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Old 01-20-2009, 05:36 PM   #21
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On the idea that it would have been too difficult to make a change in all existing copies of Paul's letters, see:

Interpolations in the Pauline Letters (or via: amazon.co.uk) by William O. Walker, also on google books, summarized and reviewed here:
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The idea that Christians suppressed all variant texts of Paul's letters is rejected by some as a conspiracy theory, but Walker points out that Marcion's version is missing. [If Marcion's version of Paul's letters could be suppressed, so could other variant texts.]

...

All we know is that the surviving text is the text promoted and perhaps produced by the winners in the struggles of the 2nd and 3rd centuries. The capacity of Christians to suppress manuscripts is shown by the example of Tatian's Diatesseron, which the Syrian episcopate made a determined effort to put an end to, so that no copy has survived except for a single leaf of vellum.

An additional factor supporting the possibility that orthodox Christians successfully eliminated any variant copies of Paul's letters is that the church of 180 was more centralized and united that it had been before or after, so the emerging orthodox leadership was in a position to standardize texts.

For those who reject anything like a conspiracy theory, Robert Price has proposed that scribes would try to err on the side of inclusiveness and always copy the longer version, so as not to lose anything precious. This would lead eventually to the longest versions surviving, with all interpolations.
So, what is a variant of Paul's letters? Those with Jesus or those without?

If it cannot be established what the letter writer wrote originally, then no variant can be truly identified.

And if is claimed that "the church of 180 was more centralized and united that it had been before or after", was this finding based on information that was suppressed?

If the church suppresed information, then the information we have today about the church itself may be erroneous, giving the false notion that they were centralized and united when they may have really been fragmented and weak.
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Old 01-20-2009, 06:04 PM   #22
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or.. the term "Christ" identified the priesthood as the anointed ones.......
"Ye have been made a kingdom of priests on the earth.".......
"Christ" identified the many priests as one body of men separated unto God. Whereas the OT uses the term "anointed", the NT uses the term "Christ".
Your obsevation brings to mind these;

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So we, many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another. (Romans 12:5)
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1Cr 12:12 For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also [is] Christ. (1 Cor 12;12)
(the "so also [is]" is crudely contrived in English)

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1Cr 12:27 Now you are the body of Christ, and members in particular. (1 Cor 12;27)
And there are more similar examples. The term "Christian" by definition means "anointed ones", and of them it is also said ;
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But you [are] a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, (1Pet 2:9)
It hangs together, but that in itself is no indication that the claims have any basis in reality.
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Old 01-20-2009, 09:04 PM   #23
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I don't see how you can put forward a theory of interpolation without some kind of evidence. It won't do to put forward the argument simply because you need it to support another thesis.

But I don't think this particular argument is in need of such a thesis anyway. From what I understand, the name "Jesus" or "Yeshua" in Hebrew means "savior." So the term, "Jesus Christ" means "savior messiah" and I don't see why it couldn't be argued that the two words combined constitute a title rather than a name and a title.

Of course, there are other problems with the mythical Jesus thesis. I think this is a minor one even if one assumes that "Jesus" is a name.
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Old 01-20-2009, 10:26 PM   #24
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I don't see how you can put forward a theory of interpolation without some kind of evidence. It won't do to put forward the argument simply because you need it to support another thesis.

But I don't think this particular argument is in need of such a thesis anyway. From what I understand, the name "Jesus" or "Yeshua" in Hebrew means "savior." So the term, "Jesus Christ" means "savior messiah" and I don't see why it couldn't be argued that the two words combined constitute a title rather than a name and a title.

Of course, there are other problems with the mythical Jesus thesis. I think this is a minor one even if one assumes that "Jesus" is a name.
Documents are not self authenticating. There is no presumption that a document is not interpolated or fictional or forgery. The proponent of any document has to provide evidence that the writing is reliable before it should be relied upon.

We do not have the originals. We do not know what they originally contained. We know that they contain interpolations.

Paul's epistles were not mentioned until Eusebius. There is no evidence that they ever circulated before the 4th century. No copy of Paul's epistles have carbon dated before the 10th century. There is no reasonable evidence that the epistles attributed to Paul were written before the 4th century.

Most of the epistles attributed to Paul are believed to be forgeries, and there is no reason to think that the rest are not forgeries.

Still, for someone to honestly claim that the originals did not contain the name Jesus, and that all references to Jesus added later, they would have to provide evidence that its true. What is the evidence for that claim?
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Old 01-20-2009, 11:21 PM   #25
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Most of the epistles attributed to Paul are believed to be forgeries, and there is no reason to think that the rest are not forgeries.

Still, for someone to honestly claim that the originals did not contain the name Jesus, and that all references to Jesus added later, they would have to provide evidence that its true. What is the evidence for that claim?
Here's my thought: Paul could have been, seems to have been, writing about a mythical messiah. If so, he wouldn't have had a name, Jesus, just a title, Christ. It's unlikely that the phrase Jesus Christ would have been edited to Christ. I can conceive, however, that the term Jesus could have been altered to Jesus Christ in several places.

As has been pointed out previously, Christ cults/groups were not uncommon, and Paul's literature likely sprang out of the current religious thought of his period, rather as the Book of Mormon sprang out of the current religious thought of Joseph Smith's time.
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Old 01-21-2009, 01:08 AM   #26
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...
Paul's epistles were not mentioned until Eusebius. ..
Just stop there. Paul's epistles were mentioned well before Eusebius. What is the basis of this claim?
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Old 01-21-2009, 06:49 AM   #27
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In his writings, did Paul say Jesus (Christ) or Christ?
In all the extant manuscripts, he says both.

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Is it possible that all references to Jesus were interpolated later by scribes 'fixing the error'? IOW, that Paul wrote of a mythical Christ, never identifying him by a name?
Possible? Yes.

Probable? Let's see some evidence.
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Old 01-21-2009, 08:04 AM   #28
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Always a problem, as just about every early church writing that is ascribed to a time before Eusebius, is "authenticated" by reference to Eusebius's and the latter church's writings and "quotations". There seem to be no actual surviving canonical manuscripts that date back to the times when they are alleged to have actually been written, in general circulation, and well known.
And almost everything we do have that is allegedly from that time, has been supplied to us by documents provided by Eusebius and the post-Nicean "catholic" church.

This is the problem that I briefly touched on back in post #14. Clement of Rome, who is by church tradition, allegedly the 4th Pope of the "catholic" church, writing from Rome to the church in Corinth, evidently did not have any copies of the so-called "New Testement" writings at his disposal, for although he uses some similar sounding language in his writing, he never once directly quotes even a single verse as it is found in the latter canonical works, even those New Testement books that are supposedly in wide circulation, and at the very foundations of the church's teachings, and of all Christian doctrine, and which if so, Clement would have been hearing, carefully reading, and accurately committing to memory, all through his rise to that most prominent position.
Now how does one explain that in light of Christian church acceptance of Clement as being an authentic example of an early "Church Father", one whom by Catholic teaching, was the head man over the entire Christian church?
Number one man in the entire Christian church, and evidently even he doesn't have a single actual NT book in his possession from which to draw his words, or to instruct others out of by saying; "have you not read what Matthew wrote in...."?
(Not even so much as a reference to the more general "Memories of the Apostles" as they are referred to latter on)
Of course he doesn't, because they have never seen, heard, or known of any such authoritative New Testement books either.

Richard Carrier noted in his "Formation of The New Testament Canon"
Quote:
The first Christian text that did not become canonized but was respected as authentic is the first epistle of Clement of Rome, reasonably dated to 95 A.D. (M 40), and contained in many ancient Bibles and frequently read and regarded as scripture in many churches (M 187-8). This is relevant because even at this late date two things are observed: Clement never refers to any Gospel, but frequently refers to various epistles of Paul. Yet he calls them wise counsel, not scripture--he reserves this authority for the OT ("Old Testament"), which he cites over a hundred times (M 41-3). On a few occasions he quotes Jesus, without referring to any written source. But his quotations do not correspond to anything in any known written text, although they resemble sayings in the Gospels close enough to have derived from the same oral tradition.
This suggests that the Gospels were not known to Clement. Yet he was a prominent leader of the Church in Rome.
If they had been written by then, they must have not made it to Rome before 95.
It is possible that they had not been written at all.
Thus it seems far more likely that the writings of Clement and of other early Christian church fathers, were latter combined with one or more Jewish "sayings" documents to produce those documents called The Gospels, and these, along with the heavily modified "Pauline" and "pseudo-Pauline" epistles, fabricated over the next three centuries, became the official canon of the "Christian Scriptures"
Which was then presented to a gullible world (with the edge of Imperial Roman swords) as all being legitimate literary works from the first century.

Of course all of this is to be weighed against claims like rhutchin's, that quite disingenuously imply that there were so many copies of the NT in circulation within the first century that it would have been an "enormous" task to make any changes.
No, the very fact that few deviations from the canonical forms can be found, to me, points to a late date of composition, at a time when The Church could both create and maintain a stringent control over the contents.
If the Gospel stories had originated in truth, and by way of recitation, and by means of natural, free and unfettered distribution as it is claimed to have been done, hundreds of widely varying texts would normally be expected to have resulted.
The church did not need to engage the Herculean task of seeking out and destroying great numbers of earlier "non-conforming" Gospel texts, simply because such developed texts had never existed in the first place.

It is time to, at long last, put the horse in front of the cart.
The Gospels did not create or influence the church, but the (Roman) church created the influence of The Gospels.
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Old 01-21-2009, 09:06 AM   #29
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Is it possible that all references to Jesus were interpolated later by scribes 'fixing the error'? IOW, that Paul wrote of a mythical Christ, never identifying him by a name?
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Originally Posted by Doug Shaver View Post
Possible? Yes.

Probable? Let's see some evidence.
I'm trying to 'expand' the possibilities to the widest selection before narrowing or eliminating any. I'm not saying this is the 'one true' way the books were written. Maybe there are references to Jesus which cannot be construed as interpolations?
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Old 01-21-2009, 09:14 AM   #30
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Always a problem, as just about every early church writing that is ascribed to a time before Eusebius, is "authenticated" by reference to Eusebius's and the latter church's writings and "quotations". There seem to be no actual surviving canonical manuscripts that date back to the times when they are alleged to have actually been written, in general circulation, and well known.
And almost everything we do have that is allegedly from that time, has been supplied to us by documents provided by Eusebius and the post-Nicean "catholic" church.

This is the problem that I briefly touched on back in post #14. Clement of Rome, who is by church tradition, allegedly the 4th Pope of the "catholic" church, writing from Rome to the church in Corinth, evidently did not have any copies of the so-called "New Testement" writings at his disposal, for although he uses some similar sounding language in his writing, he never once directly quotes even a single verse as it is found in the latter canonical works, even those New Testement books that are supposedly the very foundations of the church's teachings, and of all Christian doctrine, which if so, Clement would have been hearing, carefully reading, and accurately committing to memory, all through his rise to that prominent position.
Now how does one explain that in light of Christian church acceptance of Clement as being an authentic example of an early "Church Father", one whom by Catholic teaching, was the head man over the entire Christian church?
Number one man in the entire Christian church, and evidently even he doesn't have a single actual NT book in his possession from which to draw his words, or to instruct others out of by saying; "have you not read what Paul wrote in..., or what the Apostle wrote in...."?
Of course he doesn't, because they have never seen, heard, or known of any such authoritative New Testement books either.

Richard Carrier noted in his "Formation of The New Testament Canon"
Quote:
The first Christian text that did not become canonized but was respected as authentic is the first epistle of Clement of Rome, reasonably dated to 95 A.D. (M 40), and contained in many ancient Bibles and frequently read and regarded as scripture in many churches (M 187-8). This is relevant because even at this late date two things are observed: Clement never refers to any Gospel, but frequently refers to various epistles of Paul. Yet he calls them wise counsel, not scripture--he reserves this authority for the OT ("Old Testament"), which he cites over a hundred times (M 41-3). On a few occasions he quotes Jesus, without referring to any written source. But his quotations do not correspond to anything in any known written text, although they resemble sayings in the Gospels close enough to have derived from the same oral tradition. This suggests that the Gospels were not known to Clement. Yet he was a prominent leader of the Church in Rome. If they had been written by then, they must have not made it to Rome before 95. It is possible that they had not been written at all.
Thus it seems far more likely that the writings of Clement and of other early Christian church fathers, were latter combined with one or more Jewish "sayings" documents to produce those documents called The Gospels, and these, along with the heavily modified "Pauline" and "pseudo-Pauline" epistles, became the official canon of the "Christian Scriptures"
And were finally presented to a gullible world as being the literary works from the first century.

If all the documents we have from that time were alledgely supplied by Eusebius, then why do you think it is true or likely to be true that Clement wrote anything, that Clement was a bishop in Rome and there were jesus believers in Corinth as stated by Clement?

All documents from Eusebius must be challenged, their authenticity or veracity cannot be assumed.

I do not think the letter writer called Clement wrote in the 1st century, perhaps sometime in the second to the fourth century.
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