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06-09-2005, 02:25 PM | #21 | |
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Yes, this is another problem in this passage... You're right that the text of 1 Samuel doesn't really say that David had any other men with him. But I'd prefer to deal with this other problem later. One thing at a time... Best, Yuri. |
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06-09-2005, 02:28 PM | #22 | ||||
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Regards, Yuri. |
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06-09-2005, 02:35 PM | #23 | |
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But the problem with your theory is that the OT parallels in the gospels are very often to the non-Pentateuch (i.e. non- Samaritan) parts of the OT. Yuri. |
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06-09-2005, 02:51 PM | #24 | |
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You've obviously put in a lot of time to develop this theory of yours but, sorry to say, I don't think it holds much water. Carlson already pointed out the most obvious problems with your theory. There's a general tendency in TC to focus a lot of effort on possible accidental errors in the textual transmission of the gospels, such as homoioteleuton, and other possible scribal errors. But, in my view, overwhelming majority of the textual variants is due not to accidental errors, but to deliberate editing, often theologically and politically inspired. Also, another large class of variants is probably due to the desire on the part of later scribes/editors to expand the text. In many cases, such expansions appear to be highly problematic and even quite inept. So I think that our case of Mk 2:26 is one of these. All the best, Yuri. |
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06-09-2005, 05:38 PM | #25 |
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It was the duty of the priests to eat the twelve loaves of
the Presence which were set out every day before God (Lev 24:5-9). The twelve male positions correspond to the twelve loaves. In the time of King David, the Abiathar priest (Ahimelech, see 1 Chron 24:1-3) had allowed David and his men to eat five loaves on the condition that they had "kept themselves from women" (1 Sam 21:1-6; see also Mk 2:25-26). offa |
06-09-2005, 07:05 PM | #26 | ||
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This really makes a stronger case, then. If the omission and collocation found in verse 26 happened in an ancestor of Bezae, that ancestory could be the explanation for the omission of the phrase in Bezae, the other Greek mss., the Old Latin, and the Syriac. If the omission happened in these manuscripts due to a single accidental omission of two lines in a Greek ancestor to these manuscripts, then the premise of your O.P. disintegrates. Vorkosigan, what do you think? You're my Mark expert here. best wishes, Peter Kirby |
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06-09-2005, 07:06 PM | #27 | ||
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06-09-2005, 07:11 PM | #28 | |
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Sigh. Is there a generally accepted list of certain and probable "OT" references? |
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06-10-2005, 12:36 AM | #29 | |
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06-10-2005, 04:07 AM | #30 | |
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Since some folks might have considered Abiathar problematic it would have been a nice "drop" target. Sometimes the word itself, as in the Peshitta smoothing making Abimelech the high preist and omitting Abiathar. (This shows that some scribes were looking for a text adjustment method from the Byzantine). In the Bezae predecessor a different phrase tact was taken. Yuri, in a basic sense any theories of caesarean primacy (if that is appropriate for what is your view) have a number of the same flaws that you correctly attribute to alexandrian primacy. A small number of wildly divergent manuscripts, with the main one being of dubious scribal competence. (main two, on alexandrian). That is why I sometimes find it a tad difficult to follow your basic concepts. Shalom, Praxeas http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic/ |
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