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02-24-2013, 01:07 AM | #21 |
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Let's assume that:
1. Clement, Basilides the Pistis Sophia all agree that the ministry was for one year. 2. the Pistis Sophia and Basilides at least had it go 15 Tubi to 15 Tubi (when the moon was full) 3. Clement mentions other start dates for the gospel Now let's acknowledge that only Luke puts forward the year. Mark, Matthew and probably every other text fail to mention a year. I don't know what else can be said with any certainty. But the year couldn't have been that important if no one else mentioned it. |
02-24-2013, 01:11 AM | #22 | |||
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02-24-2013, 01:23 AM | #23 |
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The veneration of the union or zimmut of Moses and Aaron has always been tied to the conjoining of the sun and moon both masculine nouns in Hebrew. In the current liturgy there are two so-called ‘conjunctions’ established sixty days before the festivals of Passover and Sukkoth. The entire function of the festival is connected with the first of the year – either to ensure the accuracy of the calendar and in specific – the start of the year – as well as the half-shekel redemption tax which has to be collected by this date.
Depending on your calculation the gospel may have begun sixty days before the Passion. I am too tired to calculate all the possibilities but it is either sixty or ninety. According to the Basilideans Jesus starts his ministry on a full moon and he is crucified on a full moon. |
02-24-2013, 08:59 AM | #24 |
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The fifteenth was the full moon in the Egyptian month?
The transcription smdt for "full moon" is not certain, but it will be used here for lack*of an alternative that is. According to the extant lists of the names of the days of*the lunar*month, ibd is Day 2 and smdt is Day*15. http://books.google.com/books?id=2LB...html_text&cd=8 |
02-24-2013, 10:19 AM | #25 | |
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Why Must the Pentateuch Be Interpreted with a Lunar Calendar?
I know everyone thinks in terms of 'Nisan' and other Babylonian named months. But the Samaritans don't use these names. We know that Jewish and Samaritan sects used a 12 thirty day month calendar (= the Dositheans). Then when I was driving to Starbucks today it occurred to me - why would the Dositheans be wrong for doing so? If we think for a moment about the implications of accepting that Moses - an Egyptian - wrote the Pentateuch (a false claim but one every early sect accepted pretty much), how could any of those sects have believed that he used any other calendar other than the Egyptian one he grew up with? To this end the Dositheans were just maintaining the original practice of employing a 12 thirty month calendar.
Moreover the Samaritan method of calculating the calendar exactly 60 days before the full moon of Passover (= the festival of Zimmot commemorating the meeting of Moses and Aaron) seems to go back to Dosithean sources. This is not the only example of the ecumenical 'realignment' between orthodox and Dosithean factions. Whoever maintained the Zimmoth used a thirty month calendar. What then is preventing us from assuming that the original Christian gospel went 15 Tybi to 15 Phamenoth? In other words that the structure of the narrative unconsciously or deliberately imitated the Dosithean tradition of calculating zimmoth? Well the Samaritan (= Dosithean) woman shows up in the narrative at Gerizim (now John 4). The Dosithean sects in Abu'l Fath's compendium include Christian sects and pseudo-Tertullian and the Clementine Literature list Dositheus as the first or close to the first Christian heretic. The only problem I see is the fact that Clement never identifies 15 Phamenoth as a date for the Passion. He writes instead in the section just cited: Quote:
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02-24-2013, 10:29 AM | #26 |
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Apparently Phamenoth is the seventh month, which makes it the equivalent of Nisan in the Jewish secular calendar (i.e. the one which begins in the seventh month). There could be no serious objection to celebrating Passover int he seventh month as the practice was so widespread.
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02-24-2013, 11:43 AM | #27 | ||||
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In case the reader wants to work this out for themselves, here is the Samaritan liturgical calendar http://books.google.com/books?id=_iM...2015th&f=false. The festival of Zimmoth Afsa (the one which falls sixty days before Passover) is the 15th of the 11th month (= fifth month or Tybi in the sectarian calendar). According to Clement and many other traditions, Easter Sunday fell on the sixteenth of the first month (= seventh month or Phamenoth in the sectarian calendar). The Passion must therefore have taken place on the fourteenth. The Samaritans have a long established practice in the case of the 15th of the first falling on a Sabbath (as in this formulation) the Passover must be eaten in the evening of the 14th. As Pummer notes:
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The entire gospel narrative then must have taken place between the sixty days from 15th of the 11th (or 5th) month and the 15th of the 1st (or 7th) month. This leaves the question of the tradition of the Pistis Sophia that Jesus ascended on the 15th of Tybi (11th or 5th month) a year later. How could Clement and everyone else believe that Jesus's ministry was 'a year' (= the year of favor Isa 61.2) if it only lasted sixty days in the gospel? Is it coincidence that there is a 300 day (= ten month) gap in our knowledge about Jesus? However this is answered, the Pistis Sophia is not alone - or at least our division of sixty days and three hundred days between the pre and post resurrection ministry of Jesus seems to be implied by the Nag Hammadi text the Apocryphon of James. At the very beginning of that text we are told by James in an address apparently to Cerinthos or some other like-named disciple: Quote:
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02-24-2013, 12:26 PM | #28 | ||
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Why the 15 Tybi makes sense as the beginning of the gospel narrative. Jesus will eventually come to the synagogue and announce that the 'year of favor' is upon them (i.e. that it is coming). As this Samaritan website acknowledges with respect to the Zimmot http://shomron0.tripod.com/articles/...ncalendar.pdf:
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02-24-2013, 02:36 PM | #29 | ||
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It is also interesting to look at the structure of the Diatessaron at this section. We read presently:
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02-24-2013, 06:06 PM | #30 | |
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Having the gospel as the continuation of the Pentateuch in some sense if the narrative begins on the second Sabbath in the eleventh month. This because every book of the Pentateuch seems to end in the eleventh month:
http://books.google.com/books?id=VPs...aritan&f=false Quote:
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