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05-04-2005, 07:35 AM | #111 | |
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05-04-2005, 08:20 AM | #112 | |
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(When I said earlier PRO PROSOPWN SOU it should have been PRO PROSWPOU SOU Sorry about that.) Andrew Criddle |
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05-04-2005, 09:58 AM | #113 | ||
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V, My computer time online is sporadic these days, so it is difficult for me to answer all your points in one sitting, so I can probably only respond to your points one or two at a time. Quote:
I did have a class many years ago regarding biblical history. What I recall is that nearly everything in the bible is not what it claims to be. Daniel written centuries after the events it portrays, etc. This was at a Catholic college (of all places! ...and I am not catholic, btw) and the catholic students in the class were quite upset at what the professor was saying. I wish I still had the textbooks from the class... V, What would you recommend as a good starter "scholarly introduction to the New Testament"? |
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05-04-2005, 10:03 AM | #114 | |
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It's those scholars you cite all the time, whose task it is to refute Carotta, but for some reason they won't do it. Just one example which perfectly shows that you have no idea what you are talking about. E) THE EASTER LITURGY DOES NOT FOLLOW THE GOSPEL, BUT THE BURIAL RITUAL OF CAESAR (as Ethelbert Stauffer proved, cf. Jerusalem und Rom im Zeitalter Jesu Christi, Bern 1957, p. 21). V: "That means diddly, even if true. Think about it." The contrary is true. The liturgy is very significant. Texts, whether "holy" or not, are quite easy to adulterate and adopt to the needs of those in power. This way the version ad orientem conversa of the vita Divi Iulii came became the official gospel in the first place, under Vespasianus and his minister for Jewish affairs Flavius Josephus (aka Paulus). The liturgy on the other hand is conservative, and thus retains more of the origin of a religion than the scriptures, Luther's sola scriptura is wrong. Attend a Catholic Good Friday mass and an Easter Vigil. Or watch the military style processions to the water (Caesar at the Rubicon) on Epiphany (6th January, the original christmas date, senatus ultimum consultum) especially in Southern Europe. And there are umpteen other examples. You won't do any of this however, but keep studying the OT in search for further passages, which with the "right" interpretation can somehow be "proved" to be the origin of the story of Mark. You won't look to Rome, after all it's the capital of the "empire of evil" and Caesar was an immoral pagan. Of course you have no idea that "the opposition between the Old and the New Covenants is an oriental metaphor for the old Rome of the Senate and the new Rome of Caesar; between the old order, righteous but exploiting, and the new order, liberating and promoting brotherly love; or as poets have observed, between ROMA and its mirror image AMOR." All this is not significant because the recent trend in so-called scholarship has chosen a different path, well... |
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05-04-2005, 11:40 AM | #115 | |
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05-04-2005, 11:53 AM | #116 |
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You are switching subjects. Scholarly attempts to describe a historical Jesus are irrelevant in your discussion with Vorkosigan because you are not debating that topic. You are debating competing explanations for the origin of the first Gospel story. He offers an attempt to describe the creation of the original Gospel story with the Hebrew Scriptures as a primary source. That this theory is generally accepted both by folks who accept/assume a historical Jesus as well as those who deny such a notion cannot just be brushed aside as willful ignorance or dogmatic blindness. HJ proponents insist that the author is recording history by way of Scripture while MJ proponents argue that the author is expressing his beliefs by way of Scripture. They both agree that Scripture was a primary tool in the author's efforts. You, on the other hand, offer a relatively unique description of the creation of the story that, unless I am mistaken, does not appear to have been published for peer review yet seeks to overturn/deny a general consensus among scholars. To suggest that Carotta does not need to directly address that consensus with something more than a suggestion of conspiracy or accusations of a fear of change is simply ridiculous. He clearly needs to defend the claim that his explanation for the origin of the story is better than the one currently accepted. The mere fact that Carotta's explanation is not obvious and is clearly far more complicated is sufficient to require a direct rebuttal to the more obvious and less complicated explanation currently accepted. |
05-04-2005, 12:57 PM | #117 | ||
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Why should Carotta DEFEND his "claim" (better word 'discovery') if nobody criticizes it - in a decent form and in an appropriate medium, e.g. a peer reviewed journal? Probably even a "rebuttal" in such a paper would not be published today, the very thought of it, the very idea of taking this revolutionary discovery seriously is out-of-bounds, a big no-no. The way they censor it is to simply hush it up. And the "currently accepted explanation" is the one accepted by the majority in the Anglo-Saxon world I suppose? |
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05-04-2005, 02:01 PM | #118 | |||||
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05-04-2005, 03:54 PM | #119 | |||||
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Vorkosigan |
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05-04-2005, 04:21 PM | #120 | |
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The genuinely primitive Easter liturgy is what we find in Melito's homily 'On the Pasch' and in scattered references in Tertullian and other early fathers. Andrew Criddle |
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