Oh, I'm not saying it wasn't violent, just that it wasn't uncalled for in that situation. For why it wasn't uncalled for, see the teachings of Christ in general about obeying the spirit of the law rather than the letter. I always thought of temples as places where you were supposed to have a sense of decency and decorum, as opposed to hawking merchandise for cash.
I'm not sure that we are supposed to emulate Christ exactly in this instance (i.e., actually go in and smash up the place when it turns corrupt); I believe He was acting as a wrathful God and not as man there. He says "judge not, lest ye be judged," but that doesn't make Him a hypocrite for judging; it's part of the difference between divine and mortal responsibilities.
And I think drawing parallels between this incident and a deliberate war of conquest that claimed the entire Arabian peninsula by the time the Prophet died (IIRC) is absurd.
I'm not sure that we are supposed to emulate Christ exactly in this instance (i.e., actually go in and smash up the place when it turns corrupt); I believe He was acting as a wrathful God and not as man there. He says "judge not, lest ye be judged," but that doesn't make Him a hypocrite for judging; it's part of the difference between divine and mortal responsibilities.
And I think drawing parallels between this incident and a deliberate war of conquest that claimed the entire Arabian peninsula by the time the Prophet died (IIRC) is absurd.
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