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Old 06-01-2003, 11:59 AM   #41
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Hey Layman, isn't it time to cut out the childish insults? They're getting a bit old. You're sounding like you can't find any real arguments. I read lots of books, not always the same books you read, but I did catch your misstatement of Kummel, remember?

Quote:
Originally posted by Layman
This issue has nothing to do with "orthodoxy." Just the opposite, in fact, could very well be true. It is largely fundamentalists who reject the idea that Matt[h]ew and Luke wrote after Mark. . . .

My position is not in need of rescue. If you accept Matthean and Lucan dependence on Mark, it's the only position on the table. . . If you open almost any introduction to the New Testament, you'll find probable dates placing Matt[h]ew and Luke 10 or more years after Mark. Surely you can find such an introduction?
The issue here is not Marcan priority, but a lengthy 10 year gap that would fit your scenario.

We have seen many instances where there is a "scholarly consensus" that is based on nothing more than a best guess or hand-waving. I suspect this 10-20 year gap is similarly based on quicksand.

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I don't think you know what your position is. And I don't think you really know what "The Gospel for All Chrsitians" says. I own the book and have read it. I think Longenecker is a fine moderate-to-conservative scholar whose positions regularly boost the Christian faith. In other words, he's the kind of author you usually avoid like the plague.
I have a copy of The Gospels for all Christians in front of me. It is edited by Bauckham, with articles by Michael Thompson, Loveday Alexander, Richard Burridge, Richard Bauckham, Steven Barton, and Francis Watson. It details the technology of book production and copying in the early Christian world, and argues that early Christians were in constant communication with each other - while noting, of course, that

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We can only attempt to proceed, as so often, by analogy and by the disciplined use of the historical imagination, the discipline being provided in this case by the few (often disconnected) pieces of hard information we do possess, like the stray fragments of a long-broken pot which it is the archeologist’s job to try to put together again. Any such reconstruction is bound to contain a large amount that is frankly hypothetical: but the best story, in these circumstances, is simply the one that makes the most convincing use of the largest numbers of fragments, while retaining an awareness of its essentially hypothetical nature.
from p. 71, "Ancient Book Production and the Circulation of the Gospels" by Loveday Alexander.

Quote:
. . .

Nothing about the ending being lost requires that Mark wrote "privately." But we don't know how many copies there were. Reproducing such works was time consuming and expense, so very silly to assume--as you have done--that every community and every travelling missionary had a copy in his pocket. Nor do you seem to be reading my posts. I think it's probably, perhaps likely, that Matthew had access to the original Marcan ending. There is less evidence that Luke did, but Luke's entire Passion Narrative shows more independence from Mark than does Matthew's. So it is possible that he did.

. . .
Reproducing scrolls was time consuming and expensive compared to current technology, but the evidence presented in The Gospels for All Christians is that early Christians were willing to invest the time and expense in documentary production.

If you think that aMatthew had Mark’s original ending - which he felt free to rewrite, adding the earthquake, the angel, the guards at the tomb who were bribed by the leaders of the Jews, and the Great Commission - it is not clear which elements of gMatthew’s ending you think came from gMark.

Besides, you have not answered this argument very well:

Quote:
Given the independence of the traditions of Matthew and Luke, it is unlikely that they had access to an extended Marcan ending. Otherwise, they both probably would have relied more on it and shown greater similarities regarding the resurrection appearances. As it is, it appears that Matthew and Luke rely traditions independent of Mark.
-from Layman’s opening post.

You started this thread with an argument that the author of Mark must have written a resurrection appearance, because you think that Mark believed in the resurrection and there must have been a tradition of bodily resurrection among early Christians, as shown by Paul’s letters (although I believe that you would not argue that Mark had ever read Paul's letters.)

Koy raised the issue of bodily versus spiritual resurrection. It’s not an issue I want to discuss now (before I read a few more books.)
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Old 06-01-2003, 09:14 PM   #42
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I'm on the big bad atheist "ignore" list all theists who try to infiltrate our realm are given, Toto. I think Tercel hands them out at church socials.
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Old 06-02-2003, 05:20 AM   #43
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If you open almost any introduction to the New Testament, you'll find probable dates placing Mattew and Luke 10 or more years after Mark. Surely you can find such an introduction?

Yes, that's what all the books say. But it is simply another case of unsupported ex cathedra ukases. Where is the sound reasoning for that gap?

David Ross argued that both Matthew and Luke had motives to change the story from the original ending of Mark. Matt presented Jesus as a second Moses, so fishing story is too humble an ending (though Matt 28:16-20 did have him meet his disciples in Galilee, he gave the Great Commission at a mountain), while Luke thought the Resurrection would appear in Jerusalem. And he certainly knew the story of the miraculous fish which Powell argued was the original ending of Mark, but is now the ending of John. The only question is where he got it from, the ending of John, or of Mark?

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Old 06-02-2003, 05:23 AM   #44
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We have a tremendous amount of primary, and valuable secondary, sources about Paul. More than for most any other Jewish figure of that time

More than for Josephus or Philo? Herod the Great and several other Herodians? I think not. And much of the info about Paul, at least that in Acts and other second century fantasies, is clearly legendary and nigh-on useless.

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Old 06-02-2003, 08:15 AM   #45
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Quote:
Originally posted by Vorkosigan
We have a tremendous amount of primary, and valuable secondary, sources about Paul. More than for most any other Jewish figure of that time

More than for Josephus or Philo? Herod the Great and several other Herodians? I think not. And much of the info about Paul, at least that in Acts and other second century fantasies, is clearly legendary and nigh-on useless.

Vorkosigan
Actually, I was thinking of Josephus and Philo when I added "most." "Most" certainly does not mean "all." Do we have any primary evidence for Herod the Great? And I do not share your assumption that Acts was a second century fantasy. Far from it. Acts was a first century writing that had access to reliable information about Paul.
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Old 06-02-2003, 08:27 AM   #46
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Quote:
Originally posted by Toto
Hey Layman, isn't it time to cut out the childish insults? They're getting a bit old. You're sounding like you can't find any real arguments. I read lots of books, not always the same books you read, but I did catch your misstatement of Kummel, remember?
I remember that you attempted to manufacture some contradiction. Kummell backed up my assertion--the majority of scholars date Mark before 70 CE.

If we are going to visit the hall of idiot statements past though, perhaps you could finallye explain to me where the census is discussed in Matthew's gospel, or how the confrontation between Peter and Paul in Galatians was the first time they had met? I doubt you want to go there, Toto.



Quote:
The issue here is not Marcan priority, but a lengthy 10 year gap that would fit your scenario.
I do not need a 10 year gap to fit my scenario.

Quote:
We have seen many instances where there is a "scholarly consensus" that is based on nothing more than a best guess or hand-waving. I suspect this 10-20 year gap is similarly based on quicksand.
Really? Why? Are you committing yourself to the idea that Mark, Matthew, and Luke, wrote at around the same time? Why?

Quote:
I have a copy of The Gospels for all Christians in front of me. It is edited by Bauckham, with articles by Michael Thompson, Loveday Alexander, Richard Burridge, Richard Bauckham, Steven Barton, and Francis Watson. It details the technology of book production and copying in the early Christian world, and argues that early Christians were in constant communication with each other - while noting, of course, that
Ah, you finally got a copy. Why do you think this quote helps you? And while I think Bauckham's book makes some good points, he admits to be swimming up stream.


And as usual you've ignored additional arguments. Like the ascendency of Matthew and Luke at the expense of Mark by most churches.

Quote:
Reproducing scrolls was time consuming and expensive compared to current technology, but the evidence presented in The Gospels for All Christians is that early Christians were willing to invest the time and expense in documentary production.
Obviously they were, but this does not put a copy of the Gospel of Mark in the pocket of every travelling missionary that happened to pass through.

Quote:
If you think that aMatthew had Mark’s original ending - which he felt free to rewrite, adding the earthquake, the angel, the guards at the tomb who were bribed by the leaders of the Jews, and the Great Commission - it is not clear which elements of gMatthew’s ending you think came from gMark.
That Matthew and Luke had their own sources as well as used Mark is obvious. The former does not forbid the latter. Or are you now rejecting Matthewan and Lucan reliance on Mark?

Quote:
Besides, you have not answered this argument very well:.
The more I researched the issue the less persuasive this assumption became. On a logical level, it is certainly possible that Matthew knew Mark's ending and Luke did not. Or vice versa. Which is why I said that I now suspect Matthew may have had access to a longer ending. Luke may have as well, though, from what I have read, the case is less perusasive for him.

Quote:
You started this thread with an argument that the author of Mark must have written a resurrection appearance, because you think that Mark believed in the resurrection and there must have been a tradition of bodily resurrection among early Christians, as shown by Paul’s letters (although I believe that you would not argue that Mark had ever read Paul's letters.)
Sigh. It really seems you did not even read the opening post.

Quote:
Koy raised the issue of bodily versus spiritual resurrection. It’s not an issue I want to discuss now (before I read a few more books.)
If it's not an issue that you want to discuss why did you waste so much of my time trying to discuss it?
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Old 06-02-2003, 08:30 AM   #47
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Originally posted by Koyaanisqatsi
I'm on the big bad atheist "ignore" list all theists who try to infiltrate our realm are given, Toto. I think Tercel hands them out at church socials.
Since you've admitted I was right that Paul believes in a bodily resurrection, continuity between the old and the new body, the transformation of the old into the new, I didn't have much else to argue with you about. Purported disputes between Luke and Paul over the nature of the resurrected body is certainly beyond the scope of this thread. I think you are wrong on that, but I am spending my limited time on matters more closely related to this thread.
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