What would be today's equivalent of the 30 silver coins?
Bannon turning on Trump.
>>2670058
Look how much they weight and then check for silver price.
>>2670063
I meant in monetary value.
>>2670058
A teenage chick in Thailand
>>2670058
You could buy two horses for that money back then, so whatever two second hamd Honda Civics cost today?
Pic unrelated.
>>2670058
bout tree fiddy
Well shit. 30×2017= $60,510
>>2670118
30x1984 = 59520 dollarydoos
>>2670124
Fucking chiseler thieving gyppo finno-korean Hyper-war merchant
We'll say $60,001 uncle sam hankerchiefs
Picture not related
that's about 30 days pay for then times
To the average American, I guess that'd be the equal of $4,200
>>2670155
>30 days pay for them
Sauce?
>>2670161
Matthew 20 has a parable that uses 1 coin as the pay for a day's labor. Must have been seen as a fair wage for a day of work.
>>2670178
Gonna need that parable friendo
This is /his/ and we back up things here
>>2670182
I gave you the book and chapter
Matthew 20:2, in the original Greek for you
συμφωνησας δε μετα των εργατων εk δηναριου την ημεραν απεστειλεν αυτους εις τον αμπελωνα αυτου
"Now when he had agreed with the laborers for a denarius a day, he sent them into his vineyard. "
>>2670187
>denarius
Was that a silver coin?
I couldn't see betraying anyone I know for a months pay. That's retarded. A month's pay is nothing in your social circle.
A year's pay maybe. Thanks for clarifiying
>>2670195
Doesnt really have to be logical, it's religious
>>2670195
The significance comes from Exodus 21:32, as 30 pieces of silver is the worth of a slave.
Jesus' death is a ransom, the price paid to secure a slave's freedom
>>2670058
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirty_pieces_of_silver#Types_of_coin
>The word used in Matthew 26:15 (ἀργύρια, argyria) simply means "silver coins,"[8] and scholars disagree on the type of coins that would have been used. Donald Wiseman suggests two possibilities. They could have been tetradrachms of Tyre, usually referred to as Tyrian shekels (14 grams of 94% silver), or staters from Antioch (15 grams of 75% silver), which bore the head of Augustus.[9] Alternatively, they could have been Ptolemaic tetradrachms (13.5 ± 1 g of 25% silver).[10] There are 31.1035 grams per troy ounce. At spot valuation of $17.06/oz (the closing price on Monday, December 12, 2016), 30 "pieces of silver" would be worth between $185 and $216 in present-day value (USD).