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The Wedding Feast At Cana...

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sandyRoe | 23:44 Sun 30th Nov 2014 | Religion & Spirituality
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By the time the water was turned into wine the wedding guests must have already had a few. How could they have known that what they were drinking was better, unless the first drinks they were offered were dire?
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"Give beer to those who are perishing, wine to those who are in anguish; let them drink and forget their poverty and remember their misery no more." Proverbs 31
16:34 Tue 02nd Dec 2014
There is a theory – and quite a rational one – suggesting that this was the marriage of Jesus and Mary Magdalene. Just thought I’d mention that.
Jesus was not the dour ascetic that the church makes him out to be. He clearly enjoyed being around people and was not averse to socializing.
Jesus’ miracle involved a great volume of wine but that does not mean he was advocating drunkenness, on the contrary, he was, in fact, demonstrating godlike generosity. Since wine was a common beverage, any surplus could be used on other occasions.

Naomi@Do you believe everything you read? It is not rational to believe that Jesus married. He was a perfect man. Any offspring he had would have been perfect. In that case had he married Mary Magdalen there would be two conflicting human parties - those who were perfect and those who were imperfect.
Idiosyncrasy, no, I don’t believe everything I read, and just as well because after reading your post I am at a loss to understand why you question MY rationality.
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Wasn't there a book published recently which revealed that a secret society existed with the sole purpose of protecting the descendants of Jesu and Mary?
The Sangrail, I think it was called.
I've no idea. Sounds like a Dan Brown concoction.
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Here it is. I've not read it so can't comment on its veracity.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Holy_Blood_and_the_Holy_Grail
That's pretty old sandy, I think there are newer ones.
sandyRoe, that book was published in 1982 and I have read it. Interestingly (or perhaps not) Dan Brown used the authors’ names for a character in ‘The Da Vinci Code’ – Leigh Teabing – 'Leigh', one of the authors, and ‘Teabing’ an anagram of ‘Baigent’, a co-author.

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