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Old 11-06-2004, 03:10 PM   #61
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Originally Posted by spin
Vork was wrong about 14:28 being the sole occasion Mk mentions Galilee. You'll find it four times in chapter 1. You were reacting to him. And it has no importance: Galilee is part of the tradition. And you are still wishfully tryingto go beyondthat tradition on nothing more than fresh air.
spin
spin, I didn't sat 14:28 was the only mention. I said it was the only time JESUS mentions Galilee. 14:28 is a supernatural prophecy and thus a creation of the author of Mk or a later redactor. All other instances occur in Markan redaction.

Just to clarify.

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Old 11-06-2004, 03:22 PM   #62
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cave, I've dropped out so you don't have too many people to reply to.
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Old 11-07-2004, 05:55 AM   #63
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
spin, I didn't say 14:28 was the only mention. I said it was the only time JESUS mentions Galilee. I said it was the only time JESUS mentions Galilee. 14:28 is a supernatural prophecy and thus a creation of the author of Mk or a later redactor. All other instances occur in Markan redaction.
Guess it's my bad.

But why couldn't our writer have received that with other material?


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Old 11-07-2004, 08:36 AM   #64
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Originally Posted by spin
cavey old friend, I'm going to end my involvement here.
Alright, fair enough. I'll try not to say anything too controversial in my final comments.

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I see that there is no hope of extracting history from a tradition that has no historical pegs to hang it on.
If that's the way you feel, fine, I accept that.

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How one can get beyond a written tradition with only a written tradition as source material is extremely complex, perhaps too difficult.
Don't disagree here.

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What so important in distinguishing one lot of messianists from another?
It would give us a small window onto that era.

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And what does it mean to be able to distinguish xians only at the end of the process of cultural development (which I would gather was the early 2nd century CE)?
Means just what it means; tells us something, doesn't tell us everything.

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How can you know about "it's what sort of communities they were"? I don't really know other than to guess from what is written in the literature.
I agree.

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Well, don't you?
I really don't think so. I'm sorry if you see one.

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Well, you've sure come a long way on this one point. Wouldn't the initial statement have been sufficient and we could have noted it and proceeded?
I guess at this point I simply don't understand what you think the mechanics of discussion are. I'm sorry if we're at odds on this.

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You were reacting to [Vork].
Yes, I was. I was assuming that all my posts were being read by everyone.

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And it has no importance: Galilee is part of the tradition. And you are still wishfully trying to go beyondthat tradition on nothing more than fresh air.
No, I am trying to go beyond it based, for one thing, on Mark 16:7. This will be continued in my discussion with Amaleq.

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I think I've addressed numerous of your previous posts.
But apparently not the ones that weren't direct responses to you, I guess. This appears to have been a misunderstanding, on my part, at least.

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Does this have anything to do with the 500 brethren that the literature tells us Jesus appeared to?
No, it has to do with the "brothers" mentioned in Mk 6:3

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John the Baptist has a literary validatory effect on the gospels. Nothing more.
Well, at least we've established that!

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What on earth does this really show? Luke excludes it completely as not happening -- its Jesus ascends from Bethany.
I'll cover this when I respond to Amaleq.

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Mark has no resurrection and leaves everything in the air for you to believe. You have no appearance (making Mark more appealing on a literary level). You just have a story which starts in Galilee and hinting at an ending there as well. So? It's ok, it was rhetorical.
I'll give a brief response to it anyway, for those who are still reading, but at this point I think we merely agree to disagree.

The missing ending of Mark makes sense if there had been Galilean appearances that the reader would know about.
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Old 11-07-2004, 08:45 AM   #65
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
If the original claimants to a resurrection experience had those experiences in Galilee, the author of Luke does not appear concerned that his readers will know this and take exception to his alteration of the "true" story.
Or maybe they don't know this. Maybe there was some confusion on this. Maybe they've never read Mark.

This argument also works against you--if the original claimants to a resurrection experience had not had those experiences in Galilee, why wouldn't the redactor who supposedly added the reference be concerend that his readers would know that?

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Luke's treatment of Mark's suggestion that the initial appearances to the Disciples took place in Galilee does not suggest that either is recording history but it does suggest that both are creating scenes to serve their individual purposes.
In the case of Luke, I agree. In the case of Mark, I don't.

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Specific explanations are necessarily speculative but it seems to me that, if Mark is using the Q prophets as his template for Jesus' ministry (whether because he was a leader of that movement or because that is how the author imagined a living Jesus would have behaved), a Galilean location for the initial appearances needs no other motivation.
Why? Are you saying the Q prophets had resurrection experiences? If they didn't, what point would the reference serve?

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As you mentioned, Luke has other concerns and those include incorporating Paul into the story but Paul associates the "pillars" with Jerusalem rather than Galilee so an editorial decision had to be made.
Exactly--sort of (I don't think it has much to do with Paul, but perhaps instead with a tradition of a Jerusalem event--the parousia, for example.)

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They may have been from Galilee and they may have been among the original followers of a living Jesus or they may have been from Jerusalem and they may have been the first claimants to experiencing/witnessing the resurrected messiah.
I agree. In fact I'm arguing for both--from Galilee, and eventually with an important association with Jerusalem. I understand if you don't want to make any claims either way.
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Old 11-07-2004, 11:22 AM   #66
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Originally Posted by the_cave
Or maybe they don't know this. Maybe there was some confusion on this. Maybe they've never read Mark.
And maybe Mark created it. There is no conclusive evidence but I tend to consider the author's reliance upon the OT (as Vorkosigan has so ably demonstrated) as well as the treatment his story obtains from subsequent rewriting authors to be persuasive evidence.

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This argument also works against you--if the original claimants to a resurrection experience had not had those experiences in Galilee, why wouldn't the redactor who supposedly added the reference be concerend that his readers would know that?
My argument was based on the assumption you were making (ie that the Galilee tradition has some historical basis). Removing the assumption, as you do above, removes the argument. If it was known that the initial experiences were not in Galilee, it makes no sense for the author to create such a scene. That doesn't argue against me but serves to support the conclusion, suggested by Luke's treatment, that no such knowledge existed. With regard to the location of the initial resurrection experiences, Paul makes no claims and the Gospels disagree. The only reasonable explanation, IMO, of this evidence is that the actual location was not known.

IMO, the location of a ministry in Galilee, however, ultimately depends on Q. If that hypothetical text originally began as a simple collection of Cynic-style sayings to which other information was later added (including a connection to Jesus), we can hardly consider this a reliable basis for assuming historicity.

Also, are you suggesting that Mk16:7 is a later addition? I'm not sure it matters but I tend to assume it was part of the original text.

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In the case of Luke, I agree. In the case of Mark, I don't.
I understand that this is your assumption/hypothesis but, IMO, you have offered nothing substantive enough to support that conclusion in opposition to the evidence of literary creativity (ie OT reliance and subsequent treatment by other authors).

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Why? Are you saying the Q prophets had resurrection experiences? If they didn't, what point would the reference serve?
There is no evidence of resurrection beliefs in Q but their activities do appear to have been centered in Galilee so it would only make sense to depict the fundamental experience that supposedly resulted in the continuation of that activity as taking place in the same location.

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I agree. In fact I'm arguing for both--from Galilee, and eventually with an important association with Jerusalem. I understand if you don't want to make any claims either way.
But you have no evidence for both. You have separate lines of evidence for one or the other. If you understand that, then you truly do understand why I don't think one can argue for the historicity of either.
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Old 11-07-2004, 04:01 PM   #67
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
There is no conclusive evidence but I tend to consider the author's reliance upon the OT (as Vorkosigan has so ably demonstrated) as well as the treatment his story obtains from subsequent rewriting authors to be persuasive evidence.
Alright, you're entitled to do so, but I still don't see why the young man would send the apostles back to Galilee, unless there was already a tradition of Galilean appearances. The OT reference has already been fulfilled in the narrative by the Galilean ministry.

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My argument was based on the assumption you were making (ie that the Galilee tradition has some historical basis). Removing the assumption, as you do above, removes the argument.
This makes no sense, as I will note below:

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If it was known that the initial experiences were not in Galilee, it makes no sense for the author to create such a scene.
So why would the hypothetical redactor who added it to Mark (and Matthew, I guess!) create such a scene?

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With regard to the location of the initial resurrection experiences, Paul makes no claims and the Gospels disagree.
But only the gospel of Luke--the latest, the most narrative-driven, and therefore the most suspect.

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Also, are you suggesting that Mk16:7 is a later addition? I'm not sure it matters but I tend to assume it was part of the original text.
I agree.

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There is no evidence of resurrection beliefs in Q but their activities do appear to have been centered in Galilee so it would only make sense to depict the fundamental experience that supposedly resulted in the continuation of that activity as taking place in the same location.
Why? If it was known that this fundamental experience happened in Jerusalem, and only Jerusalem, why place it anywhere else?

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But you have no evidence for both. You have separate lines of evidence for one or the other.
I have evidence from Matthew and Mark (and John, but as Vork noted the story set by the Sea of Galilee may have originally been a part of Mark) that there were initial appearances in Galilee. I have evidence from Luke and John that there were appearances in Jerusalem. This seems to me to reflect two traditions of appearances. I see nothing wrong with this in principle.
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Old 11-07-2004, 08:47 PM   #68
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Originally Posted by the_cave
Alright, you're entitled to do so, but I still don't see why the young man would send the apostles back to Galilee, unless there was already a tradition of Galilean appearances.
This is basically an argument from personal ignorance and, as such, is not terribly persuasive to anyone else. There is no evidence of such a tradition prior to Mark's story and it is clearly not necessary as a motivation for the author as we have seen from the alternatives suggested in the thread. As I said from the beginning, any suggestion will necessarily be speculative. That you prefer one particular speculation does not make it more likely nor more supported by evidence. In addition, we have already seen that Luke's elimination of the Galilean appearances argues against any such tradition.

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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
If it was known that the initial experiences were not in Galilee, it makes no sense for the author to create such a scene.
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So why would the hypothetical redactor who added it to Mark (and Matthew, I guess!) create such a scene?
Again, we can only speculate about "why" but you seem to have missed the point. The fact that the author of Mark and the author of Matthew rewriting Mark both feel free to depict an initial appearance in Galilee suggests that there was no tradition to the contrary. It does not require an existing consistent tradition but it does appear to deny an existing inconsistent tradition. Likewise, the fact that Luke and John feel free to eliminate the Galilean appearance location and move it to Jerusalem suggests that there was no tradition to the contrary. And by "tradition", I mean "known or assumed to be the ways things actually happened. If we assume that either Mark or Matthew's version was widely known (more likely for the latter), that would appear to include their story.

We have no good reason to assume that there existed any "oral tradition", passed down from eyewitnesses, of any specific location for the initial appearances of the resurrected Christ. Based on Paul, it seems reasonable to conclude that this absence of a reliable tradition results from the unimportance of the location relative to the belief that such appearances had taken place.

Mark's author, having no tradition to rely upon, suggested that the appearances took place in Galilee but did not describe them. Matthew accepts this part of Mark's story but adds some description as does a later editor of Mark. Luke and John, for whatever reason(s), prefer to depict those appearances as taking place near and in Jerusalem.

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But only the gospel of Luke--the latest, the most narrative-driven, and therefore the most suspect.
John does not explicitly describe the location of the initial appearances but it is difficult to read a single day's trip by Mary all the way to Galilee to talk to the disciples after meeting the risen Christ at the tomb. Whether Luke can be objectively shown to be "the most narrative-driven" or not, all the stories are suspect.

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If it was known that this fundamental experience happened in Jerusalem, and only Jerusalem, why place it anywhere else?
Given that it is placed elsewhere, we can only conclude that it was not "known" to have taken place in Jerusalem.

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I have evidence from Matthew and Mark...
You have evidence from Mark that Matthew repeats. That doesn't double the evidence.

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...and John...
No, the intial appearance to the disciples seems to take place near Jerusalem. Mary has gone from the tomb to the disciples to inform them and "that same evening"(20:19) Jesus appears to them.

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I have evidence from Luke and John that there were appearances in Jerusalem. This seems to me to reflect two traditions of appearances.
Yes, two separate and mutually exclusive versions of the story but no "tradition" supporting either as historical nor any reason suggesting that either must be or even likely to be.
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Old 11-07-2004, 08:58 PM   #69
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Originally Posted by spin
Guess it's my bad.

But why couldn't our writer have received that with other material?


spin
He could have! But it isn't necessary. What about "Galilee" cannot be accounted for by Isa 9:1 and the S.O.P. of the writer of Mark? I mean, historically speaking, what compels us to see that as coming from a source? Paul knows nothing of Galilee, the center of the cult is Jerusalem.

There might be something. I was reading Downing's book on Paul and the Cynics last night, quite enjoyable, his work is. Galilee was quite the Cynic center.....and that may be why it appears in the tradition. But then popular thought was so shot through with Cynic thought, that it may not need a particular locale for its origin.

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Old 11-07-2004, 10:30 PM   #70
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
He could have! But it isn't necessary. What about "Galilee" cannot be accounted for by Isa 9:1 and the S.O.P. of the writer of Mark? I mean, historically speaking, what compels us to see that as coming from a source? Paul knows nothing of Galilee, the center of the cult is Jerusalem.
Paul should not recognize Galilee if they later condemned Galileans as heretics. Luke also knew better because there is a difference between "below" and "above" and I think that that distinction is made here.
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