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founder of the Christian Vegetarian Association, and a good friend. The texts don't say Jesus was angry about the changing of money. Nor does it say that the money changers were cheating anyone, as has been taught about this text, traditionally. Moneychanging was necessary, because coins with images of Caesar would have been considered idolatrous, and thus, not allowed in the Temple. Jesus doesn't seem to take issue with this.
In a couple of the Gospels, this is the turning point at which the Temple leadership decide Jesus should be gotten rid of. There's been a tradition of reading that, which I consider guided by anti-senitic stereotyping, that says the priests were upset about a loss of income. More likely, they were genuinely concerned that a respected rabbi freeing sacrificial animals wuold move people away from the Temple practices they thought were necessary to relate to God. I don't like to think of the Jewish leadership as so much evil as misguided.
One of the Gospels (guess who doesn't have her Bible in front of her) talks about Jesus driving out the animals. And why were the animals there? To be sacrificed. I really believe that what moved Jesus to lose his temper was the practice of animal sacrifice. And I like a Messiah who would get pissed off about such an atrocity.
Jesus would be in good company. A good many of the prophets also spoke against animal sacrifice. I'm often amazed at how much of what Jesus says isn't new, but is directly from Jewish teachings--often from the prophets.
I see you found my little tete a tete in R/T. I admit, I was not on my best behavior, but I think I now know how a wildebeest feels when surrounded by lions or hyenas. Hence the emotional thrashing about. Again, that's just not a place I should go.
Thanks for the "thanks"!
Critters
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