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08-17-2009, 03:06 AM | #111 | ||||||||||
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You have to start from Paul, yet what you find is no necessary connection between what we learn from him and what we get in Mark at all. Quote:
(And, just to remind you, I'm not advocating mythicism.) That's because you're not doing history. Quote:
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Or 55-135. Quote:
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08-17-2009, 08:28 AM | #112 | |||
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At any rate, start with p46 and work your way backwards using the many external references. Then use Acts and the urgent eschatology and weave out a fit from there. Quote:
Needless to say, I don't read Paul the same way as you. If all I had was Paul I would be a bit confused but there are still historical references there. Historical details are not required by that medium though Doherty at least attempts to point out places where certain sayings, if Paul knew them, would have fit well. We use Paul but he doesn't provide much historical material so we go to our next earliest sources, Mark and Q. This is not democratic. Its source criticism. I was merely pointing out that we can possibly test the no or yes HJ in Paul theory by looking at other factors if we wanted to treat that initially in an agnostic sense. I do not treat it as such. And an early apologetical date for Mark is 40 or 50, not 65-75. That is the point, the pologists want it eyewitness and early and the anit-apologist who enjoys critiquing fundamentalists on the internet dates them at the complete opposite extreme. While most critical New Testament scholars have put it ca. 70 C.E. Vinnie |
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08-17-2009, 09:31 AM | #113 | |||||||||||||
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Did you notice me telling you that tradition is not a good source of historical data at some stage? Quote:
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Did you think you were answering the question I asked? If so, perhaps I missed it. Quote:
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Rubbish, Vinnie. You are simply tarring one text with another whose relationship to the first you refuse to demonstrate. Quote:
Apologetics is like an onion: there are many layers. You cry at your layer. Quote:
You will not face the fact that what you are talking about is simply taking a better defensive position. More OEC rather than YEC. YECs are too obviously ratbags. There is a better defense to hold onto OEC. You can tell me with a straight face that you know that Mark was written 65-75 C.E. when you have only a paltry fudge to give you such a date. I must admit that I don't know when Mark was written. I assume on the torn curtain that it was post-temple destruction, but it could be with the loss of Jerusalem under Shimeon bar Kosibah. You could even be right about the date, but you can't know, though you can kid yourself. spin |
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08-17-2009, 11:12 AM | #114 | |
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In fact, it was so urgent that nobody had time to ask James about his brother. In fact, there is no evidence that these people existed, so an excuse has to be found why all these people are missing from recollections of Christians writing in the first century, apart from in anonymous , unprovenanced Gospels which can tell you even how scared Mary Magdalene was - although the very name is missing from Christian works which have some provenance. |
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08-17-2009, 05:29 PM | #115 | |
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Author(s): Bart D. Ehrman Source: Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 109, No. 3 (Autumn, 1990), pp. 463-474 Published by: The Society of Biblical Literature Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3267052 Accessed: 03/08/2009 00:34 But see also the older work: The Cephas-Peter Problem, and a Possible Solution Author(s): Donald W. Riddle Source: Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 59, No. 2 (Jun., 1940), pp. 169-180 Published by: The Society of Biblical Literature Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3262521 Accessed: 31/07/2009 02:25 Vinnie |
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08-18-2009, 01:00 AM | #116 |
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08-19-2009, 11:49 AM | #117 |
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Peter and Cephas: One and the Same
Author(s): Dale C. Allison, Jr. Source: Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 111, No. 3 (Autumn, 1992), pp. 489-495 Published by: The Society of Biblical Literature Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3267263 Accessed: 19/08/2009 14:20 Direct critique of Ehrman. I found that incidentally today while searching for articles on the Epistula Apostolorum and that came up, for obvious reasons. I only skimmed it but I will read it later. Always good to see two sides of the story. |
08-19-2009, 11:58 AM | #118 | |
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