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Old 12-31-2012, 08:39 AM   #1201
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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
It has been drawn to my attention that the claims of interpolations in the Pauline writings are flawed.

If the Pauline letters were actually composed early, that is, before c 68 CE then there would be no need for an intepolator to make the writings appear to have been composed later.
Doubtful that would have been the intention. The goal would be to insert latter devised theological and doctinal material into earlier writings to make it appear that this late devised material had been there all along. Many exaples of this have been identified.
Other than a few Church teaching 'authorities' most people would not have possessed or had access to any actual early copies of of Saul of Tarsus's writings to compare with.
Once the Christian Church authorities declared 'brother Paul wrote....thus and thus' it wouldn't have even mattered to most what any earlier genuine writings had once contained, ....even if one had the actual earlier text, direct from the pen of the original author in hand.
The Church was the ultimate authority in deciding exactly what it was that 'brother Paul' had wrote, not any competing or earlier texts.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
So, if any Pauline writings contain some information that appear to be EARLY and some other information that appear to be LATE then it is most likely the EARLY information that was interpolated.
I doubt you will find many accredited textual scholars who would support that proposition.
The normal progress is that earlier writing are redacted, edited, and updated so as to appear to give early support to latter ideas.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5674
It is known that virtually all writings of the Canon that Church writers claimed to be early were late and sometimes by over 50 years.

The claim that a disciple of Jesus called Matthew first wrote gMatthew before gMark gives the impression that gMatthew was written early.

The claim that a disciple of Peter called Mark wrote gMark during the time of Philo gives the impression that gMark was early.

The claim that John the disciple of Jesus wrote gJohn gives the impressiom that gJohn was composed Early.

The claim that Luke a disciple of Paul wrote gLuke and Acts gives the impression that gLuke and Acts were Early
These statements are about LATTER Christian claims made for the texts. It does not deal with what the internal content of the texts reveal.
Quote:
The claim that a disciple of Jesus called Matthew first wrote gMatthew before gMark gives the impression that gMatthew was written early.
That is a late Christian claim. The Book called Matthew however nowhere claims to have ever been written by any Matthew. Same with all those other claims, they are all late and have no bearing at all upon when, or by whom these texts were actually originally written.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
The pattern is clear.

Additions to the NT stories, whether authorship or contents, are to make them appear EARLY not late.
That does not concur with the opinions expressed by most recognized textual scholars.
Thus this off-the-wall view of the progression of textual develpment is certainly not 'clear' to those who make their livings working with these writings every day.
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
So, if any writings are found with information that show parts are early and parts are late then it is most likely the early parts that are historically bogus.
If any writings are found with information that show parts are early and parts are late then it is most likely the LATE parts that are historically bogus.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
In effect, LATE Paul is the real Paul.
In effect EARLY Saul was likely the real Paul, but we no longer know what it was that Saul of Tarsus actually wrote, and what other LATTER unidentifiable Pseudo-Paul's have added to, or deleated from what Saul wrote.
What we can be cetain of, is that what we now have are not the genuine unmolested writings of a authentic 1st century Pharasic Jew named Paul.
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Old 12-31-2012, 09:06 AM   #1202
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It is probably noteworthy that ancient church writers never invoke any "midrashic" or "hadith" material from anywhere about the life, background, family or education of Paul at all. Nothing to fill in any gaps in the canon.
Of course there is nothing of this kind on Jesus either.
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Old 12-31-2012, 11:18 AM   #1203
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
It has been drawn to my attention that the claims of interpolations in the Pauline writings are flawed.

If the Pauline letters were actually composed early, that is, before c 68 CE then there would be no need for an intepolator to make the writings appear to have been composed later.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post
Doubtful that would have been the intention. The goal would be to insert latter devised theological and doctinal material into earlier writings to make it appear that this late devised material had been there all along. Many exaples of this have been identified.
Your claim is utterly erroneous. NO EARLY writings of the Pauline letters have ever been found and identified.

ALL the Pauline writings that have been found are DATED to the mid 2nd century or later.


Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
So, if any Pauline writings contain some information that appear to be EARLY and some other information that appear to be LATE then it is most likely the EARLY information that was interpolated.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar
I doubt you will find many accredited textual scholars who would support that proposition.
The normal progress is that earlier writing are redacted, edited, and updated so as to appear to give early support to latter ideas.
That is PRECISELY what I am arguing against. I am arguing against the Presumption that the Pauline writings were early and then interpolated with late material.

There were NO EARLY Pauline writings so any information found in the Pauline writings that appear to be early are either fiction or were inserted to give the false impression that they were early.

For example, the Pauline writer claimed that he met the Apostle Peter and James in Jerusalem in Galatians 1. Such a false statement was either originally in the Galatians or was added later to give the erroneous impression that the Pauline writer was a contemporary of Jesus, the son of God.

Again, and again, NO Pauline letters have ever been actually recovered and dated before c 68 CE or in the 1st century.

My argument is completely compatible with the actual recovered dated manuscripts.

The Pauline letters are ALL LATE writings, that is, AFTER the mid 2nd century or later.

I can no longer accept your imagination and unsubstantiated speculation as a valid support for your argument.
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Old 12-31-2012, 11:23 AM   #1204
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
It is probably noteworthy that ancient church writers never invoke any "midrashic" or "hadith" material from anywhere about the life, background, family or education of Paul at all. Nothing to fill in any gaps in the canon.
Of course there is nothing of this kind on Jesus either.
How would you classify the Acts of Paul?

And what does this have to do with The Myth Theory of aa5874?
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Old 12-31-2012, 12:43 PM   #1205
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I didn't see that this had the status of a midrash in the many sources of apologetic literature referring to the teachings and doctrines of the Church.
In any case this thread has been wandering and we are all joining in. Not unlike in many other threads.

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Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
It is probably noteworthy that ancient church writers never invoke any "midrashic" or "hadith" material from anywhere about the life, background, family or education of Paul at all. Nothing to fill in any gaps in the canon.
Of course there is nothing of this kind on Jesus either.
How would you classify the Acts of Paul?

And what does this have to do with The Myth Theory of aa5874?
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Old 12-31-2012, 01:02 PM   #1206
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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
It has been drawn to my attention that the claims of interpolations in the Pauline writings are flawed.

If the Pauline letters were actually composed early, that is, before c 68 CE then there would be no need for an intepolator to make the writings appear to have been composed later.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post
Doubtful that would have been the intention. The goal would be to insert latter devised theological and doctinal material into earlier writings to make it appear that this late devised material had been there all along. Many exaples of this have been identified.
Your claim is utterly erroneous. NO EARLY writings of the Pauline letters have ever been found and identified.

ALL the Pauline writings that have been found are DATED to the mid 2nd century or later.
Naturally, it was only after the mid-second century CE that Christianities inventors found and heavily intepolated these old and forgotten Jewish writings with their pagan Platonic Greek based theology.
Quote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
So, if any Pauline writings contain some information that appear to be EARLY and some other information that appear to be LATE then it is most likely the EARLY information that was interpolated.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar
I doubt you will find many accredited textual scholars who would support that proposition.
The normal progress is that earlier writing are redacted, edited, and updated so as to appear to give early support to latter ideas.
That is PRECISELY what I am arguing against. I am arguing against the Presumption that the Pauline writings were early and then interpolated with late material.

There were NO EARLY Pauline writings so any information found in the Pauline writings that appear to be early are either fiction or were inserted to give the false impression that they were early.
That is your Theory. I don't happen to buy it.
And I doubt you will ever be able to sell that line of reversed reasoning to the worlds foremost textual scholars.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa
The Pauline letters are ALL LATE writings, that is, AFTER the mid 2nd century or later.
As we now have them certainly. But I'll stick with my premise that the texts we have were founded and fashioned on the content of earlier texts which have not yet been recovered

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa
I can no longer accept your imagination and unsubstantiated speculation as a valid support for your argument.
That is your perogative.
However your intransigent and dogmatic closed mindedness does not entail that all others are bound to be likewise closed minded.
I will not allow your self-imposed myopic limitations to blind or silence me.

I stick with my view that there were earlier seminal Jewish texts upon which our known Pauline Epistles were based.
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Old 12-31-2012, 01:46 PM   #1207
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Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post
Doubtful that would have been the intention. The goal would be to insert latter devised theological and doctinal material into earlier writings to make it appear that this late devised material had been there all along. Many exaples of this have been identified.
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
Your claim is utterly erroneous. NO EARLY writings of the Pauline letters have ever been found and identified.

ALL the Pauline writings that have been found are DATED to the mid 2nd century or later.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar
.Naturally, it was only after the mid-second century CE that Christianities inventors found and heavily intepolated these old and forgotten Jewish writings with their pagan Platonic Greek based theology.
Again, I no longer accept your imagination as evidence. In this thread you must, must, must PRESENT evidence--a source.

Where do you get your stories from??? The Sky???

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
There were NO EARLY Pauline writings so any information found in the Pauline writings that appear to be early are either fiction or were inserted to give the false impression that they were early.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar
That is your Theory. I don't happen to buy it.
And I doubt you will ever be able to sell that line of reversed reasoning to the worlds foremost textual scholars.
I already know that you buy what you imagine which is exactly like those who claim the Pauline writings were early WITHOUT a shred of corroboration.

It is reversed reasoning to argue from your imagination before you have any credible evidence.

You are now actively engaged in selling your imagination as support for your stories about Saul.
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Old 12-31-2012, 02:01 PM   #1208
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Yeah, Bah! Humbug! right aa?

And a Happy New Year to you too aa.
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Old 12-31-2012, 02:57 PM   #1209
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Yeah, Bah! Humbug! right aa?

And a Happy New Year to you too aa.
All the best for the New Year to you also.
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Old 01-02-2013, 09:56 AM   #1210
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As we see below in chapter 32 of Contra Celsum, Origen becomes defensive about the identity of his Jesus rather than simply suggesting that the person vilified by the Jews and Celsus was ANOTHER PERSON from the 1st century BCE. Yet he does not do that.

The only reason could be that the author as the fictional author did not know the sources from the Jews directly that would have been able to distinguish between his Jesus and the Yeshu of the Jewish tradition, or would have felt cornered given the fact that the nativity story includes one Mary and Joseph, and the Jewish version Miriam and Yosef Pandera.

And if this is the case, there is the possibility that the parent figures of the nativity story itself was adopted by the gentiles from the Jewish story without even realizing that this would be libelous to their new religion, or perhaps that the names were inserted specifically by a disloyal author to cast aspersions on the official imperial religion.

CHAP. XXXII.

But let us now return to where the Jew is introduced, speaking of the mother of Jesus, and saying that "when she was pregnant she was turned out of doors by the carpenter to whom she had been betrothed, as having been guilty of adultery, and that she bore a child to a certain soldier named Panthera;" and let us see whether those who have blindly concocted these fables about the adultery of the Virgin with Panthera, and her rejection by the carpenter, did not invent these stories to overturn His miraculous conception by the Holy Ghost: for they could have falsified the history in a different manner, on account of its extremely miraculous character, and not have admitted, as it were against their will, that Jesus was born of no ordinary human marriage.

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Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
The fact is that Celsus and Origen fail to distinguish between the background setting of the son of Panthera of the Jews versus the gospel Jesus. And therefore the question is WHY is this so? Certainly it would strengthen Origen's position by pointing out this difference between the gospel setting and the Jewish one. Surely the Jews who informed Celsus also knew this. Nowhere is the first century a subject of dispute despite the fact that Celsus himself is described as living only a century after the gospel story.

Here again would seem to be a case where an opponent is actually used in a backhanded way to support the underlying premise of the Christian claim.
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