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Does Jesus' prediction and acceptance of martyrdom suggest His sincerity?

We actually know more about Pilate from sources outside the Gospels then any other figure in the gospels, and we know he was a bureaucrat who had not been particularly sucessful in his past posts. Procuractor of Judea was sort of a last chance for him,and he really wanted to avoid problems.
He didn't go about avoiding problems very successfully then.
Josephus recounts another incident in which Pilate spent money from the Temple to build an aqueduct. Pilate had soldiers hidden in the crowd of Jews while addressing them and, when Jews again protested his actions he gave the signal for his soldiers to randomly attack, beat and kill – in an attempt to silence Jewish petitions.
See also my #102 with the quotation from Philo
But this last sentence exasperated [Pilate] in the greatest possible degree, as he feared least they might in reality go on an embassy to the emperor, and might impeach him with respect to other particulars of his government, in respect of his corruption, and his acts of insolence, and his rapine, and his habit of insulting people, and his cruelty, and his continual murders of people untried and uncondemned, and his never ending, and gratuitous, and most grievous inhumanity.
He was finally removed from his post following acts of violence against Samaritan pilgrims.
Many prisoners were taken, of whom Pilate put to death the principal leaders and those who were most influential. The Samaritans then complained to Vitellius, Roman governor of Syria, who sent Pilate to Rome to explain his actions regarding this incident to Tiberius. However, by the time Pilate got to Rome, Tiberius had died.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontius_Pilate
That was a bit of luck for him; but he then vanishes from the historical record.

Wanted to avoid problems? Seemingly, he attracted problems.
 
There were no contemporaneous recordings of Jesus' actions. The most recent was written decades later.

And we don't even have anything close to the originals of those accounts. We have copies of copies of copies of copies, most from centuries after the original authors died. Among those copies we have numerous differences and interpolations. Just look at the last twelve verses of Mark: these were added generations later, yet we have people handling venomous snakes and taking poison based on this embellishment by someone who didn't like the way Mark ended.
 
I absolutely disagree. There is nothing in these psalms indicating death and resurrection. People are being attacked or oppressed and are calling upon God for help. As to "poured out" meaning stabbed, it's very unconvincing when connected to the rest of the passage. I'm surprised you haven't based your argument in the bolded words in v15, but they certainly don't mean that the psalmist was dead.
If a person's heart melts away it means that the person dies, either literally or metaphorically. And it repeatedly gives other inferences of the person having died, like dust of death, being poured out while surrounded by enemies, etc. So it's an allegory of the person's death.

So it was written by David? This is biblical literalism of the most primitive kind.
Yes, that is the literal implication of the way the Bible presents it. Whether it was actually written by a real king David is of course more disputable. But we are just looking for meaning at this point.
It of course means the body. Soul at that time meant "living person". The idea of a separate soul that survived death is not found in the Torah. We learn from several passages in the NT that the doctrine of life after death was controversial even in Jesus' day. The Pharisees believed in the doctrine of reward and punishment after death, but the Sadducees did not. See Acts 23:8, Also Josephus, Antiquities 18:1
The idea of life after death can be found several times in the Old Testament, as in Isaiah 26. The Talmud (pharisees' book) uses that chapter as proof. But anyway, it also talks about in the Torah the idea of going to Abraham's bosom after death.

Look later in Ps 40. The psalmist is not dead... He is being attacked and derided by enemies, who seek to take his life; so he's not dead.
This could be a good point. But it doesn't say that the enemies failed to do so, since earlier in the chapter it metaphorically described him as being pulled out of the pit (being in the pit is a metaphor for death many times in the Psalms). And besides, Psalm 22 runs the same way- the Psalmist cries out for salvation, talks about enemies' attacks, about the process of having died, and then goes to talk about being saved nonetheless.
 
If a person's heart melts away it means that the person dies, either literally or metaphorically. And it repeatedly gives other inferences of the person having died, like dust of death, being poured out while surrounded by enemies, etc. So it's an allegory of the person's death.
Oh, now it's an "allegory" of the person's death. I deny that. It's a clear description of misfortunes suffered by a living person.
The idea of life after death can be found several times in the Old Testament, as in Isaiah 26. The Talmud (pharisees' book) uses that chapter as proof. But anyway, it also talks about in the Torah the idea of going to Abraham's bosom after death.
In what Torah passage please? The only reference to the bosom of Abraham I can find in the Torah is Genesis 16;5 where Sarah consigns her slave Hagar to Abram's bosom as a concubine. It is not a metaphor about the afterlife but an account of sexual activity here below. But I may have missed a reference. Please direct me to it. Isaiah 26:19 does describe the resuscitation of dead bodies buried in the earth. Yes, but of course that is not in the Torah. Daniel contains this idea too. But in Jesus' day many Jews, including the Sadducees, regarded only the Torah as finally authoritative.
This could be a good point. But it doesn't say that the enemies failed to do so, since earlier in the chapter it metaphorically described him as being pulled out of the pit (being in the pit is a metaphor for death many times in the Psalms). And besides, Psalm 22 runs the same way- the Psalmist cries out for salvation, talks about enemies' attacks, about the process of having died, and then goes to talk about being saved nonetheless.
These psalms don't talk about being dead. The description of suffering is just that - the suffering of living people - not a metaphor for death.
 
Oh, now it's an "allegory" of the person's death. I deny that. It's a clear description of misfortunes suffered by a living person.
The description used in this case was a description of a person dying, like having their heart melt, being in the dust of death, and having 0 physical strength. When those things happen, a person is dead. Even if this is a metaphorical description of misfortunes suffered by a living person, nonetheless, the metaphor itself is one of a person dying. So in the passage there is an allegory of a person dying. Or, perhaps a prediction of a person dying. But either way it's a poem that includes this description of death.

And prophecy works by allegories. So David was allegorizing his death. He created a metaphor in which he died. And the Bible also presents David as a metaphor for the Messiah and this part depicts David as having died and been resurrected.


In what Torah passage please? The only reference to the bosom of Abraham I can find in the Torah is Genesis 16;5 where Sarah consigns her slave Hagar to Abram's bosom as a concubine. It is not a metaphor about the afterlife but an account of sexual activity here below. But I may have missed a reference. Please direct me to it. Isaiah 26:19 does describe the resuscitation of dead bodies buried in the earth. Yes, but of course that is not in the Torah. Daniel contains this idea too. But in Jesus' day many Jews, including the Sadducees, regarded only the Torah as finally authoritative.
You are right about the bosom issue. Sorry for my mistaken memory. Abraham's bosom is Jesus' way of talking about the spirit in the afterlife.

However, in the Torah it also appears to say this in Genesis 49:33 when it says Jacob expired and was gathered to his people. The term "expired" here literally means "breathed out". This could mean that the person breathed out their life, just as God had breathed life into Adam in Genesis 2:7. Now if God had life and breathed it into Adam, then where did the life go when the deceased "breathed it out"? It appears that the Torah is repeatedly saying that the person at that point was "gathered to his people" who had expired before him (eg. to Abraham). Otherwise, in what sense was "he/she gathered to their people"?

Genesis 25:8
Then Abraham breathed his last[expired] and died at a good old age, an old man and full of years; and he was gathered to his people.

Genesis 25:17
Ishmael lived a hundred and thirty-seven years. He breathed his last[expired] and died, and he was gathered to his people.

Genesis 35:29
Then he breathed his last [expired] and died and was gathered to his people, old and full of years. And his sons Esau and Jacob buried him.

Genesis 49:29
Then he gave them these instructions: "I am about to be gathered to my people."

In any case, we are really debating the issue of whether the Psalms could distinguish the process of physical death from the death of the soul like psalm 30 does. Your point was that the Torah doesn't distinguish the two, but even if you are correct, it doesn't mean Israelites didn't in David's time. And indeed the soul was distinguished from the body, as for example the appearance of Samuel's ghost to the witch of Endor showed. In that incident, David's king at the time, Saul, asked the witch if he could speak with Samuel's ghost.

These psalms don't talk about being dead. The description of suffering is just that - the suffering of living people - not a metaphor for death.
In any case, the metaphor itself is one of people dying, since the Psalms repeatedly take the pit to mean that.

Regards.
 
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Hello, Hans.


I wrote a few responses at once on the last page, so perhaps you missed mine:

Well, even if that one instance were based on torture,

1. There are plenty of cases where people confessed to capital crimes without anyone even believing them, much less torturing a confirmation out of them.

E.g., in the 1920s, John Hart confessed to being Jack the Ripper and committing those murders in late nineteenth century London. Although it was pointed out that Hart was only three years old at the time of the first murder, this did not eve faze him. He maintained he was Jack the Ripper for the rest of his life.

More than 50 people confessed to having committed the infamous Black Dahlia murder in Los Angeles in 1947. None was charged, so you can't blame those on torture.

At least 20 individuals have confessed being the perpetrator of the 1996 murder of child beauty queen Jon Benet Ramsey.

At least six people, including a woman, have confessed to being the serial Zodiac Killer. (Which you might know of from Dirty Harry.)

ETC.

So, again, I have no problem imagining that some nutcase in the 1st century CE would try to get himself executed, just like the MANY folks listed above tried in the 20'th.

2. I have no trouble believing that torture could be involved in Jesus' trial too. While forbidden for citizens (just like the crucifixion), at the other extreme for slaves a deposition wasn't even admissible in court UNLESS it was under brutal torture. And for Peregrini it was more of a grey area AFAIK.
 
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The description used in this case was a description of a person dying, like having their heart melt, being in the dust of death, and having 0 physical strength. When those things happen, a person is dead. Even if this is a metaphorical description of misfortunes suffered by a living person, nonetheless, the metaphor itself is one of a person dying. So in the passage there is an allegory of a person dying. Or, perhaps a prediction of a person dying. But either way it's a poem that includes this description of death.

And prophecy works by allegories. So David was allegorizing his death. He created a metaphor in which he died. And the Bible also presents David as a metaphor for the Messiah and this part depicts David as having died and been resurrected.
No. You're reading into it a Christian prejudice that these things were all written as prophecies of Jesus. It is not so, and the words of the psalm contain no ideas whatever about David or a messiah in the later post exilic, or original Davidic, sense.
You are right about the bosom issue. Sorry for my mistaken memory. Abraham's bosom is Jesus' way of talking about the spirit in the afterlife.
That's twice you've done that. Last time was misrepresenting the Ps 30 text. Check your memory against an online bible. It's easy.
However, in the Torah it also appears to say this in Genesis 49:33 when it says Jacob expired and was gathered to his people. The term "expired" here literally means "breathed out". This could mean that the person breathed out their life, just as God had breathed life into Adam in Genesis 2:7. Now if God had life and breathed it into Adam, then where did the life go when the deceased "breathed it out"?
Where does a candle flame "go" when it expires?
Ecclesiastes: "For what happens to the sons of men also happens to animals; one thing befalls them: as one dies, so dies the other. Surely, they all have one breath; man has no advantage over animals, for all is vanity. All go to one place: all are from the dust, and all return to dust. Who knows the spirit of the sons of men, which goes upward, and the spirit of the animal, which goes down to the earth?" (Ecc. 3:19-21 NKJV)
It appears that the Torah is repeatedly saying that the person at that point was "gathered to his people" who had expired before him (eg. to Abraham). Otherwise, in what sense was "he/she gathered to their people"?
Because they were dead, forever, and now he/she was too.
 
To clarify why I asked the question, I think if Paul, the first century Christians, and the gospel writers were just making up the Bible stories of Jesus' divinity, it would mean that Jesus would have been making things up too. It seems unlikely to me that Jesus would have started a nonmiraculous, very moral sect that after He died just decided to make all the miraculous stories up using a slew of writers and religious leaders. To me, either they and He were making up stories or else they really believed that they happened like they presented them.

And yet we know that such making up miracles, or even the whole messianic mission, happened in other cases. So the notion that, yeah, but people wouldn't possibly do it, is blatantly falsified by the fact that people did just that repeatedly.

My canonical example is David Reubeni, because it's somewhere between Monty Python and slapstick.

Thing, is Reubeni wasn't a rabbi and never preached anything religious at all. He was just a high profile con-man, who scammed kings, the pope and the HRE emperor. He had no interest at all in even giving Jews hope, since if people started converting back to Judaism because of him, he could get burned at the stake instead of given lots of money. (Which eventually happened anyway.) When some schizophrenic girl had a dream and proclaimed him the messiah, and people started to come ask him about it, he told them very coldly that he's a warrior not a religious figure and has no interest in playing messiah. Of course, in a Life Of Brian like twist at least one (but probably a lot more) just took it as confirmation that Reubeni IS the messiah, and being coldly received is because of their own being unworthy of the Messiah's time.

The situation parallels Jesus in more than one aspect. But possibly the most important: in both cases the messiahood comes from someone who didn't know them having some vision or another that told them so. Neither Paul, nor the girl preaching Reubeni's messiahood had even met them, and were basing it all on just their own dreams of said messiah being in heaven and giving instructions to them. (For bonus points: in Reubeni's case the girl saw a ghostly Reubeni in heaven talking to her while he was still very much alive and travelling around.)

So not only we don't know what Jesus was preaching or believed in, we don't know if he even preached anything different from mainstream Judaism, or for that matter anything at all. It's just possible that some guy had a vision about some common bandit or some cruel exorcist or whatnot, and a group started to follow them, just like what happened to Reubeni.

At any rate, people started believing all sorts of miraculous stuff about him, even when he was saying he's not the friggen messiah at all.
 
Because they were dead, forever, and now he/she was too.

The English expression "to gather sth./so. to ..." suggests a motion towards some destination: It appears that, when (e.g.) Jacob's life had expired (disappeared), Jacob was not yet where (or in the state that) his ancestors were - this came about by the additional step of "gathering him to" them.

No need to teach me that such literal, nit-picky parsing of a modern-language translation of an ancient text easily runs the danger of introducing anachronistic bias. But: How sure are you that the Hebres didn't have a little something more inm mind about the fate of people after their death when wrote this?
 
The English expression "to gather sth./so. to ..." suggests a motion towards some destination: It appears that, when (e.g.) Jacob's life had expired (disappeared), Jacob was not yet where (or in the state that) his ancestors were - this came about by the additional step of "gathering him to" them.

No need to teach me that such literal, nit-picky parsing of a modern-language translation of an ancient text easily runs the danger of introducing anachronistic bias. But: How sure are you that the Hebrews didn't have a little something more in mind about the fate of people after their death when wrote this?
You can see the first expression of the Torah principle right away, in Genesis. Adam is first created, then condemned to death
2:7 And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul ...

3:19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shall you return.
He didn't acquire a soul from somewhere. By coming to life he became a "soul". God is saying, you were nothing before I brought you to life, and you will return to nothing when you die.

This explains the story of the Fall. It's clearer in the earlier versions of the story, found in Babylonian texts. In these, a snake explicitly steals the "herb of life" that the gods had given to the hero of the story. In Genesis the snake is there too of course. What does it mean? Snakes are very nasty, but people are special because they are made to look like Gods, who live for ever; yet people live in toil for only a few decades, then they simply return to dust, end.

Snakes, nasty that they are, seem to be able to rejuvenate themselves, by sloughing their skin. They appear to become young again. This requires some sort of mythical explanation. Aha! The gift of eternal life was intended for people; but snakes stole it, to add yet another crime to the list of their iniquities.

Now, that schema only has force if it is believed that death is the end. YHWH's words to Adam clearly mean that it is.

One has to torture the text of the Torah on the rack of preconceived ideas to make it suggest belief in an afterlife. If its authors had entertained any such belief they would have made it clear, and stated it plainly. Later religious teachers who did believe in this attractive notion spent most of their time banging on about it to anyone who would listen.
 
No. You're reading into it a Christian prejudice that these things were all written as prophecies of Jesus.
The idea that the Psalms are about the Messiah son of David is not necessarily Christian, since Jewish tradition like the Talmud also treats the Psalms this way.

The idea of a future Messiah son of David is based on Samuel's prophecy about the rule of one of David's descendants.

And I think the Talmud's basis for this would be verses like Psalm 2:8:
The kings of the earth set themselves,
And the rulers take counsel together,
Against the Lord and against His Anointed
...
Now therefore, be wise, O kings;
Be instructed, you judges of the earth.
This would not literally apply to David who only ruled Palestine. But it would apply to Messiah figure who in Jewish tradition would rule the world. Further, since the Psalms are considered inspired by God (ie. David says elsewhere that God's spirit was on his tongue), the Psalms could also be considered to work like visions where one image can symbolize something else. The image of David in the Psalm can symbolize the Messiah of David.

It is not so, and the words of the psalm contain no ideas whatever about David or a messiah in the later post exilic, or original Davidic, sense.

Psalm 22
27 All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the LORD, and all the families of the nations will bow down before him...

30 A posterity shall serve Him.
It will be recounted of the Lord to the next generation,
31 They will come and declare His righteousness to a people who will be born,
That He has done this.
In Psalm 22, the text is about God saving the person. The Psalm ends by saying that all the earth will remember this event. In the Jewish prophecies like those of Isaiah it's the work of the Messiah to bring the nations of the earth to God.

Where does a candle flame "go" when it expires?
One would not use the expression "breathed out" for a candle. In English nowadays it's an everyday expression like when milk expires. But in the Bible the expression is based on the idea of God breathing in life to people and when the people die them breathing life out. So it's a good question where the spirit went in ancient thought.

I think it was a common idea in ancient times that the spirit went someplace. The Israelites' Egyptians neighbors thought this way.

Ecclesiastes: "For what happens to the sons of men also happens to animals; one thing befalls them: as one dies, so dies the other. Surely, they all have one breath; man has no advantage over animals, for all is vanity. All go to one place: all are from the dust, and all return to dust. Who knows the spirit of the sons of men, which goes upward, and the spirit of the animal, which goes down to the earth?" (Ecc. 3:19-21 NKJV)
I think this verse is another good proof. Why does the spirit go upward? Why should it "go" anyplace instead of just disappearing like a candle flame? In Jewish thought it was depicted as God was in the heavens. That was where the spirit was going.

It appears that the Torah is repeatedly saying that the person at that point was "gathered to his people" who had expired before him (eg. to Abraham). Otherwise, in what sense was "he/she gathered to their people"?
Because they were dead, forever, and now he/she was too.
But it doesn't say that they were dead forever. What would be the point of saying he went to them if he didn't actually go anyplace at all?

Maybe just a figure of speech? But it doesn't say it's a figure of speech. It has a logic that works like this: God breathed life into man, and when man dies, he breathes it out, his "spirit" goes upward (Ecc. 3) and he is "gathered to his people".

That's what it says. Was the Torah just using a figure of speech when it says God breathed life into man? Personally, I think that the Creation story is overall a myth, but one that reflects their way of thinking in ancient time.

Regards.
 
The English expression "to gather sth./so. to ..." suggests a motion towards some destination: It appears that, when (e.g.) Jacob's life had expired (disappeared), Jacob was not yet where (or in the state that) his ancestors were - this came about by the additional step of "gathering him to" them.
Exactly.

No need to teach me that such literal, nit-picky parsing of a modern-language translation of an ancient text easily runs the danger of introducing anachronistic bias. But: How sure are you that the Hebres didn't have a little something more inm mind about the fate of people after their death when wrote this?
Yes. The Hindus, Zoroastrians, Egyptians, and Sumerians all believed in the afterlife. It's only natural that the Hebrews who came from the Arameans thought this way too. It's true that they didn't worship other gods, but they believed in spirits and godlike beings in Genesis.
 
The English expression "to gather sth./so. to ..." suggests a motion towards some destination: It appears that, when (e.g.) Jacob's life had expired (disappeared), Jacob was not yet where (or in the state that) his ancestors were - this came about by the additional step of "gathering him to" them.

No need to teach me that such literal, nit-picky parsing of a modern-language translation of an ancient text easily runs the danger of introducing anachronistic bias. But: How sure are you that the Hebres didn't have a little something more inm mind about the fate of people after their death when wrote this?

Well, when in doubt about the translation, as Gorkon from Star Trek VI taught us, the way to go is to read the Klingon original: http://biblehub.com/text/genesis/25-8.htm

The short story is: you're not particularly wrong about it meaning motion towards, but I'd say it's also not necessarily clear cut as to what kind of motion.

"Asaph" does mean to take, gather, remove, and similar meanings, and "el" generally means a direction towards, including metaphorically for states. I.e., it really says "he was taken to his people."

So it seems to me like, while one COULD understand it as some sort of being united with his dead ancestors in Sheol, it also quite a straightforward read taken more literally, especially as it flows into 25:9 where his sons bury him in the field he bought. So basically he died, he was taken to his people, and they buried him.

Also to answer rakovsky's objection about breathing out, yes, the verse does say that he "breathed out" (pretty much in the same meaning as when we say "drew his last breath"), but said breath is not a noun there. It is not that breath or "soul" that is gathered there. Especially since between the "breathed out" and "gathered" there's a bunch of stuff that clearly refers to the guy, not to his breath.
 
Exactly.

Yes. The Hindus, Zoroastrians, Egyptians, and Sumerians all believed in the afterlife. It's only natural that the Hebrews who came from the Arameans thought this way too. It's true that they didn't worship other gods, but they believed in spirits and godlike beings in Genesis.
Nonetheless the evidence is not there, and counter evidence abounds. I've cited the Sadducees, who drew their philosophy from the Torah alone. It is noted by the writers of the Enlightenment, including Voltaire. Here's Gibbon, Decline etc Ch 15.
We might naturally expect that a principle [the immortality of the soul] so essential to religion would have been revealed in the clearest terms to the chosen people of Palestine, and that it might safely have been intrusted to the hereditary priesthood of Aaron. It is incumbent on us to adore the mysterious dispensations of Providence, when we discover that the doctrine of the immortality of the soul is omitted in the law of Moses; it is darkly insinuated by the prophets; and during the long period which elapsed between the Egyptian and the Babylonian servitudes, the hopes as well as fears of the Jews appear to have been confined within the narrow compass of the present life.
 
Hello, Craig.

2:7 And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul ...

3:19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shall you return.
Yes, but in Ecclesiastes as you said, the soul goals upward. So this must mean that the person does return to dust, but his soul also goes upward.

You can see the first expression of the Torah principle right away, in Genesis. Adam is first created, then condemned to death He didn't acquire a soul from somewhere. By coming to life he became a "soul". God is saying, you were nothing before I brought you to life, and you will return to nothing when you die.
He wasn't nothing before he was alive. His dust and his life existed before he did. He was dust and he returns to that. But it doesn't specify where the life goes. God breathed it into man and man breathed it out, but where did it go after that?

Nor does the passage say that God will not breathe life back into that dust.


This explains the story of the Fall. It's clearer in the earlier versions of the story, found in Babylonian texts. In these, a snake explicitly steals the "herb of life" that the gods had given to the hero of the story. In Genesis the snake is there too of course. What does it mean? Snakes are very nasty, but people are special because they are made to look like Gods, who live for ever; yet people live in toil for only a few decades, then they simply return to dust, end.

Snakes, nasty that they are, seem to be able to rejuvenate themselves, by sloughing their skin. They appear to become young again. This requires some sort of mythical explanation. Aha! The gift of eternal life was intended for people; but snakes stole it, to add yet another crime to the list of their iniquities.

Now, that schema only has force if it is believed that death is the end.
No, it means that people can't rejuvenate themselves with the herb of life like snakes can. The Babylonians and the earlier Sumerians believed in afterlife.

One has to torture the text of the Torah on the rack of preconceived ideas to make it suggest belief in an afterlife.
Your quote from Ecclesiastes was not tortured. If man only returned to dust, why did his soul go up away from earthly dust when he died?

And here is another passage:
Genesis 5:24: "Enoch walked with God; then he was no more, because God took him away."
Enoch was close to God. So when God took him away, it wasn't a punishment. It doesn't specify that God killed him, just that he was no more. So where did he go away to?

If its authors had entertained any such belief they would have made it clear, and stated it plainly.
I think the authors frequently left a lot of questions unanswered, unfortunately. In the Torah, the "righteous king" (Mechi-zedek) "priest of God Most High" shows up and gives Abraham wine and bread. I mean, who exactly was that? And then in Psalms David puts in a little mention about God telling him: "Thou art a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek."
OK, so David is now a priest king in that order?

I think that oral traditions played a big role in clearing up what these stories meant, and unfortunately some of these commentaries might be lost in time leaving us to piece things together.

Later religious teachers who did believe in this attractive notion spent most of their time banging on about it to anyone who would listen.
Or else they, like the author of the story of Saul and Samuel's ghost, were expanding on ideas that were widespread and had been handed down to them along with the Torah. Let's say the Torah was finished around 1250 BC and Saul lived about 200 years later, it's not too much of a time gap for the same most basic religious ideas like an afterlife to get handed down and expressed more clearly.
 
Hello, Craig.

Yes, but in Ecclesiastes as you said, the soul goals upward. So this must mean that the person does return to dust, but his soul also goes upward ... Your quote from Ecclesiastes was not tortured. If man only returned to dust, why did his soul go up away from earthly dust when he died?
You have just tortured it! You misunderstand it. The words cited are "Who knows the spirit of the sons of men, which goes upward, and the spirit of the animal, which goes down to the earth?" (Ecc. 3:19-21 NKJV) It's a rhetorical question. Nobody knows any such thing, that's who. Read the text, including the adjoining verses
Enoch was close to God. So when God took him away, it wasn't a punishment. It doesn't specify that God killed him, just that he was no more. So where did he go away to?
It is agreed, I think I can show, that that passage means Enoch didn't die at all, but God took him up to heaven bodily. It's a strong argument against the idea of an immortal soul, separable from the body. I'll read the rest of your interesting post and respond later.

ETA On Enoch, yes, Hebrews 11:5 gives the Christian line on Enoch's experience.
By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death: "He could not be found, because God had taken him away." For before he was taken, he was commended as one who pleased God.
The question therefore of the survival of his soul after death doesn't arise.
 
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Well, when in doubt about the translation, as Gorkon from Star Trek VI taught us, the way to go is to read the Klingon original: http://biblehub.com/text/genesis/25-8.htm

The short story is: you're not particularly wrong about it meaning motion towards, but I'd say it's also not necessarily clear cut as to what kind of motion.

"Asaph" does mean to take, gather, remove, and similar meanings, and "el" generally means a direction towards, including metaphorically for states. I.e., it really says "he was taken to his people."

So it seems to me like, while one COULD understand it as some sort of being united with his dead ancestors in Sheol,
Yes. If "breathing out" is nothing more than the modern figurative expression "expired" (like milk expiring), then there would be no point in Genesis 35:29 saying: "Then he breathed out and died".

it also quite a straightforward read taken more literally, especially as it flows into 25:9 where his sons bury him in the field he bought. So basically he died, he was taken to his people, and they buried him.
Only two people are mentioned as having buried him. So are two sons enough to be his people? In that case, when Jacob died and his sons surrounded him, there was no point in saying that he was gathered to his people, since they were already there.

Genesis 49:29 says:
"Then he gave them these instructions: "I am about to be gathered to my people. Bury me with my fathers in the cave in the field of Ephron the Hittite"."
The context suggests that his fathers are to whom he is about to be gathered, and they are his people. It would sound too weird to make the verse say Abraham is saying that his living relatives are about to gather him, since clearly he is referring to his death.

But does gathering here mean burial? No because in Gen 25:8-9 it says he was gathered to his people "and" buried by his sons. So they are two different processes.

Notice also in Deuteronomy 32:50, it says about Moses.
There on the mountain that you have climbed you will die and be gathered to your people, just as your brother Aaron died on Mount Hor and was gathered to his people.
I don't think that this means that Moses' people were buried there on that mountain. Probably they were buried back in Egypt. So the process of being gathered to one's people is neither the same as being buried, nor is it the same as just having your tribe around you. Moses' and Aaron's "people" are distinguished above, so it isn't talking about Moses being gathered to the contemporary Israelite people to whom both belonged. Nor is it the same as being gathered to one's sons because the sons were already around Jacob.


Also to answer rakovsky's objection about breathing out, yes, the verse does say that he "breathed out" (pretty much in the same meaning as when we say "drew his last breath"), but said breath is not a noun there. It is not that breath or "soul" that is gathered there. Especially since between the "breathed out" and "gathered" there's a bunch of stuff that clearly refers to the guy, not to his breath.
I don't see how that bunch of stuff creates a contradiction of logic to the breathing out being the breathing out of his life, since the KJV phrases it this way:
Then Abraham gave up the ghost, and died in a good old age, an old man, and full of years; and was gathered to his people.
 
How the KJV phrases it, is rather irrelevant, innit?

That said, I'm not saying that "breathed out" doesn't mean expired. It does. What I object to is the nonsense question of "where did that breath go?" There is nothing in that verse about that breath in particular, much less where it went.
 
You have just tortured it! You misunderstand it. The words cited are "Who knows the spirit of the sons of men, which goes upward, and the spirit of the animal, which goes down to the earth?" (Ecc. 3:19-21 NKJV) It's a rhetorical question. Nobody knows any such thing, that's who.
You are right there is a rhetorical aspect. But it doesn't say who knows if the spirit goes upward. It says who knows the spirit. To know someone or something isn't the same as knowing where it goes. It really means who understands and knows all about a person's soul? Life and the mind are curious from a purely materialistic point of view, although it's not unobservable the direction in which life flows. You can see life in an animal moving or guiding the animal. But the life itself is curious.

Read the text, including the adjoining verses
The previous verse said: “God shall judge the righteous and the wicked,
For there is a time there for every purpose and for every work.” How does God perform His judgment if there is no afterlife? Or does this judgment mean nothing more than the judgment that occurs during the person's life, when lots of loving people got killed without their blessed reward?
It also says: "For who can bring him to see what will happen after him?" I can think of Someone whom the Torah could see as capable of anything.

It is agreed, I think I can show, that that passage means Enoch didn't die at all, but God took him up to heaven bodily. It's a strong argument against the idea of an immortal soul, separable from the body. I'll read the rest of your interesting post and respond later.

ETA On Enoch, yes, Hebrews 11:5 gives the Christian line on Enoch's experience.
By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death: "He could not be found, because God had taken him away." For before he was taken, he was commended as one who pleased God.
The question therefore of the survival of his soul after death doesn't arise.
Sure, Enoch did not experience death. It sounds like his body vanished and his soul vanished too. But then, did his body physically show up in another physical realm? If not, then did he have a soul there without a body?

And secondly, God loved Enoch who was close and faithful to him, so Enoch ended up being immortal. But then that raises the question of what the Torah writers thought about all the other righteous people who came after him. Did God just make an infinitely big exception for Enoch and then practically everyone else got stuck dying for "forever" as you say because of what Adam did? God chose to show up and eat with Abraham, and later on Abraham died and that was the end of him "forever"?

OK, my fellows, this dialectic exercize is fun, but I need to take a break. Take care, til we meet again here... or elsewhere.
 
The previous verse said: “God shall judge the righteous and the wicked,

For there is a time there for every purpose and for every work.”
Not in my online Bible link, it doesn't. The preceding verses to the one I cited are
Ecc 3:19 For that which befalleth the sons of men befalleth beasts; even one thing befalleth them: as the one dieth, so dieth the other; yea, they have all one breath; so that a man hath no preeminence above a beast: for all is vanity. 20 All go unto one place; all are of the dust, and all turn to dust again.
Unfortunately I listed vv 19-21 but only cited the text of 21 as it summed the idea up. Clearly I should have put them all in, and I apologise. But you can see the point now. It is agreed that beasts don't have a future life. Well, neither do people.

Where will God judge the righteous and the wicked if there is no future life? You ask. What a question! You haven't read the Torah and Samuel and Kings then? All the smiting and plagues and famines and massacres meted out by God or his chosen people under the command of God. Such was his judgement. It was performed on earth, on the bodies of living people.
 

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