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12-16-2009, 11:26 PM | #171 | |||||
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However, the presence of another problem in the infancy narratives does not make it ok to present the false implication that the Gospels give contradictory answers for where the family went immediately after the birth. They simply don't. Quote:
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Basically I'm hoping to see a display of intellectual integrity with the baptism issue. Will skeptics on this forum defend an errancy charge based solely on misreading the text? The SAB also lists this. How embarrassing for skepticism. |
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12-17-2009, 12:06 AM | #172 | |||||||||
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The text of Matthew is very clear. Joseph took Mary as wife, ie into his home (1:24), which is revealed in 2:1 as being in Bethlehem. Hence the move to Nazareth in 2:22 is a move to a new home as it is presented there. It is only the willful insertion of Lucan information which causes the Matthean text to falter. Quote:
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It's understandable how someone could read the chapter quickly and think the narration's timeline includes the baptism itself. I recommend reading through again to see what I mean.Note that last sentence? That's what I thought might be useful for you to do. I should add that it is excessively presumptuous of you to make the statement you did in the first sentence above ("It's understandable...") when talking of a scholar whose reading has been shown to be both extensive and intensive. You mightn't agree with his analysis of the chronology, but your claim of shallowness is blatantly shallow. Quote:
spin |
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12-17-2009, 07:58 AM | #173 | ||||
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Oh but it is a plain contradiction. "Matthew" and "Luke" start out in the same location, Bethlehem. Where do they move Jesus from Bethlehem? "Matthew's" Jesus moves to Egypt while "Luke's" Jesus moves to Nazareth (wherever the hell that was). There's nothing in either text to suggest otherwise. A plain contradiction on where Jesus went after he was born. Your claim that these moves happened at different times is just another contradiction. How does a different type of contradiction (time) defend against another contradiction (location)? The time frames for the Infancy Narratives are different to start with. "Matthew's" Jesus is born c. 4 BCE while "Luke's" Jesus is born 6 CE. There's no reason for "Luke's" Jesus to go to Egypt to get away from Herod the Great because he's long dead. There's nothing in "Luke" indicating any threat to baby Jesus (other than the bogus census journey). Quote:
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JW: Why a year later? Why not two years? More contradictions here but this time within "Matthew". All of the narrative until the last verse supports a matter of days and weeks. Herod sees Jesus as a rival and is willing to mass execute children but waits a year or two years to execute his plan? Just enough time for Jesus to go Egypt, Nazareth or Vegas. Common sense also tells us that Herod probably had a safety margin in case Jesus looked older than he was so the last verse is still compatible with a matter of weeks which would make it comparable to "Luke". So it's your supposed defense that is not as clear as you make it out to be. Simple question C, per "Luke's" Infancy Narrative does Jesus go to Egypt? I don't see much difference here with how the question is phrased, "after Jesus' birth" vs. during the Infancy Narrative. You can certainly add details and more explanation to my claimed error here but I don't see that as any defense against the error. Ehrman sees it as a significant error and I do too. It's an important detail in two Infancy Narratives that are completely different. Obviously at least one of these Narratives primarily used a non-historical source. So at least one Gospel has an entire story that is fiction. Even worse, Christianity placed these stories together in the same Bible and postured that they agree. That's a credibility problem. Joseph ErrancyWiki |
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12-17-2009, 08:19 AM | #174 | ||
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Luke says the family went back home to Nazareth within weeks of Jesus' birth. vs. Matthew strongly implies the family's home was Bethlehem and implies they had never lived in Nazareth until after returning from Egypt. Not as snappy, but it is a much more accurate description of the problem. Quote:
This is a discussion thread for his book. Seems like an appropriate place to discuss a problem with it. |
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12-17-2009, 08:40 AM | #175 | |||
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I can visit the bank and the park "after I have breakfast." It's only a plain contradiction if I say I'm visiting both at the same time. (And the bank isn't in a park.) Quote:
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12-17-2009, 09:11 AM | #176 | |
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Would we be able to trust anything he said if he believed in an historical Jesus? Or would being an historicist also make all of his beliefs wrong? |
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12-17-2009, 09:32 AM | #177 | ||
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But he has no ideological commitment to mythicism. If he found more evidence, he would change his mind again. |
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12-17-2009, 09:33 AM | #178 | |
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12-17-2009, 09:59 AM | #179 |
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That's what "strongly implies" means. It's not a weak implication that the family first lived in Nazareth after Egypt and it's not explicitly stated. Hence: a strong implication.
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12-17-2009, 10:11 AM | #180 |
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