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10-31-2004, 01:18 PM | #21 | ||||||||||
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10-31-2004, 04:40 PM | #22 | ||||||||||
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Do you think, as Josephus did, that the biblical character Abraham led an Egyptian army against the Ethiopians? You might be interested in an old study of the Arthurian romances by Jessie L. Weston called From Ritual to Romance. She tracks back the motifs and tropes found in the Arthurian legends to Roman, Greek and even Babylonian sources. So, your desire to find historical sources behind nt stories needs to be made more transparent. What exactly are you after in your effort? Quote:
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10-31-2004, 07:48 PM | #23 | |||||||
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As for the case of the young man at the tomb, he is controlled by the OT as well. The details for that sequence (Mk 16:6-8) are taken from 2 Kings 13:20-1. Mk 16:7 where that prediction is made is actually a linguistic and thematic parallel of 14:28 where Jesus predicts he'll appear again in Galilee, doublets being a typical Markan stylistic feature. So the young man at the Tomb is actually not referring to history, but to a previous supernatural prophecy of Jesus. Now, you could argue that the story reflects some underlying reality. But let's go back to Mk 14. 14:26: And when they had sung a hymn, they went out to the Mount of Olives. 27: And Jesus said to them, "You will all fall away; for it is written, `I will strike the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered.' 28: But after I am raised up, I will go before you to Galilee." v26 gives us the famous Jewish messianic belief that the messiah would appear from the Mt of Olives. Jesus' presence on Olivet there is controlled by the OT, not history. v27 Jesus cites Zech 13:7, which, if you explore that chapter, you will soon find a hidden clue -- the writer of Mark has cited Zech 13 -- where? In Mark 1, where he presents John the Baptist in terms of Zech 13:4. Then in the very next verse, our hero goes on to say he'll appear again in Galilee. In other words, Jesus makes a prediction that he will appear again in Galilee...and there's a reminder of JBap for the alert reader. Perhaps Doughty's interpretation is right. <shrug> The whole thing is a construction whose beginning and end are connected, not by history, but through the medium of the OT. There are a couple of other things. In Mk 14 the overall story frame is 2 Sam 15-6; Mark even cites the Greek of the Septaugint in the Greek verb exelthon, from exerchesthai -- it is the same as used in the LXX of David's flight from Jerusalem in 2 Sam 15:16. Raymond Brown points out that Passover night was traditionally spent within the boundaries of the city -- whose boundaries were temporarily and ceremonially enlarged for that one night, a practice Mark shows no cognizance of. In other words, the story itself is an invention off of the OT, contains practices at odds with then-current Jewish ones, contains implausibilities (Jesus and followers crossing the Kidron down a steep ravine at night), contains supernatural prophecies, and so on. There is no reason to think any of it contacts history anywhere. Vorkosigan |
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11-01-2004, 07:13 AM | #24 |
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BTW, cave, for what it is worth, a number of exegetes -- Bultman, Dibelius, Taylor -- saw 16:7 as a later insertion to harmonize that passage with Mark 14:28 (others argue that BOTH are insertions). Indeed, 14:28 is missing from the Fayum Fragment, a late second century text that seems to be harmonizing Matt and Mk.
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11-01-2004, 03:56 PM | #25 | |||||||||||||
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If the gospel account may have been based on oral traditions, that at least leaves the question open. Quote:
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11-01-2004, 04:26 PM | #26 | ||||||||||||||||
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11-01-2004, 04:28 PM | #27 | |
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11-01-2004, 05:46 PM | #28 | |||||||||||||||
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Re: the Arthurian legends: Quote:
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Stories can be set anywhere. Conrad wrote Nostromo set in South America. Someone wrote the Joseph novella (in Genesis) set in Egypt. Doesn't tell you where the text was written at all. Why don't you face the fact that you didn't have a clue where Mark was written, but didn't like the implication that it may have been written in Rome where there was a large body of Greek speakers? Quote:
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With just a name to go by, Tertullian added information to a non-entity he knew was called Ebion, though there was no eponymous founder of the Ebionite movement. Where he got the idea about the name I don't know. Tertullian wasn't a Semitic scholar. Quote:
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11-01-2004, 06:13 PM | #29 | |
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11-01-2004, 06:58 PM | #30 | |
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