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07-31-2011, 01:42 PM | #51 | ||||
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And boy did I ever try to salvage Jesus, or Christ, as in some way relevant to these connected arguments. In the beginning of this investigation, I was a faithful, although inquisitive, Christian. It was not what I wanted to be the case, but what I believed the evidence was telling me. Quote:
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However, it does not appear that the Jesus movement had anything to do with these future hopes. I think that the belief was that God would bring this age to fruition without human intervention, and that any messiah would be leading it after it was inaugurated. Paul's movement was city centered, and integrated into existing society. The Jesus movement, on the other hand, originated in rural Judaea, promoting the inauguration of a messianic age by human intervention. Those who I think radicalized it were once gentile converts to Judaism, circumcised and all, who in response to the failure of the Jewish rebellion of 66-74 CE, came to the realization that things could not happen as they had been taught. They had already burned their bridges with their relatives and now many Jews looked upon messianic converts with a good deal of suspicion. Rather than believe that their belief in the messianic age was in error, they rationalized it away as God's just judgement on Jews for their wicked thoughts of rebellion, and Jesus must have had a different function in God's plan for history than what those evil Jews had taught them. Enter Jesus as a redeemer. DCH |
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07-31-2011, 04:21 PM | #52 | ||
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In any case, the Jewish letters stemming from religious interests which do survive, do not contain the type of lengthy and sometimes discursive paraenesis of the apostle Paul, but are brief and merely administrative in purpose, being used to regulate halachic practice. Notice Yerushalmi Maaser Sheni 5:4: [Rabban Gamaliel] to our brethren, those of the Babylonian diaspora, those of the Medean diaspora, and those of the Grecian diaspora and all the rest of the diasporas of Israel, may your peace increase! I inform you that the lambs are tender and the doves are thin and the time for the ripening [of the grain] has not arrived. Therefore, it is proper in my eyes and in the eyes of my colleagues to add to this year thirty days.Or Tosefta Sanhedrin 2:6: [Rabban Gamaliel] to our brethren, residents of Upper Galilee and residents of Lower Galilee, may your peace increase! I inform you that the time for the removal has come, to separate the tithes from the olive vats.Also, from an earlier period, 2 Maccabees 1:1-9: The Jewish brethren in Jerusalem and those in the land of Judea, to their Jewish brethren in Egypt, greeting, and good peace. May God do good to you, and may he remember his covenant with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, his faithful servants... In the reign of Demetrius... [w]e besought the the Lord and we were heard, and we offered sacrifice and cereal offering, and we lighted the lamps and we set out the loaves. And now see that you keep the feast of booths in the month of Chislev, in the the one hundred and eighty-eighth year.These letters then find their nearest Christian analogue in the Jerusalem council's encyclical letter of Acts 15:23-29, but, obviously, not in the Pauline letters. Again, your version of Paul would be entirely unique for that period, so far as the evidence goes. |
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08-01-2011, 01:28 AM | #53 | |||||||
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My initial reaction is '?' Because I can't say I noticed digressions. Quote:
Specifically, I was also asking how this operated in relation to the rather extended passage from 1 Cor 15: 3-8. So, I was hoping you could clarify. And to repeat myself, I trust you accept that it's reasonable for me to be initially skeptical, until such time as some experts (in Classical Greek, for example) respond to your theory, and/or until there is some corroborating evidence of the Pauline scenario you think pertained (i.e. the 'evidence' referred to in the post above mine). Otherwize, you have a rather unique explanation. Part of what I want to know is, is your methodology for detecting interpolations a good one and/or does it deviate from, or fail to apply, any commonly accepted methodologies for detecting interpolations? Quote:
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I take it there is evidence. Quote:
This is the hub of my query about 'digressions'. If Paul was a Jew, perhaps developing a personal version of Jewish theology, and Christianity was originally a sect within Judaism, then..........him bringing Jesus into the mix is not a digression at all, and if we take Jesus out and are left with something more plainly Pre-Jesus Jewish, that doesn't strike me as something we wouldn't obviously expect. So, I think your analysis, at the moment, seems to hinge heavily, not on such speculation, but on this Greek Grammar think indicating wholesale interpolation by a different author. Quote:
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I think you mentioned that you have him as some sort of Royal claimant. Perhaps the two aren't mutually exclusive. If you think they are, and that he was a Royal claimant but not an eschatological prophet, then on what evidential basis would you make this distinction? Cheers, A. |
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08-01-2011, 07:36 PM | #54 | |||||||
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Since it is incumbant for me to explain where such a movement came from, I have to turn to Jesus as a teacher about the coming of a messianic age, which some at least of his followers thinking he himself might be leading it in as the messiah, after whose death came to believe Jesus would be resurrected to lead in the messianic age, and some of these ultimately became so disillusioned by the failed rebellion and the social effects that it brought that they had to reinterpret Jesus again, this time choosing the role of a heavenly redeemer. (puff, wheeze, man, try to say all that in one breath!) This is not too far off of the reconstructions of NT scholars. DCH |
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08-02-2011, 02:56 AM | #55 | |||
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Yes, I do not see anything particularly controversial here. It's true that I did originally think you were advancing a proto-myther case, even when you opted for 'royal claimant' (by which I initially thought you meant instead of eschatological prophet, but apparently you didn't). However, I did also get the impression (and maybe I am wrong again here) that some other posters were taking your 'wholesale interpolated Paul' and incorporating it into their myth cases. That, if true, wouldn't be your fault, but since I'm sceptical abut MJ, it may still be a reason for me to want to (respectfully) drill into your scenario. {..drilling sound from offstage....} Yes, but precisely why do you necessarily think this? I mean, most scholars who have scrutinized the Epistles, and in some cases agreed that there is pseudepigraphicism (phew. Is that actually a word? Probably not) going on, do not seem to think so. And, in relation to 1 Cor 15 3-8, how come you bracket a lengthy passage, whereas elsewhere you only bracket a word? I mean, I can guess, in principle, that you would say the larger passage needs to be removed because it's inherently associated, but I'm not sure how you make the decisions about where to cut and where not to cut on evidential grounds, rather than because it fits your scenario beforehand. I'm not yet even clear on why you think the same writer couldn't have used both forms of address, in different textual contexts. Also, is there a pattern in other texts which suggests that this was not the done thing? Quote:
However, I do have to say that there would appear to be LESS of a digression if the material was left in. This does not rule out a 'swop', but if anything, postulated swops are arguably one tiny step further in the direction of speculation, and away from parsimony. Quote:
And it must be noted, as far as I am aware, that for almost all academics, and certainly this is the case for relatively inexpert little ol' me, the text seems pretty coherent with the material left in. It seemed to me you merely painted a possible scenario. Though there may be wires crossing between us. I accept your right to have a theory. And I note your caveats about it being your personal view. I'm just still wondering why I should consider it likely. :] Cheers, A. |
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08-02-2011, 06:12 AM | #56 | |
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Are you saying......that Paul originally wrote to, say, a bunch of Romans who didn't believe in Jesus, or it seems any Christ or even actual messianic claimant, but then later, another bunch of 'Jesus movement' Romans heavily interpolated his letters, and that something similar happened in several other geographical locations, before the Gospels were written, and that the non-Jesus bunch morphed/melted away, leaving no trace? Or do you think that the interpolaters got their hands on an early compiled set? No, you don't seem to mean the latter. But, if you are not saying the former either, are you then saying that he wrote to a bunch of churches who did know of a Jesus/Christ but that he just never mentioned this sort of thing even once when writing to them? |
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