View Full Version : Judas was a Silvertard like Us
old steel
21st April 2011, 07:21 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
Antonio
21st April 2011, 09:05 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
There have been days when I could whack somebody off for 1380$
(assuming that a piece of ag was a full ounce in those days and today`s price of 46$).
Serpo
21st April 2011, 09:12 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
There have been days when I could whack somebody off for 1380$
(assuming that a piece of ag was a full ounce in those days and today`s price of 46$).
UH...
Son-of-Liberty
21st April 2011, 10:05 PM
I figure if Judas sold Jesus out for 30 pieces of silver then the stuff must be worth way more then $46 an ounce. I couldn't be bothered to snitch on anyone for $1300, fuck the police!
messianicdruid
22nd April 2011, 11:39 AM
Judas was a believer. He had been with Jesus all along, and had witnessed His miracles. He knew.
Judas had his eyes on a much bigger prize. He was trying to manipulate events to get Jesus to declare Himself openly as Messiah, summon ten thousand angels, and throw out the Romans, set up a kingdom [according to the prevailing view of prophecy] and make Judas the treasurer. ***** helps those who help themselves - so to speak}
His counterparts today are trying to get Armaggedon {TM} started so Jesus will have to return and rapture them outa here, according to their escatology [dispensationalism]. This will not end any better for them than it did for him.
I would say he's more like the FED owners/operators than us. They may not be believers, but their love of mammon is real.
sirgonzo420
22nd April 2011, 11:50 AM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
There have been days when I could whack somebody off for 1380$
(assuming that a piece of ag was a full ounce in those days and today`s price of 46$).
you might want to brush up on your english....
"whack somebody"
and
"whack somebody off"
are not the same thing...
sirgonzo420
22nd April 2011, 12:01 PM
Judas was a believer. He had been with Jesus all along, and had witnessed His miracles. He knew.
Judas had his eyes on a much bigger prize. He was trying to manipulate events to get Jesus to declare Himself openly as Messiah, summon ten thousand angels, and throw out the Romans, set up a kingdom [according to the prevailing view of prophecy] and make Judas the treasurer. ***** helps those who help themselves - so to speak}
His counterparts today are trying to get Armaggedon {TM} started so Jesus will have to return and rapture them outa here, according to their escatology [dispensationalism]. This will not end any better for them than it did for him.
I would say he's more like the FED owners/operators than us. They may not be believers, but their love of mammon is real.
But wasn't Judas kinda essential to the whole "only-begotten-son-dying-on-the-cross-to-somehow-redeem-mankind" thing?
MAGNES
22nd April 2011, 12:24 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
There have been days when I could whack somebody off for 1380$
(assuming that a piece of ag was a full ounce in those days and today`s price of 46$).
you might want to brush up on your english....
"whack somebody"
and
"whack somebody off"
are not the same thing...
:lol
If it wasn't for your post I would of missed his post totally.
Either way, killing somebody or whacking them off is not good.
Serpo
22nd April 2011, 01:55 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
There have been days when I could whack somebody off for 1380$
(assuming that a piece of ag was a full ounce in those days and today`s price of 46$).
you might want to brush up on your english....
"whack somebody"
and
"whack somebody off"
are not the same thing...
:ROFL:
mamboni
22nd April 2011, 02:16 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
On good Friday this commentary borders on blasphemy. At minimum it shows insensitivity towards Christians and their faith. Unfortunately, Christians have muzzled themselves with the "turn the other cheek" meme, so thay are easy targets.
Horn
22nd April 2011, 02:24 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
On good Friday this commentary borders on blasphemy. At minimum it shows insensitivity towards Christians and their faith. Unfortunately, Christians have muzzled themselves with the "turn the other cheek" meme, so thay are easy targets.
Look at the nose on that guy?
http://888webtoday.com/articles/images/Judas-Iscariot_wa.jpg
TheNocturnalEgyptian
22nd April 2011, 03:32 PM
I am probably ignorant, but I've got to agree with messianic druid here. 30 pieces of silver is a bit low to betray anybody, especially someone who can perform miracles and could conceivably usher in a new spiritual age if he was allowed to keep teaching.
I am of the opinion that Jesus forced Judas to betray him, so that the events could unfold in the manner that they did. I.E. Jesus asked Judas to bear his own type of cross, for the good of the movement that Jesus was founding.
Does this make sense? /flame suit on. No offense meant to any Judas haters.
illumin19
22nd April 2011, 04:40 PM
I am of the opinion that Jesus forced Judas to betray him, so that the events could unfold in the manner that they did. I.E. Jesus asked Judas to bear his own type of cross, for the good of the movement that Jesus was founding.
Does this make sense? /flame suit on. No offense meant to any Judas haters.
You must be familiar with "The Gospel of Judas". It basically says the same thing, Judas was the closest of all disciples and did what was expected of him. You can do a search online and find it I'm sure......I read it in a Barnes and NOble a while back.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5327692
Son-of-Liberty
22nd April 2011, 04:40 PM
The price of those 30 pieces of silver are headed to the moon i'm telling you!
There have been days when I could whack somebody off for 1380$
(assuming that a piece of ag was a full ounce in those days and today`s price of 46$).
you might want to brush up on your english....
"whack somebody"
and
"whack somebody off"
are not the same thing...
Man I had a good laugh....
Awoke
22nd April 2011, 05:20 PM
Dammit, I spent over a half an hour trying to find teh perfect Family Guy clip, but Youtube is blocked and none of the other video sites had it.
From season 2, episode 16 called "There's something about Pauly".
Peter is indebted to the mafia and they call him up to do a job for them. He's really nervous and figgity as he is sitting down with the mob boss, and he says "What do I need to do? Whack an guy? Off an guy? Whack off a guy?"
Seriously the funniest shit ever. I wish I could have found it and posted it instead of describing it.
messianicdruid
22nd April 2011, 06:40 PM
But wasn't Judas kinda essential to the whole "only-begotten-son-dying-on-the-cross-to-somehow-redeem-mankind" thing?
If you can use both "essential" and/or "forced" to describe what each of us are also allowed to do, according to our own character and callings, then okay. But I don't see Judas sacrificing himself to further Jesus' work, or Jesus twisting his arm to get him to betray a friend. Trading loyalty for filthy lucre is not condoned by God, but it is expected, anticipated and therefore used to teach us important lessons about life, and ourselves. Judas was given opportunity to repent, just as we all are, and he let it pass.
http://www.gods-kingdom-ministries.org/ffi/article.cfm?AID=88
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