I wonder if Fyodor Dostoevsky’s tale about Jesus’ return might have been inspired by an actual story of Jesus in the synagogue of Capernaum. In The Brothers Karamazov , the character Ivan Karamazov tells the tale of a Grand Inquisitor who puts Jesus on trial upon His return to earth. The Inquisitor claims that the Church has improved upon Jesus’ work and no longer needs Him. This Church, whatever it is, does not need Jesus, does not want Him. The shocking story Ivan tells is shocking mostly for how true it is in so many contexts, denominations, and local churches. In Mark’s Gospel, Jesus attends the synagogue of His adopted home in Capernaum and immediately encounters a man possessed by an unclean spirit. The man—or the unclean spirit in him—cries out, ‘What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are—the Holy One of God’ (Mark 1.23-24). Beyond the connection in these stories of a ...
In setting up a law on sex for his proposed colony, the Athenian in Plato’s Laws forbids sex outside marriage between a man and a woman, mentioning in the course of his discourse breaches of this law in the form of adultery, incest, uncontrolled passion, pederasty, same-sex acts and orientations, and transgenderism. The reason for such a law is to keep people from ‘those desires which frequently plunge many into ruin’ (8.835). [1] His concern in having a law governing sex is not only that, without it, people will ruin themselves but also that they will injure the state. What a state allows regarding sex is not a private matter as sexual practices have many consequences (8.836). Regarding same-sex sexual acts, he says that they are not natural (8.836). The Law should ‘follow in nature’s steps’ in opposing males having sex with males as with women. [2] In Romans 1.26-28, Paul is concerned with what is natural and what is against nature, that i...