You can't see post #34? Here it is again.
Number 10 - To read the Shema` twice daily, as it is written "and thou shalt talk of them . . . when thou liest down, and when thou risest up" (Deuteronomy 6,7).
Number 11 - To learn Torah and to teach it, as it is written "thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children" (Deuteronomy 6,7).
Number 17 - For every man to write a Torah scroll for himself, as it is written "write ye this song for you" (Deuteronomy 31,19).
Thus the father was obligated as the sole teacher of his children in Jewish history (Deut. xi. 19).
I beg your pardon. You are 100% correct! I actually studied in college that it was highly unlikely that the Apostles could read and write. However, this clearly shows in Scripture that they could and should.
Here is the link:
[URL="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History...ucation#Israel"]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History...ucation#Israel[/URL]
I am coming to the conclusion that I may need to get another ISP. You start this post with Number 10, but I dont see 1-9. I would say that the trouble is with this board, but my ISP gives me trouble on other websites as well.
Im glad that you brought up what the OT said about reading and writing. I was basing my conclusion about Jewish literacy on my general knowledge of history (40 credit hours in history along with my bachelors degree in biology, on top of the fact that I have studied history on my own almost for as long I could read) and my knowledge of Jewish custom. It used to be customary for Jewish mothers to cover a copy of the Torah with honey so their children would learn to associate reading the Torah with something enjoyable.
But, ironically the Schma Israel, one of the verses you mention, is probably the only part of the Bible that Jewish men were expected to memorize because they had to recite this prayer on each of their parents Yahrzeit, that is the annual anniversary of their death, and they are supposed to say the prayer for themselves when they know they are about to die. Herman Wouk, a Jewish writer, who served as the executive officer on a destroyer during WWII once commented that you may ask how anyone could have the presence of mind to say the Schma when they think they are about to die, but he recalls saying it many times while reaching for a lifeline when his ship was in a storm. But apart from the Schma I would venture that nothing else in the OT was to be memorized. The professional scribes that prepared copies of Jewish Scripture could not write one single letter from memory. They had to copy an existing copy and they had to read each word out loud before they wrote it.
My entire point is that the Jewish society in which Christianity started (both in Judea and in the greater Hellenic world) was highly literate. This means that the earliest Christians didnt need to rely on an oral tradition.
An oral tradition, be it real or imaginary, makes it easy to see things that werent really there. Neither the Bible, nor (to my knowledge) any other written document, made any record of how, when or where Peter and Paul died. I would venture that no one on earth knew how to answer these questions because God didnt want them to be answered. If the place had been recorded it could have easily become a center for pilgrimages and the veneration of relic, which are things that God does not want, but which the Roman Catholic Church encourages anyway. Basing the foundation of the Roman Catholic Church on an oral tradition that essentially has no foundation in fact, makes Roman Catholics look foolish.
Upvote
0