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01-17-2007, 09:09 PM | #1 |
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Q1 and Cynicism
In Robert Price's Deconstructing Jesus, he cites scholars such as Burton Mack, Leif E. Vaage, and F. Gerald Downing in presenting a case that the initial layering of sayings in the gospels (Q1) are highly reminiscent of the Cynics, the group founded by Antisthenes and Diogenes in the generation after Socrates.
A couple of the examples in Price's book: Blessed are the poor, for theirs is the kingdom of God. We should not get rid of poverty, but only of our opinion of it. Then we shall have plenty. (Epictetus) I say to you, love your enemies. Bless those who curse you. Pray for those who mistreat you. How shall I defend myself against my enemy? By being good and kind to him, replied Diogenes. (Gnomologium Vaticanum) Price then goes on in the next 9 pages, to show a large number of similar examples of Q1 / Cynic commonalities. From my persepective, we have one of two possibilities here. Either the gospel writers put words into Jesus' mouth that they knew would appeal to a greek audience, or Jesus really spoke them, and he was terribly unoriginal in his thinking. If the gospels are nothing more than literary creations, I wonder if greek philosophical thought didn't contribute almost as much as the Septuagint. Is the cynicism connection overstated? In looking at the summarized principles of this school of thought, they certainly bear a striking resembance to a number of ideas presented in the gospels. |
01-18-2007, 08:06 AM | #2 |
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Almost all Q scholars think the Cynic parallels are not the best way to approach Q1. The point of the cynic parallels is analogy: the Q1 people were more like Cynics than X were like Y. Arnal notes that this is not the way Cynic-hypothesis advocates have argued, despite the fact that they claim so. Positing direct dependence on cynicism has numerous problems, not least of which is the lack of evidence for Cynics in Galilee, let alone around the time Jesus is said to have lived.
This is also built off of a selective version of Q1, ignoring work that Kloppenborg has done on Q's stratification since his Nomos and Ethos. Vaage, for example, makes numerous changes to Q's stratification that actually undermine the principles on which the hypothesis is built. Mack makes similar, but fewer changes, while Price has not kept up to date on Kloppenborg's work, as Price published in 2000, but does not acknowledge work done in 1995 by Kloppenborg that is hazardous to his hypothesis. I'm with Koester and Kloppenborg who believe that the image of Jesus "most accessible" through the earliest layer of Q is an eschatological Jesus. |
01-18-2007, 09:20 AM | #3 | |
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01-18-2007, 09:41 AM | #4 | |
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Are we looking at the convergence of different strands, a godman in the heavens saviour with a latter developmen t of the story by constructing a human character who as a god on earth should be able to make some philosophical statements. Is this not actually evidence that the intended audience was actually Grrek - might Judaism been used as a place to locate the story? |
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01-18-2007, 11:15 AM | #5 | |
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It wouldn't have mattered if there was a cynic presence in Galilee. What would have been important was whether the gospel writers (at some phase of the process) were well versed in cynic (and even stoic to some degree) schools of thought. It's not that I'm saying that Jesus is just cynic philosophy warmed over (or that there was a literal Jesus who was a cynic). It's that there is a definite presence of greek philosophical thought blended in with apocalyptic expectations, jewish ideas of sacrifice for sins, and the ideas that Yahweh's laws and precepts needed to be followed to the letter. Religious syncretism seems to me to be every bit as plausible an explanation for the development of the gospels as the straight mythicist theory as presented by Doherty. |
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01-18-2007, 02:21 PM | #6 | |
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01-18-2007, 02:44 PM | #7 | |
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We see the same thing when speaking of Philo and GJohn concerning the logos concepts. Sometimes it seems the best we will ever get is an argument to the best explanation. |
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01-18-2007, 02:49 PM | #8 | |
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01-18-2007, 03:52 PM | #9 | |
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Mythra: I could recommend reading if you've got access to ATLA, but if not, getting ahold of these things could be expensive. Definitely the best, neutral, assessment of the cynic hypothesis is Kloppenborg's "A Dog among Pigeons: the Cynic hypothesis as a Theological Problem," where he takes apologists and conservatives like those mentioned above to task, but also takes some time to look at a few problems with particular versions of the cynic hypothesis. I can give you a list of good articles and books on the topic if you want, but you'll need to interlibrary loan a lot of stuff if you want. Zeichman ...is doing an independent study class this semester on this topic. |
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01-18-2007, 04:49 PM | #10 | |
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All I know of the Cynic theory is that Mack promoted it (in Q The Lost Gospel) and decided that in addition to what he said, Jesus had a Cynic lifestyle. From reading this thread, and highlighting the basic difference between what Diogenes actually said and what Jesus actually said, I see that the Cynic theory does begin to dissolve. Maybe he got some ideas from the Cynics, but could not be described as a Cynic himself. |
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