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11-19-2003, 06:33 AM | #51 | |
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Best version of the bible
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11-20-2003, 01:58 PM | #52 | ||||
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Which version of Mark are we talking about? The Nestle/Aland Mark is a 19th century text of Mk, based on the Egyptian MSS of 4th and 5th centuries. So is this the version of Mark that is claimed to be identical to the "original Mk"? And is there any evidence for this? None that I know of... Quote:
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As I say, I'm not a blanket Aramaic prioritist. I deal with the text on a word-by-word level, and I accept that much of the NT was written originally in Greek. But I also reject the blanket Greek priority. Quote:
All the best, Yuri. |
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11-20-2003, 03:39 PM | #53 | ||
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Regarding dating, I should have been more clear. I consider 70CE to be the minimum age of authorship. Since I am typically in discussions with fairly conservative Christians, that tends to at least provide a common ground. Quote:
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11-20-2003, 04:27 PM | #54 | ||
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If I remember correctly P45 (?) has bits of Mark, so it attests to a 3rd century copy and again if remembering correctly that's earlier than any Syriac text. It is therefore support to bring the text back then and support in general the codexes. I've seen no reason, which you have posted here, for you to have problems with the core text of Mark, as pruned by the earliest extant copies of fragments. Quote:
I'm all for interpreting only the most reliable texts, but then I don't see when one gets down to the most ancient exemplars, how one can give priority to one variant over another, unless it's on Hort's strict methodology. spin |
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11-23-2003, 03:31 PM | #55 | |||||||||
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the Great Omission in Luke http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...threadid=67918 Quote:
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Regards, Yuri. |
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11-23-2003, 03:41 PM | #56 | ||
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It depends on the subject matter, of course. But let's say re the question of how Jewish Jesus was, no conclusions based on the Greek text can be trusted. Although Bezae Greek is much better. Regards, Yuri. |
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