MikeOekiM
Bluelighter
thank jesus for jesus christ.
UUUNH! UUUUUUnnnnnHHHHHHH UUUUUUUUUUUUnnnnnGGGGGHHYEEEAAAAAAAAAH Darnell! Pump me so hard that if you met an immovable object, you would move it, no problem. AAAAAAAAAAAAoooooYAGGGGH.
also; expect us.
I'm just re-remembering the secret to happiness and the remedy to all the stresses and difficulties of life: let go and be free.
Why is it so hard to remember something so simple, especially when it makes so much sense at moments like this?
Ommmm....
I'm just re-remembering the secret to happiness and the remedy to all the stresses and difficulties of life: let go and be free.
Why is it so hard to remember something so simple, especially when it makes so much sense at moments like this?
Ommmm....
Believe ye in part of the Scripture and disbelieve ye in part thereof ? And what is the reward of those who do so save ignominy in the life of the world, and on the Day of Resurrection they will be consigned to the most grievous doom. For Allah is not unaware of what ye do.
Why do we say that Mark was written first and the others were copied from it? This has to do with what is called the "synoptic problem". Basically, so much of the text of Mark, Matthew, and Luke is shared word-for-word that the only explanation can be that there has been extensive copying between the texts.
The Gospel of Mark appears to have been written in response to the conflict between the Jews and the Romans that resulted in the destruction of Judea in 70 CE. It may have been written during the war between the Jews and Romans, or shortly thereafter. The main thrust of the story is that the Judean Jews brought destruction upon themselves. This is not at all unusual, indeed this was a common opinion among both Jews and non-Jews and was also expressed, though in a different way, by the Jewish writer Josephus. Indeed many Jews blamed themselves for their plight and for the destruction of their state by the Romans. This self-blaming of the Jews follows a clear tradition in Jewish culture and literature and is expressed repeatedly throughout the Hebrew scriptures. This is because the Jews were often dominated by foreign rulers. Jewish scriptures and literature saw the plights of the Jews as being a result of their inability to properly please their god. For this reason, Jewish literature prior to the writing of the Gospels was often pessimistic and full of self-admonishments and stories of suffering. One of the many examples of this is Psalm 74, which was supposedly written some time around 900 BCE.
I surmise that learning some formal logic might help me express myself and avoid critical failures in intellect.
Should online texts be enough to get a decent grasp of this, or would it require a more interactive approach?
I wonder if Folklore wouldn't be a better term