hughfarey wrote:I've no idea. You said he was omniscient. That means he knew everything. Your question does not address my comment.Stu wrote:How did He know of the future then and what events would befall mankind in the end days?Very confused. If he relied on the wisdom of the time, etc. he was certainly not infallible, but he didn't. Those who listened to him heard what he said, not what he knew, and not everything he said was literally true. Your question does not address my comment.Surely then if He relied on the word of mouth of the people of the time, some of His wisdom could be fallible, and His message and words shouldn't be seen as infallible?Sure. The fact of a miracle depends on the observer, not on the miracle-worker.Do you believe that He performed miracles?I very much doubt it, but that's not important. The people who were there thought he had, or at least that was the sense they made out of what happened, and what they thought and reported is more important than what actually happened.Did He create many fish out of a few?Same answer as above.Did He walk on water?No. I'm saying Jesus knew the truth, but chose to teach his followers using a context they could more easily understand.Are you saying Jesus was wrong about Noah's Ark...Yes.... and that it was just a fable?
What do you mean, "not everything he said was literally true"????Very confused. If he relied on the wisdom of the time, etc. he was certainly not infallible, but he didn't. Those who listened to him heard what he said, not what he knew, and not everything he said was literally true. Your question does not address my comment.
Is this just another way of saying that he was a magician rather than an actual miracle-worker. Because by your standards (the observer), David Blaine and David Copperfield are also true miracle workers.......Sure. The fact of a miracle depends on the observer, not on the miracle-worker.
Seriously you're losing it now. Now you're saying He didn't perform those miracles. So what sets Him apart from just another con artist of the day?I very much doubt it, but that's not important. The people who were there thought he had, or at least that was the sense they made out of what happened, and what they thought and reported is more important than what actually happened.
So He didn't walk on water - so I guess He and Peter never walked on water either?Same answer as above.
So He chose to lie to the disciples rather than tell the truth. Interesting. What else did Jesus lie about.No. I'm saying Jesus knew the truth, but chose to teach his followers using a context they could more easily understand.
This Jesus fella sounds like a tricky one. Pretends to perform miracles to trick the people into believing He is the Son of God and then tells lies about Noah's Ark to gain credibility. I don't like this Jesus.
Tell me - did Jesus die, and then rise from the dead? Or was that just a trick as well?