Darth Wong wrote:
For the second time, this doesn't change the fact that they are considered a distinct ethnicity. Your spin-doctoring changes nothing, nor does your hair-splitting.
I fail to see why you are bringing this point up again. If you re-read my post I agreed that they saw themselves (and so did God!) as a distinct group. However, as distinct as they are they were the same “race” as the two peoples both came from Abraham.
Darth Wong wrote:
Bullshit. According to your bizarre interpretation, even the concept of male and female was "smashed" by Jesus. Clearly, this interpretation is groundless and unreasonable. All this passage says is that everyone is allowed to join the Christian church. It says nothing about all races being treated the same, or men and women being treated the same, or slaves and free men being treated the same. In fact, it's written by Paul, who elsewhere exhorts slaves to obey their masters.
Let me start off by saying this part of what you wrote is absolutely correct:
“All this passage says is that everyone is allowed to join the Christian church.”
And yet you don’t make the connection between those who are now allowed to come before God through his son and establishing universal worth of all races. What stronger proclamation of equality of races is there for a religious man (in this case the author of Galacians) to say all races are now equally allowed to partake in our religious ceremonies AND spend all eternity together in the afterlife. After all that is what they were preaching about, eternal afterlife.
Darth Wong wrote:
Wrong. You are imprinting your own church's doctrines onto the text, rather than treating it as just another piece of literature. That's why you project preferred interpretations onto the text and then act as if this "meaning" flows naturally from it.
Actually, it’s an interpretation that has supporting verses in the bible and agrees with the original Greek. You fail to see the connection of that verse because you don’t look at the author as a person who is religious and places nothing above the value of fellowship of worship and who has access to eternal life.
Darth Wong wrote:
I did. This interpretation that all of the old rules were swept away is nonsense. Jesus himself denied it, and he outranks Paul
Jesus didn’t deny it at all. You are referring to this verse (correct me if I am wrong)?
Mat 5:17 Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. (KJV)
Mat 5:17 Nomizo me hoti erchomai kataluo nomos e prophetes erchomai ou erchomai kataluo alla pleroo. (Greek Transliteration)
If you had gone back to the Greek and looked up the meaning of the words there wouldn’t be any confusion here.
Pleroo (fulfill) – To Render Full, To Complete, To End.
Christ was saying he didn’t come to destroy the law but to fulfill and end it in the way it was foretold it would be in the very law he is talking about.
And further add to my point about at what point are Christians no longer under the law (out of Christ’s mouth):
Luke 16:16 The law and the prophets [were] until John (the Baptist): since that time the kingdom of God is preached, and every man presseth into it.