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Old 06-30-2006, 09:29 AM   #191
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Originally Posted by JoeWallack
No, I meant to say what I did. If English is not your first language than maybe Greek is.
OK.

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You like to highlite the rare mispelling of your opponents yet your posts are full of it.
It's "highlight" and "mispellings" and so far as I can tell, I've never commented one way or the other on how anyone has mispelled "your opponents".

More importantly, so far as I can see, what I usually do, when I have the inclination to be corrective, is to comment upon someone's infelicities of grammar, especially when those infelicities make the meaning what they are trying to say ambiguous.

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I Am married to an Academic Doctor ( a real one) who is a Full Professor.
Good for you! But leaving aside the question of how this makes you qualified to speak about what professors other than your wife, let alone all professors, typically do or don't do, how ever did you manage to get her to marry you?


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I can understand why you avoid the question. Usually Professors are proud of their placement.
Do you now, even assuming that I'm "avoiding" anything? I wonder if you've read my reply to Richard Carrier about why I don't mention my appointments. But since you seem to think it's important to do so, may I ask what your academic appointments you have had?

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You look to me to be a visiting Assistant professor (the lowest category) at De Paul. Why doesn't the web site list you as a faculty in the Religious Department when their summary says that's where you were assigned?
Could it be, do you think, it's because I'm not teaching there at the moment?

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"How is this relevant"? This from someone who constantly questions other's qualifications.
So far as I can see, I've never asked for someone's academic affiliations, only whether they have the training that is necessary to be able to make the claims they do with the confidence with which they make them.

More importatly, I've only asked about qualifications when someone was claiming an expetise on a topic that, as evidence in their posts indicated, they didn't really seem to posess. And as the moderators have noted both here and at

http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.php?t=169725

this is both a perfectly legitimate and even neccessary thing to do under those circumstances -- that is, when someone makes a claim about a subject in such a way as to bring into question that they really have the expertise on the matter at hand that they are laying claim to.

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I suggest you look up the meaning of byfucating Hypocrite.
It's "bifucating" (or are you casting an aspersion about my sexual orientation and proclivities?). And leaving aside the questions of whether you actually know what "bifucation" means and whether I've ever engaged in it, I don't think that, however the phrase is spelled, looking it up would do me any good. As far as I know, there isn't any entry on the phrase in any dictionary or reference work.

Jeffrey Gibson
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Old 06-30-2006, 09:36 AM   #192
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Mod note: please keep personal items out of this discussion. Thank you.
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Old 06-30-2006, 09:40 AM   #193
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Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
They are alternatives. Its an OR, not and AND.
As I pointed out, Earl seems in his first post to be operating with AND, not OR. I have not seen any clarification, but yes, I do agree that I misread your own clarification of the mythicist (Earl's?) position: you did present alternatives, not a combination of two things.

So I'll modify my quotation of your statement:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
Born of a woman is not a normal way to say that Jesus was a human on earth. [But it could have been used] by an anti-Marcionite interpolator to make Christ sound more human
Now, this position I have also criticized, as Ben has done. I see he's laid out the objections again in a new reply to your last post, so I won't repeat my rendition of the argument here.

Kevin Rosero
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Old 06-30-2006, 09:47 AM   #194
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Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
Because they dont know how far the text in their hands has circulated, and who has read it.
It is also easier to co-opt rather than to develop a text from scratch..
Suppose Marcion wrote the epistles of Paul. Why would the proto-orthodox co-opt them unless they believed that Paul, not Marcion, wrote those epistles. But why would they believe Marcion about Paul's epistles when he showed up with epistles the proto-orthodox never heard of before?

I'm trying to puzzle out the reasoning (which I am not understanding) behind why, if Marcion wrote Paul's epistles, the proto-orthodox would have anything to do with them. They did not co-opt the Gospel of Judas or any of the Nag Hammadi gospels.

Stephen
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Old 06-30-2006, 09:50 AM   #195
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Originally Posted by dog-on
Stephen, maybe Marcion was a much better theologian. He seems to have created a few churches of his own as well. You may be underestimating the power of the church, especially after Constantine, to make certain things go away (like the Marcionites)...
Constantine is irrelevant. The supposed orthodox interpolations into Paul's epistles predate him.

Stephen
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Old 06-30-2006, 09:57 AM   #196
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Originally Posted by S.C.Carlson
Suppose Marcion wrote the epistles of Paul. Why would the proto-orthodox co-opt them unless they believed that Paul, not Marcion, wrote those epistles. But why would they believe Marcion about Paul's epistles when he showed up with epistles the proto-orthodox never heard of before?

I'm trying to puzzle out the reasoning (which I am not understanding) behind why, if Marcion wrote Paul's epistles, the proto-orthodox would have anything to do with them. They did not co-opt the Gospel of Judas or any of the Nag Hammadi gospels.
This is very much like the question that I asked earlier. I do not see why anyone would hijack Paul for the true faith and nobody else. Is there an analogy for this? Did the proto-orthodox hijack anybody else that we know of?

Ben.
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Old 06-30-2006, 10:00 AM   #197
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Originally Posted by JoeWallack
:
Again Glibson,
Glibson??

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isn't Christianity Guilty of everything you accuse Mr. Doherty of:

"misconstred, misread, and cooked the evidence from ...tenditiously..."proof texts" in Hebrews, and how idiosyncratic and unsupportable...torturous exegesis...engagaed in...which seem to have no other grounds...other than a committemnt to...an apriori."
Well let's say I say yes. How would this make it legitimate, as you apperently think it does (in a good example of tu quoque), for Earl to do the same things?

If these tactics are, as you intimate, argument nullifying, then they nullify the arguments and the claims based upon them of anyone who uses them.

Jeffrey Gibson
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Old 06-30-2006, 10:02 AM   #198
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Originally Posted by Ben C Smith
Doherty will have argued in chapter 1 (for example) that the phrase is Pauline and in chapter 2 (again, for example) that the phrase calls Jesus a human being.
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Originally Posted by Ben C Smith
Doherty [snip]will have made a good case for Pauline originality on one chapter and a good case for a historicist meaning in another. That is why I said that Doherty would, in this case, no longer be arguing for mythicism. He would merely be offering a typology, options on a grid.
Ben, this is why Earl's proposal has struck me as an important one to debate over. Yes, of course, he's just tentatively looking at a new idea; there's nothing wrong with that. What strikes me is the contrast with the former argument. For years, Earl has presented the Pauline phrases as ambiguously denoting a flesh-and-blood human being on the earth. But now he's considering -- not reluctantly, but with anticipation and apparent eagerness -- an option in which the phrases are said to emphasize an earthly savior and contradict a purely supernatural savior.

And even that would be okay in and of itself. People can change their positions dramatically. It's just that the question raises itself, why? (Just like Jeffrey asked Ted: why did you come around to this position?) For years, historicists have been arguing that Paul's phrases denote an earthly/divine creature (i.e., a divine incarnation) and not a purely supernatural one (such as Earl's heavenly savior, or the docetist "phantom"). So this change of heart is startling, and it makes me wonder just what Earl's commitment to his former arguments was based on -- not because I think he has a bad character (I am genuinely skeptical that he does have bad character, and genuinely uninterested in raising the issue), but simply because I have to ask such a question.

But perhaps even more importantly is what happens to the mythicist case, as you've already been describing. If the phrases in Paul's texts now emphasize an earthly savior over and against an unearthly one, then what would happen if a strong case for interpolation could not be made for every one of those phrases? Then it would mean that Paul had genuinely spoken of an earthly savior.

What I wonder is why Earl did not even nod toward these difficulties, not even in anticipation. Did he notice them?

Kevin Rosero
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Old 06-30-2006, 10:07 AM   #199
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Originally Posted by S.C.Carlson
I'm trying to puzzle out the reasoning (which I am not understanding) behind why, if Marcion wrote Paul's epistles, the proto-orthodox would have anything to do with them.
I think this is an excellent way of putting it. If Marcion is your opponent, and all his original ideas and original contributions are anathema to you, then you don't try to take one of his original texts from him. I imagine you wouldn't want to be involved at all with things that are associated strongly with him and his church.

But you and he can fight over a third-party text that you both regard as part of your heritage. That's perfectly plausible.

Kevin Rosero
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Old 06-30-2006, 10:13 AM   #200
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Originally Posted by Clivedurdle
Where does it say Jesus' brother? It might say Yahweh's brother!
You must be joking. Where else in all Christian literature is Yahweh said to have siblings?

Far as I can tell, all the MJ arguments on BOTL are tautological, i.e., "We know that Jesus was not a man living on earth, so Paul could not possibly have been speaking of James having a brotherly relationship with a human being." The possibility of a literal meaning is rejected because it doesn't fit the theory, not because there's anything inherently suspect about it.

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