FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 08-28-2004, 06:24 PM   #21
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon
As I've said, it doesn't mean that Doherty is wrong. It just shows that it is impossible for him to point to any letter and say that it is the product of an MJer, without assuming it in the first place.
Ditto for the HJ. Resolving these presuppositions is a thorny problem.
Vorkosigan is offline  
Old 08-28-2004, 07:04 PM   #22
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 220
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacob Aliet
ON INTERPOLATION
Quote:
Doherty writes: Verses 15-16 of this passage [1 Thess. 2:14-16] are almost universally regarded among critical scholars as an interpolation. Their sentiment does not agree with attitudes expressed elsewhere by Paul toward his Jewish countrymen...
Robert L. Thomas states:
Quote:
So "un-Pauline" is the passage that some have supposed that all or part of it was added at a later time. Yet there is not the slightest shred of hard evidence for deletion. Exactly what provoked this sudden outburst cannot be known with certainty. An accumulation of hostile acts probably played a part. The writer had been chased out of Damascus (Acts 9:23-25) and Jerusalem (Acts 9:29,30) by his own people not very long after conversion. His message was rejected and his party driven out of Pisidian Antioch by them (Acts 13:45,46,50). At Iconium the Jews poisoned people's minds against Paul and Barnabas and ultimately forced them out (Acts 14:2,5,6). They made a special journey to Lystra to instigate an uprising that produced Paul's stoning and being left for dead (Acts 14:19). Jewish opposition continued to hound the missionary band in the second journey, specifically at Thessalonica, again producing Paul's exit (Acts 17:5,10). Even now as Paul pens these words from Corinth, a united attack has been mounted against him by the city's Jewish residents (Acts 18:6,12,13). Couple with this the present plight the the Thessalonian Christians (1 Thess. 3:3), ultimately traceable to Jewish opponents, and it is no wonder that Paul uses the occasion to recount their consistent opposition to the Lord Jesus.
The acme of the Jews' opposition is their part in the death of the Lord Jesus. Hence, Paul places their crime first among their offenses (v. 15).
From Doherty again:
Quote:
...the final sentence [in v. 16] contains a virtually unmistakable reference to the destruction of Jerusalem, which occurred after Paul's death.
.

Thomas has this to say:
Quote:
'The wrath of God' is none other than the eschatological wrath for which the whole world is destined just before Messiah's kingdom (cf. 1:10). A more general definition, such as the present outpouring of wrath (Rom. 1:18), cannot satisfy the wrath's definiteness (he orge, 'the wrath) in a letter so eschatologically oriented as this. In bringing Paul's excursus regarding the Jews to its logical climax, the meaning required is the future day of wrath. It is, to be sure, God's wrath, though 'of God' is not in the Greek.
If the wrath is yet future, why does Paul speak of it as happening in the past (epthasen, 'has come')? The best explanation of the aorist tense of the verb comes from comparing the only other NT combinations of phano epi ('come upon') - Matt. 12:28; Luke 11:20 - where Jesus speaks of the kingdom's arrival in comparable terminology. The unique force of the this verb connotes 'arrival upon the threshold of fulfillment and accessible experience, not the entrance into that experience' (K.W. Clark, 'Realized Eschatology,' JBL, 59:379). Just as the kingdom reached the covenant people at Christ's first coming without their enjoying 'the experience ensuing upon the initial contact', so the wrath that will precede that kingdom has come before the Jews' full experience of it. All prerequisites for unleashing this future torrent have been met...A time of trouble awaits Israel just as it does the rest of the world, and the breaking forth of this time is portrayed as an 'imminent condemnation' by epthasen ep ('come upon').
Notsri is offline  
Old 08-28-2004, 07:53 PM   #23
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
Default

Robert L. Thomas is a professor of NT with strongly conservative religious leanings. In fact, he is a Dispensationalist and the editor of a volume The Jesus Crisis: The Inroads of Historical Criticism into Evangelical Scholarship which regards modern critical historical methodologies as basically dangerous. Even evangelicals find his attacks a bit absurd. The original article is available here.

Quote:
Couple with this the present plight the the Thessalonian Christians (1 Thess. 3:3), ultimately traceable to Jewish opponents, and it is no wonder that Paul uses the occasion to recount their consistent opposition to the Lord Jesus.
This passage is widely seen as interpolated by mainstream scholars (Thomas is confessionally constrained to regard this passage as non-interpolated. In discussions here at Infidels would be better to rely on scholars who do not have confessional axes to grind). Schnelle makes a much better argument for authenticity, without basing it on Acts, which is a heavily novelized and highly tendentious account of early Christian history. The accounts of Paul's conflicts with the Jews in Acts are apparently creations of a later age when the two sects were in far more bitter conflict with each other.

Vorkosigan
Vorkosigan is offline  
Old 08-28-2004, 09:13 PM   #24
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Eagle River, Alaska
Posts: 7,816
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon
Personally, I think the reason Paul doesn't mention historical details about Jesus is because he generally doesn't mention historical details period.
I don't buy it. He names specific cities and specific individuals related to his own ministry quite often but never in relation to activities alleged to have taken place during Jesus' ministry.

He is either deliberately avoiding any reference or he has no knowledge of such.

Quote:
But we don't have lists of heresies constructed by known MJers.
Why would we? There is no reason to think that asserting a historical Jesus would constitute heresy since it would still include the fundamental belief in the significance of the sacrifice as well as the fundamental belief in that Jesus Christ was the Son of God. From the MJ position, asserting that the sacrifice took place at a specific time and place is superfluous but not contrary to the central beliefs. Who do you think MJers would consider "heretics"? It seems to me that anyone who did not share their beliefs wouldn't even consider themselves Christians.

Quote:
But I can't believe that HJers would have accepted a belief in a non-historical Christ as anything other than heretical.
You're ignoring my point and continuing to act as though denying historicity was something MJers would consider important. Historicity is irrelevant to MJ beliefs. There is no reason to assume they were asserting a non-historical Christ. If Doherty is correct, they were asserting nothing except belief in a sacrificed, Son-of-God, Messiah whose death held atoning significance for all believers. Explain why a Christian who also asserted a historical Jesus would have a problem with such beliefs.

Quote:
(1) The dating of many of these materials isn't known precisely.
Unless you can offer good reasons to date a text that contains explicit historical references before the Gospels, I don't see why this point is relevant. The pattern Doherty describes exists even if we stick with the generally agreed upon dates accepted by the majority of scholars.

Quote:
(2) A lot that Doherty uses as examples of Christ Myther writings date well into the second century.
As I've already pointed out, this is irrelevant since it is the presence/absence of historical references that is significant. It is, IMO, a legitimate complaint that Doherty is claiming support where it may not necessarily exist but that really doesn't say anything substantive about the thesis, itself.

Quote:
(3) We have a lot more extant materials from the 2nd C, which may be why there suddenly seems to be this sudden increase in HJ details.
That is a very relevant consideration but it makes me wonder why so little of the earlier material was preserved. Could it be because it contained beliefs that were later discarded (ie an explicitly spiritual sacrifice)?

Quote:
But there are materials that existed early which were lost, e.g Papias's 5 volumes on "Oracles of the Lord".
Again, this is not necessarily favorable for your position. It is difficult for me to imagine that a collection of sayings actually spoken by Jesus Christ and obtained from his disciples or disciples of his disciples would not be carefully and faithfully preserved by early Christians if they were considered reliable. Frankly, what little we know of Papias makes me wonder if the majority of early Christians considered him no more reliable than I do.
Amaleq13 is offline  
Old 08-28-2004, 10:33 PM   #25
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: the reliquary of Ockham's razor
Posts: 4,035
Default

Quote:
It is difficult for me to imagine that a collection of sayings actually spoken by Jesus Christ and obtained from his disciples or disciples of his disciples would not be carefully and faithfully preserved by early Christians
Why think that early Christians didn't preserve it? It certainly survived down to Eusebius, who wrote in the fourth century. A 9th century interpolation into Codex Coislinianus 305 cites Papias on something not found in Eusebius (see here). A few even have hope that it is sitting uncatalogued on some library shelf or in an old private collection (an XTalk discussion had claims of early modern references as if extant).

best,
Peter Kirby
Peter Kirby is online now   Edit/Delete Message
Old 08-29-2004, 01:01 AM   #26
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Eagle River, Alaska
Posts: 7,816
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Kirby
Why think that early Christians didn't preserve it?
The Gospels were preserved by early Christians because they were copied. Where are the copies of Papias collection of sayings? All we have are fragments reported by later writers and, apparently, the hope that a copy has somehow and somewhere managed to survive by luck.

They faithfully preserved anonymous stories written about Jesus but not a collection of sayings spoken by Jesus?
Amaleq13 is offline  
Old 08-29-2004, 02:26 AM   #27
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: the reliquary of Ockham's razor
Posts: 4,035
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Amaleq13
The Gospels were preserved by early Christians because they were copied. Where are the copies of Papias collection of sayings? All we have are fragments reported by later writers and, apparently, the hope that a copy has somehow and somewhere managed to survive by luck.

They faithfully preserved anonymous stories written about Jesus but not a collection of sayings spoken by Jesus?
Your argument was that Papias wasn't copied by the early Christians. That was incorrect, as it survived down to the 4th century for sure and probably to the 9th, at the least, possibly more (there is no evidence for an upper bound). So the early Christians did propagate copies of Papias.

Obviously, Christian scribes copied what was significant to them. That usually meant the Bible. It could also include works such as Josephus, Plato, Homer, Eusebius, and Augustine. But the list of greek/latin books for which we have even a dozen complete mss. is short. It would not be far from the truth to say, for example, that Justin Martyr's apologetic work "survived by luck," as our only witnesses to it are one fourteenth century manuscript (Paris gr. 450) and a copy of it made in 1571. And this is fairly typical of works outside the Bible and a small academic canon (including such as Homer and the other authors above). Survival is the exception, not the rule.

best,
Peter Kirby
Peter Kirby is online now   Edit/Delete Message
Old 08-29-2004, 04:57 AM   #28
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
Default

GDon,
Quote:
All we can say is that the author doesn't mention historical details, therefore MAY be an MJ.
Amaleq
Quote:
I agree.
I disagree.

Indicators of Jesus Mythers/Non HJ

1. A pre-resurrected Jesus, in the form of a nameless god as we see in Phillipians and parts of AoI, is definitively a reflection of a MJ.

2. A primitive Christ or son of God, who is either an ever-present power as opposed to a man who died in the past like we see in 1 Clement, Shepherd of Hermas, Didache and Odes of Solomon.

3. Jesus who is definitively son of God and NOT son of man like we see in Epistle of Barnabas who also adds: "Jesus, [is] not a son of man, but the Son of God, and He was revealed in the flesh in a figure. Since then men will say that Christ is the son of David, David himself prophesieth being afraid and understanding the error of sinners; The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou on My right hand until I set thine enemies for a footstool under Thy feet."
Barnabas, again doesn't mention Mary, Joseph, Pilate, Jerusalem etc.

4. Sole reliance on OT scriptures for God for God's message as opposed to Jesus' teachings on earth is a strong indicator of a non HJ like Paul and 2nd century christians unaware that Christ had a ministry on earth. If Xstianity sprung from Jesus' alleged movement (as per Funk's reverse Christology for example), this would be a very unlikely if not impossible phenomena. But it is RAMPANT in the second century.

5. Treating Christ's death and resurrection allegorically like Paul when he said he died and resurrected with Christ which means that the death and resurrection of Jesus, to Paul, were spiritual events, not historical ones.

Quote:
I don't know why Paul doesn't want to include historical details about anything, but it seems to be his style.
If I had a copy of the Jesus Puzzle with me, I could have typed out that imaginary conversation Paul had with the early Christians that Doherty put in the appendix: it blows away this idea to smithereens. Could someone volunteer? I think its worth the effort because this argument has been parotted so many times that Doherty has even published a rebuttal to it!

Quote:
The problem here is dating these texts.
Everyone's problem. When HJ proponents have a solution, wake me up.

Quote:
(2) A lot that Doherty uses as examples of Christ Myther writings date well into the second century.
True. And very good. What is the problem with that?
Quote:
(3) We have a lot more extant materials from the 2nd C, which may be why there suddenly seems to be this sudden increase in HJ details. But there are materials that existed early which were lost, e.g Papias's 5 volumes on "Oracles of the Lord".
So, do you admit that "there suddenly seems to be this sudden increase in HJ details" from late 2nd C?

Papias is not a problem for JM hypothesis though he is an unreliable source.
Ted Hoffman is offline  
Old 08-29-2004, 04:59 AM   #29
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
Default

Magdalyn, regarding Pauline authorship of Hebrews, what arguments are used to dispute it? Have you acquainted yourself with the arguments pro and con? If so, please provide a brief summary of them.
Ted Hoffman is offline  
Old 08-29-2004, 06:27 AM   #30
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 2,230
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacob Aliet
Magdalyn, regarding Pauline authorship of Hebrews, what arguments are used to dispute it? Have you acquainted yourself with the arguments pro and con?
Yes, I have. As I understand it, the authorship of this booklet has been in dispute since the earliest centuries CE. It is now considered to be anonymous.

I think the essay prefacing Hebrews in the Oxford Annotated summarizes the question of authorship well, if briefly.

A Google will turn up even more info.

FWIW, Freke and Gandy seem to think Paul wrote it. That should be enough to make anyone here come down on the side of Barnabas or Priscilla!

cheers, Magdlyn
Magdlyn is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:23 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.