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Old 06-08-2010, 12:08 PM   #41
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One need not propose that the passage "is" an interpolation, only that it is "plausible" that the passage is an interpolation.
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Why isn't an interpolation in 90 A.D. plausible?
I think all suggested interpolations have to be regarded as initially implausible in the sense that the person suggesting them has the obligation to provide arguments in support of their suggestion.

I find it hard to see how one could, in this case, provide arguments to prefer a very very early interpolation to authenticity. It is easier to distinguish the authentic text of a writer from interpolations added several generations later.

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Old 06-08-2010, 07:05 PM   #42
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I think all suggested interpolations have to be regarded as initially implausible in the sense that the person suggesting them has the obligation to provide arguments in support of their suggestion.
On the contrary, it is up to the person suggesting that there are not any interpolations to provide arguments in support of their suggestion. Are you actually proposing that all claims of antiquity should be accepted unless they are reasonably disproven?

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One need not propose that the passage "is" an interpolation, only that it is "plausible" that the passage is an interpolation.
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I find it hard to see how one could, in this case, provide arguments to prefer a very, very early interpolation to authenticity. It is easier to distinguish the authentic text of a writer from interpolations added several generations later.
I proposed a possible date of 90 A.D. What is wrong with that date? What is wrong with a possible date of 100 A.D.?

What about the important issue of guilt by association? If a man makes a number of false claims, you are suspicious of his claims even when he might be telling the truth. Since the Bible contain many claims that are probably false, and many more claims that are questionable, it is reasonable for people to be suspicious about 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, and about many other Scriptures. For example, it is very probable that guards were not posted at the tomb. That also calls into question the visits that the women made to the tomb. It would be ridiculous for anyone to claim that it doesn't matter if a book that was supposedly inspired by a God contained lots of false and questionable claims.

The issue of supernatural claims is also important. It would be ridiculous for anyone to say that a claim that a man rose from the dead does not require a good deal more evidence than a claim that a chicken crossed a road.

At any rate, if a man rose from the dead, that would hardly be a reasonable case that any God exists, let alone the God of the Bible. In addition, even if a God inspired the Bible, that is hardly a reasonable case that he has good character. So, you have wasted many years of your life unless you also have sufficient philosophical and moral arguments to add to your textual arguments. Textual arguments are merely the beginning of a very long process of trying to find reasonable evidence if defense of Christianity.

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What evidence would convince you that Jesus made some post-resurrection appearances?
Surely no evidence that any Christian could provide, but if a God inspired the Bible, he would easily be able to convince more people to accept him if he wanted to. That is one reason why so many people gave up or refuse to accept Christianity.

If intelligence and education play a significant role in evaluating whether or not the God of the Bible probably exists, if there was sufficient textual evidence that the God of the Bible probably exists, I assume that Elaine Pagels and Bart Ehrman would be aware of that. What abilities to evaluate the Bible do you have that Pagels and Ehrman do not have?
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Old 06-08-2010, 07:08 PM   #43
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Aside from 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, what other evidence do you have that Jesus made some post-resurrection appearances?
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Paul clearly witnesses to his belief in the resurrection throughout his epistles.
But where did he get his information from?

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The Gospels are evidence for post-resurrection appearances, although not in their present form first hand evidence.
But the unresolved issues of dating, authorship, and sources bring the claims into question. John was written much too late to be of much use to Christians. In another thread, you yourself basically said that Mark is not very useful regarding Jesus' post-resurrection appeanaces. You know that Matthew and Luke borrowed a good deal from Mark, and that Mark's sources are questionable. You have said that Mark used, or may have used Peter as a source, but what evidence do you have that Peter was speaking for himself?
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Old 06-09-2010, 12:55 PM   #44
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I think all suggested interpolations have to be regarded as initially implausible in the sense that the person suggesting them has the obligation to provide arguments in support of their suggestion.
On the contrary, it is up to the person suggesting that there are not any interpolations to provide arguments in support of their suggestion. Are you actually proposing that all claims of antiquity should be accepted unless they are reasonably disproven?
What we are trying to do is determine what Paul actually said, suggesting without any real evidence that a passage in a basically genuine letter is an interpolation is unlikely to help.

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I proposed a possible date of 90 A.D. What is wrong with that date? What is wrong with a possible date of 100 A.D.?
A date of 100 CE would IMO have left evidence in the textual tradition.
The problem with earlier dates is that the closer the interpolation becomes to Paul's lifetime, the more difficult it becomes to provide internal evidence that the passage is post-Pauline.

(I think we may be repeating ourselves in this thread, I may stop replying.)

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Old 06-10-2010, 07:56 AM   #45
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On the contrary, it is up to the person suggesting that there are not any interpolations to provide arguments in support of their suggestion. Are you actually proposing that all claims of antiquity should be accepted unless they are reasonably disproven?
What we are trying to do is determine what Paul actually said, suggesting without any real evidence that a passage in a basically genuine letter is an interpolation is unlikely to help.
It is my understanding, Andrew, that most exegets read a portion of this passage (3-7) as a 'credal statement' by Paul for which he uses phrases seen nowhere else in the corpus or ideas which at variance with what he says elsewhere. Examples of non-Paulinisms are, "according to the scriptures" (κατα τας γραφας, where Paul routinely uses καθως γεγραπται - "as it is written"), "was buried", "the third day", "he was seen" (note that the only other Paul's "seeing" Jesus (1 Cr 9:1) is in active perfect, while the "seeing" Jesus in this passage is passive aorist - Jesus "being seen (by)"). Am I correct in accepting that it would be the majority view of NT scholarship that at least this portion of the passage, Paul would be using church credal formulas rather than his own customary conceptual framework ?

Let us say then, FSOA, that Robert Price was not first exeget who saw these non-Pauline turns, and the curious bunching of "novelties" here for the Pauline repertoire, i.e. the notion of ranking the apostolic mettle on the basis of Jesus appearances, the mention of "The Twelve", the 500 to whom Jesus appeared before James and Paul, the idea of Paul "unfitness" to be an apostle (directly contradicting Paul's "competence" granted by God - 2 Cr 3:5), Paul seeing himself as eκτρωμα, against everything else he says about himself vis-a-vis other men in flesh believed to be apostles. Now, if it is accepted by a large group of scholars that Paul articulates in the passage credal norms existing prior to his conversion rather than his own ideas, what is the evidence that would make this the preferred interpretation, say, to the notion that these credal manifests were written up later in Paul's name ?

Much obliged.

Best,
Jiri
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Old 06-10-2010, 10:59 AM   #46
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What we are trying to do is determine what Paul actually said, suggesting without any real evidence that a passage in a basically genuine letter is an interpolation is unlikely to help.
It is my understanding, Andrew, that most exegets read a portion of this passage (3-7) as a 'credal statement' by Paul for which he uses phrases seen nowhere else in the corpus or ideas which at variance with what he says elsewhere. Examples of non-Paulinisms are, "according to the scriptures" (κατα τας γραφας, where Paul routinely uses καθως γεγραπται - "as it is written"), "was buried", "the third day", "he was seen" (note that the only other Paul's "seeing" Jesus (1 Cr 9:1) is in active perfect, while the "seeing" Jesus in this passage is passive aorist - Jesus "being seen (by)"). Am I correct in accepting that it would be the majority view of NT scholarship that at least this portion of the passage, Paul would be using church credal formulas rather than his own customary conceptual framework ?

Let us say then, FSOA, that Robert Price was not first exeget who saw these non-Pauline turns, and the curious bunching of "novelties" here for the Pauline repertoire, i.e. the notion of ranking the apostolic mettle on the basis of Jesus appearances, the mention of "The Twelve", the 500 to whom Jesus appeared before James and Paul, the idea of Paul "unfitness" to be an apostle (directly contradicting Paul's "competence" granted by God - 2 Cr 3:5), Paul seeing himself as eκτρωμα, against everything else he says about himself vis-a-vis other men in flesh believed to be apostles. Now, if it is accepted by a large group of scholars that Paul articulates in the passage credal norms existing prior to his conversion rather than his own ideas, what is the evidence that would make this the preferred interpretation, say, to the notion that these credal manifests were written up later in Paul's name ?

Much obliged.

Best,
Jiri
Hi Jiri

I think we can agree that parts of this passage are in origin non-Pauline ie they are either pre-Pauline material that Paul is using (which in effect taking the passage as authentic is what Paul is claiming) or they are a post-Pauline interpolation.


I have argued on external grounds that they are not a 2nd century interpolation, when one could argue that the passage arose as a "catholic" attempt to counter the Marcionite and Gnostic use of Paul.

The problem IMO with the suggestion that the passage is both 1st century and non-Pauline is that the idea that the passage was added that early to counter mis-interpretations of Paul seems difficult for 2 reasons.

a/ We have no evidence that disputes about the right way to interpret Paul started that early and it seems more likely that serious controversy about Paul's leters began in the 2nd century.

b/ What I meant by a possible 1st century interpolation was the possibility that the first publishers of 1 Corinthians (eg Onesimus or the Corinthian church or ...) 80-90 CE, interpolated the passage. ie I was thinking of the idea that although the passage is non-Pauline there was never a generally available version of 1 Corinthians without this passage. In this case the interpolation by definition pre-dates any widespread controversy about the interpretation of Paul's letters. It just doesn't seem likely to me that the first publisher of Paul's leters, trying to remind his fellow Christians of a partly forgotten pioneer, would have added material about Paul being unfit to be an apostle.

This argument obviously depends on my views of the 1st century history of Paul's letters, you may well disagree. If you want to follow this up, please make clear what is your view of what happened to Paul's letters after Paul's death.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 06-10-2010, 03:00 PM   #47
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It is my understanding, Andrew, that most exegets read a portion of this passage (3-7) as a 'credal statement' by Paul for which he uses phrases seen nowhere else in the corpus or ideas which at variance with what he says elsewhere. Examples of non-Paulinisms are, "according to the scriptures" (κατα τας γραφας, where Paul routinely uses καθως γεγραπται - "as it is written"), "was buried", "the third day", "he was seen" (note that the only other Paul's "seeing" Jesus (1 Cr 9:1) is in active perfect, while the "seeing" Jesus in this passage is passive aorist - Jesus "being seen (by)"). Am I correct in accepting that it would be the majority view of NT scholarship that at least this portion of the passage, Paul would be using church credal formulas rather than his own customary conceptual framework ?

Let us say then, FSOA, that Robert Price was not first exeget who saw these non-Pauline turns, and the curious bunching of "novelties" here for the Pauline repertoire, i.e. the notion of ranking the apostolic mettle on the basis of Jesus appearances, the mention of "The Twelve", the 500 to whom Jesus appeared before James and Paul, the idea of Paul "unfitness" to be an apostle (directly contradicting Paul's "competence" granted by God - 2 Cr 3:5), Paul seeing himself as eκτρωμα, against everything else he says about himself vis-a-vis other men in flesh believed to be apostles. Now, if it is accepted by a large group of scholars that Paul articulates in the passage credal norms existing prior to his conversion rather than his own ideas, what is the evidence that would make this the preferred interpretation, say, to the notion that these credal manifests were written up later in Paul's name ?

Much obliged.

Best,
Jiri
Hi Jiri

I think we can agree that parts of this passage are in origin non-Pauline ie they are either pre-Pauline material that Paul is using (which in effect taking the passage as authentic is what Paul is claiming) or they are a post-Pauline interpolation.
Thanks, Andrew. This is a significant point because agreeing that this dichotomy exists, is agreeing that Paul's style here does not match his style elsewhere. That means there are internal textual grounds for doubting the passage's authenticity. It is not some caprice.

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I have argued on external grounds that they are not a 2nd century interpolation, when one could argue that the passage arose as a "catholic" attempt to counter the Marcionite and Gnostic use of Paul.
I believe you are correct on that. This insert would not have been made to defy Marcion. It could have been made in response to Markan Paulinists who would have scoffed at the idea that Jesus "appeared" to Peter "and the twelve" (at least until Matthew ratified it by re-writing the empty tomb mystery). So, I would say, if this is interpolation it would have to be defended as an early one. It seems clear that by Marcion's time the gospel resurrection narrative perimeter would have been too firmly set to allow a variant as distant as 1 Cor 15:3-8.

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The problem IMO with the suggestion that the passage is both 1st century and non-Pauline is that the idea that the passage was added that early to counter mis-interpretations of Paul seems difficult for 2 reasons.

a/ We have no evidence that disputes about the right way to interpret Paul started that early and it seems more likely that serious controversy about Paul's leters began in the 2nd century.
I beg to differ on this one. Galatians speaks volumes about the precarious relationship Paul had with the Jerusalem missions, and therefore the reports of Epiphanius that he was considered an apostate by the "Jewish heretics" most likely originated in Paul's own lifetime. Mt 5:19 can also be seen as an early 'dissing' of Paul.

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b/ What I meant by a possible 1st century interpolation was the possibility that the first publishers of 1 Corinthians (eg Onesimus or the Corinthian church or ...) 80-90 CE, interpolated the passage. ie I was thinking of the idea that although the passage is non-Pauline there was never a generally available version of 1 Corinthians without this passage. In this case the interpolation by definition pre-dates any widespread controversy about the interpretation of Paul's letters. It just doesn't seem likely to me that the first publisher of Paul's leters, trying to remind his fellow Christians of a partly forgotten pioneer, would have added material about Paul being unfit to be an apostle.
Again, I would reply to this that we need not to assume a single source of controversy around Paul's writings. The motive to rewrite Paul in order to cut him to size would have existed as soon as the Palestinian Nazarenes and Pauline Christians began mixing and converging which I have grounds to believe happened after the war of 66-70. The most significant impetus for an insert into 1 Cr 15 would have been Paul's non-traditional, speculative view of resurrection, exhibited later in the chapter (48-54), which clashed with the emerging view of physicality of Jesus' rising when Mark was digested by the Petrines.

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This argument obviously depends on my views of the 1st century history of Paul's letters, you may well disagree. If you want to follow this up, please make clear what is your view of what happened to Paul's letters after Paul's death.

Andrew Criddle
I think the possibilities are endless. To begin with, IIUC the prevailing view is that both Corinthians were assembled from several letters. If there were extant copies of whole letters or specimen of alternative arrangements of the chapters, we could perhaps glean more about the stages of transmission. But I am not aware of evidence of this sort. Was there a master of 1 Corinthians (in a master collection like 'Apostolikon') ? Was it kept at Corinth ? With Onesimus ? Onesiphorus ? Who had access to it ? How many copies were made ? I really don't know where one would begin.

Thanks again for writing.

Jiri
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Old 06-12-2010, 01:36 AM   #48
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How about a 90 A.D. interpolation?
I think it is an early one - from before the gospel storyboard became current. "The Twelve" in the passage do not resemble the twelve disciples Jesus chose. The group (otherwise unknown in the Pauline corpus) does not seem to have been connected to the apostles. Cephas stands outside of the Twelve. James, curiously ranks below the simultaneous appearance to the 500 - which is unknown to the gospels (could it be an early version of the Pentecost ?). The apostolic cortege is mentioned with the appearances to James and Paul which might be something of a historical marker. The passage would come from the time of the ascendancy of Cephas (Peter) over James, as a key referent authority in the Jerusalem congregation. That the sequence of appearances was meant as authority ranking is apparent from the wording in 8-9 : "and last of all he was seen by me...for I am the least of the apostles..."

It might be something of a surprise that Cephas would not be grouped with the apostles but 1 Cor 9:5 also separates Cephas from that group. (In contrast, Gal 1:19 assigns the apostolic status to Cephas by implication).
Hi Jiri

Can I clarify a point ?

You seem to be saying that although you don't think the passage in 1 Corinthians is authentically Pauline you do regard it as our earliest surviving account of the resurrection appearances.

Am I understanding you correctly ?

Andrew Criddle
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Old 06-12-2010, 06:15 AM   #49
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I think it is an early one - from before the gospel storyboard became current. "The Twelve" in the passage do not resemble the twelve disciples Jesus chose. The group (otherwise unknown in the Pauline corpus) does not seem to have been connected to the apostles. Cephas stands outside of the Twelve. James, curiously ranks below the simultaneous appearance to the 500 - which is unknown to the gospels (could it be an early version of the Pentecost ?). The apostolic cortege is mentioned with the appearances to James and Paul which might be something of a historical marker. The passage would come from the time of the ascendancy of Cephas (Peter) over James, as a key referent authority in the Jerusalem congregation. That the sequence of appearances was meant as authority ranking is apparent from the wording in 8-9 : "and last of all he was seen by me...for I am the least of the apostles..."

It might be something of a surprise that Cephas would not be grouped with the apostles but 1 Cor 9:5 also separates Cephas from that group. (In contrast, Gal 1:19 assigns the apostolic status to Cephas by implication).
Hi Jiri

Can I clarify a point ?

You seem to be saying that although you don't think the passage in 1 Corinthians is authentically Pauline you do regard it as our earliest surviving account of the resurrection appearances.

Am I understanding you correctly ?

Andrew Criddle
Close to, yes. I believe Mark ended at 16:8, and described the experience of the resurrected Jesus as his Transfiguration. The passage of 1 Cr 15:3-8 might well have been from the period between Mark and Matthew, articulating for the first time Jesus post-mortem appearances as confirmation to the select witnesses that he had risen. It could have been written after Matthew, but not long after, because Matthew was superior writing which likely overturned Mark on short order. (I read the SE & LE of Mark as attempts to re-establish Mark as the premier gospel authority, a losing cause.)

Best,
Jiri
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Old 06-12-2010, 06:55 AM   #50
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Close to, yes. I believe Mark ended at 16:8, and described the experience of the resurrected Jesus as his Transfiguration. The passage of 1 Cr 15:3-8 might well have been from the period between Mark and Matthew, articulating for the first time Jesus post-mortem appearances as confirmation to the select witnesses that he had risen. It could have been written after Matthew, but not long after, because Matthew was superior writing which likely overturned Mark on short order. (I read the SE & LE of Mark as attempts to re-establish Mark as the premier gospel authority, a losing cause.)

Best,
Jiri
I regard the eleven in Matthew 28:16 compared to the twelve in the best text of 1 Corinthians 15:5 as evidence that the Corinthians passage is pre-Matthaean.

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