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02-18-2012, 10:42 AM | #11 | |||
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Discrepancies of 3 Years and 14 Years
Hi stephen,
This is extremely important. It is another indication that post Commodus, in the 190's and early 200's proto orthodoxy and the canonical texts are really only starting to be edited and put together in the form that we know them. Lets try this experiment. Let us say that Acts is composed before Luke or at least before the 15th year of Tiberius passage is slipped into it. Irenaeus says in Proof of the Apostolic Preaching, "For Herod the king of the Jews and Pontius Pilate, the governor of Claudius Caesar, came together and condemned Him to be crucified." Claudius is 41-54 CE. Irenaeus claims in Against Heresies 2.22 that Jesus was Baptized in his 30th years, but died twenty years later at age 50. If we assume that Irenaeus is working from the death of Herod the Great in 4 BCE, he is placing the baptism in 25 CE or the 12th year of Tiberius (14-37 CE). The ancients had no zero and counted the first year as one. Thus he is placing the death of Jesus around the 45 CE. Now let us look at Acts: Quote:
What we have is a three year discrepancy between Acts placing the death of Jesus in 42/43 CE under Claudius and Irenaeus placing it in 45 CE under Claudius. We also get this three year discrepancy between Basilides/Marcion date of 28 CE for the baptism (15th year of Tiberius) and 25 CE of Tertullian (12th yea of Tiberius). Note that Tertullian and Irenaeus are in agreement about the baptism year 25 CE under Claudius. (Is this because Irenaeus and Tertullian are one writer?) I thnk maryhelena is correct that the baptism date is coming from the Matthew birth narrative, just adding 30 years to the 4 B.C.E. date of Herod's death. We can assume that this was the first calculation done and 25 was the first Baptism date arrived at for Jesus. Those reading the gospel of John and noticing the three passovers would have given the crucifixion a date of 28. Those reading the gospel of John and seeing that the Jews suggested that Jesus was around 50 and the three passovers were not necessarily consecutive would have added 20 years to the 25 baptism date and arrived at a 45 CE crucifixion date. Those reading Acts and knowing from Jospehus that the famine happened in 45 would have calculated the date from the famine backward to arrive at a crucifixion date of 42 CE for Jesus. The writer or editor of the Pauline Galatians letter seems to be trying to synch up the different dates for the crucifixion. Paul gets converted, apparently in the same year as the death of Jesus. Yet he has to account for his visit visit to Jerusalem at the time of the prediction of the famine in 444/45 CE. The writer tells of a trip three years and then a trip 14 years later. He is trying most likely to get the 28 CE death date to match up with the 45 CE famine-trip to Jerusalem date. Warmly, Jay Raskin Quote:
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02-18-2012, 10:43 AM | #12 | ||
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Stephan, as I said in an earlier post - if NT scholars, today, can't make head or tail out of the contradictory NT dating structure for JC - then, likewise, back in earlier days - various compilations of the data would be in circulation. http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/250101.htm Eusebius: Church History (Book I) Quote:
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02-18-2012, 10:49 AM | #13 | |
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We also have to remember that four paragraphs later in Against Marcion Book One the familiar "fifteenth year of Tiberius" is referenced
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I think the beginning of Antoninus Pius reign is meant but even this doesn't make sense now. Yet scholars can't claim that Tertullian knows the year of Marcion He must be referencing 'the era of Antoninus.' But what does this have to do with 115 years 61/2 months I don't exactly know. The Edessan Chronicle similarly puts Marcion's arrival at 138 CE - clearly the beginning of Antoninus's rule but 138 - 115.6 = 123 CE or something like that. |
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02-18-2012, 11:08 AM | #14 |
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and that's the paradox of marcionite research. Tertullian says he doesn't know the date of marcion but scholars somehow turn that into a firm date for marcion!
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02-18-2012, 11:54 AM | #15 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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DCH |
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02-18-2012, 02:38 PM | #16 |
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well maybe that's the trick. 115 years and 6 and a half months from the beginning of July 11 138 is January 28 23 CE or there abouts.
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02-18-2012, 02:50 PM | #17 | |
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Jay
That's a very good point. It would have escaped me if you hadn't brought it up. Irenaeus's peculiar dating does fit (although from memory he says 'almost fifty'). Interestingly my friend Tjitze Baarda just sent me his latest article to be published I think later this year where he determines a variant in the 'not yet fifty' reading in John in the Syriac tradition. I am so bad at math now it takes real effort to to figure out what the implications of 49 rather than 50 are. One obvious thing - which has nothing to do with this topic is that it would imply that Jesus could have both been born and died in a sabbatical year (assuming of course that what Eusebius says about the book of Daniel also matches to a sabbatical system of some kind). BTW: Quote:
Thanks for these rewarding posts guys. Stephan |
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02-18-2012, 02:56 PM | #18 | |
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If he was born 6 CE he was thirty in 23 CE? Marcion's coming being associated with the start of Antoninus reign 138 - 115 and six months 1/2 = 23 CE THIS IS THE CATHOLIC SYSTEM. Does this mean that the early Catholics assumed a common crucifixion date for the Marcionites c. 25 CE? |
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02-18-2012, 03:21 PM | #19 | |||
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Quote:
'Against Heresies 3" Quote:
The Apology attributed to Tertullian Quote:
It is completely unsubstantiated that Tertullian and Irenaeus agree about the baptism of Jesus at 25 CE under Claudius. |
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02-18-2012, 08:00 PM | #20 | |
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With this discussion I can finally straighten out something which was only imperfectly accomplished in my book. The 'gospel' literary genre is non-existent in the Greek world. The only way the terminology makes any sense is if we assume a Hebrew or Aramaic original (as noted above). The underlying idea would be that when Jesus is standing in the Jewish house of worship reading Isaiah chapter 61 (or in Clement's gospel reading something related but ultimately not the same as what now appears in Luke):
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What comes from looking at Irenaeus's attack against Clement's understanding, Clement's statements equating the gospel with the Jubilee and other Alexandrian writers (Origen) is the clear intimation that Jesus's ministry must have coincided with a 49th year (i.e. anticipating the Jubilee in the subsequent year). This is not at all crazy. I have even read the current Pope make this argument. The difficulty is that the fifteen year of Tiberius does not fall on a sabbatical year. Yet 26 CE does. We know from the rabbinic literature that the temple was destroyed in the year following a sabbatical year. Not a Jubilee but the first year of a new cycle of seven. The temple was destroyed in the summer of 70 CE - so in other words in a year that began fall 69. So we know that 68/69 was a sabbatical year. There are other references to sabbatical years dating back to the Second Commonwealth period. The cycle must have been as follows (counting backwards): 68 61 54 47 40 33 26 19 12 5 CE 2 BCE 9 16 23 The point is that this is notion is well established. Since DCH has provided us with a way of making 26 CE become 'the 12th year of Tiberius' I think it is a very significant discovery. Now the gospel starts to make sense (especially Jesus's announcement in the Jewish house of worship at the beginning of Luke) The only things left to determine are - can we show the Jubilee fell in that cycle? If Samaritan tradition was shared by the Jews (which must be true) Jesus would be appearing in the forty-ninth year. The Jubilee is declared on the Day of Atonement of the 49th year, announced in all countries over a period of just under six months (six months less nine days, because the Day of Atonement is on the 10th of the 7th of year 49), and then it runs from the first to the last day of year 50, which is also year 1 of the next seven years. If 26 was the 49th year and 27 the Jubilee then this pattern would continue throughout time. The next pairing would be 75/76 CE and then 124/125 CE and then finally and most significantly 173/174, the year of the massive uprising in Alexandria that almost toppled Marcus Aurelius. This twelfth year of Tiberius finally begins to make the gospel make more sense. The idea of God appearing among men on the Jubilee is implicit in the Qumran literature. http://books.google.com/books?id=h4d...page&q&f=false |
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