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Old 10-14-2011, 01:21 AM   #151
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Scholars who find a larger source in John than just the (usually) seven signs usually include the editor who is identified by his frequent use of the term “Pharisee”.
You mean he had Tourette's and couldn't stop saying 'Pharisee'.

How in the name of all that is holy can any editor be identified by his use of one word?

Is there no end to the sheer garbage that believers will spew out?
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Old 10-14-2011, 10:58 AM   #152
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Scholars who find a larger source in John than just the (usually) seven signs usually include the editor who is identified by his frequent use of the term “Pharisee”.
You mean he had Tourette's and couldn't stop saying 'Pharisee'.

How in the name of all that is holy can any editor be identified by his use of one word?

Is there no end to the sheer garbage that believers will spew out?
That's Urban C. von Wahlde's idea. It doesn't work well as he intended, but seems to work in a more limited in-between stage between editions.
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Old 10-15-2011, 07:01 AM   #153
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may I request that our numerous well-informed scholars advise me whether anyone else has dared to present a broad-based case for either naming authors of gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses. Google search (and even visits to my academic library) have not turned up much going on in recent decades, nor even what I regard as improvements in source-criticism. Better yet, can anyone point me to scholars who have pretty much proven that there are no eyewitness gospel accounts nor can (m)any authors be identified. And has anyone disproven Teeple's source theories?
I have searched the academic literature from time to time over the past few years. Articles directly addressing the question of who wrote the gospels are hard to find. If the issue is even mentioned, it is nearly always just to acknowledge an apparent consensus that the authors are simply unknown.

I do not recall ever seeing any article offering a proof against any eyewitness contribution to the gospels or a proof that none of the authors can be identified. Except for a few scholars committed to some version of evangelicalism, there seems to be a presupposition among academics that (a) the authors should be presumed unknown absent compelling evidence of their identities and (b) absent compelling evidence of eyewitness sources, it should be assumed that there were not any.

I do not remember reading anything addressing Teeple's work.

To the foregoing, I know of one exception. The historian Robin Lane Fox, whose work in general is not friendly to any orthodoxy, believes that the apostle John (the "beloved disciple") contributed to significantly to the writing of the gospel bearing his name.
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Old 10-16-2011, 02:48 PM   #154
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may I request that our numerous well-informed scholars advise me whether anyone else has dared to present a broad-based case for either naming authors of gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses. Google search (and even visits to my academic library) have not turned up much going on in recent decades, nor even what I regard as improvements in source-criticism. Better yet, can anyone point me to scholars who have pretty much proven that there are no eyewitness gospel accounts nor can (m)any authors be identified. And has anyone disproven Teeple's source theories?
I have searched the academic literature from time to time over the past few years. Articles directly addressing the question of who wrote the gospels are hard to find. If the issue is even mentioned, it is nearly always just to acknowledge an apparent consensus that the authors are simply unknown.

I do not recall ever seeing any article offering a proof against any eyewitness contribution to the gospels or a proof that none of the authors can be identified. Except for a few scholars committed to some version of evangelicalism, there seems to be a presupposition among academics that (a) the authors should be presumed unknown absent compelling evidence of their identities and (b) absent compelling evidence of eyewitness sources, it should be assumed that there were not any.

I do not remember reading anything addressing Teeple's work.

To the foregoing, I know of one exception. The historian Robin Lane Fox, whose work in general is not friendly to any orthodoxy, believes that the apostle John (the "beloved disciple") contributed significantly to the writing of the gospel bearing his name.
Wow, thank you, Doug!
Robin Lane Fox is well known. I probably read his Pagans and Christians from my local library. I'll have to get hold of his earlier The Unauthorized Version. What I read at Enotes about it seems to confirm what you said:
"The audience most likely to profit from THE UNAUTHORIZED VERSION —against the author’s expectations—will be found among Christians who are neither fundamentalists nor theological liberals; from an encounter with Lane Fox they should emerge with a sharpened sense of precisely what they affirm when they recite the Apostles’ Creed."
http://www.enotes.com/unauthorized-v...orized-version
That fits me.
Regarding the rest, I claim to work without presuppositions, so I go where exegetes fear to tread. After 50 years, I still say the emperor has no clothes, what we "see" is just the form criticism, redaction criticism, etc. that "covers" the orthodox undergarments that also need to be stripped away.
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Old 10-16-2011, 03:16 PM   #155
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Scholars who find a larger source in John than just the (usually) seven signs usually include the editor who is identified by his frequent use of the term “Pharisee”.
How in the name of all that is holy can any editor be identified by his use of one word?
That's Urban C. von Wahlde's idea. It doesn't work well as he intended, but seems to work in a more limited in-between stage between editions.
Let me expand on that, as appealing to authority does not answer Steven's question. Right, Steven, "it takes a village", it takes the insights of W. Nicol, Robert Fortna, Howard Teeple, and von Wahlde as analyzed by me (shown below in part), together with Teeple's later Editor (not shown below, coming later in my article).
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Urban von Wahlde provides the key for identifying “Source” narrative outside the Signs Source. He separates “earlier” “P-Material” from ”J-material,” based upon the use of the words “Pharisee” or “Jew”. Von Wahlde’s results do not coincide with Fortna’s. The term “Pharisee,” if recovering a source, distinguishes a source separate from the Signs Source. None of the Nicol Source passages contain the word “Pharisees.” Nevertheless, there is overlap with Fortna’s Signs Gospel. The P-Material extends, however, into the discourse sections. The parts of the discourse chapters where “Pharisee” occurs are not in the discourses proper. Whereas Jesus is quoted in these chapters saying “Jews” quite often, he never says “Pharisee.” This accompanying narrative to the discourses is identified by Howard Teeple as being in the Source to be recognized. (Teeple, Ch. 12) Von Wahlde and Teeple are basically compatible. [2011 Note: Except that Teeple sees the "Jew" (=Judean) sections as from an earlier source.] Putting their work together, we obtain a narrative “source” which is interwoven with discourses and with Nicol’s Signs Source narrative. But if the Signs Source is removed from Teeple’s and von Wahlde’s larger suggested Source, the remainder [exclusive of the Passion Narrative] looks like the work of an editor. Not to pre-judge the case, let us call it the “P-Strand.”
The above is from page 4 of my transcription of an article of mine: Dale Adams, "The Significance of John", The Cincinnatus Society Journal, Number 3 (May-July 1988), pp. 1-13. I plan to serialize it here in FRDB as the more technical underpinnings for what I have presented in my thread here. Now that I have found that so many here are very literate, I expect many here can profit from it. (I also restore therein the part of my section about Nicodemus where the editor cut out the best part, that Nicodemus would have needed to write his portion while Jesus was still preaching.)
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Old 10-16-2011, 06:11 PM   #156
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may I request that our numerous well-informed scholars advise me whether anyone else has dared to present a broad-based case for either naming authors of gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses.
I'm confused. Isn't it a staple of evangelical conservative "scholarship" that the gospel writers were travelers with Jesus/working from eyewitness testimony?

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Scholars who find a larger source in John than just the (usually) seven signs usually include the editor who is identified by his frequent use of the term “Pharisee”.
The usual view is three hands in John and as many as five.

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Old 10-16-2011, 08:44 PM   #157
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may I request that our numerous well-informed scholars advise me whether anyone else has dared to present a broad-based case for either naming authors of gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses.
I'm confused. Isn't it a staple of evangelical conservative "scholarship" that the gospel writers were travelers with Jesus/working from eyewitness testimony?
The key word here is "sources". Evangelicals do not acknowledge written sources underlying the canonical texts. They stand pat on Matthew as the eyewitness to that gospel and John as the eyewitness to the whole text of John.
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Scholars who find a larger source in John than just the (usually) seven signs usually include the editor who is identified by his frequent use of the term “Pharisee”.
The usual view is three hands in John and as many as five.
Vorkosigan
Sorry for the extra "usually" in the "usualy include". "sometimes include" would be better.
I'm with you. I see the first editor bringing together the Signs and Discourses, next editor added "P-Strand", the main Editor (John) used names without an article, and there was a final redactor. I largely agree with the atheist Howard Teeple in my source criticism of John.
See also my Post #155. I can email anyone who wants a copy of my 1988 source-criticism of John.
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Old 10-17-2011, 12:01 AM   #158
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Wow, thank you, Doug!
Robin Lane Fox is well known. I probably read his Pagans and Christians from my local library. I'll have to get hold of his earlier The Unauthorized Version.
You're very welcome.

The latter book is the only one of Fox's that I've read so far. I hope to get to Pagans and Christians one of these days.

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Regarding the rest, I claim to work without presuppositions, so I go where exegetes fear to tread. After 50 years, I still say the emperor has no clothes, what we "see" is just the form criticism, redaction criticism, etc. that "covers" the orthodox undergarments that also need to be stripped away.
I think I know what you're trying to say, but research without presuppositions is a fantasy. We all use them, all day, every day, and it has nothing to do with our human limitations or imperfections. Reasoning of any sort is just impossible without presuppositions. The ideal scholar doesn't try to lose all his presuppositions. He tries to recognize them and then lose the ones he can't justify.
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Old 10-17-2011, 12:30 AM   #159
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...... may I request that our numerous well-informed scholars advise me whether anyone else has dared to present a broad-based case for either naming authors of gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses.
In respect of the canonical gospels, Eusebius Pamphilus of Caesarea dared to present - in many books - a broad-based case for either naming authors of gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses.

However in respect to the non canonical gospels, this same author in the same books, although stating that he would dare to present a broad-based case for either naming authors of the Gnostic gospel sources or claiming them as eyewitnesses, failed to deliver any specific information.



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The historian Robin Lane Fox, whose work in general is not friendly to any orthodoxy, believes that the apostle John (the "beloved disciple") contributed significantly to the writing of the gospel bearing his name.
Wow, thank you, Doug!
Robin Lane Fox is well known. I probably read his Pagans and Christians from my local library.
I have some notes from a reading of this book here.

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Regarding the rest, I claim to work without presuppositions, so I go where exegetes fear to tread. After 50 years, I still say the emperor has no clothes, what we "see" is just the form criticism, redaction criticism, etc. that "covers" the orthodox undergarments that also need to be stripped away.
What you mean by 'emperor has no clothes' and what others mean may be entirely different.
What precisely do you mean when you say this?
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Old 10-18-2011, 12:50 AM   #160
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OK.Adam.http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...toryId=6515548
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