Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 05, 2022 10:47 pmTo the contrary, the veil was not between Judaism and Christianity, but between the place where God dwells and the place where human beings dwell. You can see this, since even Jews were not permitted into that sacred space, except for one person -- the High Priest -- and only once a year, and only if he brought with him a pure sacrifice. Nobody, but nobody...Jew or Gentile...was able to inhabit that space or to enter it without being judged, prior to the death of Christ.
If you read the book of Hebrews, it makes this point quite clear: there's no theology to back the other interpretation.
What parts of Hebrews would you submit as supporting that view?
OTOH, and
despite any particular Gospel or Epistle, I think the *meaning*, if it can be known, is more in line with what I presented. Within the story-line of the Gospel narrative, and the Christian narrative, the murder-of-God action by the reigning power in Judea literally brought an end to the nexus which was Judea. And if I am right it ripped the dispensation out of their hands. How could it be otherwise? In
Christian eyes and
Christian terms -- which is also to say in Jewish-Christian terms -- something radical and incontrovertible occurred with the cited event of this
rent. In just a few years more the Exile began which, if only in Christian terms, was understood to be 'God's retaliation'. You don't murder the Son of God and just get off the hook. Again, this is
Christian logic.
It seems to me that your interpretation has no specific and tangible relationship to the context. I am aware that the standard interpretation is that
"When Jesus died, the veil was torn, and God moved out of that place never again to dwell in a temple made with human hands (Acts 17:24). God was through with that temple and its religious system, and the temple and Jerusalem were left “desolate” (destroyed by the Romans) in A.D. 70, just as Jesus prophesied in Luke 13:35. As long as the temple stood, it signified the continuation of the Old Covenant. Hebrews 9:8-9 refers to the age that was passing away as the new covenant was being established (Hebrews 8:13).
So in fact I would say that my interpretation is pretty close to the standard one. And what I said makes more sense -- and I mean this in a Christian hermeneutical sense. The murder of Jesus Christ had severe implications for the Jews and Judaism. This is all *part of the story* of the European diaspora. Endless and extraordinary suffering by the hand of the goyim.
there's no theology to back the other interpretation.
I am unsure what you mean since -- and this seems pretty clear within Christian documents and hermeneutics -- that the theology in facts supports what I propose. It is *standard material*.
AJ: The entire idea of The Frankfurt School is a reference and a term that has many many different levels of meaning.
IC: No it doesn't. It's actually very straightforward.
It is possible to say that the varied positions and assertions of those of The Frankfurt School had strong and definite relations to Marxism and post-Marxism, but there really is a whole other dimension: an attempt by those theorists to find a way to undermine the 'fascist' and in their eyes anti-Jewish tendency they clearly noticed as latent in America (the place where they landed and established a base). So when you (when one) reads their writing, for example
The Authoritarian Personality by Adorno, you notice a strong, in fact an intense, effort to discover a means to undermine whatever it is that they (he, his school of thought) fears. It is in this sense that The Frankfurt School, the term, the use of the term in discourse today, has numerous levels of meaning.
If you refer to almost any Right-leaning source, and certainly many radical Right sources, to be given interpretation of what The Frankfurt School means, it will give an interpretation that is decidedly more nefarious.
And for this reason I would contradict the 'straightforwardness' you indicate.
I think it is. It assumes that anybody who opposes Globalism is not acting on wisdom or truth, but rather on fear and desire for some mythical ideal of ethnic purity. And that's obviously just partisan slander. It's not remotely true. Globalism has many intelligent opponents, who resist it on principle and for ethical reasons.
But that is not at all what I would say, and it is not what I meant when I used the term 'desperation'. The notion of despair:
[Middle English despeiren, from Old French
desperer, from Latin
dēspērāre :
dē-, de- + spērāre, to hope; see spē- in Indo-European roots. N., from Middle English
despeir, from Anglo-Norman, from Old French
desperer, to despair.]
I do not say that opposing the machinations of globalism and the doing of 'the global elite' is a bad or unnecessary thing, by no means would I assert that, but what I do assert is the mood of despair and desperation that leads people to grasp wildly at straws (interpretations) that help them resolve their angst and confusion. So there are many many levels of extreme conspiratorial thinking, as it is called, among those who don't have enough realistic information to interpret their world and tend to wild interpretations. I can support all that I assert here.
Since I do not regard the desire for 'ethnic purity', mythical or real, as being necessarily wrong or immoral (I would say that a specific nation of people has, in fact, a right and even a moral imperative to preserve themselves at this level among numerous levels) I cannot respond to your assertion about "some mythical ideal of ethnic purity". There are no people that I am aware of who do not naturally and innately feel some need or desire to preserve themselves at an 'ethnic' level. So I see it is non-bad. It is certainly not evil.
Do you see it differently?
Really...you can't be serious. They are not "desperate": a great many are just smart people with a strong sense of who they are, what they want and don't want, a respect for diversity of culture and opinion, and an urge to be free rather than to be subject to a monolithic global State run by elitist tyrants.
I think you are getting too hung up on that one word. I have tried to define what I mean by desparate and also despair. I see despair as being a prime motivator in today's political and social climate. And I do not mean it as a way to denigrate those who oppose globalism and a host of other things as well.
There are some 'smart people', I certainly agree, and there are also many who are not smart at all and who clutch after 'desperate interpretations' as a way to attain psychological relief. Here I refer, for example, to the so-called Q-anon movement, which is filled to the brim with people who are attempting the sort of 'interpretation' I speak of.
Globalism is a fool's project...well, and a totalitarian's dream.
That may be true, ultimately, but a globalized and let's say
universalist humanity-uniting project is one
outcome of Christian ideology, it seems to me. Or do you think I have got this wrong?