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Old 08-24-2009, 07:01 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post

Sure, you see some in Tyndale and in the Geneva notes. Rheims NT (RCC) surely. Beyond that, not much in text.
There is the strange translation of Revelation 17:5 in the KJV which makes "mystery" part of the forehead inscription. The text could be read that way, but neither Tyndale nor modern translations do. While I cannot prove this, it seems to be influenced by Joseph Scaliger's recollection that the word "mysterium" had been written on the papal tiara. (My source that Scaliger reported this is on page 120 of Joseph Scaliger: a study in the history of classical scholarship (or via: amazon.co.uk) by Anthony Grafton. Oxford 1983)

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Old 08-24-2009, 10:19 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Hi Folks,

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort, using now well-known methodology,
Well-known because virtually every Westcott
(You keep putting these two names together as they are some kind of parah to you. Yes, they put the book out together, but you should know however that it was Hort who did all the grunt work of textual analysis.)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
and Hort methodology and analysis blunder was accepted, possible exceptions being the cloud over the Lucian recension and the absurd primitive corruptions. They deliberately designed a methodology to try to fight the "vile Textus Receptus". In their more lucid moments, even modern textcrits at times acknowledge that this was the real purpose of the textcrit endeavor of the last 130 years.
Is there anything in this besides YEC rhetoric?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Tended ?? The typical stuff. Simply list the readings in the W-H text that depart from Sinaiticus and Vaticanus when they agree.
List reasons why it would be necessary to abandon earliest manuscripts when they agree:

________________________
________________________
________________________
________________________
________________________

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
After you give that list, we can discuss if this is a tendency or a slavish and absolute submission to two corrupt manuscripts.
OK, we understand your fear of the texts that Hort relied on, but I'll wait for you to show that these texts are as you apparently so lamely claim to be more corrupt than your favored later manuscript evidence.

I gather you will admit that they are the oldest manuscript sources we have. If not, which texts that you can demonstrate are older?

I appreciate your resourceful consistency of trying to shift the burden of proof.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Please give the list above. Demonstrate that by "oldest traditions" what you mean is not only two corrupt manuscripts (and a couple of papyri sections).
How can you claim that they are corrupt when you have nothing to show that the prior state was very different from the Alexandrian tradition?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Even when there are early church writers with clear evidences that precede those manuscripts by a century or two.
You need to demonstrate this, but see below.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Simple question, which is an earlier tradition for Acts 8:37, Vaticanus and Sinaiticus or the early church writers Irenaeus and Cyprian ?
This is obviously one of those things that you've done your prep work on and I have never looked at before in this light. You know that one example in itself means little. However, Irenaeus doesn't give indications that he is citing from Acts 8:37. Irenaeus's Philip says 'that this was Jesus, and that the Scripture was fulfilled in Him; as did also the believing eunuch himself: and, immediately requesting to be baptized, he said, "I believe Jesus Christ to be the Son of God."' Where in any version of Acts 8 does Philip say to the eunuch "that this was Jesus, and that the Scripture was fulfilled in Him; as did also the believing eunuch himself"? Where in the same text does Philip say as Cyprian has him "If you believe with all your heart, you may"? You know that the answer is nowhere. What else did Irenaeus get from nowhere that might have got confused with early tradition?

I'm sure you've got other attempted proofs. This one's a failure.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Same question for the resurrection account in the Gospel of Mark, where Irenaeus is again one of the earlier traditions.
There's an assertion in here somewhere, but it's not particularly clear not enunciated with any data.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Now if you do not consider early church writers as "christian texts" then explain why the writings of these men who read and studied Bibles (most in Greek, Latin or both) hundreds of years earlier than any extant manuscripts are not texts.

Two corrupt manuscripts, one known and totally rejected and that to a large extent disagree with most EVERYTHING else in many verses, will clearly have "differences" from any consistent and accurate and pure Bible.

The devolution was to the corrupt text, from one that is pure. You have a couple of questions above to answer.
This is an a priori commitment which has no connection to reality made for it.

You have no way of knowing the temporal relationship between your favored texttype and the Alexandrian. As the earliest manuscripts are Alexandrian and feature elements that have not survived in later Greek texts Hort worked on the notion that the normalization process removed the wrinkles. That's one way of looking at it. But on the issue of being closest to the sources there is a prima facae case for supporting the oldest.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Actually, Hort was quite eclectic. He didn't always favor the oldest manuscripts.
See my request above. Surely there are 25 to 100 easy-find verses where Westcott and Hort rejected a reading of Vaticanus and Sinaiticus for other eclectic evidences, and you can list the easiest five above.
I haven't looked at Hort's actually work in over a decade. I don't even have a copy here of his text with apparatus. Perhaps you'd like to complain about my memory. Would you like me to google something for you?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Simply supply the list. If you cannot do so, simply say so and state why. You made the many claims about their eclectic methodology, give the verses that support the claim.
You might start with all the western non-interpolations. Hort used the Sinaiticus as his benchmark. All the non-interpolations are a sign of him preferring another text over Aleph. That makes eclectic. Oh,... I get it -- you want some evidence for favoring the TR.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Note : There is no difficulty confirming the verse claims. The W-H Greek is fully reflected in the RV (Revised Version) text which is close to identical to the NRSV, NAS, etc.
This is not what I have heard. Can you confirm with citable data that Hort's text "is fully reflected in the RV.. text which is close to identical to the NRSV, NAS,"...?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
The Reformation Bible Greek is 100% reflected in the King James Bible and the Geneva Bible. And, with a caution or two, Youngs and the NKJV and some other versions. Thus every significant variant can be easily seen in English.

The information about Aleph and B (and if their is a corrector) is available from Laparola, along with a bunch of other manuscript information, and also the e-catena material comes over automatically and there are ECW references (which material is often woefully incomplete, yet is helpful as far as it goes). Noting that they can put 500 Greek manuscripts under one entry (Byz) reflecting the deficient mentality of the modern textcrit biz.
Which of those 500 are early and what dates do you give for the earliest?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Oh, one other point. The pool of such agreements (Aleph-B) against the Reformation Bible is not a commonly-discussed number (and the number will vary based on significance) I think it is safe to say that 1000 is very conservative. The 180 major omissions on the Magic Marker page are mostly of this nature, and that represents only one type of difference, and very major ones. Remember that Aleph and B have 3000 significant disagreements with each other in the Gospels, per the Herman Hoskier analysis. If spin wants to claim that there are not many such verses (Aleph and B vs the Reformation Bible) he can do so and we can discuss this first and in depth, while he tries to give the examples requested.
There seems to be something you haven't got in the study. Hort's "neutral" text was a relative term. Today no single manuscript tradition is seen as 100% correct. Therefore I'm sure you will find individual issues that you can point at where one texttype will be preferable to others.


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Old 08-25-2009, 12:49 AM   #23
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Hi Folks,

It looks like spin now realizes he was blowing hot air, and that he now accepts that the actual Westcott-Hort theory was :

Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles

Asked for verses to support his earlier description :

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort, tended to favor readings from the oldest manuscripts ... Hort was quite eclectic. He didn't always favor the oldest manuscripts
Spin has defacto acknowledged that so far he has ZERO! In the whole 27 books of the NT ! By trying the "answer a question with a question" approach.

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
List reasons why it would be necessary to abandon earliest manuscripts when they agree: ________________________
Will spin retract now retract his blundering and misleading ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort ... didn't always favor the oldest manuscripts
Once spin does that, acknowledges that the W-H methodology was simply :

Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles

Then we will have a base to address this issue further. However, so far instead we have the same blunder in another form:

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort's "neutral" text was a relative term.
spin, its time to acknowledge the truth to the forum, you were wrong, the above erred either deliberately or lack of knowledge, in your main claim on their methodology.

(My conjecture is that the error was lack of knowledge, there is so much propaganda claptrap about the decrepit 'revision' and the resulting Greek text. And the modern version proponents rarely look at actual verses closely. Statements similar to that of spin's error here are repeated daily, you could probably find them from even "evangelical textual critics" .. yet again, without any verse examples where W-H actually did not use the agreed alexandrian reading from the two manuscripts over all other evidences.)

You now apparently accept (but will not acknowledge) that the whole W-H system boiled down to two manuscripts - and all other evidences were secondary (e.g. they may be consulted when Vaticanus and Sinaiticus did not agree, or when only one has a variant reading and the second lacked text and the variant in the first was prima facie absurd.)

W-H would take the Vaticanus and Sinaiticus reading
No matter what was in :

hundreds of Greek manuscripts
hundreds of Old Latin and Vulgate manuscripts
hundreds of Syriac manuscripts
other language evidences
early church writer references
(even ECW from before the two manuscripts would not affect the decision to take Aleph and B)

Whatever was in those evidences and contradicted their approach would be of no import, even if the reading was very strange, they would still take the two darling manuscripts.

(Possible exception: if the level of textual blunderama was so glaring that it seemed outside even the realm of their lectio difficilior approach .. a complete absurdity that could not be foisted into the text .. however readings with such a high bar of absurdity would in most, perhaps every, case be in only one of the two manuscripts, not both, for obvious reasons.)

spin ..
Simply write the truth on this, once, and we will continue.

Shalom,
Steven Avery
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Old 08-25-2009, 05:11 AM   #24
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Default thread is about Westcott-Hort 2 manuscript dependence

Hi Folks,

Note: Most of this thread is not King James Bible .. the main topic (after the posts that are about the ending of Mark) is about the:

textual theory of Westcott-Hort and their methodology of dependence on the two alexandrian manuscripts.

This is a Reformation Bible versus Critical Text discussion in the general sense, and a Westcott-Hort methodology discussion in the specifics.

There are a number of related elements within the discussion. such as the earlier writer citations, the relationship of English Bibles to the two underlying texts, the small differences between the Westcott-Hort text (reflected in the Revised Version) and the NA27 Critical Text (reflected in NAS, NIV etc) the citations in Acts 8:37.

While a thread about the King James Bible is fine in its own right, the only posts here really on that topic are the two between Avi and myself.

Shalom,
Steven Avery
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Old 08-25-2009, 06:37 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Hi Folks,

It looks like spin now realizes he was blowing hot air, and that he now accepts that the actual Westcott-Hort theory was :

Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles

Asked for verses to support his earlier description :

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort, tended to favor readings from the oldest manuscripts ... Hort was quite eclectic. He didn't always favor the oldest manuscripts
Spin has defacto acknowledged that so far he has ZERO! In the whole 27 books of the NT ! By trying the "answer a question with a question" approach.
You can see Steven Avery in the park on his soap box declaiming to know one that he knows that modern bibles are all crap because spin isn't going to pander to his folly and go and get a copy of the full Hort that he hasn't seen for a decade. OK, you've heard that. Get your whinge out of your system. Say it several times: spin has zero. Do it again: spin has zero. Feel good? Doesn't change much.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Will spin retract now retract his blundering and misleading?
Show that it is blunder and misleading. Cut the empty rhetoric and quote the exact errors of analysis that Hort made in his Greek text and explain why it is wrong. Perhaps, you might get an argument. But you are just building up to bust your guts about your prefab examples, just as the Aramaic primacy guys do.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Once spin does that, acknowledges that the W-H methodology was simply :

Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles
Would you mind showing that the text you don't understand but are trying to criticize can be summed up as "Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles"?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Then we will have a base to address this issue further. However, so far instead we have the same blunder in another form:

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort's "neutral" text was a relative term.
spin, its time to acknowledge the truth to the forum, you were wrong, the above erred either deliberately or lack of knowledge, in your main claim on their methodology.
I tell you what demonstrate your claim. You're big on shifting burdens. You've always been big on shifting burdens. This post is one long demonstration of you shifting your burden. If you want to make a claim about the Hort text, you have some time got to break down and learn the Greek and demonstrate your claims. Rehashing the apologetics is ultimately meaningless because you aren't demonstrating anything.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
(My conjecture is that the error was lack of knowledge,
I'm not going to renounce a position based on memory simply because you are rabbiting on with your usual apologetic agenda. Stop joking.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
there is so much propaganda claptrap
Sorry, did you just say -- I mean you -- did you just say "propaganda claptrap"? I mean are you committing the ultimate act of hypocrisy? It seems you are!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
about the decrepit 'revision'
Buzz word: "decrepit". It indicates nothing but your dislike. Where is your analysis. So far in this thread you've shown nothing.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
and the resulting Greek text.
What's your exact problem with it? If you can put it in a meaningful package I can look at it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
And the modern version proponents rarely look at actual verses closely.
Which scholars in the area do you mean? Can you name them? Or are you just doing what you usually do? -- waffle!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Statements similar to that of spin's error here are repeated daily,
Where is the error? Where is your evidence? Where is your argument? Where is your lunch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
you could probably find them from even "evangelical textual critics" .. yet again, without any verse examples where W-H actually did not use the agreed alexandrian reading from the two manuscripts over all other evidences.)
You are still too far up the road. The burden is back where you started. Demonstrate your case, rather than abdicate your responsibilities.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
You now apparently accept (but will not acknowledge) that the whole W-H system boiled down to two manuscripts -
I gather you are attempting to be a prophet. Sorry to disappoint you but you are without a clue. You are confusing the acceptance of Hort's preferences with Hort's whole system. All you need to do is show that his whole system is the way you are trying to portray it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
and all other evidences were secondary (e.g. they may be consulted when Vaticanus and Sinaiticus did not agree, or when only one has a variant reading and the second lacked text and the variant in the first was prima facie absurd.)
This simply negates your claim that "the whole W-H system boiled down to two manuscripts". You've just shown at a minimum that other manuscripts become deciders.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
W-H would take the Vaticanus and Sinaiticus reading
No matter what was in :

hundreds of Greek manuscripts
hundreds of Old Latin and Vulgate manuscripts
hundreds of Syriac manuscripts
other language evidences
early church writer references
(even ECW from before the two manuscripts would not affect the decision to take Aleph and B)
We've already seen you misuse data from church fathers. You are rushing to pile up so much material, though I know you haven't looked at anything but English apologetics. You know less than judge does about Syriac manuscripts. You apparently don't know anything about the scribal tendencies of Syriac manuscripts. You don't enter into the notion of dating any of these sources. You are just trying to boggle with numbers and the result seems guarateed to be meaningless.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Whatever was in those evidences and contradicted their approach would be of no import, even if the reading was very strange, they would still take the two darling manuscripts.
You know getting data out of you is like getting blood from a vampire. Lots of vampire rhetoric, but no substance.

Here you've skipped over the data and once again gone for one of your foregone conclusions.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
(Possible exception: if the level of textual blunderama was so glaring that it seemed outside even the realm of their lectio difficilior approach ..
Translation: Steven Avery and his apologetic cohorts (living and dead) don't like the approach. As a matter of fact they hate the logic of lectio difficilior. [If there are any other poor readers to this slugfest, lectio difficilior is the approach which notes the more difficult form of a phrase or passage is most likely to be changed, therefore those difficult phrases and pssages that have survived are more likely to represent an earlier form of the text.] Of course the logic of lectio difficilior has been accepted by the vast majority of text scholars. This makes Steven Avery out on a limb, so he shouldn't be so shocked about the state of text scholarship.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
.. a complete absurdity that could not be foisted into the text .. however readings with such a high bar of absurdity would in most, perhaps every, case be in only one of the two manuscripts, not both, for obvious reasons.)
Yup, Steven Avery sure doesn't like lectio difficilior, but have you ever seen a clear scholarly presentation of his point of view on the issue? Naaa, didn't think so.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
spin ..
Simply write the truth on this, once, and we will continue.
OK, show me by demonstrating the truth and yes we'll see where we go from there.


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Old 08-25-2009, 06:47 AM   #26
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Steven Avery describing Sinaiticus and Vaticanus:
Quote:
Those two early texts are woefully corrupt
Quote:
Originally Posted by Erasmus:
But one thing the facts cry out, and it can be clear, as they say, even to a blind man, that often through the translator’s clumsiness or inattention the Greek has been wrongly rendered; often the true and genuine reading has been corrupted by ignorant scribes, which we see happen every day, or altered by scribes who are half-taught and half-asleep.
My question to you Steven, is this: What would Erasmus have written about Westcott and Hort?
How do Erasmus, or you, Steven, or Westcott/Hort, or anyone else know what the ORIGINAL Greek texts contained?

Given that we do not, and can not, know with certainty, what the original texts were, absent a copy of the original version, how is it that reliance upon a translation from a faulty Greek copy into Latin or Syriac or Coptic renders clarity today? How do you know, Steven, that the Latin or Syriac or Coptic copies (of faulty Greek copies) are more faithful to the original Greek manuscripts, than Sinaiticus and Vaticanus?

Yes, we can see some problems with both of the latter documents. I don't dispute this fact. Any person can observe, using the internet, the fact that Sinaiticus contains redactions, scribbles, scribal notations, and textual modifications. I do dispute the notion that Erasmus' copies of ancient Greek manuscripts, or Steven Avery's copies of ancient Greek Manuscripts are ANY LESS woefully corrupted. They may even be or have been, more corrupted. No one knows, because no one has any extant original copy.

Let me write it again. We don't know anything about the original manuscripts' content, whether it is something as complex as the omission of entire verses from Mark 16, or something as simple as omission of a single Greek word, "mou" = English "my", in John 14:28:

KJV: " : for my Father is greater than I."

DRB: " : for the Father is greater than I."

So, Steven, since this thread has been split away from the question of the Endings of Mark, may I suggest, in order to SIMPLIFY the discussion, that we focus on this ONE sentence from John 14:28, involving this ONE word, "mou", i.e. "my", which I claim, has been wrongfully inserted into KJV and many other versions?

Which is the AUTHENTIC Greek, Steven? More to the point, how do you know, (what basis) which is the correct version, and which is the "woefully corrupted version: "the father" versus "my father" --i.e. which is the version that the author of John initally wrote? On the one hand, Jesus is referring to THE father, and on the other hand, according to your beloved KJV, "MY" father.

Let me make my own opinion very clear, I believe that the ORIGINAL Greek manuscript, when the ink came off the quill of whoever was writing John 14:28, did not include this word, "mou". It is my belief, not a fact, that "mou" was inserted into copies created in later decades/centuries. I have no evidence to support my position. I argue this opinion based solely on my understanding, however feeble, of history. I have observed how the Christian church behaves, and the modification from "the father", to "my father" is entirely consistent, from my point of view, with the sort of editorial changes I would associate with the practices of this religion.

Could it be the reverse? Yes, it could. The original version could indeed have been "my father", not "the father". How can I be certain that "mou" was deleted from the original version, so that Sinaiticus represents a "woefully corrupt" copy? I can not. I do not know. Point is: I don't think you, or anyone else, knows either. Accordingly, I don't think you ought to rail against Westcott and Hort, or Sinaiticus and Vaticanus, (both of which contain "the father", not "my father" in John 14:28,) until that day comes when you can produce an authentic 2nd century version of John, i.e. hot off the press, when it was supposedly created.

I would welcome your comments on the theological significance of "the father", versus "my father", since this thread is no longer devoted to Mark, and since the focus has shifted now, to why we cannot, or should not, accept Vaticanus/Sinaiticus as authoritative texts. I will be very keen to learn why you think you know which Greek texts are more trustworthy than those two venerable documents, particularly in the context of interpretation of that passage in John 14:28.

Here's my guess: I suppose that you work backwards. I guess that you start, not with the Greek texts, but with your understanding of one of the flavors of Christianity, and then search for a Biblical version that supports your political viewpoint. If I am in error, I look forward to your clarification.
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Old 08-25-2009, 06:51 AM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Hi Folks,

Quote:
Originally Posted by bacht
imo the KJV is a great translation for public recitation. The rhythm is beautiful, and the attention to the flow of words to the ear is terrific.
Amen. Preach it !

Naah. if that were true, if the situation were so dumbed-down, reading the KJB would help those in trouble in reading to be edumacated and literate, since the basic problem would be reading comprehension, not the King James Bible language.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bacht
and many words are either out of use or have changed their meaning. Passages that were once clearly intelligible to contemporaries are now obscure or misleading.
Difficulties are minor, and often paying attention to the words really helps your speech and improves your "conversation" in community life. Is there really a difficulty in speaking the Bible powerfully and clearly using the English Holy Bible ? I trow not !

Shalom,
Steven Avery
Steven how do you expect us to take you seriously? Are you advocating what the Catholics used to do, reading the Latin text to uncomprehending congregants? This might work for public worship, but privately studying the Bible in Shakespearean English is ridiculous. Might as well learn the Greek and Hebrew if there's no usable English translation.

Or we could go back to medieval style when no-one understood the text, they just looked at the pretty-stained glass pictures over the sanctuary (not that much different from cartoon tracts I guess).
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Old 08-25-2009, 07:01 AM   #28
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Hi Folks,

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Hort, tended to favor readings from the oldest manuscripts ... Hort was quite eclectic. He didn't always favor the oldest manuscripts
Note the same old trickery. Spin makes the assertion and then runs and hides around "you prove I am not right".

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
You can see Steven Avery in the park on his soap box declaiming to know one that he knows that modern bibles are all crap because spin isn't going to pander to his folly and go and get a copy of the full Hort that he hasn't seen for a decade. OK, you've heard that. Get your whinge out of your system. Say it several times: spin has zero. Do it again: spin has zero. Feel good? Doesn't change much....Show that it is blunder and misleading. Cut the empty rhetoric and quote the exact errors of analysis that Hort made in his Greek text and explain why it is wrong. Perhaps, you might get an argument. But you are just building up to bust your guts about your prefab examples, just as the Aramaic primacy guys do...Would you mind showing that the text you don't understand but are trying to criticize can be summed up as "Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles"?...I tell you what demonstrate your claim. You're big on shifting burdens. You've always been big on shifting burdens. This post is one long demonstration of you shifting your burden. If you want to make a claim about the Hort text, you have some time got to break down and learn the Greek and demonstrate your claims. Rehashing the apologetics is ultimately meaningless because you aren't demonstrating anything.... I'm not going to renounce a position based on memory simply because you are rabbiting on with your usual apologetic agenda. Stop joking. Sorry, did you just say -- I mean you -- did you just say "propaganda claptrap"? I mean are you committing the ultimate act of hypocrisy? It seems you are! Buzz word: "decrepit". It indicates nothing but your dislike. Where is your analysis. So far in this thread you've shown nothing. What's your exact problem with it? If you can put it in a meaningful package I can look at it. Which scholars in the area do you mean? Can you name them? Or are you just doing what you usually do? -- waffle! Where is the error? Where is your evidence? Where is your argument? Where is your lunch? You are still too far up the road. The burden is back where you started. Demonstrate your case, rather than abdicate your responsibilities. I gather you are attempting to be a prophet. Sorry to disappoint you but you are without a clue. You are confusing the acceptance of Hort's preferences with Hort's whole system. All you need to do is show that his whole system is the way you are trying to portray it. This simply negates your claim that "the whole W-H system boiled down to two manuscripts". You've just shown at a minimum that other manuscripts become deciders. We've already seen you misuse data from church fathers. You are rushing to pile up so much material, though I know you haven't looked at anything but English apologetics. You know less than judge does about Syriac manuscripts. You apparently don't know anything about the scribal tendencies of Syriac manuscripts. You don't enter into the notion of dating any of these sources. You are just trying to boggle with numbers and the result seems guarateed to be meaningless. You know getting data out of you is like getting blood from a vampire. Lots of vampire rhetoric, but no substance. Here you've skipped over the data and once again gone for one of your foregone conclusions. Translation: Steven Avery and his apologetic cohorts (living and dead) don't like the approach. As a matter of fact they hate the logic of lectio difficilior. [If there are any other poor readers to this slugfest, lectio difficilior is the approach which notes the more difficult form of a phrase or passage is most likely to be changed, therefore those difficult phrases and pssages that have survived are more likely to represent an earlier form of the text.] Of course the logic of lectio difficilior has been accepted by the vast majority of text scholars. This makes Steven Avery out on a limb, so he shouldn't be so shocked about the state of text scholarship. Yup, Steven Avery sure doesn't like lectio difficilior, but have you ever seen a clear scholarly presentation of his point of view on the issue? Naaa, didn't think so.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery
spin .. Simply write the truth on this, once, and we will continue.
OK, show me by demonstrating the truth and yes we'll see where we go from there.
spin acknowledges his assertion above. spin says he wrote it from memory! Yet he refuses to even give one verse where Westcott-Hort depart from a Vaticanus-Sinaiticus agreement. spin's memory is what counts, in his unusual world, not the facts. spin actually acknowledges he has zero support for his "quite eclectic" assertion, not even one verse, yet will not retract the position ! Amazing.

You have to have a rather limited intelligence if you somehow think that does not place Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles - even when there is lots of Latin, Greek and Syriac and early church writer evidence contrary .. the reading will be Aleph-B.

Case closed. spin is clueless and refuses to support or retract his memory with even one verse. He sure can type a lot of nothing when he is trying to hide a blunder argument.

Oh wait. Does spin claim that all the Aleph-B agreements have additional strong support in the lines? (I would agree that if that were the case there might be some conceivable defense for the assertions he made.) Yes or no. If spin claims yes, if that is the basis of his hodge-podge above, then spin .. make the claim clearly and we can continue. You write as if you are such a textual expert, yet you make weird claims from memory and then simply spew invective when caught.

Shalom,
Steven Avery

PS.
Note:
Issues like more discussion of the abuse of lectio difficillior as a tool to fabricate weakly-supported errors and blunders into the modern version text simply will wait. The basics first.
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Old 08-25-2009, 07:13 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Hi Folks,

Note the same old trickery. Spin makes the assertion and then runs and hides around "you prove I am not right".
Still the same old same old burden shift. Spout fumes about how horrid Hort's work is and you simply cannot demonstrate the fact. It's only to be expected.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
You can see Steven Avery in the park on his soap box declaiming to know one that he knows that modern bibles are all crap because spin isn't going to pander to his folly and go and get a copy of the full Hort that he hasn't seen for a decade. OK, you've heard that. Get your whinge out of your system. Say it several times: spin has zero. Do it again: spin has zero. Feel good? Doesn't change much....Show that it is blunder and misleading. Cut the empty rhetoric and quote the exact errors of analysis that Hort made in his Greek text and explain why it is wrong. Perhaps, you might get an argument. But you are just building up to bust your guts about your prefab examples, just as the Aramaic primacy guys do...Would you mind showing that the text you don't understand but are trying to criticize can be summed up as "Vaticanus and Sinaiticus über alles"?...I tell you what demonstrate your claim. You're big on shifting burdens. You've always been big on shifting burdens. This post is one long demonstration of you shifting your burden. If you want to make a claim about the Hort text, you have some time got to break down and learn the Greek and demonstrate your claims. Rehashing the apologetics is ultimately meaningless because you aren't demonstrating anything....I'm not going to renounce a position based on memory simply because you are rabbiting on with your usual apologetic agenda. Stop joking. Sorry, did you just say -- I mean you -- did you just say "propaganda claptrap"? I mean are you committing the ultimate act of hypocrisy? It seems you are! Buzz word: "decrepit". It indicates nothing but your dislike. Where is your analysis. So far in this thread you've shown nothing. What's your exact problem with it? If you can put it in a meaningful package I can look at it. Which scholars in the area do you mean? Can you name them? Or are you just doing what you usually do? -- waffle! Where is the error? Where is your evidence? Where is your argument? Where is your lunch? You are still too far up the road. The burden is back where you started. Demonstrate your case, rather than abdicate your responsibilities. I gather you are attempting to be a prophet. Sorry to disappoint you but you are without a clue. You are confusing the acceptance of Hort's preferences with Hort's whole system. All you need to do is show that his whole system is the way you are trying to portray it. This simply negates your claim that "the whole W-H system boiled down to two manuscripts". You've just shown at a minimum that other manuscripts become deciders. We've already seen you misuse data from church fathers. You are rushing to pile up so much material, though I know you haven't looked at anything but English apologetics. You know less than judge does about Syriac manuscripts. You apparently don't know anything about the scribal tendencies of Syriac manuscripts. You don't enter into the notion of dating any of these sources. You are just trying to boggle with numbers and the result seems guarateed to be meaningless. You know getting data out of you is like getting blood from a vampire. Lots of vampire rhetoric, but no substance. Here you've skipped over the data and once again gone for one of your foregone conclusions. Translation: Steven Avery and his apologetic cohorts (living and dead) don't like the approach. As a matter of fact they hate the logic of lectio difficilior. [If there are any other poor readers to this slugfest, lectio difficilior is the approach which notes the more difficult form of a phrase or passage is most likely to be changed, therefore those difficult phrases and pssages that have survived are more likely to represent an earlier form of the text.] Of course the logic of lectio difficilior has been accepted by the vast majority of text scholars. This makes Steven Avery out on a limb, so he shouldn't be so shocked about the state of text scholarship. Yup, Steven Avery sure doesn't like lectio difficilior, but have you ever seen a clear scholarly presentation of his point of view on the issue? Naaa, didn't think so.
OK, show me by demonstrating the truth and yes we'll see where we go from there.
spin acknowledges his assertion above. He says he wrotes it from memory. Yet he refuses to even give one verse where Westcott-Hort depart from a Vaticanus-Sinaiticus agreement.
Perhaps you don't remember how memory works.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
Case close.
How close?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
spin is clueless
Note the usual empty rhetoric?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
and refuses to support or retract his memory with even one verse.
This is a better representation of the facts than you've made so far. But why should I retract a memory? That's just the way it is. It may be wrong. But your apologetics don't help to clarify the issue. Nobody is going to change their memory simply at your whim. Demonstrate your claim about Hort's text and you then could make me see that the memory is wrong.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Avery View Post
He sure can type a lot of nothing when he is trying to hide a blunder argument.
I think anyone can see that Steven Avery still won't demonstrate his vociferous claims about the Hort work on the earliest manuscript traditions. Instead he incessantly shifts the burden. This is the process.
  1. Make unsubstantiated claims about something.
  2. Wait for any signs of opposition.
  3. Attack them with a tide of shite.
  4. Refuse to substantiate the original claims.
  5. Sometimes cite opinions of well-known old time apologists, in lieu of any facts.
  6. Shift the burden.
You'll sees variations of this sad process time and time and time again.


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Old 08-25-2009, 07:22 AM   #30
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Hi Folks,

Quote:
Originally Posted by bacht
how do you expect us to take you seriously? Are you advocating what the Catholics used to do, reading the Latin text to uncomprehending congregants?
bacht .. do you ever even go into a fellowship, or even a Paltalk room, where the King James Bible is the standard ?

Shalom,
Steven
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