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Old 08-22-2008, 08:05 PM   #1011
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It was translated into the Greek language so Jews that were Hellenized could read it, not so Greeks could read it.
This belief is held by some because Eusebius tells us that Papias made that claim about a Gospel connected to Matthew but most experts do not find this claim supported by the actual text. It appears to them to have been originally written in Greek.
'It' refers to the Septuagint which was only written in Greek.
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Old 08-22-2008, 08:07 PM   #1012
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ok, Luke then...

the women saw two Angels that looked like men...
(Luke 24:4) While they were perplexed about this, suddenly two men stood beside them in dazzling attire.
the women reported the story and clarified that they were Angels..

(Luke 24:23) and when they did not find his body, they came back and said they had seen a vision of angels, who said he was alive.
That is exactly what you asked for. A case where Luke saying man is referring to an Angel.

Also, Acts 12:15 Peter, a man mistaken for an angel.

Matthew described the Angels more specifically because he was writing to a Jewish audience where his "appearance like lightning, clothes white as snow" were allusions to verses like Ezek 1:13 and Dan 10:6.

Mark and Luke did not write to Jews and their readers were not going to draw from the same knowledge of these descriptions.

The OT references are relevant because that is where knowledge of Angels begins. Mark and Luke are consistent with the Old Testament because Angels, when they appear, appear as men (Gen 18:2, 19:1, Judg 13:6, as examples).


~Steve
Look, you can't support the verses under discussion with themselves! I obviously meant some other verses than the very ones we are discussing! Grr! Additionally, I must remind you of what you yourself wrote in post #971: "Angel means messenger. A messenger can be a man." It is not at all clear that the women in Luke 24:23 think they have seen an actual angel. They report having had a vision of a messenger. I'm sure you'll agree that God can use normal humans as messengers. We have no reason to think that these messengers were anything more.

Acts 12:15 doesn't work for you. When Peter knocks on the door, some superstitious men inside thinks it must be "the angel of Peter" knocking. It would seem they are afraid there is some kind of spectre or ghost outside, trying to get in. Peter is obviously not an angel, but the men mistakenly thinks it is some kind of supernatural being. Therefore they use the word ἄγγελος (angelos) but not even in the meaning of an "angel from God"! What you need is an example of an actual heavenly angel being referred to as "man" or "young man" (with or without white/dazzling robe). Preferably in Mark or Luke/Acts, and not these verses we are discussing! Best would be Mark, since he is most at odds with your harmonization attempt.

Once again you make this claim: "Mark and Luke did not write to Jews and their readers were not going to draw from the same knowledge of these descriptions." Yet, I have shown you before many verses where Mark simply uses ἄγγελος (or variations thereof). It would seem, then, that his readers do know what an angel is, or at least Mark assumes they do. Would you like some examples of the same from Luke? I can give you many, if you like.

The idioms of Hebrew and Greek are not the same. Therefore it is not very convincing when you show that an expression in Hebrew denotes some specific thing, when we are discussing how that something is expressed in greek. Granted; angels can take on the appearance of mortal men, but remember: according to Matthew, the angel had the "appearance of lightning." Did he write that just because Ezekiel and Daniel wrote something similar, or because that's what it actually looked like?

Finally, I would really appreciate it if you could answer my question from the previous post:

Quote:
Let us for the sake of the argument suppose that you have seen an angel whose appearance was like lightning. How would you justify telling people that you saw a young man? Can you think of any way it would not be a lie?
I just shopwed you that in Luke 24:4, he referred to men and then twenty verses later made it quite clear that those men were Angels. I know you realize that.

Here is the answer to your question. Angels are Spirits and you cannot see them. Men are a form that they apparently take for the sake of performing some task chosen by God. In the case in question, they took on the form of men with very dazzingly white robes. No lie, I beleive this to be true.

~Steve
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Old 08-22-2008, 08:29 PM   #1013
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If I find a book with pop-ups and very colorful, in English about the US Presidents, can I form a hypothesis about to whom and when it was written?
Well, if that is the case, if all the oldest ancient versions of the NT are found in languages that do not include any Hebrew language, can I form an hypothesis about to whom and when it was written?




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It was translated into the Greek language so Jews that were Hellenized could read it, not so Greeks could read it.

~Steve

Again, this is just speculation. Can you provide credible information that gMatthew was translated to Greek from some other language.
You are confusing language with audience. I did not say Matthew wrote in hebrew. I said he wrote to Hebrews. He wrote it in Greek. The language is not what makes it obvious that it was written to Jews.

This is the same reason the Septuagint was translated. Jews reading Greek. Are you with me now?
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Old 08-22-2008, 08:59 PM   #1014
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'It' refers to the Septuagint which was only written in Greek.
:thumbs:
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Old 08-22-2008, 09:08 PM   #1015
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Again, of that earthquake and the zombies there is just one account. Events of that magnitude could and should have been mentioned by several of them. Matthew is not even supported by his fellow evangelists, let alone by neutral or indifferent observers like Josephus, Pliny, Philo, or Tacitus. Hostile or unreliable accounts could have mentioned it for their own purposes or to support their own whacky theories. There is nothing.
Again, we have one reliable account. That is all that is necessary to establish it as fact.
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Old 08-22-2008, 10:07 PM   #1016
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You are confusing language with audience. I did not say Matthew wrote in hebrew. I said he wrote to Hebrews. He wrote it in Greek. The language is not what makes it obvious that it was written to Jews.
You are contradicting yourself. Earlier, you implied that language was relevant to audience, now you have flip-flopped. You appear to be making stuff up.

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
If I find a book with pop-ups and very colorful, in ENGLISH about US Presidents, can I form a hypothesis about to whom and when it was written?
And
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
It [gMatthew] was translated into the Greek so Jews that were Hellenized could read it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
This is the same reason the Septuagint was translated. Jews reading Greek. Are you with me now?

Again, mis-leading information. The Septuagint was not written for Hellenized Jews, that is not the reason.
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Old 08-23-2008, 04:46 AM   #1017
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Again, of that earthquake and the zombies there is just one account. Events of that magnitude could and should have been mentioned by several of them. Matthew is not even supported by his fellow evangelists, let alone by neutral or indifferent observers like Josephus, Pliny, Philo, or Tacitus. Hostile or unreliable accounts could have mentioned it for their own purposes or to support their own whacky theories. There is nothing.
Again, we have one reliable account. That is all that is necessary to establish it as fact.
:rolling::rolling:
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Old 08-23-2008, 06:05 AM   #1018
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You are confusing language with audience. I did not say Matthew wrote in hebrew. I said he wrote to Hebrews. He wrote it in Greek. The language is not what makes it obvious that it was written to Jews.
You are contradicting yourself. Earlier, you implied that language was relevant to audience, now you have flip-flopped. You appear to be making stuff up.



And

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
This is the same reason the Septuagint was translated. Jews reading Greek. Are you with me now?

Again, mis-leading information. The Septuagint was not written for Hellenized Jews, that is not the reason.

I think I see the problem. If you read the Bible like you read my posts, then it is no wonder you do not undestand it. You have no pupose in this but obfuscation. I am coming to the conclusion it is intentional.
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Old 08-23-2008, 06:08 AM   #1019
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Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
You are confusing language with audience. I did not say Matthew wrote in hebrew. I said he wrote to Hebrews. He wrote it in Greek. The language is not what makes it obvious that it was written to Jews.
You are contradicting yourself. Earlier, you implied that language was relevant to audience, now you have flip-flopped. You appear to be making stuff up.



And

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
This is the same reason the Septuagint was translated. Jews reading Greek. Are you with me now?

Again, mis-leading information. The Septuagint was not written for Hellenized Jews, that is not the reason.
Also, I would appreciate that when quoting me, you do not add to the quote. You have made it appear that I added [gMatthew] defining the it. It is obvious from my original post that I was referring to the Septuagint. Please do not attribute to me by adding quotes and then alter the quote. That is COMPLETELY INAPPROPRIATE.

~Steve
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Old 08-23-2008, 06:45 AM   #1020
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Also, I would appreciate that when quoting me, you do not add to the quote. You have made it appear that I added [gMatthew] defining the it. It is obvious from my original post that I was referring to the Septuagint. Please do not attribute to me by adding quotes and then alter the quote. That is COMPLETELY INAPPROPRIATE.

~Steve
I was responding to your posts about gMatthew.

This is what you posted on gMatthew.

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
Matthew described the angels more specifically because he was writing to a Jewish audience.........
And
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
.... I did not say Matthew wrote in hebrew. I said he wrote to Hebrews. He wrote it in Greek...
You seem to be confused and cannot remember what you have posted, or maybe you don't want to.
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