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Old 11-02-2004, 12:03 AM   #31
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Originally Posted by the_cave


If the risen Jesus didn't appear in Galilee, why on earth would the young man say, after Jesus' death, that he will appear in Galilee? Wouldn't someone start to wonder why Jesus has not in fact appeared in Galilee?
He didn't appear in Galilee. People do not arise from the dead.

The story was invented many decades after the fictitious event. Nobody wondered.

This is the modern day equivalent of saying he would appear in Canada. As if that was a "location". Even if you told everyone in Galilee, what were they supposed to do? Camp out at Gischala? Hit the beach at Capernaum? Mt. Carmel, maybe?
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Old 11-02-2004, 12:07 AM   #32
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Originally Posted by rlogan
He didn't appear in Galilee. People do not arise from the dead.
Yes, but others have visions of them doing so. So "Galilee" must be explained, not merely dismissed as a fiction.
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Old 11-02-2004, 01:59 AM   #33
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
Yes, but others have visions of them doing so. So "Galilee" must be explained, not merely dismissed as a fiction.
Hi Vork. No problem, you took out the second part of my statement.

The gospel story has been made up after the "fact". I don't have to present to you the body of evidence regarding that.

One might think this specific matter is tricky with having to prove a negative. (prove he did not appear to people in Galilee). But it isn't.

There was no gospel Jesus and there cannot therefore be a returning from the dead by someone who never existed in the first place. The "people who saw him" are fiction.

He has to be resurrected. That is an integral part of the new faith. So he has to be seen in the story. Fixating on where he was "seen" is silly when it is fiction to begin with.


I noticed how specific the instructions were from the boy in the tomb. Yeah - he said to meet him in Galilee 2 clicks south of Capernaum in the sheep barn by the camel watering station.
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Old 11-02-2004, 01:21 PM   #34
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Comments by or about Chili and his interpretation of Galilee and the beast in Revelation have been split off to this thread.
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Old 11-02-2004, 03:03 PM   #35
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Originally Posted by the_cave
And a parable or two...do you think Mark was the original author of the parables? Just wondering what your opinion is.
Of the parables in Mark? Yes. They are closely related to the OT, and Mark even managed to work in a larger parallel to the Elijah-Elisha cycle in Kings in the Parable of the Tenants (=Jehu killing 70 sons of Ahab). The underlying logic of the Jehu parallel here makes the chief priests and scribes into the priests of Ba'al, which also happens in a couple of other places where there are not parables. The parable itself is filled with markers of Markan style -- use of the Septaugint in the introductory verses, hypertextual references to the Temple (in Jewish lore on the Isaiah quote in 12:1 the Tower=Temple, the vat=altar and the fence= the oral law), a prophetic reference to Jesus' death, etc. If Mark did not write the parable, his adaptation is deep and strong.

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You might as well ask "What exactly is left for Peter to have done and uttered?" Yet we know from Galatians that Peter was a historical person. For the moment, I'm less interested in what a historical Jesus might have said and done, than I am in the general location and behavior of the early Christians.
OK. I can see where it would be possible to argue that "Galilee" exists because it has some tie to early Christianity. Outside of the Gospels/Acts, what evidence can you cite?

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Well, at least this is some progress...when do you think this was? Again, we know from Galatians that this was fairly early on.
Mark reflects a later period when missionary activities were strong, I believe and clashes with Judaism intense. Sometime after 110, I would say, but anywhere between 70 and 150.

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If the risen Jesus didn't appear in Galilee, why on earth would the young man say, after Jesus' death, that he will appear in Galilee? Wouldn't someone start to wonder why Jesus has not in fact appeared in Galilee? It is possible, but then where is the resurrected Christ? Because he isn't at the beginning of the gospel.
I agree totally. That's why I think that John 21 was the original ending of Mark.

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So then question then is, when and where did Jesus appear in Galilee in the spirit?
He didn't. The whole thing, IMHO, is an invention of people outside of Galilee. Peter and James and the others were all Jerusalemites. Paul never connects them to Galilee, and he never calls them anything that would suggest they are not Jerusalemites.

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I say if you're going to write that the Messiah will appear in Galilee, whether fiction or not, either you need to describe the Messiah appearing in Galilee, or there needs to be an understanding that this has actually happened. Otherwise, there's no point in writing it.
He did, in my view, in John 21.

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But then what would that mean? What would "a nod" to southern Syria indicate?
The location of the Markan community.

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So, that takes care of all the prophecies--why go back to Galilee?
Because Isa 9:1 indicates it!

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Alright, Mark is using the same prophecy passage twice, sort of. I still don't see how Jesus' pre-resurrection appearance at the beginning of the gospel could be the equivalent of a post-resurrection appearance after the end, fiction or no.
Well -- neither do I! I don't think Doughty's idea is particularly appealing. But I tossed it out there anyway. The whole thing is controlled by Isa 9:1.

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But for what historical purpose? It's being used by a real group for real purposes, after all. It's not merely a work of fiction.
It is a work of fiction that is designed to provide an Origin Myth for the group.

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But we of course know, once again from Galatians, that there was in fact a group associated with Jerusalem who preached a risen Christ and whose leaders included a James and John and Peter. These documents of course have a connection with history. The question is, what is that history? We in fact seem to agree that Galilee became involved at some point...the question is, when?
I don't know. I think it is all explainable in terms of Isa 9:1 and dozens of other OT passages. When Paul says "Gospel" he means something he found with an idiosyncratic reading of the Torah. Mark simply followed his lead, searching the OT for crumbs.

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Old 11-02-2004, 07:15 PM   #36
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
OK. I can see where it would be possible to argue that "Galilee" exists because it has some tie to early Christianity.
IMO, the connection originates with the prophets of the coming Kingdom of God described in Q. Mark's author does not appear to have had a copy of Q but it can be argued that he was familiar with the group it describes.

Whether that connection was created because Jesus was actually a leader of that group or because the author of Mark was familiar with them and used them as his template for depicting the pre-crucifixion Jesus is another question entirely.
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Old 11-03-2004, 03:10 PM   #37
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Originally Posted by spin
If the gospel accounts (plural, they often don't agree, which suggests separate development of traditions) were based on mushroom drug experiences, as suggested by a few writers, does that mean we have to leave the question open?
No.

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You don't have any information about his life.
Well, we have a *little* bit of information...in this example, not much.

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OK, you leave it open, I'll continue to do literary analysis, which is something that we can do with the literature.
Ok, agreed.

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When you don't know anything about a text except literary information, you've got to do a lot of leaving things open.
I frankly admit this.

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And numerous other examples...
But, spin, surely it's not as though Latin wasn't spoken anywhere besides Rome!

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Doesn't tell you where the text was written at all.
Sure, ok. I said it was a wild guess.

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Why don't you face the fact that you didn't have a clue where Mark was written, but didn't like the implication that it may have been written in Rome where there was a large body of Greek speakers?
? This is a little bizarre...a) I said it was a wild guess, b) I have no problem with the implication it was written in Rome. In fact that would be highly interesting, since the reason I was a bit skeptical is that Rome mostly had only tradition going for it--as I'm sure you know, Mark was in fact traditionally written in Rome.

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I can't determine that the Kalihari played no role whatsoever in the movement, though there is no gospel reference to it.
Within reason, I mean, obviously.

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I don't see how. Perhaps you should read Lucian's "Alexander" or even his "The Passing of Peregrinus" to get some idea of the religious background in the eastern Mediterrranean.
Ok, so...Christianity is indistinguishable from other religions? Are you really saying that? Are you saying that the label "Christianity" is therefore useless? It seems the people of the time thought differently, otherwise they would have called it something else.

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The collection of the parts makes different, the analysis of each part makes same.
In that case...it's the bringing together of the parts that's unique.

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Where he got the idea about the name I don't know. Tertullian wasn't a Semitic scholar.
I don't know where he got it, either. Maybe there was a founder, maybe there wasn't. Maybe someone else thought of it before Tertullian. Who knows. Hopefully that answers your question.

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I think that "just" masks more than you want to say.
No, really it doesn't. Perhaps I have my own prejudices and biases, or perhaps I don't, but if I do I'm sure you agree they would have no place here. In this forum, I'm merely trying to engage with the arguments presented, and perhaps present my own. I'm willing to listen to reasonable argument and evidence. I'm also perfectly free to disagree with those arguments and that evidence, and to say so. Why else is this forum here?

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So, if you don't want to explain your position clearly, do you think there can be a meaningful conversation between us? It becomes more an interrogation. That's not pleasant.
You never asked me for my position, but it should be obvious. I'm merely casting a skeptical eye on the idea that none of the gospel of Mark has any source in historical fact. You would think that skepticism would be welcome on this board! I'm sorry if it has felt like an interrogation--I'm not sure what's wrong with asking challenging questions.

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In the context of Occam's Razor you were making a clear criticism, yet you didn't enunciate it. What were you saying and based on what?
I'm simply saying that I think there is some evidence of actual history behind the gospels. I'm trying to enunciate it. Maybe I will succeed, and maybe I will fail. Maybe the results will be inconclusive. That's all.
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Old 11-03-2004, 03:16 PM   #38
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
No, you can see 14:28 and 16:7 as a back insertion from Matthew.....
Possibly, but it sure seems easy to explain away a verse by claiming it's an interpolation. It smells of ad hoc-ness.

14:28 might have been added later. It is a very short verse. But it's hard to remove the Galilee reference from 16:7. It seems original.

Interesting that it needs to be in 16:7 if Luke was using Mark...though if Luke was also using Matthew (i.e. instead of Q), he could possibly have gotten the reference from there.
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Old 11-03-2004, 03:18 PM   #39
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
If the risen Jesus did appear in Galilee, why would the author of Luke change the story from a post-death promise of a future appearance in Galilee to a pre-death prediction of resurrection made in Galilee?
IMO, because he needed them in Jerusalem for Pentecost, at the beginning of Acts.

Also, it occurs to me that if Luke knew of 14:28, he didn't invent anything--he just rewrote 16:7 in a way that kept the disciples in Jerusalem.
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Old 11-03-2004, 03:21 PM   #40
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rlogan
He didn't appear in Galilee. People do not arise from the dead.
Obviously for the purposes of the argument we are discussing resurrection visions (whatever they might have been), rather than resurrected people walking about.

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This is the modern day equivalent of saying he would appear in Canada. As if that was a "location".
You must at least agree that Galilee is much smaller than Canada.

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Even if you told everyone in Galilee, what were they supposed to do? Camp out at Gischala? Hit the beach at Capernaum? Mt. Carmel, maybe?
I suppose anywhere would have done. If you were visiting me, and I told you to go back to Alaska, would you ask me where exactly did I mean?
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