Am I a prophet 🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠

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Beckie

Well-known member
Feb 15, 2022
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This thread and those of us (including self) reading and posting give this ungodly nut case a platform are out of line. This verbal trash is being read by anyone across the world and we are feeding the troll.
 

Niki7

Well-known member
Feb 21, 2023
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Firstly, the word is "although".

Secondly, your self-aggrandizing "deeper meaning" is not any deeper than the plain text. Lose the arrogance, or be thought of as a donkey.
Oh I don't know :unsure:

Do trolls look like donkeys?
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
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Firstly, the judge is a character in a parable, not a real person, so your question is irrelevant, and secondly, the text doesn’t give enough information to answer the question.
What about this Judge is she fictional to.
 

Niki7

Well-known member
Feb 21, 2023
1,963
733
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There was a talking donkey in the book of Numbers. Maybe he was an ass. That's the same thing, right?
No. That particular donkey made sense. This nonsense is an embarrassment to donkeys. However there could be an ass somewhere




 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
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Yes then there's the spiritual truth of Peter waking on water briefly befor he sank.
Was that Peter walking on water in body or spirit ?.
Peter walking on water was a literal event recorded in scripture. it was not a Parable. You asked what I thought was a "Parable" if it was fictional.

"Some people are suggesting the parable of the op is only fictional."
What's your take on that. ?


Jesus said why he spoke in parables, you will find that in Matthew chapter 13.

10 Jesus’ disciples came and said to him, β€œWhy do you use parables when you speak to the crowds?”

11 Jesus replied, β€œBecause they haven’t received the secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but you have.
12 For those who have will receive more and they will have more than enough. But as for those who don’t have, even the little they have will be taken away from them.
13 This is why I speak to the crowds in parables: although they see, they don’t really see; and although they hear, they don’t really hear or understand.
14 What Isaiah prophesied has become completely true for them:

You will hear, to be sure, but never understand;
and you will certainly see but never recognize what you are seeing.
15 For this people’s senses have become calloused,
and they’ve become hard of hearing,
and they’ve shut their eyes
so that they won’t see with their eyes
or hear with their ears
or understand with their minds,
and change their hearts and lives that I may heal them.[a]

16 β€œHappy are your eyes because they see. Happy are your ears because they hear. 17 I assure you that many prophets and righteous people wanted to see what you see and hear what you hear, but they didn’t.

THe reason for Parable are what Jesus said :) Nothing more, nothing less.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
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No I'm not being an ass @tourist 😊.
I'm being as stubborn as a mule in my belief based on this passage.😊.

I believe Jesus was referring to this passage when he spoke in Luke about the unjust judge and the widow
Isaiah 10
Woe to those who make unjust laws,
to those who issue oppressive decrees,
2 to deprive the poor of their rights
and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people,
making widows their prey
and robbing the fatherless.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
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Now can anyone answer if the unjust judge was an athiest.
 

tourist

Senior Member
Mar 13, 2014
41,360
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Tennessee
No I'm not being an ass @tourist 😊.
I'm being as stubborn as a mule in my belief based on this passage.😊.

I believe Jesus was referring to this passage when he spoke in Luke about the unjust judge and the widow
Isaiah 10
Woe to those who make unjust laws,
to those who issue oppressive decrees,
2 to deprive the poor of their rights
and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people,
making widows their prey
and robbing the fatherless.
It's all good brother. Let us go in peace. :)
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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And, there are people who cannot read scripture for what it says, and try to over-complicate a rather simple, straightforward principle.
The bigger issue is people teaching unrevealed doctrine.

I'll give you some background on what I am thinking of regarding this verse. John MacArthur put on an anti-spiritual-gifts conference maybe 9 years ago or so. RC Sproule was a guest speaker. They played a recorded message. He was addressing the issue of believers being empowered by the Spirit supernaturally. He went through three passages in Acts-- Acts 8, Acts 10, and Acts 19.

Here were his reasons, as I recall, for why he thought these things occurred- so that God could show he was accepting the Samaritans in Acts 8, so that God should show he was accepting the Gentiles in Acts 10, and so that God could show that he was accepting disciples of John the Baptist in Acts 19. That wasn't his exact wording, but it was something along those lines.

The Acts 19 explanation smelled of poppycock. Jesus had disciples who had been disciples of John the Baptist and John acknowledging Jesus was part of the message the apostles recounted as seen in the gospels. So it seems rather silly to think that they would need some special supernatural acknowledgement. Paul was already ministering among the Gentiles at this time.

Come up with some kind of special reason why something in scripture happened as an excuse to rule out that scripture being 'profitable for doctrine' in other ways is a poor approach to scripture, especially if the reason one argues for is unrevealed-- the Bible doesn't teach it.

I'll give another example. Some believers-- especially those influenced by Reformed thinking-- may argue that the reason Jesus did miracles was to demonstrate His deity. I am not necessarily disagreeing with that, though I do think it is more nuanced than that, because the Man Christ Jesus was also doing miracles by the power of the Spirit. I seem to recall John Calvin making the point about Christ doing miracles that proved His divinity in at least one commentary on a passage, that I don't remember the specifics.

The problem comes when someone argues that the exclusive reason for all of His miracles was to prove His divinity. Then you run into problems with actual specifics of passages. Jesus fed the 5,000. Was the only reason to prove His divinity? Doesn't one of the passages point out how Jesus had compassion on the multitude, who were like a sheep without a shepherd? Couldn't compassion be a reason behind the miracle. Is there nothing in the event to show that He was a Prophet? Elisha the prophet performed a miracle, through prophecy, of multiplying food? Is there no lesson there about trusting God for our material possession? What about Jesus using His servants to cooperate with Him in His work? He had the disciples have the people sit down and distribute the food.

You can come up with ONE reason and argue that this is THE reason something in the Bible happened. Even if you can find scripture that gives a reason something happened, that doesn't prove it is the only reason. And if you just make up the reason and it isn't taught in scripture, you could be way too far out on a limb.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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Yes, he was an atheist. Now will you shut up?
The unjust judge is a character in a parable. But isn't it likely that a judge in Judea who did not fear God could be not an atheist, but still not fear God. A lot of people who do not act like they fear God say they believe in God. You can talk to people who go out and get drunk, fornicate, even commit adultery, or even participate in some 'light' theft, and if you ask them if they believe in God, they say they do.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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Body. It's related to the sacrament of baptism.
This appears to be a different kind of baptism that happened to Peter, a baptism that occurred not because of faith, but because of a lack of faith.

I do wonder if the fellow disciples give him the ancient Jewish equivalent of a high five or a thumbs up after He got into the boat. They were amazed at the Lord Jesus, but He was always doing amazing stuff, and they probably already at least suspected that He is the Messiah.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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That morality tale raises questions. How will an indigent old widow ever be able to attack a judge in a high state position? What would she possibly do to get revenge on him, how could she ever even get started gaining elite access to a court of law? He must have been a terrible coward, to be afraid of an old woman with no family while in the prime of his life and fully integrated into the state government.
He didn't want to be bothered or pestered. He probably had some social constraints that kept him from being cruel to her. If he granted her justice, she would leave him alone.

The parable is a logical paradox. The judge is unjust, but he gives this woman justice. Unjust judges do not grant justice, because they are unjust, it is therefore impossible for an unjust judge to be just. I wonder what the solution is.
If unjust judges are pressures or bothered enough, they can render just rulings that are inconsistent with what they want to do. I suppose philosophically an answer might be that justice does not find its source in unjust humans, even if they are the instrument of dispensing it.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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Some of you guys seem rather mean towards the OP. If I remember right, he has been a believer for about a year.

I disagree in that I see no reason to think that the unjust judge had to be a real person. But it could have been one of those cases where there were unjust judges in society back then and the way the legal system happened, cases like that really happened. Someone thinking to himself that he does not fear God seems maybe a bit fictional, but it could be some people, including judges, in Israel were just that introspective and self-aware.

But be that as it may, I don't know why one would dismiss him as a troll.
 

HopeinHim98

Well-known member
Mar 16, 2023
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Some of you guys seem rather mean towards the OP.
I hope I wasn't mean. But I do think a lot of what was being said didn't make much sense or didn't have a good point so I felt it is a waste of time to go around and around about it.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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What about this Judge is she fictional to.
We are all hear news about rulings from federal courts including the Supreme Court as well. It's possible that Jesus' audience was familiar with unjust judges in their own society.