Right let's spend a bit more time with these twits.
Agreed.
Now that's a decent answer. It's about time.
It didn't need answering, as it was too obvious to most.
:hammer:
How stupid can you be? Not once have I tried to negate the accusation, You really are a moron.
For anyone who isn't devoid of a brain like andy here, the Law is relevant because the Pharisees were breaking it. They were breaking both of these laws and andy doesn't get that. He doesn't know how they were breaking the laws here.
Well just tell me where Jesus points out their breaking of the law?
He doesn't because they weren't.
It's also relevant because it explains part of the reason the punishment could not be carried out even if the witnesses had not left. Do any of you anti-MAD people know why? andy doesn't.
As I keep saying, and you keep ignoring, judicial judgement was never intended. Now because you just can't grasp this, even though I keep saying it over and over, let's go back to the passage.
Now, Lighthouse, forget protecting mad for a moment, and just think about scripture....
the scribes and Pharisees brought to Him a woman caught in adultery. And when they had set her in the midst, they said to Him, "Teacher, this woman was caught in adultery, in the very act. "Now Moses, in the law, commanded us that such should be stoned. But what do You say?"
Do you see this? "But what do you say"
This was theological entrapment, not a trial. Will you finally get this into your thick head?
No breaking of the law happening here, because it wan't an official trial.
This they said, testing Him, that they might have something of which to accuse Him.
Do you understand this?
It was a test. Now, sherlock, if Jesus would have agreed with Moses and the pharisees, it wouldn't have been a test, would it?
So what exactly was the test here? Why were the pharisees testing Jesus?
Every Christian denomination will tell you that the reason was because Jesus came to offer grace to sinners, not judgement.
Because this conflicts with your trashy mad theology, you have to invent nonsense in order to avoid the obvious.
If Jesus didn't condemn the woman, he was in conflict with Moses, but seeing as he was the minister of the new covenant of grace, and the pharisees didn't believe in him, he needed wisdom to tackle the situation.
Jesus was not a witness to her crime. andy has admitted that much. He was also not a judge or a priest according to their knowledge. So by His own commandments He could not condemn her of His own accord.These are all reasons Jesus didn't condemn her even after they were gone, though she had broken the Law, which is very relevant t the issue at hand. andy wants to argue that Jesus didn't teach the Law and uses this case as evidence when Jesus was the only one who didn't violate or ignore the Law in this incident.
Lighthouse here doesn't want to accept that the woman was a theological prop used for nothing other than theological debate. That's it!
The pharisees could have simply invented the situation in order to get his opinion on the matter, but to use a real person makes the situation personal. Would Jesus be disgusted with an adulteress woman, or would he extend grace to her?
If he was merciful, he was against Moses, according to the pharisees.
The Law was upheld, because the woman was the only on brought forward, the witnesses did not go to the place appointed in front of a judge and a priest, and the witnesses left without testifying. And andy thinks I'm trying to negate the accusation when I already admitted she was guilty weeks ago.
Not mentioned in scripture, because it was not a real trial, and was never meant to be.
Rome did not allow Jews to condemn anyone to death.
I'm not the blind one here.
That's funny!
I've just explained why you're wrong, above. As a minister the Law He could not condemn her. Not according to the Law.
How does it make no sense as one of the possibilities for what He wrote in the sand?
Example of what? Your ignorance of the Law? You've done enough of that for all to see.
Very much so. Doesn't mean it isn't interesting to discuss.
I didn't say they were guilty of adultery with her.:AMR:
They were, however, guilty of breaking the laws on how to go about punishing adultery.
Covered above.
No we don't. None of us know what He wrote in the sand.
Why do you see this as relevant?
John doesn't.
This is not something with which I need help.
He ministered both in conjunction. They are not mutually exclusive, oh daft one.
Of course it would be.
If an adulteress deserved to die under the law, that person realizes the need for grace. Yes?
The person who has an adulteress heart, but isn't condemned for the act they haven't committed, and doesn't have a need of grace, is blind.
John 9:41 Jesus said to them, "If you were blind, you would have no sin; but now you say, ‘We see.’ Therefore your sin remains.
The only blind one here is you as you can't see how it's even possible for grace and law to work together.
Yeah you're not the only one who says that grace and law can work together, but no one has given an example of it. You know why?
Because grace works by faith, and law works by works (Rom 11:6).
You have yet to engage in a similar thread; one that was started because you wouldn't answer a question in this thread.
I don't want to change the thread topic to satisfy your curiosity. Start a relevant thread, dopey!
OK, where?
See, that's the problem with you. You make claims but never provide the passages to support them.
Acts 9:36-42 & Acts 20:9-12
Is it really so hard to do that?
What in the world?
I told you that Peter and Paul did it once, as far as we know from scripture, and you want verses?
Then you show the verses telling everyone what I said in the first place?
:chuckle: Nutcase!
Now watch this: I, Lighthouse, stand corrected.
Now explain why it never happened again after that.
We don't know how many times the dead were raised in apostolic times, and after.