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09-15-2011, 01:29 PM | #21 |
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Hi Stephan
Many of these interesting references seem to be claiming that when Jesus said "this is my body" he meant "this is the type of my body". What references are there to a claim that Jesus actually said "this is the type of my body" ? Andrew Criddle |
09-15-2011, 02:35 PM | #22 | |
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Well to be honest, it all comes down to the interpretation of von Harnack as to how the Marcionite gospel read, or better yet - what Tertullian meant when he made this ambiguous statement against Marcion:
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The alternative explanation is that the reading was limited to the ancient liturgy. Yet this doesn't preclude the liturgy reflecting the original reading. Look at the number of times fire or light being present at the baptism of Jesus are found in early liturgies and Patristic references. They go back of course to the baptism description in the Jewish-Christian gospels which are now lost. von Harnack is enough to take the claim seriously. I can't help but think this is yet another example where Tertullian or his source agree on the gospel reading and fight over its implications. Consider what is written later in Book Five: "And further, I have already,1 in discussing the gospel, by the sacrament of the Bread and the Cup, given proof of the verity of our Lord's Body and Blood, as opposed to Marcion's phantasm." It the Marcionite reading was simply "this is my body" the passage doesn't make sense. How could the Marcionites have claimed that Jesus had no material substance unless their passage had 'figura' in it? And besides it fits better with Exodus 3:12 - 15. I have a very difficult time with the idea of Jewish converts to Christianity believing that 'things' (i.e. objects in the world) actually were God or gods. It just smacks of the vulgarest expression of paganism resurfacing in Christianity. Philo and the early Alexandrian tradition would have known better. Another curious thing is how rarely the expression "This is my body" actually appears in the early Fathers. They seem to avoid the discussion completely. Very curious. |
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09-15-2011, 09:26 PM | #23 | |
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von Harnack's original references in Fremden Gott:
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It should be noted that this comment which von Harnack cites in the Latin translation - "Et corpus suum dedit eis ad manducandum, ut magnitudinem suam absconderet et opinionem eis inderet, se esse corporalem, quia eum nondum poterant intelligere" - is said by a marginal note to have come from Marcion himself. McCarthy translates the original text as "What was the purpose of the appearance of his body and his nourishment? [Marcion] said, "That he might hide his greatness and make them believe that he was corporeal, because they were not capable of [grasping] it." von Harnack's point is that this piece of evidence seems to support the idea that the Marcionite text said that the bread was 'the type of my flesh' |
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09-16-2011, 12:01 AM | #24 | ||
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Apparently the debate over the proper reading or meaning of the passage is very old indeed. From Martin Luther's That these words of Christ, ‘This is my body’, etc.,still stand firm against the fanatics [E.G. Rupp and Benjamin Drewery, Martin Luther (London: Arnold, 1970), 132-5]:
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Johannes Œcolampadius (or Œkolampad) (1482 – 24 November 1531) was a German religious reformerHe was born in Weinsberg, then part of the Electoral Palatinate. He attended school at Weinsberg and Heilbronn, and then, intending to study law, he went to Bologna, but soon returned to Heidelberg and took up theology. Enthusiastic about the new learning, he passed from the study of Greek to that of Hebrew, taking his bachelor's degree in 1503. He became cathedral preacher at Basel in 1515, serving under Christoph von Utenheim, the humanist bishop of Basel. In Basel Oecolampadius became an editorial assistant and Hebrew consultant to Erasmus' first edition of the Greek New Testament, and wrote that edition's epilogue in praise of his master That these Protestant theologians also thought that Jesus uttered the words 'this is the sign of my flesh' is quite interesting. More about the controversy is developed here (for those who can read German) http://books.google.com/books?id=zT3...arnack&f=false Another quote from Luther against these men (and Calvin I presume): Quote:
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09-16-2011, 04:17 AM | #25 |
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Yes, Christianity is 2000 years old and an object of interest in the mind of billions of men and women spread over the span of five continents.
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09-16-2011, 07:22 AM | #26 | |
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fingo, fingere : 1 - compose, create, invent 2 - imagine 3 - mold, form, shape 4 - produce 5 - adapt, transform figura : 1 - beauty 2 - figure of speech 3 - shape, form, figure, image 4 - style Why not translate : this is the image of my body ? |
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09-16-2011, 08:00 AM | #27 |
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Even those of us who think Jesus was likely an historical figure are at a loss to explain how we can have verbatim quotes of what he said. No stenographers, no audio tape, only reports long after the event based on traditions about what he said. See the Sermon On The Mount as rendered in a very funny scene from the Life Of Brian.
For that reason I regard it as silly to parse unreliable quotes to find out exactly what Jesus meant when we can't even reliably reproduce exactly what he said. Navel gazing posing as deep thought, theology at its worst. I expect this from theologians, but not from folks who style themselves as careful thinkers. Steve |
09-16-2011, 08:57 AM | #28 | |
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With regards to the question of why the Marcionites would have had a gospel which speaks of Christ's flesh as a 'figure' von Harnack draws our attention to this passage from the Dialogues of Adamantius, which I have reproduced from Pretty's translation. Eutropius (Eutr.) is the judge of the debate, Megethius (Meg.) is the Marcionite, Adamantius (Adam.) is the Catholic:
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09-16-2011, 12:05 PM | #29 | |
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HISTORY OF DOGMA
BY DR. ADOLPH HARNACK ORDINARY PROF. OF CHURCH HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY, AND FELLOW OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, BERLIN _TRANSLATED FROM THE THIRD GERMAN EDITION_ BY NEIL BUCHANAN VOL. II. BOSTON LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 1901 CONTENTS http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/19613/pg19613.txt Quote:
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09-16-2011, 12:38 PM | #30 | |
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The problem facing Christianity—from Harnack’s
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