by jimwalton » Sat May 06, 2017 2:57 pm
> Miracles
It's interesting to look through the Bible and notice how the miracles never seem to convince too many people. People seem to make their decisions about spiritual things apart from the working of wonders. When Moses did miracles for the Pharaoh, he stubbornly resisted Moses' demands. When God did one miracle after another for the people of Israel after they left Egypt, they all still fell away in rebellion. When Elijah did a great miracle on top of Mt. Carmel, the people still continued in their sin. And when Jesus did hundreds of miracles, one after another, people just wanted more of the show and weren't really motivated to consider his claims to deity. People nowadays say, "God should just show himself to us," or "If he did miracles now (in the era of video and scientific proof), we'd be convinced." I don't buy it. People are generally not convinced by miracles, but by truth. The miracles are just signs, not convincing proof, so it seems. They justify them in their minds to be other things (magic tricks, sleight of hand, natural occurrences, whatever).
> Jesus should have been a huge figure at the time, with tons of historical evidence and records in Roman emperors journals and diaries, don't you think?
Rome only cared about Rome. It was an astounding center of cultural pride, philosophical skepticism, legalism, and power. The universe revolved around Rome. A messianic claimant in a dirty corner of the empire was of no import to Rome; Jesus was just another candidate in a long list of religious exhibitionists in a land known for religious obsession, as far as Rome was concerned, and they couldn't have cared less. As far as Rome was concerned, Jesus was only of local political concern to Pilate, trying to keep peace in what he considered to be one of the worst places in the empire. Later, Jesus only enters the writings of Roman historians because the Christians are perceived as unpatriotic because they won't worship the emperor.
> About the old testament and the prophecies, how would you respond to the claims that the main promises weren't delivered, so it's not reasonable to state that he was the true messiah?
I would have several responses to those claims. The first would be that there was a great misunderstanding of the messiah in that most thought he was only coming once, when in reality he was coming twice, with each coming having certain characteristics. His first coming was in humility as the suffering servant (Isa. 53), and his second coming was in power, as per the "messianic prophecies." My second response is that people don't understand that the entire OT is a messianic prophecy, not just the snippets traditionally identified as such. Jesus shows up on virtually every page of the OT.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Sat May 06, 2017 2:57 pm.