Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
04-16-2007, 09:27 AM | #22 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
|
I just got an updated version of Goodacre's “Prophecy Historicized or History Scripturized? Reflections on the Origin of the Crucifixion Narrative". I'd like to study it before I come back to Sanders.
|
04-16-2007, 10:15 AM | #23 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Quote:
I suspect you have misread what Ken Olson said about what Goodacre thinks in that XTalk thread. Ben. |
|
04-17-2007, 08:21 AM | #24 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
|
You are right Ben.
I think I have arrived at a judgement on this matter. There are three approaches scholars take regarding the correspondences between the gospels like Mark and the OT. 1. Evidence of creativity off OT sources (e.g. Sanders and Crossan). 2. Evangelists narrating events using OT language or framework. 3. Jesus acting out what he had read in the OT to signify to onlookers that he was the messiah (Sanders). I think (2) and (3) are unreliable interpretations because they lack boundaries and ultimately the exegete resorts to pick-and-choose methodology. In this thread, I am interested in (3) - which is the one Sanders employs in interpreting some acts of Jesus. Sander's approach ignores the fact that the evangelists were faced with liturgical needs, narrative needs, polemical needs, theological and apologetic influences. That alone knocks out that approach. The explanatory power of this approach fails when one considers literary and text-critical issues like the triptychs and doublets - for example, Ludemann's argument that the Sanhedrin trial is a doublet of the trial before Pilate. Turton presents the doublet as appears in the image below: http://www.angelfire.com/empire/intensity/doublet.jpg Can both of these be considered historical? As noted earlier, events like the crucifixion scene where Jesus' garments are torn, as is prophecized in Psalms are simply implausible because they involve many people and unless there is a play in progress and a script being followed, that scene is fictional. Where does that leave us? Pick and choose. My verdict is that a multivaried approach has to be used. Sander's approach is too unreliable to yield any credible results. |
04-17-2007, 08:41 AM | #25 | ||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Quote:
On the one hand, Matthew 1-2 and Luke 1-2 narrate the birth narratives against an OT background, and I think you and I can agree that most of those narratives are probably invented. On the other hand, Luke 21 paints the fall of Jerusalem in OT colors. As Rick pointed out, Mark casts the death of John with OT images. Yet these events are, at core, historical. The indubitable failure of these two extremes to cover all options means that the truth must lie, as usual, somewhere in the middle. I can easily see using the OT parallelism to strike out many of the details. I do it myself. But to erase the entire event automatically, without further argument, is to use an all-or-nothing approach that is completely foreign to criticism (but right at home, interestingly, in fundamentalism). Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Ben. |
||||||
04-17-2007, 11:06 PM | #26 | |||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
|
Quote:
Quote:
JBap's death has historical weight because of MA. Other than multiple attestation Ben, what justification can we have for retaining the rest? Do you assign reliability to the embarrasment, dissimilarity, friend and foe criterions etc? Am trying to interrogate your methods. Am not sure I have advocated for an all-or-nothing approach but I am trying to see what your method is so that I can understand why it is (presumably) better than all-or-nothing. Quote:
Sanders himself condemns pick-and-choose methodology though he does it himself. Quote:
Quote:
|
|||||
04-18-2007, 06:43 AM | #27 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Quote:
As for the historical process of what I have called discerning, picking the good information out of the bad, and sifting and sorting, I refer you to Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History, page 143: Having accumulated his notes, the investigator must now separate the credible from the incredible. .... In detailed investigations few documents are significant as a whole; they serve most often only as mines from which to extract historical ore. Each bit of ore, however, may contain flaws of its own.Call it what you will, but this is what I was talking about. Ben. |
|
04-18-2007, 09:16 AM | #28 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
|
Quote:
Quote:
I think its incredible that Jesus' biological father was God as John and Matt indicate (immaculate conception). Does that mean that Jesus' pedigree was unknown or lacking? If not, who was his father? Do we pick Joseph yet the same books say it was God? And who was his mother - how do we know? Why should we believe that the mother of Jesus was called Mary? How do you decide what is credible and what is not? Fiction can be credible. So the fact that something is credible alone does not make it historical. I find the the trials at night very unlikely. For various reasons: 1. Trials were not to take place during the sabbath or festivals because these were days of rest. 2. Sentences were usually handed the following day, not the same day as the day of the trial. 3. Trials took place during the day not late evening. 4. The temple was closed at night and that was where the people (chief priests and scribes) would assemble for such purposes. 5. The priests would have been very busy on the eve of the festival and would be unwilling to gather for a trial. In addition, wine was regularly taken and that would have further made the sanhedrin unwilling to assemble for the trial. 6. Jewish penalty for blasphemy is not crucifixion but stoning. 7. The enemies of Jesus (Pharisees and Herodians) suddenly disappear and scribes take over and hand a death sentence to him. 8. The trial before the Sanhedrin is a doublet of the trial before Pilate Because of the above and contradictory behaviours of the individuals presented, scholars like Merz have proposed that Jesus was executed prior to the passover. 9. Why doesnt Mark name the high priest yet the Roman procurator in the scene is named? (Matt and Luke do their research and paste the name but why doesnt the first gospel name him?) My issue is, why believe he was tried at all if the trial generates so many questions and is so at odds with what was known? Give me reasons for believing there was any trial at all You do note that what is incredible and what isn't is influenced by our worldviews and interpretive frameworks right? The Historian Alun Munslow wrote that our interpretations on historical issues are mediated by the positions we adopt (implicitly), our preferred arguments through which we connect events, the nature of our inferences and the theories we invoke to refer to past reality. How do you shake off all this baggage from what he labels "credible"? If you cant, "credible" is simply an argument from personal credulity, which is not useful. Many people think evolution is incredible. So what? |
||
04-18-2007, 10:23 AM | #29 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
Quote:
2. The demanding tone you take (now, period) is the single best way to ensure I do not indulge you with an analysis. I am pretty stubborn that way. Ben. |
|
04-18-2007, 10:21 PM | #30 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
|
No problem Ben. Thanks for playing.
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|