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08-03-2005, 07:42 AM | #11 | ||
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(Ted, I hope you do not mind my butting in for a moment.)
Vorkosigan, you appear to regard pericope construction by paralleling (the OT, for one) as a clear indicator of fictitiousness: Quote:
C. H. Dodd even thought he could demonstrate that Luke was written before 70, on the assumption that, if the author knew of the actual fall of Jerusalem, he would have described it in more concretely historical terms (like Josephus, I suppose) instead of leaning so heavily on the LXX. You appear to be making this same assumption (quote taken from Doherty and the 2nd Century Apologists): Quote:
Thinking out loud. Ben. |
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08-03-2005, 08:12 AM | #12 | |
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08-03-2005, 08:17 AM | #13 | |
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08-03-2005, 09:00 AM | #14 |
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If the person who wrote "Mark" had described the temple destruction etc as a historical event that would had completely blown the ''cover story'' that his gospel was allegedly an eyewitness [verbatim speeches of JC etc] account set 40 years prior, that the "prophecy'' was the result of after the event knowledge not supernatural power, and the whole thing was a-historical.
By using the Tanakh, this unknown person could claim the validity and authority of Judaism for his story- the "it's all predicted in the scriptures/typology" concept. The references to the temple c70 are pretty specific in "Mark" and was clearly recognized as such by his successor "Luke" who added some corroborating detail [19.41 for example] so I think it's ''dead parrot'' [Monty Python speak for bleeding obvious] that author"Mark" IS referring to 70ce. Now to go along with this blows some pretty major holes in the Christian apologetic line re the identity of the author, the date of authorship, and the whole question of credibility. So we get strained arguments to attempt to build the case that the author was not clearly referring to 70ce. Examples include..the desolating sacrilege is the Caligula statue [that was never built]..it was the bloke whose name I forget that desecrated the temple a 100plus years prior and the C.h.Dodd defence mentioned above. I am currently reading Dodd's "The Interpretation of the Fourth Gospel" first published in 1953. It's interesting, but when I skipped to his appendix where he adresses "The Historical Aspect" he reveals his preconceptions. In his words "John" describes.."the eternal reality conclusively revealed and embodied in an historical Person, who actually lived, worked, taught suffered and died..."p444. Such a preconception makes it extremely difficult for a believer like Dodd to admit that the first gospel was written at least 40 years after the events allegedly described. |
08-03-2005, 09:01 AM | #15 | |
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It seems, however, that from our point of view it might be a very good move to place an historically detailed and accurate prophecy of the fall of Jerusalem on the lips of Jesus, much like Daniel 11.2-39 places an historically detailed and accurate prophecy of Hellenistic history on the lips of Daniel, or like 1 Kings 1.1-3 places a detailed and accurate prophecy of the reforms under Josiah on the lips of an anonymous prophet. (Note that it does not matter in this case whether we take the fulfillment in 2 Kings 23.15-18 as genuine history; what matters is that it is narrated as such.) Yet Luke et alii, if they wrote after 70 (as I think at least two of them did), passed by such an opportunity (especially if any of them knew the Jewish Wars of Josephus!) in favor of echoing the LXX. Why? If echoing the scriptures was that important to them, then what does that do to any presumption that they should have described historical events purely as historical events, minimizing the connections to the OT? I would like to use gospel material that is not predictive prophecy as an example that would eliminate the potential interference that you point out, Amaleq, but unfortunately the candidates that come to mind (the crucifixion of Jesus, for instance, which I myself take to be a brute fact of history, yet painted in OT colors as usual) might not be above suspicion as history in a discussion on this board (we might get sidetracked by arguments that the Testimonium is a total fabrication, the note in Tacitus is either fabricated or based on faulty information, Mar Saba is referring to somebody else, and so forth; I have not yet seen, on the other hand, any attempt to deny that Jerusalem fell in 70). Another observation. Luke tells us point-blank in the book of Acts that Christians were the sort of people who might see something happen and then turn around and describe it almost exclusively in terms of OT prophecy. Pentecost is a case in point. In the narrative, Peter sees the phenomenon of tongues of flame and a miracle involving language translation, but when he stands to speak about it, he quotes Joel at length about dreams and visions and signs in the heavens, none of which literally describes the scene before him. (Note again that it does not matter to the argument whether we think any such thing really happened at Pentecost circa 30; what matters is that Peter is presented as the kind of person who would refer to a concrete event in terms of OT prophecy.) If the early Christians habitually pointed up events, whether fictional or nonfictional, in OT terms, then the utility of OT parallelism as a criterion for fictitiousness is greatly compromised. Thanks for the insightful comment. Ben. |
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08-03-2005, 09:45 AM | #16 | ||
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ted |
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08-03-2005, 12:01 PM | #17 | ||
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Vorkosigan will state that the author's reliance upon Hebrew Scripture does not establish the story to be fiction so much as it denies that it can be asserted as history. So let it be written, so let it be done. It seems to me that your point would be valid if the author was describing the fall of Jerusalem and chose to use Scripture but that isn't really what he is doing. What is being described is the prophecy allegedly uttered by Jesus and the only way your question works in that context is if we know that the prophecy is a historical fact. Do you see what I mean? Perhaps there really was a guy named "Jesus" who spoke a prophecy about the destruction of the Temple but it seems just as possible that Mark's author might feel compelled to put such a prediction in the mouth of his Lord after the fact. Would a historical Jesus have phrased such a prophecy in Scriptural terms? Possibly. Would an author have continued to rely on Scripture to recreate a historical prophecy that nobody recorded verbatim? Probably. But it also seems probable that this same author would have continued to rely on Scripture to fabricate a prophecy that was never actually spoken. Quote:
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08-03-2005, 12:10 PM | #18 | |
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I would suggest that the treatment of Mark by the authors of Matthew and Luke is evidence that it was not taken as a serious work of history/biography but as a story that could be modified to fit a given author's differing beliefs. |
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08-03-2005, 12:19 PM | #19 | ||
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best wishes, Peter Kirby |
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08-03-2005, 12:59 PM | #20 | |
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IMO it is unlikely that Josephus was at that time sufficiently familiar with the Gospel story to parody it. The 'Antiquities' in c 93 CE might be another matter. Andrew Criddle |
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