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12-11-2008, 11:07 PM | #11 | |
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The logic of 15:12-19 is to me typically Pauline in its style. Your discourse problem doesn't seem convincing to me: I see no great connection between the end of ch.14 and the start of ch.16. What you intimate is that Paul isn't allowed to change the topic -- though he does so frequently. spin |
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12-12-2008, 04:02 AM | #12 | |||||
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12-12-2008, 05:52 AM | #13 | ||
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The church writers place Paul after the Jesus stories, the author of Acts place Paul after the ascension of Jesus and the letter writer called Paul placed himself after Jesus ascended to heaven. In almost all the letters, the writer claimed that Jesus was crucified, died and was resurrected. In order to show that 1 Cor 15.3-11 is an interpolation it must be shown that the letter writer could not have seen or heard information about Jesus at the time of writing the letter. Now, the time of writing of the letter to the Corinthians is uncertain, there is no external corroborative source for the writer. The claim that the words "according to the scriptures" are likely to be interpolations is very weak, since it would mean that anywhere a writer introduces some new phrase into his work then all new phrases are likely to be interpolations. 1 Cor 15.3-11 is considered an interpolation, if the letter writer is assumed to be early 1st century, but there is no hard evidence to verify such assumption. So the claim of interpolation is really an assumption based on another assumption. |
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12-12-2008, 07:03 AM | #14 | |
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The argument that all of chapter 15 is inauthentic is not based soley on the discontinuity it introduces between chapters 14 and 16. Chapter 15 is suspicious for several other reasons as well. The complete case is summarized as: 1. The introduction has Paul claiming to be reminding his readers of what he taught them. This is suspicious because it's the tact you would expect a later writer to use to have Paul speak his words. 2. The words then spoken in 3-11 are in fact out of character for the rest of Paul's writings, but not out of character for chapter 15 3. 3-8 appear to be a creed, which is anachronistic 4. Vs. 8 has Jesus appearing last to Paul, as part of the same set of teachings that were supposedly handed down to Paul. 5. All the discussion about resurrection bodies in Chapter 15 is totally out of character with the rest of Paul's writings 6. In Chapter 15, Jesus is referred to as the firstfruits, because he is the first to be resurrected. This is unharmonious with Paul's other usages of the expression (Rom. 8:23 and Romans 11:16), where it refers to the body of believers not the body of Jesus. 7. What the hell is all that business about baptism for the dead!? 8. The eschatology discussions in 24-28 and 50-52 are out of place in comparison to the rest of Paul's writings. 9. 1 Cor. 14 flows right into chapter 16. 15 interrupts that flow. Individually, none of these might be compelling, but as I group, I believe they are. |
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12-12-2008, 07:15 AM | #15 | |
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The idea of the death and resurrection of the messiah as well as general resurrection can indeed be found in the Jewish scriptures, so this isn't Paul referring to his own writings as scripture. The death is depicted in Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22, and the resurrection idea comes form Isaiah 26:19, Job 19:25-26, and Daniel 12:2. (Psalm 22, when read by first/second century Jews, would obviously describe a crucifixion,and so it formed the basis of the crucifixion in the Gospels). So if we do allow Paul to reference Jewish scriptures, then the claim that Jesus' death and resurrection are in accordance with them rings true. |
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12-12-2008, 08:21 AM | #16 | |
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The persistence of the twelve in the tradition indicates to me that the twelve may well be earlier than the eleven. Ben. |
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12-12-2008, 08:25 AM | #17 | |
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Ben. |
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12-12-2008, 10:44 AM | #18 | ||||||||||||||
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You know, I think I will cross swords with you on this one... sort of. I actually think a decent case for interpolation can be made here. I cannot say that it convinces me (yet), but it is stronger here than for a lot of the other interpolations I have seen proposed (including a number of yours ).
So let me do 4 things here:
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For I delivered to you at the first that Christ died and was buried and was raised again on the third day. So we preach and so you believed.I am not finished with my study on this text as reflecting Marcion, but the parts I have checked so far have panned out. Notice how we now have the content of the gospel announcement, answering to the I make known to you in verse 1, but the content corresponds completely to what we have from Paul elsewhere, with one exception, to wit, the third day. Quote:
In short, following the Marcionite text gives you both (A) early textual support for the interpolation and (B) the actual content of the Pauline gospel (with the emphasis on the resurrection part of it for the rest of the chapter), and all you have to do is to give up the notion that one way of expressing the three days is more primitive than the other. Alternately, you could possibly argue that Marcion himself added the on the third day part. But I would have to see the argument (based hopefully at least on the Marcionite gospel, which I have not looked into with regard to the three days) before giving an opinion on how strong it is. Quote:
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Besides, you have a methodological problem here, I think. In other arguments you see notions not surviving into the gospel era as a stroke against authenticity; in this case, the notion does survive into the gospel era (with a special appearance to Peter promised in Mark and mentioned in Luke, yet you still use it as an argument against authenticity. Overall, arguments based on which ideas survived and which did not are precarious. Quote:
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In 1 Corinthians 15.1-2 Paul speaks of the gospel he preached, using the first person singular (I). But in verses 14-15 (and in verse 11 in the Detering reconstruction) he uses the first person plural (we). Now, I have no problem with the we referring either to Paul alone (in an epistolary sense) or to Paul and Sosthenes (see 1.1); nor do I even have an insurmountable problem with Paul switching from singular to plural. But it does seem awfully convenient that the alleged interpolation just happens to fill out the we so nicely, exactly along the lines of the canonical verse 11. Ben. |
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12-12-2008, 02:36 PM | #19 | |
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12-12-2008, 10:04 PM | #20 | |||||||||||||||||
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All the gospels are adamant that it was one or more women first to see the risen Jesus. Putting Cephas at the beginning smacks of polemic. There would be no point in later inventing a first visit by women if a visit by Cephas/Peter was already in the tradition. It's a species of lectio difficilior. Quote:
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Of course the twelve is more primitive than the eleven -- the eleven presupposes the twelve. But again all the gospels agree that it was one of the twelve who betrayed Jesus. If the twelve here were part of the original tradition regarding post-resurrection traditions, then the most logical approach would have been to have had a 12b set up to take over when Judas took the leap. That way, you preserve the twelve. Once traditions are set, believers are so creative within the limits of the dogma. You've seen the whackiness of modern believers who feel compelled to defend the veracity of the word against reason and science. If the twelve at the resurrection were part of the tradition there is no reason not to maintain them. Quote:
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