>"One of my favorite apparent discrepancies—I read John for years without realizing how strange this one is—comes in Jesus’ “Farewell Discourse,” the last address that Jesus delivers to his disciples, at his last meal with them, which takes up all of chapters 13 to 17 in the Gospel according to John. In John 13:36, Peter says to Jesus, “Lord, where are you going?” A few verses later Thomas says, “Lord, we do not know where you are going” (John 14:5). And then, a few minutes later, at the same meal, Jesus upbraids his disciples, saying, “Now I am going to the one who sent me, yet none of you asks me, ‘Where are you going?’” (John 16:5). Either Jesus had a very short attention span or there is something strange going on with the sources for these chapters, creating an odd kind of disconnect."
>>9826444
>Christcucks will defend this
>>9826449
>this is considered top american scholar
Here is the simple explanation:
>It may seem like a false charge against the apostles that they did not ask where their Master was going, for earlier they had inquired of him on this subject. In asking, they did not lift up their minds to trust as they should above all have done. And so the meaning is 'As soon as you hear of my departure, you become alarmed and do not consider whether or for what purpose I go away".
Why is amercan education so shit, why do they even specialize in subjects when they can't even think to save their lives?
>>9826644
So, Op do you have anything else to say or you will stay btfoed forever?
TOP KEK, OP BTFOED
>>9826444
>NOW I am going... yet none of you asks me
>N O W
Basic 3rd grade English but it's too much for atheists to grasp