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View Poll Results: What is the literary relationship between Matthew and Luke?
Matthew used Luke. 2 5.56%
Luke used a primitive Matthew; an Ur-Matthew, if you will. 3 8.33%
Luke used a text of Matthew roughly equivalent to our modern Matthew. 12 33.33%
Matthew and Luke developed their gospels indepently of each other (but drew much material from Q) 19 52.78%
Voters: 36. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old 03-19-2007, 11:48 AM   #21
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Luke was the first circulating written Gospel, as can be inferred by the introduction. And the early dating is confirmed by his addressing the High Priest Theophilus.
I'm curious what you mean that we can "infer from the introduction" that Luke wrote first. Most people would see his comment that "many have taken in hand to set in order a narrative of those things which have been fulfilled among us" as evidence of the opposite. As for "Theophilus," there is insufficient reason to identify him with any individual historical person. Unless of course you have in mind some evidence and/or argument(s) that I do not.
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Old 03-19-2007, 12:20 PM   #22
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Think about it. You've just thrown your whole case.

If Luke is really a (much later) edition of Marcion's Gospel (150 A.D.), then Luke couldn't have copied Matthew, but somehow Marcion magically duplicated 90% of the material in Matthew, or the final editor of Luke did.
I've never said Luke copied Matthew. But you never thought of that. Your train is on the track and the disaster is waiting to happen.

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But that is the most ludicrous scenario of all.

Are you even serious?
You're into projection and self-irony, I see.

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Luke may suffer from a few variants, but nothing like your proposal shows up in any manuscript evidence of any period or place.
You have no position from which to make relative or absolute chronologies, so why don't you try to say something you can talk about?


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Old 03-19-2007, 12:49 PM   #23
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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
you've missed the point again.

The fact that Luke 'leaves out' Mk 6:45-8:26 is strong evidence both that,

(1) This section was added to Greek Mark much later.

(2) and Luke copied Mark before it was inserted,

(3) while Matthew copies the section straight through (with expansions and adlibs),

(4) Making Luke earlier than Matthew, and

(5) making Luke a better witness to the original text of Mark (Ur-Mark).

This has been commonly noted since Streeter (The Four Gospels (or via: amazon.co.uk), 1930)

Removing the obvious interpolation (recording two different versions of the feeding of the 5000/4000), an attempt to preserve an alternate version of Mark's story, Luke reproduces virtually the whole of Mark.

JW:
Hmmm, lemme see if I understand what you are saying. Greek "Luke" and not the original Aramaic "Luke" left out 6:45-8:26 of Greek "Mark" (not Aramaic "Mark") because this was added to Greek "Mark" after it had been copied by Greek "Luke" even though Greek "Matthew" and not Aramaic "Matthew" copied but did not copy 6:45-8:26 of Greek "Mark" after it was added to Greek "Mark" which proves that Aramaic "Luke" was written before Aramaic "Matthew" and makes "Luke" a better witness to the original unoriginal "Mark" because it removes a part of "Mark" which allows a reproduction of all of "Mark" because this is the simplest explanation?



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Old 03-19-2007, 01:11 PM   #24
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You have no position from which to make relative or absolute chronologies, so why don't you try to say something you can talk about?
Lets see if that's true.

Most textual critics of all stripes make some basic conclusions about the relative age of various strata or layers of tradition within the gospels.

For instance,

(1) passages that clearly deal with conflicts with Jewish authorities are assigned a certain date,

(2) and passages that deal with concerns reflecting the historical position of the early church belong to a different period.

(3) Passages that reflect advanced doctrines or viewpoints involving mature reflection on theology or the meaning assigned to historical events also have their own basic order of precedence.

(4) Finally, passages that reflect historical events known to have occurred later are also assigned a different strata.

(5) The earliest passages are usually assigned based upon plausiblility. For instance, Jesus as an observant Jew or Rabbi would teach one thing, whereas his later Gentile church followers would hold other doctrines.

So generally speaking, although these ideas aren't 'proofs', they are reasonable conclusions based upon plausible historical assumptions, and are accepted by most historians and critics.

To say we have "no position from which to make relative or absolute chronologies" then is a falsehood which paralizes all possible advance from a historical/critical viewpoint.

But your extreme position is in fact false. We do have reasonable probabilities to guide us as to relative age for various types and strata of gospel content.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

When we apply these reasonable and basic guidelines to the remarkable differences in content between Luke and Matthew, we note as before the following.

Using the standard and very useful general rule or guideline, "Prefer the harder reading" as original, we would say the Social Gospel, which poses clear personal difficulties for middle-class and wealthy Jews and gentile converts will be likely toned down by subsequent editors and expounders or apologists.

And this is what Matthew shows: a tendency to downplay or delete the social gospel. The alternate possibility, that it was added later, makes Jesus' social gospel non-existant. If that were true, and the social gospel was only added later in say the 2nd century as you propose, this would mean Christianity is almost entirely foreign to the early Rabbinical Judaism of Jesus. But the compassionate and merciful content of Jesus' teaching is acknowledged everywhere.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Again, when we take the very extreme changes concerning Roman Law and order in hand, it is quite reasonable and expected that a Jesus who was ambiguous about taxes and advised His followers to arm themselves, and made dark, suggestive 'parables' about demons named 'Legion" being excorcised and transferred to pigs and drowned into the sea, the evidence is all in one direction:

(1) Matthew carefully removed the reference to 'Legion' from the veiled story of the demons being thrown off the cliff. (Compare Mark 5:1-20/Luke 8:26-39 with Matthew 8:27-31) Given that the evidence tilts toward Mark being primary and in either scenario Luke and Matthew used Mark as a source, then Matthew is the more secondary and developed text.

Matthew has been edited to clean up the dark Zealot-inspired story of the 'Legion'.

(2) Next we look at Jesus advice to his disciples to "buy a sword" because they will no longer be safe. (Luke 22:35). Again, some monkey-business occurs with the sword reference, and now Jesus is a pacifist. "two swords are enough" to fulfill all prophecy requirements (which have no O.T. reference!).

What happened here? The probability is that again Matthew continues to tone down incriminating and dangerous elements of early Christian tradition, and this only serves to make the new religious movement appear more benign to investigators examining their new scriptural texts, which are publicly read and spied upon.

(3) Finally, the ambiguous (and standing alone, sinister) doctrinal instruction concerning taxes (Mark 12:13-17/Luke 20:20) is again toned down and reinterpreted safely for both Roman authorities and Temple hierarchy (favouring the Jewish temple tax even more! Matthew 17:24-26)

Note especially, that Peter is involved in the paying of the tax to the Temple authority. Here is clearly an appeal to the later primacy of Peter, as special authority, and again the veiled reference to a 'fish' ("from now on you will become fishers of men"!) who coughs up the tax money for the Jewish disciples.

Aside from the obviously contrived nature of the story, it speaks strongly of an early arrangement between the Jewish christians and the Temple authorities, long after the crucifixion.

Again Matthew comes out last, the most developed and modified version of the gospel, with its edits all having a simple, easily understandable common purpose:

To appear benign to the Romans and appear 'Jewish friendly' to the Jerusalem authorities.

Any attempt to interpret the edits in a reverse direction poses great difficulties in what Luke's purpose (as the later redactor) could have been.
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Old 03-19-2007, 01:16 PM   #25
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Originally Posted by JoeWallack View Post
JW:
Hmmm, lemme see if I understand what you are saying. Greek "Luke" and not the original Aramaic "Luke" left out 6:45-8:26 of Greek "Mark" (not Aramaic "Mark") because this was added to Greek "Mark" after it had been copied by Greek "Luke" even though Greek "Matthew" and not Aramaic "Matthew" copied but did not copy 6:45-8:26 of Greek "Mark" after it was added to Greek "Mark" which proves that Aramaic "Luke" was written before Aramaic "Matthew" and makes "Luke" a better witness to the original unoriginal "Mark" because it removes a part of "Mark" which allows a reproduction of all of "Mark" because this is the simplest explanation?



Joseph

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Its you who needlessly muddy the waters.

There is no original 'aramaic Matthew', except as a translation into Hebrew of Greek Matthew.

1) Luke used Mark and some other sources.

2) Someone added 6:45-8:26 to Mark.

(note that this section of Mark is suspicious on two counts: The reference to Bethsaida at beginning and end (6:45/8:22)
and the duplication of a standard 'miracle' (feeding of 5000) in another version. Other content seems to indicate a knowledge of the gospel of John, again an anachronism for Mark.)

3) Matthew rearranged Luke, but had access to the new Mark and used the new material

(Mark 6:45-8:26 corresponds to Matthew 14:22-16:12, with Matthew's usual extra bullshit.)
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Old 03-19-2007, 01:24 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
you've missed the point again.
Did you have one there, Nazaroo, or is this grandstanding stuff self-stimulation as it appears?

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
The fact that Luke 'leaves out' Mk 6:45-8:26 is strong evidence both that,

(1) This section was added to Greek Mark much later.

(2) and Luke copied Mark before it was inserted,

(3) while Matthew copies the section straight through (with expansions and adlibs),

(4) Making Luke earlier than Matthew, and

(5) making Luke a better witness to the original text of Mark (Ur-Mark).
Gosh how many assumed conclusions is that??


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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
This has been commonly noted since Streeter (The Four Gospels (or via: amazon.co.uk), 1930)

Removing the obvious interpolation (recording two different versions of the feeding of the 5000/4000), an attempt to preserve an alternate version of Mark's story, Luke reproduces virtually the whole of Mark.
Removing apparent interpolations is what makes Luke secondary amongst a long list of other issues.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
It may be a modern notion, but one familiar to modern readers, and adequate to the task of describing the essential process.
Oh, rubbish. It is not appropriate and it is just your rhetoric that spews such silly ideas. Just think a bit more and cut the crap.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Luke copies Ur-Mark, and Matthew copies and rearranges Luke, as well as incorporating material from the newer (extant) Mark and James.
It's novel at least.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Most people call that plagiarism. It is not anachronistic in the sense of describing the essential act.
Ignorant people may call things they don't know much about by the wrong name, but plagiarism is about intent. Drop it. It's just silly on your part to continue to try and justify it.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Who cares what the original 'authors' thought of doing it? If you prefer just 'copying' then I don't mind using the word 'copying' to describe this obvious act of pilfering.
While you continue to fall over your presuppositions, I guess you can use whatever inappropriate words you like. One of the rules you might like to think about, when you are not plowing on regardless, is that you have to reduce the amount of presuppositions you make, the retrojections you make. These will merely interfere with anything you try to do.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
For example:

Sermon on the Plain (with Social Gospel) --> Sermon on the Mount (woes against rich deleted).
Two separate sources is just as feasible. So is the notion that the woes are a Lucan addition. But there are many more possibilities.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
(The many parallels from all parts of Luke to the new super-Sermon are too many to list, but it is inexplicable that Luke would break to pieces the Sermon on the Mount and scatter the bits, only to completely undermine and drain the force of the original speech, if he had known of it. cf., Luke 8:16,(unhidden lamp & again 11:33, 12:1-3), Parable of the Rich Fool (Luke 12:13f), food and drink (Luke 12:22, cf. Matt. 6:25f), Lord's Prayer (Luke 11:1f etc.)
Have you thought of other possible explanations? Why do you think most people who've looked into it go for one of them?

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Beware Leaven (scribes Lk 12:1f)--------> Woe to scribes (original more plausible speech of Jesus cranked up)
Parable of the Rich Fool (Luke 12:13f) ---> SoM (Matt. 6:24)
Parable of the Fig Tree (Luke 13:6-9) ----> Fig Tree (garbled, Matt. 9:33f, 21:18 threat literalized)
Parable of Salt (Luke 14:34-35) ---------> SoM (Matt. 5:13 directly applied)
Parable of Lost Coin (Luke 15:8f)--------> Hidden Treasure (Matt. 13:44)
Parable of Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11f)----> Two Sons (Matt. 21:28f)
Parable of Unjust Steward (16:1f ) ------> (embarrassing immoral lesson deleted )
Matthew substitutes: Parable of the Bad and Faithful Servants (Matt.24:45f)

Parable of the Tax Collector ------------> deleted.
Story of Zacchaeus Generosity ---------> embarrassing example deleted.
(last trace of social gospel vanishes)
Usually one uses what you call "deletions" as examples where someone has added something.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Law and Prophets, John (16:14f) -------> (ambiguity removed, Law expanded and reinforced cf. SoM. etc.)

Parable of Rich man/Laz. (soc. gosp. 16:19f) ---> Social Gospel turns into Narrow Way, literal hellfire (Matt. 7:13 etc.)
Uh-huh.

I think you're rushing your material.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Days of Noah and Lot (17:20f) -------> Woe to Galilean cities! (not Jerusalem, Matt. 11:20f)

Taxes and Caesar (Luke 20:20f) -------> dangerous ambiguity cleared up with made-up story of Jesus paying taxes (Matt. 17:24f)
Umm, Luke follows Mark.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Parable of Widow's Mite (Luke.21:1f)----> Parable of Foolish Virgins (25:1f -- "get your own supplies!")
The widow's mite is from Mark. The connection between it and the foolish virgins seems to be you trying to hard, as seems to be the case frequently in this rushed list.

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Coming persecutions (Luke 21:12f)------> deleted.
Obviously deleted from the Marcan source, wouldn't you say?

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Fig Tree analogy (Luke 21:29)----------> Lesson of the Fig Tree (Matt.24:32, cf. Matt.9:33, 21:18)
Matt is Mark verbatum.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
"Who is the greatest?" (Luke 21:24f) -----> Embarrassing story deleted, toned down (Matt.20:20f)
Neither of them liked the Marcan original idea, so they changed it.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
"Buy a sword!" (Luke 21:35)------------> Dangerous and incriminating advice deleted.
Sounds like your presuppositions are overburdening to me. Luke adds a sword. Matt doesn't cut off an ear.

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So much for 'Matthew's Deletions and alterations.
It perhaps almost as possible as Luke's additions and alterations.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
All of his 'additions' are later Church and Congregational crap:

Tree and fruit ---Matt. 7:15f
Cost of Discipleship Matt. 8:18 etc. (multiple repetitions)
Son of Man is Lord of Sabbath Matt.12:1f)
Miracles multiplied and exaggerated (14:34 etc.)
Disputes over ceremonial washing expanded (15:1f)
"Jesus" on fasting wholly out of realistic context (17:19)
Dealing with offences (18:6f)

"Who is Greatest?" (stolen from episode in Luke 21:24)
teachings on Divorce and Celebacy (obvious later church accretions 19:3f)
Woe to Scribes and Pharisees leaves out Lawyers (Matt. 23:1 compare Luke 11:37)
Inane parables (Wise and Foolish virgins, sheep and goats, blah blah)
Story of bribed guards (anti-Jewish apologetics/polemics)
You signal differences but don't do any of the work to aid your claims. You assume your conclusions and parading this stuff hasn't been used to support what you apparently want to say.

All I see is an awful attitude to the texts, one with which you have no possibility of understanding or appreciating the material you are trying to analyse. What is all the heat about the writer(s) of Matt? You are so far along the rails with such a blind head of steam that you cannot change your destination if you need to. Less heat and less hype and a little more respect for your materials and you will do a little better.


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Old 03-19-2007, 01:49 PM   #27
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Less heat and less hype and a little more respect for your materials and you will do a little better.

You signal differences but don't do any of the work to aid your claims.
So far all you've done is snipe. At least I offered a plausible interpretation of the evidence, which I presented (not you). You don't even offer any evidence.


Quote:
Luke adds a sword. Matt doesn't cut off an ear.
Again, with the consistant picture I presented, Luke reports a sword saying.
Matthew removes the report about the ear, (the obviously more difficult reading) even though it is independantly reported in other gospels, e.g. John.

The only evidence you offer, is consistent with my interpretation.

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Two separate sources is just as feasible.
Mechanically 'feasible' but hardly plausible. What counts is what probably happened, not what you want to have happened.

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Why do you think most people who've looked into it go for one of them? [the other explanations]
Everyone acknowledges that the last 200 years of investigation into the Synoptic problem has been based upon a "Christian" viewpoint, whether liberal or conservative. Most textual critics of the past have been either Christians of some flavour or other, or at least hangers-ons.

And most scholars too in this field are researchers who are also Anglican or RC bishops, etc.

No one should be unaware that a large part of 'scholarship' in this area (Synoptic problem) has been apologetic in nature to one degree or another.

Protestants tend to support the Markan hypothesis (the shortest gospel with the least superstitious accretions), while Catholic scholars push the Matthean Priority view (Matthew best supports conservative catholic dogma).

Its no surprise that Christians of every flavour would shrink from Lukan priority relative to Matthew and Matthean dependance upon Luke, even though it is obvious.

If Matthew butchered Luke, (which seems to be the case), then Matthew is hardly an inspired gospel, but rather a cynical Jewish-Christian adoptionist 'gospel' manufactured for the Jewish masses, to keep them from mass exodus out of Judaism.

Quote:
"You see how you avail nothing? The whole world has gone after Him!"

"Quick, lets do our usual trick: reissue a 'new improved' gospel! he heh"
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Old 03-19-2007, 03:32 PM   #28
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So far all you've done is snipe. At least I offered a plausible interpretation of the evidence, which I presented (not you). You don't even offer any evidence.
No evidence at all. You provided data unaccompanied with reasoning.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Again, with the consistant picture I presented, Luke reports a sword saying.
Uh-huh.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Matthew removes the report about the ear, (the obviously more difficult reading) even though it is independantly reported in other gospels, e.g. John.
So the writer didn't like his Marcan source.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
The only evidence you offer, is consistent with my interpretation.
I haven't attempted to offer evidence.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Mechanically 'feasible' but hardly plausible.
All lip and no content.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
What counts is what probably happened, not what you want to have happened.
You are clueless as to what happened. You've shown no inclination to understand the material you8 are trying to hack up, so you knee-cap yourself.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Everyone acknowledges that the last 200 years of investigation into the Synoptic problem has been based upon a basic "Christian" viewpoint, whether liberal or conservative. Most textual critics of the past have been either Christians of some flavour or other, or at least hangers-ons.

And most scholars too in this field are researchers who are also Anglican or RC bishops, etc.

No one should be unaware that a large part of 'scholarship' in this area (Synoptic problem) has been apologetic in nature to one degree or another.

Protestants tend to support the Markan hypothesis (the shortest gospel with the least superstitious accretions), while Catholic scholars push the Matthean Priority view (Matthew best supports conservative catholic dogma).
This doesn't support your claim of the previous paragraph. Hype doesn't back up hype.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
Its no surprise that Christians of every flavour would shrink from Lukan priority relative to Matthew and Matthean dependance upon Luke, even though it is obvious.
It seems to me a complete and utter blunder, but so does Luke copying Matt.

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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
If Matthew butchered Luke, (which seems to be the case), then Matthew is hardly an inspired gospel, but rather a cynical Jewish-Christian adoptionist 'gospel' manufactured for the Jewish masses, to keep them from mass exodus out of Judaism.
Who the fuck cares about inspiration? -- another retrojection. One person's inspiration is another's anathema.

And again you are too busy falling over your assumptions to allow yourself room to think about the material.

I don't really care that you support the apparently ludicrous position of Matt copying from Luke. If you could only cut the crappy attitude problem and do some serious presentation of materials that might allow you to make a more sensible case for whatever it is you are bellowing about.

I usually start with Mark because the gospel is shortest, lacks important material such as the resurrection, has the worst language and the most arcane material. When you creatively copy a previous text you try to improve on it, not make it worse, as would have happened if Mark had been derived from one of the other gospels we have. Mark's Greek is improved on in both Matt and Luke. You can apparently see how each of the writers have dealt with Mark. I don't mind the notion of Ur-Mark, as I think it possible that Mark underwent changes after it had been in circulation, but I would doubt that your Ur-Mark would have anywhere near the amount of material mine might, if I looked into it rigorously -- but I'm too lazy. I don't think the relationship will be resolved to anyone's satisfaction. There isn't really enough information available.


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Old 03-19-2007, 03:38 PM   #29
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If Matthew butchered Luke, (which seems to be the case), then Matthew is hardly an inspired gospel, but rather a cynical Jewish-Christian adoptionist 'gospel' manufactured for the Jewish masses, to keep them from mass exodus out of Judaism.
I thought you were an inerrantist (specifically, KJVO) Christian? Yet you say that it "seems to be the case" that Matthew is not "inspired"? Perhaps you could elaborate.
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Old 03-19-2007, 05:01 PM   #30
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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Luke's ... We know for a fact that he used Mark.
Where is this supposed "fact" factified ?
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