Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
03-11-2008, 11:31 AM | #81 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Florida
Posts: 315
|
Quote:
That link was interesting. The part about the different councils is transparent to someone reading the gospels in English, as I do. The passage about burying the three bodies also impacts my post #73 on this thread. Thanks for bringing that to my attention. Stuart Shepherd |
||
03-11-2008, 11:46 AM | #82 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Bordeaux France
Posts: 2,796
|
Arimathaea, the name
I have found successively this :
1 - In the book Jesus, by Charles Guignebert (1938), Arimathaea is given in a small note as the homeland of the prophet Samuel. 2 - 1 Samuel, Chapter 19, Verse 18 : Now David fled and escaped and came to Samuel at Ramah, ... 3 - Ramatha : the name means Raised, lofty. Ramah, or Ramatha could be a hill, and this etymology is not very encouraging, because I think that there are many placenames of this kind. 4 - Ramatha, 5 miles north of Jerusalem, was said in the IVth century to have been the birthplace of Joseph of Arimathea and the homeland of Samuel. St Jerome writes that this town is between Lydda (now Lod) and Joppe (now Tel-Aviv Jaffa). 5 - But, there is another Ramatha, Ramathaïm-Sophim, which is also said to be the homeland of Samuel. |
03-11-2008, 02:46 PM | #83 |
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: California, USA
Posts: 338
|
Arimathaia as Bestdiscipleton?
I am not engaging any other issues here. Some asked me to explain my theory of the town name (since it has gotten garbled in transmission). That's all I intend to do. You can debate its merits amongst yourselves. I'm not interested. But just to set the facts straight:
There is a reason (a) I have not published this theory and (b) I only posed it originally as a question. It is mere speculation and should not be treated as anything more than that. As to the details: (1) The ari- prefix is indeed an old Greek root prefix meaning "best" (e.g. aristocracy, "rule of the best"). That's outright stated in the standard L&S Lexicon, "ari- : insep. prefix, like eri-, strengthening the notion conveyed by its compd.: cogn. with areiôn, aristos, chiefly denoting 'goodness, excellence'." This would have been well-known to anyone educated in Greek of the time, since ancient education emphasized classical and preclassical poetry, including the interpretation of rare words commonly used in such literature, where even the L&S notes this prefix saw wide use. At least half a dozen examples are listed in the L&S. (2) The termination -aia for forming town names out of root words is widely attested as commonplace (countless examples can be seen in the Barrington Atlas, which is now the standard reference for ancient geography). The stand-alone word "disciple" is mathêtês, but the root is math-, forming the noun mathê, which means education, learning, gaining information (as reported in the L&S), and the corresponding verb math-ein, and many related cognates. So a town could in principle be recognizably named mathaia, "teaching town" and hence (by association) "disciple town" (i.e. the town inhabited by people who receive the best teaching), or what we might encounter in English as "Teachton" or "Discipleton." Analogous examples are the actual towns of Dikaia (Justice Town), Drymaia (Thicket Town), or Gygaia (Gyges' Town). The reason I have not published this, and only phrased it as a question, is that I have no particular reason to believe this is what Mark was doing, unless certain assumptions are established first, including (i) the scholar-reported difficulty in identifying a real town with that name is granted as a problem and (ii) Mark created the name in Greek for a symbolic purpose (or selected a real town name and transliterated it into Greek in just this way for its symbolic use). In other words, if Mark is creating or forming a name for its symbolic hidden meaning (you have to grant that first before the theory is even worth considering), then the readiest possibility would be the intended meaning that Arimathaia is the town where the best teaching (the best doctrine) comes from, and thus where the best students (the best disciples) come from, conveying the point that Joseph behaved the way a good disciple should have, and only later was this hidden meaning telescoped into Joseph actually being a disciple (or else that development was actually made to make the symbolic point even clearer). Currently I think it only makes sense to see this as the case if you already reject the historicity of either Joseph or his Gospel description (which you would have to do on other grounds). For there are other viable (although varyingly odd) interpretations of the name's derivation from real towns. |
03-11-2008, 06:06 PM | #84 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 89
|
Is there any real point in continuing the debate on whether Arimathaia is a proper word or not? After all, all the opponents of the early christians accused them of writing appalling Greek so they may have just constructed the word incorrectly.
What is important in the first instance I think is examining the story and trying to determine if it has any credence as a reasonable description of a historical event as christians have claimed. |
03-11-2008, 08:50 PM | #85 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 3,058
|
Quote:
Here's the full entry: So thanks for the omission of the material which might cast doubt upon your claim. Quote:
And even if you can, was Mark classically educated? Quote:
Quote:
And following that entry we get immediately this: Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
and for μάθησις they have Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
The name is Drymaea, isn't it? Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
And why does no classically trained early church father ever tell us that "discipletown" is the meaning of Ἂριμαθαίας? Jeffrey |
||||||||||||||||||||
03-11-2008, 11:08 PM | #86 | |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Florida
Posts: 19,796
|
Quote:
|
|
03-12-2008, 05:31 AM | #87 | ||||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Florida
Posts: 315
|
Quote:
You never know what unbelievable story the fundies will concoct to explain away contradictions. But what about Nicodemus? The Gospel according to John has him helping Joseph of Arimathaea to bury Jesus, and he was also a member of the council. How did he vote? Quote:
Quote:
Stuart Shepherd |
||||
03-12-2008, 11:02 AM | #88 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Charleston, WV
Posts: 1,037
|
Something else which makes the Joseph of Arimathea story seem suspicious is the fact that once Joseph completes the burial of Jesus, he completely disappears from the NT, even though he was in a unique position to be one of Christianity's biggest proponents. Joseph of Arimathea was a righteous man (Luke 23:50), who acted bravely since he was a dissenter in the decision to betray Jesus (Luke 23:51; cf. Mark 15:43) and had to be a disciple of Jesus in secret "for fear of the Jews" (John 19:38). It would seem that such a high-placed individual would have been the perfect candidate to spread the message of the resurrection, especially since he of all people could verify that the tomb was empty: the tomb was Joseph's (Mathew 27:60), and he, along with Nicodemus, a Pharisee who knew that Jesus was from God (John 3:1-2), performed the burial. Why wasn't Joseph privy to the "many convincing proofs" and instructions about the kingdom of God, which Jesus provided during his 40-day sojourn after the resurrection?
Quote:
|
|
03-12-2008, 11:31 AM | #89 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Florida
Posts: 315
|
Quote:
Excellent observations..on the money. The NT treats Joseph of Arimathaea as a supporting player in their theatre production, and soon as he is no longer needed to create the drama he is dumped. You have definitely exposed the fiction of this "greatest story ever told". Stuart Shepherd |
||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|