jaguar_prince
New member
In a previous post I suggested that Mary the Magdalene (Magdalene is a title not a name!) may have been Jesus' beloved disciple.
A careful and intelligent poster objected among other things that since in John 21 Peter takes off his clothes when the disciple whom Jesus loved recognizes the mysterious figure on the shore as the Lord and nakedness was taboo among Jews, the beloved disciple could not have been a woman. For Peter to appear as the Man (adam) before the Fall would have been to unseemly...
At first I found this a sterling counterargument and I dropped my theory in utter confusion but having reflected on it again during the week-end I no longer think that this "Victorianl" argument is as good as it sounds.
Why?
Well, because there is a famous example in the Bible in which a king-and not an ordinary one but the most famous king in the Bible- put off his clothes and danced naked before Mose's arch and ALL his people.
So in exceptional circumstances, nakedness was no longer considered shameful.
Considering Peter's impetuousness and the identity of the man on the shore( is He not much more than Moses's arch?), is it too much to say that Peter could have put aside conventional decency in order to reach his beloved master more quicky?
If we choose to read this passage symbolically and mystically, we may also say that in this episode we see the disciple who was to become the pillar of the Church recovering the candor of our protoparents before the Fall...
Any thoughts on that?
A careful and intelligent poster objected among other things that since in John 21 Peter takes off his clothes when the disciple whom Jesus loved recognizes the mysterious figure on the shore as the Lord and nakedness was taboo among Jews, the beloved disciple could not have been a woman. For Peter to appear as the Man (adam) before the Fall would have been to unseemly...
At first I found this a sterling counterargument and I dropped my theory in utter confusion but having reflected on it again during the week-end I no longer think that this "Victorianl" argument is as good as it sounds.
Why?
Well, because there is a famous example in the Bible in which a king-and not an ordinary one but the most famous king in the Bible- put off his clothes and danced naked before Mose's arch and ALL his people.
So in exceptional circumstances, nakedness was no longer considered shameful.
Considering Peter's impetuousness and the identity of the man on the shore( is He not much more than Moses's arch?), is it too much to say that Peter could have put aside conventional decency in order to reach his beloved master more quicky?
If we choose to read this passage symbolically and mystically, we may also say that in this episode we see the disciple who was to become the pillar of the Church recovering the candor of our protoparents before the Fall...
Any thoughts on that?
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