• andros_rex@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Revelation (no ā€˜sā€™) doesnā€™t really have the narrative that ā€œBiblical literalistsā€ think it does. The Beast isnā€™t said to be the Antichrist - the ā€œAntichristā€ isnā€™t mentioned in Revelation at all, only in John IIRC - a lot of this is coming from Scofield and Darby. People before the 1800s did not believe in the narrative of ā€œthereā€™s a rapture where Christians disappear, the Antichrist takes over for 7 years, all of these prophecies are fulfilled, and the Jesus comes back.ā€

    Itā€™s basically all made up through connecting unrelated passages in Daniel and Ezekiel. Premillennial dispensationalism is new and not reading the Bible ā€œliterallyā€ at all.

      • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Guaranteed to have a typo when you nitpick spelling, but that sentence works well when read in a Ricky Bobby voice.

        The ā€œRevelationsā€ thing is a really funny way to pull off the classic atheist power move of knowing the Bible better than a Christian. Great for trolling eschatological TikTok and Facebook accounts.

        • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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          6 days ago

          Cā€™mon, Revelation vs Revelations is childā€™s play. Everybody knows the real name is the Apocalypse of John.

        • Zink@programming.dev
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          6 days ago

          Agreed on the ā€œrevelationsā€ thing. Once that tidbit sticks in your memory you just see people using it incorrectly everywhere.

          Maybe itā€™s a Baader-Meinhof effect thing, but I think itā€™s genuinely a very common mistake thatā€™s very easy to make.

          Same with daylight saving(s) time. I hear other detail-oriented people add that S all the time.

      • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Could be an Antichrist, could be a natural desire, could be Emperor Nero, could be something else. Being a ā€œBiblical literalistā€ isnā€™t really something that makes sense, because at some point you do have to accept that some things are metaphor. The line being drawn is arbitrary, even if ā€œliteralistsā€ donā€™t like to admit it. Revelation is especially obtuse and symbolic - though it does make sense if you realize itā€™s probably about Nero and John of Patmos was tripping balls on some kind of psilocybin.

        Revelation almost didnā€™t even make it in the Bible - the Shepherd of Hermas was more popular. I donā€™t think Jerome liked it.

          • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            Yeah - and the fact that the book is weird as fuck is how Scofield and Darby (and later Hal Lindsey, Jenkins and Lehaye etc) were able to convince even people who donā€™t believe in the Bible thatā€™s itā€™s some sort of hyper specific end times prophecy instead of the more likely reality that itā€™s a bunch of gematria (math magic games) and random symbolism as secret hints that Nero was a dickwad.

              • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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                7 days ago

                When you look at the Bible, how do you separate the ā€œallegorical work[s] of fiction about politicsā€ to the ones about theology?

                Itā€™s almost as if itā€™s a mish mash of various folk stories, history, propaganda (with a ton of tension in the Pentateuch which often does things like repeat the exact same story twice with minor differences because itā€™s clear that thereā€™s being an attempt to reconcile the kingdom of Judah with the kingdom of Israel and or later justify King Davidā€™s more shitty actionsā€¦)

                Lots of pop theology is completely absent from the Bible. I feel like a random person could read the Koran and figure out the shahada, but even the idea that Jesus was the Son of God, died for your sins and was resurrected doesnā€™t even peek through until John, which was the last gospel to be written. Pretty sure the Q author and the sayings source thought of Jesus as a prophet - not the Messiah. Most understandings of hell and Satan are entirely Dante and Milton (filtered through pop culture).

                Edit: my personal ā€œbeliefā€ - Jesus was a Jewish political dissident that was martyred by the Roman state. His followers understood him as being the Messiah in a war sense - to lead some sort of revolt against the Romans. Then he just fucking dies and they have to figure out how to cope.

                Thereā€™s a bunch of these iterant preacher types during the era - things kinda sucked. The ā€œBabylonian Exileā€ 2 electric boogaloo. Josephus, kinda the main neutral source to Jesus existing, had participated in a revolt/mass suicide against the Romanā€™s (basically everyone except Josephus killed themselves, and he was like ā€˜nahā€™ and had a pretty nice life as a Roman historian). Historians are pretty sure John the Baptist was real, and he was probably one of these types (he bit where he baptized Jesus is very clearly an attempt to be like ā€œhey, if you like this guy he actually liked our guy even more.ā€)

                So Jesus was probably very anti Roman, and killed by the Roman state as a potential revolutionary leader. Later, Paul (or his forgers) realizes that rewriting some of the theology a bit to be more sympathetic to power might be helpful.

                • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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                  6 days ago

                  So Jesus was probably very anti Roman, and killed by the Roman state as a potential revolutionary leader. Later, Paul (or his forgers) realizes that rewriting some of the theology a bit to be more sympathetic to power might be helpful.

                  Isnā€™t that the gospel of Matthew?

                  To my knowledge his employer let him rewrite the gospel in a more pro Roman way, possibly to make the religion that was spreading amongst Romans more accesable to them.

                  • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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                    6 days ago

                    The Gospel of Matthew is a synoptic gospel like Luke - itā€™s made up of material from Mark, Q and the sayings source.

                    I donā€™t know if itā€™s really ā€œpro Roman.ā€ Iā€™ve always taken ā€˜Render unto Caesarā€™ as a dark joke. My impression now might be colored by the Pasolini film, which is so faithful an adaptation that itā€™s got the endorsement of the Vatican, and really brings Jesus to life in a way that makes him the kind of angry socialist I want to team up with.

                    Luke felt like the pro Roman one to me, and is why I think itā€™s why most Christians in the US turn to it for their passion plays (if you can make out near the Holy City of the Wichitas during the off season, lots of funny pictures to be taken on that cross) and nativities. Luke was of course evangelizing to the Roman gentiles.

                    If I was a Christian, Iā€™d believe ā€œLukeā€ and Paul ruined it. The Roman state did not really seriously persecute Christians in the way that pop culture portrays, barring maybe Nero, so Iā€™m pretty sure the religion had been pacified/made acceptable by the turn of the first century.