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Old 11-03-2004, 02:15 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
How do you differentiate between ignorance of parables or apocalyptic sayings and a deliberate avoidance of them?
every religion inevitably generates both gnostic and faith branches. the faith branch never gets along with the gnostic branch because the gnostics like to lord over the mere believers in their knowledge. hence your attempt to indicate that christianity was unique, and that jesus was a unique savant whose knowledge included no gnostic element, and none of whose disciples possessed gnostic knowledge, flies in the face of the manifest pattern of world religions. however, if it feeds your sense of uniqueness to believe that he was the son of God, then so be it.
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Old 11-03-2004, 06:03 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Vinnie
It doesn't hinder or support anything until you come up with a methodology for determining the literary dependence of one text upon another and demonstrate how Thomas fits the bill. Thus far we have next to nothing...
If we don't have that, you're stuck as much as I am. But essentially, you're saying that.....
  • Mary said to Jesus: Whom are thy disciples like? He said They are like little children dwelling in a field which is not theirs. When the owners of the field come, they will say: Yield up to us our field. They are naked before them, to yield it up to them and to give them back their field. Therefore I say: If the master of the house knows that the thief is coming, he will keep watch before he comes, and will not let him dig into his house of his kingdom to carry off his vessels. You, then, be watchful over against the world. Gird up your loins with great strength, that the brigands may not find a way to come at you, since the advantage for which you look they will find. May there be among you a man of understanding! When the fruit was ripe, he came quickly, his sickle in his hand, and reaped it. He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.

...mixes up sayings from Mark and John. Essentially, that John plucked out one saying, but rejected the others, while Mark plucked out all but that one saying which coincidently was used by John. That's asking a lot of coincidence.

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It also shows that the author did not directly use the text of Mark. Now your argument changes to Thomas is indirectly dependent upon Mark. Indirect dependence tends to get as hypothetical as it comes where exegetes can back-reason virtually anything they want, any form critical tradition history, development of a pericope and so on...
No, I don't know exactly how Thomas depends on Mark and the other gospels.

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Please state unequivocally what you are arguing: Thomas is directly dependent upon the synoptic tradition, or Thomas is indirectly dependent.
I have no idea, but it is most likely that he had something written in front of him.

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Can you please provide me with the numbers of each of the passages in Mk, Mt and Lk?
There is a partial list in Holding, and in the appendices of Birth of Christianity, which you have. Unfortunately Davies' site is down; it has a complete list.

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That is the nature of oral tradition. Its not entirely sytematic. Its fluid and dynamic. Do ou have anything of substance to add against oral tradition?
No, because you have not established that this is based on some oral tradition of sayings going back to the hoary antiquity prior to the canonicals.

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Patterson states that Mark's apocalytic application of the saving in v. 29 is secondary and cites a number of works defending htis point. I have to leave it at that until further investigation. That saying could have come from anywhere though. Mark may have added it there because it fit. Sayings often have diverse and complicated tradition histories. You treat them in too much of a one dimensional fashion.
Yes, that saying could well be an insertion. But "Mark may have added it there because it fit" is totally ad hoc. We know where the saying from Joel has a context that reflects a specific author's style: Mark. We know where it doesn't: Thomas. The conclusion is simple. Similarly, Mark 12:1-12 is reflected in GThom 65-66. Again in Mark those sayings have a certain context that is very rich, including Elijah-Elisha parallels, and usefulness in Mark's later program of presenting the scribes, priests, and pharisees as the Priests of Ba'al. Again in Thomas the sequence has no context -- but the order is preserved! Again the "lamp" metaphor in Thomas is simply a metaphor about preaching, but Mark has an additional pointer to Jesus' messianic status as the lamp of the house of David promised to Israel. That context is gone from Thomas too.

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There is no solid evidence Thomas received it from Mark. Thomas does not seem to know either the parable or its apocalytic setting which kind of undercuts any attempt at arguing for its dependence. Instead you are left to assert Thomas, for whatever reason, surgically chopped this out of mark, inserted it into his own work and removed all traces of Marcan redaction in this process and virtually every other? Is Thomas a forgery? Did its author have the acumen of a modern form-critic?
Why not? We know that the other Gospelers made similar moves. Luke edited and changed many things in Mark and Matthew. All four cited from the Old Testament but in many cases changed the context completely. Context-elimination and re-formation was a common practice in NT writing.

Your position requires that MMLJ all used different parts of Thomas. That John simply rejected large portions, which coincidentally, the Synoptics all liked. Hoding turns up several John parallels that Patterson did not think were parallels, but sure look like it to me.

Redaction-criticism has an underlying assumption that the shorter text must be the earlier. That is not a valid assumption.

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Thomas is not gnostic. Some of its material may have rudimentary gnosticism but in no meaningful sense can Thomas be labeled gnostic (see Davies on this point).
Nor did I say it was. What I said was that it had three sets of material, one of which is gnostic flavored, one of which is Cynic-flavored, and one of which is OT flavored. For some reason the canonicals picked up on the second and third, but ignored the first. Why?

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Also, I think the Cynic flavored stuff may suggest a first century date rather than a second. Most are under the conviction that Jesus gave up home and family but later on Christians largely settled back into families and communities. I think the social setting of this material should be dated early rather than late but I could be way off base.
It's hard to tell, since the social setting didn't really change fundamentally over the 1st and 2nd century. Peasant farming stayed peasant farming, and Cynics stayed Cynics.

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Mark has the secret element going on.
..so why not label the sayings "Secret" as thomas does? Yet Mark mocks his own secrecy, one reason scholars like Davies and Weeden thought he was doing parody. Mark's secrecy motif could also be drawn from Dan 12 (Helms)
  • "There in Daniel, Mark found a "secret" that was "sealed until the time of the end" (Dan 12:4). "None...shall understand" that secret; "only the wise leaders shall understand" (Dan 12:10). (1997, p17)

..which would be perfectly consistent with his normal practice of taking out of the OT.

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You argument also is methodologically weird to me. Mark didn't use a whole TON of sayings material that would have been right up his alley. Why didn't he include all these wonderful Q sayings, the sermon on the plane, etc? We can speculate but its irrelevant. We have to judge on the basis of what the evangelists included, not on what he didn't include.
Yes, but if you want to claim that Mark used Thomas or knew this material, you gotta explain why he ignored the bulk of it and the stuff he ignored was picked up by John, who didn't pick up any stuff that Mark did. Strange, eh? It is easy to explain why Mark didn't use the Q material in Mt and Lk; he didn't know it (there is no Q and no Q community). The Mark-Q overlaps that Tuckett thinks are so devastating contain style markers of Mark...that's a separate discussion.

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First he starts off assumuing Thomas is Gnostic and therefore late.
The Gospels created and modified oral tradition when they were made.
Thomas being late second century must be seen as dependent upon them.
I am not interested in that portion of Meier's argument, but in the portion I cited to show the problem of the mixed material in GThom and how the gospelers dealt with it.

Quote:
Thomas shares material with a number of sources (Mark, Q, Luke, Matthew and so forth). These sources all in turn used a number of other, earlier sources. Either Thomas had access to these sources or those sources. Shared material is not an argument at all. It falsely turns a simply premise into a conclusion:

THomas shares material with these sources.
Therefore Thomas was dependent.
No, it runs.

Thomas shares his material with these sources. Yet the sources that supposedly depend on Thomas strangely all agree on ignoring certain parts of it. Apparently four different authors agree that Logia 98:

(98) Jesus said: The kingdom of the Father is like a man who wanted to kill a great man. He drew the sword in his house and drove it into the wall, that he might know that his hand would be strong. Then he slew the great man.

...was completely unsuitable. Other examples abound. The authors of the gospels ignore the same stuff? One would expect that there would be considerable overlap and considerable diversity if Thomas was accessible to all three Synoptics and all four gospelers. But instead the use of Thomas is remarkably uniform: certain statements, like logia 74:

He said: Lord, there are many about the well, but no one in the well.

...are ignored by everyone. Apparently this innocent logia was so offensive nobody wanted it. Apparently 4 different gospelers could find nothing it to their respective individual tastes.

And how could Mark have missed 102:

(102) And Jesus said: Woe to them, the Pharisees! For they are like a dog sleeping in the manger of the cattle; for he neither eats, nor does he let the cattle eat.

Yowza! It is hard to imagine a better fit with his anti-Pharisee program than that one. It is easy to understand if GThom postdates Mark, harder to understand if Mark knew GThom. And what are the Pharisees doing in Thom anyway, since their influence postdates 70 AD?

Quote:
similar must be shown for Thomas. Order is uselss in Thomas' case and specific redactional material in Thomas of the synoptic authors is extremely hard to come by. What's left? Not much.
I agree. The compiler of GThom often eliminated the Gospel redaction. In Logia 71 Jesus is held to say:

(71) Jesus said: I will des[troy this] house, and none shall able to build it [again].

As Holding points out, Patterson's argument on this is absolutely ludicrous.

Even Patterson has to admit that Thomas has been edited in light of the gospels. Once you admit that, all the bets are off.

Quote:
Over time Thomas came to include such a broad stream of tradition.
I agree completely!

[quote]There is nothing strange here. Ultimately, how many sources do you think underlie the Gospel of Mark? Parable lists, miracle lists, passion, an earlier proto gospel, apocalyptic discourse, sayings collection and oral tradition? Why is it so hard to fathom when we treat GThomas in a similar fashion?

OT, Jewish apocrypha, jewish legends and traditions, common sayings and proverbs, cynic tradition. No passion, Mark created that off the OT. No miracle lists -- they are all apparently from the OT. No proto gospel. Mk 13 is not an apocalypse, as the SBL committee decided a while back. In any case Mk 13 is not only a riff on the OT, but Mark has even managed to work in an Elijah-Elisha parallel.

We are both treating Thomas the same way, as a compilation of diverse sources. The difference is in what the sources are.

Quote:
What examples of Justin can you cite? As far as I am aware Justin largley used systematic harmonizations of Matthew and Luke.
Just poking around for a second:
  • John 10:33- in Dialogue of Justin
    And Trypho answered, "We shall remember this your exposition, if you strengthen [your solution of] this difficulty by other arguments: but now resume the discourse, and show us that the Spirit of prophecy admits another God besides the Maker of all things, taking care not to speak of the sun and moon, which, it is written,[172]

The point is that sayings shorn of context are not at all abnormal in Christian composition. The gospelers did it to the OT; now GThom did it to the gospelers.

Quote:
And again, for indirect dependence from memory we can argue convincenly either way. Its all but a useless stance to take. Once you posit indirect dependence you posit agnosticism.
No, because there are ways, and one is to look at the usage patterns. It is difficult to explain why all 4 gospelers ignored the same sayings.

Quote:
Do Justin and other second and third century authors writing from meory have so many doublets as well? We can't really test it since sayings gospels died out by the turn of the first century. Holding's assertion has the convenience of untestability.
But your logic is circular. According to my view and holdings, there were sayings gospels alive in the second century. Both sides appear to be begging the question on this point.

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Holding has nothing inspiring here, just untestable speculation. Also speculative is the thesis that Thomas has doubles because in the oral tradition its author used the sayings were linked topically and by catchwords and different lists popped up. As I said, anything can be explained under the "from memory" theory.
I don't agree with Holding that "memory" is at work here. I totally agree that the terms "oral tradition" and "memory" can explain anything. That is why Patterson's claims on the oral tradition are nonsense.

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There is no evidence that would have us date THomas in the fifties. I think it originated about the same time as Mark and may have been finished, largely, by the end of the first century.
We date the gospels differently. I put them in the period of about 115-145, with Thomas shortly after.

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Final nail in the coffin? Hello. That statement could have been made in 40 C.E. There may have been a solid bed of oral tradition that was known and the author decided to introduce more material here. 50 C.e., 60 c.e., 70 c.e. Whenever. There is nothing remotely resembling a timestamp on that.
It isn't a timestamp but an indicator of dependence. In order for a secret tradition to arise there must also be, side by side, a recognized public tradition. But there was no public tradition until the gospels appeared; Paul does not know any "sayings" of the lord.

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Also, here we see Thomas arbitrarily become later than the canonicals is just biased scholarship. Do you accept the inspiration of the NT canon as well? Since when do synoptic gospels designate all "public teachings of Jesus"???
A red herring. They do not have to contain ALL public teachings in order to designate the existence of A public teachings tradition. Which Paul does not.

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These authors made use of traditions that circulated and were used for 20-50 years.
Assumes facts not in evidence. There is no evidence of any tradition of Jesus sayings in circulation except for those demonstratably Cynic-oriented and those from popular culture and tradition. Paul knows of no sayings tradition. Papias is evidence only for the second century, and his "living voice" may well be a reference to the indwelling of the spirit rather than the oral tradition (there is also the possibility that Eusebius simply invented him).

Quote:
Secret sayings in Thomas conjures absolutely nothing in regards to the synoptic gospels as if its author is adding stuff they don't have. Is that interpretation a conclusion or an argument?
Vinnie
I don't understand your point. Surely if Thomas' compiler is adding sayings that the gospels don't have, he is buttressing his thesis that these were secret ones that no one knew!

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Old 11-03-2004, 09:39 PM   #23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by premjan
every religion inevitably generates both gnostic and faith branches. the faith branch never gets along with the gnostic branch because the gnostics like to lord over the mere believers in their knowledge. hence your attempt to indicate that christianity was unique, and that jesus was a unique savant whose knowledge included no gnostic element, and none of whose disciples possessed gnostic knowledge, flies in the face of the manifest pattern of world religions. however, if it feeds your sense of uniqueness to believe that he was the son of God, then so be it.
I have no idea how any of this relates to my question and none of it seems to relate to any position I have ever held or even defended as a "devil's advocate". :huh:
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Old 11-04-2004, 03:00 AM   #24
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan

Assumes facts not in evidence. There is no evidence of any tradition of Jesus sayings in circulation except for those demonstratably Cynic-oriented and those from popular culture and tradition. Paul knows of no sayings tradition. Papias is evidence only for the second century, and his "living voice" may well be a reference to the indwelling of the spirit rather than the oral tradition (there is also the possibility that Eusebius simply invented him).
We have pre-Eusebian evidence of the existence and nature of Papias's work see Irenaeus Against Heresies Book V chapter 33

Quote:
In like manner [the Lord declared] that a grain of wheat would produce ten thousand ears, and that every ear should have ten thousand grains, and every grain would yield ten pounds of clear, pure, fine flour; and that all other fruit-bearing trees, and seeds and grass, would produce in similar proportions ; and that all animals feeding [only] on the productions of the earth, should [in those days] become peaceful and harmonious among each other, and be in perfect subjection to man.

And these things are bone witness to in writing by Papias, the hearer of John, and a companion of Polycarp, in his fourth book; for there were five books compiled by him. And he says in addition, "Now these things are credible to believers." And he says that, "when the traitor Judas did not give credit to them, and put the question, `How then can things about to bring forth so abundantly be wrought by the Lord? 'the Lord declared, `They who shall come to these [times] shall see.'"
We also have several post-Eusebian writers who seem to have independent knowledge of Papias's work.

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Old 11-04-2004, 07:04 AM   #25
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and papias wrote his works ca 100 c.e. not 135 as if often claimed.

I'll respond to your post tomorrow Vork, but you seem to mistakenly assume I am asaying Luke and John and co. were dependent upon Thomas. I did not argue any such thing. Merely that the instance you brough up does not show Thomas' dependence on Mark. For me to argue Thomas is completely independent I have every burden as do you in showing it is.

""""""How do you differentiate between ignorance of parables or apocalyptic sayings and a deliberate avoidance of them?""""""""

First,I am not 100% sure if you really can.

Second, I'd venture a guess an say on a thorough case by case analysis. We have to com up with a few examples and compare with all the rest I guess and see if the theory consistently explains the final result found in Thomas. Are there certain omissions he hsouldn't have made?

I would say the lack of order coupled with a lack of any Markan, Johannine, Matthean or Lukan redactional material is good evidence of independence. Some fatigue or clear creation of Mt Lk, Mk should have slipped in whether Thomas was directly using them or indirectly remembering them. This has to be more than can be ascribed to scribal tendencies as well (see Davies!)

I find the lack of significant redactional material persuasive. Others see some there. That is where the entire argument rests, not on finding overlap and parallel material which is of no value.

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Old 11-04-2004, 08:47 AM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
Dependent on them. The "early" Gospel of Thomas is a romantic historical fantasy of historicism.
[Somewhat Tangental]
Given that scholarship at large (most certainly including Thomasine scholarship), doesn't pay much attention to the Jesus myth (not saying it's right, just saying it's how it is), your position here is nonsensical.

Virtually nobody is arguing the historicity of Jesus on the academic front. You're suggesting that a position is being advocated in response to a question that is scarcely being asked, much less being adressed.
[/Somewhat Tangental]

Regards,
Rick Sumner
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Old 11-04-2004, 12:56 PM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Amaleq13
How do you differentiate between ignorance of parables or apocalyptic sayings and a deliberate avoidance of them?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vinnie
First,I am not 100% sure if you really can.

Second, I'd venture a guess an say on a thorough case by case analysis. We have to com up with a few examples and compare with all the rest I guess and see if the theory consistently explains the final result found in Thomas. Are there certain omissions he hsouldn't have made?
I can't think of a good reason for the author(s)/compiler(s) to intentionally avoid parables but I had Crossan in mind with regard to apocalypticism. If I recall correctly, he considers GTh and Q to represent diverging movements from a shared collection of sayings. The former moved in a gnostic direction (and away from apocalypticism?) while the latter became more apocalyptic. Within that context, an absence of apocalyptic pronouncements would be expected and not informative.

The absence of parables seems to me to be more consistent with early rather than late although "partially early" still seems reasonable (ie later additions did not include parables because the original was purely a sayings collection). I tend to think of GTh as late in its current form but likely containing an original core of sayings from the 1st century.
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Old 11-04-2004, 08:41 PM   #28
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I don't see the gospels as being apocalyptic, maybe Matthew, certainly John, but John didn't come from Q.
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Old 11-05-2004, 02:56 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by Vinnie
and papias wrote his works ca 100 c.e. not 135 as if often claimed.

I'll respond to your post tomorrow Vork, but you seem to mistakenly assume I am asaying Luke and John and co. were dependent upon Thomas. I did not argue any such thing.
I beg your pardon.

Quote:
I find the lack of significant redactional material persuasive. Others see some there. That is where the entire argument rests, not on finding overlap and parallel material which is of no value.
Vinnie
It's whether there is a lack that's under discussion.

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We have pre-Eusebian evidence of the existence and nature of Papias's work see Irenaeus Against Heresies Book V chapter 33
Thank you.

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Old 11-05-2004, 03:01 AM   #30
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Originally Posted by Rick Sumner
[Somewhat Tangental]
Given that scholarship at large (most certainly including Thomasine scholarship), doesn't pay much attention to the Jesus myth (not saying it's right, just saying it's how it is), your position here is nonsensical.

Virtually nobody is arguing the historicity of Jesus on the academic front. You're suggesting that a position is being advocated in response to a question that is scarcely being asked, much less being adressed.
[/Somewhat Tangental]

Regards,
Rick Sumner
Given that my point had nothing to with the Jesus Myth either, your position here is nonsensical. You seem to have a thing for raising the Jesus Myth at the oddest moments. Were it not for you, it would hardly be mentioned around here.

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