Ahh, a lesson in spiritualizing Scripture.
> You can't just say it, you have to give evidence. I'll deal with your citations further down the post.
So you don't think Zacchaeus needed to sell all he had?
> Jesus didn't ask for them; Jesus didn't demand them.
That's not what I said, I said it was necessary. Do you disagree?
> The appropriate response to greed is repentance. Zaccahaeus understood that he couldn't come to Jesus and continue to participate in systemic, institutionalized sin (tax collectors abusing their office and power). It meant publicly giving reparations and embarking on a new lifestyle. The problem wasn't his wealth but rather how he had acquired it. He understood that joining with Christ was agreeing to justice. Zacchaeus was convicted and volunteered to restore wealth to those he had cheated.
Ya, I don't disagree. You referenced Zacchaeus as someone who voluntarily gave away his wealth, and I was saying he had to if we he wanted to enter the Kingdom.
> Because there is no prescription stated—ever.
Except I never said it was stated, only implied. Which it is. It is the Greek translation we evidently disagree on.
> Acts 4.32 indicates that they shared the use of their possessions, not the ownership of them. There was no prescription or expectation that they would sell all they had.
I think the Greek (against Robertson) states it was communal ownership—not just use.
> As far as the translation "from time to time," A.T. Robertson...
Yes, I have seen you are a fan of Robertson on other posts. He has added a phrase not found in the text. And I find that worrisome, even if it is for the sake of clarity. I would trust other scholars more who don't add phrases for the sake of clarity. I suspect we will just have to agree to disagree on this.
> As I have already shown, there was exception to share in common, but no expectation to sell. Selling was purely voluntary.
Based on a phrase not even in the text. It was not time to time, and it was not only use, but possession that was shared.
Selling was purely voluntary in the sense that if you didn't want to join the community you didn't have to sell.
> Luke 1.52-53...
The text I referenced speaks of the rulers and the rich, not just the humble and the proud. There is "no notion" that Christ has a problem with wealth?? It's like every five lines in the Synoptics... As to your OT examples, yes? As an Anabaptist I start with Christ and read back. Because there was polygamy, slaves, stoning, murder, by big time OT figures, God was fine with it?
The primacy of the NT over the OT might be an issue here.
> Luke 3...
A prescriptive command to share, might I add.
> Luke 6.24...
Your interpretation is not in the text. All it states is, "woe to the rich, for you have received your consolation." No reason to add things about greed and exploitation, although I agree those are sinful.
> These are the people Jesus is talking about.
Not found in the text. He's speaking "with a great crowd of his disciples and a great multitude of people from all Judea, Jerusalem, and the coast of Tyre and Sidon."
> Luke 12.32-33: Practice the Jubilee!...
Ya, that's what I have been saying all along... Craig Keener is agreeing with me in that quote. This is the crux of the issue, "Most people, like most people today, would have found Jesus’ words frighteningly difficult." So we spiritualize them.
> So it's not riches that are particularly the issue here
Yes it is, and people not giving it up.
> Luke 14.33...
How does this sound like a spiritual truth? He literally says possessions, not souls. And we see the community in acts doing this. The same disciples who he asked to sell everything.
> Paul advocates sharing, not renunciation of possession.
We aren't discussing Paul. We are discussing the community in Acts. Let's not widen the goalposts too far. Luke/Acts are what are on the table. There are clear commands in Luke from Jesus that we then see in the community in Acts.
> Jesus came to bring good news to the poor, to liberate them from their oppression and economic deprivation. The Church has to live in justice. It will involve the rich giving much away and the poor being supplied. It's actually a lot like Communism. You can have things, but have an open hand.
Mostly agreed
If only many others saw things this way. A tragedy of the Western Church.
> Luke 18.22. The chapter is couched in a prophetic context...
Nah. There were no chapters in the early manuscripts (as I am sure you know), and there is a clear shift after verse 14. The two parables, and then a shift to the children, the ruler, Jesus' prediction, and the blind beggar. The two parables start with "told a parable..." and we don't see that with the ruler. It is clearly not a parable, and not only about prophetic justice.
> It's not wealth that keeps people from the kingdom, but self.
Wealth certainly doesn't help
We are basically on the same page, maybe just different paragraphs in the story. Feel free to reply, feel free not to. I appreciate the dialogue either way!
Ahh, a lesson in spiritualizing Scripture.
> You can't just say it, you have to give evidence. I'll deal with your citations further down the post.
So you don't think Zacchaeus needed to sell all he had?
> Jesus didn't ask for them; Jesus didn't demand them.
That's not what I said, I said it was necessary. Do you disagree?
> The appropriate response to greed is repentance. Zaccahaeus understood that he couldn't come to Jesus and continue to participate in systemic, institutionalized sin (tax collectors abusing their office and power). It meant publicly giving reparations and embarking on a new lifestyle. The problem wasn't his wealth but rather how he had acquired it. He understood that joining with Christ was agreeing to justice. Zacchaeus was convicted and volunteered to restore wealth to those he had cheated.
Ya, I don't disagree. You referenced Zacchaeus as someone who voluntarily gave away his wealth, and I was saying he had to if we he wanted to enter the Kingdom.
> Because there is no prescription stated—ever.
Except I never said it was stated, only implied. Which it is. It is the Greek translation we evidently disagree on.
> Acts 4.32 indicates that they shared the use of their possessions, not the ownership of them. There was no prescription or expectation that they would sell all they had.
I think the Greek (against Robertson) states it was communal ownership—not just use.
> As far as the translation "from time to time," A.T. Robertson...
Yes, I have seen you are a fan of Robertson on other posts. He has added a phrase not found in the text. And I find that worrisome, even if it is for the sake of clarity. I would trust other scholars more who don't add phrases for the sake of clarity. I suspect we will just have to agree to disagree on this.
> As I have already shown, there was exception to share in common, but no expectation to sell. Selling was purely voluntary.
Based on a phrase not even in the text. It was not time to time, and it was not only use, but possession that was shared.
Selling was purely voluntary in the sense that if you didn't want to join the community you didn't have to sell.
> Luke 1.52-53...
The text I referenced speaks of the rulers and the rich, not just the humble and the proud. There is "no notion" that Christ has a problem with wealth?? It's like every five lines in the Synoptics... As to your OT examples, yes? As an Anabaptist I start with Christ and read back. Because there was polygamy, slaves, stoning, murder, by big time OT figures, God was fine with it?
The primacy of the NT over the OT might be an issue here.
> Luke 3...
A prescriptive command to share, might I add.
> Luke 6.24...
Your interpretation is not in the text. All it states is, "woe to the rich, for you have received your consolation." No reason to add things about greed and exploitation, although I agree those are sinful.
> These are the people Jesus is talking about.
Not found in the text. He's speaking "with a great crowd of his disciples and a great multitude of people from all Judea, Jerusalem, and the coast of Tyre and Sidon."
> Luke 12.32-33: Practice the Jubilee!...
Ya, that's what I have been saying all along... Craig Keener is agreeing with me in that quote. This is the crux of the issue, "Most people, like most people today, would have found Jesus’ words frighteningly difficult." So we spiritualize them.
> So it's not riches that are particularly the issue here
Yes it is, and people not giving it up.
> Luke 14.33...
How does this sound like a spiritual truth? He literally says possessions, not souls. And we see the community in acts doing this. The same disciples who he asked to sell everything.
> Paul advocates sharing, not renunciation of possession.
We aren't discussing Paul. We are discussing the community in Acts. Let's not widen the goalposts too far. Luke/Acts are what are on the table. There are clear commands in Luke from Jesus that we then see in the community in Acts.
> Jesus came to bring good news to the poor, to liberate them from their oppression and economic deprivation. The Church has to live in justice. It will involve the rich giving much away and the poor being supplied. It's actually a lot like Communism. You can have things, but have an open hand.
Mostly agreed :) If only many others saw things this way. A tragedy of the Western Church.
> Luke 18.22. The chapter is couched in a prophetic context...
Nah. There were no chapters in the early manuscripts (as I am sure you know), and there is a clear shift after verse 14. The two parables, and then a shift to the children, the ruler, Jesus' prediction, and the blind beggar. The two parables start with "told a parable..." and we don't see that with the ruler. It is clearly not a parable, and not only about prophetic justice.
> It's not wealth that keeps people from the kingdom, but self.
Wealth certainly doesn't help ;)
We are basically on the same page, maybe just different paragraphs in the story. Feel free to reply, feel free not to. I appreciate the dialogue either way!