Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
09-26-2011, 10:06 AM | #11 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
Quote:
If the latter were the case, I’m not sure that this is at all problematic. Since we don’t have any context or surrounding text for the lost reference indirectly quoted by Origen, we can’t say that “brother of Jesus called Christ” would be anything but natural for what the interpolator was creating (no doubt based on an already developed oral tradition that the fall of Jerusalem had been due to the death of James). “Brother of Jesus” would appear by necessity, and “the one called Christ” suggested, if nothing else, by the identical phrase appearing multiple times in the Gospels, as in Matthew 1:16. If no “brother of Jesus” appeared in the original Ant. 20, Eusebius or some other interpolator simply copied the entire phrase from Origen’s source (or Origen himself) and thus the common phrase is explained. If “brother of Jesus” did appear in the original Ant. 20, then we have a simple coincidence of no great import leading to the commonality of the phrase between Origen and Eusebius’ first ‘witness’ of our extant Ant. 20. As for there being no textual variants, this is hardly problematic, since our earliest mss of the Antiquities come from centuries later, and we can safely presume that by then a widespread knowledge about those two references to Jesus in Josephus would have led Christian mss copies to reflect their well-known wordings. (This is an established principle in textual criticism.) I’m not sure how I lost you in saying that Eusebius witnesses to the Origen (supposed) passage and Ant. 20 as two separate passages, since in H.E. II, 23.20, he quotes the lost reference (perhaps courtesy of Origen) and then says, in 23.21 immediately after, “Josephus has also recounted his death in Ant. Book XX…” and proceeds to quote the Ananus/death of James passage as we have it. Ergo, two separate passages. This was also my point in saying that it is telling that, unlike Eusebius doing that very thing here, Origen failed, despite referring to his fall of Jerusalem passage three times, to be led to mention anywhere the other death of James passage in Ant. 20. This, taken with a similar silence on Ant. 20 in every other pre-Eusebian commentator, gives us a situation identical to that regarding the TF: no witness to either of them prior to Eusebius. Nor does Andrew Criddle’s observation on Origen do much to counter that. He strikes me as grasping at a very thin straw. It’s a resemblance, but hardly such a specific one that needs indicate interdependence. More tellingly, why, since Origen has referred directly to a source in Josephus for his comment on James and the fall of Jerusalem, did he not do the same for this ‘allusion’? Why not back up his statement that Quote:
Why is it that so many arguments for knowledge of this and that on the part of early Christian writers from Paul on is dependent on so-called allusions rather than on direct statements and attributions? Earl Doherty |
||
09-26-2011, 01:56 PM | #12 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 2,579
|
Quote:
Quote:
Best, Jiri |
||
09-26-2011, 02:39 PM | #13 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Mondcivitan Republic
Posts: 2,550
|
Hi Ted,
That early Christians considered Jesus divine, that is, more than a mere man, is unquestioned. Chris Price, actually, makes a good case, but guilds the lilly a bit with the frequent use of op.cit. and ibid. However, it doesn't help connect or disconnect the TF to Ant 20. DCH Quote:
|
|
09-26-2011, 04:34 PM | #14 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Mondcivitan Republic
Posts: 2,550
|
Spin,
Always nice to hear from you! Origen obviously read something that he thought was by Josephus that connected the destruction of Jerusalem with the death of James. Nothing like that is in the received text of Josephus' works, and if something resembling it was actually there originally then I am confident that Christian scribes would have retained it, as it would validate the existence of a person mentioned in Acts and Paul's letter to the Galatians. Origen, in my way of thinking, is not reacting to the context of a passage he believes is about his Savior's brother, but about some statement that he thinks attributes the destruction of the city to his death. All I am saying is that Ant 20:200-203 is about Ananus' recklessness, whose death at the hands of the Idumeans during the Revolt Josephus certainly DID attribute to the consequent destruction of the city, in War book 4. I do not believe in coincidence. Ananus, not James brother of Jesus, is the middle term. Even James' speech from the parapet of the temple is mirrored by a speech by a high priest Jesus, the man executed by the Idumeans along with Ananus. He had previously given a moving speech on the city wall to the Idumeans below, and was later killed and mocked by them before throwing his body from the temple wall into the valley below. I think that some sort of marginal commentary that asks "Is this one (meaning Ananus) the one whose death was the cause of the downfall of the city? It would be more fitting that it had been on account of the death of Jesus (the high priest in War 4), on account of the speech on the wall. For on its account (meaning the speech), God was angered against the rebellious ones (the Idumeans, expressed by the great storm that immediately followed the speech), for they then threw him (dead) from the wall." With many details simply alluded to, it would not take much for a Christian to misinterpret the whole thing to mean "This one (James the brother of Jesus) is the one whose death was the cause of the downfall of the city. It would be more fitting that it had been on account of the death of Jesus (the Christ of God), on account of the speech [of James] on the wall. For on its account (meaning the speech), God was angered against the rebellious ones (the Jews, destroyed by Vespasian's army), for they then threw him (alive) from the wall." DCH Quote:
|
|
09-26-2011, 10:35 PM | #15 |
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Yo DCH!
I also don't believe that it is a coincidence both Josephus (BJ 4) and Origen give cause for the fall of Jerusalem to the death of an individual, but the connection has clearly been mediated. That mediation seems to come--at least partly--through the work of Eusebius's Hegesippus. (Talking about a 5 book work in Latin--presumably a translation--on the Jewish War, the Jewish Encyclopedia says of its author, another Hegesippus, 'The name is merely a corruption of "Josephus"'.) If the names Hegesippus and Josephus could be confused, then Origen seems to have made a mistake working from memory, going from book 18 of Josephus to his memory of Hegesippus, for it is Hegesippus who supplies the narrative content as well as the elements necessary for Origen to construct the phrase "James the brother of Jesus called christ". Hegesippus is the candidate for connecting the priest that Josephus also mentions to James. If you feel the need to explain Origen's James story to the destruction of Jerusalem, you also have to explain the implicit connection in Hegesippus, who covers all of Origen's material before him. |
09-27-2011, 03:08 AM | #16 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Europe
Posts: 219
|
Quote:
"and coming to his own country he taught them in their synagogue, so that they were astonished, and said, "Where did this man get this wisdom and these mighty works?". The same author was also aware of the note in 'Commentary on Matthew' of Origen 10.17 which comments Matthew 13:54: "And perhaps by these things is indicated a new doubt concerning Him, that Jesus was not a man but something diviner". The interpolator lived after Origen. His name was most probably Eusebius. |
||
09-27-2011, 06:01 AM | #17 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 2,579
|
Quote:
1) Origen does not quote but paraphrase Josephus. Ergo, Eusebius' quote in 2:23 linking the siege to James' murder is not directly relying on Origen as source but apparently on a similarly interpolated Josephan text which has not been preserved. 2) Eusebius clearly separates Hegesippus and Josephus in his writing. Josephus' witness of the link is valuable to Eusebius because he is one of the 'sensible Jews'. There is no evidence whatever that the link is supplied by a presumed passage in Hegesippus relating to the Roman siege but withheld by Eusebius. The fact that Eusebius mentions it after the Hegesippus account does not connect it to that passage. The link is made explicit by the quoted passage in Josephus later in the paragraph which also qualifies the the siege as happening "just after" the killing of James. The year of the appointment of Albinus, 62 CE, was six years before Vespasian's siege. So the connection between the two events need not have been as strong in Hegesippus' mind as in the later chronicler's. In conclusion, there is no proof to the assertion that Origen relied on Hegesippus who he mistook for Josephus but a fairly strong argument against such an idea provided by Eusebius. Jiri |
|
09-27-2011, 07:26 AM | #18 | |||||||||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||||||||
09-27-2011, 09:54 AM | #19 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: USA, Missouri
Posts: 3,070
|
Quote:
If we do not accept that idea, which I do not, then we have two references by Origen that could conceivably tie back to the TF: 1. Josephus did not believe Jesus was the Christ 2. there was some doubt about Jesus having only been a man, and not something more 'diviner'. |
|
09-27-2011, 10:59 AM | #20 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
Quote:
2. If you had the backing of a famous Jewish historian for this sentiment, would you fail to mention that? Earl Doherty |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|