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Old 04-05-2007, 01:09 AM   #11
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Dutch radicalism has long been refuted on the grounds of bad logic.
would you like to explain?

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Your whole argument assumes that there must have been quotes, and "identified authors" at the time it was written. Simply ludicrous.
Not disputing, but would you like to explain why in your mind the assumption is ludicrous?

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What do you know of the Petronian Question?
Are you suggesting Matthew copied Petronius?
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Old 04-05-2007, 01:10 AM   #12
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Often Mark is thought to be late 60s, and Josephus sets the terminus a quo for Luke.
IMHO this is to take a speculative theory far too seriously. Luke-Acts cannot sensibly be later than 62.

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Old 04-05-2007, 01:12 AM   #13
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Anyway, it seems very curious to me that the gospel authors, if they were writing after the fall of the temple, wouldn't have added, "And see what happened, Jesus' prediction came true!"
Except that in the case of the fall of the temple/Jerusalem it was clear to anyone post 70 (even more so post 135) that the prediction had come true. Any literary reminder surely would be a bit superfluous -- how much more effectual if an audience can see for itself without literary prompting?
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Old 04-05-2007, 01:31 AM   #14
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Actually, if anything the gospels are dated too early, since there is no positive evidence that anyone much quotes them before Justin around 150 A.D. and nobody clearly identifies the "authors" until Irenaeus around 170.
That hardly means much. What do you make of texts which are found much later, from which no one has ever quoted? Dutch radicalism has long been refuted on the grounds of bad logic. Your whole argument assumes that there must have been quotes, and "identified authors" at the time it was written. Simply ludicrous.

What do you know of the Petronian Question?
Chris is quite right. (I'm not sure that I know what the Petronian question is, tho).

I think that if we just state the argument -- that any text must have been written shortly before the first text in which it happens to be mentioned (and does the same argument apply to that text too? ) -- then that seems to me to be the same as to refute it.

The idea relies on the reader not knowing much about how stuff has come down to us, which of course most of us don't (although one or two of us in this forum are rather interested in the subject). 99% of ancient literature is lost (so Pietro Bembo, backed by N.G.Wilson). Hermias isn't mentioned at all in the surviving texts of antiquity, for instance. Macarius Magnes is only mentioned once in a 6th century text. And so on it goes. Ancient texts are not widely referenced by other ancient texts as a rule. It's just the way it is. (A long list would doubtless be convincing, but like most people I don't make up such lists unless I need to).

Since we only have 10 second century authors, and mainly apologetic texts happen to have survived, arguments from what these don't say are risky. For instance Justin Against Marcion (cf. Iren. AH IV.6:2 made use of it; Eus. HE IV.11:8ff) is lost, for instance. This would certainly have had a lot to say about Luke! Likewise his anti-heretical treatise (Just. 1 Apol. 26) But people then solemnly talk about Justin "not saying things", in his measly three surviving works, as if this was evidence.

There are reasons why our 2nd century texts are biased in favour of apologies, which few perhaps know.

By the 10th century, the anti-heretical works were long obsolete, full of references to long-dead heresies of interest to no-one. The theological works were all rather amateurish by comparison with 'modern' (i.e. 5th century+) theological texts, stuffed with material about the theotokos and Aristotelean dialectic. The apologies against paganism were also obsolete, although the Byzantine state still had pagans to the north, in Russia.

But Archbishop Arethas of Caesarea happened to be interested in early apologetics, being something of a scholar, and he arranged for someone to copy a bunch for him. The so-called Arethas codex is extant, and is the main source for much of what it contains.

So our view of 2nd century writers is skewed by a historical accident, and consequently arguing what they do not say is hopelessly and hog-whimperingly unwise.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 04-05-2007, 01:40 AM   #15
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Most scholars, even evangelical scholars, seem to date the Gospels post-70 CE. To my current knowledge, this is because {and only because} of the "predictions" of the destruction of Jerusalem and its temple.

I have read all of the "predictions", but I see no reason why these foreshadowings could not have been an obvious conclusions from previous rebellions and the conflicting ambitions and culture of the Romans. The temple would have been an obvious target of a Roman takeover (and it probably happened to other "rebelious" cultures at the hand of the Romans).
I think so too. As an argument it's merely an inversion of the theological argument from prophecy. Indeed it's an obvious ploy to unwind that argument -- by turning it on its head, the same data points against authenticity of the claims, rather than for it. I see no reason why we couldn't just reverse it again; leaving nothing.

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So, why can't the gospels be pre-70 CE?
Luke must be, since he finishes Acts in 61 with huge amounts to happen in 62, 64, 68 and 70 AD all gone unmentioned. He uses at least a draft of Mark, which must thus have existed in some form. The fathers tell us that both were in Rome at that time, so there's no real surprise. They also disagree about when Mark was completed; either when Peter died or after. It could quite possibly be anywhere from 64-70. It's hard to see it later. Matthew in its current form (the mention by Papias of an aramaic form should make us wary) is closely related to Luke and Mark and must be from the same period -- say the 3rd quarter of the 1st century. We can see this by looking at the very different-looking John -- clearly a later text --, which the data places later, in the 4th quarter of the century, say around 85-90, when John was an old man, and indeed suggests that he saw the others (he probably did). Matthew must precede this time, and probably does so by 20 years just like the others. If we see the synoptics all composed over a period of 10 years, and then John 15+ years later, that would explain the change in tone and approach.

There seems no convincing reason to me to date any of these texts at any other point. Why do it? (Other than for theological reasons, hem hem). What other data is there?

All the best,

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Old 04-05-2007, 01:57 AM   #16
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IMHO this is to take a speculative theory far too seriously. Luke-Acts cannot sensibly be later than 62.
Richard H. Anderson wrote a paper that pegs Luke at about 40 AD, written to Theophilus the high priest, while Acts is right before the 62 you mention above, written to the same Theophilus (no longer high priest, however his son held the position around that time). It is quite interesting to see various linkages between the folks referenced in the NT when you shed the pseudo-scholastic baggage of late dating, unsupported interpolations to match doctrine, fatigue to match doctrine, denying the possibility of prophecy and such. Such baggage makes it very difficult to see the rather obvious, as alluded to in the OP, the gospels predated the destruction of the Temple (leaving aside for now how easy or difficult such a prophecy would be to make).

As for the scholars who hold an early dating view, there are I believe 5+ modern works that take an early dating viewpoint. Whether they hold unambiguously to a pre-70 date for all the NT (with the possible exception of Revelation) I do not know offhand. Personally I think that such a pre-70 NT date is fully consistent with the evidences. I noticed a few counter-attempts above, and I grant I am not going into them, however they did not seem to have a lot of pizazz.

Shalom,
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Old 04-05-2007, 02:20 AM   #17
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What, other than these "predictions", lead scholars to date the gospels post-70 CE? I know of at least one scholar, whom I believe was well-respected, who wrote a book defending a date for the gospels prior to 70 CE, but I don't recall if it was just a scholarly joke or what.

So, why can't the gospels be pre-70 CE?
The first person who clearly knew substantial amounts of gospel literature was Justin Martyr. That should be the starting point of our investigation.

Irenaeus acknowledges that Marcion distributed a gospel which appeared to be a reduced form of the gospel of Luke of Irenaeus's time, so that should put the written gospel process a little before Justin's time.

The question would be now, how do you get earlier than say 140CE? That seems to be the challenge in my eyes. This is where people start parading Papias whose only existence these days is to try to justify a gospel tradition earlier. We've had a lot of discussion about Papias and the difficulty of trying to introduce the Papias traditions as though they had historical value.

And I notice some people mention Acts of all things, a document with extremely difficult history. How does one justify dating that text?

Anyway, gospels, before 140CE?


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Old 04-05-2007, 04:25 AM   #18
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Richard H. Anderson wrote a paper that pegs Luke at about 40 AD, written to Theophilus the high priest...
But doesn't such an early date have various problems? We can see from long passages which are verbally identical that Luke has Mark before him, or a draft not far from what we have. Mark is based on Peter's preaching in Rome, and may not have been published until after his death in 64 (so the fathers -- pardon me if I haven't the ref. before me). This suggests that Mark cannot have achieved that form much before then. Therefore Luke cannot predate it by much either. And anyway, isn't the long stay in Rome of Paul's imprisonment a natural point to compose the works?

Luke also refers to accounts by a previous generation in Luke 1. If he wrote in AD 40, there were no previous generations. In AD 60 there is.

All the best,

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Old 04-05-2007, 06:11 AM   #19
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Can luke be as early as 60? Not, of course, if L/A is reliant upon Josephus (ref. Mason). see http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...djosephus.html

[It seems that these points arise from the ashes about every 9 months].

And it's ironic how an argument from silence is so pliable.
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Old 04-05-2007, 06:26 AM   #20
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It doesn't matter since both Paul and John, the largest contributors never died. A group of Christians were chosen never to die until Christ returned, which was to be close to 2000 years later. Obviously this gave the original Christians a chance to sort of "shepherd" the Bible and the NT into it's present form. So it really doesn't matter how old the gospels were actually, they were always under the secretive but relative control of the original congegation members.

Now some people just can't believe this, but the Bible does teach this. IF it is true then it would impact upon the reliability and authenticity of the NT.

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