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05-05-2009, 06:42 PM | #11 | |||
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Dates Based On Unexamined Assumptions
Hi Arnoldo,
Actually, it doesn't bare witness for a good dating. We only have a terminus post quem of 150-160 for Justin Martyr's works. The references to Marcion being alive and the Bar Kochba war may be there to establish the setting of the works. If the works are not by an historical Justin, but a later writer, the works could be written as late as 202-204 when the orthodoxy-heresies debate really begin. If written in 202-204, almost immediately, the passage in Matthew about the Roman legion tomb witnesses and the deception of the Jews could have been inserted by anyone who read the Justin Martyr work, or more likely, by the same writer who wrote the JM works and showed such a passionate hated for the Jews. So it would be more correct to say that Matthew knows Justin rather than Justin knows Matthew. Confusing the date of setting with the date of composition is always a big mistake. In many Western Hollywood movies there are references to Civil War veterans. This establishes the date of the setting of these stories as somewhere circa 1865-1890. However, no Western movies were actually created in this time period, as movie technology had not been invented. The vast bulk of these movies were made between 1930 and 1970. Please note that Justin's Apology to the Emperor is a fantasy work. No address ever took place. Likewise his discussion with Trypho and the Jews is also a fantasy discussion. The work is actually two teachings. In the first teaching, Jesus, who is the Old Man by the Sea, teaches Justin that he knows Philosophy better than the Philosophers. In the second teaching, Justin teaches the Jews that he knows the Jewish scriptures better than the Jews. The writer in both cases shows a great ignorance of both Philosophy and Jewish scriptures, but does show a tremendous and unbridled hubris. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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05-05-2009, 06:51 PM | #12 |
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05-05-2009, 07:09 PM | #13 | |||
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05-05-2009, 08:01 PM | #14 | |
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Justin Martyr in his writings did not ever claimed to have witnessed any implausible event or claimed he personally knew any one who witnessed any implausible event and participated in the very event. There are no claims by Justin that he could speak in tongues or had the gifts of the Holy Ghost or claimed that he knew anyone who had the gifts of the Holy Ghost and spoke in tongues. Justin Martyr did not write about the martyrdom of anyone who miraculously failed to expire by the intervention of angels or some supernatural power. There are no revelations from Jesus to Justin. The writings from Justin, I find, are very plausible and are virtually filled with information of antiquity about paganism where he showed a picture where there was really no orthodoxy in Christian beliefs up to the middle of the 2nd century. And most interestingly, Justin Martyr's writing is virtually free of, and isolated from, the fiction called Acts of the Apostles or the Pauline letters upon which other church writers are fundamentally based upon, like Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen and Eusebius. Acts of the Apostles and the Pauline letters are products of fiction, Justin Martyr wrote nothing about them. It appears to me that Justin Martyr truly believed in Jesus, he believed the gospels or memoirs of the apostles represented the truth about Jesus Christ. I cannot find any post-ascension fiction in the writings of Justin Martyr, but there is such fiction in Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen and Eusebius to name a few. From Justin Martyr's writings, it would appear to me that there was no gospel named "according to Matthew", and there was no author known by the name Matthew who wrote a gospel, but there were Jesus stories with information similar to present day gMatthew called memoirs of the apostles or gospels. Again from Justin, it would appear that up to the middle of the 2nd century there was no Pauline influence it was the stolen body story that was prevalent at that time. If Paul was actually telling people in the churches all over the Roman Empire that over 500 people saw Jesus after he resurrected, it would have made very little sense for the author of Matthew to have fabricated a later false story that the disciples stole the body of Jesus. So, for the NT's chronology to make sense Matthew's "stolen body story" must have preceeded Paul's "Over 500 story". |
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05-05-2009, 08:44 PM | #15 | ||||
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both for the history of the orthodox canonical new testament, and for the supposed history of the non-orthodox non-canonical new testament literature. The foundation of the chronology of the mainstream belief systems surrounding the apocrypha is to be found in Eusebius via Tertullian, Eusebius via Irenaeus, Eusebius via Serapion but most importantly in the identification of the largest number of non-canonical books, via Eusebius himself as the primary source. Can anyone be allowed to suspect that Eusebius simply retrojected the appearance of the gPeter and other books into the past at the time he was attempting to present a harmonius acceptance of the NT canon at Nicaea? I can understand the reluctance of people in this forum to suspect Eusebius of providing fraudulent and false information, texts, references, names, dates and places with respect to the most holy of new testament canonical literature. What I do not understand is the reluctance of people in this forum to be suspicious of Eusebius' assertions regarding the gnostic Hellenistic heretics - specifically the Eusebian assertions regarding the chronology of the "other books of the bible ... the NT apocrypha". Surely everyone MUST I repeat MUST understand that Eusebius is a completely and utterly hostile witness with respect to the books written by the (docetic) heretics. Quote:
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05-06-2009, 09:00 AM | #16 | ||||
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Justin is Perhaps Not So Credible
Hi aa5874,
I agree with much about what you say. Justin is unique in many ways. The facts as presented by Eusebius and from a naive reading of the texts will explain that uniqueness, but I believe that uniqueness can also be explained if we see him as someone at the beginning of the orthodox/heresies division (which I do not see happening before 200, otherwise the fact that Clement of Alexandria doesn't know it is most difficult to explain.) We also have to examine his own personal educational situation. He is unfamiliar with the gospels in their canonical form, the letters of Paul and Acts of the Apostles, because they are just being appropriated into the new orthodoxy at this time. He does have a smattering of knowledge about philosophy and Hebrew scriptures. As far as him being credible, I think we have to be careful. The ideas that he presents are not fantastic in one sense, but are fantastic in another sense. They are not the simple fantastic ghost stories and fairy tales that we encounter in typical ancient works, but a more fantastically Platonic version. For example, he puts forward the idea that the devil read the prophesies of the Jews and somehow had the Greek and Roman Gods (the devil's demons) perform miracles that resembled them before Christ came. That explanation for why Jesus' miracles resembles those of the Greek and Roman Gods certainly is just a little "fantastic." Also a little fantastic is believing that the emperor, Antonius Pius, the head priest of the Roman State religion would listen, along with his sons, to a speech denouncing the Roman Gods as evil demons. Antonius Pius had deified his wife Faustina in 141. So besides attacking the Gods Pius sacrificed to on a daily basis, Justin was also insulting the memory of the Emperor's dead wife. Justin's accusations could not have sounded more insane and offensive to an ordinary Roman of the time. Imagine someone arguing seriously to the Pope that Jesus Christ is really the devil. Note also that at the end of the Apology, Justin gives a letter by Hadrian defending the Christians, as if Antonius Pius would not know the policy of the Emperor whom he had served for 20 years and had adopted him as son and heir. Imagine this dialogue: Your policy, President Obama, stopping torture is wrong. I will prove it. Here are the directives of President Bush authorizing it.or Your policy, Herr Hitler, discriminating against the Jews is wrong. I will prove it. Here are the laws passed against such discrimination by your predecessor Van Hindenburg.Both arguments are ridiculous and inauthentic. One can imagine a bad dramatic writer 50 years from now writing the first scene, and one can imagine a bad dramatic writer putting forward the second scene today. They just don't seem credible as contemporary writings. There is an important recent article by Andrew Hofer, The Old Man as Christ in Justin's "Dialogue with Trypho", Vigiliae Christianae, Vol. 57, No. 1 (Feb., 2003), pp. 1-21 which argues persuasively that the mysterious Old Man that Justin meets who turns him into a Christian is actually supposed to be Jesus. It makes perfect sense (Dial: 1): Quote:
This is Justin's encounter with the mysterious Spirit/God Jesus. Just like Paul's encounter with Jesus, only the privileged can see him. The ending of the encounter also indicates that the Old Man by the Sea is Jesus: Quote:
Martyr, naturally means "eyewitness." It is my opinion that Justin gets the name Martyr because he here claims to have seen the Christ. His alleged willing death for death is just a convenient myth created after the term martyr developed its different meaning of one who dies for his/her religion some time in the Third century. It is clear by the style of the dialogue, where both the old man and then Justin assumes the role of Socrates that Justin has been inspired by his recent reading of Platonic dialogues. While Justin claims to have studied philosophy before his conversion to Christianity by his encounter with the God Jesus, his adoption of the literary style of Plato suggests that he was a convinced Christian first who started reading Plato later to justify his conversion. In all his writings, he quotes no philosophy book except Plato's Timaeus. This suggests his knowledge of philosophy was shallow at best. His own confession, in chapter 2, is that he studied Stoicism for "a considerable time," (but never got around to discussing God) Aristotle, "for a few days" and Plato "a little while". My guess is that he was first a Christian who later studied Philosophy under three different teachers for several weeks and read a few works by Plato. At that point he had his revelation that Plato did not have the whole truth, because he had not studied the Hebrew prophets, so he declared himself a "Christian Philosopher" and started his study of Hebrew scriptures. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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05-06-2009, 11:26 AM | #17 | |
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I am primarily interested in what Justin Martyr wrote. Justin Martyr wrote about the stolen body story, he appears to be completely un-aware of the the Pauline 500. But, the over 500 story should have been widely known since it should have been circulated for over 100 years in the Roman Empire and in the churches founded by Paul. Justin Martyr must have attended a Pauline church or knew persons who attended the Pauline churches. Justin wrote nothing whatsoever about Paul, his letters, his churches, his mysteries, his revelations or his 500 story. Absolutely nothing. After one hundred years of Paul's 500 story circulating all over the Empire in the churches, every Jesus believer would have know some of the 500 by name and even the addresses of those who saw Jesus in a resurrected state. Perhaps a great grandmother or father of Justin would have been one of the 500. If gMatthew was written after the Paul 500, then the author of Matthew perhaps would have named a few of 500. The author of Matthew did no such thing. The author of gMatthew must have attended a Pauline church, he must have heard about Paul's 500. He did not. The author of Mark, Luke and John did not name anyone of the 500, perhaps the most important eyewitness evidence to obliterate the skeptics, only Paul gave the number "over 500". The authors of gMark, gLuke and gJohn must have attended some Pauline churches and heard about the Pauline 500. They did not. Only Paul. Paul was after Justin. The stolen body was widely known. The stolen body preceded the Paul 500 story. The evidence seems to suggest that Justin's writings are credible. |
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05-06-2009, 04:01 PM | #18 | |
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Thank you Philosopher Jay for these analytical gems.
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