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Old 07-04-2008, 11:20 AM   #491
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you were going to go thru the chronological arrangements of the gospels I supplied and check them for coherence. Did you change your mind?
No. I was doing that check when I noticed Paul's claim that Peter saw the risen Christ before the other disciples did. I don't see any place in the gospel accounts where that might have happened.
did Peter see the risen christ before Thomas did according to the gospels?
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Old 07-04-2008, 02:06 PM   #492
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you were going to go thru the chronological arrangements of the gospels I supplied and check them for coherence. Did you change your mind?
No. I was doing that check when I noticed Paul's claim that Peter saw the risen Christ before the other disciples did. I don't see any place in the gospel accounts where that might have happened.
Sounds like sometime after he and John came back from the tomb after checking out the women's claims and let the others know what they found(including those who were walking on the road to Emmaus) and before the two met Jesus on the road to Emmaus. sschlichter has done a good job of harmonization and as I already said, many good jobs have already been done. My references give three examples, the second one even puts it in one continuous story as requested. Apparently those who requested the continuous narrative didn't check out the reference. Here it is again from post 412 http://bible.crosswalk.com/Commentar...i?section=T0-8 .
(I think those who demand a continuous narrative are just making excuses. As Sschlichter said, just read from left to right across the columns of his parallel columns and you have it.)
On a side note, the answer to John 20:22 is that the disciples did receive the Holy Spirit at that time and became NT believers as opposed to OT believers. In Acts, the Holy Spirit came upon the believers, a different type of relationship. However, as sschlichter has already pointed out, they are obviously different occurrences at different times and have no negative impact on the harmonization.
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Old 07-04-2008, 02:18 PM   #493
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If Amaleq is arguing that their emotions could not have been mixed or changed at all in any way over the entire time described in the accounts, I think the absurdity in his position is obvious.
No, you've got it wrong. I don't suppose it might be because you haven't actually read the thread?

I'm saying Matthew 28:8 describes Mary responding with joy to the message from the angel that Jesus was not dead.

I'm saying that John 20:2 depicts Mary as solely concerned with the location of Jesus' dead body.

I'm saying that the proposed harmony is implausible where it claims that Mary's joyful response to the angel's message preceded her sole focus on the disposition of Jesus' corpse. There is no textual justification for such a dramatic change nor for the notion that Mary somehow came to completely disbelieve the message from the angel.

Barker's challenge requires that any proposed harmony both include all details from the texts and be plausible. This one fails to meet either requirement.
You are putting words into the biblical text that don't exist. It does not say that Mary's sole focus was on the disposition of Jesus' corpse, you said that. It does not tell every emotion that she had for every second. You are adding a mistake to the text when you claim that her sole focus was his body. You also claim that she completely disbelieved the angel's message. That is not written anywhere in the text. Again you are putting something into the text that just isn't there.
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Old 07-04-2008, 04:05 PM   #494
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I'm saying that John 20:2 depicts Mary as solely concerned with the location of Jesus' dead body.
You are putting words into the biblical text that don't exist.
I'm relating what the text describes. It describes Mary as solely concerned about the location of Jesus' dead body.

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It does not say that Mary's sole focus was on the disposition of Jesus' corpse, you said that.
No other concern is described and, given her clear (and reasonable) assumption that Jesus was still dead, no other concern is suggested nor actually plausible. It shouldn't have to be said that one cannot be worried about the location of the risen Lord as well as the location of his dead body. As Pastor Guzik notes, John 20:2 depicts Mary as concerned about Jesus' dead body.

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You also claim that she completely disbelieved the angel's message.
No, you are confused (perhaps due to still not having read the thread?). I've denied that claim for the same reason you do. The "dr" is the one who adds this to his failed narrative.

One must read doubt on Mary's part into the texts and against her explicitly joyful reaction described in Matthew.

Likewise, one must read other concerns into John 20:2 and against the sole and rather exclusionary concern that is described.
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Old 07-04-2008, 04:25 PM   #495
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You are putting words into the biblical text that don't exist.
I'm relating what the text describes. It describes Mary as solely concerned about the location of Jesus' dead body.
.
No the text does not say 'solely'. You do.

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[
No other concern is described
.
That doesn't mean it didn't exist.

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[
and, given her clear (and reasonable) assumption that Jesus was still dead, no other concern is suggested nor actually plausible.
.
It is quite plausible. It doesn't have to be suggested (mentioned) in order for it to be plausible. It doesn't mention the exact hour, minute, and second of the day when it happens either, but there are many answers to this time that are plausible.

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[
It shouldn't have to be said that one cannot be worried about the location of the risen Lord as well as the location of his dead body.
.
Again you are assuming that you know everything about her state of mind for every second of the day of the resurrection and that you know that she could not possibly had any mixed emotions or ever changed her mind or doubted herself at all, even a little. You really seem to be claiming to have a tremendous knowledge of every detail of that day in history. You ought to share your sources for this remarkable knowledge.

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[
As Pastor Guzik notes, John 20:2 depicts Mary as concerned about Jesus' dead body.
.
Don't know who he is, but does he also know every thought that Mary had for that every day?

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[
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You also claim that she completely disbelieved the angel's message.
No, you are confused (perhaps due to still not having read the thread?). I've denied that claim for the same reason you do. The "dr" is the one who adds this to his failed narrative..
You may be right about this.

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[
One must read doubt on Mary's part into the texts and against her explicitly joyful reaction described in Matthew.

Likewise, one must read other concerns into John 20:2 and against the sole and rather exclusionary concern that is described.
You don't HAVE to read doubt into the texts, but it is certainly permissible to assume that it may have been one of her emotions and certainly can be used to provide a reasonable guess at more of the details of the account than are given in the text.
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Old 07-04-2008, 07:09 PM   #496
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John 20:22 is that the disciples did receive the Holy Spirit at that time and became NT believers as opposed to OT believers. In Acts, the Holy Spirit came upon the believers, a different type of relationship.
that remains a possibility, my friend. and I agree that the topic is tangential.
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Old 07-04-2008, 11:16 PM   #497
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No the text does not say 'solely'.
Right. I already acknowledged that the text doesn't state "solely". The text describes a sole concern on the part of Mary and suggests no other.

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That doesn't mean it didn't exist.
This is, of course, a very weak argument from silence. That aside, do you have a specific additional concern you suspect or are we to just leave it open until such speculation might become "necessary"?

Just to catch you up to speed on a thread you clearly haven't read:
The narrative created by the "dr" asks us to believe that this scene with Peter (John 20:2) follows her joyful reaction upon hearing that Jesus was alive.

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It is quite plausible.
Not as the "dr" has it. He quite implausibly contradicts John's chronology.

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Again you are assuming that you know everything about her state of mind...
No, I am just reading the text.

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Don't know who he is, but does he also know every thought that Mary had for that every day?
You would if you had read the thread. No, he simply provides a relatively unbiased and professionally honest reading of the text.

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You don't HAVE to read doubt into the texts...
Where, in the texts, do you find Mary doubting the angelic message?

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...but it is certainly permissible to assume that it may have been one of her emotions...
Not when that assumption is incompatible with the explicit description of a joyful reaction to the message. And it certainly is incompatible. You need more than a weak argument from silence to plausibly import doubt.
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Old 07-05-2008, 05:09 AM   #498
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Right. I already acknowledged that the text doesn't state "solely". The text describes a sole concern on the part of Mary and suggests no other.


This is, of course, a very weak argument from silence. That aside, do you have a specific additional concern you suspect or are we to just leave it open until such speculation might become "necessary"?



Just to catch you up to speed on a thread you clearly haven't read:
The narrative created by the "dr" asks us to believe that this scene with Peter (John 20:2) follows her joyful reaction upon hearing that Jesus was alive.



Not as the "dr" has it. He quite implausibly contradicts John's chronology.
John mentions no other, but that does not preclude that she had other concerns or emotions or that they fluctuated wildly. The other witnesses mention other emotions by the participants and so Mary may have experienced many of these same emotions. I don't thnk that it is a weak arguement from silence.

As far as the chronology goes, it seems that Mary may have either left the tomb by herself before the angels or Jesus appeared to the rest of the women as described by Matthew at that point, or she was there and did see the angels and maybe Jesus as well. If she did see them both as I guess dlb is suggesting, them maybe when she returned and told the disciples, they did not believe her, she began doubting herself at that point, and as a last arguement to the disciples told them that whatever she saw, at least "his body is not there and we don't know where they have taken it". Again, these are just plausible guesses filling in details that the eyewitnesses don't give us.

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Where, in the texts, do you find Mary doubting the angelic message?
Quote:
...but it is certainly permissible to assume that it may have been one of her emotions...
Quote:
Not when that assumption is incompatible with the explicit description of a joyful reaction to the message. And it certainly is incompatible. You need more than a weak argument from silence to plausibly import doubt.
It is incompatible only if you assume that the description given by John of Mary's emotions at one point is the only emotion she experienced the whole day. If they changed, it is quite plausible. (Actually, he doesn't report her emotions at all, just her statement.)
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Old 07-05-2008, 05:39 AM   #499
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No. I was doing that check when I noticed Paul's claim that Peter saw the risen Christ before the other disciples did. I don't see any place in the gospel accounts where that might have happened.
Sounds like sometime after he and John came back from the tomb after checking out the women's claims and let the others know what they found(including those who were walking on the road to Emmaus) and before the two met Jesus on the road to Emmaus. sschlichter has done a good job of harmonization and as I already said, many good jobs have already been done. My references give three examples, the second one even puts it in one continuous story as requested. Apparently those who requested the continuous narrative didn't check out the reference. Here it is again from post 412 http://bible.crosswalk.com/Commentar...i?section=T0-8 .
(I think those who demand a continuous narrative are just making excuses. As Sschlichter said, just read from left to right across the columns of his parallel columns and you have it.)
On a side note, the answer to John 20:22 is that the disciples did receive the Holy Spirit at that time and became NT believers as opposed to OT believers. In Acts, the Holy Spirit came upon the believers, a different type of relationship. However, as sschlichter has already pointed out, they are obviously different occurrences at different times and have no negative impact on the harmonization.
Here's that link.
http://bible.crosswalk.com/Commentar...i?section=T8-1
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Old 07-05-2008, 07:08 AM   #500
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Like I said, you still don't understand the nature of the implausibility as you continue to be distracted by your irrelevant mistake claiming that Mark refers to "joy". :banghead:
You're flailing bigtime here. Allow me to correct you on that, taken from post #442

Quote:
Mark 16
8And they went out quickly, and fled from the sepulchre; for they trembled and were amazed: neither said they any thing to any man; for they were afraid.

Quote:
Matthew 28
8And they departed quickly from the sepulchre with fear and great joy; and did run to bring his disciples word.

12:00

They left the tomb quickly.

12:01

They trembled with fear

12:02

They were amazed with great joy

12:03

They were afraid.


Amazed and joy are not synonymous, it is amazed WITH great joy i.e amazed accompanied by great joy or amazed next to great joy
your response post #444

Quote:
Yes, that is what I've been trying to explain to you. Amazed and joy are not synonymous so it is false to claim that the authors both state joy. One states "amazed" and one states "joy".
So basically you agreed with me, yet here you state that I said mark refers to joy. In the most recent development of this debate, I explained to you, I gave yOU the benifit of the doubt that I wasn't explaining it properly, after I laid out the above explanation that is quoted. So you continue to refer to things that have already been refuted.


Quote:
Not if you are still claiming they [Mt+Mk] both state joy. That continues to be quite blatantly false. Ultimately irrelevant to your implausible narrative but false nonetheless.
another strawman. ahahhahah as you can see I set up a little timeline to give you an idea of how the emotions came about.



Quote:
And this continues to have no support from the texts and continues to contradict the explicitly joyful reaction described by Matthew.
Incorrect.

The joy is from the angels.




Quote:
The scene in John 20:2 is clearly Mary's initial reaction and placing it subsequent to the angelic message continues to be implausible.
You are not following the rules. You are supposed to be criticizing the plausibility of the narrative. I suggest you read up on the rules again.
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