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Was Jesus an illiterate peasant? (part 1)

by Ben Witherington in Patheos.com

There is an awful lot of loose talk and pontificating on the basis of loose talk when it comes to the issue of Jesus’ social level, and his ability to read or write, or whether he could have been multi-lingual. Sometimes the discussion is even based on irrelevant data— for example the fact that Galilee was not inhabited by scads of Gentiles (see Mark Chancey’s fine monograph on how Gentile was Galilee). The ethnic makeup of Galilee is frankly irrelevant to the issue of whether Greek was used in the first century in Galilee or not for the very good reason that all of the Holy Land had long since been Hellenized for centuries.

Click here to read this article in full.

  • 29 May 2019
  • Author: Guest Blogger
  • Number of views: 4359
  • Comments: 20

A Story of Ethical Perfection

by Tom Gilson—

If asked, "Who's ethics were unmatched in all of Western literature?" who do you think of? ...Socrates? Buddha? There is perhaps only one character portrayed as possessing perfect power while being perfectly other-oriented. This is one of 38 micro-videos in the all-new 2nd annual Locke and Lewis Lecture Series. Thanks to Tom Gilson for filming this exceptional talk at our request.

 

Click here for Part 2 of Too Good to Be False by Tom Gilson

  • 10 May 2019
  • Author: Guest Blogger
  • Number of views: 2493
  • Comments: 1

by Scott Oliphint

Of all religions, Christianity is the one that has the most historical evidence, and therefore the least to hide, in what it purports. We should never hide from, or routinely dismiss, the historical aspect of Christianity. But if all we have are historical reasons for our belief in the resurrection, then it is possible to conclude, with a certain amount of probability, that the resurrection of Jesus Christ happened in history. However, we also recognize that, when we are thinking about the “why” question as it pertains to the resurrection of Christ, Christians should never be content to begin and end their belief in the resurrection of Christ with only historical data. Those data can support our belief in the resurrection. They can supplement what we believe and why we believe it. But historical data cannot be the center of our response to the “why” question. If the historical data are at the center, then the best we can say is that we believe the resurrection probably occurred. But that will not do; we do not believe in the probability of the resurrection. Instead, the center of our response to the “why” question of the resurrection is that, without the resurrection of Christ, there is, in fact, no Christianity at all.

Read the whole article here: https://zondervanacademic.com/blog/what-the-resurrection-means/

  • 21 April 2019
  • Author: Scott Cherry
  • Number of views: 2497
  • Comments: 3

A Youtube Playlist Featuring 8 Excellent Videos Explaining Easter

This is a Youtube playlist. Click here to access.

Easter is so much more than bunnies, colored eggs, and jelly beans. Indeed, there is a much better name for this wonderful holiday—Resurrection Day. That's because the main focus of it is new life and victory over death accomplished by one particular figure of history who is famous for this. But of course there had to be a death before there could be a victory over it. The editors of Tao and Tawheed have produced this series of talks on the subject to capture the important events and details of this historical narrative from the four gospels of the New Testament. Its presenters include Ben EdwardsIsmail NemrWissam Yousif and Eddie Yousif (together), Steve SchlichterJon and Jayne Frazier (together)Jeff DavisScott Cherry, and UMD student Christian Ledford.

  • 15 April 2019
  • Author: Scott Cherry
  • Number of views: 3052
  • Comments: 1

11 Reasons Why It's Logical to Believe the Real Jesus Rose from the Dead.

by Scott Cherry

In the 1st century the Christian faith mushroomed throughout the Roman Empire despite waves of persecution against Christians. Unlike Islam, it spread without military force or any sort of violence perpetrated by Christians for three whole centuries. It was literally unstoppable, but why?! Because it was credible, and thousands of average people believed it even though they had nothing to gain and everything to lose during those three centuries. There is no other logical way to explain the growth of Christianity but that Jesus rose from the dead and appeared to the disciples and "more than 500 brethren at one time". (1 Cor. 15)

  • 11 April 2019
  • Author: Scott Cherry
  • Number of views: 3608
  • Comments: 3
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