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06-21-2006, 02:49 PM | #731 | |
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Paul may have visited a few stalwart members of the "church of God" in the city. And they probably talked theology into the night. But that's not evidence of a thriving community. A tiny, struggling one, perhaps. Didymus |
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06-21-2006, 03:45 PM | #732 | ||
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Do you suppose linguists in 2000 years will look at the previous sentence as referring to a horse that's kata sarka? Spiritual, Physical or Fictitious? Quote:
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06-21-2006, 10:22 PM | #733 | |||||||||
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06-22-2006, 11:26 AM | #734 | ||||
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Yes, the connection seems to have been made without difficulty, at least among gentiles and God-fearers in the Diaspora. It seems to have been an idea whose time had come. Of course, Palestine Jews were written off early on. They knew firsthand that something was fishy. Quote:
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If it's taken literally, Gal 1.19 is almost as troublesome to the "virtual MJ" idea as it is to standard MJ theory, to which it's fatal, IMO. So far, I have not found any "difficulty" in VMJ that's more problematic than BOTL. (This does not say that there isn't one lurking in the bushes!) AFAIK, this is the only time in the entire NT where the writer claims to have met with a living, breathing eyewitness to Jesus' life. So it's very tempting to view it as an abberation, a fluke of some kind. A well-evidenced interpolation theory would solve a lot of problems, so I'd certainly like to hear your reasons for tossing Gal 1.19 into the Pseudegraphia Dumpster. Can you cite sources on this? But, assuming that we must take it literally or "near" literally, how can it be explained in light of the virtual MJ idea? It seems like we're once again forced to conjure up unevidenced scenarios. But at least in virtual MJ Paul is allowed to think of Jesus as a human being. (As George Bush might unabashedly point out, human beings have brothers!) Here are some possibilities: Scenario 1. Literal: James was the surviving brother of the man who was crucified. As the stories surrounding his brother grew, he carried on in Jerusalem as a church leader. Leaving aside the "stories" part, that's the standard Protestant Christian position, minus certain implications (see below). But wait! The virtual MJ idea posits that Jesus' actual life story was unknown. Wouldn't James have known about his brother's life? Wouldn't he have confirmed historicity and corrected false beliefs? The answer is "not necessarily." At least not unless we work from a whole boatload of weak assumptions: all brothers keep in touch; all brothers are raised together; all brothers know what has happened to their siblings over the years. In fact, it's possible, if unevidenced, that the first time James met his brother Jesus as an adult, was in Jerusalem just before the Trial. But there's a problem with this, too. Neither Paul nor the gospel authors hint at such a "long lost brother" scenario. Scenario 2. Near-literal: James, a leading figure in Jerusalem when Jesus arrived there, realized that this saintly man was in trouble and tried to protect him in a brotherly fashion. To accomplish that, he could have even claimed Jesus was his brother. In either Scenario, VMJ permits Paul to refer to James as "the brother of the Lord" without implying that he met with a man who had been Jesus' companion during his earthly ministry in Galilee. And of course, there'd be no worries about Paul claiming to have met the brother of a mythical being. Whenever it's necessary to speculate like this, it's a problem for the theory. But no Jesus theory is without such difficulty. As I've said, at this stage this approach to BOTL seems to me the least problematic. And there may be other VMJ-friendly approaches that I haven't thought of. Quote:
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06-22-2006, 12:24 PM | #735 | ||||||||
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The former, inasmuch as the allegedly preserved "memory" doesn't exist. It has turned out to be fiction derived from the OT and other ahistorical sources. Quote:
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06-23-2006, 12:40 AM | #736 | ||
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06-23-2006, 12:54 AM | #737 |
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Didymus, regarding 1 Galations 1:18-20:
Here it is from the NIV, starting at verse 17: 17nor did I go up to Jerusalem to see those who were apostles before I was, but I went immediately into Arabia and later returned to Damascus. 18Then after three years, I went up to Jerusalem to get acquainted with Peter and stayed with him fifteen days. 19I saw none of the other apostles—only James, the Lord's brother. 20I assure you before God that what I am writing you is no lie. Verse 20 is referrencing verse 19 and (maybe 18 well). Why does Paul need to add verse 20? He makes no other comment regarding this so called "Lord's brother" and this so-called meeting was made irrelevant, especially in light of verses 11-12: 11I want you to know, brothers, that the gospel I preached is not something that man made up. 12I did not receive it from any man, nor was I taught it; rather, I received it by revelation from Jesus Christ. The other odd thing is what Paul says in verses 22-23, which could read, "And was unknown by face to the churches...": 22I was personally unknown to the churches of Judea that are in Christ. 23They only heard the report: "The man who formerly persecuted us is now preaching the faith he once tried to destroy." 24And they praised God because of me. Verse 21 seems to break the flow, since verse 22-23 seem to refer back to verse 18 and seem not break the flow if 18-20 weren't originally there: 21Later I went to Syria and Cilicia. In Galations 2:1 the word "again" [palin] would then also be an addition. The account of the meeting with the "Pillars" and the events surrounding it seem more like a first meeting. If Paul had, indeed, met Peter earlier, it doesn't seem like they actually spoke about their "gospels". Which would also seem strange considering who these guys were. I think that verses 18-20 are a later interpolation that the Orthodoxy used to "rehabilitate" Paul of the letters to the Paul of Acts. |
06-23-2006, 03:22 AM | #738 | |
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Frank R. McGuire: Did Paul write Galatians? 1967-68 http://www.radikalkritik.de/in_engl.htm I don't think that, at this time, it is necessary to go quite as far with the argument as McGuire, but he does raise valid points concerning the whole Paul/Jerusalem problem. This and the issues I point to in my previous post should lead one to at least seriously consider interpolation as likely. |
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06-23-2006, 05:35 AM | #739 |
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Didymus, I read the Ben C. Smith's argument in the link you provided. Though his argument could make sense if the passage is original (even in this case it would not be conclusive), he completely fails to address (from what I read), what is evidently, a strong case for interpolation in Galatians.
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06-23-2006, 08:14 AM | #740 | |
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I must admit I'm favorably disposed, since an interpolated Galatians would eliminate (what I think at this stage is) the biggest difficulty with VMJ. But that's obviously not a sound reason to accept McGuire. It has to stand or fall on its own merits. Didymus |
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