> Let’s take a look at the passage in context ... Luke 14... So, you're wrong.
Oh, thank you for clarifying. I thought you were in the passage of the rich young ruler. Sure, let's look at this passage.
First of all, even a superficial reading shows that Jesus is using a lot of hyperbole: Hate your parents (which is contrary to the Law of Moses—and, we can easily tell that the crowd doesn't take it to be that that's what he is saying, and so not a literal expectation), hate one's own family and even oneself (contrary to his own teaching of "love one another," and so not a literal expectation), and carry a cross (certainly not a literal expectation).
Jesus uses hyperbole a lot.
- It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle… (Mt. 19.24)
- Straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel (Mt. 23.24).
- The log in your own eye (Lk. 6.42)
- Gouge out your eye (Mt. 5.29; 18.9)
The text is about discipleship: "If someone wants to be my disciple." It's about "coming to Jesus." When he uses the illustrations in vv. 28-32, he doesn't care about building towers or going to war; the point is clearly commitment and counting the cost. That's his
obvious point. As I mentioned before, neither Jesus nor any of his disciples gave up all their possessions.
His final illustration is with salt. Jesus is not talking about salt, but rather about fidelity to the covenant. The point is that disciples who do not live like disciples are worth as much as unsalty salt, viz., nothing.
The teaching is counting the cost, willingness to lose, and self-sacrifice. He's talking about souls, not possessions. Jesus always talks in spiritual terms, using what sounds like metaphors, hyperbole, and even ridiculous demands to refer to spiritual truths. In Jn. 6.54, he tells people to eat his flesh and drink his blood. Therefore he is not saying that you have to give every away and give everything up physically, but spiritually. He is talking about souls, not possessions. He wants no spiritual competitors, compromise, or not counting the cost.
> Acts 4
You'll notice that they did not give up all their possessions. Jesus’s disciples did not become propertyless but shared all that they had (Acts 4.44-45). Here in Acts 4 is generous sharing, not ascetic deprivation and poverty. It's a communal mindset, not a divestiture. They shared the use, not the ownership. Each member regarded his private estate as being available to the community. 2 Corinthians 8.14 requires generosity, not asceticism and poverty; sharing, but not renunciation of possessions.
> Why did none of these Christians own private property?
They did own private property; they didn't sell it, they shared it.
> Jesus DID tell “large crowds” of people that they cannot be his disciple unless they get rid of all their private property.
Hyperbole to make a point about discipleship.
> Jesus’ earliest followers DID NOT own any private property, as per Jesus’ wishes.
Yes, they did. From time to time someone would sell what they had, and that was their prerogative, and they did it to meet the needs of the community. The verb forms in the verse (iterative imperfects) show that there was no once-for-all divestiture of possessions as an entrance requirement into the church. (That was true in the Essene community at Qumran, but not of the Christian Church).
> John 12:6 refers to a collectively-owned money bag.
Correct, but the point is that they hung onto it: they collected the money, saved it for their use, and used it. They didn't (1) refuse to take any money, or (2) give it all away as soon as it came to them. In other words, they didn't divest themselves of all financial resources (cash or possessions).
> Let’s take a look at the passage in context ... Luke 14... So, you're wrong.
Oh, thank you for clarifying. I thought you were in the passage of the rich young ruler. Sure, let's look at this passage.
First of all, even a superficial reading shows that Jesus is using a lot of hyperbole: Hate your parents (which is contrary to the Law of Moses—and, we can easily tell that the crowd doesn't take it to be that that's what he is saying, and so not a literal expectation), hate one's own family and even oneself (contrary to his own teaching of "love one another," and so not a literal expectation), and carry a cross (certainly not a literal expectation).
Jesus uses hyperbole a lot.
[list][*] It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle… (Mt. 19.24)
[*] Straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel (Mt. 23.24).
[*] The log in your own eye (Lk. 6.42)
[*] Gouge out your eye (Mt. 5.29; 18.9)[/list]
The text is about discipleship: "If someone wants to be my disciple." It's about "coming to Jesus." When he uses the illustrations in vv. 28-32, he doesn't care about building towers or going to war; the point is clearly commitment and counting the cost. That's his [b]obvious[/b] point. As I mentioned before, neither Jesus nor any of his disciples gave up all their possessions.
His final illustration is with salt. Jesus is not talking about salt, but rather about fidelity to the covenant. The point is that disciples who do not live like disciples are worth as much as unsalty salt, viz., nothing.
The teaching is counting the cost, willingness to lose, and self-sacrifice. He's talking about souls, not possessions. Jesus always talks in spiritual terms, using what sounds like metaphors, hyperbole, and even ridiculous demands to refer to spiritual truths. In Jn. 6.54, he tells people to eat his flesh and drink his blood. Therefore he is not saying that you have to give every away and give everything up physically, but spiritually. He is talking about souls, not possessions. He wants no spiritual competitors, compromise, or not counting the cost.
> Acts 4
You'll notice that they did not give up all their possessions. Jesus’s disciples did not become propertyless but shared all that they had (Acts 4.44-45). Here in Acts 4 is generous sharing, not ascetic deprivation and poverty. It's a communal mindset, not a divestiture. They shared the use, not the ownership. Each member regarded his private estate as being available to the community. 2 Corinthians 8.14 requires generosity, not asceticism and poverty; sharing, but not renunciation of possessions.
> Why did none of these Christians own private property?
They did own private property; they didn't sell it, they shared it.
> Jesus DID tell “large crowds” of people that they cannot be his disciple unless they get rid of all their private property.
Hyperbole to make a point about discipleship.
> Jesus’ earliest followers DID NOT own any private property, as per Jesus’ wishes.
Yes, they did. From time to time someone would sell what they had, and that was their prerogative, and they did it to meet the needs of the community. The verb forms in the verse (iterative imperfects) show that there was no once-for-all divestiture of possessions as an entrance requirement into the church. (That was true in the Essene community at Qumran, but not of the Christian Church).
> John 12:6 refers to a collectively-owned money bag.
Correct, but the point is that they hung onto it: they collected the money, saved it for their use, and used it. They didn't (1) refuse to take any money, or (2) give it all away as soon as it came to them. In other words, they didn't divest themselves of all financial resources (cash or possessions).