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09-19-2011, 04:55 PM | #71 | ||
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09-19-2011, 05:11 PM | #72 | ||
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09-19-2011, 05:24 PM | #73 |
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Why no just assume there is no later addition and the words are Josephus' own? This would discredit his independence as a source and in any case he wasn't a contemporary. We can agree that around that time there were at least some people who believed Jesus was the Messiah or else there wouldn't have been an early church.
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09-19-2011, 05:43 PM | #74 |
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The whole thing is obviously a later interpolation. Relying on Layman quoting Vermes and Meiers is folly.
Joe Atwell called attention to the passages following the TF. They have a strange satirical air to them, especially the one about "Paulina" (both concern women married to a Saturninus). In fact the one right after it is about a fake god who reveals himself after three days...... Doherty is a good antidote: http://jesuspuzzle.humanists.net/supp16.htm "But here, as Zindler points out, Josephus is very clear that this is a digression, for he introduces the account with: “I will now first take notice of the wicked attempt about the temple of Isis, and will then give an account of the Jewish affairs.” At its conclusion he alerts the reader: “I now return to the relation of what happened about this time to the Jews of Rome, as I formerly told you I would.” As Zindler says, “No such notice is given to explain his alleged digression into Jesus appearing alive on the third day.”" As Doherty points, let's assume a less Christian partial TF was present. That gives even greater motive for the writers of the early Christian era to use it. Yet none do. Later writers also seem to be aware of copies of J that have no TF:
You can be sure that if they possessed an original text with the partial fantasy TF, they would have mentioned it. Earl also observes:
The TF floated into these texts as a bloc. And not the partial fantasy TF, either. Vorkosigan |
09-19-2011, 06:54 PM | #75 | |
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Who were the people really interested in establishing some authentic history for their "nation of Christians" and when did they really swing into action before the 4th century? |
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09-19-2011, 07:13 PM | #76 | |
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After all, Eusebius included some dubious documents - correspondence between Jesus and King Agbar, e.g - which later scholars in the Renaissance were easily able to identify as forgeries. |
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09-19-2011, 07:13 PM | #77 | ||
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See Making fruit salad of the Testimonium Flavianum Ted the "Partial TF" argument appears to runs like this. The TF may not be an apple (a genuine juicy testimony) but it certainly not a lemon (a common sour forgery) -- This bit is often omitted from treatments such as Price's, but not Kirby's because is is in fact something else which we will call an orange (with bits of partial apple, mixed with bits of partial lemon). |
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09-19-2011, 07:14 PM | #78 | ||||||||||||
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[T2]"About the same time another outrage threw the Jews into an uproar"[/T2] The Jesus insertion has nothing to do with the Jewish uproar Josephus was talking about before or after it. It's a fish out of water. Quote:
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And don't just pick out what you don't like. Quote:
You analogy is wrong. You can point to a radiator. It is not an arbitrary decision to isolate a fault there. It is purely arbitrary to admit that a text has been tampered with and then cut out the obvious bits proclaiming that the rest must be good. It is one thing to isolate bits that are clearly not a part of the original. But there can still be other parts that slip through because they don't look so obvious. Some flyspecks aren't black and blend in on the bread You will go away unrepentantly convinced that one can be this arbitrary, while being correct. And I'll go away unrepentantly knowing that you too frequently talk through your hat. |
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09-19-2011, 07:26 PM | #79 | ||
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For newcomers, I'm trying to understand what seems to me to be a strong argument for Eusebian interpolation, that is not begin presented as a strong argument. Kirby doesn't even mention it in his article. Nor Price. And Olsen downplays it. Why isn't it being trumpeted for interpolation instead? |
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09-19-2011, 07:42 PM | #80 | ||
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Photius writes: http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/ph...ibliotheca.htm On the other hand the divine Ignatius and Clement, the author of the Stromateis, and Eusebius Pamphilus and Theodoret of Cyr condemn the heresy of the Nicolaitans but deny that Nocholas was connected with it. Hippolytus and Irenaeus claim that the Letter to the Hebrews is not by Paul 26, but Clement and Eusebius and a numerous company of the other fathers count this letter among the others and say that Clement named above translated it from Hebrew.So why did Photius not refer to the TF? |
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