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11-04-2005, 12:59 PM | #11 | |||
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11-04-2005, 04:28 PM | #12 | |
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In this case, if Matthew had either a blindfold or two different groups in mind, he forgot to tell the reader. I pondered the passage for months before you mentioned how Goulder handled it, and I probably never would have lighted on his solution without him (or your reference to him). That looks to me like a deficiency in the Matthean prose, a gap that happens to be filled in nicely in Mark and Luke. It appears to me that any of the usual examples of fatigue could be neutralized if we are allowed to fill in the gaps as Goulder has done. It is easy enough, for instance, and quite plausible, to imagine Jesus entering a house some time before Matthew 12.46. Yet Matthew does not mention it; ergo, fatigue. The missing blindfold looks like the missing house to me. Matthew took spitting on him and covering his face and elided it quite naturally to spit on his face, skipping the blindfold. Or so it seems to me so far, at any rate. Ben. |
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11-04-2005, 07:57 PM | #13 |
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My own view is that there is no Q and not one saying goes back to Jesus. The writer of Mark dipped into the common pool of Hellenistic and Jewish wisdom, extracting out sayings known to many. Matthew, who obviously spent many an hour puzzling Mark out, and who was a lot dumber, went to that same pool and grabbed more.
For me the significant overlap is the Baalzebub one, on my site here. Essentially I argue that the writer of Mark often signals his borrowings by citing passages elsewhere in the Gospel. Baalzebub is the object of only one reference in the OT, in a passage that the writer uses twice. Hence my suspicion that it is original to Mark. Hence my conclusion that "Q" is actually Mark, expanded by Matthew and Luke. Andrew Criddle, who always comes to the conversation equipped with a large bucket of cold water, pointed out that the Septuagint spells Baalzebub differently than the Gospels do, and thus the writer might not be pointing back there. But the one Vinnie raises is another good one. Dale Allison (1998) has argued that the Temptation story is a reading of the Myth of the Fall. "In paradise Adam lived in peace with the animals and was guarded and/or honored by angels. There too he was fed by angels or (according to another tradition) ate the food of angels, manna. But after succumbing to the temptation of the serpent he was cast out (the verb is ekebalon in Gen 3:24 LXX). This sequence of events is turned upside down in Mark. Jesus is first cast out. Then he is tempted. Then he gains companionship with the animals and the service of angels."(p187-8) The writer of Mark is the only one who preserves all the elements in inverted order. The others all omit and change the order. The Markan version is the original and correct one -- the preservation of the inverted parallel shows the origin of the passage, in the creativity of the writer of Mark, not the manuscripts of Q. Vorkosigan |
11-05-2005, 01:06 AM | #14 | ||
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So my question is, do verbatim agreements in Mark//Q overlaps undermine the rationale for Marcan priority to begin with? If they do then it would seem that a simpler way of explaining triple agreements under Marcan priority where Matthew and Luke also agree against Mark (the overlap passages) is by positing a direct relationship between Matthew and Luke. Of course Matthew still could have had access to a sayings document or sayings documents and other special traditions (Luke as well). Quote:
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11-05-2005, 05:47 AM | #15 |
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For clarification, one of the phrases in my post, if Matthew had either a blindfold or two different groups in mind, should read if Matthew had either a blindfold or two different positions in mind.
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11-05-2005, 08:50 AM | #16 | |||
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11-05-2005, 09:02 AM | #17 | |
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(I suppose Goulder's approach to this parallel, however, eliminates Matt 26:68 as a possible example of editorial fatigue in redacting Mark, but the main interest over this parallel has been accounting for the Minor Agreement, not evidence for fatigue.) Stephen |
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11-05-2005, 09:56 AM | #18 | ||
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Farmer, IIRC, has a rather different take on why Matthew 26.68 stands on its own, does he not? Ben. |
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11-05-2005, 10:21 AM | #19 | ||
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Yet Mark, while not logically necessary, is there; we have it in writing. Is some sayings text or tradition (calling it Q might mislead the reader), while not logically necessary, perhaps there too, but without the good fortune of having been preserved for posterity? For me it is the internal evidence that sometimes points to a sayings source of some kind. I would be very interested to read the Farrer response to what Kloppenborg, for example, argues at Matthew 10.24-39. I have a chart drawn up on my site, and it certainly looks to me like Matthew copying from either Luke or some sayings text makes sense while Luke copying from Matthew seems arbitrary (dispersing the units into five blocks, but keeping them all in the same order throughout his gospel). Also, it looks to me like Matthew had some text or tradition very much like Luke 14.15-24 in front of him when he decided to distort the story into the muddle that we now have at Matthew 22.1-13. In the broadest sense, no, a sayings source is not externally necessary if Luke knew Matthew (or if Matthew knew Luke, for that matter), but certain internal details IMHO may demand some kind of third-party vector. Ben. |
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11-05-2005, 11:36 AM | #20 | |
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