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Old 12-16-2005, 11:13 AM   #151
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion

In short, it does mean preached for only a short time, up till now. (The Christians have certainly never stopped preaching.)

The passage does not refer to Jesus preaching the good news - it clearly refers to Christians preaching a written Gospel.

Note the key words : preaching a Gospel "which you may read".


So, what we have in Aristides is :
* a singular written Gospel (you may READ there-in)
* which is named simply "the Gospel" (the Gospel as it called)
* which had only been preached for a short time
* in 138-161 (note the mixup of Caesars' names.)


Iasion
I agree it is about Christians preaching the Gospel, but I think that to Aristides the content of the Gospel was not changed by being written down.

His point surely is that the Gospel message is relatively recent, not that it has only recently been committed to writing.

(We may hold that the nature of the Gospel message was radically changed by transition from an oral to a written form but 2nd century Christians don't seem to have thought like that, to them the Gospel is the message about Jesus whether written or oral.)

The fact that this Gospel is now available for Antoninus Pius to read, does not imply that the preaching of this Gospel only started when it was written down.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 12-16-2005, 02:04 PM   #152
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Greetings,

Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Pearse
I agree.
Nonsense.

Aristides refers to Christians preaching from a written Gospel about a virgin birth etc.

Did Jesus preach from a written Gospel about a virgin birth etc?

No.

Roger, and others, consistently ignore the part "which you may READ there-in" because it clearly means a WRITTEN Gospel.


Aristides is clear evidence of a WRITTEN Gospel that had only been preached a short time in 138-161.


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Old 12-16-2005, 02:13 PM   #153
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Greetings andrew,

Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
I agree it is about Christians preaching the Gospel, but I think that to Aristides the content of the Gospel was not changed by being written down.
Why do you think that?
Aristides says nothing of the sort.


Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
His point surely is that the Gospel message is relatively recent, not that it has only recently been committed to writing.
His point is the Gospel had only recently been preached - there is NO mention of anything earlier at all.



Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
(We may hold that the nature of the Gospel message was radically changed by transition from an oral to a written form but 2nd century Christians don't seem to have thought like that, to them the Gospel is the message about Jesus whether written or oral.)
There is clear evidence the Gospel was changed over the years.


Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
The fact that this Gospel is now available for Antoninus Pius to read, does not imply that the preaching of this Gospel only started when it was written down.
Rubbish.

Aristides makes NO MENTION of any earlier oral phase.
Aristides makes NO MENTION of preaching before the written Gospel.

But Aristides directly STATES the preaching about Jesus (from the written Gospel )only just started a short time ago.

This is clear and present evidence that the Gospels were late productions.


Iasion
 
Old 12-16-2005, 03:00 PM   #154
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
But Aristides directly STATES the preaching about Jesus (from the written Gospel )only just started a short time ago.
Unfortunately, his summary doesn't really match any of the four included in the Bible. Specifically, he appears entirely ignorant of any story about one of the disciples betraying Jesus since he pretty clearly states that the same twelve disciples who followed the living Jesus continued to preach about him after his death. He only knows a written gospel that has a virgin birth but no betraying Judas.
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Old 12-17-2005, 12:11 AM   #155
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
Greetings andrew,



Why do you think that?
Aristides says nothing of the sort.




His point is the Gospel had only recently been preached - there is NO mention of anything earlier at all.





There is clear evidence the Gospel was changed over the years.




Rubbish.

Aristides makes NO MENTION of any earlier oral phase.
Aristides makes NO MENTION of preaching before the written Gospel.

But Aristides directly STATES the preaching about Jesus (from the written Gospel )only just started a short time ago.

This is clear and present evidence that the Gospels were late productions.


Iasion
I'm not sure what you're claiming.

Aristides presumably believed that the preaching of the Gospel started before the middle of the 1st century CE. (He clearly traces this preaching back to the 12 apostles)
Quote:
Thereupon
these twelve disciples went forth throughout
the known parts of the world, and kept showing his
greatness with all modesty and uprightness. And
hence also those of the present day who believe that
preaching are called Christians, and they are become
famous.
(Whether he was right or not is not the real issue although I would claim he was.)

This must be what his short time ago means ie only about a century ago.

The date when this preaching was written down is not the issue.

(Could you clarify whether you're suggesting that Aristides held that there was no preaching of the Gospel at all until much later than 50 CE or that he regarded preaching based on say Mark's gospel as fundamentally different from earlier preaching based on oral tradition ?)

Andrew Criddle
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Old 12-17-2005, 02:33 AM   #156
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
Aristides refers to Christians preaching from a written Gospel about a virgin birth etc.
This is a possible interpretation; but in view of the dual meaning of 'gospel' -- a) the message and b) one or more books in which it is written down -- it sounds much more to me as if he has meaning a) in mind, and then refers to the existence of a written form.

In my experience trying to squeeze answers out of half-a-sentence relating to a topic which is not in the mind of the author is a risky business, and one prone to mistakes. We mustn't force meanings on such a text, if we want to see what it says.

Quote:
Aristides is clear evidence of a WRITTEN Gospel that had only been preached a short time in 138-161.
This seems upside down to me. How do you preach a book? You preach a message, which is contained in the book. As for 'a short time', since Aristides is preaching a gospel which is a century old by that point, does he not mean a 'short time relative to Judaism and paganism?'

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 12-17-2005, 02:34 AM   #157
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Amaleq13
Unfortunately, his summary doesn't really match any of the four included in the Bible. Specifically, he appears entirely ignorant of any story about one of the disciples betraying Jesus since he pretty clearly states that the same twelve disciples who followed the living Jesus continued to preach about him after his death. He only knows a written gospel that has a virgin birth but no betraying Judas.
I've just referred to what happens if you try to extract answers from an author on a question which he is not addressing. This is another example. He wasn't interested in telling the emperor about Judas, so skips over it.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 12-18-2005, 02:11 PM   #158
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Pearse
I've just referred to what happens if you try to extract answers from an author on a question which he is not addressing. This is another example. He wasn't interested in telling the emperor about Judas, so skips over it.
No, this is an example of a strained apologetic attempt at harmonization.

What I provided is simply a description of what the text gives us. The author clearly states that the same group of twelve (ie "these twelve disciples") who followed Jesus preached the gospel after his death.
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Old 12-18-2005, 03:22 PM   #159
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Amaleq13
Unfortunately, his summary doesn't really match any of the four included in the Bible. Specifically, he appears entirely ignorant of any story about one of the disciples betraying Jesus since he pretty clearly states that the same twelve disciples who followed the living Jesus continued to preach about him after his death. He only knows a written gospel that has a virgin birth but no betraying Judas.
What if Aristides is before the other Gospels?
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Old 12-20-2005, 01:30 PM   #160
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Amaleq13
No, this is an example of a strained apologetic attempt at harmonization.

What I provided is simply a description of what the text gives us. The author clearly states that the same group of twelve (ie "these twelve disciples") who followed Jesus preached the gospel after his death.
It's very difficult to see how Aristides could have known about the tradition of the Virgin birth, while not knowing about Judas.

If we assume that Aristides is deliberately avoiding saying 'the twelve went out and preached (except for the one who went bad betrayed his master and killed himself)' then this might point to an embarassment with the story of Judas. If so this might be relevant as to whether or not earlier writers such as Clement of Rome, who also don't mention Judas' betrayal, did or did not know of this tradition.

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