GigachadAspie1997
Iron
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2025
- Posts
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I didn't ever read what he said in his thread tbh.So essentially you admit you cannot disprove his arguments but you chose to have blind faith because it gives your life meaning?
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I didn't ever read what he said in his thread tbh.So essentially you admit you cannot disprove his arguments but you chose to have blind faith because it gives your life meaning?
This confirms what I said lmaoKeep mocking theism until you experience the righteousness from God.
god’d not real thoKeep mocking theism until you experience the righteousness from God. Please rape me
god’d not real tho
- was circumcisedChristianity is not a kike mythology.
Jesus might have been born in Israel, but he's not and never was a jew.
Matter of fact, he exposed the jews for being the greedy monkeys they are that only care about money.
- was addressed as rabbi
The word “rabbi” is derived from the Hebrew word rav. In early uses of the word in the Hebrew Bible, it was simply a term of respect or honor. The HarperCollins Bible Dictionary notes that this sense of the word can be found in 2 Kings 18:17 and 2 Kings 25:8, where it’s used to mean something like “chief” or “officer” rather than its later meaning of “teacher.” In the Hebrew Bible, by the way, the term is not used to mean teacher, which is instead denoted by the Hebrew word mō·w·rāy.
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However, by the New Testament period, there had clearly been a shift from its original meaning, as it seems to have been used only to mean “teacher” in a religious sense. In the Gospels, Jesus is called “Rabbi” 15 times (for example, Mark 9:5; Mark 11:21; Mark 14:45; John 1:38) and is also addressed twice using the Aramaic equivalent “Rabbouni,” since Aramaic was the language of Jesus and his disciples (Mark 10:51; John 20:16). Interestingly, in Matthew, only Judas calls Jesus “Rabbi,” while the other disciples call him “Lord.” The HarperCollins Bible Dictionary notes that in the New Testament, only Matthew, Mark, and John use the term Rabbi.