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03-10-2010, 09:33 PM | #11 | ||
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You will note that I call it an alternative chronological layout, not a reconstruction. Basically it rearranges the passages into chronological order, as in the preserved text they are confused in a manner similar to Ezra-Nehemiah. I recognize that in Daniel the "chronology" is artificial and probably serves as a framework for his "prophecies." I am not defending the idea that these are genuine historical "prophecies."
I agree that chapters 7, 8 9 & 10 all show signs of having been written around 164 BCE. The earlier chapters may rely on older lore or legends. DCH Quote:
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03-11-2010, 02:38 PM | #12 | |
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4 Ezra chapters 11-12 do have the Son of Man as the Messiah, as does 2 Baruch 35-40. These were ideas mainstream Judaism was working on. Are you assuming the Son of Man sayings in the second part of Enoch are pre-Christian, because that would be not at all solid. Milik thought they could be as late as 270AD, and there is no sense of a consensus on the dating question. First century BC to first century AD is as far as consensus has got for that section. On the broader question of “flow”, there are two aspects, I guess. Getting the idea out there to Xians the idea that the Bible isn't designed to be read in discrete sections, but seen as different acts of the same play is a key idea I push. And that's because it's exactly what the NT writers are doing. They are looking at the broader story of 'Sin, exile, forgiveness, restoration' as being a constantly recurring theme in God's dealings with Man/Israel. But that then leads to the question you raise, 'Can a Divine Origin be seen?'. The key difference between the Bible and other comparable collections of writings, for me, is the strong sense that there are things going on behind the stories and histories that seem to possess a life of their own. The discovery of complex ideas playing out through simpler narrative analogies; the sense of revelation of reality rather than creation of theology is something that has become a lot clearer to me. |
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03-11-2010, 04:18 PM | #13 | |||
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I suspect that many of the complex ideas you see playing out in the texts are not actually there in the texts; rather, you see them playing out because you are immersed in a long tradition of exegesis that sees them playing out. When you look at other faiths' texts, you do not see similar complex ideas being played out, because you are not immersed in their interpretive traditions. Those who are immersed in these other interpretive traditions will see ideas playing out in their own texts that are just as complex and just as interconnected (and just as foreign to the intent of the original authors) as you see in the Bible. |
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03-11-2010, 08:55 PM | #14 | ||
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Could you be more specific about those sources? Jane is correct, there is no clear cut consensus.
Before the discovery of the DSS, the consensus was that the Similitudes were composed between c. 105-64 B.C. (see R H Charles' translation and commerntary in Apocrypha & Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament (or via: amazon.co.uk), vol 2, 1913, pp. 170 ff). This was challenged by J C Hindley (no relation), who in the article "Towards a Date for the Similitudes of Enoch," NTS 14 (1967/68), finds two historical markers. He links a reference to shaking hills with streams of water in 54:7 with the Antioch earthquake of A.D. 115 as described by Dio Cassius. In addition, the reference to Parthians in 56:5-7, usually taken as a reference to the Parthian threat of 40 B.C., he takes as a reference to the Parthian confrontation with Trajan ca. A.D. 113-117. (The Book of Enoch, or, I Enoch: a new English edition: with commentary and textual notes (or via: amazon.co.uk), by Matthew Black, James C. Vanderkam & Otto Neugebauer, 1985, 1997) Then there is J T Milik, in The Books of Enoch (or via: amazon.co.uk) (1976), who says: It seems to me quite certain that it did not exist during the pre-Christian era, in an Aramaic or Hebrew text, since not one fragment of it, Semitic or even Greek, has been located in the very rich assortment of manuscripts from the caves of Qumran. Hence it is probably a Christian Greek composition (its use of the text of the LXX has already been pointed out) which draws its inspiration from the writings of the New testament, the Gospels especially, beginning with the titles of the pre-existent Messiah: 'Son of Man' (Matt. 9:6; 10:23; 12:8; etc.) and 'Elect' (Luke 23:35). However, it is not likely to be an early Christian work, since no quotation from it is recorded between the first and fourth centuries, that is, during the period in which quotations, allusions, and reminiscences of other works attributed to Enoch abound. In fact, the existence of the Greek Book of Parables is not attested until the early Middle Ages, and even then indirectly, by the stichometry of Nicephorus and by the Slavonic Enoch ... Finally, we must recall its absence from any early version (apart from the Ethiopic) and especially the absolute silence on this subject in Coptic literature. No discovery of Byzantine papyri in Egypt has provided a Greek or Coptic sample of it.His opinion was challenged by members of the SNTS Pseudepigrapha Seminar in Tuebingen (1977) and Paris (1978). See J H Charlesworth NTS 25 (1979) 315-23; M A Knibb, "The Date of the Parables of Enoch: A Critical Review" NTS 25 (1979) 345-59; and C L Mearns, "Dating the Similitudes of Enoch," NTS 25 (1979) 360-69. Their consensus, as reported by E. Isaac in his translation of Ethiopic Enoch published in Charlesworth's Old Testament Pseudepigrapha (or via: amazon.co.uk), vol 1, was that the "Similitudes were Jewish and dated from the first century A.D." Opposing the opinion of Milik that the Similitudes had replaced an original Book of Giants by A.D. 400, he asserts "I am convinced that 1 Enoch already contained the Similitudes by the end of the first century A.D." (pg. 7). DCH (BTW, Jane, thanks for bringing Milik into a discussion here - a welcome change from potatoes). Quote:
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03-13-2010, 12:22 PM | #15 | |
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I do think Joel Marcus makes a decent case for a pre-Christian Similitudes however (in his Gospel of Mark commentary). Basically, Jesus in the Gospels treats the Son of Man as a known quantity without bothering to explain who he is. That the Similitudes are non-Christian is evident from the total absence of references to the Son of Man's death and resurrection. The Enochic Son of Man, like Jesus, is to judge the dead on the day of judgment. Both Jesus (at least in some NT texts, e.g. John) and the Enochic figure are pre-existent heavenly beings. Marcus asserts, "With apologies to Voltaire, if the Enochic Son of Man had not existed, it would have been necessary to invent him." It seems that Jesus and the early Christians were drawing on an existing tradition of who the Son of Man was, a tradition that is also found in the Similitudes. This could mean that they were using the Similitudes, but it could also mean that both the Christians and the author of the Similitudes were drawing on a common tradition of Danielic exegesis. It seems unlikely that Similitudes is a Christian work itself, however, and it is unlikely that a post-Christian Jewish author would deliberately use Messianic ideas that originated in Christian circles. It seems likely that the early Christians had access to, if not the Similitudes itself, at least a common oral (written?) tradition that they both drew upon. |
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