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01-16-2008, 08:19 AM | #21 | |
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01-16-2008, 09:40 AM | #22 |
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Well, I certainly would not want an incident like that on my conscience, so here goes.
Let us start with Theophilus of Antioch, apparently writing during the principate of Commodus (of Gladiator fame; refer to chapter 27 of book 3), in To Autolycus 2.22.2: Οθεν διδασκουσιν ημας αι αγιαι γραφαι και παντες οι πνευματοφοροι, εξ ων Ιωαννης λεγει· Εν αρχη ην ο λογος, και ο λογος ην προς τον θεον, δεικνυς οτι εν πρωτοις μονος ην ο θεος και εν αυτω ο λογος. επειτα λεγει· Και θεος ην ο λογος· παντα δι αυτου εγενετο, και χωρις αυτου εγενετο ουδεν.Theophilus thus attributes John 1.1 to someone named John. Other passages of interest include To Autolycus 3.12, 13, 14: Ετι μην και περι δικαιοσυνης ης ο νομος ειρηκεν, ακολουθα ευρισκεται και τα των προφητων και των ευαγγελιων εχειν, δια το τους παντας πνευματοφορους ενι πνευματι θεου λελαληκεναι.Refer to Matthew 5.28; Matthew 5.32 = Luke 16.18; Matthew 5.44, 46 = Luke 6.28, 32; Matthew 6.3; 1 Timothy 2.2; Romans 13.7-8. These are, of course, anonymous quotations of materials from what Theophilus calls gospels. The Latin prologues name names, but their date is disputed. A lot of people put them in century II, though I have my doubts. The Muratorian canon is broken off at the beginning, but it names Luke as the third gospel and John as the fourth. It probably dates to late century II, or possibly early century III, since it regards the episcopate of Pius of Rome as recent. Polycrates of Ephesus (quoted by Eusebius in History of the Church 3.31.1-3): Και γαρ κατα την Ασιαν μεγαλα στοιχεια κεκοιμηται, ατινα αναστησεται τη εσχατη ημερα της παρουσιας του κυριου, εν η ερχεται μετα δοξης εξ ουρανου και αναζητησει παντας τους αγιους, Φιλιππον των δωδεκα αποστολων, ος κεκοιμηται εν Ιεραπολει, και δυο θυγατερας αυτου γεγηρακυιαι παρθενοι, και η ετερα αυτου θυγατηρ εν αγιω πνευματι πολιτευσαμενη εν Εφεσω αναπαυεται· ετι δε και Ιωαννης, ο επι το στηθος του κυριου αναπεσων, ος εγενηθη ιυρευς το πεταλον πεφορεκως και μαρτυς και διδασκαλος, ουτος εν Εφεσω κεκοιμηται.This letter identifies the beloved disciple with someone named John. He certainly seems to know some version of our gospel of John. Next, Ptolemy. His work has been lost, but Irenaeus writes in Against Heresies 1.8.5: John, the disciple of the Lord, wishing to set forth the origin of all things so as to explain how the father produced the whole, lays down a certain principle.... And he expresses himself thus: In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God; the same was in the beginning with God. .... Such are the views of Ptolemy.The flourit of Ptolemy is usually dated to around 150, but this depends at least in part on identifying him with the Ptolemy mentioned by Justin in his second apology, which seems not at all secure to me. Nevertheless, it seems clear that his flourit predates Irenaeus by some interval. Heracleon, whose lost commentary is frequently quoted by Origen and who dates to before Irenaeus, had to have known a text very much like our gospel of John. I do not recall offhand whether anything Origen quotes from him tells us that he attributed the gospel to someone named John, but the text he is using is certainly some form of our canonical gospel. A sample, from Origen, On John 10.9: But Heracleon, dealing with the words after this he went down to Capernaum, declares that they indicate the introduction of another transaction, and that the words went down are not without significance. Capernaum, he says, means these farthest out parts of the world, these districts of matter, into which he descended, and, because the place was not suitable, he says, he is not reported either to have done anything or said anything in it.This describes John 2.12, where Jesus is reported to have gone to Capernaum, but no event is described there. (This is just one of rather many examples.) A fragment of Apollinaris is preserved in the Chonicon Paschale: There are, then, some who through ignorance raise disputes about these things, though their conduct is pardonable, for ignorance is no subject for blame, rather needing further instruction, and they say that on the fourteenth day the Lord ate the lamb with the disciples, and that on the great day of the feast of unleavened bread he himself suffered; and they quote Matthew as speaking in accordance with their view. Wherefore their opinion is contrary to the law, and the gospels seem to be at variance with them.Apollinaris is dated to the principate of Marcus Aurelius (who died in 180). Ben. |
01-16-2008, 10:17 AM | #23 | ||
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A footnote
Hi JoeWallack,
Good points in your thread, thanks. Just a footnote, that the dating of Irenaeus and Justin come from Eusebius. He, unfortunately, cannot be taken as an accurate source, as he is often inaccurate in other datings, e.g., the letters of Abgar of Edessa. There is no other external or internal evidence to date the writings of Irenaeus to 180. In fact, they are marked by a suspicious lack of internal evidence for dating, as if any dating evidence has been erased. Justin does have internal evidence in his works that give the settings around the mid-second century C.E., but if the works are simply rhetorical, then the date of the settings do not indicate the real date. Many of the works of Plato are set 50-100 years in the past from when he wrote them. The first works that can be dated with reasonable assurances, as they mention contemporary events, are some of Tertullian's and Clement of Alexandria, circa 200-215. It is quite possible, in my opinion that the writings attributed to Irenaeus and Justin Martyr also come from this period or after. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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01-17-2008, 07:35 AM | #24 | |
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JW: ECW mid-ranges T & A to 183. T & A doesn't do much for the early dating argument. In the Big picture T & A looks like a Philosophical argument rather than a Historical argument. Justin so far, looks like the Transition from Philosophical arguments to Historical arguments being mainly Philosophical but adding in some supposed Gospel history. The Canonical Gospels look like the Fuel for Historical arguments. Irenaeus looks like the first to use the Fabled Four Fuel for HA (Historical Argument) but was Irenaeus c. 180? Eusebius attributes The Apostolic Preaching to Irenaeus but apparently never bothered to look at it or even describe it? The Apostolic Preaching is a Mixed Philosophical/Historical "Recapitulation" Argument with scholarship noticeably worse than Against Heresies. http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/irenaeus_02_proof.htm I doubt that Irenaeus wrote both unless he wrote The Apostolic Preaching much earlier and, similar to Justin, made a Transition from Philosophical to Historical arguments. Other Fathers after 180 continue to use Philosophical arguments. So what is the relationship between the Type of argument made by a Father and the existence of the Canonical Gospels: 1) Used Philosophical Argument because Canonical Gospels did not exist? 2) Preferred Philosophical Argument even though Canonical Gospels existed because Canonical Gospels were not considered Authoritative? 3) Preferred Philosophical Argument even though Canonical Gospels existed and were considered Authoritative? It also looks like preference for PA (Philosophical Argument) Verses HA has some Geographical determination. The East goes longer without the Canonical Gospels being a major part of Arguments until Origen(?) while popularity of the Canonical Gospels looks to start in the West with Justin and Irenaeus. Could it be that the East, being closer, preferred supposed Legends (Papias) while the West, being farther away, needed writings, and that it was also the West (Rome) that established a Center for an Empire and therefore needed a Canon for Uniformity (and a counter to Marcion's Canon)? Ben, Peter asked me to ask you what do you think? Joseph It ain't no Mistries whether it's Politics, Religion or Histries. The thing you gotta know iz, Everything is Show Biz. http://www.errancywiki.com/index.php/Main_Page |
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01-17-2008, 08:23 AM | #25 | ||||||||
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My tendency has been to see this as a function primarily of time, not of space. I doubt it was any harder or easier to get traditions about Jesus in, say, Syria than it was in Rome. Papias is writing about a time when, apparently, traditions could still be gleaned by asking people who knew other people. That time was, however, breathing its last, and so Papias commits what he has to writing himself (this explains the apparent irony of Papias preferring oral traditions yet choosing to write a book; it was not oral tradition per se that he preferred, but rather the living voice, but that voice was dying quickly by the time he wrote). By the time of Justin and Irenaeus, there was no way to ask a living elder what Andrew or Peter or Thomas had said. There were no longer any former disciples of Jesus such as Aristion and John the elder around to ask questions of. Written works were all that could be relied upon. Ben. |
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01-18-2008, 07:07 AM | #26 |
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JW:
Continuing with the Evidence concerning 1st vs. 2nd century Dating of the Canonical Gospels: External: 1) Extant fragments of Gospel text 2nd century Direct evidence Key evidence: 1) Earliest fragment is P52 mid-range date of c. 165 2) Church Father References2) No other fragment with mid-range in 2nd century. 2nd century Direct evidence Key evidence: 1) Irenaeus c. 180 Familiar with all 4 Canonical Gospels 2) Justin Martyr c. 155 Familiar with Synoptics No evidence of "The Simontic Problem" 3) The Epistula Apostolorum c. 145 One paragraph on the Passion Narrative No evidence of "The Simontic Problem" 3) 2 Clement c. 145 One sentence on the Passion Narrative Now on to the next earlier Evil & Wicked Early Church Writing, Marcion, which ECW dates c. 135.No evidence of "The Simontic Problem" http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Itha...7/Gospel1.html JW: And so Marcion evidences c. 135: 1) A version of "Luke". 2) No Infancy Narrative (but strong incentive to circumcise it if it existed). 3) Q 4) "The Simontic Problem" 5) The Passion Narrative Marcion looks to me to be the best evidence for an Indirect argument for Early Dating because at c. 135 presumably enough time has passed so that no one can prove original "Luke" and enough time had passed that no one realized original "Luke" was copied from "Mark". So at c. 135 it's looking like: 1) Strong Indirect evidence for "Mark". 2) Weak Indirect evidence for "Matthew". 3) Direct evidence for "Luke". 4) No quality evidence for "John". Joseph "Statistics remind me too much of the 6 foot tall man who drowned in a river who's average depth was 3 feet." - Woody Hayes Ieousiscity.The Argument For HJ. A Skeptical Reconstruction |
01-18-2008, 07:35 AM | #27 | |
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01-18-2008, 08:34 AM | #28 |
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Let me supplement your Marcionite evidence for Luke with two observations.
First, Marcion does indeed seem to have known a gospel that he placed in his canon; he does not seem to have fully composed this gospel himself. Tertullian, Against Marcion 4.4.3-4: Quod ergo pertinet ad evangelium interim Lucae, quatenus communio eius inter nos et Marcionem de veritate disceptat, adeo antiquius Marcione est quod est secundum nos, ut et ipse illi Marcion aliquando crediderit, cum et pecuniam in primo calore fidei catholicae ecclesiae contulit, proiectam mox cum ipso, posteaquam in haeresim suam a nostra veritate descivit. quid nunc, si negaverint Marcionitae primam apud nos fidem eius, adversus epistulam quoque ipsius? quid si nec epistulam agnoverint?If it is true that in the Antitheses Marcion accused the Judaizers of contaminating a gospel, then Marcion must have known (at least) two gospels in all, the one being the gospel that he accepted into his canon, the other being a gospel that he thought was a contamination of it. (Tertullian and others, of course, returned the favor and accused Marcion of doing the contamination; so Marcion can have composed only one of these gospels, not both, and he may have composed neither.) I note in passing that I should modify my last post slightly, since this is an example of ancient writers speaking of one writer modifying another; when the issue was interpolation or contamination, the ancient were not mute. Mere plagiarism, on the other hand, I am not convinced was all that common to point out. Second, Marcion is not evidence for the name of Luke being attached to the gospel. Tertullian, Against Marcion 4.2.3: Contra Marcion evangelio, scilicet suo, nullum adscribit auctorem, quasi non licuerit illi titulum quoque affingere cui nefas non fuit ipsum corpus evertere.Is Marcion the chicken or the egg? Fun stuff. Ben. |
01-18-2008, 09:17 AM | #29 | |||||
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An Alternative Hypothesis: The Gospel of John the Baptist
Hi Ben,
You conclusion that Theophilus of Antioch (circa 170-180) is referring to canonical texts seems to me unwarranted. Here is the full passage from http://www.earlychristianwritings.co...lus-book2.html that is allegedly from the canonical Gospel of John: Quote:
One expects that if he knew anything about a Jesus on Earth, he would be paralleling that event to the event of God walking in Paradise. He does not. We may assume that he is talking about a text by someone named John. We may assume that The gospel writers used this text soon after Theophilus demonstrated that it can be used to justifiy the idea of God being on Earth. We know that the cult of John the Baptist predated the cult of Jesus. We may take it that Theophilus is simply quoting a text from John the Baptist and the writers of the canonical gospel of John did the same. In the above case we have Theophilus referring to a text but not a gospel. In the next example, he refers to a gospel or gospels, but does not name a text. Quote:
The next quoted passage does not curiously name Jesus, but talks about the evangelical voice: Quote:
The final quoted passage again talks about a gospel, but does not give it a name. The text as quoted seems to be a conglomeration of a number of different passages. Quote:
Thus we have an alternative hypothesis to the quoting of canonical texts hypothesis. Theophilus was quoting and referring to a gospel of John, but not the canonical Gospel of John, but an earlier gospel of John the Baptist. Much of the text of which was incorporated into the canonical gospels. One could say that this alternative hypothesis does not fit the logical rule of Occam's razor that we should not multiply elements unnecessarily to explain the facts. However this addition of the element of a lost gospel of John explains why Theophilus never refers to Jesus or anything that he did in the canonical gospels; while the hypothesis that he is quoting directly from canonical gospel gives us no explanation of this fact. Thus the supposition that such a text existed is necessary to explain all the facts. This explanation of Theophilus' gospel references may be conjoined to the arguments I give in the book "Evolution of Christs and Christianities" for the existence of such a pre-canonical John the Baptist gospel text. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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01-18-2008, 09:45 AM | #30 | |
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Cheers. Ben. |
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