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08-01-2007, 09:50 PM | #151 | ||
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08-01-2007, 10:15 PM | #152 |
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Doherty may be wrong on some points, and right on others. I would hesitate to claim he's wrong on any particular point, since:
a) He's way smarter and much more read than me b) I am not familiar with all his claims c) no-one would care about my position on the matter |
08-02-2007, 07:40 AM | #153 | |||||||||
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(And where does the genuine Paul equate the mystery with Christ? Is that not a deutero-Pauline conception?) Quote:
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In Romans 11.1 Paul says that he himself is an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham. By seed of Abraham, then, Paul appears to mean that he is descended from Abraham. In Romans 9.3 Paul calls his brothers kinsmen according to the flesh and then proceeds to identify them as Israelites. By kinsmen according to the flesh, then, Paul appears to mean ethnic Israel, to whose members he is related physically by race. In 1 Corinthians 10.18 Paul writes of Israel according to the flesh and then discusses the sacrificial system. By Israel according to the flesh, then, Paul appears to mean ethnic Israel, Israel as physically descended from the patriarchs. In Romans 1.3 Paul calls Jesus the seed of David according to the flesh. By this phrase Paul appears to mean that Jesus is physically the descendant of David. All of these instances have in common the description of a person or group of persons by their physical descent. Two of the instances use the seed metaphor; two others use the phrase according to the flesh. Our instance of choice, Romans 1.3, uses both. These verses (and others from other parts of Paul and from other authors) are the basis for my reading of Romans 1.3. Now, what is the basis for your reading? (Note, I am not asking for your reasons for subverting the natural reading; I am asking for your reasons for thnking your reading is the more natural.) Quote:
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But let me take a different tack here in a desperate attempt to keep the discussion focused on the meaning of these phrases. Let me concede (purely for the sake of argument, I assure you) that you are correct about 1 Corinthians 15, that in that chapter Paul tells us outright that Jesus never had a physical body (not, as on the usual reading, merely that he had no physical body after his resurrection). What then? How does this affect the clear meaning of Romans 1.3? You cannot automatically jump to the conclusion that Paul must have meant something unusual by his seed of David according to the flesh phrase. You have to consider, for example, whether the same Paul who penned 1 Corinthians 15 also wrote Romans 1.3! What if the line in Romans 1.3 is a proto-orthodox insertion? This is one way of identifying such insertions, after all; the insertion contradicts something that the author elsewhere affirms. But how would you know whether the potential insertion contradicts something else if you can warp its meaning at will? To be sure, there are some phrases and expressions that admit of several possibilities of roughly equal merit, and in those cases it is perfectly legitimate to let the rest of what the author has written guide our interpretive decisions. But seed of David according to the flesh does not appear to be one of those ambiguous expressions. In fact, I can say with near certainty that, if you were to succeed in persuading scholars at large of your interpretaton of 1 Corinthians 15, many if not most of them would then regard Romans 1.3 as an interpolation. That would be the easiest way to resolve the tension. (This is, IIUC, what Jakes Jones IV does on this very discussion board; he thinks Paul was speaking mythically in 1 Corinthians 15, and he regards Romans 1.3 as a proto-orthodox, anti-docetic insertion.) Or, to look to another hypothetical possibility, what if Paul contradicted himself royally? Changed his mind between the two epistles? How would we ever know, if we are allowed to turn seed of David according to the flesh into whatever we want? Thus I insist that we should figure out what seed of David according to the flesh means on its own merits (using the usual kinds of evidence, generally involving a lexical study of other instances of the terms and phrases involved) before deciding its place in the Pauline epistolary corpus. Quote:
But again, let me concede the point (just for the sake of argument, of course). Let us assume that Galatians 3-4 proves that Paul had no physical or earthly personage in mind at all when he wrote of Christ. What then? How does that affect the plain meaning of seed of David according to the flesh? We are back to the usual options: Paul contradicted himself; Romans 1.3 is an interpolation; Paul changed his mind. If you think that Paul did indeed write Romans 1.3, and yet did not believe in an earthly Jesus of some kind, then it is up to you to provide the evidence for your reading. Instead, you are trying to overwhelm what appears to be the natural reading of Romans 1.3 with other data, other verses, that do not directly relate to the meaning of the language. You are, IOW, not showing us why your reading is the natural reading of Romans 1.3 and Galatians 4.4; you are rather trying to show us why the natural reading cannot be right. Do you see the difference? Quote:
I can make the above hypothetical concessions in good faith on this thread, since the topic here is supposed to be what those physical-sounding phrases mean, regardless who wrote them. I realize that in my OP I asked contributors to assume that the Pauline epistles were genuine pretty much as they stand, and that I have here brought up the possibility of interpolation. I hope contributors will indulge this brief change in policy, since I want to make the point that providing unrelated counterpoints does not answer the call for related analogies. Ben. |
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08-06-2007, 08:02 AM | #154 | |
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08-06-2007, 01:14 PM | #155 | ||||||||||
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Ben, you are still stuck in your modern/orthodox/preconceived paradigm that a phrase like “of the seed of David according to the flesh” must be interpreted in what you regard as a “natural” way.
You start from that assumption, so that nothing I say can change your position. I’m not saying that, for us, this is not a valid assumption. For us, how we think in the modern era, “of the seed of David according to the flesh” is natural. We couldn’t possibly understand it any other way. We have no mental contexts in which an alternative could fit, and especially when we think of it in the words of the English translation. What I am trying to do is bring in other considerations of context to, shall we say, ‘soften’ that assumption and lead us to think that perhaps Paul (or whoever wrote this phrase and others like it) could have had something else in mind, or could have been influenced by other considerations to adopt an idea which, perhaps even to them, in whatever rational faculties they may have possessed, made something less than literal sense. I offered a number of considerations in regard to context, to what Paul elsewhere says which would lead us to assume he did not see Jesus as a human being on earth who could have had a physical descent from David. I offered, for example, 1 Corinthians 15:44-49. If it could be shown that Paul, in light of this passage, had no thought of Jesus having a human, physical body, then we are automatically forced to regard Romans 1:3 has having some other meaning in his mind, since the two would be incompatible. How do you deal with this? You first of all heap scorn on my exegesis of it (without addressing that exegesis, but I'll give you a chance below and hope that we don't get the "different conceptual universe" response yet again); then, perhaps as a readier alternative, you allow (for the sake of argument, of course) that if I am right in regard to that passage, Romans 1:3 would have to be set aside as by someone else, perhaps a proto-orthodox insertion. Either way, you have hardly discredited my contentions. Quote:
I offered another point of context relating to “born of woman”, in that I pointed out that the immediately preceding verses, Gal. 3:23-25, have Paul declaring that what has arrived in the present time is “faith in Christ” not Christ himself? How did you deal with that? More of the same scorn, without addressing my arguments on those verses. It looks like whatever I bring up to make my points, you simply reject out of hand as nonsensical, and/or appeal to your necessary “natural” interpretation. Is this proper debate? Do you think you are thereby discrediting my position? Quote:
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You can see that what I am being forced to argue here is first and foremost not the actual texts, but the closed-minded attitudes being brought to the question which we simply can’t get past. However, let’s address some of those points of context you so scornfully dismiss: Quote:
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On all these things I am appealing to context immediate and large, to exegetical argument, to careful analysis of texts rather than an a priori reading into them what tradition has always done, not to “well, it can only mean one thing.” P.S.: Quote:
Earl Doherty |
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08-06-2007, 04:59 PM | #156 | |
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Born of a woman just means that Mary was not human and therefore sinless while Joseph was Jewish and therefore sinner under the law that was given to Moses to convict the outer man of sin so the inner man can be set free, here now born of woman that once was taken from Joseph to be his dowry in betrothal if and only if he kept her virgin by his intergity as the "upright Jew." |
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08-07-2007, 02:34 PM | #157 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Let me just say neutrally that I disagree with your exegesis of 1 Corinthians 15, but just for a moment am willing to go along with it so that we can get to the meaning of Romans 1.3 and Galatians 4.4. Quote:
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As for the frequent translation of a phrase in the opening verse, "on the night he was arrested/betrayed," the latter renditions are dependent on Gospel preconceptions, whereas the word itself (paradidomi) has a basic meaning of "hand over" or "deliver up," which can equally apply in a mythical setting. Other passages in Paul (e.g., Romans 8:32) speak of God doing the delivering up, or even Jesus himself (Ephesians 5:2 and 25), which rules out, or renders unnecessary, a Gospel understanding.Here you grapple with the tendency to interpret that Greek word as betrayed, thus implying a knowledge of Judas Iscariot on the part of Paul. You do two things to answer this tendency: 1. You present the basic or usual meaning of this Greek word, and it does not (have to) mean betray. 2. You provide instances in which Paul uses this word in a similar context (delivering Jesus up), but to mean something other than betray. This is a good argument. I first encountered it in G. A. Wells, and it is effective. Now, how does the following procedure on my part for Romans 1.3 differ from the procedure you used for 1 Corinthians 11.23? Quote:
I do not think it is going too far to say that you, Earl Doherty, do not think Paul was thinking of Judas when he wrote 1 Corinthians 11.23; you present evidence that he was thinking of God, or of Jesus himself, or of just being delivered up in general. That is what I think with regard to Romans 1.3. I think that Paul was thinking of a descendant of David, and I have presented evidence for this. If somebody tried to topple your argument on 1 Corinthians 11.23 without even glancing at the verses you offered, such as Romans 8.32, I know you would see through such evasive tactics immediately. Quote:
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Just exactly how far to the left of center are you standing that a group of interpolation-hunting Jesus mythicists should strike you as too orthodox? Or are you draining even the word orthodox of every last vestige of its meaning, too, just as you are trying to do with flesh, seed of David, and born of woman? Surely this, if nothing else, deserves a different conceptual universe comment. Quote:
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So, I ask you once again (you ignored this the first time round), was Richard Carrier just plain wrong to even ask for analogies? Quote:
You never bothered to refute my point, yet here you are claiming once again that finding elements in the Jewish scriptures somehow removes those elements from perceived history. Quote:
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However, I decline (for now) to go into it. I want to keep this thread on track. I would like to address your argument on 1 Corinthians 15, but some other time. Thanks. Quote:
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(I do not even agree with your differences, from a Pauline perspective! But even if they were legitimate differences, they would not nullify the similarities between Augustus and Jesus, which have been pointed out by scholars as diverse as Deissman, Talbert, Evans, and Price.) Is this the same Earl Doherty who has written the following in supplementary articles 13A-D? I have made the point earlier that there are different forms of 'resurrection'. All are variants on the basic idea of 'conquest of death' by the god, and all have the same result regardless of their differences, namely the guarantee of some form of positive afterlife for the initiate.And who quotes Price approvingly? It is very hard not to see extensive and basic similarities between these religions and the Christian religion. But somehow Christian scholars have managed not to see it, and this, one must suspect, for dogmatic reasons.Of course there are differences between Augustus and Jesus. I myself even mentioned that at the time. But the differences do not overwhelm the similarities. Quote:
In fact, I have adopted something of a soft mythicist position on this thread so as to highlight the nature of Romans 1.3 and Galatians 4.4. So, if you think that the nearly instant deification of Jesus and the relative lack of harder evidence for his career spell doom for an historical Jesus, so be it, and I will agree for the sake of argument just to get back to Romans 1.3 and Galatians 4.4. I am still asking what Paul meant in those verses, regardless of whether he believed in an HJ or not. Quote:
You have so far in this debate ignored (A) my analogy with Augustus until I pressed you again (so much later in the discussion that you seem to have forgotten why I originally even brought it up), (B) my presentation of the other Pauline verses that seem to parallel Romans 1.3 (similar to your Pauline verse that seems to parallel 1 Corinthians 11.23), and (C) my question to you about Richard Carrier. Hopefully you will not ignore the following. What do you make of Ignatius? On your reading, Ignatius knew of mythicist opponents and writes against them. His diatribe against them includes these descriptions of Jesus: ...τω κατα σαρκα εκ γενους Δαυιδ, τω υιω ανθρωπου και υιω θεου ([I]one from the race of David according to the flesh, son of man and son of God).If Ignatius was countering mythicist claims, why was he using mythicist phrases pioneered by the mythicist Paul to do so? Why did these phrases seem like such handy prooftexts to him against mythicism? One last thing that I hope you do not ignore. On a recent thread I brought up the Christ hymn in Philippians 2 and opined that the most natural (yes, natural) way to read it is that God bestowed the name of Jesus on Christ at his resurrection; if this is indeed the correct way of reading this hymn, it strikes a rather large blow for mythicism, as Price points out. IOW, I willingly conceded that, despite my larger views on mythicity and historicity, this one passage, on its own terms, seems to point against my overall stance. G. A. Wells did a similar thing, though perhaps less forcefully, in his online response to you. While backing up a lot of his points against your views, he admitted that the issue of the archontes in 1 Corinthians 2.8 seems to turn somewhat in your favor and against his own view. He willingly conceded that his own reading of that verse involved a reading into of sorts that your avoided. What I would like to know is this: Can you willingly concede that, despite your overall views on historicism and mythicism, the born of a woman and seed of David according to the flesh lines seem, on their own terms, to point against your type (though not all types) of mythicism? Ben. |
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08-07-2007, 07:20 PM | #158 | |
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08-08-2007, 06:52 AM | #159 |
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Actually Ben, Jesus was never addressed as Christ in any of the four Gospels until after his resurrection to make it known to the reader that he was not Christ, but was, at best, 'Christ-in-becoming' if and only if he could find completion on the cross. Hence the "now it is finished" in John after he identified his bosum-buddy [John] as the providential son of wo-man in the flesh of David who was son of man in exile and here now fully man in completion to isolate and identify the purity of Jewish godmanship.
Resurrection after the crisis moment is needed to transform a potential [Senecan] tragedy into a [divine] comedy. |
08-08-2007, 07:06 PM | #160 | ||||
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If the case against an accused man is dependent entirely on one piece of evidence, and yet many other pieces of evidence point to his innocence, what should one do? Simply convict him on the basis of the former? Should we not, on the basis of the latter, try to see if there is another way to explain that apparent piece of incriminating evidence? And if the defense attorney manages to do just that, while at the same time demonstrating the strength of his client's alibi, or his inability to have physically performed the murder, or whatever, shouldn't the jury weigh the relative merits of guilt and innocence? That's all I'm asking you to do. I don't have a problem with either of those two 'incriminating' pieces of evidence. I see Romans 1:3 in the context of its scriptural derivation and can readily accept Paul stating it on that basis--yes, even if he didn't understand it (I simply say that as a possibility), which I don't see as an element of "desperation". I have recently given a detailed analysis of Romans 9:5 as constituting much less than a direct statement that Christ is of "human descent" from the Israelites. I have pointed out the contradictions in the context of Gal. 4:4. This sort of thing should make it clear to you why I am comfortable with not deriving the kind of literal, natural meaning from our 2 or 3 passages in question. And I still see merit in regarding certain problematic phrases, such as the last one, as very possibly interpolations. And when I read passages like 1 Corinthians 15:44-49, or Titus 1:3, or many of those I have highlighted here and elsewhere, which indicate to me beyond shadow of a doubt that Paul and other early writers have no recent historical figure in their minds, then like my ideal jury, I am forced to set aside the odd passage which seems to lean in the other direction if we simply assume their "natural" meaning. So in sum, I sleep very well at night. Now, in regard to your appeal to Ignatius. You overlook a basic anomaly here. The best example is in Smyrneans 1. Here is the Loeb translation of the pertinent verses: Quote:
We encounter a similar situation in Acts 2:30. Quote:
Now, you may want to opt for the latter alternative in each case in order to preserve your appeal to the "natural" meaning, but it's a rather inglorious choice. My preference really borrows from both. It was something which all concerned, from Paul to Ignatius to the author of Acts, ultimately derived from scripture. In their minds it had to apply, one way or another, mythically, metaphorically, or simply undefined. What that way was we can't know for sure, but that it was originally compatible with the view that Christ was an entirely spiritual being, I personally have no problem accepting. And thus I feel that I have, if indirectly, answered your question: Quote:
Whether I will continue this discussion much longer is debatable, since we are simply repeating ourselves to little avail, which is the usual way these things end up. Earl Doherty |
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