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Old 04-22-2010, 05:14 AM   #11
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Since Luke/Acts is anti-Marcion
Is it anti-Marcion, or is it not rather (as Price suggests) trying to harmonize Marcion with orthodoxy, or bring them together in some way - an attempt to find some sort of middle ground?
I think anti-Marcion is probably a better term since there really is no middle ground.

This is not to say that the early church was not interested in bringing the Marcionite church into it's fold.

Based on the polemical works around this time, I think it is quite clear that the orthodoxy was condemning Marcion with one hand, while co-opting his "gospel" with the other.

Accepting the Marcionite texts, while simultaneously claiming that Marcion had subverted them, was a brilliant political maneuver.
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Old 04-22-2010, 07:55 AM   #12
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Do you know of anyone who has commented on Mason's thesis outside of Carrier's article on the secular web or various evangelical apologists who predicably oppose it?
JW:
It is telling that there does not appear to be any quality article disputing Mason here on the Internet or elsewhere. As always, where the hell is Jeffrey Gibson when you really need him. Obviously your average Christian Bible scholar has no motivation helping to publicize that "Luke" may have used Josephus as a source. I use the observation that "Luke" used Josephus as a source (and why wouldn't she?) as evidence that "Mark" likewise used Josephus as a source:

"Mark's" Fourth Philosophy Source (After Imagination, Paul & Jewish Bible) = Josephus

I'd also like to mention here that in addition to the specific reasons Mason has we also have the general reason that based on the Thread:

Say It Ain't So Joe. Testimonium Flavium. Will Eusebius Be Convicted In Civil Court?

Josephus was probably the most widely read non-Christian author of the early Church.

The Tobinator also has a nice little article on the evidence for "Luke" using Josephus as a source:

The Reliance of Luke-Acts on the Writings of Flavius Josephus

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We have alluded in many places in this website the reliance of Luke-Acts on the works of Flavius Josephus. Here we try to give the reasons why this is a very likely possibility.

That there is some sort of a relationship can easily be seen by anyone familiar with the two authors' works. For instance, we find some historical references in Luke that could have been taken from the writings of Flavius Josephus. Luke's references to the census by Quirinius (Luke 2:1-3) and to the massacre of the Jews by Pilate (Luke 13:1) was given in Josephus' Antiquities of the Jews (18:1 & 18:3:2).

So the next question is this: how goes this "relationship"? Did Luke rely (either "copied" or "remembered") on Josephus? Or did Josephus copy Luke? Or could the relationship be explained by simply the authors sharing a similar cultural milieu and having access to similar sources? There are some compelling reasons for believing that Luke was "familiar" with Josephus' works. The reasons are as follows:

* Many details of the gospel of Luke have uncanny parallels in Josephus' works.
* Luke hit upon the exact same names of people Josephus used in his narratives. Since the names given by Josephus were merely examples (i.e. they were not that outstanding), someone with access to a different source would have come up with a list of different names.
* The manner in which historical errors were made in Luke-Acts betrays his source as Josephus.
* Perhaps more importantly, the similarities in uncommon vocabulary between Josephus and Luke, form the final proof of latter's dependence on the former.

All these cannot be explained by Josephus having copied Luke, or that they both shared similar sources. The conclusion that Luke used the works of Josephus (Jewish War, Antiquities of the Jews and the autobiographical The Life of Flavius Josephus) means that Luke's literary works (the gospel and the Acts of the Apostles) must be written later than Josephus. Josephus completed his autobiography (the latest of his three work mentioned here) circa 95 CE. This means that the earliest date possible for the composition of Luke's gospel is 95 CE.
The only other related article I can think of is Goldberg's from 1995:

The Coincidences of the Emmaus Narrative of Luke and the Testimonium of Josephus

This is specific to the TF and concludes it most likely that there was a common source. Presumably because it was written in 1995 Goldberg was either unaware of or just ignored all the other parallels between "Luke" and Josephus.

You would have to use a formal criteria for valid parallels such as Clark has proposed in order to create a professional and scientific presentation of the quality of the parallels. I don't see anyone as having done that yet. This would be the objective part. The second part would be the conclusion which is subjective. We have Skeptics here claiming a likely conclusion but at this point I think all we have is that Josephus is the only identified possible source for "Luke" (not counting "Mark" and Q of course) so it is the most likely source we have but not necessarily a likely source due to the unknown (the distance between what would be good evidence for Josephus as source and the evidence we have).

The primary significance of "Luke" using Josephus as a source is not what it tells us as to the historicity of "Luke". We already know that "Luke" is primarily fiction. The significance is dating. Another piece of evidence which coordinates with all the other evidence that "Luke" is 2nd century:

The Papias Smear, Changes in sell Structure. Evidence for an Original Second Century Gospel



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Old 04-22-2010, 08:37 AM   #13
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Where's Jeffrey?
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Old 04-22-2010, 03:57 PM   #14
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aa,

Hey, that was a good post (mainly because I thought the same thing after reading Andrew's post).

Besides, according to Harry Gamble the readings of a work-in-progress would occur among the privacy of one or two friends, who could offer candid criticisms of style and vocabulary, with the public reading occurring at the time of formal publication, before a larger audience.

Or was Streeter implying that the author of Luke-Acts was himself tight with Josephus? If so, that seems to be presumptious.

DCH

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FWIW it was proposed in the early 20th century (by Streeter IMS) that the similarities and disagreements between Antiquities and Luke-Acts could best be explained by Luke having heard Josephus give public readings of Antiquities as a work-in-progress before the publication of the finished work (which was too late for Luke to make use of).

Andrew Criddle
Once it is not known for certain when gLuke was written it cannot be assumed that Antiquities was published too late for the author called Luke.

There are indications that gLuke and Acts of the Apostles are very late and after the writings of Justin Martyr.
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Old 04-22-2010, 05:55 PM   #15
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Do you know of anyone who has commented on Mason's thesis outside of Carrier's article on the secular web or various evangelical apologists who predictably oppose it?
There is a review here: http://www.jstor.org/pss/1205281 by Gregory E. Sterling of Notre Dame in The Journal of Religion. The tail end of the review, which is the relevant bit, is available without a Jstor account. He finds it a "reasonable case" but isn't buying it. I don't know what his theological commitments are, but he has published quite a bit on Philo, Luke-Acts, and some on Josephus.

Peter.
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Old 04-22-2010, 06:44 PM   #16
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...
There is a review here: http://www.jstor.org/pss/1205281 by Gregory E. Sterling of Notre Dame in The Journal of Religion. The tail end of the review, which is the relevant bit, is available without a Jstor account. He finds it a "reasonable case" but isn't buying it. I don't know what his theological commitments are, but he has published quite a bit on Philo, Luke-Acts, and some on Josephus.

Peter.
He finds it "a reasonable case but I would prefer to believe that they drew from common sources." Personal preference? Aesthetic? It's not clear what this means.

Sterling is a professor of Theology at Notre Dame. His BA and MA were from Protestant-connected universities, and his PhD from the Graduate Theological Union. He is the author of Historiography and self-definition: Josephos, Luke-Acts, and Apologetic Historiography (or via: amazon.co.uk), which can be previewed on Google books. From what I can read there, it appears that he dates Luke-Acts to 90 CE, which would create some difficulty if the author had read Josephus (as opposed to Pervo, who dates it to 110.) I can't read all of his argument, but it appears that the crucial point for him is that that he wants to date Luke-Acts prior to the Revelation of John.
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Old 04-22-2010, 09:43 PM   #17
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Interestingly, Mason reviewed Sterling's Historiography and Self-Definition: Josephos, Luke-Acts and Apologetic Historiography in Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 113, No. 1 (Spring, 1994), pp. 154-157. JSTOR has the 1st page online here (about a half page of text). Apparently, Sterling proposed a new genre for Luke-Acts, "Apologetic Historiography." Unfortunately, this review is not on the JBL's Review of Biblical Literature page. (I might want to get hold of that one, 'cuz I like that idea of Luke-Acts as a form of apology.)

I was able to find an online article by Christopher Price, a conservative Christian apologist active at christiancadre.org, here that critiques Mason's hypothesis (chapter 5). He does not buy into it, but cites no scholarly rebuttals. The best he can do is cite B. H. Streeter's "rebuttal of this theory" in The Four Gospels, A Study of Origins, (1924, pages 557-58) which Price thinks "carried the academic day." Obviously this predates Mason's Josephus and the New Testament which was first published in 1992 (it was greatly expanded and updated in the 2nd edition of 2003).

Here are the exact words of Streeter:
If the Lucan writings were first circulated in Rome it becomes unnecessary to decide the vexed question whether or not Luke had read Josephus.

The question arises from the fact that Luke's statements violently conflict with those of Josephus in regard to the dates of Lysanias (Lk.iii.1-2) and Theudas (Acts v.34 ff).

It has been maintained by distinguished scholars that Luke's statements can be accounted for on the theory that they are the result of a hasty perusal, and a consequently imperfect recollection and misunderstanding, of Josephus.

Personally I am quite unconvinced that there is dependence of any kind.
[P. W.] Schmiedel, whose statement of the case for dependence is the most elaborate in English [Encycl, Bib., art. "Lysanias and Theudas."], finds it necessary to suppose that Luke was using, not Josephus directly, but some notes that he had made after reading him.

But if a gross mistake is to be attributed to imperfect notes, it would surely be more natural to suggest that the notes in question were taken down hurriedly at some lecture, rather than in the course of a perusal of a book, especially as it was not so possible with ancient methods of writing as with modern print to make mistakes through running one's eye rapidly over the page.

Now there is not the slightest improbability in the supposition that Luke had heard Josephus lecture in Rome.

Josephus was granted by Vespasian rooms in the Imperial Palace, and remained in favour with subsequent emperors.

Luke also, I have suggested, had a connection with the Flavian house.
The writings of Josephus were addressed to the Roman world at large, and it would appear that after AD 70 he for the most part lived and wrote in Rome.
In that case, unless his practice was quite different from that of contemporary writers, it would have been a matter of course for him to recite large portions of his works to public audiences before they were published in written form.

Pliny and Juvenal constantly refer to this custom—
the latter to expatiate on the boredom it induced.

Plutarch tells us that while in Rome, at about this date, he was so busy lecturing, and doing minor political business, that he never had time to master the Latin language—
an observation which incidentally reveals the extent to which Greek was a second language of the educated native Roman as well as of the immense city population of foreign origin.

The Antiquities of Josephus was published c. AD 93.
It is a long work and would have taken many years to compose—
probably most of the interval since the publication of his earlier work, The Jewish Wars, about AD 78.

Josephus was extremely conceited, not at all the man to lose any opportunity for publicity, and he would do much to be in the literary and social fashion.

Moreover, his writings were largely intended for propaganda purposes;
he wished to do his best to reinstate the credit of the Jewish people.
He would certainly have recited parts of the Antiquities at intervals during the ten years before its publication.

Fashionable Rome felt bound in etiquette to attend the recitations of its noble friends;
but a parvenu like Josephus would have been only too glad to fill up the back seats with unimportant people like Luke. (H. B. Streeter, The Four Gospels, Chapter 18, )
Here is a link to that article by P. W. Schmiedel listing the literature on the question of whether Luke used Josephus:
That Josephus had been used by Lk. was first affirmed by Holtzmann (ZWT, 1873, pp. 85-03, and especially 89-90, l877, pp. 535-549). See also Hausrath, NTliche Zt.-gesch.(2) 4, 1877, pp. 230-241; Keim, BL 5, 1875, pp. 510-513, and Aus dem Urchristenthum, 1, 1878, pp. 1-27, especially 18-21 ; Clemen, Chronol. d. paulin. Briefe, 1893, pp. 66-69, and St. Kr. l895. pp. 355-337 ; and Krenkel, Josephus u. Lucas, 1804, pp. 162-174 (very thorough). Lk.'s use of Josephus was denied by Sonntag, St. Kr. 1837, pp. 622-652 ; Wieseler, Chronolog. Synppse, 1843, pp. 103-10;, and Beitr. zur Wurdigung der Evangelien, 1800, pp. 101-104; Zuschlag, Theudas, 1849; Schurer, ZWT 1070, pp. 574-582; Belser, Tub. theol. Quartalschrift, 1896, pp. 61-71; Blass, St. Kr. 1896, p. 459-460, and Acta apostolorum . . . secundum formam Romanam, Leipsic, 1896, p. 16-17 (cp Acta. apostolorum edit. philologica, Gottingen, 1895, ad loc.); Ramsay, Was Christ born at Bethlehem? 1898, 252-260; Feine, Theol. Lit.-Blatt, 1900, 60-61; Cross, Exp.T, 1899-1900, pp. 538-540. (Encyclopedia Biblica, vol III, 1902)
Hugh Schonfield also treated the possibility of use of Josephus by the gospel writers in The Passover Plot (1965, pp. 164 f. & 253 f.). This is expanded in The Jesus Party aka The Pentecost Revolution (1974, pp. 35-44). Schonfield does not cite any critical authorities, just Josephus' works.

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Do you know of anyone who has commented on Mason's thesis outside of Carrier's article on the secular web or various evangelical apologists who predictably oppose it?
There is a review here: http://www.jstor.org/pss/1205281 by Gregory E. Sterling of Notre Dame in The Journal of Religion. The tail end of the review, which is the relevant bit, is available without a Jstor account. He finds it a "reasonable case" but isn't buying it. I don't know what his theological commitments are, but he has published quite a bit on Philo, Luke-Acts, and some on Josephus.

Peter.
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Old 04-22-2010, 10:09 PM   #18
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From JW's reference:

This means that the earliest date possible for the composition of Luke's gospel is 95 CE.
For 'Luke' to have written immediately following Josephus, seems to me to imply that Josephus wrote Luke. Either that or Luke is more likely decades later than Josephus, allowing enough time for the works of Josephus to become quasi-scriptural.

If we date Acts (and thus Luke) to the same time period as so many other Acts style documents (late 2nd century), then this allows plenty of time for Josephus to have been made legendary.
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Old 04-22-2010, 10:12 PM   #19
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Interestingly, Mason reviewed Sterling's Historiography and Self-Definition: Josephos, Luke-Acts and Apologetic Historiography in Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 113, No. 1 (Spring, 1994), pp. 154-157. JSTOR has the 1st page online here (about a half page of text). Apparently, Sterling proposed a new genre for Luke-Acts, "Apologetic Historiography." Unfortunately, this review is not on the JBL's Review of Biblical Literature page. (I might want to get hold of that one, 'cuz I like that idea of Luke-Acts as a form of apology.)

I was able to find an online article by Christopher Price, a conservative Christian apologist active at christiancadre.org, here that critiques Mason's hypothesis (chapter 5). He does not buy into it, but cites no scholarly rebuttals. The best he can do is cite B. H. Streeter's "rebuttal of this theory" in The Four Gospels, A Study of Origins, (1924, pages 557-58) which Price thinks "carried the academic day." Obviously this predates Mason's Josephus and the New Testament which was first published in 1992 (it was greatly expanded and updated in the 2nd edition of 2003).
Have you read Harnack on dating Luke-Acts? (I'm thinking of the later Harnack, around 1911, I think). When I read it, I had to struggle hard not to be completely sold on AD 62-64. He argues impressively, and it is easy to understand how he had as much influence as he did.

Peter.
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Old 04-23-2010, 04:36 AM   #20
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Was Luke a correction of Matthew?
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