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Old 04-05-2012, 06:25 PM   #111
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1. Upon what do you base your assertion that Mark was written in Egypt?

John Chrysostom, Clement of Alexandria, the Acts of Barnabas (by implication) various Arabic texts
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Old 04-05-2012, 06:37 PM   #112
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1. Upon what do you base your assertion that Mark was written in Egypt?

John Chrysostom, Clement of Alexandria, the Acts of Barnabas (by implication) various Arabic texts
Ah yes people who used theology to do historical work, instead of modern scholarships who can look at the whole picture these ancient people had no clue of. :Cheeky:
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Old 04-05-2012, 06:44 PM   #113
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Like trying to find vegetarians who hunt. so what's your point
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Old 04-05-2012, 06:57 PM   #114
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And if we expand the argument to include 'witnesses that Alexandria was the home see of St Mark' we'd have to include Eusebius of Caesarea. Given that Eusebius lived c. 263 – 339 and didn't invent the association of St Mark with Alexandria how far are we removed from Clement here?
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Old 04-05-2012, 06:59 PM   #115
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2. By what means would Clement be able to divine the authorial intentions behind a book written ~70-100 years before?

Only white Anglo-Saxon Protestants think like this. Clement was part of a tradition. He cites Philo almost unconsciously. Schaff has shown he draws from the Marcosians. Clement wasn't 'divining' Mark's intentions. He was privy to a tradition - no different from his Jewish contemporaries.

And with respect to Clement not explicitly citing his intentions. Origen was his student and Origen never mentions Clement. Go figure.
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Old 04-05-2012, 07:02 PM   #116
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If Bart ehrman had a time machine and landed in 2nd century Alexandria you dont think his research would improve?
Only if the time machine had a reverse gear.

DCH
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Old 04-06-2012, 11:20 AM   #117
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God, I am so sick of hearing all these stupid white people arguing the historical Jesus including Bart Ehrman. To an informed outsider it seems to be such a waste of time. Some points:

1. There is no early Christian tradition which understood Jesus to be a historical individual without presenting t have been a divinity first - i.e. that 'Jesus' was present with Abraham, Moses in various Pentateuch narratives.
Gospel of Thomas clearly does not present Jesus that way. He is an oracular source of his fleshy twin.

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2. The notion of Jesus being born from a woman developed after the idea that Jesus came down from heaven as a God - i.e. there is no Church Father who argues POSITS Jesus as being human in some form without at the same time arguing against the heretical interpretation of the gospel (i.e. that Jesus was NOT human, that he had no human mother, that he really die on the cross etc.)
There is a detectable differentiation from the earliest time of a human being called "Jesus" and a Spirit of God that entered him and confirmed him as "Christ". Again this differentiation is not present in Thomas, who presents instead an oracular source called "living Jesus". But this differentiation is present in the Pauline Christianity, even though Paul was not at all concerned with what Jesus did and said on earth; he received the gospel direct fom the risen one.

Christian gnosticism, IMO grew out of the Paulinism when the judaising Christianity (best seen in Matthew) took over, corrupting Paul's teaching in claiming - contra a basic tenet of Paul - that Jesus was a perfect human on earth. Mark, clearly hinted at the impossibility of this: 'Why do you call me good ?' For Mark like for Paul, the Spirit was the gift of God, that could not be appropriated.

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3. The argument about the shape of the present gospel cannot be used to determine the understanding of how those heretical traditions understood Jesus. This is my basic difficulty with Doherty's research. I haven't commented on it before but it's like trying to determine the truth about the Whitewater investigation from the Drudgereport or the whether affirmative action is fair from Rachel Maddow. These are biased sources. We are not getting the original material to reconstruct the position of those who held the view that Jesus was a God and not human.
I think the christological development can still be reconstructed, even though I agree the sources are biased. Jesus was clearly not God in the synoptics. This is a later development of gnosticism (including the Johanine hookup with orthodoxy), where the asceticism of Paulines was theologized, and Christ separated from human flesh altogether. Of course, Paul's Christian brotherhood was a spiritual one, but not written up as anything that could be considered docetic. Paul was a dualist; it is not hard to see how his dualism progressed to the concept of lower and higher God, reflecting the dualism of 'psyche' and 'pneuma' in human nature. First it manifested itself in the neutral and dependent demiurge of the Valentinians, then in the evil independent Jewish demiurge of the Marcionists.


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Their NT had different readings, omitted different passages and added new information we no longer have access to. To use the Catholic canon to reconstruct these opinions is hopelessly flawed.
Again, I think you are being too pessimistic. Elaine Pagels did a great job in The Gnostic Paul (or via: amazon.co.uk). There should be more studies like hers.

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Here is the Jewish argument against the historical Jesus. The Qumran literature makes it very apparent there was an active expectation that God would visit his people. There is repeated evidence in the gospels that Jesus was condemned for claiming he was the Son of God or some such divine epithet. Yes there is also the 'son of David' or Christ sayings. But the Marcionites are repeatedly identified as interpreting these passages as if Jesus himself rejected these claims.
They apparently read Romans without the pathetic forgery of 1:2-6, and they had Mark (not Luke !) as their Euangelion.

But back to to the nonsensical charges of Sanhendrin against Jesus in Mark. I recently contacted a well-known Markan scholar to get a feel what to expect when I come out arguing that the passion play has no sources other than the "scriptures" that Jesus is to fulfil (Mk 14:49), i.e. the tanakh and Paul's corpus. Mark's use of Paul is of course paradoxical; his letters come historically after the events narrated. Jesus is proclaiming the fulfilment of scriptures that have not been written yet, but that of course is part of the "messianic secret" asserted by the plot. Mark's paschal drama is so original and its plan so tightly tied together with the events narrated, that it makes no sense to read them as actual, historical events. To posit pre-Markan written or oral sources, makes no more sense than saying Hamlet is a report, originating in Danish folk tales and lost correspondence of Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern.

Of course I did not come out saying things like that. I asked him about some verses he considers pre-Markan. He wrote to me that whatever objection I might have, these verses were pre-Markan; this was not his position but that of the current Markan scholarship. End of discussion. In other words, if the pig won't fly, and the book says it does, refer the matter to scriptural authorities. Now these were critical verses because if one admits them as part of the plot, then one has to admit that the messenger in the tomb, and the tomb itself, are symbolic tools of Mark to run as a complement to the messenger at the Jordan. Again, this fulfils Paul (Rom 6:3-6).

So, the charges against Jesus, and the trial before Sanhendrin, is not supposed to make sense. Jesus nowehere claims he is a Davidic messiah; as a matter of fact he flat out denies it. 'How can the scribes say that the Messiah is the son of David ?' (12:35). So, Peter in his confession and the Sanhendrin believe is that Jesus is a pretender to the throne and wishes the rule as a Davidic king over restored Israel. But Mark's Jesus knows he is not that kind of Messiah. He is the one not yet preached by the gospel (of Paul) ! So the disciples' idolatry of him, the charges against him, and Jesus response to them are an executed comedy of errors. However, the ecstatic semantic riot in Jerusalem around the meaning of 'king', 'Christ', 'temple' and 'body' had a dead-serious purpose in Mark; it was not a slapstic for its own sake. Mark likely himself performed the exorcism he imputed to Jesus, and his gospel was an ancient form of hypnotherapy that would have been effective to a surprising degree.

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Moreover nothing about Jesus is messianic nor would there be grounds for the Jewish authorities to kill someone for falsely claiming to be the messiah. The Pentateuch does present grounds for stoning someone who is a wizard calling the people away from the God of Israel. This may well have been grounds for Jesus's execution. Nevertheless this does not settle whether Jesus was a human being only that the narrative assumes that the Jews THOUGHT he was an enchanter.
But the Sanhendrin did not find Jesus guilty because he was claiming to be messiah. He is condemned for blashphemy, in claiming he is messiah AND that they will see Son of man (i.e. him as messiah) seated on the right hand of power. Of course if he had made himself seated on the right hand of (the Lord, glorious in) power (Exd 15:6), he would have been blaspheming (Lev 24:16, Deu 5:11) and yes, IIUC, he would have been condemned to death by stoning.

Best,
Jiri


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So then we are back to the same problem. Jesus did not claim to be the messiah. This was most likely imposed on the text by later interpreters. The original claim by default was that he was taken by Peter to be the Son of God (see Clement of Alexandria's version of Matthew 16:18) and condemned for being an enchanter (hence his identification as Balaam in rabbinic sources). There is nothing to suggest that any tradition ever identified Jesus as a historical person before the middle of the second century.
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Old 04-06-2012, 11:54 AM   #118
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Gospel of Thomas clearly does not present Jesus that way. He is an oracular source of his fleshy twin.
Judas the twin
Peter and Andrew being 'brothers'
John and James being 'brothers'

all suggests to me at least that adelphopoeisis was part of the early Agape. In other words, Jesus was 'the firstborn of many brothers.' Recall the Arian interest in the term 'firstborn' = the diving being first created from God the Father (= the Son) who floats down to earth to establish Peter as his brother through baptism. I bet the tradition of Judas assumed that Judas was the first to have undergone adelphopoeisis no less than the Basilidean tradition Simon (= Peter). The idea that you have three pairs of 'brothers' among the disciples makes it impossible in my mind for this to be historical brotherhood.

Look at Mark 10:17 - 31 in Clement's gospel of Mark in Quis Dives Salvetur. He tells Peter leave your family of the flesh and after you die you will receive brothers, land and house in the kingdom of God. Give me a break. Peter somehow was told to give up his brother but somehow takes along a material brother once becoming a disciple. I think not.

Peter and Andrew, James and John, Judas and Jesus were all married or bound according to the spirit in the same way as we see George the Arian bishop and his pal or later John Moschus and Sophrinus or John the almsgiver and his brother or any of the other examples from later antiquity.
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Old 04-06-2012, 11:56 AM   #119
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Again this differentiation is not present in Thomas
Goodacre has a paper being reviewed at this moment about Judas Thomas being dependent on the synoptics. I am not sure what date we should assign Judas Thomas but the title alone suggests familiarity with brother-making
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Old 04-06-2012, 11:58 AM   #120
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Elaine Pagels did a great job in The Gnostic Paul

I used to like that book and Pagel's scholarship generally before I actually started to become intimate with her sources. Her interpretation is very weak. I won't get into the particulars but she over values Epiphanius, ignores the Marcionites and over-emphasizes the Valentinian tradition.
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