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04-23-2001, 06:23 PM | #111 |
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POLYCARP: Tacitus is referring to the Roman governor Pilate as a procurator because that is the title with which he is familiar. Its the same type of mistake as calling Massachussets a "state". Its not a "state", its a "commonwealth". However, we don't nitpick with someone who calls Massachussets a state anymore than we should nitpick with Tacitus for calling Pilate a procurator.
Its purely semantical... What exactly is your point about Tacitus referring to Pilate as procurator? EARL: The point is that Tacitus could not have been quoting from an official document of Jesus' period (as if there would have been such a record), which would have called Pilate "prefect" not "procurator." This means that Tacitus' source must have been secondary or hearsay not primary, whether from Christians or uninformed non-Christians of his own time; he was repeating common knowledge of his time (after 115 CE), the existence of which isn't in dispute. Tacitus is not an independent confirmation of Jesus' existence, since his information appears to come from a later period as opposed to an informed and independent (early) source, which would have provided the prefect-procurator distinction. **** NOMAD: In the KJV, Pilate is identified as the governor in Matthew, Luke and John 28:10. Matt does so no less than 8 times, starting with Matthew 27:2. And just to be certain, I looked up procurator under the NIV, NASB, KJV and RSV Bibles, and found no instances where this title was ever used (for Pilate or anyone else). EARL: The term "prefect" is also not found anywhere in the NT. The NT authors aren't aware, or at least don't use, the distinction. The author of Matthew calls Pilate simply "hegemon," which means "governor" or "leader" in general, rather than using the official Roman term. (We get the term "hegemony" from this Greek word.) The term "hegemon" doesn't betray any detailed knowledge of the Roman hierarchy on Matthew's part. And the same term is found in Luke 3:1, "hegemoneuo" ("being the leader"). Pilate is not mentioned at all in John 18:28. The term in John 18:28 is "praitorion" which means "judgment hall" or "palace." Again, no special knowledge is betrayed by the use of that term, no distinction between "prefect" and "procurator," nothing that could only have been received from a very early source of Jesus' own time. So as for Nomad's question, "Since the Gospels identify Pilate as the governor of Judaea (Matt 27:10, Luke 3:1, John 18:28), why would this error by Tacitus be attributed to Christians?" the answer is that this question rests on a false premise, that the NT authors showed detailed, independent knowledge of the Roman hierarchy of Jesus' time, and therefore wouldn't likely have been the source for Tacitus' use of "procurator." The term the NT authors used for Pilate was a general term for "leaders" or "governors," and therefore even later Christians of Tacitus' time, without any reference to the prefect-procurator distinction in their sacred texts could very well have been the source for Tacitus' error. Certainly we are entitled to believe that Christians rather than Roman records of Jesus' period would have been the more likely source for the error. **** Regarding Pliny, the point is not that Jesus isn't referred to in the passage, but that the author doesn't distinguish between an historical or mythological head of the religious group. The passage gives no details about an historical leader, such as Jesus, that could only have derived from an early, informed, and independent source. Pliny's information comes from Christians of his own time (around 112 CE). The same goes for Serapion, as far as I can see. [This message has been edited by Earl (edited April 23, 2001).] |
04-23-2001, 06:47 PM | #112 |
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Good, we're back to SERAPION.
A couple points to make here… Three times Pliny refers to "Christ". I really don't understand how you fail to see this as a clear reference to Jesus. You even said that Pliny received his info from Christians. If he got the info from Christians, then how in the world would he not know of Jesus? You are right. I blew this. I was just writing too fast. No need to have bitten your tongue. I deserved the abuse. Let's shelve this for a moment….. "Socrates is not dead, because of Plato; neither is Pythagoras, because of the statue of Juno; nor is the wise king, because of the NEW LAWS HE LAID DOWN." Polycarp, we have a translation problem here, because several versions I have: "…live in complete dispersion. But Socrates did not die for good; he lived on in the teaching of Plato. Pythagoras did not die for good; he lived on in the statue of Hera. Nor did the wise king die for good; he lived on in the TEACHING WHICH HE HAD GIVEN." That's the version from F. F. Bruce, as I cited, on the SecWeb. Where is yours from? Note also the JUNO-HERA flip-flop. Is this originally a latin version? Although it seems difficult to confuse TEACHINGS with LAWS. Does anyone have this in the original language? By the way, I found the entire text of the letter here, at New Advent, where they keep the Catholic Encyclopedia. It is a sad, and very moving letter. http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0863.htm And they wrote, for that passage: "…because of the statue of Hera; nor yet the Wise King, because of the NEW LAWS WHICH HE ENACTED." Jesus was not king, and did not enact or lay down any laws. Point remains. There is no reference to Jesus in this passage. Certainly not a specific one. To summarize, once again, there is no specific reference in Serapion and Suetonius. If it were there, you could just post it. Since Pliny and Lucian are specifically referencing Christian beliefs, how can they count as a "specific" reference to Jesus? For Tacitus, we have already seen, it is unknown where he got his information. Arguments could go either way. Some nine sources you gave as "specific references" have turned out to be not so specific. Marcus Aurelius we agreed has no specific reference. All of us have been making an implicit assumption that such works as count for specific references should be non-christian. But everyone is forgetting about -- gnostic and spurious works. Those are certainly extrabiblical, and may count as specific references. Michael |
04-23-2001, 08:36 PM | #113 | |
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04-23-2001, 08:39 PM | #114 | |
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Inquiring minds want to know Doug. [This message has been edited by Layman (edited April 23, 2001).] |
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04-23-2001, 09:41 PM | #115 |
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Turtonm, your reply dealing with the Chrestus/Christus argument was good.
However, I think that the evidence weighs in heavily on the side of this being a reference to Jesus. The discussion on Classic-L even ended with one of the very quotes that I posted above from J.P. Meier (i.e. - *quodam* argument). Suetonius was apparently talking about a Jew, so it really shouldn't matter that the name was common among non-Jews. All of this information was provided in my quotes above, but it might be hard to understand due to lack of context... Regardless, it is a disputed text, but a very good argument can be made for its referring to the Jesus of the NT. Most things in history are based on probability, and I think there is a high probability that Suetonius' passage indeed refers to Jesus (possibly in the very manner suggested in the Classic-L discussion). Turtonm, thanks for your thoughtful, researched, and documented opinion. Ish |
04-23-2001, 10:33 PM | #116 | ||||||||
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Tacitus is using the title that would have made sense to the readers of his day. How in the world you decided that this was because he got it (or could have even possibly gotten it) from Christians is beyond me. Christians weren't using the title procurator, so you think that Tacitus might have gotten it from them because...? Secondly, in the passage Tacitus makes a simple statement: Jesus was executed by Pilate during the reign of Tiberius. Since he does not elaborate on this point, you argue that this shows he may have gotten his information from Christians. This begs the question though. Why? Finally, you have never defended the assertion that Tertullian or Ignatius should have been aware of Tacitus' Annals, and further, that they should have quoted from it. You have offered no reason that we should accept either of these arguments. Quote:
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Look at it this way: Tacitus may have gotten his information from the man on the moon for all we know. But unless you are prepared to offer and defend an explanation for why we should think that he did (again, remember, you're saying that you think it is possible is not good enough), then why should we even consider this as a realistic option? Quote:
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Sorry Polycarp. Nomad |
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04-23-2001, 11:06 PM | #117 | |||||
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Did this argument make sense to you when you typed it? I think it is far more probable that Tacitus was simply using the title that was most commonly known to his readers of the early 2nd Century, and he made this choice regardless of who he used as a source. As for trying to pass this off as somehow a Christian invention, or that he had to have gotten this information from Christians, the reasoning behind this escapes me completely. Quote:
Nomad |
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04-24-2001, 04:43 AM | #118 | ||
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Doug, Doug, Doug... You are making me feel guilty for having to show how illogical your argument is. I think I'll leave you to rest in your happy place. What color is the sky in "happy land"? Peace, Polycarp (who is kinder and gentler today than he was yesterday) |
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04-24-2001, 05:06 AM | #119 | ||||
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I think Ish wrapped up the topic very well. We're not going to get much further on this topic. As for the "teachings/law" issue in Serapion I've seen it translated both ways. They would seem to be very close - maybe laws only to the followers of the king? Teachings would actually fit better with Jesus. I don't know what the original language says. It is a very sad letter from a guy who seemingly has no hope. Nomad is free to disagree with me on Serapion, although I must tell you I think he’s been blinded by Satan Lucian clearly believes Jesus existed. He doesn’t agree with Christian doctrine as is clear from his constant ridicule given to it. However, he refers to Jesus as a man who lived in Palestine and was crucified. He doesn’t scorn the fact Jesus existed – only the fact that Christians are stupid enough to worship such a man. Suetonius is probably the least likely of the bunch, but I still think its more probable to be a reference to Jesus than someone else. Quote:
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We really can’t trust Christian sources on the issue of Jesus because they’re biased and we know they always lied about everything. Do you think the gnostic Christians were an honest bunch? Peace, Polycarp |
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04-24-2001, 07:11 AM | #120 | |
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