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12-10-2007, 01:52 AM | #81 | |
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12-10-2007, 06:18 AM | #82 | ||
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12-10-2007, 07:40 AM | #83 | |||
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Alright, I will roll up my sleeves and trawl through this.
The basic Argument Earl argues that past scholarship (first half of 20th century) accentuated the cosmological orientation of Hebrews as Platonic and the later scholarship treated it as Jewish. Platonic cosmology entails "moving in a vertical, dualistic universe of realms heavenly and earthly" whilst Jewish orientation has a "linear historical progression from past to present, with messianic and eschatological currents." I agree that it would have been more scholarly for Earl to provide the specific references and his failure to do this makes it difficult to verify his claims. Jeffrey's Charges Jeffrey Gibson argues that Earl is wrong on many counts: 1. Jeff argues that Earl has not "adequately and accurately summarized the course of 20th century academic research on the background of Hebrews." He fails to provide support for this as we see below. 2. Jeff argues that scholarship has not regarded the cosmological orientation of Hebrews in a Platonic/Jewish orientation and implies that Doherty has constructed a false dichotomy. He mentions L.D. Hurst's The Epistle to the Hebrews: It's Background and Thought (Cambridge, 1990) as an example that departs from Earl's dichotomy. 3. Jeff argues, contra Doherty, that "compatibility of the older view with the mythicist interpretation of the Epistle" is not one reason for the trend to shift from Platonic to Jewish. Jeff classifies this as a genetic fallacy and goes on to charge that Doherty has not demonstrated or supported this claim. 4. Jeff questions whether Doherty is "sufficiently acquainted with, grounded in, or has actually grasped, the arguments put forward by" the scholars to make the pronouncements Earl makes. Jeff then posts a huge tract of text that is presumably L.D. Hurst's The Epistle to the Hebrews: It's Background and Thought, pp. ciii-cxii. The purpose of this post is to assess whether the huge text supports Jeff's arguments 1-4 above. Jeffrey's Citation The pasted text includes an introductory section headed conceptual background that justifies the production of a bibliography that will help one understand the conceptual background of Hebrews. Note that we are interested in the cosmological orientation of Hebrews and points 1-4 above so this first section is too broad to be germane to Jeff's points 1-4 above. The text then proceeds to provide a bibliography variously grouped under the following headings: Philo, Alexandria, and Platonism, Qumran, Apocalyptic Judaism, Merkabah Mysticism, The Samaritans, Pre-Christian Gnosticism and Mystery Religions. Most of the text is too tangential to be useful and we get one relevant statement under the subtitle "Mystery Religions" and its the following statement: Quote:
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An analysis of Jeffrey's Citation Neither of the above provides relevant points to Doherty's point, which is specifically about the "cosmological orientation of Hebrews." The only one that says something relevant (the Platonic dualism), which is the one that briefly mentions Kasemann, stands in isolation from the rest and is demolished in the same post. As such, Jeff's post fails to demonstrate that Doherty has constructed a false dichotomy. It fails to demonstrate that the trend Doherty talks of is inaccurate. It fails to demonstrate that it is false that one reason for the trend is the fact that the former positions favored a mythicist interpretation and it fails to show that Doherty is not qualified to make the pronouncements Doherty makes. This renders Jeffrey's entire post tangential and not useful in supporting the charges he makes against Doherty. It can be safely considered an entire waste of time. |
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12-10-2007, 08:54 AM | #84 | |
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Consider e.g. Heracles. He started out with a human phase, his stable cleaning days. Then he died, underwent apotheosis, and now he resides in heaven. It would be helpful if we had a reference to his stable cleaning days as "his days of the flesh." Then we could say of Hebrews: See, this is the same construct as used for Heracles, and in that case it clearly meant to point out his earthly existence as opposed to his later divine state. Until we have such an example, either the one way or the other, the phrase as encountered in Hebrews remains agnostic with regard to HJ/MJ. It fits both scenarios equally well. Gerard Stafleu |
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12-10-2007, 10:04 AM | #85 | ||||
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12-10-2007, 10:17 AM | #86 | ||||
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12-10-2007, 10:48 AM | #87 |
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Which would also be in the same manner in which the Greeks saw Alexander as historical.
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12-10-2007, 11:38 AM | #88 | |
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12-10-2007, 11:39 AM | #89 | ||
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12-10-2007, 11:47 AM | #90 |
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Try the first one. My point being here that the passage in Apuleius shows that people at that time could put their mythological figures (Paris, Heracles) at the time "when the world began." Which means that they did not necessarily think of Heracles being in the same category of "historicity" as Alexander.
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