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02-17-2008, 06:55 PM | #131 | |||||
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So, how did Tertullian know who wrote what? And from where did he get the names? The so called "Pauline epistles" as we have them today, make no claim to the authorship of the Synoptics. The Acts of the Apostles is also anonymous. The word "Luke" is nowhere in the NT as a writer , there is no known history of a writer named "Luke". All that can be found are 3 isolated verses with the word "Luke" Colossians 4.14, Quote:
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I can't find Luke. Who was he? |
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02-18-2008, 01:41 AM | #132 | |||
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Excerpts from the longer post here: Quote:
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02-18-2008, 08:51 AM | #133 |
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What about Papias? Certainly not without problems but the rumors he shares about texts attributed to Mark and Matthew are evidence that points to another conclusion.
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02-18-2008, 09:26 AM | #134 | ||
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02-18-2008, 10:22 AM | #135 |
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Hi, Neil. I have been enjoying your recent blog posts on Marcion and such.
Some points to ponder about Justin and the ascription of the gospels or memoirs by name: 1. It has been said that Justin never identifies the memoirs by name, but that is not strictly true. In Dialogue 106.3 he mentions the memoirs of Peter. Now, it seems to me that there are two possibilities here. First, perhaps he means the gospel of Peter and the Boanerges detail given was present in the part of that gospel that we no longer have. Second, he may have meant the gospel of Mark under the assumption that, as per the Papian tradition, Mark was writing according to Peter in some way. In any case, he does seem to identify one of these memoirs with the apostle Peter by name. 2. Justin does not often differentiate between the different memoirs in this manner (indeed, the mention of Petrine memoirs may be the only time), but he does know that they are plural and that they are called gospels (plural), according to Apology 1.66.3. 3. So long as Justin calls them the apostolic memoirs in general instead of mentioning one of them by name, most of them (the Petrine being the exception) can remain either anonymous or collective in the same way that the Epistula Apostolorum or the Apostolic Constitutions are either anonymous or collective. But what if Justin attributes the memoirs to people other than the apostles? In Dialogue 103.8 Justin does just that, writing that the memoirs were written down by the apostles and by those who followed them. Interestingly, the detail in question in this instance is from the (western text of the) gospel of Luke. I am unsure exactly how far to press this. On the one hand, the statement does not name names, least of all the name of Luke. On the other hand, to specify that some of the memoirs derive from the followers of the apostles seems a bit too specific without knowing some names; how would one know that followers were responsible for some of them without knowing the names? Would the story circulate that gospel X was written by a follower, not by an apostle, but we are not sure which follower? And is it a mere coincidence that this information comes in conjunction with a text that comes from a gospel attributed to one of the followers? Did the later fathers read this line in Justin and make sure that the gospels were attributed both to apostles and to followers, and that the gospel immediately implied in context was one of the latter? Even if so, how did Justin himself come by the idea without knowing any names? Ben. |
02-18-2008, 10:56 AM | #136 | |
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02-18-2008, 11:17 AM | #137 | |
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I admit I have in the past not given this possibility as much consideration as it probably deserves, but I also keep coming back to the speculation it involves, namely that the Boanerges detail was present in the gospel of Peter, whereas we do not have to speculate that this detail is contained in the gospel of Mark. Ben. |
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02-18-2008, 03:02 PM | #138 | ||||||||
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Excerpts from "Dialogue with Trypho" 106 Quote:
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And where did the name Mark come from? Mark is not mentioned anywhere as a writer in the NT. Eusebius in Church History claimed Mark was in Alexandria and converted many, even founding many Churches, but Eusebius erroneously labelled the Theraputae or Essenes as Christians indicating that Mark may also be a fictitious character. Philo wrote nothing about Mark, his Jesus, his Christian converts or Churches. |
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02-18-2008, 04:46 PM | #139 |
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02-18-2008, 05:36 PM | #140 | |
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To be clear, the ANF translation (with a capital H in the pronoun Him) is possible, but not probable. The nearest antecedent is Peter, not Jesus, and Peter as the source of a memoir is in agreement with the usual practice of Justin to call the memoirs apostolic (of the apostles), not dominical (of the Lord). But you say my translations are suspect. So I give you Helmut Koester: "His Memoirs" in this text must mean "Peter's Memoirs" (not "Christ's Memoirs").And I give you Charles Hill: The latter, he says, is written in 'his', that is, Peter's, memoirs.And I could give you many, many more. Ben. |
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