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02-18-2004, 06:38 PM | #21 | |
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Vinnie,
That Jesus was born in Nazareth is clearly nowhere near as secure as you tried to assert. Not only is it questionable that this was the word intended, it is questionable whether the town even existed at the beginning of the Common Era. Quote:
Your foot must taste awful seasoned with so much arrogance. |
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02-18-2004, 07:03 PM | #22 |
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We clearly need to get the search engine back, so we don't have to discuss whether Nazareth existed in the first century every time the last thread falls off the first page.
This is what I can find: Nazareth or Nazorite? Was there a Nazareth? Was there a Nazareth in Jesus' Time? |
02-18-2004, 07:21 PM | #23 |
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Thanks for the info, Toto, though I'm not sure it establishes the existence of a "Nazareth" at the beginning of the 1st century CE.
Not enough to warrant the certainty with which it has been asserted as the birthplace of Jesus but perhaps enough to keep Vinnie from eating shoe. Maybe he has something more definitive to warrant his certainty. |
02-18-2004, 08:00 PM | #24 |
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I don't think that there was a Nazareth, but the record is sufficiently unclear that it's hard to prove that there wasn't.
However, the Nazareth described in the gospels does not fit the settlement that the archeologists have found, if they have found anything (which is still not really clear to me.) |
02-18-2004, 09:45 PM | #25 | |
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Allah, I praise thee for bestowing such blessings of humorous Irony upon me, thy faithful and not so humble servent! Aint karma grand, Vinnie |
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02-18-2004, 10:24 PM | #26 | |
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Luke only has nazareQ (Q = theta) in the birth narrative, so the writer of this birth narrative obviously knew the term, while the earlier redactor didn't make the connection with nazarhnos either, and then the puzzling "nazara" in 4:15 (note this found in the Alexandrian text), which linguistically would have been an excellent source for nazarhnos had there been such a place -- along the lines of Antioch/antioxhnos (x = chi). Matthew like Luke has nazaret at the end of the birth narrative and the still puzzling nazara in 4:13 as well as nazareQ in 21:11. (I have used the Alexandrian Greek text though the Byzantine text has levelled out much of the differences. It is normal practice to use the more difficult forms as more probably original.) So, I think one can see evidence of textual development through the way the group of terms nazarhnos/nazwraios/nazara/nazaret/nazareQ are used. But to come back to the original question 'What does "Nazarhnos" mean?', let me turn back to Mark and the little apocalypse of ch.13. We find the Greek verb grhgorew ("watch, be vigilant") used three times, 13:34, 35, & 37, the latter two being imperatives from Jesus to his listeners to be watchful, ending the passage with such an entreaty. Then in the garden of Gethsemane, Jesus's companions twice receive the same entreaty to be watchful -- but they failed. The term necer [c = tsade] ("watch, observe, be vigilant"), as in "nocri ha-brit" ("keepers of the covenant"), makes an excellent source for the Greek "grhgorew" (which occurs in key places in the nt) and gives us a meaning to our term nazarhnos, ie someone who is awake, alert, vigilant, watchful. spin |
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02-18-2004, 10:42 PM | #27 | |
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02-18-2004, 10:56 PM | #28 | |
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02-19-2004, 12:03 AM | #29 |
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Given that there is no proof of an historical jesus, the argumentation about where he was born seems to me a complete and utter waste of time.
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02-19-2004, 12:33 AM | #30 | |
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