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05-07-2010, 08:29 AM | #21 | ||
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05-09-2010, 07:09 AM | #22 |
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05-09-2010, 09:41 AM | #23 | |
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05-09-2010, 09:55 AM | #24 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Not So Simple
Hi Joe,
In regards to Mark 16:8 and Matthew 28:8, I agree that "The only significant difference is the last line of each where "Matthew's" women run to tell as opposed to "Mark's" woman who run not to tell." This establishes a probable direct relationship between them. However, I am not sure that we can say that Mark 16:8 is the basis for Matthew 28:8. I can demonstrate that it is the reverse. Let us say that Mark is editing Matthew and gets to 28:8. He knows Celsus' criticisms including the fact that the disciples did not see Jesus. Anti-Celsus (1:31): Quote:
We can assume from this that Celsus was unfamiliar with Mark 16:1-8 where three women see Jesus, but familiar with Mark 16:9-13 Quote:
Now, it is also clear that we are dealing with two versions of Matthew. In the first 28:8-10 is immediately followed by 28:16-17. Matthew 28:11-15 appears to be a digression and the two pieces match perfectly when we take it out. Quote:
Mark now reads the criticism of his work by Celsus and reads Matthew's revised version of his work. He decides to adopt Matthew's multiple women attesting to the risen Jesus, but he decides that their testimony should not count for anything. He then adds 16:14-20, in which all the disciples see for themselves Jesus and believe. Quote:
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Mark: Only Mary sees Jesus and none of the disciples believe her Matthew (revising Mark): Three women see Jesus and some of the disciples believe her when they go to Galilee Mark revised, based on Matthew: Three women see Jesus and all the disciples believe. Matthew revised again based on Mark: All the disciples now believe. The two gospels are in harmony despite the contradictions within each. Thus we get a complex dialectical process where the gospels are influencing each other. Sincerely, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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05-09-2010, 10:11 AM | #25 | |
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05-09-2010, 12:27 PM | #26 | ||
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The readers of gMark MUST HAVE another source to find out about THE ORIGIN of JESUS. It must be that either Jesus did live or that there was some other source about JESUS available to the readers of gMark about the ORIGIN of Jesus. If a person reads gMark ALONE it will be become apparent that the author EXPECTED his readers or audience to have been ALREADY familiar with JESUS. This is how the author of gMark introduces Jesus for the very FIRST TIME in his book. Mark 1.9 Quote:
1.When was JESUS born before THOSE DAYS? The author of gMark has no answer. 2. How old was Jesus in THOSE DAYS? The author of gMark has no answer. 3. Was JESUS a PHANTOM in THOSE DAYS? The author of gMark has no answer. 4. Was JESUS actually a JEW in THOSE DAYS? The author of gMark has no answer. In order for gMark's JESUS to make SENSE those questions must have been answered BEFORE by some other source. The JESUS story or tradition appears to have been well-established to understand gMark's JESUS. It must be that it was known JESUS was from Nazareth of Galilee BEFORE gMark was written. GMark was NOT the first story, source or tradition of Jesus, perhaps the MEMOIRS OF THE APOSTLES as found in the writings of Justin Martyr but certainly NOT gMark. |
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