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Old 12-28-2011, 08:43 PM   #21
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Do you or aa5874 think anything in the Dialogue goes back really to the 2nd century?

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So... what's your point?
Can you please answer directly, not with counter-question? Are you trying to argue Dialogue is of later date than 2nd century? If so, please present your argument in full, not just as a couple of disconnected observations and questions.
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Old 12-29-2011, 01:10 AM   #22
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It's rather funny that the text is called a dialogue between Justin Martyr and Trypho. As dialogues go, there should be a back-and-forth between them. However, the bulk of the text is merely rhetorical pronouncements where poor Trypho can't get a word in edgewise, even if it's all merely a literary device to promote certain views.

Justin Martyr (if that's who wrote it, and I have my doubts) expects his reader to take his word for it that everything he claims is true. He bases the vast majorit of his arguments on the Jewish scriptures except for a couple of chapters where he uses citations of statements that could just as easily be interpolations.

He doesn't even claim any sources for his metaphors such as the idea that the lamb of Passover on the two spits represents Christ on the "tree" or that the two goats of Yom Kippur represent the first and second comings.

He never represents any sources in the names of any Christians at all. The term "memoirs of the apostles" doesn't make sense anyway because the gospels are GOOD NEWS, the divinely inspired theology and not just memoirs. And he would never explain which memoir he was referring to. I suppose it could be argued that he was referring to such sources that were not yet considered sacred writ or "holy gospels" but just sources.

Then of course we see that many if not most of his references that are also found in Matthew (and a couple in Luke) are not exact renditions of those sources either.
You might have convinced me, with all this, that I should not believe everything the author says in the Dialogue With Trypho. But I was already convinced of that.

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I suppose it could be argued that he was referring to such sources that were not yet considered sacred writ or "holy gospels" but just sources.
Yes, it could be so argued, but I'm not sure why. The notion that they were generally accepted as sacred writ from the moment they were first written is what needs a good argument, it seems to me.
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Old 12-29-2011, 04:33 AM   #23
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I think that Duvduv makes a point that despite the "Dialogue" featuring a Jew and Justin, it cannot be simply assumed that Justin (or the author whoever it was) accurately represents Jewish beliefs of his time when he places them in Trypho's mouth.

Was the author thinking of something like the "son of man" of the Parables of Enoch (date unknown, and not found among the DSS), or Metatron of the Hackaloth literature (which is believed to have developed 4th-6th century CE, and often equated with the glorified Enoch)?

If anyone wants to explore this further, there is a 1st rate introduction to this kind of literature and its traditions in the article "3 (Hebrew Aoocalypse of) Enoch: (Fifth-Sixth Century AD)," by Philip Alexander, in Charlesworth's Old Testament Pseudepigrapha (or via: amazon.co.uk) vol 1, p 223ff. 3rd Enoch is a Hebrew work that describes heavenly ascents and features Enoch as a transformed heavenly figure of very high repute in the Heavens around God's throne. This work has scenes where Metatron is lashed with fiery noodles if anyone even get the thought that he was in some way equal to god. It is uncertain how far back these "two powers" ideas go.

DCH

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An alleged theological concept referenced by Justin in his Dialogue with Trypho is used by James F. McGrath and Jerry Truex Two Powers’ and Early Jewish and Christian Monotheism" Journal of Biblical Studies 4.1 (2004): 43-71. to provide support for an earlier rather than later dating for Justin’s writings.

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An extremely important witness to early Jewish-Christian dialogue is Justin Martyr. His Dialogue with Trypho the Jew was written around 160 C.E., although it purports to record a dialogue which he had around 135 C.E.34 Whether a fictitious dialogue or not, what is important is that Justin seems to be concerned about interacting with the actual views and positions held by contemporary Jews. It is significant, therefore, that one of Justin's Jewish interlocutors agrees with Justin that there is be a second figure in heaven alongside God, who is also called God and Lord.35 Trypho is portrayed as quite quickly reaching the same conclusion.36 Thus, in this second century work, there is no hint that the belief in a ‘second god,’ a heavenly agent and vice-regent, is heretical or antithetical to Jewish monotheism.
IIRC, the “Two Powers” theological construct was at first tolerated, perhaps even accepted by “orthodox” Judaism beginning in the first to second century but was later determined to be a heretical belief. On the other had it does appear to be an argument from silence that Justin’s stance re the two powers concept supports that Justin wrote in the second century.
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Old 12-29-2011, 05:22 AM   #24
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It was GJohn who was more confused than the aurhor of Dialogue. I didn't mean that Justin saw the lamb as atoning for sin. It was GJohn who made the metaphor, not " Justin. "
The official position of the Church is that Matthew came first.

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1) The sacrifice for expiating sins is NOT the lamb of Passover, but the goat of Yom Kippur. At least "Justin" didn't go as far as GJohn with this mistake.
I see. This is what Justin says about Jesus as the lamb (the discussion of the goats is in italics):



Now, I see Justin discussing the lamb of the passover representing Christ insofar as its blood is put on the doors of the house, so that the destroying angel passes over it, and as it is roasted in a likeness to Christ's suffering on the cross. I see him then discuss Christ as prefigured in the two goats of "the fast," which refers not to Pesach, but to the Day of Atonement. He refers to the goat sacrificed for sin and the scapegoat, which symbolically took upon it the unintentional sins of Israel. Here is the statement from Leviticus 16 regarding the goats:



Martyr later references both the lamb of the Pesach and the goats of the Day of Atonement as actions not able to be carried out in just any place. He also compares Christ to the passover lamb in the following way:



I don't ever see Martyr refer to Christ as a passover lamb whose blood atones for sins. I see him refer to Christ as a passover lamb whose blood diverts God's destruction, which is a perfectly accurate description. I also find Martyr describing Christ in terms of the goats used on the Day of Atonement. Where do you find a reference to Christ as a passover lamb whose blood atones for sins?



And where is this established?



And why do you reject the notion that the he had textually divergent sources in front of him, and that the differences arise from his Vorlagen and not his exegesis? Have you even considered that notion?

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4) I am not an expert in detecting interpolations and do not know Greek, but I have this suspicion that there are at the very least marginal glosses or interpolations in Justin in the Dialogue.
I see. I know a lot of text-critical work has been done with Martyr's text, and there are certainly glosses and interpolations, but many of them are actually subsequent to the original composition of his text. Have you considered that?
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Old 12-29-2011, 06:24 AM   #25
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What does Justin know about the concept of apostolic succession from "Peter"as part of the so-called Christian tradition of his alleged period in the mid-second century??
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Old 12-29-2011, 08:24 AM   #26
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It was GJohn who was more confused than the aurhor of Dialogue. I didn't mean that Justin saw the lamb as atoning for sin.
I see that now. That was my misunderstanding. I apologize. On the other hand, having looked at John, I really don't see an issue. To begin with, mixing metaphors is not particularly uncommon or unwelcome in early Jewish and Christian literature. Metaphors of adoption are explicitly mixed with ideas of begetting all the time, for instance, in both Jewish and Christian texts. Next, the word "lamb" is used twice in John:

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John 1:29: The next day John saw Jesus coming to him, and said, "Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world."
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John 1:36: And looking at Jesus as he walked, he said, "Behold the Lamb of God!"
John does not specifically refer to the Day of Atonement or Pesach, and there are Old Testament texts that describe lambs as atoning for sin, and in ways unrelated to the Day of Atonement or the Pesach. Ezek 45:15, for instance, has God give a general command to take a lamb for a meat offering, burnt offering, and peace offering, "to atone for them (לכפר*עליהם)." Using a lamb as a sin offering, or to otherwise atone for sin, is describing in Lev 4:32–35; 5:6–7; 12:6–8; 14:12–18. I see nothing incompatible with John's notion that Christ, as the Lamb of God, could atone for the sins of the world.

On Martyr, though, you said that he was wrong to use the lamb on the spit and the two goats as prefiguring Christ on the cross and in his suffering. Since his metaphor really doesn't violate the Jewish tradition, why is his metaphor inappropriate? You seemed to suggest that it was because no one used it that way before him, but certainly religious metaphors are not required to have precedents.
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Old 12-29-2011, 08:31 AM   #27
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Individual offerings can atone for individuals. But the atonement of the public is only through the Yom Kippur sacrifice, and there is certainly no atonement for future generations. But anyway it is a goat. Justin's metaphor about the spits being the crucifix, etc. is very creative however, but GJohn doesn't share it.

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Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
It was GJohn who was more confused than the aurhor of Dialogue. I didn't mean that Justin saw the lamb as atoning for sin.
I see that now. That was my misunderstanding. I apologize. On the other hand, having looked at John, I really don't see an issue. To begin with, mixing metaphors is not particularly uncommon or unwelcome in early Jewish and Christian literature. Metaphors of adoption are explicitly mixed with ideas of begetting all the time, for instance, in both Jewish and Christian texts. Next, the word "lamb" is used twice in John:



Quote:
John 1:36: And looking at Jesus as he walked, he said, "Behold the Lamb of God!"
John does not specifically refer to the Day of Atonement or Pesach, and there are Old Testament texts that describe lambs as atoning for sin, and in ways unrelated to the Day of Atonement or the Pesach. Ezek 45:15, for instance, has God give a general command to take a lamb for a meat offering, burnt offering, and peace offering, "to atone for them (לכפר*עליהם)." Using a lamb as a sin offering, or to otherwise atone for sin, is describing in Lev 4:32–35; 5:6–7; 12:6–8; 14:12–18. I see nothing incompatible with John's notion that Christ, as the Lamb of God, could atone for the sins of the world.

On Martyr, though, you said that he was wrong to use the lamb on the spit and the two goats as prefiguring Christ on the cross and in his suffering. Since his metaphor really doesn't violate the Jewish tradition, why is his metaphor inappropriate? You seemed to suggest that it was because no one used it that way before him, but certainly religious metaphors are not required to have precedents.
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Old 12-29-2011, 08:34 AM   #28
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If "Justin" didn't know about apostolic succession involving Peter as the "true" Christianity, then it is clear that this idea developed later on, i.e. the 4th century.

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What does Justin know about the concept of apostolic succession from "Peter"as part of the so-called Christian tradition of his alleged period in the mid-second century??
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Old 12-29-2011, 08:37 AM   #29
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I think that Duvduv makes a point that despite the "Dialogue" featuring a Jew and Justin, it cannot be simply assumed that Justin (or the author whoever it was) accurately represents Jewish beliefs of his time when he places them in Trypho's mouth.
I don't think anyone would make the assumption that an apologetic and polemical tract would represent the ideologies of the antagonist with sensitivity and accuracy.

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Was the author thinking of something like the "son of man" of the Parables of Enoch (date unknown, and not found among the DSS), or Metatron of the Hackaloth literature (which is believed to have developed 4th-6th century CE, and often equated with the glorified Enoch)?
The idea of a "second power" has its roots in the early personification of Wisdom and in the Angel of Yhwh imagery. It is more fully fleshed out in the Greco-Roman period beginning in Daniel with the "son of man," who is further described in the Similitudes (or Parables) of Enoch (I don't know of any scholars who still argue the Similitudes date to after the destruction of the Temple). Two good recent discussions are Boccaccini's Enoch and the Messiah Son of Man, and Hurtado's Who is This Son of Man?

I would also point out that Philo calls the Logos "another god," just like Martyr, and the OG of Daniel has humanity worship (λατρευω) the Son of Man. The latter is eschatological, of course. The novelty of the New Testament's description of Christ is that it takes eschatological expectations and connects them with a contemporary figure. Humanity's exaltation is then cast into an eschatological future.

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If anyone wants to explore this further, there is a 1st rate introduction to this kind of literature and its traditions in the article "3 (Hebrew Aoocalypse of) Enoch: (Fifth-Sixth Century AD)," by Philip Alexander, in Charlesworth's Old Testament Pseudepigrapha (or via: amazon.co.uk) vol 1, p 223ff. 3rd Enoch is a Hebrew work that describes heavenly ascents and features Enoch as a transformed heavenly figure of very high repute in the Heavens around God's throne. This work has scenes where Metatron is lashed with fiery noodles if anyone even get the thought that he was in some way equal to god. It is uncertain how far back these "two powers" ideas go.
I second the value of Philip's discussion. He was the second reader for my thesis at Oxford, and I was frequently in awe of his command of the literature. Also, he has a wonderful accent. I could listen to him talk all day.
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Old 12-29-2011, 08:45 AM   #30
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Individual offerings can atone for individuals. But the atonement of the public is only through the Yom Kippur sacrifice, and there is certainly no atonement for future generations.
But this is not the lamb of just any individual, it is "the lamb of God." Additionally, Christ is said to take upon himself all the sins of the world to atone for them. The metaphor certainly takes on more symbolism than the sterile notion of a lamb as a sin offering, but it's not a misuse of the lamb imagery, nor must John's comments be lashed to the concept of the Day of Atonement.

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But anyway it is a goat. Justin's metaphor about the spits being the crucifix, etc. is very creative however, but GJohn doesn't share it.
There are many metaphors they do not share.
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