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Old 02-22-2013, 05:50 PM   #181
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the roman origin of Mark is well established in antiquity
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Old 02-22-2013, 06:18 PM   #182
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tanya has made the counterpoint that the Latinisms can mean Latin background without meaning Rome as the place of authorship. The simplest proposition is the author moves from Rome to Alexandria, and once there writes in Greek because that is the language you would market the piece in.
1. The writing of Mark implies a Latin linguistic context that doesn't exist outside a big Latin speaking city.
2. The writer's audience lives in the Latin speaking context. (One doesn't write in such a way that your audience won't understand you, when you literally translate Latin idioms.)
3. The writer suggests that his audience knows what Roman money is, given the mention of the Roman coin quadrans as an equivalent to two leptas. Note also the equivalence in 15:16 of a hall (αυλη) and a praetorium, given to explain the former. This is for a Rome aware audience.

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But it leads me to wonder if these Gnostic teachers have this kind of Latin background. If I am not mistaken, official correspondence between Rome and Alexandria would have been in Latin. Or, at least that is what Pliny was doing up in Bithynia. But that would not result in the kind of Latinisms spin is talking about. Is there deeper Latin roots than this?

Or have we asked the same question spin has for Egyptian - are there Afroasiatic language "tells" in the Greek of Mark? That one would be for spin.
The people in Alexandria used Greek as their principle language and the city was built by the Greek Ptolemies. The Jews that lived there spoke Greek. The linguistic environment doesn't seem to reflect what can be gleaned from GMark.

(But I must admit I know nothing significant about Coptic, which was the language of the non-Greek speaking population of Egypt at the time.)
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Old 02-22-2013, 06:47 PM   #183
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There never was an animal or blood sacrifice for death penaty sins in the Jewish scriptures, just the death penalty.

Blood sacrifice was only efficacious for unintentional sins.

Leviticus 4:27-29
‘Now if anyone of the common people sins unintentionally in doing any of the things which the Lord has commanded not to be done, and becomes guilty, if his sin which he has committed is made known to him, then he shall bring for his offering a goat, a female without defect, for his sin which he has committed. He shall lay his hand on the head of the sin offering and slay the sin offering at the place of the burnt offering.


Numbers 15:27-28
‘Also if one person sins unintentionally, then he shall offer a one year old female goat for a sin offering. The priest shall make atonement before the Lord for the person who goes astray when he sins unintentionally, making atonement for him that he may be forgiven.


There was no vicarious atonement.Everyone was responsible for themselves.
"The soul that sinneth, it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him." - Ezekiel 18:20

Human sacrifice was considered an abomination. Deuteronomy 12:31, Jeremiah 32:34-35, etc.

Yet TedM has the audacity to say that the Jewish scriptures found salvation value in a human sacrifice!

Jake
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Old 02-22-2013, 07:11 PM   #184
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"he shall bring for his offering a goat, a female without defect...."

"he shall offer a one year old female goat for a sin offering."

What? Not a thirty-year old male lamb?

Where does The Law require sacrifice of a thirty-year old male lamb?

Even a sheep dies of old age before thirty. Isn't thirty years kind old for a lamb?
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Old 02-22-2013, 07:24 PM   #185
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Here's the Jewish context:

1. Belief that sin results in man's death. Since Genesis 1.
2. Animal sacrifices for sins for many centuries.
3. Sacrifices during Passover. Since Moses.
4. OT prophecies of a Messiah who would save Israel from their sins. Throughout OT.
5. Desperate for the kingdom of God to arrive


*The Jews expected a Messiah from God, who had godly characteristics. Any man who they thought may have been the Messiah was also considered to be the man who would save the Jews from their sins.

*If such a man was killed, then it is only logical for those who followed him to consider whether the death was that of a martyr -- and whether it was related to his ability to save the Jews from their sins. ....

Comments?
TedM,

In Torah, animal sacrifice was efficacious only for unintentional sins.
In Torah, there was no sacrifice for death penalty sins, only the death penalty.
In Torah, there was no vicarious atonement. Each person was responible for themselves.
In Torah, human scarifice was viewed as an abomination.

TedM, all you have demonstrated is that early Christianity misappropriated the Jewish scriptures and corrupted the Jewish heritiage in an attempt to give themselves the legitimacy bestowed by the assumed venerable age of the Jewish scriptures.
There is no dying and rising godman in the Jewish scriptures. There is no being "in Christ" in the Jewish scriptures. Christianity is based on a lie. And TedM, you have merely followed that same path snout to tail.

Jake
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Old 02-22-2013, 07:28 PM   #186
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Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post
"he shall bring for his offering a goat, a female without defect...."

"he shall offer a one year old female goat for a sin offering."

What? Not a thirty-year old male lamb?

Where does The Law require sacrifice of a thirty-year old male lamb?

Even a sheep dies of old age before thirty. Isn't thirty years kind old for a lamb?
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Old 02-22-2013, 07:41 PM   #187
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The first full blown Gnostic teachers (Basilides, Valentinius, Carpocrates and Epiphanes) appeared in Alexandria at this time. At this place and time I propose that the Basilideans wrote urMark.

Jake
I've read Spin's "Latinisms" blog entry, so for the moment let's just suppose we take it for granted that there is a Latin first-language writer who is composing in Greek. So he mixes up the order of things the same way an English speaker would do in Spanish or vice-versa. spin would like to place us in Rome on that basis.

tanya has made the counterpoint that the Latinisms can mean Latin background without meaning Rome as the place of authorship. The simplest proposition is the author moves from Rome to Alexandria, and once there writes in Greek because that is the language you would market the piece in.

But it leads me to wonder if these Gnostic teachers have this kind of Latin background. If I am not mistaken, official correspondence between Rome and Alexandria would have been in Latin. Or, at least that is what Pliny was doing up in Bithynia. But that would not result in the kind of Latinisms spin is talking about. Is there deeper Latin roots than this?

Or have we asked the same question spin has for Egyptian - are there Afroasiatic language "tells" in the Greek of Mark? That one would be for spin.
It seems likely that canonical Mark was composed (or redacted) in Rome. I am suggestig that the urgospel originated in Alexandria before being brought to Rome.
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Old 02-22-2013, 08:21 PM   #188
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted
Which is more reasonable?:
1. The writers of the 4Q521, despite mentioning the Messiah in the first part of a Messianic passage did not think HE was the one to heal, preach to the poor, etc, and decided in fact that the "Anointed" in Isaiah, who clearly wasn't God, WAS God.

2. The writers of 4Q521 saw the healing, preaching to the poor, etc.. as something the Messiah would do in the Messianic age, and the Christians quoted from the same passage to show fulfillment by Jesus.
As I demonstrated, the text, ie 4Q521, does not say what the messiah would do. If you don't believe me, demonstrate with the text of 4Q521 exactly where it says what the messiah would do. Otherwise stop the stupid claims.
Settle down.

You support the idea that the writers of 4Q521 changed the 'liberator', the 'healer', etc.. from "the Anointed" (in Isaiah 61), to God himself. After centuries of proof that Israel lacked the ability to be their own Savior, their own Servant, Anointed, there was a need to find a DIFFERENT interpretation of the passage. When they couldn't save themselves, and after several more centuries of looking for a Messiah, instead of looking for a Messiah in a Messianic passage , you say they looked to God himself. Does that make much sense?

Then you say that instead of the Christians using this passage directly, they were 'tapping into common speculation', but that somehow the interpretation of WHO was ushering in the Messianic age changed from God to the Messiah. Does that make much sense?

Lastly, you are right in that 4Q521 does not say that the one who is healing and preaching to the poor and liberating the captives in the Messianic age is the Messiah. That is true. It says it is the "Lord". But, common sense would dictate that the Messiah should have a purpose though, doesn't it? But in fact, according to you he is 'incidental' to what happens when he comes. Now, does that make much sense?

I prefer to go with what makes sense. Through the Lord, the Messiah (the VERY one just mentioned in the beginning of the passage, no less) ushers in the Messianic age by healing, preaching, and liberating.

How possibly can the doings of the Lord be separated from the doings of the Messiah in a Messianic age? What good is the Messiah when the Lord can just do it all himself?

Now, even if you are correct and I am wrong, this DSS passage shows that the ideas the Christian used with regard to their Messiah originated from within the Jewish culture. Their use of this passage shows a willingness to adopt or modify (if you are correct) existing concepts to apply them to their concept of Messiah. It IS close enough spin. I see no need for Roman influences to come up with a resurrected Messiah.
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Old 02-22-2013, 08:52 PM   #189
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jakejonesiv View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by TedM View Post
Here's the Jewish context:

1. Belief that sin results in man's death. Since Genesis 1.
2. Animal sacrifices for sins for many centuries.
3. Sacrifices during Passover. Since Moses.
4. OT prophecies of a Messiah who would save Israel from their sins. Throughout OT.
5. Desperate for the kingdom of God to arrive


*The Jews expected a Messiah from God, who had godly characteristics. Any man who they thought may have been the Messiah was also considered to be the man who would save the Jews from their sins.

*If such a man was killed, then it is only logical for those who followed him to consider whether the death was that of a martyr -- and whether it was related to his ability to save the Jews from their sins. ....

Comments?
TedM,

In Torah, animal sacrifice was efficacious only for unintentional sins.
Hi Jake. My op doesn't say otherwise. Inferences don't require 100% perfect matchups.


Quote:
In Torah, there was no sacrifice for death penalty sins, only the death penalty.
So?


Quote:
In Torah, there was no vicarious atonement. Each person was responsible for themselves.
I didn't say otherwise. Some are better than others at seeing things vicariously. I'm suggesting that the Jews weren't all too dull and uncreative to see a vicarious atonement from a Passover martyr. Perhaps you disagree.


Quote:
In Torah, human sacrifice was viewed as an abomination.
People keep saying this, but it really doesn't even apply here. No priests were 'sacrificing' Jesus in order to absolve sins.

We really are talking about self sacrifice in order to please God. That takes on a more 'acceptable' flavor, as such a concept permeated through the entire Jewish culture. Otherwise they wouldn't have tried to follow all of those mind-bogglingly detailed and pedantic Laws..


Quote:
There is no dying and rising godman in the Jewish scriptures.
And there didn't have to be in order for some Jews to create one out of such a Passover event. All they needed was the appreciation for self-sacrifice, the link of sacrifice with sins, and a prophet-like figure who had a following. Had Judas the Galilean been crucified during Passover Christians today might be worshiping Judas as the Christ instead.
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Old 02-22-2013, 09:09 PM   #190
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Thanks to everyone on Mark, I take instruction on that readily.
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