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Old 03-16-2011, 11:17 AM   #21
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I don't know about other forum participants, but so far as I'm aware, there is zero evidence for anything like that. In general, even the most hard-core inerrantist fundamentalists don't believe that the gospels existed during Paul's lifetime.
For what it's worth, some quote 1 Tim 5:18 (" ... the worker deserves his wages") as evidence that Paul had a copy of Luke and attributed scriptural status to this gospel. And yes, but of course, Paul wrote the Pastorals (or so the argument goes).

Cheers,

V.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:01 PM   #22
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This doesn't go to answering my question. Evidence of what exactly? If you can't answer the question with any directness, you aren't putting forward evidence, but data.
I am a generous man, let us call it data

Data presented by the OP for discussion
The thing about evidence is that it has that rare quality known as "relevance". Data just may as well be the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:09 PM   #23
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This text is obviously related to the four gospels of the new testament, not to some prophesy in the ancient Jewish texts. Certainly there were no references in the ancient scriptures to Cephas, or "the twelve". Prophecy is generally expressed using future tense, do these verbs not all employ past tense, instead? Paul is describing something that actually happened, not something simply predicted to happen at some distant future time.

My claim, perhaps utterly without foundation, is that the author of Paul's epistle 1 Corinthians 15:3 and 4, was thinking about the four gospels, not the ancient texts, when he set quill to papyrus, and wrote: "according to the scriptures". In other words, I hypothesize that this author, "Paul" sought to equate the four gospels with the ancient Jewish texts, raising the stature of MML&J to the same lofty position held by "the Bible". According to this interpretation, "Irenaeus" has merely confirmed "Paul's" intent, i.e. "Paul" and "Irenaeus" could well be one and the same person.

I therefore dispute the notion that Paul is simply relating the Passion narrative to an earlier prediction.

avi
Hi Avi,

I think you'll find the majority opinion squarely on Stephan's and Doug's side. For Paul, the "scripture" was basically the HB (LXX). The texts that came to be known as the gospels apparently were not in anything approaching final form for another 15 years at the least. That Paul considered Jesus's suffering and resurrection to have been foretold by the scriptures as he knew them was an idea that seems to have been in circulation fairly early; this idea seems to have predated the gospels, which developed the idea even more. In other words, Paul couldn't have been thinking of the gospels here, unless one adopts J.A.T. Robinson's ideas about the gospels' dates. Rather, the earliest Christians interpreted Jesus's death and resurrection as the fulfillment of HB passages they took as prophetic, and this interpretation happened at a relatively early date. The gospels are evidence of popularity of this interpretation (the one Paul expresses), and not the other way around. At least, I think so.

Cheers,

V.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:11 PM   #24
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Another good reason not to read Paul through the post hoc lens of the Marcionites. The former doesn't represent the views of the latter.
There is no one who seriously doubts that Marcion developed the first interpretation of Pauline material. I happen to think that Marcion WAS 'Paul' but that is a side issue.
Then does this...
Paul is saying that he explained to his followers that the Passion narrative was predicted in the Jewish writings... The Marcionites definitely held this was not the case...
...mean that Marcion might be disagreeing with himself?

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It is very dangerous to dismiss things we don't fully understand in order to make way for the familiar (and thereby dismiss Christianity).
The corollary is that it's dangerous to insinuate things we can't fully show the relevance for in order to make something more familiar.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:23 PM   #25
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...mean that Marcion might be disagreeing with himself?
No it only means that 'Paul' (not even a real name of the man in the Catholic tradition but an appelation applied after conversion for reasons unclear in Acts) and his story as developed in Catholic sources was false. So the Marcionite rejection of Acts and the Marcionite rejection of 'Paul' (cf. Irenaeus Against Heresies 3.15,16; Tertullian Against Marcion 5.1; Adamantius Dialogues 1 all from memory but the citations are in the 'environs' cited here).

We can't just continue to assume that all of our inherited Catholic tradition about 'Paul' and the 'Pauline tradition' is sancrosact. It was developed to refute the original Marcionite attachment to the apostle and their authority over the proper interpretation of literary corpus.

In short, 'Paul' was created out of Mark's rib to allow for a new interpretation of his gospel. Remember the Marcionites viewed the Pauline epistles as commentaries of sorts on the gospel which was his original composition (i.e. 'my gospel' according to my gospel etc).

It would have been impossible to create the Catholic tradition and continue to allow for the original Marcionite paradigm. There had to be a way of proving the Marcionites wrong and so distance between 'Paul' and 'Marcion' was invented.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:27 PM   #26
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For what it is worth I have always suspected that Paulos is a development of an original understanding of the apostle as the 'tamym po'olo' (Samaritan pronunciation) of Deut 32:4. In other words, the apostle is Jesus 'new creation' as interpreted in Marqe's Mimar Book 4 chapter 2. I assume the Samaritan apostle is one and the same as the Christian apostle. Again only stating this as a sidebar. Not essential to the conversation.

It is common in the Samaritan Targum to substitute Aram. maroq for tamym. I think a faux etymology of the name Mark (marqe) from maroq was known to the Samaritans.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:27 PM   #27
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When did tas grafas become associated with "the four gospels"?
Sometime in the late second century, at the earliest.

We cannot tell which one in particular, but when he referred to "scriptures," he was talking about some of the books that Christians a long time later called the Old Testament.

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Is there sufficient evidence within Paul's epistles, to convince forum participants that Paul possessed access to, and had read, the four gospels?
I don't know about other forum participants, but so far as I'm aware, there is zero evidence for anything like that. In general, even the most hard-core inerrantist fundamentalists don't believe that the gospels existed during Paul's lifetime.
Good Afternoon, Doug.

Thanks for your comment. Always welcome.
Umm, I guess I cannot quite fathom your idea here.

You indicate clearly, an opinion that Paul had little or no knowledge of the four gospels, yet, you have not commented on the complete passage:
1 Corinthians 15: 1-6, which, for me, at least, is convincing evidence that Paul did know of the gospel stories. How else can one interpret the words, "Cephas", and "the twelve"? Do you mean to write, here, Doug, that the ancient Jewish prophecies referenced twelve disciples, one of whom had been named "Cephas"?

When Paul writes "according to the scriptures", as he does in 1 Corinthians 15: 3 & 4, then, he has persuaded me, at least, that he intends the reader to consider the four gospels on a plane equivalent to the ancient Hebrew texts, i.e. our "old testament".

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Originally Posted by spin
One normally uses the nominative form, ie αι γραφαι (ai grafai), rather than the accusative.
apologies, my error.

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Originally Posted by Iskander
The catholic interpretation is as good as any other interpretation.
Hmm.
Is that what you posted here?

My questions remain unanswered.
When did ai grafai first refer to the four gospels?

(I acknowledge that most folks consider these two greek words to represent the ancient Jewish writings, i.e. "scriptures", and NOT the four gospels.)

(I anticipate encountering one of the cute icons from spin, showing me beating the poor dead horse...) what can you do, eh?

So, whether Catholic, or any other tradition, I am asking about the "correct" interpretation of 1Corinthians 15: 1-6.

I don't agree that these sentences intend to communicate that Paul was telling the folks in Corinth about the passover story, in terms of the old testament texts. I am looking for someone to explain WHY this passage should not be interpreted as referring, convincingly, to the four gospels?

In particular, how does one explain "Cephas" and "the twelve" if one imagines that this letter to the folks in Corinth refers only to ancient Jewish scriptures, and NOT to the four gospels?

avi
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:35 PM   #28
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If we're to trust Bart Ehrman it's simply a copyist error. We don't have any original gospels left. The oldest we have is Mark. Over time it, or another it evolved from, got changed meanings. Eventually four of them took distinct shapes and their own traditions. So it was never really a point where it became four gospels. All in all, if you count difference as it's own gospel, there are many more than just four. The limit to how different a gospel needs to be to count as a separate gospel is entirely arbitrary.

At one point the bishop of Alexandria (Athanasius I think it was) decided to list a number of books that were considered canon. His priest were asking him which books to buy. At this point the Bible wasn't compiled. He simply did an inventory of which books his churches had, and to avoid wasting money of throwing books away he tried to include the books the churches already had.

Much later, at the council of Nicea when they were deciding which books to include there were economic reasons to use the Egyptian compilation, since Egypt was the largest diocese with the most Bibles already owned. It was simply practical to adopt the Egyptian Bible as is. And that's the Bible we now have as the Vulgate Bible. So it was mostly a bottom up, partly random and a highly pragmatic compilation. The official story is a lot more complicated than this. But I think my summary is more accurate. There was a lot of random involved.

Bottom line, there's no logical reason it couldn't have been fewer or more gospels. This is just how it ended up for no good theological reason at all.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:41 PM   #29
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For what it is worth I have always suspected that Paulos is a development of an original understanding of the apostle as the 'tamym po'olo' (Samaritan pronunciation) of Deut 32:4. In other words, the apostle is Jesus 'new creation' as interpreted in Marqe's Mimar Book 4 chapter 2. I assume the Samaritan apostle is one and the same as the Christian apostle. Again only stating this as a sidebar. Not essential to the conversation.

It is common in the Samaritan Targum to substitute Aram. maroq for tamym. I think a faux etymology of the name Mark (marqe) from maroq was known to the Samaritans.
I really loath theoretical etymologies for individual personal names. They are generally unfalsifiable, making them of only of entertainment value.
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Old 03-16-2011, 12:44 PM   #30
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...mean that Marcion might be disagreeing with himself?
No it only means that 'Paul' (not even a real name of the man in the Catholic tradition but an appelation applied after conversion for reasons unclear in Acts) and his story as developed in Catholic sources was false. So the Marcionite rejection of Acts and the Marcionite rejection of 'Paul' (cf. Irenaeus Against Heresies 3.15,16; Tertullian Against Marcion 5.1; Adamantius Dialogues 1 all from memory but the citations are in the 'environs' cited here).

We can't just continue to assume that all of our inherited Catholic tradition about 'Paul' and the 'Pauline tradition' is sancrosact. It was developed to refute the original Marcionite attachment to the apostle and their authority over the proper interpretation of literary corpus.

In short, 'Paul' was created out of Mark's rib to allow for a new interpretation of his gospel. Remember the Marcionites viewed the Pauline epistles as commentaries of sorts on the gospel which was his original composition (i.e. 'my gospel' according to my gospel etc).

It would have been impossible to create the Catholic tradition and continue to allow for the original Marcionite paradigm. There had to be a way of proving the Marcionites wrong and so distance between 'Paul' and 'Marcion' was invented.
Your story doesn't match my story. But I probably understand your presuppositions better than I do mine, so I don't know where I stand.
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