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AphorismJesus on the cross was a charade devised to convince the masses that our flesh, the world, and our bodily existence, is meaningless. This worked to such a degree that a torture device is the symbol of an entire religion.
There is a bit of context to this verse and some theological meaning. I don't think that Jesus was giving a lecture on sacrifice, but was explaining a truth about real love which knows no upper limit.
Jesus had one message and only one message. It wasn't that God sacrificed Jesus, but that Jesus sacrificed himself to his friends. "Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends." (John 15:14)
Huh? Jesus was a person of the type, Judean, of the ethnic group with Jerusalem as their center of the world, in the belief that their God lived there and its temple was the proper location to sacrifice to that God.
He lived completely within the Law of the Jews, . . .
I don't think that a person being a "temple" is a New Testament concept.
and because of his complete faith in God, his temple was made a holy dwelling by the Lord.
Jesus was The Lord, as he says so himself in the gospel of John. He did more than just give an example to us but proclaimed his status as God.
The Lord lived through Jesus so all men would know what God desires, that we should be good to each other and always care for each other and help each other.
Jesus had a lot of "commandments" that he followed constantly but that one particular commandment was the one that he gave to us.
Jesus received this one command from God, that we love each other as He loves us, and followed the command to his death for the Glory of God.
I don't think that a person being a "temple" is a New Testament concept.
I don't think that Jesus was giving a lecture on sacrifice, but was explaining a truth about real love which knows no upper limit.
Jesus was The Lord, as he says so himself in the gospel of John. He did more than just give an example to us but proclaimed his status as God.
Jesus had a lot of "commandments" that he followed constantly but that one particular commandment was the one that he gave to us.
The translation that you are quoting is interpretive rather than literal because both words, bod and temple, are in the singular in the original Greek text.
I think these two passages say enough on the subject of Temples.
My argument may be overly complex but it goes something like this:
. . . where he says "I am the Lord" these are the words of God inside him.
What "rest"?
if we were to truly follow the One Commandment, then we would automatically follow the rest of the commandments.