Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
This appears to be a contradictory statement. Can you please clarify?Paul12 said:A lot of what is said is true...but as to the overlying truth we shall never know.
Now why would you entertain this so-called "theory" that Jesus had a child with Mary Magdalene? You said that you "definitely do not hold much credit to it", however, if you are entertaining the thought, then you are ascribing to this "belief". Quite antithetical if you ask me.Paul12 said:At the very least, I will entertain the suggestion of Jesus having a child with Mary Magdalene, but I definately do not hold much credit to it.
The ending was quite predictable, I agree. About halfway through the book, I pretty much deduced what the conclusion was going to be.Priest said:It was a decent book, but it was easy to figure out, and the ending was extremely flat for all the claims that were made in it.
I fully agree!Priest said:If you are new to the Christian faith I would HIGHLY reccomend skipping it until you have read and understood the New Testament, and Jesus's teachings.
The quote above seems to be an attempt to justify the movie and all that is in it.Even the offended Bruce Bawer acknowledged the film as "the work of people who thought they were doing something devout." The film, like the book, seems to take as given that God exists, that Jesus is the Messiah, that he performs miracles, and that the culmination of his mission lies not in social gospel or liberation theology or societal revolution or even ethical teaching, but in the Cross and all the Cross entails. Medved's comparison to King David is inaccurate inasmuch as this Jesus, far from ending in bitterness and disillusionment, realizes that his "last temptation" has come from Satan, repudiates it, and in the film's final frames triumphantly declaims on the Cross, "It is accomplished. It is accomplished."
-Carol Iannone teaches at the Gallatian School of Individualized Study at New York University and has written for Commentary, National Review, and Modern Age.
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9602/iannone.html
Did they both not attempt to link Christ with Mary Magdalene?Crazy Liz said:Interesting, ddl. I made a comparislon between the two books in the other thread I linked above. Both are fiction, and announced early on as such by the authors, who (I think) had no intent to make any claims their works of fiction were historically accurate.
Now, one of these books is great literature and the other popular genre fiction. There really is no comparison. They also don't link Jesus with the same Mary.
I must confess that I have only read commentaries on both books and the movie. In every commentary that I have read and even in the original controversy sparked by the last temptation movie the reference has always been to Mary Magdalene. There may have been changes from the original book and the movie though.Crazy Liz said:No. The Da Vinci Code, following the Merovingian legend, links Jesus with Mary Magdalene. Last Temptation of Christ includes an extended fantasy of a hypothetical marriage between Jesus and Mary and her sister Martha. Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus is not the same as Mary Magdalene, although the two have become conflated in some folklore.
The first review you linked to are as poorly-researched as the Dan Brown book. I must confess I didn't look at the second, expecting drivel of the same quality.
Martin Luther found many things that didn't fit with his personal theology so he shattered Christendom and started editing the Bible to suit his wants. Hardly a great spiritual leader. If you read some of the things he wrote about the Jews you might change your mind on what a great guy he was.maybe this is just too much "book" learning, or public schools talking, but i think that it's not entirely impossible to think that there may have been some cover ups by the early church. the early church was corrupt in some ways, look what martin luther stood for, he found 95 things the church was doing that went agaisnt what his learning and faith told him.
The Avignon papacy was not a papcy, it was an anti-papacy. Do you have any sources to back up your claim that the pope is nothimg more than mere political puppet?in the early days of the church many times the pope was pope because powerful secular rulers wanted a puppet so they could control the church as well. take the avignon papacy for example.
The Church has always reached out to the people of mission countries using language they understand. It's why we call the Resurrection Easter. The fact remains that we are still celebrating the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, not some pagan sun god.then so many of our holidays were started by pagans and are celebrated the way they are now because the church wanted to put their own spin on things. i'm not saying that the church is corrupt now(i won't say it's perfect either because we are still human) but i think that the possibility exists that the church did some underhanded things in the beginning.
shutterbug said:maybe this is just too much "book" learning, or public schools talking, but i think that it's not entirely impossible to think that there may have been some cover ups by the early church.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?