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04-20-2011, 06:04 PM | #101 |
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What a nightmare...
JW: Continuing the assault on Burridge's What the Hell are the Gospels?, a comparison of "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King using Burridge's criteria to see which would parallel better: 3 - External Features Scale Literary Units Joseph ErrancyWiki |
04-22-2011, 04:18 PM | #102 |
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JW:
Continuing the assault on Burridge's What the Hell are the Gospels?, a comparison of "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King using Burridge's criteria to see which would parallel better: 3 - External Features Sources Methods of Characterization Joseph ErrancyWiki |
04-23-2011, 10:39 AM | #103 |
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JW:
Continuing the assault on Burridge's What the Hell are the Gospels?, a comparison of "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King using Burridge's criteria to see which would parallel better: 4 - Internal Features Setting Topics Joseph ErrancyWiki |
04-24-2011, 10:13 AM | #104 |
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JW:
Continuing the assault on Burridge's What the Hell are the Gospels?, a comparison of "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King using Burridge's criteria to see which would parallel better: 4 - Internal Features Style Atmosphere Joseph ErrancyWiki |
05-06-2011, 09:24 AM | #105 |
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JW:
Continuing the assault on Burridge's What the Hell are the Gospels?, a comparison of "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King using Burridge's criteria to see which would parallel better: 4 - Internal Features Quality of Characterization Social Setting Joseph ErrancyWiki |
06-04-2011, 06:34 PM | #106 |
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JW:
Continuing the assault on Burridge's What the Hell are the Gospels?, a comparison of "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King using Burridge's criteria to see which would parallel better: 4 - Internal Features Authorial Intention Encomiastic = laudatory. Match to Caesar. Exemplary = Match to Caesar. Informative = Match to Caesar. Entertainment value = Match to Oedipus. To preserve memory = Match to Caesar. Didactic = Match to Oedipus. Apologetic and polemic = Match to Caesar. Overall Match to Caesar Joseph ErrancyWiki |
06-05-2011, 01:23 PM | #107 |
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JW:
Time to summarize the results of using Burridge's own criteria from What the Hell are the Gospels?, in comparing "Mark" to Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar and Oedipus the King to see which would parallel better: 1 - Opening Features Title = OedipusMatch to Oedipus 2 - Subject Significance of subject = CaesarMatch to Caesar 3 - External Features Mode of representation = OedipusSummary of External: Match to Oedipus = 7 Match to Caesar = 0 Neutral = 1 Overall match to Oedipus 4 - Internal Features Setting = CaesarSummary of Internal: Match to Oedipus = 3 Match to Caesar = 4 Overall match to Caesar Grand Summary: 1 - Opening Features = OedipusUsing Burridge's own criteria to determine genre, "Mark" parallels better with Oedipus the King than Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar . Since Oedipus the King and Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar are considered representative of the respective genres of Greek Tragedy and Greco-Roman Biography, this creates serious doubt as to Burridge's general conclusion that the Gospels are Greco-Roman Biography and specifically his implication that "Mark" individually is Greco-Roman Biography. Joseph ErrancyWiki |
07-09-2011, 03:17 PM | #108 | |
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JW:
I've already demonstrated in this Thread that "Mark" parallels much better to Oedipus the King than Suetonius, The Life of Julius Caesar. This suggests that "Mark" in turn parallels better with Greek Tragedy than Greco-Roman biography. Asking than if "Mark" is Greco-Roman Biography is probably the wrong question to be asking. The better question is is "Mark" Greek Tragedy. Continuing with Poetics and looking for parallels to "Mark": Quote:
[1] A describes a goal of creating the strong emotions of fear and pity, textbook Greek Tragedy. And these two emotions are exactly what "Mark's" goal is. Fear in reaction to what Jesus does and pity in reaction to what is done to Jesus. Note especially the reversal of the two for motivation. Jesus is motivated to do to others by pity and others are motivated to do to Jesus by fear. Again this type of goal of creating strong negative emotions in the audience would be unknown in Greco-Roman Biography. [2] Again, "Mark" takes a basic of GreekTragedy (GT), unmerited misfortune, and makes it a primary theme. All of Jesus' abuse is undeserved. [3] And again, "Mark's" Jesus isn't just renowned, he is the most renowned. [4] Another extreme. Jesus goes from being the most popular person around to the least popular (Is "Mark" satirizing the GT formula?). [5] No happy ending for Jesus in the tAMPb. Jesus actually does the Impossible (really). But no one believes it. Now that's Tragedy! [6] "opposite catastrophe for the good and for the bad". Boy does this author use this. Jesus' catastrophe is his death is undone but his mission is not just to become undead but to convince people of it. Those who make him dead don't realize that by doing so they are killing themselves (a favored theme of GT). Joseph ErrancyWiki |
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08-14-2011, 02:45 PM | #109 |
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JW:
The Skeptic Master Bart Ehrman faithfully reports in Lost Christianities page 71 that Super Sleuth "Saba" Smith also discovered fragments at Mar Saba of a lost play of Sophocles. Those who have been paying attention gnosis that Sophocles is the greatest author of Greek Tragedy of all time. Considering that this Thread demonstrates amazing parallels between "Mark" and Greek Tragedy is it a coincidence that [subliminal message] in addition to discovering these fragments Smith also discovered Secret Mark? [/subliminal message] Joseph EDITOR, n. A person who combines the judicial functions of Minos, Rhadamanthus and Aeacus, but is placable with an obolus; a severely virtuous censor, but so charitable withal that he tolerates the virtues of others and the vices of himself; who flings about him the splintering lightning and sturdy thunders of admonition till he resembles a bunch of firecrackers petulantly uttering his mind at the tail of a dog; then straightway murmurs a mild, melodious lay, soft as the cooing of a donkey intoning its prayer to the evening star. Master of mysteries and lord of law, high-pinnacled upon the throne of thought, his face suffused with the dim splendors of the Transfiguration, his legs intertwisted and his tongue a-cheek, the editor spills his will along the paper and cuts it off in lengths to suit. And at intervals from behind the veil of the temple is heard the voice of the foreman demanding three inches of wit and six lines of religious meditation, or bidding him turn off the wisdom and whack up some pathos. ErrancyWiki |
08-14-2011, 03:24 PM | #110 | |
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Have you ever sat down to reconstruct this "Secret Mark" according to its prescription of insertion into Mark? The apparatus looks suspiciously like a mechanism designed to make Jesus and the Apostles in question appear in a very distorted and common light. I posted this observation last year after going through the exercise. Therefore I ask again - Have you ever sat down to reconstruct this "Secret Mark" according to its prescription of insertion into Mark? If you have not done so, it is worth the effort to examine the task specified by the text itself. On the idea that the gospels are tragedies, I think this is within the bounds of tolerance. Those who authored the gospels in Greek had their Greek audience in mind, and it was a very tragic reality for that Greek audience. They were told that their god had been crucified on account of his healing people, performing miracles, raising people from the dead, etc, etc, etc on the Sabbath day, whereon one should not work. It was a tragic tetrarchy of tales that spread the Good News to the Greek speaking world of their immanent loss. They were told that it was not in fact Zeus "in which they lived and moved and took their being", but rather a dead Jew. This was tragic news to the Greeks, and the Platonists took it badly. Best wishes Pete |
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