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Let me quote what you put in your post.
m not aware of the reversal in the Hebrew Isaiah. Either way, Im convinced that Lamb of God refers to atoning sacrafice. Ive never heard of an alternative interpretation that flows with the Bible as a whole.
Acts 8:32
There are two different words in use here: lamb ("seh") and sheep ("rachel"). Lamb refers to the slaughter, sheep refers to Jesus silence.
I looked into this last night.
Lev 14:25
And he shall kill the lamb of the trespass offering, and the priest shall take some of the blood of the trespass offering, and put it upon the tip of the right ear of him that is to be cleansed, and upon the thumb of his right hand, and upon the great toe of his right foot:
The animal specified for this sin offering is a goat.
Lev 4:35
And he shall take away all the fat thereof, as the fat of the lamb is taken away from the sacrifice of the peace offerings; and the priest shall burn them upon the altar, according to the offerings made by fire unto the LORD: and the priest shall make an atonement for his sin that he hath committed, and it shall be forgiven..
They triumphed over him
Rev 12:11
And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death.
As it turns out, by what Logarock quoted in Leviticus 4, there is some sort of possible involvement of a lamb in fixing a problem concerning particular individual sins in this hypothetical world of the 'camp in the wilderness' of the immigrants from Egypt described in the Old Testament.
Above all of this, John the baptist called Jesus the Lamb of God. The same title is used repeatedly in the book of Revelation. The spotless lamb was slaughtered as an atoning sacrifice. That means death.
which seems to imply that Jesus was a participant in some sort of the Old Testament style ritual of atonement with himself being the sacrificial offering.
There is no logical way to separate Jesus' work from the OT Law. Jesus knew His fate, and He came to fulfill it.
Could it be that the reason he was reading the Septuagint was that it was in Greek (the common language of the eastern Roman Empire), where the Hebrew was in what had already been a dead language for hundreds of years at that point?
The Eunuch was reading the Septuagint, because that is what was available to him at that time, but the Septuagint is not God inspired scripture, it is a translation.
The Masoretic text was finalized in the fourth century AD, so it is a cleaned up and standardized version that does not verify that the older Hebrew was any less problematic than the Greek versions.
While I believe it is a good translation (I own a copy), it does have errors: the Apocrypha, the numerical data in Genesis 5, etc. I trust the metered Hebrew texts over the Septuagint.
I don't know if logic comes into play, but my point is that there is an ambiguity here.
I would think its more logical to sheer a sheep and slaughter the lamb, not the other way around.
I can see how this could be something that someone may want to grasp at out of desperation to support a failed theory of salvation based on a scheme of substitutionary death as payment for sins, but my comment would be that I fail to see any such interpretation made like that in the New Testament.
In light of your last post consider Jesus clear indications, as part of His "fulfilling the law and the prophets" focus on Leviticus that I posted above.
Which is described in chapter 4 of Leviticus.
When Jesus healed a leper, He told the man to go show himself to the priests and offer the gift according to Moses law for same type healing to the priest in Leviticus 14.
As prescribed in the aforementioned chapter. The priest's part comes into play after the symptoms are gone.
Now considering the man was already healed when he came to the priests . . .
You lost me here. You seem to have skipped some steps in the logic.
. . . Jesus was clearing pointing at himself as not just healer but sacrifice.
How so?
Jesus was saying and showing that He was the fulfillment of the Leviticus requirement but not in type but in reality.
Hmm, all this from that one story?
Not only that but that He fulfilled the role of High Priest Himself.
I think that the legal issues described in these books reflect more the ceremonial norms in the later temple times.
You talk about the exodus as if it never happened.
I don't think that Jesus' mission was dependent on the nuances of Levitical laws.
If the exodus never occurred, then Jesus' ministry had no foundation.
I think that there is evidence that will support that idea.
Then, you act as though the Septuagint is the original OT.
Which was it, written, or oral?
How can you support the idea that a Hebrew speaking race would record their laws in Greek. That makes no sense. The Hebrews preserved their Law in an oral tradition, memorizing syllable patterns.
I just made some arguments today against your position.
As for the 'Lamb of God' issue, I cant make you see what you refuse to see.
Right, Jesus gave up his life in the process of bringing about a new system for people to be truly righteous through the spirit that Jesus can give us from God.
The NT repeats multiple times that Jesus was our sacrafice for permanent atonement. I will not cite those verses again. You can find them yourself.
originally posted by: jmdewey60
a reply to: LogarockThe animal specified for this sin offering is a goat.
Lev 4:35
And he shall take away all the fat thereof, as the fat of the lamb is taken away from the sacrifice of the peace offerings; and the priest shall burn them upon the altar, according to the offerings made by fire unto the LORD: and the priest shall make an atonement for his sin that he hath committed, and it shall be forgiven..
Here you have a provision made for an alternative sacrificial animal, this being a lamb.
Food offerings are burnt to appease the deity, and the fat from the lamb is placed on the food offerings to be burnt, apparently to have a pleasing aroma to the food in general.
The priest in this scenario does the actual atonement, with the outcome of "it shall be forgiven him" whatever that inadvertent sin was.They triumphed over him
Rev 12:11
And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death.
by the blood of the Lamb
and by the word of their testimony;
they did not love their lives so much
as to shrink from death.
(2011 NIV)
Obviously here "the lamb" is a figurative reference to those "our brothers and sisters" mentioned in verse 10, those who testified without regard to their own lives.
originally posted by: jmdewey60
a reply to: LogarockI looked into this last night.
Lev 14:25
And he shall kill the lamb of the trespass offering, and the priest shall take some of the blood of the trespass offering, and put it upon the tip of the right ear of him that is to be cleansed, and upon the thumb of his right hand, and upon the great toe of his right foot:
The entire chapter is devoted to people being ceremonially made "cleansed" after recovering from a skin condition.
It does involve lambs and apparently blood from them for some sort of bodily anointing.
I don't think that it fits in with what I was asking about, which was some sort of atonement by killing lambs.
Exactly. That's what it says.
Your rendering here would be that they overcame with their own blood their own lives.
What "atoning work" are you talking about?
They followed their master, even by your rendering, to death, He being the Chief and primary Lamb and foundational atoning work to which they are found worthy to take part in.
It is really more about being righteous.
And so give their lives in kind but not to a lending of their own ultimate atonement but rather demonstrating their worthiness to partake.
Not sure what you are referencing, but the interpretation of the thing in chapter 4 of Leviticus is problematic and seems to be a word adaptable to whatever use it needs to be applied to. There is probably an unsaid accepted concept that for a wrong, there needs to be a recompense (with the idea that his medical condition was a punishment for some past sin), but in practical terms, it seems to be more like a "priestly tax" to pay for the services rendered in certifying the "cleanness" of the patient.
On the above part of your response what we see is that leprosy cleansing falls under the category of a sin offering.
OK, you seem to have jumped over to chapter 5. Rather than a "price" like paying for a sin, it seems that what is going on is that a priest has some sort of power to intervene between a person with a problem, and God. In order to be accepted and heard, he needs to have burning bodies that God will be attracted to, then the priest can work his magic.
Healing of the condition is a result but not separated from a price given for sin. In the case of the poor, instead of a lamb, birds were allowed to be used . . .
I don't know where you are reading this but in Leviticus 5, the birds are killed, one burnt, and the other probably eaten by the priests.
. . . which signifies a spiritual jubilee, the free bird fly's free from its debt and one is killed in its stead, the jubilee of the impoverished soul.
What sacrifice? Are you saying that Jesus being sacrificed is applied retroactively to previous events?
You asked how so in another response. The leper shows up already healed, without giving an offering yet. The significance here is that the sacrifice gave authority to the healing.
Who do you mean, when you say "we", you and Logarock?
How about you start citing some scripture that says you are right?