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02-05-2004, 06:29 PM | #11 |
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Just ordered "Lost Christianities" and am waiting on a friend whose mother works in a bookstore to find "Orthodox Corruption." Thanks for the recommendations!
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02-06-2004, 06:11 AM | #12 | |
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http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...threadid=71920 Vorkosigan |
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02-06-2004, 07:13 AM | #13 | |
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Good point in your review about Ehrman's failure to adequately address the Pauline corpus in Corruption. I hadn't paid attention to it, but you're right, it's a curious glossing of very important material. What do you think of his Intro to the NT? Worth the $$? Or, should I invest in the Udo Schnelle? godfry |
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02-06-2004, 03:29 PM | #14 | |
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02-08-2004, 06:58 PM | #15 |
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CAVEAT LECTOR
I just finished reading (please take that literally, as I just quit reading...I didn't finish the book) Lost Christianities, and I found a LOT to take issue with. As I read each succeeding chapter, it became clearer and clearer that the author has a number of self-induced blind spots. By the time I finished part II, I was scribbling rebuttals in the margins of every page, and I knew that I had already learned about all I could from this book.
Before you read this book, read Mr. Ehrman's credentials on the dust cover. He chairs the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina. Though he never identifies his own convictions of faith, it is clear that he is Xtian. All the "lost" Xtianities are viewed with respect to the "orthodox". Because of this, corruption of the canonic gospels is never even considered, while all the apocryphal gospels are labeled out front as forgeries. Here is an example of his tunnel vision: (Ch. 5, "Christians Who Would Be Jews: The Early Christian Ebionites) He insists on referring to the Ebionites as Ebionite 'Christians', which requires siding with the Ebionites' enemies' (all we actually know of them is from the writings of the Paulinist Christian Church) description of them as Christians who had tried to go back to Judaism. Then he says that their opponents 'clearly agree that the Ebionites were and understood themselves to be Jewish followers of Jesus'....(and) believed that Jesus was the Jewish Messiah sent from the Jewish God to the Jewish people in fulfillment of the Jewish Scriptures.' He goes on to tell us that they believed that Jesus was wholly human, that he was conceived and was born by entirely conventional means. (This definition absolutely precludes their being Xtians!!) He tells us that they disbelieved Paul and considered him heretical (but doesn't elaborate). He then wanders off on his own, assigning to the Ebionites' the belief that 'What set Jesus apart from all other people was....that God chose him to be his son and assigned him a special commission, to sacrifice himself for the sake of others, not as punishment for his own sins but for the sins of the world.' That one person could vicariously atone for another's sins is completely antithetical to Judaism; so is the sacrifice of a human, much less a deity! In Jewish Law, that IS blasphemy. THAT was their quarrel with Paul! His Xtianity seems to blind him to the interpretation that the Ebionites were not and never had been Xtians. They believed in a Jewish Messiah (in other words, a 'political' messiah), not a sacrificial/resurrected Christos. That Paul had preached to both Jews and Gentiles that Jesus was the latter was considered a heresy by observant Jews. This blind spot leads him to additional mistakes. He rhetorically asks what scriptures the Ebionites had. He cites that they seemed to have adopted GMatt as their principal scriptural authority, then adds that their own version may have been a translation of the Greek text into Aramaic. Other scholars contend (correctly, I think) that the first versions of both GMark and GMatt WERE in Aramaic, only to be later translated into Greek. If they were observant Jews who were followers of Jesus, then they almost certainly HAD to have roots back before the crucifixion, in which case they would in fact most likely have had an Aramaic GMatt (pre Greek translation, and Xtian editing), that probably also starred a Jewish Messiah named Jesus. Only by holding fast to the Paulist Christ construct as the only possible historical Jesus can the author make the preceeding assumptions with impunity. So, I warn you to approach this book with all the skepticism that you would bring to any other tome by a Xtian apologist. If you do not already have a pretty good knowledge of the subject, this book probably isn't for you (Too many things to unlearn later). On the other hand, if you do...he does a credible job of investigating the gospels of Thomas, Mary, and Peter, The Acts of Paul, and other apocryphal books, is fairly convincing in depicting the rise of orthodoxy, but completely refuses to even consider that the eventually victorious faction might also be flawed. Rather, it sounded more like a Xtian teacher explaining to a Xtian student how many competing early Xtian sects there were (and how they were flawed) and how the prevailing church consolidated its power and became 'the' orthodoxy that all current Xtianity stems from. caveat lector |
02-09-2004, 07:29 AM | #16 | |
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02-09-2004, 10:18 AM | #17 | ||||||
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Re: CAVEAT LECTOR
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02-09-2004, 10:36 AM | #18 |
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I've finished this book (unlike a recent critic I did actually read the entire thing). At present I don't have my copy handy so it'll be another day before I post a full review. That being said I enjoyed this book immensely and would strongly recommend it to anyone with an interest in early Xianity. It should be pointed out that this book is intended for a popular audience and as such it does not present any earth shattering discoveries or controversial theses to anyone familiar with the early variety of Xian belief. It does however provide an excellent overview of what the earliest strands of Xianity looked like, how we know about them and how the conflict between the "proto-orthodox" Xians and other, now lost, groups transpired.
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02-09-2004, 01:36 PM | #19 | ||||||||||
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Re: Re: CAVEAT LECTOR
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P.S. I have not read "orthodox corruption", but the more corruption he cites, the more he makes my point. In the face of all the corruption, he survived his 'crisis of faith'. Sorry, I cannot view one who under those circumstances remains a Xtian as UNBIASED. Quote:
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Because I recognize Paul's epiphany as the actual birth of the Christ, I most certainly DO (and am supported by 99.9% of Xtian ministers) that belief in the divinity of Christ is an essential prerequisite to being a Christian. Quote:
In fact, the Jerusalem 'church' was no 'church' at all, but a synagogue of observant Jews who called themselves Nazarenes. I contend that the Ebionites WERE the descendants of the disciples and followers that were The Jerusalem Church (TJC) (Nazarenes), who were waiting for Jesus to return and establish the prophesied Kingdom of God (Israel). They no more considered the resurrected Jesus to be divine than they did the resurrected Lazarus to be divine. After 70 CE, the surviving members of TJC were forced to flee form the Romans, and certainly fell on hard times (hence the name "Ebionites", meaning "poor"). Quote:
The "presupposition" rests on this foundation: The differences between the various contending Xtian sects and movements are dwarfed by the differences between any of them and Judaism. For that reason, and Paul's presence at the nexus of the schizm, I have labeled all of them essentially Paulinist in nature. If that is being obtuse...so be it. Quote:
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02-09-2004, 02:45 PM | #20 | ||||||||
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Re: Re: Re: CAVEAT LECTOR
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