According to the Holy Bible what was Jesus from Nazarath last words before he died?
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
"Father, into your hands I commit my spirit."
"It is finished."
All 3 are correct!
The Last words of Jesus of Nazareth on the cross was:
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" according to Matthew 27:46
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" according to Mark 15:34
"Father, into your hands I commit my spirit." according to Luke 23:46
"It is finished." according to John 19:30
Who can anybody believe this shit. The Bible is full of contradictions.
8 comments:
This is because you do not understand what sin is, what Jesus did on the cross, or the fact that this is not the end of the story. The whole point of the New Testament is that Jesus is not dead and those were certainly not his last words. So there is no contradiction when you understand what it's about.
I'm guessing you have not heard any reports from around the world, such as in South America and Africa, where even the dead are raised to life? Don't be too quick to throw aside these reports. There are many such stories from all over the world if you took a little time to research.
He-he! I just re-read the post and realized you were talking about the different statements, not the words themselves. Yes, and Judas died with his guts spilling out but he also hung himself. There are certainly confusing parts of the Bible, but the reason that doesn't matter to many Christians, and myself, is that we have experienced God himself. So you see, the different memories or recordings of the gospel writers about who said what when is too trivial to think that the God we continually experience must be fictional. B
It is true about police interogation techniques that they are more suspicious of different suspects stories if every detail lines up, as if the criminals had cooperated to tell a particular story. They are more apt to believe someone who has a slightly different memory due to different perspectives and faulty memories. Besides, three of the gospels say that Jesus cried out before dying. That could easily have been the moment that he said "it is finished."
No, I do not see.
Well, I can't make you see that for sure, and I want to apologize for the hasty first reply that I made. I sure hope your eyes will be openned to who God is vs. the seeming outward appearances you have come to know. Human sin really skews perception of him. I'd encourage any of you reading this to take a little time to research the recent works of God on earth that include miracles that have happened, including the dead raised to life in such countries as Africa and South America. I also recommend Ravi Zacharias for some challenging thoughts.
Which god do you mean?
Please write specific if you want a debate. I have to know what you mean before I can answer. And please keep a debate on one page, no not cut it up under several pages.
Sorry, I'll keep comments in their respective posts. I thought of an example to show what I meant about conflicting statements in the Bible not influencing Christians to disbelieve in God.
Take for instance this years' Democrat election between Obama and Clinton. Imagine that Obama is actually a close friend of yours. Then imagine all of the talk on the radio, TV, and articles written about him. Surely there will eventually be something that skews what Obama meant when he said "thus and that" or mistakenly (or purposely) misquoted him. Perhaps they took something he said out of context to indemnify him. Since you actually know him and his character, you know when you're reading something of consequence. You know the truth about him. So misleading or confusing statements are not a problem for you. Besides, you can call him up any time and ask him about things he said or didn't say.
It is the same with the God of the Bible and the true Christian. Because I have a good relationship with God, and I experience him on a regular basis, knowing that potentially 3 gospel accounts record his final words on the cross differently does not make me believe that God must not exist. If that were true, my belief would have to be fully in my mind and not reality, not experience. Plus, I reiterate that it is accepted science in interogation to believe two slightly different alibis than two exact alibis, not to mention two completely different alibis.
Do you see what I mean?
So you believe in the god of the Bible but you do not believe in the words of the Bible?
What do you mean when you write: "I have a good relationship with God, and I experience him on a regular basis"
What is your relationship with your god?
What is your experience of him?
He's real My GOD
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