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Old 11-25-2003, 11:16 AM   #41
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Originally posted by Vinnie
This actually presents a good stand alone argument on the dangers of some appeals to "it looks like x would have mentioned this" in arguments for interpolation.

The same thought occured to me. Thanks to MW for bringing this to my attention.
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Old 11-25-2003, 11:20 AM   #42
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Originally posted by Vinnie
Marcion interpolated it

Vinnie
I know you think this is a joke, but I'm sure that Layman believes that Marcion made significant changes in his versions of Paul's letters to fit his heretical opinions. And we know that Marcion was anti-Jewish. Why is this not a good possibility?
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Old 11-25-2003, 11:26 AM   #43
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I know you think this is a joke, but I'm sure that Layman believes that Marcion made significant changes in his versions of Paul's letters to fit his heretical opinions. And we know that Marcion was anti-Jewish. Why is this not a good possibility?
Because, as Tertullian establishes, the orthodox Church had its own versions of 1 Thess. and knew how they differed from Marcion's. Yet he is quite clear that the passage we have today was in the manuscripts he was using to combat Marcionism.

And Marcion is better known for altering words or cutting out swaths of passages he did not like. I'm not aware that he was accused of interpolating multipe passages. Could you provide some references to that effect? I'd honestly be interested in them.
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Old 11-25-2003, 11:39 AM   #44
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Marcion made significant changes in his versions of Paul's letters to fit his heretical opinions. And we know that Marcion was anti-Jewish. Why is this not a good possibility?
Thats why I brought it up. I am well aware of the editorial activity of Marcion. But yes, I do consider the thesis that Marcion made it up as a defense for interpolation to be a joke for a number of reasons.

The primary reason being that it is methodologically flawed. First and foremost comes a discussion of Paul. The fact that a text agrees with a later author's views does not give one grounds to argue "interpolation" if it is consistent with the other author's views. They just agree.

If its not inconsistent with Pauline thought and so on there is no reason to toy around with Marcion. You have to provide good reason that it should be viewed as an inteprolation before moving on to candidates for interpolation. Marcion is only valid as a candidate once we have determined the passage is an interpolation but that is precisely the issue at hand here and Layman has argued that it pre-existed Marcion as well anyways so its a moot point. See his latest post.

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Old 11-25-2003, 11:43 AM   #45
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I know that the usual story is that Marcion charged his opponents with interpolations and his opponents charged Marcion with cutting out what he did not like. But why could Marcion not have added this? Tertullian might have just accepted it into his edition.

If you believe that Tertullian would never invent or alter a text, I guess you'd believe anything.

But I'm running out of time and will have to take this up again after the holidays.
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Old 11-25-2003, 11:48 AM   #46
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You are going on vacation or something aren't you? If so, have fun and happy Thanksgiving

If the stuffing is a little bland interpolate a little salt and pepper into it when no one is looking

Vommoe
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Old 11-25-2003, 11:50 AM   #47
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Quote:
Originally posted by Toto
I know that the usual story is that Marcion charged his opponents with interpolations and his opponents charged Marcion with cutting out what he did not like. But why could Marcion not have added this? Tertullian might have just accepted it into his edition.

If you believe that Tertullian would never invent or alter a text, I guess you'd believe anything.

But I'm running out of time and will have to take this up again after the holidays.
Nothing but generalities from you, Toto. Offer some substance if you really want to participate in the discussion.

You are speculating with no evidence or even discussion that Marcion invents this passage that was in NO manuscripts before, then Tertullian likes it so much that he takes this from his most bitter heretic foe and added it to the sacred scriptures he is defending from that foe. And Tertullian does this in a public argument against Marcion's altering the scritpures, even though his audience would have had their own versions of Thess. and known that Tertullian was copying from Marcion! But wait, there is more. Tertullian, though loving this passage so much he adopts it from a hereitic, cannot go so far as to include the part about the prophets being "their own." For some unknown reason, the statement that the prophets were the Jews "own" goes too far for Tertullian and he denounces Marcion publically for changing "the" to "their own" while he's busy coopting the entire passage.

This is going to become a habit for me. LOL!
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Old 11-25-2003, 12:04 PM   #48
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Originally posted by Vinnie
So, does Cyprian also fail to cite Rom 11:3 as well?

It should be noted that Rom 11:3 is as follows:

"Lord, they have killed your prophets and torn down your altars; I am the only one left, and they are trying to kill me"

This cites 1 Kings 19:10,14

...

He doesn't cite Kings, Romans or Thess here on this in any way shape or form though he knows all three.
What are you talking about? Cyprian most certainly cites 1 Kings 19 in this passage (although it appears he is using a different numbering system)
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Also in the third book of the Kings, Elias saith unto the Lord: "In being jealous I have been jealous for the Lord God Almighty; because the children of Israel have forsaken Thee, have demolished Thine altars, and have slain Thy prophets with the sword; and I have remained solitary, and they seek my life, to take it away from me."16
That is taken directly from 1 Kings 19. He would therefore not need to quote Paul in Romans, because Paul is already quoting the original source, 1 Kings.
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Old 11-25-2003, 12:19 PM   #49
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Here is another passage from Cyprian from the same treatise where he lays the blame of Jesus' death at the Jews, yet again fails to quote Paul (although he does quote from the Old Testament and the Gospel of Matthew).

Treatise XII.1 Three Books of Testimonies Against the Jews, Book 2

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14. That He is the righteous One whom the Jews should put to death.

In the Wisdom of Solomon: "Let us lay hold of the righteous, because He is disagreeable to us, and is contrary to our works, and reproacheth us with our transgressions of the law.214 He professeth that He has the knowledge of God, and calls Himself the Son of God; He has become to us an exposure of our thoughts; He is grievous unto us even to look upon, because His life is unlike to others, and His ways are changed. We are esteemed by Him as frivolous, and He restraineth Himself from our ways, as if from uncleanness; and He extols the last end of the righteous, and boasts that He has God for His Father. Let us see, then, if His words are true, and let us try what will come to Him. Let us interrogate Him with reproach and torture, that we may know His reverence and prove His patience. Let us condemn Him with a most shameful death. These things they considered, and erred. For their maliciousness hath blinded them, and they knew not the sacraments of God."215 Also in Isaiah: "See ye how the righteous perisheth, and no man understandeth; and righteous men are taken away, and no man regardeth. For the righteous man is taken away froth the face of unrighteousness, and his burial shall be in peace."216 Concerning this very thing it was before foretold in Exodus: "Thou shalt not slay the innocent and the righteous."217 Also in the Gospel: "Judas, led by penitence, said to the priests and elders, I have sinned, in that I have betrayed the innocent blood."218
And again in the same book, again failing to mention that Paul thought that the Jews crucified Christ:
Quote:
20. That the Jews would fasten Christ to the cross.

In Isaiah: "I have spread out my hands all day to a people disobedient and contradicting me, who walk in ways that are not good, but after their own sins."252 Also in Jeremiah: "Come, let us cast the tree into His bread, and let us blot out His life from the earth."253 Also in Deuteronomy: "And Thy life shall be hanging (in doubt) before Thine eyes; and Thou shall fear day and night, and shalt not trust to Thy life."254 Also in the twenty-first Psalm: "They tore my hands and my feet;255 they numbered all my bones. And they gazed upon me, and saw me, and divided my garments among them, and upon my vesture they cast a lot. But Thou, O Lord, remove not Thy help far from me; attend unto my help. Deliver my soul from the sword, and my only one from the paw256 of the dog. Save me from the mouth of the lion, and my lowliness from the horns of the unicorns. I will declare Thy name unto my brethren; in the midst of the Church I will praise Thee."257 Also in the cxviiith Psalm: "Pierce my flesh with nails through fear of Thee."258 Also in the cxlth Psalm: "The lifting up of my hands is an evening sacrifice."259 Of which sacrifice Sophonias said: "Fear from the presence of the Lord God, since His day is near, because the Lord hath prepared His sacrifice, He hath sanctified His elect."260 Also in Zechariah: "And they shall look upon me, whom they have pierced."261 Also in the eighty-seventh Psalm: "I have called unto Thee, O Lord, the whole day; I have stretched out my hands unto Thee."262 Also in Numbers: "Not as a man is God suspended, nor as the son of man does He suffer threats."263 Whence in the Gospel the Lord says: "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up, that whosoever believeth in the Son may have life eternal."264
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Old 11-25-2003, 12:29 PM   #50
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Quote:
Originally posted by MortalWombat
Here is another passage from Cyprian from the same treatise where he lays the blame of Jesus' death at the Jews, yet again fails to quote Paul (although he does quote from the Old Testament and the Gospel of Matthew).

Treatise XII.1 Three Books of Testimonies Against the Jews, Book 2
You mean he does not quote the Gospel of Luke, the Gospel of Mark, or the Gospel of John? Is this new evidence that they did not exist at that time? How much evidence do you think he needed to argue something no one in his audience was denying?

These references are irrelevant to the issue of the authenticity of this passage. It already existed in multiple manuscript traditions over a hundred years prior. And there was plenty of evidence to be had for this point. That the author did not create a Thesarus on the issue is irrelevant.
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