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06-17-2006, 01:06 AM | #21 | ||||||
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After this little tantrum of yours, bye, Roger. :wave: Quote:
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06-17-2006, 04:15 AM | #22 | |
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The majority of your statements seem to be very unreliable. The remainder of your post needs no comment from me. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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06-17-2006, 04:46 AM | #23 | |
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06-17-2006, 04:51 AM | #24 |
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Rom.15.7-9 seems to me to indicate that the suggestion that the letter is written exclusively to Jews is quite incorrect. Likewise 1.16, 2.9, 2.25-26, 3.9, 10.12 and so on. It seems clear, IMHO, that it was written with both Jewish "Christians" and Gentile "Christians" in mind. I don't know what we should call such a group if not a " Christian community." The term "Christian" is, of course, somewhat anachronistic, but not enough so that it isn't useful here.
More importantly, Paul's argument is against Jewish Christians (or, more aptly, "Judaizers." People who wished the Gentiles in the community to accept circumcision), but for Gentile Christians. That is, it is of greater concern to Paul that he convince Gentile Christians not to accept circumcision than it is that he convince Jewish Christians not to ask for it. ETA This is more important because it furthers the suggestion to the nature of his audience: It doesn't make sense for him to take such tacts if Gentiles were not intended recipients. That Paul uses scriptural basis (which spin would like to emphasize) for this does not, as spin suggests, point to an exclusively Jewish audience. "Judaizers" were, presumably (in fact, very presumably--one who would suggest otherwise would own a substantial burden) preaching circumcision by relying on scripture, and pointing to "Christianity" as the extension of that covenant. There is no other way for Paul to attack this: He *has* to rely on complicated prooftexting and "tortured exegesis" (to steal an oft-used term). He has no other recourse. Regards, Rick Sumner |
06-17-2006, 05:58 AM | #25 |
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For those interested in Tacitus and his knowledge of Judea and the terms "procurator" and "prefect", you will note that in the passage that Roger Pearse kindly put up, Tacitus indicates that after Judea was under the control of Herod it passed to Herod's three sons, adding "The kings were either dead, or reduced to insignificance, when Claudius entrusted the province of Judaea to the Roman Knights or to his own freedmen".
We have the passage of Judea out of the hands of local management and as a unified province put in the hands of the Roman equestrian order or Claudius's freedmen. The administrator of an imperial province, eg Judea from this time on, was a procurator. Judea did not become a province until Claudius made it one, so obvious there was no procurator of Judea before this time and Tacitus clearly indicates his knowledge of the status of Judea's administration in his History. That he would unaccountably call a military prefect -- for that's what Pilate was -- a procurator is unthinkable. Tacitus time and again talks of "camp prefects", "city prefects", "prefect of the Pretorian Guard", etc., as well as referring to administrators of imperial provinces as "procurator". When talking of Vespasian's rewards people for good work in H(istory) 2.82, Tacitus writes, "Many among them he distinguished with prefectures and governments, and several with the honours of senatorial rank; all these were men of eminence who soon reached the highest positions." The phrase "with prefectures and governments" should actually be "with prefectures and procuratorships" [(multos) praefecturis et procurationibus]. That there are administrative differences is clearly evident in Tacitus's distinctions. He is consistent with his use of "procurator" for the administrator of provinces, while the former worked under other people as administrators of parts of provinces (as with the Alps which was a province divided into two prefectures), though with "prefectures and procuratorships" he is clearly referring to provincial positions. Tacitus has indicated that he knew what the difference between the two positions is. He has indicated that he knew what the status of Judea was before and after the change brought in by Claudius. He indicates that Judea was put into the hands of imperial agents who administered provinces, ie procurators. He refers to procurators of Judea. That he would call someone who was not an administrator of an imperial province, while knowing the state affairs in the particular case of Judea, a procurator is ludicrous. This is just one aspect of the christian addition to Tacitus. spin |
06-17-2006, 06:06 AM | #26 | |
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I'd suggest the preferred interpretation, particularly in the light of the manuscript tradition against such interpolations, should be one that accounts for it. To be sure, sometimes the manuscript tradition is wrong (eg. 1Thess.2.15-17, at least IMO), but those need to be argued on more substantiative grounds than that they don't work with what you interpret the epistle's intended audience to be. Regards, Rick Sumner |
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06-17-2006, 06:30 AM | #27 |
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Okay, well enough about the procurator vs prefect issue, that's been done to death.
Back to my central question. Is there any evidence, other than this Tacitus quote, that "Christians" existed in Rome in 64? If so, were the people who wre called Christians the same people that we identify with the story of Jesus? THe earliest references to the term "Christian" in the Bible from from around 80 at the earliest. There is one mention of "Christian" in Acts, one mention of "Christians" in Acts, and one mention of Christan in 1 Peter. All of these were written around 80 at the earliest, if not 20-40 years later. The mention in Acts says that Paul used the term Christains, but its never mentioned in the writings of Paul. How could there have been a significant group of identifiable "Christians" in Rome in 64????????????????????????????????????????? |
06-17-2006, 06:38 AM | #28 | |
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06-17-2006, 07:06 AM | #29 | |
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06-17-2006, 07:37 AM | #30 | |
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there is absolutely zero evidence of "christians" anywhere in the year of 64, let alone in Rome. The implication of fiction by the primary eccesiastical "historian" of the "tribe of christians" is that no such tribe existed anywhere in the antiquity so described, until the century this "historian" penned his monstrous fable. Pete Brown www.mountainman.com.au |
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