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#31 | |||
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From Vridar's blog: Quote:
They appear to be inventing paradigms in order to try and salvage some integrity for a history that has yet to be written. But for the sake of the argument, let us assume there was an oral tradition and that Eusebius just unfortunately "made another mistake". The logical implication of a prior oral tradition is that we must be dealing with a later editor who assembled the texts we have before us. On a positive note this assumption provides an explanation for the appearance of the universal and consistent use of "nomina sacra" in the earliest Greek texts. But on a negative note, it introduces another NAMELESS player to the saga of the history of anonymous authorship - a player unknown to Eusebius, and hence to us. Duplicity abounds. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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#32 | ||
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Andrew Criddle |
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#33 | |
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#34 | |||
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Hi andrewcriddle,
Yes, it does seem to be testifying to an oral tradition and if there were more testimonies like this, we could say that the gospel writers were trying to record some kind of oral tradition, but this seems to be unique. Because it is unique, we cannot be sure it is reporting a true oral tradition, rather than an imagined oral tradition. One can see it as just another in a long list of rhetorical charges that the gospel writers make against "the Jews" (i.e. they betrayed their God, their prophets, the son of God; they're hypocrites, oppressors, and liars, and dozens of more rhetorical charges that are laid against the Jews). Quote:
What would make the oral tradition a whole lot more credible is if the gospel writers had related their sources and explained their own. For example, if Matthew had written something like "I heard from a Jewish man in the city of Tiberias that the disciples had stolen his body, but I talked with Peter and he told me that the disciples were all in his mother's house for those three days." This would sound more believable and less like another rhetorical hit on the Jews. Warmly, Jay Raskin Quote:
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#35 |
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Explaining the gospels by oral tradition has always struck me as a case of obscurum per obscurius.
And anyway, where is the evidence of any oral tradition whatsoever? So far as I can see the Christian texts all rely and place their authority on other texts. |
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#36 |
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Wow, I've won you over!
So nice that someone here finally listens to me. |
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#37 | ||
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#38 | ||
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The claim that the disciples stole the body of Jesus must have or was most likely invented by Apologetics to explain an earlier story about the Empty Tomb . In gMatthew, Jesus supposedly resurrected and was NOT seen by anyone except by the women and later his disciples in a mountain in Galilee. If Jesus did exist did ,claim he would resurrect and the tomb was found empty then it would have been his followers who would have removed the dead body of Jesus to give the impression that he resurrected. It is either that the disciples stole the body or that Apologetics invented the stolen body story. If opponents of Jesus actually killed him then there would have been no empty tomb. |
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#39 | |
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The fabricators were looking for a story with some antiquity in order to totally subvert the antiquity of the Greeks, and they "found" the LXX, a Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible. They used the LXX to fabricate the New Testament.
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Perhaps the writers were instruments of the Holy Spirit. Perhaps they were the instruments of a Holy Sponsor. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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#40 | |
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Although this may have no direct relevance to an oral tradition we should be continually reminded that only a very small percentage of people were literate and that these literate minority were the only bridge to the mass of illiterate people. At the time of their origins and appearance in history, the Christian texts were designed to be read out aloud to the sheeples. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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