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Old 08-14-2007, 09:05 AM   #11
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I can't find a problem for Christianity/Christians here. I suppose that if the lineage problem had been pointed out to me when I was a Christian, I would have said, "Who cares if Jesus fulfills the criteria for the Messiah of the Jews? He's my Saviour, regardless of his human ancestors."
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Old 08-14-2007, 09:09 AM   #12
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Good morning, Earl.

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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post
The fallback descent-through-Mary position is taken only by Christian commentators who clearly subscribe to an historical Jesus, beginning with Ignatius. Paul never tries to qualify any “kata sarka” status of Jesus, from David or anyone else, by such a device.
I'd suggest that this position was taken, instead, by those with the descent-from-David axe to grind. More specifically, it could have been taken as a reaction to those who questioned Jesus's bona fides as the seed of David. To me, this makes sense if we're talking about a situation involving an audience consisting of an appreciable proportion of Jews (or God-Fearers) and some decades removed from Jesus's death. I'm not sure I'd have expected the issue to be especially problematic for Paul, who presumably preached relatively soon after Jesus's death, to a largely Gentilic audience who may have been inclined - for the time being - to accept Paul's simple assertion of Davidic descent.

(snip)

Is it possible that Matthew and Luke were doing the best they could with a very difficult task - that being to (a) on the one hand, establish Jesus as descended from David, as apparently required by the "prophetic" texts (wouldn't it be ironic if Jesus really was descended from David), thus cementing his status as standing in the tradition of Jewish heroes, and (b) establish his origin as no less auspicious as those of pagan gods (or Roman emperors)? If so, is it then possible that later ancient Christian figures were more-or-less trapped by Matthew's and Luke's unfortunate efforts to merge mutually exclusive concepts?

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I guess my ultimate point is that if a group of people were able to accept such a situation involving so much irrationality and contradiction, simply because it was seen as necessary dogma, I think we should have no trouble believing that any sort of irrational and contradictory dogma could be accepted by them. And that includes that an entirely spiritual being could be “of David’s seed” simply because it was a necessary dogma, since scripture said so (and helped along by the general mythology of the day); that normal understanding of words and phrases could go by the boards, even when those same words and phrases in other contexts by the same writers could be applied and understood in their “normal” ways.
As you state it, I think the point is a good one. What I find missing, though, is an accounting for the fact that this entire set of details (Davidic descent, genealogy, virgin birth) seems not to have been assembled in the beginning (e.g., in the times of Paul and even Mark), but could have instead evolved - over time and in different directions, depending partly on location - to what we see in Matthew and Luke. I think early Christians didn't have to eat the entire elephant at once, only a spoonful at a time.

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If Matthew and Luke and Ignatius and Irenaeus could live with a faith that entailed so much illogical daftness and sophistry, we should have no trouble accepting that Paul could have believed that his spiritual Christ was “of the seed of David” simply because he found it in scripture and “knew” it had to be true.
It appears you're arguing that, if Person A could believe X, then Person B could believe Y. In this case, I think it's a valid argument, but only because it's a very broad argument. I don't think it's very helpful in terms of establishing that Person B (Paul) actually does believe Y (spiritual Christ). It seems the argument is along the lines of, "If Billy Bob can believe in Bigfoot, then his neighbor Jim Bob can believe in UFO abductions." True, perhaps, but it doesn't mean Jim Bob believes in UFO abductions.

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If Ben or anyone else insists on rejecting that meaning in Romans 1:3 allegedly because it would go against Paul’s logic or understanding of natural meaning, then we must insist on the same for Matthew and Luke and Ignatius and Irenaeus: they could not possibly have believed in both the descent from David and the virgin birth, since this must have gone against their capacity for logic and understanding of natural meaning.
I think the poor ancient Christians found this entire topic to be an albatross around their collective neck, or else they wouldn't have done quite so much handwaving. And if they themselves weren't convinced by the handwaving, they were advised to simply convince themselves of their own insufficient understanding.

Cheers,

V.
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Old 08-14-2007, 09:37 AM   #13
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The Chili digression has been split off here
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Old 08-14-2007, 10:09 AM   #14
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Why is Jesus' descent at all relevant? I don't think we have any reliable information concerning his descent, nor should we care.
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Old 08-14-2007, 10:12 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
How far does his [Doherty's] point rest on how "seed of David" and "in the flesh" was perceived by the early Christians? Is it worth finding other examples of those expressions, or is it enough to point out that Christians could accept irrationality and contradiction?
Unless I misunderstood the OP, I don't think it "rests" on it. Rather, it tries to give an explanation for it.

Ben, in the original thread, posited that we should read "born from a woman" in a natural way, meaning a simple straightforward birth from a human woman. Earl has now shown (assuming for a moment he is right) that, in the early Christian community, there is a contradiction regarding Jesus' lineage (of which "born of a woman" is part): the virgin birth and descent from David do no fit together.

If the community of the time could manage to take such a contradiction in its stride, then that takes away from the argument that the reading of "born from a woman" necessarily has to be a "natural" one: apparently the community did have no problems holding one "unnatural" view (virgin birth + Davidian descent) regarding Jesus' lineage, so why should we then have to assume that all their other views regarding the lineage, specifically the "born from a woman" bit, are "natural"?

Gerard Stafleu
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Old 08-14-2007, 10:14 AM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
But I'm going to go out on a limb (since I have not researched this particular point) and guess that no Christian commentator in any century ever makes a point of declaring Mary is of the tribe of Judah, which would bring her closer to possible descent from David.
When I’m wrong, or overlook something, I don’t mind as much when I’m the one to discover and point it out. Justin does indeed openly state that Mary was of the tribe of Judah, or at least “of the family of David, and Jacob, and Isaac, and Abraham.” (Trypho 100).

The ANF (I, p.249) offers this happy footnote to the verse: “Note this testimony to Mary’s descent from David.” I doubt very much that this is any kind of “testimony”. More likely it is Justin making up something to serve his purposes, or perhaps he borrowed from some previous innovator.

But considering that royal lineage was not traced through the mother, especially in Judaism, we can consider that Justin is just talking through his hat. (And apologists like the translator in the ANF have bought it.)

I’m still undecided as to what Luke may have intended about his implied lineage of Jesus through Mary. He had to imply it, because it’s the only reasonable alternative when he breaks the chain between Joseph and Jesus. Or…did Luke actually do that? I believe Price notes that some obscure manuscript has wording which directly has Jesus the son of Joseph. Logically, this would tend to be the original, as surely no scribe would change it in this direction after the virgin birth idea was established.

Perhaps Luke simply made Mary “kinswoman” to Elizabeth because he wanted to make Jesus and John related. But why specify that Zechariah and Elizabeth were both of the tribe of Aaron, make Mary their “kin,” but not specify that she was of a different tribe, since a natural association to make from this (as I have) is that Mary was of the same lineage?

Since Luke has made up the entire first chapter based on midrash, and since the parents of John (as far as I know) never surface anywhere else, it’s a good possibility that, writing a century later, he has simply made up everything, including the character and lineage of John’s parents, maybe even their names. Who knows? (We certainly can’t trust the Prologue, which with its claims of carefully researching history is immediately followed by this fanciful chapter 1 which is entirely derived from midrash on the Old Testament and contains not an identifiable scrap of tradition or history.)

The bottom line still remains. If early Christian commentators like Ignatius and Justin thought of both descent from David and the virgin birth as “true”, then they are thinking irrationally (or not thinking at all), because the two items cannot be rationally resolved. Except, of course, if one or the other is figurative/metaphorical/mystical, etc. Definitely by the time of Justin, however, I would opt for the former.

And in regard to “V”s comments (thanks). Of course, I was only making the basic point that if a group can be shown to accept illogical, contradictory positions in one area, they can do so in any number of areas of their doctrine. It then becomes invalid to argue, as Ben has done, that Paul couldn’t have meant such-and-such by a certain statement on the grounds that it would contravene what he sees (and we all agree) are rational and accepted standards in understanding what could possibly be meant by that statement. The details of the comparison are irrelevant, the principle still stands.

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Old 08-14-2007, 10:19 AM   #17
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There is one thing to note, though: this contradiction only manifests itself in a community that holds both the views of Davidian descent and virgin birth. The epistle writers, however--and I'm sure this has been remarked on before--don't seem to mention the virgin birth, so the contradiction does not exist for them.

The contradiction only appears in the Gospel community, and while this does show that people of that general time did not have a problem with accepting such a contradiction, it does diminish the impact of the argument on the epistle writers, specifically Paul.

Gerard Stafleu
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Old 08-14-2007, 10:54 AM   #18
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Is this also about the soul spirit distinction I am trying to elucidate? Jesus is "strange" because his father is a spirit and he did not have a soul because he was not conceived in sin as all souls are. I know this sounds chiliesque but think about how theology has developed here - the sinlessness of Mary is the only logical direction the church can take about this!

The gospels are stating Jesus is not an ordinary human!
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Old 08-14-2007, 11:07 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gstafleu View Post
There is one thing to note, though: this contradiction only manifests itself in a community that holds both the views of Davidian descent and virgin birth. The epistle writers, however--and I'm sure this has been remarked on before--don't seem to mention the virgin birth, so the contradiction does not exist for them.

The contradiction only appears in the Gospel community, and while this does show that people of that general time did not have a problem with accepting such a contradiction, it does diminish the impact of the argument on the epistle writers, specifically Paul.

Gerard Stafleu
I wish I had put it so succinctly. I think Earl's main point is valid, but at its strongest, it's not particularly strong. His analogy, furthermore, doesn't strengthen the point because of differences such as you have pointed out, and that I tried to point out.

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Old 08-14-2007, 11:29 AM   #20
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Originally Posted by judge View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post

Matthew and Luke seem reluctant to commit themselves. Both go to huge trouble to trace Jesus back to David (Luke beyond), but then disingenuously break the chain between Joseph and Jesus without actually stating that Jesus’ lineage is through Mary.
If we read the most ancient semitic version of Matthew there is an alternate reading which indicates that Jesus lineage is through Mary.
The alternate reading being that Matthew 1:16 should read Joseph the husband of Mary.
Every time another version of the genealogy of Jesus is introduced, it only makes matters worse. Multiple versions of an event do not correlate to reliability, credibilty and actuality.
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