Happy Easter, Lamont.LaMont Cranston wrote:Toontown, Yes, I am familiar with that famous line. I hope that you'll agree that many things in life, including lines attributed to Jesus, are subject to a certain amount of interpretation, and if you'd actually like to discuss some of these things (i.e. "turning the other cheek:) in more depth, I'm more than willing.
In the case of the line "Do not suppose I come to bring peace, but, rather a sword," I think that Jesus was just describing what was going to happen when he came on the scene. He was talking about some very heavy duty stuff, and, from what I can tell, he had some idea of what was going to happen when his teachings got into the hands of people who would put their own spin on it. He was saying something like "Hey, guys, the things I'm talking about are very powerful, and, even after I'm gone, it's going to hit the fan for a very long time." I'd say that the J-Man called that one exactly right.
By the way...Happy Easter!
The trouble with your post is, your re-interpretation is not anywhere near what Jesus is quoted as having said. Jesus said HE would bring fire and division upon the earth. And another problem is, the Messiah was not supposed to be "gone" for a long time after he showed up. The Messiah was supposed to appear, lay low Israel's enemies, and rule the earth from Jerusalem. Plain and simple. No sacrificial lamb stuff, no multi-millenia waiting period. The prophesied Messiah was no lamb. He was a conquerer. The sacrificial lamb thing was something that was concocted later.
I believe Jesus may well have been a real person who sought to fulfill the Messiah prophecy. But he failed. The Messiah was supposed to put the Romans to the sword, not be crucified by them.