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12-09-2003, 12:24 PM | #11 | |||
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12-09-2003, 12:28 PM | #12 | |
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12-09-2003, 02:35 PM | #13 | |
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So, should I assume that no one here thinks Q had a baptism passage? Or that if it did, it originated with the passage in Mark (whenever it was added)? |
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12-09-2003, 03:51 PM | #14 | ||
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Vinnie:
You have done well, my son. . . . I agree with much of your analysis. Vork asks: Quote:
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This is "embarassing" in Mk. "How come he could be driven by someone else." "Well, no, he was not actually driven, you see he. . . ." Mk then Mt-Lk and then expecially Jn make a big point in subordinating J to B to Junior. In fact, Jn goes into great detail. I think one can wonder whether or not there was competition from a J the B tradition--a tradition of competition--or, finally, it could just be a problem. Does it mean it happened. No, not necessarily. Another "embarassing tradition" is the "I Will Like Destroy this Temple!" Okay . . . cool, we all know the Temple was ultimately destroyed . . . by the Romans. They also failed to do it in time--waited about forty years. One mentor speculates that the historical Junior did make this claim and, obviously, failed! "Hey, didn't your guy claim he would destroy the Temple? What happened?" "No . . . it was the 'Temple of the Body' . . . which . . . like . . . he rebuilt!" The same process of apologetics and mythmaking occurs to this day whenever anyone reminds a fundamentalist that Junior mispredicted the end of the world. Now, does that mean the historical Junior did claim to destroy the Temple? Cannot prove that, only that likely the tradition existed and the Synoptics had to account for it. --J.D. |
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12-09-2003, 09:13 PM | #15 | |||||
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This argument about "subordination" is entirely subjective. The application of Meier's criteria is simply too subjective, and here is a good example. Again nowhere in Mark does anything suggest that Mark is embarrassed by this account. Indeed, the fact that Mark included it is prima facie evidence that he was not embarrassed by it. Further, Mark reports many positive things about John -- that the pharisees feared to condemn him because the people thought he was a prophet, that he was held in high esteem by Herod, that he spoke fearlessly against the marriage that got him killed, and he had disciples. In other words, there does not seem any reason to suspect that Mark would have been embarrassed by an association between the two. Far from it. Quote:
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12-10-2003, 06:41 AM | #16 | ||
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You keep repeating this but I've yet to see a coherent explanation why this requires an historical baptism. Christian baptism came from Jewish baptism, not from the "fact" that Jesus was baptized. It is not until the church fathers that this connection is ignored/downplayed/replaced. Vinnie responded: Quote:
You also need to provide support for your original assertion rather than try to distract with an illegitimate attempt to shift the burden of proof. You made the claim now back it up. SPECIFICALLY, how does the fact that the baptism of Jesus is not explicitly connected to Christian baptism until "the church fathers" constitute evidence that the baptism is historical? |
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12-10-2003, 06:44 AM | #17 | ||
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12-10-2003, 07:27 AM | #18 | ||
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12-10-2003, 08:02 AM | #19 | |
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What evidence is there that there wasn't a baptism in Mark and that it was added later? This needs some serious arguments. Need I remind readers of the diverging ways Matthew and Luke (our earliest witnesses to the text of Mark) both follow and diverge from Mark on this point after adding their own infancy narratives? Luke diverges more than Matthew but is not Matthew dependent upon Mark here? Or was the interpolation in Mark dependent on Matthew? What is the evidence that backs up this assertion? Vinnie |
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12-10-2003, 11:09 AM | #20 | |||
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I think the historicity of the baptism is dependent upon the historicity of the Jesus-JBap connection. If that could be confirmed historical, I think you could safely assume that JBap baptized Jesus. However, even assuming an historical Jesus, there are good reasons to suspect that the JBap-Jesus connection might have been a deliberate fabrication between competing sects. Quote:
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