Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for April 05, 2011

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    comicgos  about 13 years ago

    Hmmm… I think Hell would be more interesting!

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    EarlWash  about 13 years ago

    He wouldn’t fit even without the camel.

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    rayannina  about 13 years ago

    A lot of people think that. It isn’t.

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    thirdguy  about 13 years ago

    excuse me Clark but when the lightning hits, I really don’t want to be this close to you.

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    lewisbower  about 13 years ago

    Oh CLARK It might be standing for eternity knowing there was a great party and you refused the invitation.

    As for the “eye of the needle”, it is a gate in Jeruselem a camel may enter by kneeling. Allegory, perhaps. You got forever to decide.

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    SQLMamma  about 13 years ago

    “Eye of the needle” is not a gate in Jerusalem. That was a lie, probably fabricated by a ‘man of the cloth’ to assuage his guilt surrounding his greed.

    When Jesus said that it’s easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into heaven, the disciples didn’t say, “Oh yeah, tough, but not impossible. Camels go through the gate all the time.”

    No, they were shocked. They thought that wealth was a sign of God’s love and wondered then WHO can possibly get into heaven? Jesus was talking about the impossible.

    The important thing is what comes next. Jesus looked at them and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”

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    Monkmunk  about 13 years ago

    Haha! This is so true! How stupid is it that we don’t take everything the bible says completely seriously?

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    cdward  about 13 years ago

    Lewreader, SQLMamma is correct about the “Eye of the needle.” When Jesus said it, he meant it to be understood in those terms. Ultimately, what he meant was, those who have great wealth are condemning themselves because they love it more than pretty much anything else. Certainly, they love it more than the poor.

    Regardless of your faith or lack thereof, love of wealth will kill your soul (or whatever life-giving force you choose). Say what you will about Jesus, in the gospels he is far more concerned with how the poor and disenfranchised are cared for than about sex. I recommend his approach.

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    cdward  about 13 years ago

    Oh, and Clark, I assume you don’t believe in heaven. Fine, but then it’s disingenuous to say what heaven is like. Generally, neither scripture nor the church say anything about what goes on there or what it looks like - only that it is a place of joy.

    I know too many people who have all the goodies and parties and sex they want and are still miserable. So I’m assuming joy doesn’t reside there (even though I like those things okay).

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    grapfhics  about 13 years ago

    What will the GOP think now. SQLMomma? Does God love them or not? Tune in tomorrow, while the Government reassesses the budget and revenues.

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    black_knight15_au  about 13 years ago

    and yet just by changing one letter in Koine Greek, camel becomes rope. “It is easier for a rope to pass through the eye of a needle…” Makes more sense. Nobody has the original to check…

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    Elaine Rosco Premium Member about 13 years ago

    Pray for the unbelievers that they may believe!

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    Marblypup  about 13 years ago

    To quote ‘Kehlog Albran’, “it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle… if it is lightly greased”.

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    roctor  about 13 years ago

    Abundantley blessed? Then retirement in a gated community with like minded people. Supersinner and I will be ib the smoking section somewhere else. Amen!

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    peter0423  about 13 years ago

    You do get to choose, roctor, right now and every day you live. Your will be done.

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    Yukoneric  about 13 years ago

    Aren’t the words for camel and rope the same? Take your pick for the most sensible……………..

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    bbHhh  about 13 years ago

    In Mark 10:21 Jesus is reported as saying “Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven.”

    In 24:25 he says “Children, how hard it is to enter the kingdom of God! It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”

    26 The disciples were even more amazed, and said to each other, “Who then can be saved?”

    27 Jesus looked at them and said, “With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God.”

    It’s pretty clear from that this Jesus meant something impossible - not a rope, and not a gate. He clearly didn’t think greed was good, and didn’t think economics should be based on capitalism.

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    Packratjohn Premium Member about 13 years ago

    I don’t care how much money you have, the only things that matter to me are how you got it, and what you do with it once you have it. I’m hoping you did, and continue to do, good things. For the record, I’m somewhere between atheist and agnostic.

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    alan.gurka  about 13 years ago

    Clark, maybe that’s your hell.

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    wicky  about 13 years ago

    That’s all it is, an allegory.

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    DavidGBA  about 13 years ago

    and that is a BIGGGGGGGGGGGG needle!

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    Can't Sleep  about 13 years ago

    All this religious and political discussion has overlooked one thing – a very funny strip.

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    Sandfan  about 13 years ago

    Always entertaining to have people explain exactly what Jesus meant 2000 years ago. So what was up with Muhammed and those virgins?

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    MobyD  about 13 years ago

    bbHhh said:

    “In Mark 10:21 Jesus is reported as saying ‘Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven.’”

    Y’know, that sounds like a pretty good argument, from a Christian perspective, for an estate tax; a fairly hefty one at that. I’m sure the GOP (Greedy One Percent) would never see it that way, of course.

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    Digital Frog  about 13 years ago

    So Camelot is next to heaven? Did Authur finally find the Holy Grail? Tune in next week when…

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    rmbdot  about 13 years ago

    Rope, not camel.

    There was a translation/transcription error by some scholarly scribe many centuries ago. The words for “rope” and “camel” differ by only one character in whichever original language he was working from..

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    aerwalt  about 13 years ago

    There is nothing wrong with being wealthy.

    What you do with it is what counts.

    I prefer my heirs to use whatever is left when I go rather

    than the gov’t.

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    Nelly55  about 13 years ago

    stirred the pot all the way around today, eh Wiley?

    I’m with Nightshade………very funny strip

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    CUTTERMALONE  about 13 years ago

    Sayhowurfeeling….. I think that you are having a little problem with the concept behind this corporate entrance exam. Your suggestion would be putting the eye of the needle through the camel. It is supposed to be the other way around. Don’t worry, a lot of businesses make that mistake. I think the original instructions were fairly specific, even if Wiley didn’t repeat them.

    Based on the comments and to fulfill all translations the rest of it might read:

    2.) find a rope and attach to camel. 3.) pass the rope through the eye of the needle. 4.) drag camel through needle with the rope.

    That would keep everybody happy……except the camel.

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    ilsapadu  about 13 years ago

    I didn’t get the strip, I’ve never heard of this eye of the needle business and I don’t know what the camel has to do with it so I thought I’d read the comments to clear things up.

    Believe me, things are not clearer now.

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    TaurusLady  about 13 years ago

    St Mark 10:25 ~

    It is easier for a rope to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.

    This from ~ HOLY BIBLE From Ancient Eastern Manuscripts transcribed by George M Lamsa, a native Assyrian born and raised in a part of the ancient biblical land from which Abraham migrated to Palestine.

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    Kevin Parker Premium Member about 13 years ago

    Jesus is supposed to have repeatedly condemned being wealthy and caring about money– and also condemned divorce and remarriage as being equal to adultery. Someone explain to me why so many “Christians” have ripped out those verses and fixated on homosexuals and abortion, which Jesus never mentioned.

    We can tell you made up your god when he hates everybody you hate.

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    cocoonministries  about 13 years ago

    At THIRDGUY: as if He could miss!

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    kirbey  about 13 years ago

    @NightShade09, I also think this is a really funny strip today as always !

    cheers !

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    hitman4cookies  about 13 years ago

    “The elevator to the bottom floor is to the left sir…”

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    Varnes  about 13 years ago

    Mark Twain also said something to the effect of he’d probably enjoy hell better than heaven be cause the people would be more fun to be with and the conversations would be better…

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    Varnes  about 13 years ago

    Ok, I looked it up, it was Heaven for the climate and Hell for the company, but I thought he said it the other way, too….

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    TaurusLady  about 13 years ago

    billdog ~ I am just sayin’…..am a recovered Catholic and have no interest in organized religion or people who claim to know what God thinks!

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    Ernest Lemmingway  about 13 years ago

    I think everyone is reading too much into this. The sign says, “Corporate Entrance Exam.” It applies only to corp execs.

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    GeraldTarrant  about 13 years ago

    I was taught the Eye was a gate in Jerusalem, but that it was so narrow that the only way a camel can get through is to shed whatever packs it is carrying. That would go along nicely with how Jesus was telling the guy to give up all his worldly possessions.

    But let’s just yell at each other about religion instead. It’s much more fun.

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    dfowensby  about 13 years ago

    its a frickin’ cartoon, sakes. get a life all you christers. yeesh. oh: mistranslated from the latin from the greek from the aramaic: rope. not camel. passing a rope throught the needle eye. makes a lot more sense, eh? camel. sort of like the mistranslation of poisoner. it became witch. and a young woman became a virgin mother in the same way. catholic monks couldn’t translate worth a bleeep, and now you have a rather ludicrous religion based essentially upon bad writing. uck.

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    sleepeeg3  about 13 years ago

    If you have to explain it…

    Something religious, Wiley ripping on corporate America again - I think I got it. >yawn<

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    runar  about 13 years ago

    My idea of the perfect afterlife is one in which there is no literal heaven or hell; each person gets, instead of what they hope they’ll get, what they fear they deserve.

    Personally, I’m not sure I’d care for the traditional notion of an afterlife. While I would really like being reunited with my late wife, I’d hate to have to put up with my sister for eternity.

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    Dtroutma  about 13 years ago

    Wow! A simple wry commentary on the corporate raiders “paying” for their actions, at some point , and all the “thumpers” go nuts, again. Considering how many “hypocrhristians” are actually just greedheads trying to cover their assets in the afterlife, which well, doesn’t really exist as described in the ‘toon, or “the book”– too funny. Belief and faith don’t have to include interpreting myths literally.

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    dflak  about 13 years ago

    There comes a point when you stop owning things and they start owning you.

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    DonVanni  about 13 years ago

    If there is a heaven or hell, I hope Georg Cantor or David Hilbert designed them.That way, if you’re in heaven, all you’d have to do is sing for about a minute once a day EVERY day for Eternity. Thus you would do in infinite amount of signing and still have the rest of the day to enjoy yourself. Same as with Hell: you get a tiny poke with a hot needle once a day for Eternity and get an infinite amount of suffering, but get to enjoy yourself the rest of the time.

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    MatureCanadian  about 13 years ago

    Wow, Wiley, sure stirred it up today! Love it.

    Yes, Mark Twain’s Letters from the Earth says it all.

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    cdward  about 13 years ago

    A: The reason for the biblical discussion is because the cartoon makes a biblical allusion.

    B: It is not a mistranslation. It says camel (kamilos), not rope (kamêlos), and it mesa camel, not rope. This is a classic case of hyperbole, which is an accepted rhetorical style of the time and culture. It is intended to make the impossibility of the situation more obvious, since the camel is the largest land animal common to the area. In the Babylonian Talmud there is a similar saying, but with elephants.

    C: The point of the aphorism is still basically the same as that of the cartoon: The very rich (here represented by the corporate exec whose sole function is to make money for those who already have money, and especially for him or herself), live lives that are antithetical to the Gospel - or to anyone who cares for those who have less.

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    COGNIZANT  about 13 years ago

    Very good, “Darke Force”

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    GailRubin  about 13 years ago

    My husband (we being of the Jewish persuasion) needed me to explain this one this morning. I said it was a New Testament thing. Nonetheless, this gets entry into the Death Cartoon Collection at The Family Plot Blog! http://thefamilyplot.wordpress.com/category/death-cartoons/

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    Justice22  about 13 years ago

    To make it short,,, Worshipping money is the true evil, not having some.

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    treered  about 13 years ago

    another turn of the spoon: I thought the “Eye of the Needle” was a gate in the wall where ONLY people could go in or out… Wiley, you’ve hit another outadapark!

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    lin4869  about 13 years ago

    I’ve been taught that heaven is all around us at this moment. Our priest (a female) conjectures that Jesus may have said the camel through the needle part with a sense of humor, plus I’ve also read/learned about the narrow gate.. In any case, we’ve learned that Jesus didn’t condemn people who had surplus money; he did, however, tell us that it’s not to be worshipped. We don’t usually attribute a sense of humor to Jesus, but he probably had one.

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    black_knight15_au  about 13 years ago

    As the guy who first mentioned the rope not camel, I doth repent in ashes Glad I didn’t mention that stauros and xylon were originally upright stakes, pole ot tree and not a cross… Woops, just did and @ cdward, thanks for the translations. What have you got on stauros and xylon?

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    artybee  about 13 years ago

    Well, which is it, rope or camel??? I thought The Good Book was supposed to have been written all perfect in the rough draft.

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    1OldDude  about 13 years ago

    @Digital Frog: A used camel lot next door to heaven? Lack of money is the root of all evil!

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    wacorley  about 13 years ago

    I’m surprised the right-wing tea partiers are reading this comic strip in the first place! After all, they HAVE no sense of humor! And most of those with no sense of humor, have no sense, period, as far as I’m concerned. Non Sequitur is one of the best strips!

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    michaelrafferty  over 12 years ago

    As this string of comments demonstrates, there is no certainty to any quotation from 2,000 years ago. This one is, however, consistent with others attributed to Jesus regarding the danger that wealth will be a barrier to the kingdom of heaven.

    It is the distinction between “money is the root of all evil” and “the love of money is the root of all evil.”

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    kaystari Premium Member almost 12 years ago

    you need to broaden your imagination, and information, about what Heaven will be like. Your waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay off.

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