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02-18-2005, 05:08 PM | #81 |
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Thank you Andrew. Weird, yes. Troubling to me given the presence of Judith in the LXX. Maybe I'm missing something. But it seems to me that's a stake in the heart of the post-118 dating for Judith...
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02-19-2005, 01:35 PM | #82 | |
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Hello again, Jay.
Sorry for the delay in getting back to you. Things have been a little hectic. It's not always easy for me to respond here in a timely fashion. Anyway, regarding your comments: Quote:
In v. 2 Polycarp's focus turns to Jesus, and appears to remain there briefly even in v. 3: "(v. 2) ...our Lord Jesus Christ, who endured our sins....whom God raised up... (v. 3) though you have not seen him, you believe, etc." The antecedent to "him" in v. 3 is "our Lord Jesus Christ" from v. 2, not God. In v. 3, then, when Polycarp says "though you have not seen him," he probably alludes to the NT doctrine of Christ's assumption into Heaven, where he now sits "at the right hand of God" (Mark 16:19; Acts 2:33, 7:55-6; Rom. 8:34; Col. 3:1; Heb. 10:12; 1 Peter 3:22); for this reason he is to us now invisible. That Polycarp has Christ's assumption at least partly in mind, is probably confirmed by 2:1 (the next v. after 1:3): "... God...raised our Lord Jesus Christ 'from the dead and gave him glory' and a throne at his right hand." Alternatively, the words "though you have not seen him" can be explained by the fact that Polycarp is writing to the Philippian Christians nearly a hundred years after Christ's ministry; of course they hadn't seen him. I would favor the former interpretation, though. Incidentally, since the larger issue here is Polycarp's dependence on 1 Peter, notice again the words "from the dead and gave him glory" in 2:1; they come from 1 Peter 1:21. In fact he actually quotes 1 Peter three times in those first few paragraphs (1 Peter 1:8, 13, 21). Regards, Notsri |
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02-19-2005, 04:58 PM | #83 | |
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02-21-2005, 09:34 AM | #84 | |
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Of the three, the first is the least likely. One would expect that the writer of Polycarp would want to give the Apostle Peter credit for the expressions as it would only enhance the authority of the propositions. The fact that he does not do this would suggest that he is unaware of these expressions being in 1 Peter. Now the writer of 1 Peter would have to face the problem of why Peter writing circa 50 would be quoting Polycarp circa 110. It seems unlikely that the writer of 1 Peter would be quoting the writer of Polycarp in this way. This leaves the third possibility of the same writer writing both as the most likely. The writer is just taking on the general persona and tone of an important old Christian writer, and it does not matter to him if the writer is Peter or Polycarp. Thus he uses the same expressions. Warmly, Philosopher Jay |
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02-21-2005, 10:46 AM | #85 | |
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I don't think that the writers of Polycarp and 1 Peter are the same person, because the writer of Polycarp is one of the most unoriginal writers in the first two Christian centuries. The letter of Polycarp borders on being little more than a patische of expressions from the epistles of Paul (as he knew them), 1 Clement and other sources (including on rare occasion some LXX) -- all done without attribution as typical at that time. The same charge cannot be leveled at the writer of 1 Peter, who exhibits a lot more originality in thought and expression than that of Polycarp (but is still no Paul). The balance of probabilities is that 1 Peter is yet another source that the writer of Polycarp plagiarized and/or alluded to. If Eusebius's information that Polycarp's contemporary Papias also knew 1 Peter is credible (and I think it is), then that information too would support this conclusion. |
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02-21-2005, 10:59 AM | #86 | |
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02-21-2005, 11:23 AM | #87 | ||
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The general lack of attribution among comtemporary Classical authors is fairly well-accepted among historians. For example, Anthony Grafton, The Footnote *: * A Curious History (Cambridge: Mass.: Harvard, 1997): 29, explains: Quote:
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02-21-2005, 11:28 AM | #88 | |
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I'm having trouble with the comment about 1 Clement not exhibiting a Monarchial Episcopate. I think the comment out of place in the respect that as I understand the term it is much later than the second century. Any help here is appreciated. Pseudo-authority was being attempted prior to the actualization.
The other bizarre issue with 1 Clement is the naming of the "messengers": Quote:
I Clement is emphatic about bowing down to the appointed "authority" (from Peter and Paul to their appointments and so on). But the letter does not state who those appointments are. Typical apologetic approach dictates we declare that everyone knows who we are talking about. So why put in the names of the lowly messengers when the whole point of the letter is to vest Church leadership in certain individuals? It's just too bizarre if we try to pass this letter off as genuine and sincere. I can think of at least a couple of reasons for naming the messengers though. Verisimilitude with much less risk than naming phony bishops too close to the time in question. Actual messengers who are now imbued with pseudo authority for other locales. If there are no appointments by Peter and Paul (as this suggests) then it lends credence to legendary status as opposed to historicity. |
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