Originally posted by Agathon
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You keep trying to change the subject when you can't even read the book you are attempting to interpret, and you have no comeback to the argument offered. What you have posted is irrelevant bull****, which you posted merely to try and disguise the fact that you don't have a response to the argument.
Again, either there is reason giving involved in the passage, or Jesus is a sophist.
Your argument makes him a sophist, because you have him proposing some figurative bull**** such that he doesn't really offer anything in response to the Pharisees' attempt to make trial of him. But if he has something to offer, then his use of the Genesis passage can't really be figurative. Or, we should more accurately say, the author of the Gospel must have the character of Jesus do this, or there is no point.
If there were some mystical glue, then whether a divorce was granted, or adultery took place, or any other such condition was or was not met would not matter. The mystical glue would react automatically to the conditions. So, if an illegitimate divorce was sought, the magical bond wouldn't break and they'd still be married. And so on. (As an excercise you can run through as many permutations of conditions and the reactions of the marriage bond as it takes for you to grasp the concept.)
Now imagine, if you can, how such effects would be reflected in the material world where the spouses' bodies are quite plainly not one flesh. Please explain, to the best of your ability, what happens in the case of adultery. Please then explain what happens in the case of remarriage which is actually adultery because of an existing marriage that was not legitimately ended by divorce.
Midrash has little to contribute here, since it's usual practice to stick to what the writer in question says first.
So there is no need for rational people to assert that the entire Bible is consistent or that early Christianity is consistent with ancient Hebrew religious beliefs.
People want to believe this for religious reasons, and the author of Matthew, and JC himself may well have believed it, but it is unlikely to be true.
It's pretty obvious that Christianity is quite different and much more sophisticated and humane than the vile cult of the ancient Hebrews. This passage is just one of the places where that fact is evident. It's just a cover because Jesus really didn't like orthodox religious practice, but rather than proclaim himself a heretic, he does the usual trick of saying that he really understands the meaning of the original scripture.
You already got in trouble because you didn't understand which verbs were being used where. Now you're just floundering and making vague appeals to authority because you can't read Greek.
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