clairvoyantly foresee man’s ultimate thermonuclear self-destruction.
I see Him primarily as a Redeemer.Do you see Jesus as primarily an apocalyptic teacher?
"No man knoweth" (Matthew 24:36)What is your understanding of the apocalypse?