Hi,
I wrote: "I ask again, what did Jesus teach"
Snow Leopard <juliet784@hotmail.com> writes: >Jesus said, I shed my blood for the remission of your sins. and
>1) You're forgiven, sin no more >2) I will die to remove your sins >3) The law is made for man, not the other way around
You've missed the entire point of Jesus's preachings -- and instead concentrated on the things he did to prepare people for what his preachings dealt with. Jesus's message was not so much "I forgive you" as "Repent -- for the Kingdom of Heaven is at Hand". Once people repent -- which he sometimes acknowledges by pointing out the "faith" they have -- then he forgives (and heals) them. To really see that this is his entire mission in the early years, one need only look at his first activities:
Matt 3:17
"From that time on Jesus began to preach "Repent, for the kingdom of
heaven is near"
Then, one can verify that this same mission still consumed him much later -- what did he send his disciples out to preach?
Matt 10:7
"As you go, preach this message: the kingdom of heaven is near"
Mark 6:12
"They went out and preached that people should repent"
Luke 10:9
"Heal the sick who are there and tell them, 'the Kingdom of heaven is
near you'"
and
Luke 10:11
"Yet be sure of this: The kingdom of God is near"
As a final note, about half of the Parables Jesus uses begin with
"What is the kingdom of God like?", or something similar. Many of
them are very instructive, but overall, I've never been sure what
exactly Jesus meant by his Kingdom. Just when I think I've got it, I
find something entirely different. Maybe you know what he meant?
Towards the end of his mission, Jesus began to see that people had
rejected his message -- and this is echoed in his frequent cries of
"who do you (or the people) say I am?". Jesus was a man seeking to
make an impact, and finding instead that people did not understand his
message (a sentiment which is itself repeated many times throughout
the Gospels). Interestingly, he begins to see himself in the
Suffering Servant passages in Isiah -- and this likeness is enough to
pave the way for the coming Christian theology at the hand of Paul.
ERiC
... I had hoped that you would find Jesus's emphasis on the Kingdom
yourself -- it's difficult to miss -- but since I seem to have to
spell things out, so be it. I recommend reading an entire Gospel to
put Jesus's mission in context.