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12-05-2007, 10:22 PM | #21 | ||||
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12-05-2007, 10:31 PM | #22 | |||
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12-05-2007, 10:31 PM | #23 | ||
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12-05-2007, 11:20 PM | #24 | |||
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I have no firm opinion here on how early these traditions are. This is about method. Quote:
If this law was the same after 70 as before 70, how can you demonstrate that the one who listed it in (what became) the Mishnah was writing before 70? To aver that this marriage law did not change is fatal to your positive argument for the early date of its inclusion in this list. It may have been included before 70, because the law had applicability before 70, but then again it may have been included after 70, because the law still had applicability after 70. On your own terms, neither a positive argument nor a negative argument is possible. Ben. |
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12-06-2007, 12:51 AM | #25 | ||||||
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12-06-2007, 06:03 AM | #26 | ||
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Charles Talbert, What Is A Gospel? (or via: amazon.co.uk) If or when you read it, I would be happy to discuss the data and their implications with you. (I know you prefer to eschew modern scholarship and turn solely to the texts themselves; however, one thing a good scholarly book will do is present and organize the data from the texts. If nobody ever read such scholarly books, we would have to reinvent the wheel every time we set pen to parchment.) Quote:
It is a bit like the US Constitution or the Bill of Rights. The Constitution is written up tightly as a structured list of laws and guidelines. Some of these laws are very old, dating in principle back to English common law or the Magna Carta; others are brand spanking new, barely precedented except perhaps in the imaginations of Voltaire or Locke. The fact that some of the laws in the list date back to century XIII does not mean that all of the laws in the list date back to century XIII; the list itself was compiled five centuries to late to be put to such use. Likewise, in the case of the Mishnah, it matters not whether certain laws on the list are ancient; the antiquity of one law on the list does not inherently prove anything about the antiquity of another law on the same list; the list compiler may have incorporated both old and new laws. You have, AFAICT, provided no method for using one law to date another. Ben. |
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12-06-2007, 07:58 AM | #27 | |||||||
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You have only captured part of the idea of my argument when you lean on the notion that laws are inherently conservative. You must lean on the rest of the argument that writing a set of differences which includes a specifically pre-70 status quo should be dated on that inclusion, as there is no indicators that the clause about people who try capital cases is of a different fabric from the rest of the discourse and there are no attributions to any part of it to a later sage as is the case of so much of the material in the Mishnah. You need to have a reason for hacking bits out of the text and so far you don't. Funny enough I was going to write about the US Constitution in my previous response to show the basic idea of laws from one period whose context and content are quite clear from knowing the history of the time get added to later, reflecting the times the addition is from. Take the second amendment which talks about militias: you know, without considering the rest of the bill of rights, that it was written in a context in which militias were a going concern and people needed arms to be part of a militia. You can date that amendment and the other more pithy ones to a similar date based on style and interest. Quote:
However, your attempt to compare the texts as you do isn't viable. You need to look at what the text is doing -- and sorry, it seems at least to me that you haven't got past what I've cited of the section. We are not dealing with separate laws but with a section which deals with the state of two related institutions and the differences between them. But you do need to read the Mishnah in order to see how it was put together. Quote:
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12-06-2007, 08:48 AM | #28 | |||
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I remember researching Neusner a while back on this issue. Unfortunately I cannot recall in which of his innumerable works he says this, but I believe he thinks that the legal opinions expressed in the Mishna are those that should be applied in a revived Jewish state.
Yes, for some while after the destruction of Herod's temple there was hope that the political situation would change enough for Jews to lobby the emperor to allow the reestablishment of the Temple state. However, that never transpired and by the Bar Kochba rebellion it as pretty much a given the chances were virtually zero. So, while Neusner would agree that some part of these decisions might have been based on actual pre-70 practice, that doesn't mean that is how the sages wanted things done in the future. It all would depend on whether they thought there was a good reason for continuing the practice, or if the better choice was to recommend a better course for the future. As for the actual state of affairs in Jesus' time, many critics believe that the Jerusalem temple operated as a "temple state" (sort of like a city state, with land under its jurisdiction, setting its own laws, etc). In the east, temple states were overseen by a representative of the king who ruled the area in which the temple state operated, and that would have beeen the Roman prefect Pilate in the early 30's CE. He or the Roman king could have set limits on how far the temple state could carry out its own legal decisions, and apparently did in the case of the Jewish temple state. The popular stoning of gentiles stupid enough to wander out of their permitted boundries in the temple complex would be an example of something they did permit. The stoning of Stephen, if it really happened the way it is depicted in Acts, would likely have been an illegal tumult in Roman eyes. But did lynchings of blacks get prosecuted in the US south in the early part of the 20th centuy ... no. Neither did the Stephen thing ... In Jesus' case, the gospels clearly depict the Jewish authorities as wanting to do away with this troublemaker, for petty reasons like jealousy or quibbling over violations, that to the gentile readers would seem like superstitious requirements, but in the end hand him over to the Romans as an unauthorized royal pretender. I could argue that this is all careful apologistic rhetoric written in the late 1st or early 2nd century CE intended to explain (away) to the Romans in general how the founder of the Christian faith could have been executed as a rebel king, while at the same time distancing themselves from and blaming the unpopular Judeans (who had just suffered defeat by the Romans in the war of 66-74 CE). But one could also look at the operations of death squads and illegal "disappearance" style executions that occur all the time in the puppet states of powerful empires and wonder if this isn't an example of that kind of justice (or at least presented that way by the gospel authors as "the way it is" in places like Judea). DCH Quote:
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12-06-2007, 09:53 AM | #29 | ||||
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Cases coming before the court, be they civil or criminal, the witnesses thereof must be examined and investigated. As it is written: One manner of judicial law shall you have....up for me in your usual way (I like the colors and boldfacing that you do) so that I can see exactly what in this list you are regarding as the status quo and what you are regarding as the appendices. Quote:
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As for Charles Talbert, he draws upon the heroic and divine biographies and compares the gospels to them. These texts include: the Life of Moses; the Life of Empedocles; the Life of Apollonius; the Life of Romulus; and the Life of Hercules. The gospels share with these (and other) texts their central storyline: The hero lived his life heroically because he was either a theios anēr or divinely born (or both). Accordingly, the gospels are heroic biographies. That is their genre. To directly compare the gospels to, say, the nonheroic biographies or to, say, the popular novels is a mistake, since they lack what is most important in the gospels, to wit, the divine nature of the hero (along with such things as his unusual birth, his ascension or assumption, and the like). But the devil is in the details. Read the book. (It was, BTW, no storming conservative who first encouraged me to read Talbert; it was Robert M. Price. Just FYI.) Ben. |
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12-06-2007, 10:07 AM | #30 | |
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