"It is of great importance to straighten out this inverting of the relationship, criticizing Christ by Paul, the Master by the disciple." Kierkegaard, My Task (1855)

Relevant

A Joomla! Template for the Rest of Us

 

Search

Questions?

Please enter your questions, and we will get back to you as soon as possible. As an anti-spam measure, we ask that you re-type the code you see in the box below, prior to clicking "Send Message"






Recommendations

Only Jesus (great song by Big Daddy)

What Did Jesus Say? (2012) - 7 topics 

Just Jesus: His Living Words (2011)

None above affiliated with me

JesusWordsOnS-cropsmall
JesusWordsSalv-crop2
DidCalvinMurderServetusM

Efforts To Tamper With The Text

Marcionites Eliminated Jesus Had a Father/Mother/Brothers

Tertullian in 207 A.D. was defending that Jesus was born a man although simultaneously God was indwelling that man. The heretics were saying Jesus did not have true human flesh because Jesus was God. Or they claimed Jesus had angelic substance. Tertullian points out that to sustain this argument the heretics - -the Marcionites in full context -- altered portions of what was apparently Luke 8:19-21. They erased the fact Jesus had a mother or brothers and sisters:

First of all, nobody would have told Him that His mother and brethren were standing outside, if he were not certain both that He had a mother and brethren, and that they were the very persons whom he was then announcing,—who had either been known to him before, or were then and there discovered by him; although heretics have removed this passage from the gospel, because those who were admiring His doctrine said that His supposed father, Joseph the carpenter, and His mother Mary, and His brethren, and His sisters, were very well known to them. But [the heretics claim] it was with the view of tempting Him, that they had mentioned to Him a mother and brethren which He did not possess. The Scripture says nothing of this, although it is not in other instances silent when anything was done against Him by way of temptation. (Tertullian, 207 AD On The Flesh of Christ ch. 7.)

Tertullian reasons that Jesus' brothers and apparently Mary did not adhere to Him at the time, and so the Gospels portray a very realistic situation that can happen in any family. It also may explain why Jesus said one must be prepared to be rejected by one's own family. Tertullian explained:

“The Lord’s brethren had not yet believed in Him.” .So is it contained in the Gospel which was published before Marcion’s time; whilst there is at the same time a want of evidence of His mother’s adherence to Him, although the Marthas and the other Marys were in constant attendance on Him.  In this very passage indeed, their unbelief is evident. Jesus was teaching the way of life, preaching the kingdom of God and actively engaged in healing infirmities of body and soul; but all the while, whilst strangers were intent on Him, His very nearest relatives were absent. (Id.)

Interestingly, this opens up the question whether the Marcionites insisted that the virgin birth took place and that Mary remained a virgin and never had any other children. Why else did Marcion eliminate Jesus had siblings from his version of the gospel? Thus, the account here of the Marcionites of 144 AD-207 A.D by Tertullian in 207 AD has echoes later of what became Roman Catholic doctrine which denies Jesus had brothers/sisters, etc. Yet, as you can see, Tertullian, a voice of orthodoxy at the time, affirmed the Gospels did say Jesus had brothers.