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10-28-2004, 05:58 PM | #11 | ||||||||||
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Nothing is simple in this business: everything is overdetermined. If there was a Jesus and he had disciples, why were there twelve? There may have been twelve, but it may have been one of those mystical numbers relating to the number of tribes of Israel, which may relate to the number of months in a year, which in turn may relate to... The gospel of Mark is certainly not a work of original material hot off the brain of a gospel writer. It assumes stuff about communities, about traditions in circulation, and those responsible for the production of Mark themselves don't seem to show direct interest in prophecies because they don't give it the importance of the Matthean tradition. It's certainly in the Marcan tradition, but not of too much interest to our writers. Prophecies can at best provide bare events, if they are the sources of much of the narrative. However, once you have the skeleton, the flesh can mysteriously appear. Which could come first, the prophecy of the event? Quote:
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We have teachers wandering about the hills of the Peloponesis with their students, along the Ionian coast, through the wildernesses of Palestine, and who knows where else. Prophecy of origin merely gives a location for an origin. How it may be related depends on what those who contributed brought to it. If they knew of a wandering teacher from Gaulanitis, then that teacher may supply some shadow in the story. With just a name to go by, Tertullian added information to a non-entity he knew was called Ebion, though there was no eponymous founder of the Ebionite movement. Later writers added more to the story. How stories develop is pretty inconsequential usually. Quote:
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Now as those events include information which don't fit our understanding of reality -- people don't walk on water, people don't bring others back from three days dead -- and there is no way to check the validity of a literal interpretation of the literature (which is after all just one interpretation of the literature), then alternative explanations which require fewer presuppositions should be considered and if they at least explain the same information then they should be considered as valid. As a totally literary explanation of the development of the traditions that interest us seems feasible, then that also has to be considered valid. I personally, don't consider it worth the effort to go into such explanations, be they literal, literary or some other means. I prefer to deal with what I consider can have a fair chance of being substantiated. This is why I would prefer to talk about the dead sea scrolls, though almost no-one gives a fig about the scrolls except for the wrong reasons, what they reveal about Jesus, which is nothing, other than some minimal background information to the new religion. spin |
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10-28-2004, 08:20 PM | #12 | |
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10-29-2004, 10:01 AM | #13 | |||||||||||||||||||
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Basically there needs to be a reason why the original author of the Galilean events set them in Galilee. Just because this Judas was from there doesn't seem to be enough of a reason--we don't even know if he was active there. Also he doesn't seem to have been a wonderworker. But maybe Josephus is leaving things out, who knows? Furthermore, Josephus says his sons were executed later--does this mean that a movement continued there after Judas' death? Or were they active elsewhere? We don't know. Judas is a possible explanation, but not a very good one, so I think the question is left open. Quote:
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10-29-2004, 10:21 AM | #14 | ||||||
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10-29-2004, 01:55 PM | #15 | |
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"The movement" appears to be synonymous with the gospel Jesus in your world view. Jesus was superimposed on "the movement" or "movements" after-the-fact. |
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10-29-2004, 03:34 PM | #16 | |
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10-29-2004, 05:10 PM | #17 | |||||
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You are right; it is elaborate. But then Mark is a very complex and elaborate Gospel, more so than the others. And saying an idea is "elaborate" is not a valid critique of it; just a register of subjective disdain. Quote:
Just look at the way Galilee is portrayed in Mark. Few or none of its major cities rate a mention. The landscape is bereft of political and social tension (read Mk 12:13-17 carefully. Does Mark make it clear that there is any sociopolitical tension present?). The major cities and market towns near Jesus' alleged home in Nazareth, Sepphoris and Tiberias, go unmentioned. Mark knows "Herod" is in change but I am not entirely certain he knows which one. In Mark Galilee plays a narrative role -- the land of the Jews -- opposed by the areas across the Sea of Galilee, which stand for the Gentiles. When Jesus crosses the Sea of G, he goes from one world to the other. Mark's geography is entirely imagined and allegorical. There's nothing real about this Galilee that you want to think is so important. Note that the Isaiah quote also explains the prominence of the Sea of G in Mark. Quote:
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BTW, getting rid of Q doesn't solve the historical problems posed by Q. Matthew still got those stories from somewhere. So be comforted; perhaps there is a tradition in that material. Vorkosigan |
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10-29-2004, 05:34 PM | #18 | |
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10-29-2004, 10:29 PM | #19 | ||||||||
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2) they were constructing from a miscellany of information that came there way what happened, 3) they weren't interested in real world events, but were setting mystical events in a real landscape, based on the garbled reports they found, 4) they were collecting the messianic tales that came their way and knew nothing more than those, 5) they were simply inventing a nice story for their moral and religious needs, 6) they were convinced the messiah had come but had no real information, so they assumed they would get it from biblical prophecy, 7) need I continue? How a particular trope got incorporated into a tradition is quite often unrecoverable, but some of them last for thousands of years. How do items from the epic of Gilgamesh end up in a Sinbad story from 1001 Nights? How does a text written in Rome, which I'm pretty sure Mark was get its information? That's slightly more complex again. Quote:
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10-31-2004, 01:07 PM | #20 | ||||||||||||
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