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09-20-2011, 06:36 AM | #1 | |||||||
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Doherty's Defence of Q
As promised, I posted my analysis of Earl's argument for Q on my blog.
Here are excerpts: Quote:
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Jiri |
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09-20-2011, 11:58 AM | #2 |
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IMO the real problem with Earl Doherty's use of Q is not his belief in its existence, which I think is probably correct. The real problem is his use of speculative ideas about the supposed strata of this hypothetical document. This does seem to be piling hypothesis upon hypothesis.
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09-20-2011, 02:21 PM | #3 | |
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You ACCUSE Doherty of "piling hypothesis upon hypothesis" but you are PILING ON your own hypothesis of "Q'. Please, please, please. Let us deal with the EXTANT evidence until "Q" is found. Why do people here think "Q" will support ONLY their theory? |
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09-20-2011, 02:39 PM | #4 | |
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1) minor agreements, 2) Luke's order, redactional cuts 3) alternating primitivity, 4) editorial fatigue ? Thanks. Jiri |
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09-20-2011, 02:40 PM | #5 |
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I always looked at Q as an alternative to saying that Matt and Luke made crap up, to suit their own particular beliefs.
Q seems to require a certain assumption that I am not sure is necessary, perhaps even a bit circular. |
09-21-2011, 09:00 AM | #6 | ||
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However, I do believe there are traditions in Matthew which he did not invent but either transmitted from oral traditions or commented on as Jesus. IOW, I would not promote the view that his gospel was composition ex nihilo as reaction to Mark. Some of the sayings have an authentic ring to them. Not because they are particularly profound theologically but because seem to reflect the what-me-worry amoral attitude that Paul and Mark would have censured. Sayings like 'foxes have holes', 'take no thought for the morrow', 'behold the fowls' are thematically a tradition cluster which is consistent with the lifestyle of the itinerant preachers and may have well come from one mouth given they bespeak a metaphoric style. There is also a rebellious, anti-nomian edge to some which comes into full relief in the "let the dead bury their dead", and in "who does not hate their mother and father, cannot be my disciple". I think this last saying, was more authentically picked up by Luke (as the core was preserved by Thomas) precisely because of the nasty edge of it was blunted by Matthew who changes it to "he who loves [them] more than me". Matthew - forever the righteous one - evidently sided with Mark on this score and repeated his anathema (Mk 7:10/Mt 15:4), even with the inauthentic addition of "let him surely die" to Deut 5:16. Mark of course shamed him into it, with his outrageous recitation by Jesus of the decalogue, adding a new commandment "do not defraud" before "honour your father and mother". Luke on the other hand does not explain how one honors one's parents if one is to hate them in order to follow Jesus. So, traditions there were, but I am not sure where the Q-theorists feel they have the ground to insist there was a written document. Quote:
Best, Jiri |
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09-21-2011, 11:51 AM | #7 | |
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One problem IMHO with the minor agreements is that a number may be textual issues. IE in a number of places the original text of Matthew probably did not agree with the original text of Luke against the original text of Mark. However textual corruption has meant that for example while originally Luke and Mark agreed against Matthew, our current text of Luke has been 'corrected' to agree with Matthew and hence disagree with Mark. Andrew Criddle |
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09-21-2011, 03:24 PM | #8 | ||
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Do we have examples of this type of assimilation, which are supported by manuscript evidence ? Or are these in bulk mostly "conjectural emendations" that Goodacre discounts, as an example of one unprovable hypothesis fixing the problems of another ? Best, Jiri |
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09-21-2011, 07:23 PM | #9 | ||
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09-21-2011, 08:07 PM | #10 | |||||
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Jiri, your ‘rebuttal’ to my chapters on Q was a waste of time, both for yourself and for everyone here. You failed to discredit a single argument of mine in favor of Q and against the Luke used Matthew scenario. Instead, there was a heavy reliance on snide comment with very little of substance to accompany it.
Sorry if you saw me as guilty of “poor form” in some of my language, but voicing that opinion does not constitute a counter-argument. Quote:
And you may not have been able to grasp the common sense necessity in giving the reader a basic idea of what Q is and what it contains before discussing the validity of its hypothesized existence, but I daresay others can. For the question of the existence of Q to be at all understandable, the reader has to know what we are talking about; the arguments against Goodacre’s contentions, for example, inevitably rely on having established some concept of what Q contains. Sorry if all that was beyond your grasp. Your objection does not constitute a counter-argument. Just a sneer. As for Occam’s Razor, I was addressing myself to those who actually say that the ‘simpler’ explanation with the least elements ought to win the day. Period. My analogy showed up the ludicrous nature of that argument. Your posturing on what would actually happen in a murder trial is irrelevant, since I was hardly pressing the analogy to that extent. This was more padding on your part, and did nothing to actually counter the principle I was making, let alone offer any definitive insight on how Occam’s Razor should be applied to the question of Q—other, that is, than the simplistic and too-common handling of it I was aiming to discredit. I notice you throwing in more sneering comments like “inexpert” in regard to my readers. Once again, no counter-argument in evidence here. Quote:
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I am reminded of a similar desperation from those who regard the Johannine epistles as written later than the Gospel of John, and have to try to explain how the lofty and powerful hymn to the Logos which opens the Gospel could possibly have been reduced to the 'prologue' of 1 John. Quote:
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Once again, other than offering alternate ‘explanations’ for the problems in Luke using Matthew, none of which are based on any perceivable textual evidence but only on the claim that, well, they could theoretically be so, Jiri has offered absolutely nothing by way of counter-argument or rebuttal to my defense of Q in Jesus: Neither God Nor Man. But that’s no surprise. It’s consistent with his usual fare. Earl Doherty |
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