Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
05-18-2007, 06:07 PM | #51 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
Quote:
For those interested, the context of my remark can be found immediately before the above posting. Considering that I have given ample evidence of having read, understanding, and even finding flaws in Kloppenborg's presentation, I can only assume that Carlson's dig is yet another means of avoiding actually answering the points I have brought up and which I have indicated he has not addressed. Earl Doherty |
|
05-18-2007, 06:33 PM | #52 | |||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
I fear I am going to regret this, but since Ben has committed himself to reviewing my chapters on Q in The Jesus Puzzle, I will take the time to comment on his present observations so as to hopefully prevent him from making the same mistakes when he does that, and waste both his time and ours.
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
In the same vein: Quote:
Quote:
And I’ll mention two other ones which Ben made no reference to in his recent posts. The first is Lk/Q11:49. I’m not going to repeat all the discussion, including here, on this saying, but simply point out that I have offered a lot of argument for expecting that Q could have worked in a reference here to Jesus’ own death, and it did not do so. In conjunction with that, we have observed that Q nowhere makes the slightest allusion to a death (let alone a resurrection) of its Jesus figure. This in itself is an astonishing feature of this document which no one has ever satisfactorily explained. We are entitled to regard this void as indicating that Q knew of no such death and resurrection, which in itself would be inconceivable if Jesus existed in any way remotely like the Gospel picture. You refuse to acknowledge or even recognize this possibility. Such a conclusion is a fit with other similar conclusions based on other observations which I am also making. The other is the opening Baptist pericope in which he prophesies a “coming one” who will baptize with fire, the description of which in no way suggests either a teacher/prophet already on the scene or anything but a figure due to arrive in the future to judge and inaugurate the kingdom. I argued extensively in my rebuttal to Zeichman that there is no way to get around this, and even Kloppenborg admitted as much, interpreting the erchomenos as a future figure, perhaps angelic. But how could such a saying have been formed and attributed to John which creates that erroneous impression, that John is not speaking of Jesus? Thus we are entitled to regard this as indicating that it did so because when the saying was formed and attributed to John, no historical Jesus existed in the Q mind. You simply refuse to acknowledge or even recognize this possibility. Such a conclusion is a fit with—but you know the drill by now. In this connection I made an observation in my article which I posted earlier (at least, I think I posted it earlier), and no one saw fit to attempt an explanation. It also involved Kloppenborg making an admission which even he did not attempt to explain, and in fact showed every sign of not acknowledging or even recognizing the possibilities that were inherent in it. It is so striking that I am going to repeat that part of the excerpt here. Anyone is welcome to attempt an explanation/rebuttal to what I make of it. Quote:
Quote:
But if you have read my book, and have read what I have to say on the matter in my rebuttal article, you will realize there is much more involved than simply an experimental postulation as to how the Dialogue could be explained as a later Q development once they had introduced an historical Jesus. The basic one I employ in the book is that the Dialogue is very obviously (and Kloppenborg agrees) a later redacted construction. It is put together out of discrete units (one quite obviously in the Gospel of Thomas) which had a previous life lacking the context of the Dialogue which they came together to form. (A similar argument is made in favor of rejecting the complex of 3 chreiai in Q1.) Another is the observations I’ve made in the excerpt from the article which I repeated just above, that there is an incompatible conflict between the erchomenos here and that term in two other pericopes of Q, leading to the conclusion that this spells an insertion of an historical Jesus which, by definition, can only have taken place in a later stage of Q, and certainly later than most of the other material that is traditionally placed in Q2. Several other observations in my book and article also dovetail into such a result, including my extensive discussion concerning all the indicators that suggest that Q’s attribution evolved from Wisdom into Jesus, thus placing the introduction of Jesus in a later stratum. In the same vein, if the Son of Man in Q bears all the marks of being an expected future figure, not identified with Jesus except possibly in an anecdote which itself bears other marks of being a later evolution (namely, the Dialogue), then this is further justification for placing that pericope in the later or latest stratum. All of this is “evidence”, Ben, not circularity. It’s just that you are unable or refuse to recognize or acknowledge it as such. Now, I’m going to quote from your latest posting (at least at this time of writing) to illustrate how you are misled into asking invalid questions of me because you are locked into your historical Jesus paradigm where Q is concerned. Quote:
Another requirement would also be contradictory. You suggest I need to point out similarities between how, for example, wisdom is treated in the Dialogue, with how she is treated in other pericopes which are acknowledged to be (even by myself) part of Q2. But that’s asking me to defeat my own purpose. If the Dialogue is a late addition reflecting a completely new feature (the introduction of an historical Jesus), how can you demand that I point to commonalities within it to other pericopes identified as part of an earlier stratum? You requiring such a thing is fallacious, Ben. It sets up an inherent contradiction. You will accept my conclusion that the Dialogue belongs to Q3 by me supplying “evidence” that it belongs in Q2??? Your demands make no allowance for the very natural situation that all strata are not going to rigidly adhere in all their parts to sets of principles of redaction and content, so that if a given pericope doesn’t contain X and Y and even Z it doesn’t belong. Evolving documents involving the hand of many redactors and reflecting evolving beliefs and outlooks over time don’t behave that way. Again, and it’s a point I reiterate in my article, this rigidity comes out of longstanding scholarly pursuits taking place behind impressive writings desks and along hallowed university halls that bear no resemblance to actual Sitz im Leben situations of a first century maelstrom of sectarian preaching, especially irrational sectarian preaching beset on all sides by opposition, persecution and even death for one’s convictions. Instead of demanding I conform to your paradigms, you need to examine my case on its own, as laid out in my book and supplemented by a lot of new observations in the article, and first see if it makes consistent sense; then ask yourself does it better solve the many difficulties I have raised (and even others have raised) in regard to Q and its relationship to the rest of the early Christian record. I hope I haven’t wasted an entire evening here. I certainly won’t be doing it again. If none of this has made Ben (the most clear-thinking person on the other side, as far as I’m concerned) alter his evaluation of the state of my argumentation even a little, then I will truly abandon hope. (I suppose I could paraphrase Dante and post this sign over the entrance to this forum: Abandon hope, all ye mythicists who enter here.) Earl Doherty |
|||||||||||
05-19-2007, 10:04 AM | #53 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Thanks for the reply, Earl, even after originally bowing out. There is much to go over in your post, of course, but let me first deal with the most confusing statement that I have found in my first run-through:
Quote:
Quote:
But notice that one of the suggested arguments was to show how wisdom in the dialogue unit has nothing in common with how it appears in Q1 or Q2; that is quite the opposite of what you said I was requiring of you, namely commonalities, is it not? Quote:
Ben. |
|||
05-19-2007, 01:52 PM | #54 | |||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: USA
Posts: 562
|
Mr. Doherty, thank you for the extended post. It has been helpful in better understanding particular aspects. I'll keep my response short.
Quote:
Q 6:20 "And raising his eyes to his disciples he said..." Q 7:1 "He entered Capernaum..." Q 10:2 "He said to his disciples" Besides, setting aside the dialogue and action sequences is begging the question. "Not including those verses that tautologically would indicate this is wrong..." This seems to be eliminating the possibility of major counterexamples, and if so, such IS question-begging. Being dismissive of actual counterexamples and precluding the possibility of others is extremely circular. If I've misunderstood you, please inform me. If this is correct, it can only be circular. Quote:
Q 6:20 Lk: "Then he looked up at his disciples and said" Matt: "...his disciples came to him. Then he began to speak and taught them saying..." Q 7:1 Lk: "...he entered Capernaum..." Matt: "As he entered Capernaum" Q 10:2 Lk: "He said to them" Matt: "Then he said to his disciples" Besides, what is the evidence for attributing the Beelzelbub controversy and the distance healing to Christians in Q? Ultimate tradition-historical provenance is irrelevant. It seems to be conjecture. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||||
05-19-2007, 02:32 PM | #55 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Quote:
It is my page of agreements, for any interested parties. Quote:
Quote:
Ben. |
|||
05-19-2007, 04:08 PM | #56 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
Quote:
I’ll take a page from Mark Goodacre and appeal to Lucan-Q “editorial fatigue”…. Quote:
(Perhaps while you’re at it you might identify the location in The Formation of Q for Carlson’s phrase “biographical-narrative preface” which he tried to ridicule me on for not recognizing as Kloppenborg’s. He seems to be passing up the chance to tell me himself and discredit my thought that he might be bluffing. But then, he has also passed up explaining how he was misinterpreted as maintaining that there was indeed some kind of narrative structure to Q.) Anyway, I am not going to comment further on your posting here. I’ll wait until both you and Ben issue more comprehensive installments. I gather you are working on a rebuttal to my rebuttal. Good luck with that. Earl Doherty |
||
05-19-2007, 04:24 PM | #57 | |||
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: USA
Posts: 562
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||
05-19-2007, 05:07 PM | #58 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Quote:
Quote:
Nord: He's bluffing! I'll kill him.—Waterworld. Quote:
Ben. |
|||
05-19-2007, 08:34 PM | #59 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: USA
Posts: 1,307
|
Quote:
Doherty's "narrative structure" is still tilting at the strawman. Q has narrative, even apart from Q3 (as Kloppenborg defines it). One of Kloppenborg's major contributations to Q studies is to show that the amount of narrative in Q is not unusual when compared with other sayings collections. Thus, Doherty's attempt to appeal to Kloppenborg--of all people--for the proposition that Q lacks narrative is rather pitiful. For example: Quote:
|
|||
05-19-2007, 11:25 PM | #60 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Cary, NC, USA
Posts: 42
|
Stephen said:
Quote:
Q 6:20 Lk: "Then he looked up at his disciples and said" Matt: "...his disciples came to him. Then he began to speak and taught them saying..." Q 7:1 Lk: "...he entered Capernaum..." Matt: "As he entered Capernaum" Q 10:2 Lk: "He said to them" Matt: "Then he said to his disciples" I agree with Earl that 'disciples' doesn't mean a lot, but Stephen (or Chris or Ben), can you give us more? :Cheeky: Because it could be so damaging for the Jesus Puzzle case that I might change side. Thx |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|