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06-16-2006, 01:28 PM | #11 | ||||||||||||||||
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Romans is dealing with matters so arcane to a gentile (in the sense we understand the term) that it is clear that the readers were steeped in Jewish knowledge. It's not that knowledge of the Jews was common knowledge. Paul tones his pitches to his audience. Romans was pitched to a Jewish audience. Quote:
The logic of foreign grammatical structures being picked up and used with native terms is highly unlikely. In all those cases of pidgins developing, it is foreign vocabulary being picked up and used in native grammatical structures. When foreign terms get absorbed, those terms are modified to suit the native grammar, as evinced in the examples given by your sources. The contrary seems on the surface ludicrous, so unless productivity of such grammatical items can be displayed, it is simpler and more reasonable to go with the fact that the terms were formed by those whose grammatical structures are preserved. Quote:
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Prime opportunity to mention support for his position and he likes to support his statements, but he doesn't do it here. Quote:
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With one special exception (Egypt) prefects did not have control of provinces. This is simple. It is normally a subserviant role under someone else -- here of Syria. Tacitus happily uses the terms prefect and procurator transparently and correctly everywhere else -- and there were various types of prefects which Tacitus usually indicates when he uses the term. Your "pretty common" mistake is unreasonable conjecture, based on a few non-Greeks writing in Greek about Romans. Quote:
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How did the populace at large, who we are told called them by the name christian, know or recognise these christians?? Do you believe that the populace, once we know how they could recognize these christians, hated them all as we are told? What religion is the person two doors to your left? Quote:
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Why are you so willing to try to make this passage fit by ignoring so much? Quote:
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Perhaps you believe that Tacitus wrote the line about the "multitude" of those who confessed of whatever it was they confessed about. Perhaps you believe that he was exaggerating, just as he made a mistake over the rank and class of Pilate. spin |
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06-16-2006, 01:31 PM | #12 | |
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06-16-2006, 01:43 PM | #13 | |
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06-16-2006, 01:57 PM | #14 | ||||||
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The Chester Beatty papyrus places the doxology of 16.25-27 at the end of chapter 15 and omits 16.24. I do not think any of this points to the conclusion that Paul never sent this epistle to the Romans. Ben. |
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06-16-2006, 02:00 PM | #15 | |
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Stephen |
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06-16-2006, 02:49 PM | #16 | ||||||||
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I am also rather unclear why Tertullian, in your view, *has* to quote this passage. Quote:
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All the best, Roger Pearse |
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06-16-2006, 03:21 PM | #17 | |
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Well I see that I have opened a can of worms here. Good info though.
I was asking if 64 would have been the earliest reference to the word "Christians". I am still perplexed as to how there would have been a significant enough group of people calling themselves "Christians" in Rome by 64 to have been identified and used as a scapegoat by Nero. Let's assume the Christian scenario of "Jesus" being killed in 33. We know that in 33, according to this scenario, the term Christians didn't exist yet. The term "Christians" only appears one time in the Bible: Quote:
Now, Acts says that the term "Christians" was used during the time of Paul apparently, but as far as I see, Paul never uses the term himself (is this correct?) Now, from what I understand Paul was preaching his gospel between let's say 40 and 65. I'm still confused. How is it that "Christians", who were identified as "Christians", were in Rome and significant enough in numbers as to be identified as a group worthy of blaming the fires of Rome on? Are we to believe that in 30 years since "the death of Jesus", and before any known written works of so-called Christianity other than Paul's, that a large group of "Christians", who identifed themselves and were known to the public as "Christians", existed in Rome? It just doesn't add up. How could "Christians" have become that infamous in that amount of time, before, as far as we can tell, their teachings hadn't even been formed yet? Furthermore, if Christains had become that cohesive by that time, and were indeed so moved as to be engaging in social disruptions in the name of a "Christ" who was killed by Pilate, then why is it that our first works of Christianity coem from Paul, who was apparently unfamiliar with their teachings, and not Roman Christians? Can we really be expected to believe that "Christians" existed in Rome, the most advanced literate place on earth at the time (perhaps Alexandria was more, I'm not sure) and they left no works at all, or even any trace whatsoever? I'm still confused.... |
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06-16-2006, 09:21 PM | #18 | |
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06-16-2006, 09:34 PM | #19 | |||||||||
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It is plain that "procurator" is inappropriate when Judea was at the time, as Tacitus indicates, not an imperial province. Quote:
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06-16-2006, 11:45 PM | #20 | ||||||
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The Book 5 of the Histories in English is here. This certainly records the change in the appointments system, and is new to me -- thank you. But it doesn't really add anything to the question about what these people were titled. Rather than have me repeat memories of journal articles, why not have a read of the literature on prefect and procurator for details of how confused it all got around that time. Quote:
All the best, Roger Pearse |
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