HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
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If as Hans and others suggest, the whole story was just cobbled together from OT Scripture, a man crucified by Romans wouldn't have been called the Messiah by anyone. The Messiah was supposed to unite the tribes and defeat the enemies of Israel.
Actually, not really. Some people were building a completely different prophecy than you seem to imagine. One in which the messiah isn't in fact the one who'll conquer the world for them, but one who'll be executed although innocent, and that will make GOD finally get off his ass and do what he promised all along.
You have to understand that Judaism was the product of an accretion of BS propaganda stories, invariably showing the one-two punch of:
A) pretending to be from a couple hundred years earlier and make some amazing predictions that came true. Sorta like if I were to forge a prophecy from 1500 describing in reasonable detail the American Revolution. This gave it credence as a genuine prophecy.
B) using that credence to give some encouraging prophecies about what will happen in the near future. Like that God will totally kick everyone's ass and put the Jews on top, and burn everyone who doesn't come sacrifice (and thus pay tax) to the Jews' temple.
The thing is, B usually didn't quite go as prophecised. Combine that with some very concrete promises God made in the first 5 books about what he'll do if they obey Him, and that's basically even more broken promises.
So why doesn't God keep his word? Well, the answer they had, including in those forged prophecies was: because you're all a bunch of unworthy sinners, and God would rather punish you than help you.
Yeah, the tendency of Judaism to wield guilt like it's a military flail, was already in full swing.
So some people were already getting ideas that it's impossible to satisfy God, no matter what you do, and everything they do to please God, only gets them another kick in the balls for being sinners. Hence they must need someone to take that sin away somehow.
Basically, really, it's the kind of divergence you get when people start looking at past texts to figure out what the messiah would be like... and some go into dada land and start finding cryptic prophecies everywhere, like an early Bible Code. You can't assume that everyone would get the same.
I mean, even Christians today, knowing exactly who and what they must support with those phrases taken out of context as "prophecies", still can't agree about which they are and how many of them there are. Now picture some people trying to do that before Jesus, without knowing what they must arrive at.
Plus, really, I think even the "great military leader" faction is a bit mis-represented. I think it was perfectly clear to everyone that by themselves they're no match for Rome's might. It doesn't matter what leader you get, when you go against an empire which has more professional soldiers than you have total male population, and whose economic might can crush you several dozens of times over, you WILL lose.
Plus, if you expect to win by military action, you make allies and whatnot. Whereas these guys were the kind of fundamentalists that were more into antagonizing any possible ally for being heathens, and turning against the few allies they manage to get at the dumbest possible moment. It doesn't quite sound to me like what you'd do if you expect to win by having a great general, even if he is inspired by God or whatnot.
Or see the sicarii destroying the food supplies in Jerusalem, to force a disastrous open ground confrontation with the Roman army. It makes no sense if you expect that to work militarily, but it's the kind of stonking stupidity one would do if one believes that God just needs such a desperate final show of faith to do a spectacular miracle and win the war for them.
And that's really what it was about. What everyone actually expected was really that God will win the war for them. Whether with the messiah at the head of the army, or the messiah sacrificing in the temple, or with the messiah killed beforehand so God would be pissed off at the Romans, or whatever, still it wasn't the messiah per se that would win them the war. God was supposed to do that. The messiah was more or less just a marker or catalyst, sorta like in Isaiah.
And, really, if you look at even their pseudo-history in the OT, that's the pattern. They don't credit Moses or Joshua with being great generals. They just do what God commanded them, and God is the one who gives victory and/or performs whatever miracles are needed to secure that victory.
In that setup it's not very clear why one sort of messiah would be less believable than another sort. If what you're expecting the messiah to do is just to mark or trigger God's intervention, then why would you specifically need a great general messiah as opposed to any other imaginable messiah.
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