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07-02-2004, 06:52 AM | #11 | ||
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07-02-2004, 08:25 AM | #12 | |
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07-02-2004, 09:47 AM | #13 |
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"""""""""""Actually Vinnie, there are many important historical issues and questions which have very little and ambiguous evidence. """""""
That was my point. Little or ambiguous evidence is useless. NT scholars tend to stack ambiguous theories on top of one anothber compounding the probability or error. """""""""""That doesn't mean that they shouldn't be carefully researched and studied;"""""""" Of course but if the evidence is inconclusive say so and don't build on it. For example, those who write on the synoptic problem note all current views have problems. Scholars tend to just go with the one they think has the least problems//explains most things. This hardly sounds like a great idea. Its guesswork built on top of guesswork. """""bit by bit light is shed, even if our explanations end up only being best guesses."""""""" If all we are doing is guessing then those historical incidents you speak of should not be that important. """""""" But if for no other reason then their supreme influence on Western civilization, the documents of the New Testament deserve painstaking historical examination, however difficult the task may be.""""""""" Yes but if the scholar is not an uber-minimalist then he is either incompetant, biased, thinking wishfully or all three. When there is a paucity of evidence we don't make leaps and say x, y and z. We simply lack sufficient evidence regarding event x and leave it at that. If all solutions to the synoptic problems today have weaknesses and problems, why should I buy any of them? Why not some hitherto unknown theory, something uber-complex like Boismard's? There could have been all manner of shared sources // editors aware of different sources // stages of a gospel, etc. Parts of LK may be dependent upon MT while parts of MT are dependent upon LK while both also are dependent on a large saying source and smaller ones. For example, maybe original Luke had no infancy narrative and a later editor aware of Matthew's decided he wanted this gospel to have one and is so different from Matthews's because the evangelist decided "I'll show you how to write a birth narrative..." Vinnie |
07-02-2004, 11:20 AM | #14 | |
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Therein, Hengel dates Luke before Matthew and shows some skepticism of Q. Can't remember how far he goes on the Luke and Matthew dependence angle. |
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07-02-2004, 01:31 PM | #15 |
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Thanks, I've now added it to my "list". Are there any others you could recommend? I'm just getting started in reading up on biblical criticism. So far I've the only book I've read in the area is The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture By Bart D. Ehrman.
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07-02-2004, 02:14 PM | #16 | |
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I could recommend lots of books. But I was trying to think of some critical scholarship that took the idea of Lucan priority over Matthew seriously. Off the top of my head, I can't think of any others (at least, not others that do not date Acts to 62 CE because there is no execution of Paul narrated). |
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07-02-2004, 02:24 PM | #17 |
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That's okay. I was looking for biblicial criticism in general -- that is, from any of the different areas.
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07-02-2004, 04:07 PM | #18 |
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The Four Gospels and the One Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Investigation of the Collection and Origin of the Canonical Gospels, by Martin Hengel.
A short exerpt can be read on Amazon. |
07-03-2004, 01:07 AM | #19 | |
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The only other possibility is geographical: Luke could have originated in an area where Christians had little contact with Jews, and Matthew in Palestine where the conflict was. But in that case there must be a Q, because the non-Mark commonalities between Luke and Matthew necessitate some relationship between them. |
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07-03-2004, 04:47 AM | #20 | |||
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