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06-28-2006, 02:43 PM | #111 | |
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Regarding Gal. 4:4 , I hope this is allowed...
Here is the passage from Tertullian's - Against Marcion, Book V.4 Quote:
This should be considered, in my opinion, evidence that the 'born of a woman'... was not in Marcion's version and that, for some reason, Tertullian didn't notice that it was missing. |
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06-28-2006, 03:04 PM | #112 | |
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In the light of what Tertullian says actually says, the quote is extremely good evidence that the absence of GENOMENON EK GUNAIKOS in Marcion's text is due to Marcion's excision of it from a text that originally had it. Moreover, Marcion thought that sex was part of the evil god's creation. This, along with Marcion's belief that Judaism was evil and that Jesus was the end of the Law, provide us with a strong motive on Marcion's part for wanting to excise the text. Jeffrey Gibson |
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06-28-2006, 03:51 PM | #113 |
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Dr. Gibson, do you have any evidence to show that Marcion's text was not the original? I assume that Tertullian is writing some time after Marcion's death, about 220AD. Is this correct?
In the quoted passage, Marcion doesn't say anything about Christ in the flesh. He seems to be arguing against the Marcion's demiurge. My point was that Marcion did not have this line as part of the passage. This seeming fact, and the issues that seem to be raised by Acts (eg. the subordination of Paul to the other Apostles, a position that Paul himself, through his own testimony, does not see himself in), that Paul really doesn't seem to ever dwell on fleshy Jesus, much less allude to him as a guy that recently walked around Palestine and that Paul was, to the best of my knowledge, pretty much the "patron" Apostle of the Marcionites, would all seem to prove Marcion priority, at least as being worthy of serious consideration. Especially when one regards the alternative position's evidence. |
06-28-2006, 03:58 PM | #114 |
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May we be very careful with our definition of Orthodox? We might be talking early 400's before it gets fixed! Plenty of time for iterations because of yes buts and arguments in the Turkish Baths!
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06-28-2006, 04:20 PM | #115 | |
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Maybe Paul was not a Jew, and his original writings where straight mystery religion type of stuff. It was later picked up by Marcion and ended up as part of the church canon, long after Paul had anything to say about it. And on another note. Was Marcion's version of Luke the first Gospel we have any record of being alluded to by the early church fathers? |
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06-28-2006, 05:19 PM | #116 | |||||
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Ben. |
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06-28-2006, 05:58 PM | #117 |
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Here I have been seeing some major burden shifting. The mythicist's case doesn't stand on any particular explanation for "Born of a woman","seed of David", "kata sarka" and/or "Brother of the Lord". The historicist's case does, it's the historicist that has to show those phrases' inclusion in our extant epistles can only be explained by Paul's understanding that Jesus was a human who lived and was crucified a few years earlier. The mythicist only has to show that that is not the only possible explanation.
The mythicist's case does not rest upon those phrases having only one possible explanation, the historicist's case however.... does. |
06-28-2006, 06:27 PM | #118 | |
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The historicist case has more room. "Brother of the Lord" can be a title for a man who was regarded as a spiritual brother to the Lord, and the Lord himself can still be a human Jesus. "KATA SARKA" can be translated "sphere of flesh" and still denote either a life on earth or in the celestial spheres. "Born of woman" can be translated as "come of woman" or "made of woman" and still mean an earthly Jesus. |
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06-28-2006, 06:58 PM | #119 | |
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06-28-2006, 07:42 PM | #120 | ||
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