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04-18-2007, 11:25 AM | #431 | |
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But whether or not you accept this, please provide me with primary evidence that supports your claim about the tiles carrying with them the notion of "supreme" authority in any given region. JG |
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04-18-2007, 11:27 AM | #432 | |
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When you claim interpolations and non-redactions of convenience you never "demonstrate" them. You simply assume your own theory and try to move on from that point. With no comment as above. On a fundamental issue like the Luke-Acts common authorship it is sufficient, or it should be sufficient and proper, to point out that we have very different views of the Bible text. I see the introductions themselves as virtually conclusive evidence augmented by tons of other evidences. Your mileage varies. And it is unlikely that either of us would change our position on such a side-discussion. Not every argument about authenticity and authorship can be discussed in every thread and when there is a fundamental difference it should simply be stated clearly and other readers will be awares. (That is why your waiting three weeks for the Luke-Acts excuse was particularly noticed.) And good moderators will understand this as well and hold all sides to similar standards of "demonstration" when they see that as appropriate. And there will be many times that a fundamental difference should just be acknowledged and stated rather than made into a side-diversion. Shalom, Steven |
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04-18-2007, 11:37 AM | #433 |
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No, he does not. And I challenge you to show me on the basis of the Greek syntax and grammar of the Josephan passage you appeal to as evidence that he does, just how he does.
I also challenge you to show me how a claim based on ambiguous "evidence" derived from Josephus about EQNARCHS and BASILEUS is relevant to your claim about the interchangeability of TETRARCHS and BASILEUS, especially when the very souce you appeal to in support of your clam, namely Josephus, explicitly shows in the very source you appeal to that he did not regard the titles and offices as interchangeable nor that one who was a TETRARCHS could, would, should, or ever was called a BASILEIUS. JG |
04-18-2007, 11:39 AM | #434 | |
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That is why the appeals went to Rome. Why not answer the questions about who were the kings in the Josephus discourse (rather a fundamental and simple question). And what exactly is your accusation against the NT text of Mark and Matthew. Take your time and come up with a real answer. I'm off to work and some chores. Shalom, Steven |
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04-18-2007, 11:42 AM | #435 |
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04-18-2007, 12:01 PM | #436 |
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04-18-2007, 02:26 PM | #437 | |||||||||
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But more importantly, the question is not whether it could or would have happened, but whether apart from Matthew and Mark, it ever did happen. Please provide me with textual and/or epigraphical and/or numismatic evidence that it did. Quote:
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What limb? Did you or did you not, in giving the selective quotation above of Ant 17. 354, imply that what Josephus says in Ant 17. 354 was that the concern of the "discourse" he there mentions was nothing but kings and that he does not go on in the sections of 17.354 which you have not quoted to say that his discourse concerned other topics as well? Quote:
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Are you ever going to answer this question? Quote:
Why don't you answer my questions about (1) whether or not Josephus says in the part of Ant. 17.354 that you haven't quoted that the concern of the discourse he refers is not limited to kings, but has a focus on other topics as well and (2) whether or not in your selective quotation of Ant. 17. 354 you did indeed imply that "kings" is what Josephus says is the only concern of his "discourse? JG |
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04-18-2007, 03:26 PM | #438 |
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Hi, praxeus.
I have become a bit lost in the sheer bulk of this discussion. Is there an instance of a tetrarch (or other similar nonkingly ruler) being called king in the historical texts of the era? Thanks. Ben. |
04-18-2007, 04:24 PM | #439 | |
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Notably, in the instances in ancient literature and in the corpus of inscriptions in which both BASILEUS and TETRARCHS do appear, there is always a distinction made between the titles. Witness, e.g., the inscriptions about Antipas and Herod the Great from Cos. Jeffrey Gibson |
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04-20-2007, 10:48 AM | #440 | |
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What do you think the reason for this is? Jeffrey |
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