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Old 09-15-2013, 12:37 PM   #171
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But how is Against Heresies "complete bullshit" if it represents the opinions of a Christian living c 200 CE? Adolf Hitler's writings are still indispensable material for understanding German political and social life in the first half of the twentieth century
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Old 09-15-2013, 03:39 PM   #172
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That's wonderful. Why is it more likely the official Roman libraries had junk than the real thing?
It's quite possible that a Roman library had a copy of the LXX, but that cannot be inferred from the Apuleius quote.

If a Roman library had anything on Zoroastrianism, it most likely would have been recently written Greek pseudepigrapha, not authentic Avestan books translated into Latin. Moses's reputation as a "magician" surely inspired similar
pulp fiction in the Mediterranean world. The Paris Magical Papyri serves as an example.
The LXX is NOT the product of Jesus cult Christians so has no relevancy to the OP.
This is false. The evidence suggests that the Christians used a Greek LXX with "Christianised nomina sacra".

Quote:
The LXX was a product of Jews specifically to be placed in an Alexandrian Library in the time of Ptolemy II.
This LEGEND derives from the Aristeas Letter inserted into Josephus, and may be a false legend. In any case, the LXX used and preserved by the so-called early Christians contains "Christianised nomina sacra".


Quote:
The LXX, a Greek copy of Hebrew Scriptures, was written at least 200 years before the Jesus story and cult and did not originate with Jesus cult Christians.
The Greek NT and the Greek LXX used by Christians both use "Christianised nomina sacra". How do you explain this?
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Old 09-15-2013, 04:54 PM   #173
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The Greek NT and the Greek LXX used by Christians both use "Christianised nomina sacra". How do you explain this?
Could you please stop adding this comment to every thread?

Lay out the evidence of exactly what you think needs to be explained. Were the copies of the LXX written by Christian scribes?

You can read this on JSTOR:
The Origin of the Nomina Sacra: A Proposal by L. W. Hurtado
Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 117, No. 4 (Winter, 1998), pp. 655-673

Hurtado suggests the the origin of nomina sacra lies in Jewish gematria.

See also this thread on b-Greek:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Stephen Carlson
In most (all?) manuscripts of the LXX, Christian scribes used the "nomina sacra" for writing God, which is just the first and last letters of the word (θς, θυ, θω, θν), depending on which case it is. They also wrote a line over the nomen sacra, but I don't know how to reproduce it here.

In NT manuscripts, the nomina sacra convention is also used for Lord, Jesus, Christ, etc.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken Penner
Regarding the LXX: In Codex Sinaiticus, Scribe B (who copied the Isaiah portion) abbreviates the following words regularly by means of an overbar: θεός (ΘΣ, ΘΥ, etc.), κύριος (ΚΣ), πνεῦμα, Ἰσραήλ, Ἰερουσαλήμ, Δαυίδ (ΔΑΔ), ἄνθρωπος (ΑΝΟΣ), πατήρ, μητήρ, πᾶς, βασιλεία. These abbreviations (and those of Christ and Jesus in the New Testament) are distinctively Christian scribal habits, from the oldest Christian manuscripts. The reason for these so-called nomina sacra is unclear. Some of these words might have been abbreviated because they refer to divinity (God, Lord, Spirit, Jesus, Christ, Father, Son), but others such as μητήρ, πᾶς, and βασιλεία do not fit this pattern. Even when these words are not used to refer to God (e.g., some instances of κύριος, ἄνθρωπος, πατήρ), they are still abbreviated.
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Old 09-15-2013, 08:49 PM   #174
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The LXX is NOT the product of Jesus cult Christians so has no relevancy to the OP.
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
This is false. The evidence suggests that the Christians used a Greek LXX with "Christianised nomina sacra".
You are confused. You have no idea what is true or false as soon as you admitted there was a forgery mill and have no actual dated manuscript from Aristeas.

You seem not to understand that there were Later editors of the LXX.

You must mean Jesus cult Christians manipulated or interpolated the Greek LXX just like the TF was inserted into the writings of Josephus.

There is no evidence whatsoever that the LXX was originally produced by Christians of the Jesus cult.

It is documented that the LXX originated during the time of Ptolemy.

And further, there is no actual corroborative evidence that the Jesus stories were part of the LXX in the 2nd century.

No Jesus cult writer of the 2nd century claimed the Jesus stories were part of the LXX.

Examine Josephus' Antiquities of the Jews 12.
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If then it please thee, O king, thou mayst write to the high priest of the Jews, to send six of the elders out of every tribe, and those such as are most skillful of the laws, that by their means we may learn the clear and agreeing sense of these books, and may obtain an accurate interpretation of their contents, and so may have such a collection of these as may be suitable to thy desire."
The LXX was produced by SEVENTY-TWO Jews in the time of Ptolemy at least 200 years before the Jesus cult and was a Greek version of Hebrew Scriptures or Laws.


Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
The LXX was a product of Jews specifically to be placed in an Alexandrian Library in the time of Ptolemy II.
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman
This LEGEND derives from the Aristeas Letter inserted into Josephus, and may be a false legend. In any case, the LXX used and preserved by the so-called early Christians contains "Christianised nomina sacra".
The LXX has nothing whatsoever to do with the Jesus cult. The 4th century Church writers did not claim the Jesus story was started in the 2nd century BC so it completely unreasonable to assume that Aristeas Letter is a false legend.

We have Hebrew Scripture and we have the LXX and it can be easily seen that the LXX is fundamentally a Greek version.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
The LXX, a Greek copy of Hebrew Scriptures, was written at least 200 years before the Jesus story and cult and did not originate with Jesus cult Christians.
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman
The Greek NT and the Greek LXX used by Christians both use "Christianised nomina sacra". How do you explain this?
Please show that the Greek LXX from the 2nd century BCE used "Christianised nomina sacra".

Please show that the nomina sacra in the Greek LXX originated with Jesus cult Christians.

It is not logical at all that ONLY Jesus cult Christians could have used the nomina sacra.

The nomina sacra for 'God' in Greek does not require a Jesus cult.
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Old 09-16-2013, 03:13 AM   #175
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Originally Posted by Toto View Post
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The Greek NT and the Greek LXX used by Christians both use "Christianised nomina sacra". How do you explain this?
Could you please stop adding this comment to every thread?

Lay out the evidence of exactly what you think needs to be explained. Were the copies of the LXX written by Christian scribes?

You can read this on JSTOR:
The Origin of the Nomina Sacra: A Proposal by L. W. Hurtado
Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 117, No. 4 (Winter, 1998), pp. 655-673

Hurtado suggests the the origin of nomina sacra lies in Jewish gematria.

See also this thread on b-Greek:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Stephen Carlson
In most (all?) manuscripts of the LXX, Christian scribes used the "nomina sacra" for writing God, which is just the first and last letters of the word (θς, θυ, θω, θν), depending on which case it is. They also wrote a line over the nomen sacra, but I don't know how to reproduce it here.

In NT manuscripts, the nomina sacra convention is also used for Lord, Jesus, Christ, etc.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken Penner
Regarding the LXX: In Codex Sinaiticus, Scribe B (who copied the Isaiah portion) abbreviates the following words regularly by means of an overbar: θεός (ΘΣ, ΘΥ, etc.), κύριος (ΚΣ), πνεῦμα, Ἰσραήλ, Ἰερουσαλήμ, Δαυίδ (ΔΑΔ), ἄνθρωπος (ΑΝΟΣ), πατήρ, μητήρ, πᾶς, βασιλεία. These abbreviations (and those of Christ and Jesus in the New Testament) are distinctively Christian scribal habits, from the oldest Christian manuscripts. The reason for these so-called nomina sacra is unclear. Some of these words might have been abbreviated because they refer to divinity (God, Lord, Spirit, Jesus, Christ, Father, Son), but others such as μητήρ, πᾶς, and βασιλεία do not fit this pattern. Even when these words are not used to refer to God (e.g., some instances of κύριος, ἄνθρωπος, πατήρ), they are still abbreviated.
Also from the above ....

Quote:
The Nomina Sacra are probably one of the most universal, yet completely uncommented upon Christian scribal habits in History, for we really don't know all that much about them; when they first appeared; who started the trend off; whether it really was just a Christian scribal habit or whether they adopted it extremely quickly. But I don't think the Nomina Sacra correspond at all to the current trend of writing 'God' as 'G-d'. The most universal ones that appear in all Christian Greek manuscripts (those for Χριστος, Θεος, Κυριος, Ιησους) are all certainly considered 'Divine' names/titles, which would account for their special status as being singled out in the text.
The general modus operandi that seems to be followed by everyine is that when fragments of the LXX are examined, the presence of nomina sacra indicate a Christian presence (especially if the papyri is from a codex) OTHERWISE the presence is being assumed to be Jewish.

Septuagint As Christian Scripture by Martin Hengel

Quote:

The Form of the Christian LXX
The presence of nomina sacra in the LXX denote a Christian presence.

This claim is echoed by many articles and books.

THEREFORE it stands to reason that whoever the earliest Christian scribes were who preserved the New Testament (using nomina sacra) these same scribes also preserved a version of the LXX (using nomina sacra).

Is this clear up to this point?


The next point is that if this is accepted, and the evidence from the papyri supports this contention, then we are left with a further two points:

(1) The Christians must of preserved their own LXX (with nomina sacra) as a distinct and novel step beyond the legendary Ptolemaic LXX from the 1st century (or 2nd century depending on your view of Christian origins).

(2) The use of the nomina sacra in the NT and the LXX by the orthodox, and the use of the nomina sacra by the heretics who authored the gnostic gospels then must have continued and persisted from the 1st (or 2nd) century for 300 (or 200) years until the manuscripts found their way to Constantine's imperial scriptoria where they were mass produced and widely distributed.

A problem arises with the logical consequence outlined above in point (2).

How was it possible that there was an almost universal standard use by both the orthodox and the heretics of the nomina sacra over this 200-300 year period.

This appears to require an explanation.

OVER
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Old 09-16-2013, 03:17 AM   #176
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You seem not to understand that there were Later editors of the LXX.
You seem to forget that there are supposed to be extant early papyri fragments for
(1) the LXX
(2) the canonical NT
(3) the non canonical gnostic stuff.

All of these use nomina sacra and are palaeographically dated EARLY.


Quote:
Please show that the nomina sacra in the Greek LXX originated with Jesus cult Christians.
It is generally accepted by scholarship that this is the case.

See the above response to Toto and the links provided therein.
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Old 09-16-2013, 04:19 AM   #177
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Umberto Eco Name of the Rose - I know it is fiction - has chunks set in a monastic library that is clearly very chaotic in its management!

There are allusions in this thread to a possible formal christian library where things are handed down, which is evidence of quite sophisticated institutional arrangements.

There must be other evidence of this type of structure.

Possible places to look - Vatican Library, Alexandria, Carthage, Constantinople, Jerusalem, Lyon...

A formal study of how xians managed books might be interesting.
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Old 09-16-2013, 06:43 AM   #178
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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
You seem not to understand that there were Later editors of the LXX.
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
You seem to forget that there are supposed to be extant early papyri fragments for
(1) the LXX
(2) the canonical NT
(3) the non canonical gnostic stuff.

All of these use nomina sacra and are palaeographically dated EARLY.
The use of Nomina Sacra is really unrelated to time the LXX was composed because it is documented and corroborated in the writings of Josephus and others of antiquity.

Fragments of the LXX have been found and DATED before the Jesus story and cult was claimed to have started.

The LXX is NOT a product of the Jesus cult of Christians and is confirmed by PALEOGRAPHIC dating.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Septuagint_manuscripts

Quote:
Manuscripts are generally numbered according to Alfred Rahlfs' Verzeichnis der griechischen Handschriften des Alten Testaments (1914). The oldest manuscripts of the Septuagint include 2nd century BCE fragments of Leviticus and Deuteronomy (Rahlfs nos. 801, 819, and 957), and 1st century BCE fragments of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, and the Minor Prophets (Rahlfs nos. 802, 803, 805, 848, 942, and 943)....
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Old 09-16-2013, 10:16 AM   #179
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
...
How was it possible that there was an almost universal standard use by both the orthodox and the heretics of the nomina sacra over this 200-300 year period.

This appears to require an explanation.

OVER
They wrote in the same language, Koine Greek, and they used the same shorthand/abbreviations. :huh:

Given that we don't understand exactly why these particular abbreviations were used, I don't see anything that requires some elaborate explanation. And if we did understand why, I'm not sure what other problem this would illuminate.
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Old 09-16-2013, 11:31 AM   #180
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That's rather speculative and a stretch......in the case of modern Jews, Orthodox Jews do not write sacred terminology the same way this is done by non-Orthodox (Reform/Conservative) or secular Jews in Hebrew or in Yiddish.

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Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
...
How was it possible that there was an almost universal standard use by both the orthodox and the heretics of the nomina sacra over this 200-300 year period.

This appears to require an explanation.

OVER
They wrote in the same language, Koine Greek, and they used the same shorthand/abbreviations. :huh:

Given that we don't understand exactly why these particular abbreviations were used, I don't see anything that requires some elaborate explanation. And if we did understand why, I'm not sure what other problem this would illuminate.
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