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07-20-2012, 09:56 PM | #21 |
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For Chrissakes, Don. I asked the question as a means of demonstrating the problems that would be involved given such a claim. You are a piece of work! Do you think this means you don't have to address any of the surrounding arguments I am making?
Still up to your old tricks! And I've been sucked in again! Well, since you have nothing more to offer, I'll consider our 'debate' over. If no one else chimes in, or offers anything substantial, I guess that'll be the end of it. The gun is still smoking. Earl Doherty |
07-20-2012, 10:52 PM | #22 | ||
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Augustus is a neither a title nor a name, but it is closer to a name than a title -- and can be used as an identifier of a ruler or general in the same way his personal name can. (In support of this note that the alternative to the choice of Augustus as the "name" to be bestowed upon Octavian was for a time Romulus.) It is an honorific. But what the hymn is telling us is that even Jesus is an honorific -- that is, a name not bestowed at birth but (like all honorifics) bestowed upon a ruler or general as a reward for victory or to acknowledge assumption to power (e.g. Africanus, Maccabee, Soter/Saviour, Epiphanes, Augustus). If the Philippian hymn is our first record of the name Jesus for the uniquely Christian divinity then it appears as an honorific. And just as honorifics tend to do, they become used as if they are proper names of the ruler. (With thanks to the arguments of Matthew Novenson who would be squirming in pain if he knew his work is being picked up to further a mythicist case.) |
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07-20-2012, 11:13 PM | #23 |
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The name here is definitely Jesus. But I am wondering how this argument helps either side. To be certain there wasn't a man called Jesus from birth being described here. But what does any of this mean? God empties himself before the crucifixion in the figure of a man and after the crucifixion the man who was really going to be crucified earns the right to the name Jesus. WTF does that really mean?
I am pretty sure Gregory Thaumaturgus (to Theopompus) says God was emptying his impassability on the guy that was about to suffer passion. But I can't figure out the logical sense of the passage here. Even if Jesus is a mythical figure or being, why is the name given as a reward only after the crucifixion and to whom? |
07-20-2012, 11:21 PM | #24 | |
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Here is Clement's use of the passage:
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07-20-2012, 11:26 PM | #25 |
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A lot of Church Fathers relate the passage to the LXX's idea that Joshua used to be called Auses before receiving the name Jesus (a detail not found in the SP - all passages read 'Joshua' in the Samaritan text).
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07-20-2012, 11:27 PM | #26 | ||
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07-20-2012, 11:28 PM | #27 | |
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I think the early Christians associated the name 'Jesus' with the king, even a messianic name - but why? The Samaritans do not take a messianic interest in the name Joshua. Irenaeus again reinforces the association of 'Jesus' with the king:
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07-20-2012, 11:28 PM | #28 |
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I've made it clear from the start: I'm assuming that the "name that is above all names" is "Lord", as per your OP, when you asked "But what if the “name” were “Lord”?". According to your original point, if this “name” is “Lord” then "[t]here is a contradiction here which cannot be resolved." But you are wrong. There is no contradiction. It makes sense, just as your 'President' example makes sense. But if the "name" is not "Lord", then my point is moot.
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07-20-2012, 11:31 PM | #29 |
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Right. But I am working from the premise that Earl gave: "But what if the “name” were “Lord”?" My point is that if the name is "Lord", then (contra Earl) the passage makes sense. If it isn't "Lord", then my point is still correct, but it is moot.
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07-20-2012, 11:33 PM | #30 | |||
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