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Old 03-17-2003, 12:36 AM   #31
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Originally posted by Layman
Not that I can tell. Kummel rejects all attempts to date Mark after the fall of Jerusalem.
No - he indicates one particular scholar who attempted to date Mark to 71 based on the situation in Rome did not make his case.

Quote:

I did not claim all scholars, I claimed a majority of scholars. And I proved my point.
What point do you think that you proved? You quote a German scholar who wrote in 1965 as to the range of opinions - does that prove anything? It certainly doesn't prove that Mark was written before the fall of Jerusalem, your original assertion. Nor does it prove that most scholars today date Mark to before the fall of Jerusalem.

Quote:
All "quoting" is by definition selective. Kummel is clear that he dates Mark before the fall of Jersualem. He is also clear that this is the opinion of the majority of scholars.
Kümmel splits the difference and settles on 70, the date of the destruction of the Temple. How is this before the fall of Jerusalem? I see nothing that indicates Kummel clearly dates Mark before the fall of Jerusalem; in fact, he seems fairly indecisive.

Quote:
. . .
Overall, though, you are missing the point. Mark, a contemporary of the author of Hebrews, writes of Jesus being executed outside the they city. This is evidence of the existence of such a tradition at that time. As such, it is more reasonable to conclude that the author of Hebrews was trying to "force" a fit of that tradition with existing Hebrew scripture. If the author had simply created a story about Jesus based solely on the Hebrew scripture at issue, it would have been much different.
It is not *clear* evidence of the existence of a tradition. The author of Hebrews may have written first, and Mark picked up the idea from him, or from a similar reading of the Hebrew scriptures. You keep trying to create multiple attestation when the evidence is consistant with direct influence.

We know that the Christians of the time read the Hebrew scriptures for clues about Jesus, but their method seems to have been rather idiosyncratic and creative. What do you think that a story created about Jesus based on the Hebrew scripture at issue would have been like, and how can you be sure?
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Old 03-17-2003, 02:48 AM   #32
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No. It is irrational to assert that two extremes are the only options when there is a large middle ground inbetween.
An ordinary sage/preacher that was lionized? Well, that is a HJ.
A mythical figure that was historicized? well, that is a MJ.

Why not be kind enough as to elaborate to us on this "large" middleground?

My point is that when (if we can) we reach the bottom of the layers of truth/fiction and ambiguities and strip off all the fluff, we will find either a mythical man like hercules or a historical being like Adolf Hitler.
Tell me what irrational about that please. And provide the continuum of possibilities between these two extremes. Or NOGO can do that since he says:
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I agree with you that between Jesus is God and no Jesus there are many possibilities.
Layman wrote:
We have been through that. What you call evidence is exactly what Doherty is disagreeing with.
You cannot support why Modern Translations and Commentaries Interpret the Term as "Second" or "Again" is any better than Doherty's other than appeal to popularity.

In essence, it betrays the fact that you do not understand why the interpretation is done as such because you cannot articulate the merits of the transactions you cling to. You can only regurgitate the interpretations like a computer without explaining why they are better than Dohertys. Its clear you believe there was a first coming and any translation that seems to support it is correct from your POV.

Its called argument from a position of preconception (apop).

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I was quite clear. Just because some makes some platonic noises does not mean they can't believe something happened on earth.
"platonic noises"? very funny. Platonism was a way of understanding the world and it permeated religious ideologies in all aspects in first century Palestine. We are not talking about "something". We are discussing the alleged life, death and resurrection of Jesus - the very core of christianity.

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I make my argument and you failed to offer any serious rebuttal. You were left resporting to conspiracies to alter the text.
Doherty made the following points which you could offer no substantive responses to:
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The most important thing to realize is that the act of "appearing" throughout these verses relates to one thing: Jesus' sacrifice, which is synonymous with his entry into the heavenly sanctuary to make his offering to God. The "appearing" in verse 26b is not some sudden shift to a general reference to Christ's birth or life on earth, something which is never even touched on when discussing the sacrifice. The "appearing to abolish sin" of this latter verse is in the same category as the "appearing before God" of the earlier verse 24. All of it takes place in heaven.
It is true that those two "appearings" do not use the same verb, but Ellingworth points out (p.480) that "there is no sharp distinction or contrast in Hebrews between emphainizo (verse 24) and phaneroo (verse 26b)." Some scholars (e.g., J. Swetnam, Hebrews, p.233) recognize that the idea of "appearing" in verse 26b is focused specifically on the sacrifice, and this, as we have seen, the author nowhere makes a point of locating on earth.
.....
And...

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That the writer does not have any earthly event in mind in this entire passage is indicated by a verse coming shortly after the 9:24-26 quoted above. 28a is a virtual restatement of 26b: "So Christ was offered once to remove men's sins. . ."

This removal or abolition of sin, spotlighted in both 26b and 28a, is tied in the former to the act of sacrifice and in the latter to the act of offering. But these are synonymous, for the act of offering is the act of sacrifice. And this act, as we have seen, is always presented as the entry of Christ into the heavenly sanctuary carrying his sacrificial blood.
Thus the reference to "appearing" at the completion of the ages (in 26b) is a reference to the heavenly event. Nowhere is anything earthly in view.

I make the same point in the Sound of Silence feature, put a little
differently:
.... Verse 24 above speaks solely of Jesus' appearance (the verb
emphainizo) before God, meaning in heaven. When we go on to verse 26, it too speaks of an "appearance" (the verb phaneroo), in this case at the end of the ages. The natural flow of meaning is to take the latter appearance as synonymous with the former one, in other words, it is the appearance in heaven. Since that latter appearance (in verse 26) is defined as the abolishing of sin by his sacrifice, and since such a sacrifice is always and exclusively spoken of as the entry of Jesus into the heavenly
tabernacle, we must assume that in verse 26, too, the writer has in mind the heavenly event. The "appearing" at the climax of history and the abolishing of sin by his sacrifice, is a reference to a spiritual event in heaven, not an earthly one on Calvary in incarnated form.
But this creates a devastating silence on any "appearance" on earth. If Jesus' sacrifice in heaven is defined as the appearance which took place at the completion of the ages, where is the incarnation, which also should have been seen as taking place at such a time? There is no sign in this entire passage that the writer is making a switch, between verse 24 and verse 26, from the heavenly appearance to the earthly one. In verse 26,
in fact, the verb used is phaneroo, one I have often pointed out would be an odd one to use to signify incarnation. It means to "reveal" or "be manifested." It can also mean to 'put in an appearance,' but here it can be aligned with all the other usages of this word, and related ones, in the epistles (eg, 1 Peter 1:20, Romans 3:21 and 24, Romans 16:26, etc.) where the meaning is clearly the revelation of Christ or the bringing of him to the light of knowledge, usually by God. This enriched meaning of "appearance" in Hebrews 9:26 reinforces the concept that Jesus, for this writer, is a spiritual entity, revealed in this last period of the world as having undergone a heavenly sacrifice, the most important element of which is the entry into the higher world sanctuary. Neither room nor importance is given in any degree for a presence on earth or a sacrifice in those lower physical precincts....
[ The following verses, 27-28, contain a reference to Jesus'
subsequent appearance when the End-time actually arrives. This is claimed to be the one clear place in the epistles where a reference is made to a second coming. If it were so, it could be placed in opposition to a first coming which constituted the one into the heavenly sanctuary. But there is an alternate understanding for the key phrase which renders the idea
"next" rather than "second." This question will be examined in the Appendix, but
is also covered in the Epilogue to Article No. 9. ]
I am still waiting for your response.

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Not when its clear that many later Christian writers did not feel any need to mention said historical fact.
How do you know what they did NOT feel?
The only way people express their thoughts/ feelings is thro their deeds. We cant assume they thought/felt what they did not express.
Going by your line of thought, one can state that the fact that Hitler did not express his love for the Jews does not mean he did not love them.
Arrant nonsense.
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Once again you prove you have no idea what Doherty's theories are. And that you have not read the subject matter at issue. Have you ever read one of Ignatius' letters? Or Polycarps? Or the other writings I referenced?
You are obviously more interested in overreaching yourself. Why would I take references from you?

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The scholar you cite does note even mention Hebrews.
That is because he doesn't need to its the same question he is addressing.

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Very funny. And hypocritical, considering the conclusory, uninformed grief you gave me over the obvious analogy that the author of Hebrews draws between Jesus and the high priests.
Aah, I gave you grief? Poor Layman. Bad IronMonkey. Bad IronMonkey. No wonder the insults and ad hominems. Why not take a break? I will cover for you - or better yet, why not ask Bede to do that?

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We are not just talking about an analogy. Per Doherty's theory, the author of Hebrews invents his refernces to Jesus based solely on Hebrew scripture.
That is what I have refuted in the previous page. The word camp appears in both references Doherty cited - hence the authors' interest in drawing a parallel. If you want to argue about the poetic taste of the author of Hebrews, thats your prerogative.

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No, it seems forced because the animals were sacrificed in the camp and Jesus was executed outside the gate. It seems forced because Jesus suffers before the sacrifice and the animal is "burned" after the sacrifice. It seems forced because the author switches from "camp" to "gate" for no apparent reason.
I get your point and agree that those contrasts exist. You must also admit however that:
1. Both Jesus and the animals were sacrificed.
2. Both the animals and Jesus suffered during the act of sacrifice.
3. Both of them were sacrificed to redeem (certain) people of sins.

Considering (1.)(2.)(3.) above, the locations, and sequences you mention are rather trivial. An analogy can be drawn between the two because they represent acts of sacrifice.

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Because the author was not restricted to Doherty's version of how Platonic thought works.
Doherty isnt the one arguing that the author was forcing "patterns" now is he?

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No one has proven what kind of allegedly "platonic framework" was used.
Its not about a "kind-of platonic framework". Its a platonic framework.
Read Supplementary article number 9 for a better understanding of the platinic mindset of the Hebrews author.
In a nutshell, to the platonists, what happened on earth was just a reflection/imitation of a higher truth.

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No its not. As I have shown specifically twice now.
You have not. Not even once. You have only disagreed and complained that the author is "forcing" an analogy.
I have argued with "proof of concept" Attis, Osiris etc.

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As it is, you've shown me time and again that you have not even read Hebrews and fail to understand Doherty's theory.
I dont need to show you I have read anything. Because that is not the main subject in this thread.
And I really wouldnt give a rats ass how you judge the breadth of what I have or have not read.

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IM: Now you have started another thread, with a dramatic, presumptuous title.
Layman: Your point?
Your'e pretentious. You just want to draw attention by your posturing.

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Actually, what I've shown is that there is no reason to think such an omission is significant.
Thats a subjective statement that is totally meaningless in the context of our discussion.
I can equally say there is no reason to think such an omission is insignificant.
In the absence of evidence, we have no reason to believe the writer(s) believed in a historical Jesus.

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Nope, I explain why its not significant by pointing out example of example of later Christian writers who write about the crucifixion and never mention its location.
Those examples only prove that there are later Christian writers who wrote about the crucifixion and never mentioned its location. But they do not prove that:
1. Mentioning the location was insignificant
2. The authors knew the location (but chose not to mention it).

Unless you can make a case for a conspiracy of silence.

Quote:
IM:
It follows logically that if one is writing about a person but doesnt mention any historical entities, then the person(being written about) is not likely to be historical, or the text cannot be considered to be historical.

Layman: If you assume the answer, you will be right in the question.
That, up there Layman, is an argument. With premises and a conclusion.
You need to refute it if you are serious about whatever you are claiming.

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Not when its clear that many later Christian writers did not feel any need to mention said historical fact.
Tell us how you know what they did not feel and I will turn your question-begging upside down and shake it clean.

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You have not established that the author's "platonic leanings" foreclosed any discussion of earthly events.
Doherty has. Supplementary article number 9.

From the quote you provided Luke T. Johnson, The New Testament Writings, at 422 said:

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...Only because Jesus was and had a body could he be a priest...
Apop.

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Of course the author uses "camp" when discussing the system set forth in the Scriptures. The difference, quite obvious, is that he does not use "camp" to describe Jesus' death.
Strawman argument again. You need to be vigilant about this habit Layman.

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I do not respond to absurd arguments. I've read probably about 20 or so commentaries on Hebrews from all different perspectives. Doherty's understanding is way out there.
So we should take you on your word that you have read and understood "about 20 or so commentaries on Hebrews from all different perspectives"? I see.

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I never said that the author had no Platonic persuasions.
Oh really!
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Wow. You used the word soteriology. Now explain yourself rather than rehashing words that I'm not sure you have any understanding of.
You are not sure? Not to worry, you will be soon enough.

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None of this explains why the author of Hebrews chose to use a word indicative of a contemporary tradition about the historical Jesus. Or why the order and location of Jesus and the animal sacrifice is so disparate.
The discrepancy is trivial. Dont beat yourself to death about it.

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I cited Bruce and Kent because they discussed how the analogy was "inexact",
He did not say the analogy is inexact. He said (according to your citation):
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The parallel may seem inexact
And the manner in which he said it implies the inexactness does not make it an inapt analogy.
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..."not meant to be pressed," and pointed out the differences between the OT system and the discussion of Jesus.
Of course there are differences. Its absurd to quote an author to explain that to us.
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I cited JOhnson for the reasons I had to recite him here.
The fact is that the three of them do not support your argument that the author of Hebrews "forced" a parallel. You picked it out of the air and cited them to mislead us into thinking your argument had some scholarly support.
Your argument remains totally unsupported, totally unsubstantiated, totally baseless.
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Old 03-17-2003, 08:11 AM   #33
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vtran31
How do you get that. I get it means it will be a time of tribulation that is so tribulous that anything in the past, beginning of the creation of God, this present time, now, or the future, ever will be.
I thought that I was quite clear.
This is how the statement should have been spoken by Jesus some 30-40 years before.

"For those days will be a time of tribulation such as has not occurred since the beginning of the creation which God created until then, and never will (after the event).

Jesus is prophesying about an event sometime in the future.
So nothing like it would have been experienced until then
NOT until now. From the speaker's (Jesus) perspective the statement is in error.

From Mark's perspective "now" is the time present time when he is writing the text. If the event is still in the future for Mark then he would have used the words "until then".

vtran31:
I get it means it will be a time of tribulation that is so tribulous that anything in the past, beginning of the creation of God, this present time, now, or the future, ever will be.

Yes, but where do you place the event???
is it
a) creation till present
b) now
c) in the future

Your statement seems to say that the event will never happen.
The logical place to put it is "now". The author is saying that nothing like it happened in the past and nothing like it will happen in the future.
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Old 03-17-2003, 08:29 AM   #34
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Quote:
Posted by Toto
Since no effective argument for a year before or after 70 can be cited, we must be satisfied with the conclusion that Mark was written around 70.

Toto:
This leaves a different impression from your quote, no?

Layman:
Not that I can tell. Kummel rejects all attempts to date Mark after the fall of Jerusalem.

That's pretty clear. What do you think is the ambiguity?

Yes, and if Toto's quote is correct, then he also rejects all attempts to date the fall of jerusalem before 70 CE.

Amazing! Layman does not see how his partial quote changes the conclusion which Kümmel states quite clearly " we must be satisfied with the conclusion that Mark was written around 70."

But Toto, this cannot really surprise you. Believers are masters at misquoting references. They learn the basic technique by reading the NT.
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Old 03-17-2003, 10:41 AM   #35
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Originally posted by NOGO
Yes, and if Toto's quote is correct, then he also rejects all attempts to date the [Mark] before 70 CE.

Amazing! Layman does not see how his partial quote changes the conclusion which Kümmel states quite clearly " we must be satisfied with the conclusion that Mark was written around 70."

But Toto, this cannot really surprise you. Believers are masters at misquoting references. They learn the basic technique by reading the NT.
Toto's quote is correct. Thank you for your ability to read plain English.

Layman is trained at this sort of dubious word twisting. It should be clear from the paragraph that I quoted that Kümmel did not reject any attempt to date Mark in any year, other than rejecting the evidence presented by one particular scholar for the year 71. It would be more accurate to say that Kümmel accepts all of the proposed dates as possibilities, and says that the date of 70 CE must "satisfy" us - in other words, it's a best guestimate in the face of uncertain knowledge.
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Old 03-17-2003, 12:03 PM   #36
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Layman
Actually, I got the point just fine. Every letter I cited also discussed Jesus' death, crucifixion, or "passion."

There is simply no significance in the "failure" to mention a detail a JesusMyther now finds necessary.
If you did get the point just fine, as you say, you certainly show no sign of it.

There is no significance to you because you are unable to step outside the box for just a moment, suficiently long, to even understand someones point of view.

If the author of Hebrews had mentioned Calvary when discussing the sacrifice of animals outside the camp as an analogy to Jesus' sacrifice then we would not be arguing.

The significance is obvious.

Calvary was a hill outside Jerusalem so the analogy is good. Jesus was sacrificed outside the "camp". Why then not state it since it is a benefit to the arguement presented?

You should also see that presenting a million verses discussing Jesus' sacrifice without the above analogy does not help your case. This is not disctated by the whims of a Jesus myther. It is disctated by the logic of the argument.

For this reason I must conclude that you still don't get the point although you claim that you do.
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Old 03-17-2003, 01:55 PM   #37
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Quote:
Originally posted by NOGO
If you did get the point just fine, as you say, you certainly show no sign of it.

There is no significance to you because you are unable to step outside the box for just a moment, suficiently long, to even understand someones point of view.
Actually, it is of no significance because it is of no signifiance. But I do thank you for the clarification.

Quote:
If the author of Hebrews had mentioned Calvary when discussing the sacrifice of animals outside the camp as an analogy to Jesus' sacrifice then we would not be arguing.
I'm not willing to take your word on that.

Quote:
The significance is obvious.
I disagree.

Quote:
Calvary was a hill outside Jerusalem so the analogy is good. Jesus was sacrificed outside the "camp". Why then not state it since it is a benefit to the arguement presented?
First, you are wrong. Jesus was not sacrificed outside the "camp." He was sacrificed outside the "gate." (meaning large gate, as to a city or temple).

Second, it would not benefit the argument presented to say "Calvary." The analogy is between outside the camp and outside the gate. Since you JMers like "parrallels," why do you ignore that here? To say, the animal was sacrificed "outside the camp" is roughly similar to "outside the gate." It's not the same, however, as saying, "outside the gate, near Calvary." It adds nothing to the argument. Nothing at all.

Quote:
You should also see that presenting a million verses discussing Jesus' sacrifice without the above analogy does not help your case. This is not disctated by the whims of a Jesus myther. It is disctated by the logic of the argument.
Not that you have shown.
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Old 03-17-2003, 02:07 PM   #38
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Quote:
Originally posted by Toto
What point do you think that you proved? You quote a German scholar who wrote in 1965 as to the range of opinions - does that prove anything? It certainly doesn't prove that Mark was written before the fall of Jerusalem, your original assertion. Nor does it prove that most scholars today date Mark to before the fall of Jerusalem.
E.P. Sanders is a german scholar who wrote in 1965?

Kummel doesn't buy a dating after the fall of Jerusalem. That is very clear from his quote. Not that I really care what is personal opinion is. What I was trying to prove to you I did prove: the majority of scholars date Mark before the fall of Jerusalem:

But inasmuch as there is no clear reference to the destruction of Jerusalem in the year 70, most scholars date Mark in the years 64-70.

To what extent Kummel finds the arguments compelling or not is irrelevant to the fact he writes that "most scholars date Mark in the years 64-70."

This, along with Sanders comment, does suggest that the majority of scholars date Mark befor the fall of Jerusalem.

Just a reminder. E.P. Sanders:

Cumulatively, however, the absence of decisive references in mark to events which were post-70 add up, and they make it likely that Mark was written near the end of the first generation of Jesus' followers: approximately 65-70.

E.P. Sanders & Margaret Davies, Studying the Synoptics, at 21.

The authors then proceed to note that, regarding their dating of Mark, "The reader will learn that we do not share many of the consensus judgments about the synoptics. This one, however, seems correct...." Id.

What is your evidence that a majority of scholars date Mark after the fall of Jerusalem, Toto?
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Old 03-17-2003, 03:17 PM   #39
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Quote:
Originally posted by Layman
E.P. Sanders is a German scholar who wrote in 1965?
Kümmel was. You are the one waving him around as the last word on liberal Christian interpretations.

Quote:
Kümmel doesn't buy a dating after the fall of Jerusalem. That is very clear from his quote. Not that I really care what is personal opinion is. What I was trying to prove to you I did prove: the majority of scholars date Mark before the fall of Jerusalem:

. . .

To what extent Kümmel finds the arguments compelling or not is irrelevant to the fact he writes that {deleted - repetition doesn't make it so}
You have no shame. I have caught you telling less than the whole truth, and you still persist in citing a misleading portion of the entire paragraph from Kümmel.

It is untrue that "Kümmel doesn't buy a dating after the fall of Jerusalem." Kümmel clearly does not take a decisive stand on the issue. He reports that "most scholars" say one thing, others say another, and picks a consensus date in the middle, which has Mark written around the time of the fall of Jerusalem.

Sheesh.

Quote:
This, along with Sanders comment, does suggest that the majority of scholars date Mark before the fall of Jerusalem.

. . .
Given your record of selective quotation, I would prefer to see the entire section that Sanders and Davies wrote.

You have, however, managed to change the subject, which was not the majority opinion on the dating of Mark, except that it reflects your ideological assumption that Mark was written by a person named Mark who knew St. Peter in Rome, and got his details from him, making Mark genuine history. You can probably find some faith based scholars who hold that view, who will interpret away any evidence of the fall of Jerusalem in Mark as not "decisive" enough. But modern scholars who are not basing their scholarship on their confessional stance appear to reject this. I don't have any sources here at work, except for Peter Kirby's page on Mark. But you've already rejected that, since Peter is no friend to Christianity.
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Old 03-17-2003, 04:08 PM   #40
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Quote:
Originally posted by Toto
Kümmel was. You are the one waving him around as the last word on liberal Christian interpretations.
As is obvious. I offered more than Kummel.

I never said he was the last word. I just wanted to offer up a liberal source. Obviously, you will only accept extremist scholars as sources.

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You have no shame. I have caught you telling less than the whole truth, and you still persist in citing a misleading portion of the entire paragraph from Kümmel.
Since almost any statement is going to be "less than the whole truth," this isn't much of an indictment.

Quote:
It is untrue that "Kümmel doesn't buy a dating after the fall of Jerusalem." Kümmel clearly does not take a decisive stand on the issue. He reports that "most scholars" say one thing, others say another, and picks a consensus date in the middle, which has Mark written around the time of the fall of Jerusalem.
No. He makes it clear that the majority of scholars date Mark before the fall of Jerusalem. It is you who are being dishonest here if you contend otherwise.

Quote:
Given your record of selective quotation, I would prefer to see the entire section that Sanders and Davies wrote.
Feel free to check them out.

All quotes are selective, Toto. At least I'm offering some. Sanders, Davies, and Kummel agree that the majority of scholars date Mark prior to the fall of Jerusalem.

Quote:
You have, however, managed to change the subject, which was not the majority opinion on the dating of Mark,
Cute. You are the one that accused me of relying on medieval scholars for this dating. Now that you have (once again) been proven a fool about this issue, you are pretending you never raised it.

Quote:
except that it reflects your ideological assumption that Mark was written by a person named Mark who knew St. Peter in Rome, and got his details from him, making Mark genuine history.
I certainly don't think that the Gospel of Mark had to be written by a Mark who knew Peter for it to be "genuine history."

Quote:
You can probably find some faith based scholars who hold that view, who will interpret away any evidence of the fall of Jerusalem in Mark as not "decisive" enough.
I probably could. But what I found was E.P. Sanders and Kummell, and their description of the majority opinion in Marcan scholarship.

Quote:
But modern scholars who are not basing their scholarship on their confessional stance appear to reject this. I don't have any sources here at work, except for Peter Kirby's page on Mark. But you've already rejected that, since Peter is no friend to Christianity.
If you don't have any evidence for your assertion, why are you so sure of it? And how did you determine that Sanders and Kummel base their stance on their "confessional stance"?

Quite a lot of hoops you are adding to this (completely unsupported as usual). Basically you seem intent on whittling down who is a "scholar" until only radical liberals are left. And all this without any evidence!

If I said the sky was blue on a clear day in California at noon you'd find some way of disputing that.

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