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Old 09-30-2004, 09:12 AM   #11
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Originally Posted by DramaQ
I was reading an older thread on the Secret Mark debate and came across a brief discussion about the motive a forger might have for creating it. Why would someone “invent� Secret Mark?

I’d been thinking about another aspect of the letter that makes me believe I have a potential answer to that qustion.

It has to do with the way the information in the letter is presented. When you think about it, the letter has a way of “leading� the reader to a certain conclusion.

Consider this: At the beginning we have what amounts to a demonstration of Clement’s expertise in regard to the gospel when he explains how Mark wrote in Rome during Peter’s stay. But that he then moved to Alexandria after Peter’s martyrdom to compose a more “spiritual� version.

The problem: We’re pretty sure Mark did NOT write under Peter’s guidance, so right away we find ourselves questioning just how well informed Clement really is. We imagine Clement has simply “bought into� the traditional story and doesn’t “really know�.

That’s an important set up for what comes next.

Clement would have us (or Theodore anyway) believe that Mark first wrote what we know as the canonical version and THEN ADDED TO IT to form “Secret Mark�. As Casper points out, the riff in Mark 10:46 pretty clearly indicates material has been removed. It would hardly have been written with that awkward transition and then conveniently used to a later addition.

Once again, we are automatically - almost subconsciously – drawn to the conclusion that “Clement gets it wrong�.

Now look where that leads us: After Clement gives Theodore the “true� material in Secret Mark, he goes on to state that the rest of that materials found in the Carpocratian version are “falsifications�.

But - perhaps unawares - we’re already given a mind set that this Clement is on shaky ground with his facts. And that with regards to this additional material Theodore has found, maybe Clement once again got it wrong.

I know I for one – when I first read the letter – asked myself:

“If the REAL direction of writing is from Secret Mark to Canonical Mark – this is, from larger work to edited, shorter work – then isn’t it possible that the larger-still version held by the Carpocratians PREDATES Clement’s version? And that in reality THAT was the first version? That a later church expunged the quasi-erotic material to form Secret Mark. And that a further, third editing removed the ‘secret’ material to form the canonical one?�

The Smoking Gun:



According to the letter, Clement’s primary desire is to silence the Carpocratian’s claim that they have “true� Marcan material. In the process of this he admits to the existence of a secret version and (rashly) duplicates some of that in an open letter. This is his “proof� that what the Carpocratians have is NOT true gospel.

So what does he do? He repeats some of the Carpocratians text! The very text that he denies as true and calls “unspeakable teachings�.

Think about it: If you were Clement, wouldn’t committing ANY of the words of the contested document be the LAST thing you’d do? If anything, he simply could have written “All other things about which you wrote are not found�. Why on EARTH would he quote the material back?!

Especially given the fact that Theodore obviously KNOWS what the material is. After all HE’S the one who wrote it to Clement in the first place. He didn’t need it repeated right back to him.

The only way the inclusion of any of the Carpocratian material makes sense is if the author of the letter wanted readers to know what it said.

And from that, we’re free to draw our conclusions about the development of the gospel. (From larger secret material to lesser to canon.)

Or rather, we’re “lead’ to the conclusion by a very craftily constructed letter, the motive of which is to do just that.

DQ
Hi DramaQ

This is a similar argument to that of Charles Murgia in 'Secret Mark Real or Fake ?' pps 35-40 in 'Longer Mark Forgery Interpolation or Old Tradition ?' the 18th Colloquy of The Center for Hermeneutical Studies December 1975 (published 1976) Berkeley California.

Murgia argues that the letter serves to render authentic the material which at face value it aims to refute. Beneath the rhetorical bluster 'Clement's' statements serve both to make the Carpocratian claims plausible and explain to us, the modern readers, (by going on about secrecy and lying on oath), why this material has been previously unknown.

I would recommend you try and get hold of a copy of the Colloquy (there are a number of good essays and a round table discussion) but it is rather obscure and difficult to find.

Andrew Criddle

(FWIW Murgia said he did not believe the forger was Morton Smith he said the forger clearly had a well developed sense of humour and as far as he could tell Morton Smith had no sense of humour whatsoever.)
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Old 09-30-2004, 10:48 AM   #12
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There is a reference to that Berkeley Colloquy here (a reprint of this.)
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Old 09-30-2004, 11:38 AM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
This is a similar argument to that of Charles Murgia in 'Secret Mark Real or Fake ?' pps 35-40 in 'Longer Mark Forgery Interpolation or Old Tradition ?' the 18th Colloquy of The Center for Hermeneutical Studies December 1975 (published 1976) Berkeley California.
Hi Andrew,

You are a remarkably well informed person! Thanks for the reference. I'm gonna try my luck tracking down the material you mentioned.

It always gives me a bit of mixed-feelings when I find out about existing work on my little stray thoughts.

On the one hand I feel almost vindicated because I'm not "all wet". Someone out there with a lot more credentials than I have has already given credence to the idea.

On the other hand, I have to face the (inevitable) reality that however clever I may think I am being, there is truly "nothing new under the sun" and I'm just covering old ground.

Ah well. It keeps my mind exercised.

Quote:
(FWIW Murgia said he did not believe the forger was Morton Smith he said the forger clearly had a well developed sense of humour and as far as he could tell Morton Smith had no sense of humour whatsoever.)
lol… Not sure if that would have made Smith any happier, but it’s an interesting point.

And if it is a forgery and Smith didn’t do it, it means there’s still a bit of a mystery out there. Where DID the letter come from?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
There is a reference to that Berkeley Colloquy here (a reprint of this.)
Thanks, Toto. Off to more reading….

Dq
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Old 09-30-2004, 02:19 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DramaQ
According to the letter, Clement’s primary desire is to silence the Carpocratian’s claim that they have “true� Marcan material. In the process of this he admits to the existence of a secret version and (rashly) duplicates some of that in an open letter. This is his “proof� that what the Carpocratians have is NOT true gospel.

So what does he do? He repeats some of the Carpocratians text! The very text that he denies as true and calls “unspeakable teachings�.

Think about it: If you were Clement, wouldn’t committing ANY of the words of the contested document be the LAST thing you’d do? If anything, he simply could have written “All other things about which you wrote are not found�. Why on EARTH would he quote the material back?!

Especially given the fact that Theodore obviously KNOWS what the material is. After all HE’S the one who wrote it to Clement in the first place. He didn’t need it repeated right back to him.

The only way the inclusion of any of the Carpocratian material makes sense is if the author of the letter wanted readers to know what it said.
Trouble is, almost all of the early Christian apologetics do that in their anti-heretical rants. St. Augustine, for example, is one of the main sources for the beliefs of those he denounced.
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Old 10-01-2004, 09:00 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by ohwilleke
Trouble is, almost all of the early Christian apologetics do that in their anti-heretical rants. St. Augustine, for example, is one of the main sources for the beliefs of those he denounced.
Sure, but the letter isn't an apologetic to an audience where it would be understandable to divulge the material he's denouncing.

He's answering a specific letter from an individual who quoted the material to him in the first place. He has no reason to repeat it back to the person who just sent it to him.

In my playwrighting class we were taught to identify (and strictly avoid) what is called "expository" dialog. That is having one character tell another something he already knows. It's a poor technique for passing the information on to the audience. For example: The husband says to his wife "Well we were married by a priest, you know." She DOES know! The only reason he has to say this is so the AUDIENCE will know. It's a dead giveaway.
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Old 10-01-2004, 01:44 PM   #16
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State of the manuscript
Quote:
What happened to the book in which the Secret Gospel of Mark was found?

In the summer of 1958, Morton Smith photographed the back pages of a book on which was written two quotations from a hitherto-unknown secret gospel of Mark. What happened to the book and the back pages?

In the spring of 1976, David Flusser, Shlomo Pines, Archimandrate Meliton, and Guy Stroumsa visited Mar Saba to see the book. A monk found it there and the back pages were indeed written with the letter that Smith photographed. They advised Meliton to take it to the Patriarchal library for safekeeping due to too many thefts at Mar Saba, which he did. Flusser, Pines, and Stroumsa wanted to do an ink analysis of the MS; however, the only place capable of doing that was at an Israeli police headquarters but that was unacceptable to Meliton. (Stroumsa, "Comments," JECS 11 (2003): 147-148).

The rest of story is in Hedrick's 2000 FOURTH R article. Hedrick, working in conjuction with Nikolaos Olympiou, was able to learn that shortly after the book was deposited into the Patriarchal library, then-librarian Kallistos Dourvas (Olympiou's student) removed the pages from the book and photographed them, both in black and white and in color. (Hedrick was eventually able to get some of the photographs via Olympiou, which were published in the FOURTH R article.) Accordingly to Kallistos, who remained the librarian until 1999, the pages of the Clement letter were supposed to have been kept along with the book, but when Olympiou visited the library in 2000, the Clement pages were missing. The last report in the Hedrick article is that Kallistos was to go to the Patriarchal library in Sept. 2000, yet Hedrick's 2003 JECS article did not say whether this had actually happened or what was the result.

Stephen C. Carlson, Friday, December 12, 2003
Jack Kilmon has a site supporting SecMark

religioustolerance.org on Secret Mark
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Old 10-01-2004, 05:46 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DramaQ
I know some “controversial� interpretations have been put forward as to what the ritual describe MIGHT mean. But taken at its face value, what exactly is said in the part that was so secret it had to be expunged from Canonical Mark?

It doesn’t seem to be much more than a baptism rite. But that didn’t stop them from leaving Jesus’ own baptism in the canonical version. Is it the Gnostic element that they were worried about? Or is it the miracle working that smacked too much of “magic�.
On baptisms performed by Jesus: perhaps any indication that Jesus baptised anyone was considered controversial early, which is why it was removed from "Secret Mark"? Jesus doing that could have been taken as "anointing" a successor, in the same way that John the B's baptism of Jesus is sometimes taken.

Just a thought.
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Old 10-01-2004, 06:48 PM   #18
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Hello, friends,

I see that Toto has already posted the links to my recent analysis of Secret Mark (thanks Toto!). I think I've now laid to rest any doubts about the authenticity of this document. Or, at least, it's perfectly clear that Smith himself was not guilty of any wrongdoing.

What's this stuff about Clement somehow appearing to be an idiot, or something? Really, now...

You can make any ancient author to look silly, if you really wanted to. The job of a historian is not to pass judgement, but to reconstruct history.

The simple fact is that the Clementine scholars have no objections to this letter having been written by Clement. They know Clement's writings better than any of us do. Sheesh...

Best,

Yuri
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Old 10-01-2004, 07:24 PM   #19
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In this analysis here Yuri, you write:
http://www.trends.net/~yuku/bbl/8secmk.htm

"Now I have revisited this old controversy. In the course of my recent
research re: the compositional history of the Gospel of Mark..."

where did you write up your research?

BTW, good to see your creative self around here again.

Vorkosigan
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Old 10-02-2004, 10:19 AM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
In this analysis here Yuri, you write:
http://www.trends.net/~yuku/bbl/8secmk.htm

"Now I have revisited this old controversy. In the course of my recent
research re: the compositional history of the Gospel of Mark..."

where did you write up your research?

BTW, good to see your creative self around here again.

Vorkosigan
Hello, Vork!

The article that you cite above was written in 1998. It's been available on my webpage since then. I never submitted it to any journals.

My newest research on SecMk is available at,

http://www.trends.ca/~yuku/bbl/secmk.htm

This newer material was posted to IIDB, and Toto already gave a link to these postings.

I've been busy with some other stuff recently, but also lurking in this forum on and off.

Actually, recently I've read a discussion of the Cleansing of the Temple incident where you participated (something about the vessels that Jesus reputedly didn't allow to carry in the Temple area). That made me go back to the books, and now I've been doing a study of this incident that I hope to post here soon.

The Magdalene Gospel contains a few unusual details for this story, although I'm still not quite sure what to make of them.

Cheers,

Yuri
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