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Old 08-07-2006, 06:30 PM   #31
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Originally Posted by Ben
At the risk of picking nits, I ask again, why does the instance of οικουμενη have to encompass heaven in 1 Clement 60.1?
First of all, I was quoting Bauer, so to get an answer to your question, you’ll have to ask Bauer. He certainly was more knowledgeable than I am, so I’m quite willing to take his word for it. But if you ask for my own opinion, I can only speculate based on my own reading of the text. It may have been based on Clement’s use of the word aenaon in the first part of the sentence: “…didst make manifest the eternal fabric of the world (kosmos).” [Loeb/Lake trans.]. And Bauer actually designates TWO “extraordinary use”s: he includes under that heading the second example I quoted, Hebrews 2:5. Personally, I think he missed a third: Hebrews 1:6. When you create a scene which to all appearances looks like it takes place entirely in heaven, attended only by angels and drawing only on scripture, then the use of oikoumene in such a context looks like “an extraordinary use” to me.

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You stated on your website that Hebrews 8.4 was a smoking gun against an earthly tenure. I answered that the construction was a present contrary-to-fact condition, not a past one, unless context can somehow coax a past meaning out of it, which it cannot in this case.
Well, Ellingworth didn’t agree with you, nor did the translators of the NEB. The former agreed that the latter was grammatically possible (at least as including a past meaning).

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So, again, just for the sake of what exactly is at stake, it is manifest that, if the author of Hebrews thought that Jesus became high priest at a time which the historicist position places during his earthly tenure, Hebrews 8.4 would be a smoking gun for your mythicist position. If, however, the author of Hebrews thought that he became high priest only after his earthly tenure, Hebrews 8.4 means nothing either for or against your mythicist position.
So, again, just for the sake of trying to get my point across, I will repeat myself yet once more. Your second alternative cannot work. If the author of Hebrews were aware of an earthly tenure for Jesus and a death on Calvary, he could never have been led to think of and present him as high priest only after death. Because an essential part of the sacrifice would have been performed on earth, the shedding of his blood which brought forgiveness of sins, and thus his role as High Priest would have had to encompass that event on earth. And thus Jesus would have been a priest on earth, at the same time as the priests in the Temple. But this would contradict the dichotomy he has set up between Jesus and the earthly high priests and contradict the thought surrounding 8:4. But if he was not aware of an earthly tenure and death on Calvary….(I’ll continue that thought below)

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Indeed, the author does so clarify. He separates the days of his flesh (5.7) from the time of his priesthood. During the days of his flesh, he was learning obedience through his sufferings (5.8). It was only when he was perfected, or completed (5.9), in that process that he became the source of salvation and a high priest after the order of Melchizedek (5.10). Is there really any doubt that the culmination of this process, in the mind of both author and reader, was death?
Again, if “the days of his flesh” referred to a time on earth, then they included the crucifixion and death, on earth. I am not saying that the “days of his flesh” are not separate in the writer’s mind from the act of “sacrifice” which the author defines as the entry into the heavenly sanctuary and the offering of his blood. The question is, does “days of his flesh” refer to a time on earth? I maintain that it does not, one reason being that the activities during those “days” are from scripture, not history. So while there is a separation between the death/suffering/perfection and the entry into the sanctuary, both took place in a spiritual setting. Again, if that death/suffering/perfection had taken place on earth, the shedding of the blood aspect would have taken place on earth, and this being a normal aspect of sacrifice would have set up an apparent contradiction with the earthly priests which would have to be resolved. But if the death/suffering/perfection had taken place in a lower part of the celestial realm, not heaven itself, then it created no contradiction or anomaly in his own mind or the minds of his readers, and thus he could apply his concept of “priest” only to the post-death situation. Remember that all this debate has arisen over 8:4, and if none of Jesus’ activities took place on earth, then no problem is created.

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But to call only the sprinkling of the blood the sacrifice, to the exclusion of the actual slaughter of the animal, seems a semantic exercise unconnected with the present argument. For of course I meant that Jesus shed his blood in one spot and then sprinkled it in another. If you find some place where I used the term sacrifice inappropriately, I hope you will excuse me and take me for what I am obviously arguing, that Jesus was not killed (according to our author) in heaven.
Perhaps you misunderstood me. I simply pointed out that for the author of Hebrews, Christ’s “sacrifice” is never spoken of as anything other than the entry and offering in the heavenly sanctuary. Whether, if pressed, he would also have included the death and shedding of blood, that’s quite possible. But he has ignored that aspect of it, which I suggest he could not have if it had been an earthly event in recent history which had given rise to his faith movement and his own conversion. I agree that he would not have thought of Jesus as being killed in heaven itself, if by this you mean the highest sphere of God himself which also seems to (and logically would) include the heavenly sanctuary where he offered his blood. But he could certainly have thought of him being killed in a lower part of the heavens.

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The author tells us that Jesus entered the world (10.5) or the inhabited earth (1.6), that during the days of his flesh (5.6) he was being perfected, that he partook of blood and flesh just like us (2.14), that he was crucified (6.6; 12.2), and that after his death he went into heaven (9.24), and the implication that he died on earth is conspicuous by its absence?
But none of those passages speaks in earthly terms. That’s the fundamental problem. In your first three examples (10:5, 1:6, 5:7) he does something in scripture. They all use the present tense, which causes commentators problems, as I pointed out. Ellingworth even allows that the setting is “a timeless present” represented in scripture. You can hardly label these as references to earth conspicuous by their presence! As for the others, we have long discussed the legitimate application of “blood and flesh” and even “crucifixion” as things that can be undertaken by a heavenly savior in a heavenly setting. And if he suffered death in a corruptible part of the heavens, then he could indeed enter the highest “heaven” after that death.

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He ignored that dimension only if the world or the inhabited earth means something other than earth, if flesh means something other than flesh, if his crucifixion happened somewhere other than the usual venue for crucifixion, and if, when he went into heaven, he was already in heaven to begin with.
You have it exactly.

All the best,
Earl Doherty
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Old 08-07-2006, 07:46 PM   #32
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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
First of all, I was quoting Bauer, so to get an answer to your question, you’ll have to ask Bauer.
I see. Next time I see him in Wal-Mart, I shall be sure to ask him.

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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty, emphasis mine
Well, Ellingworth didn’t agree with you, nor did the translators of the NEB. The former agreed that the latter was grammatically possible (at least as including a past meaning).
If your proposed reading as a past progressive condition is only possible (which I conceded in my very first post on the subject), then it is, by definition, not a smoking gun.

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If the author of Hebrews were aware of an earthly tenure for Jesus and a death on Calvary, he could never have been led to think of and present him as high priest only after death.
Sure he could. In fact, he was constrained to do so precisely by his knowledge of that earthly tenure. He could not present Jesus as a priest on earth because he knew Jesus was not a Levite.

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Because an essential part of the sacrifice would have been performed on earth, the shedding of his blood which brought forgiveness of sins, and thus his role as High Priest would have had to encompass that event on earth.
What you say makes sense. If the author were freely composing about a Jesus who never left heaven for the entire sacrificial process, then he would be free to make Jesus a priest somehow before his death.

But he did not do so. He made Jesus a priest only after his death. Why? Because he knew that he could not make Jesus a priest before his death, because he was not a Levite.

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Again, if “the days of his flesh” referred to a time on earth, then they included the crucifixion and death, on earth.
Agreed. His death was the last thing to happen in the days of his flesh. Coincidentally, his perfection through suffering (surely his death) was also his inauguration into the high priesthood. Why did the author inaugurate his priesthood only after his death, and not before or during the actual suffering? See above for my answer.

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Again, if that death/suffering/perfection had taken place on earth, the shedding of the blood aspect would have taken place on earth, and this being a normal aspect of sacrifice would have set up an apparent contradiction with the earthly priests which would have to be resolved.
Our author resolves this apparent contradiction by making him a high priest only after his perfection through suffering.

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But if the death/suffering/perfection had taken place in a lower part of the celestial realm....
Where does the author refer to a lower part of the celestial realm?

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But he could certainly have thought of him being killed in a lower part of the heavens.
I cannot find anything in this text about Jesus being killed in a lower part of the heavens, though after he is killed he enters heaven.

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And if he suffered death in a corruptible part of the heavens, then he could indeed enter the highest “heaven” after that death.
Where does the author divide the heavens into corruptible and incorruptible parts?

This is quite a flurry of assertions; all we need now is the evidence.

Quote:
But none of those passages speaks in earthly terms. That’s the fundamental problem. In your first three examples (10:5, 1:6, 5:7) he does something in scripture.
It all seems to boil down to this for you. If the actions seem to be ripped straight from the pages of Hebrew scripture, then they were not even imagined as having taken place on earth.

That is an argument for another time. For now it is sufficient to note that (A) Hebrews 8.4 cannot, by definition, be a smoking gun and that (B) you have produced no argument against my contention that οικουμενη is a perfectly good word for earth.

Ben.
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Old 08-08-2006, 04:52 AM   #33
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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
Thank-you, Don, you have hit the nail right on the head. You have illustrated and justified the Argument from Silence. Let’s go back a few verses earlier in Acts 17 and see what Paul was preaching and what the people of Beroea were doing:
17:2-3 : “Following his usual practice Paul went to their meetings; and for the next three Sabbaths he argued with them, quoting texts of Scripture which he expounded and applied to show that the Messiah had to suffer and rise from the dead. ‘And this Jesus,’ he said, ‘whom I am proclaiming to you, is the Messiah.’ ”
“This Jesus whom I am proclaiming to you.” Which Jesus is he proclaiming, according to Acts as a whole? Jesus of Nazareth. The Gospel Jesus. The Jesus who had just lived on earth and was crucified by Pilate.
Acts 13:27-31 (from a speech by Paul in a synagogue of Pisidian Antioch) – “The people of Jerusalem and their rulers did not recognize him, or understand the words of the prophets which are read Sabbath by Sabbath; indeed they fulfilled them by condemning him. Though they failed to find grounds for the sentence of death, they asked Pilate to have him executed. And when they had carried out all that the scriptures said about him, they took him down from the gibbet and laid him in a tomb. But God raised him from the dead; and there was a period of many days during which he appeared to those who had come up with him from Galilee to Jerusalem.”
Now, why couldn’t Paul himself have said all that—or even any of it—in his own letters, in his own voice? The answer is, that he could have, that in so many places he should have. And yet he didn’t. Your comparison simply highlights that quantum gap between the two. The people of Beroea checked the scriptures to see if the manner in which Paul applied them to the human Jesus of Nazareth was legitimate. The Paul of the epistles (and every other epistle writer) does no such thing. They simply define their Jesus in terms of the scriptural passages. It is scripture that describes and encompasses everything they say about him. Do you understand the difference, Don? One half of the equation is missing. That makes it no equation at all. You and others like you are bringing the ‘missing’ half along with you, from the Gospels and 19 centuries of Christian tradition, something Paul and other early writers had no knowledge of.
But... doesn't Paul appear to have knowledge of them? Paul tells us quite a few things that match up with the Gospels. You say that we shouldn't read the Gospels into Paul, but then on the other hand, you use Gospel content as examples on what you say is missing. Neither of us regard the Gospels as containing a lot of historical information, so it makes for an unusual argument. What historically viable information is there actually in the Gospels that you regard is missing from Paul? (Yes, I know it is kind of a trick question, but it is a serious one).

The fact is, Paul tells us quite a bit about Jesus. True, there are none of the details that you want to see -- Calvery, Pilate, Nazareth, etc -- but then Paul provides very little information on such historical details about himself, the other apostles, or even details about the visionary Christ. Isn't that an interesting coincidence?

Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
(Incidentally, notice in that passage in Acts, those who do not recognize and who crucify Jesus are the people of Jerusalem and Pilate. Now, I wonder why the real Paul could only refer to the daemonic forces in 1 Corinthians 2:8? Or if he really meant the evil angels through the earthly rulers, why he didn’t mention that in Acts? Just wondering…)
Yes, good point, though there is no real contradiction between them if both believed that earthly rulers were involved.

Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
You emphasize the importance to the early Christians of Jesus fulfilling scripture. But you can’t have it both ways. If they felt that importance, why is it never addressed in the epistles? If this is a subject of intense interest and paramount necessity, why is there a complete void on the subject? If Hebrews 5:7 ‘quotes’ passages from the Psalms as envisioned prophecy, why doesn’t it try to illustrate how such prophecy was fulfilled in actual historical events?
This reminds me of our debate over whether Tatian believed in a HJ since he didn't refer to the Christ of the Gospels. I pointed out that there were parallels with other HJ writers, so lack of references wern't a strong indicator of ahistoricity, even if the lack itself couldn't be explained.

There are too many references to an earthly Jesus in Hebrews I think to conclude other than that the author was referring to a HJ. Earl, if we could conclude that Hebrews DID refer to a HJ, wouldn't you agree that this would be a major blow against your analysis of Paul and other early writings?

Don
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Old 08-08-2006, 07:06 AM   #34
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Originally Posted by gnosis92
As i pointed out, there are instances where Paul does present Gospel Jesus traditions (including Thomas)
Paul says a few things that can, given an assumption that Paul was aware of the gospel Jesus, be interpreted as references to him.
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Old 08-10-2006, 11:36 AM   #35
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Hello,

You can call me the "gnosis" if you want. I don't entirely understand why the phrase "in the days of his flesh" that your proposed interpretation, that this refers to a lower platonic realm, represents a better interpretation than the simpler understanding "the days of his life on earth"

the alternative explanation for the mythical description of much of Hebrews, is that the early christians did believe that jesus existed as a historical person, but what they were describing was a post-resurrection experience of the resurrected christ, and as you described, was a description of the son and they were channelling him, and searching him in scripture.

Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
First of all, I was quoting Bauer, so to get an answer to your question, you’ll have to ask Bauer. He certainly was more knowledgeable than I am, so I’m quite willing to take his word for it. But if you ask for my own opinion, I can only speculate based on my own reading of the text. It may have been based on Clement’s use of the word aenaon in the first part of the sentence: “…didst make manifest the eternal fabric of the world (kosmos).” [Loeb/Lake trans.]. And Bauer actually designates TWO “extraordinary use”s: he includes under that heading the second example I quoted, Hebrews 2:5. Personally, I think he missed a third: Hebrews 1:6. When you create a scene which to all appearances looks like it takes place entirely in heaven, attended only by angels and drawing only on scripture, then the use of oikoumene in such a context looks like “an extraordinary use” to me.



Well, Ellingworth didn’t agree with you, nor did the translators of the NEB. The former agreed that the latter was grammatically possible (at least as including a past meaning).



So, again, just for the sake of trying to get my point across, I will repeat myself yet once more. Your second alternative cannot work. If the author of Hebrews were aware of an earthly tenure for Jesus and a death on Calvary, he could never have been led to think of and present him as high priest only after death. Because an essential part of the sacrifice would have been performed on earth, the shedding of his blood which brought forgiveness of sins, and thus his role as High Priest would have had to encompass that event on earth. And thus Jesus would have been a priest on earth, at the same time as the priests in the Temple. But this would contradict the dichotomy he has set up between Jesus and the earthly high priests and contradict the thought surrounding 8:4. But if he was not aware of an earthly tenure and death on Calvary….(I’ll continue that thought below)



Again, if “the days of his flesh” referred to a time on earth, then they included the crucifixion and death, on earth. I am not saying that the “days of his flesh” are not separate in the writer’s mind from the act of “sacrifice” which the author defines as the entry into the heavenly sanctuary and the offering of his blood. The question is, does “days of his flesh” refer to a time on earth? I maintain that it does not, one reason being that the activities during those “days” are from scripture, not history. So while there is a separation between the death/suffering/perfection and the entry into the sanctuary, both took place in a spiritual setting. Again, if that death/suffering/perfection had taken place on earth, the shedding of the blood aspect would have taken place on earth, and this being a normal aspect of sacrifice would have set up an apparent contradiction with the earthly priests which would have to be resolved. But if the death/suffering/perfection had taken place in a lower part of the celestial realm, not heaven itself, then it created no contradiction or anomaly in his own mind or the minds of his readers, and thus he could apply his concept of “priest” only to the post-death situation. Remember that all this debate has arisen over 8:4, and if none of Jesus’ activities took place on earth, then no problem is created.



Perhaps you misunderstood me. I simply pointed out that for the author of Hebrews, Christ’s “sacrifice” is never spoken of as anything other than the entry and offering in the heavenly sanctuary. Whether, if pressed, he would also have included the death and shedding of blood, that’s quite possible. But he has ignored that aspect of it, which I suggest he could not have if it had been an earthly event in recent history which had given rise to his faith movement and his own conversion. I agree that he would not have thought of Jesus as being killed in heaven itself, if by this you mean the highest sphere of God himself which also seems to (and logically would) include the heavenly sanctuary where he offered his blood. But he could certainly have thought of him being killed in a lower part of the heavens.



But none of those passages speaks in earthly terms. That’s the fundamental problem. In your first three examples (10:5, 1:6, 5:7) he does something in scripture. They all use the present tense, which causes commentators problems, as I pointed out. Ellingworth even allows that the setting is “a timeless present” represented in scripture. You can hardly label these as references to earth conspicuous by their presence! As for the others, we have long discussed the legitimate application of “blood and flesh” and even “crucifixion” as things that can be undertaken by a heavenly savior in a heavenly setting. And if he suffered death in a corruptible part of the heavens, then he could indeed enter the highest “heaven” after that death.



You have it exactly.

All the best,
Earl Doherty
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