cubinity
jesus is; the rest is commentary.
Mt. 9:25 But when the people were put forth, he went in, and took her by the hand, and the maid arose.
So, you think Jesus took her hand and the maid's dead body arose, still dead, and He presented it to her parents, since after all, Matthew failed to fill in assumptions that she was alive.
v26 And the fame hereof went abroad into all that land.
The fame of levitating a dead body. Not unreasonable at all(the wink means sarcasm)
Your sarcasm only demonstrates meanness, not the invalidity of my point.
I think the people were animated by life. I don't understand why you aren't listening in all the ways I've said that over and over and over again. I agree with you about what you think went on that the passage is describing. Your failure to appreciate that only reinforces that you are not in the habit of paying attention to what is actually written, by me or by the authors of the Bible.
But, whatever.
You continue to ask me what I think, and you continue to argue for why your interpretation of the description is reasonable, and you are going with arguments like these because the one argument you and I know you can't make is the one that would actually prove me wrong. Our interpretations simply are not in the text. As much as you may not like the implications of that fact, it is and will always be true.
Why does it matter so much to me to make that point? Is it because I disagree with your interpretations? No, as I've repeatedly said I agree with them! Is it because I think this particular issue of people climbing from graves two thousand years ago is so important when it comes to the fundamental difference between what is actually in the text and what we assume is happening as we interpret the text? No, not really in this case.
It matters because all the time people, like this OP, flip open the Bible, read a passage, interpret its meaning, only to read another passage and interpret its meaning, and come away asking something like, "Are these contradictory?" At other times, well-meaning believers will read a passage and interpret its meaning, and then read another passage that totally contradicts it, interpret it in a way that conveniently makes the words mean something non-contradictory, and then argue that the Bible never contradicts itself.
It also matters because people tend to make their Christian dogma based on what they think the Scriptures are saying rather than what they actually say, using as you so shamelessly do, human reasoning. They then tout their reasoning around as divinely inspired truth when it is really just opinion.
In this case, for example, is it divinely inspired truth that those folks were alive? No. Is it a very reasonable assumption that the divine truth we have in our possession is implying that those folks were alive? Sure. What is the divine truth? Bodies rose from graves and went into the city, appearing to people. Is there a difference between the divine truth that the bodies arose and the very reasonable assumption that they rose because they were alive? YES!!! Is a difference like that significant to a believer that has to deal with dogma formulated by others? ABSOLUTELY!!!
It is important to know the difference between what is actually present in the text versus what you and I think it means, so that we can address these types of circumstances maturely and respectfully (to the text and to each other).
Think you can appreciate that on some level?
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