Team 1 Question 1

The centurion in Luke chapter 7 sends people to Jesus so that he will heal a sick slave of his.  And when Jesus is almost to the centurion, the centurion sends friends to tell Jesus that he is not worthy of this service.  But rather than listening to them Jesus says “not even in Israel have I found such faith”.  Here Luke’s gospel is depicting Jesus as appealing to more people than just the Jews, and therefore it is important to show that the gentiles have just as much or more faith than the Jews.  Since gentiles are getting the word even as easily or easier than Jews it makes the story seem more inclusive to them.  This is similar to what Peter tells to the centurion from Caesarea in Acts chapter 10.  Peter tells him that “God shows no partiality, but in every nation anyone who fears him, and does what is right is acceptable to him” (Acts 10:34-35).  Once again saying that Jesus is interested in everyone.

 

Jesus tries to reach out to Samaria as well, although in chapter 10 of Luke Jesus and the disciples are not greeted well, which even leads James and John to ask Jesus if they should command fire down from heaven on the people.  Although Jesus does not send down fire on them, he does rebuke them, before leaving.  While this event did not go well, it did depict Jesus trying to spread the word to the Samaritans who were not popular among the Jews.  A slightly more successful narrative is in Luke chapter 17 where Jesus is going from Samaria to Galilee and he heals 10 Lepers, of which only one returns to thank him, in the narrative the one who happens to come back to thank Jesus is a Samaritan.  Luke is continuing the theme of Jesus as the savior to everyone by having him heal a Samaritan. Not only does Jesus heal him, since he comes back to thank Jesus it makes the samaritan seem more righteous than the other ones who did not bother to thank Jesus.  
Luke wants to show that Jesus is being fair minded to everyone including the Samaritans, and when a Lawyer asks Jesus what he should do to inherit eternal life.  Jesus asks him what the law says, and the lawyer replies that “You shall Love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind” (Lk 10:27).  But the lawyer then asks who he should consider as his neighbor, then Jesus gives an example of a man getting beaten by robbers, and then only a Samaritan would help him.  Which is depicting Jesus as considering everyone your neighbor.  Then before Jesus leaves earth he says “…you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea, and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8).  This was Jesus’ instructions to the disciples right before being taken up by a cloud.  Luke is trying to say that the followers of Jesus need to continue teaching about Jesus to the far reaches of the earth at the time, which for them was Rome.

Team 1, Question 1

 

This part of Mark is portraying Jesus as having a connection with God. In Mark 1:22 it says “They were astounded at his teachings for he taught them as one having authority, and not as the scribes did”.   Right after that in Mark it briefly describes Jesus casting out an unclean spirit.  But even the unclean spirit is given a chance to connect Jesus with God; in verse 24 the unclean spirit says “What have you to do with us Jesus of Nazareth?  Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are, the Holy One of God.”  When Jesus forgives the sins of the Paralytic, the people question to themselves how this person had authority to forgive sins, because only God could forgive sins.  Giving another connection to the divine being, and Jesus responds to their questioning in their hearts by performing the more difficult task of telling the man to get up and walk.

 

Jesus often didn’t conform to the traditional customs of the land, like feasting when John the Baptist and his disciples as well as the Pharisees were fasting, he also ate with people who were sinners, and he and his disciples broke the Sabbath day by eating forbidden grain and healing people.  For not feasting Jesus responded to the people by saying “The wedding guests cannot fast while the bridegroom is with them, can they?… .”  In this statement Jesus is referring to himself as the bridegroom, which probably did not make sense to a lot of people who heard him say it. But later in Mark Jesus says that his parables were intended so that the outsiders would not understand what he was saying.   In response to eating with the sinners Jesus says “I have come not to call the righteous, but sinners.”  A pretty logical response that if you want more people to be righteous you should go to the ones who aren’t.  And in response to breaking the Sabbath he says in Mark 2:27 “The Sabbath was made for humankind, and not humankind for the Sabbath; so the Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath.” And in response to healing on the Sabbath he says “Is it lawful to do good or to do harm, to save life or to kill?”  and then it says they were silent, meaning that essentially Jesus won that argument.  

 

The parable of the sower tells of someone sowing seeds, and his seeds fall on different places determining which seeds will sprout, and grow and produce lots of grain, the ones that fall on good soil, grow and produce 30, 60 or even 100 fold.  And then Jesus finishes the parable by saying in Mark 4:9 “Let anyone with ears to hear listen!”  Then Jesus goes on to say in Mark 4:21-23 Jesus follows up the parable of the sower with an analogy of a lamp saying “I s a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lamp stand?  For there is nothing hidden, except to be disclosed; nor is anything secret except to come to light.  Let anyone with ears to hear listen!” The symbolism of the light, is a connection to Jesus as the light of the world.  And this analogy is saying that if you know the word then you need to go sow it somewhere instead of hiding it, but a lot of people who hear it are not going to get well rooted in it. The comparison of the mustard seed to the kingdom of heaven means that from something small the kingdom of heaven will grow into the greatest kingdom.  Similar to how the seeds which fell on the good soil end up producing up to a hundredfold.  

Team 1 Question 1

Team 1 Question 1

a. According to White on page 71 the kings in Greece and Mesopotamia had a patron deity who gave the king a place above the rest of his subjects.  Although this sets the king apart and above the rest of the people in the kingdom, but the king was not thought as a god, a shift from other earlier cultures where the king was viewed as a god, or as a descendant of a god.  White describes that during the New Kingdom period of Egypt from 1465-1165 BCE the old pharaoh was the god of the dead symbolized as Osiris, and the new pharaoh was the son of Osiris.  Later on Alexander the Great went into Egypt in 332 BCE where he was not only made a king, but also a god.  After his death legends began to circulate that Alexander was born through the agency of Zeus-Ammon.  And the Ptolemies and Seleucids who succeeded Alexander the Great were a big fan of deifying the king as well.  The Seleucids who ruled in Syria-Palestine from 167-164 BCE called their king Epiphanes which meant god manifest.

 

b. Demetrius who liberated the city of Athens was given the status of a deity. Athens went to great lengths which to honor Demetrius which he found to be somewhat annoying. First they gave them the title king, however this title was refused because both Demetrius and Antigonus believed that the title should only be for people who were descendants of Philip or Alexander.  Athens then became the only place to give them the title of savior gods.  Then they decreed that a portrait of Demetrius and Antigonus would be woven into the robe of the goddess Athena, and finally they consecrated the the spot where Demetrius stepped from the chariot with an altar, and called it the Altar of the Descending Demetrius.  Because the Athenians regarded Demetrius like a god, and because you don’t just put an altar anywhere, the term descending is likely referring to Demetrius descending to earth from above, like god coming down from heaven.

 

c. When welcoming Demetrius to Athens the Athenians proclaimed him as the one true god, and that he must be the son of Poseidon, and they even prayed to him.  This makes it quite clear that to the Athenians a human could be a god.  The song reiterates that Demetrius was son of Poseidon, and pays reference to the other gods who weren’t helping them while Demetrius was.  They prayed to Demetrius in the song that he has the power to create peace, and then they asked him to punish the Aetolians.

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