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08-26-2002, 12:57 PM | #11 | |
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I didn't mean to imply that I disagreed with the Bobiensis being dated to the 4c more recently. My Bobiensis example was merely meant to show that, generally speaking, the palaeographers very often don't know what they're doing. Yes, there are certainly many MSS which have also been re-dated later over the years. One example is the Old Latin MS Vercellensis (abbreviated as "a"), which seems to have been pushed recently from 4c to late 5c. I don't think any ideological bias had played much of a role -- either way -- in these particular re-datings. These are all Western MSS, and they've never had too many fans, least of all in the more recent Anglo-German scholarship. I oppose the French scholarship to the Anglo-German scholarship, because I see the French textual scholarship as a lot more reasonable and realistic. As to Ptolemy citing John, I've certainly been aware of that. But we don't really know much about what sort of a version was used by Ptolemy. It could well have been a very early pre-canonical version. In my view, Jn originated in Alexandria as a rather short gnostic gospel. But later it had been "cleaned up" and expanded to become our canonical Jn. And it also had been given a new home in Ephesus. All the best, Yuri. |
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08-26-2002, 01:00 PM | #12 | |
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GThomas (GOT) is a very important text. It has great many links with the Old Syriac Christian textual tradition, and with the Diatessaron -- although most of our current GOT scholars don't like to dwell on this too much. But it's not of course "the genuine words of Jesus, miraculously preserved". Just like the NT gospels, GOT has many editorial layers. The importance of GOT is in that it clearly had a separate line of transmission -- at least at a later period -- compared to the canonical gospels. So it preserves a lot of unusual stuff, some it quite late, but some very early. Pretty soon, I'm planning to upload to the Net a study of GOT Logion 79 ("A woman in the crowd said to him, "Lucky are the womb that bore you and the breasts that fed you.", etc."), that will clarify quite a bit about how the editors of GOT were working with very early texts, and adding stuff on top of that. All the best, Yuri. |
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08-26-2002, 01:20 PM | #13 | ||||
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That's what I'm saying, the importance of P52 is widely overrated in NT scholarship. Quote:
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But maybe it isn't a coincidence? Could it be possible that, originally, both these Papyri only featured the Passion Narrative -- rather than the full gospel of John? After all, some scholars think that the Passion Narratives preceded the complete gospels. In any case, the Passion Narratives were often preserved separately even in the later centuries. As to the "ivory tower conspiracy theory", I don't really need it at all. As I say, the mood in NT studies became a lot more conservative after WWII, and this is a fact, rather than conspiracy. So there was a more conservative mood, and p52 may have just happened to come in handy to satisfy the desire of the scholars to date everything earlier than before. Where there's a will, there's a way. All the best, Yuri. |
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08-26-2002, 02:18 PM | #14 |
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Greetings, all,
For anybody who might be interested, I'm now providing some additional reasons to doubt the very early status of P52. This time, the info comes from some conventional NT scholarly sources, the stuff that has been published recently. In the other thread, CX already cited some material from the following book by Schnelle. But it looks like he may not have read the footnotes to p. 477! Because there's some important stuff there about the recent re-dating of p52 by Schmidt. Recently, A. Schmidt (ZWEI ANMERKUNGEN ZU P.RYL.III 457, APF 35, 1989) dated the Rylands to ca 170 CE. A reference to this is found in U. Schnelle, THE HISTORY AND THEOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT WRITINGS, Fortress Press, Minneapolis, 1998 / SCM, London, 1998, p. 477, n. 119. According to Schnelle, A. Schmidt "dates p52 in the period around 170 CE (+/- 25) on the basis of a comparison with P Chester Beatty X." Also, a recent article by C. Tuckett in THE NEW TESTAMENT STUDIES, "P52 and Nomina Sacra" (October 2001) can be noted here in this discussion. In this article, Tuckett tried to find the Nomina Sacra in our MS Rylands, by doing a detailed study of line-length and word-spacing, but was unsuccessful. So he concluded that "Jesus" was written in full in the two instances where one might have expected to find Nomina Sacra in MS Rylands. But it is generally believed that there was a regular practice of abbreviating nomina sacra in early Christianity. So this also seems at odds with a very early dating of p52. And so, I have now presented quite a bit of evidence that tends to cast doubt on the very special status that p52 still enjoys in today's NT studies. I'm saying that almost everything to do with this little scrap of writing is really based on wishful thinking, rather than hard evidence. This is really a fraud, that's what it is. And moreover, in general, the early dating of the canonical gospels, that our crooked NT guild is still advocating almost unanimously, is likewise a clear and obvious fraud. These are not 1c documents. These are clearly very late and corrupt texts, that tend to portray Jesus as a Gentile Jesus. Contrary to common perception, the really primitive gospel texts are not lost. These are the ancient Old Syriac Aramaic gospels, that have mostly been ignored and covered up in recent NT scholarship. And also, the Diatessaron is very important, because it comes from the same Aramaic textual tradition. The picture of Jesus that one finds in these Semitic-based texts is very different. All the best, Yuri. |
08-26-2002, 02:30 PM | #15 | |||
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Actually If I'm not mistaken P90 completely includes the verses attested by P52. I don't find it curious at all and I suspect something very much like what you describe is precisely what occured. I wonder if we are addressing the different points here. I doubt very much that canonical John as we have it existed in the latter part of the first century. Most Johannine scholars conclude several revisions/redactions are attested by our current version. Thus canonical John could date to the 2nd century and the now lost autograph (or first revision) could easily date to the end of the first century but bear only some similarity to canonical John. This is equally plausible for all the gospels. They've all been redacted. Noone except the most obtuse fundamentalist argues otherwise. So is your point that the gospels as we have them did not develop until the 2nd century or that the gospel genre did not exist at all in the first century? Certainly a strong case can be and is made for the former position. I think, however, the latter position would be much more difficult to establish though you are welcome to try. |
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08-29-2002, 09:19 AM | #16 | |||||
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You will note that so far I've made no assertions whatsoever in regard to this matter. The general rules of the game would have it that whoever makes any specific assertion has the onus of proving it. Quote:
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As to the gospel genre as such, according to what Loisy said in his later years, this originated only ca 100 CE... Perhaps at the very end of 1c. I don't necessarily agree with Loisy on everything, but I generally consider him as my main mentor in this whole NT field. IMHO, he's the last of the truly great -- and truly honest -- biblical scholars of the 20c. In all my years on the Net (as well as off the Net), I've never encountered even one professional biblical scholar who has read his two most important books, both written late in his life. (P. Kirby has these two books on his website in English translation.) All the best, Yuri. |
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08-29-2002, 10:06 AM | #17 | |
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In my opinion. it may be premature of you to talk about "onus" and/or the "general rules of the game". [ August 29, 2002: Message edited by: ReasonableDoubt ]</p> |
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08-29-2002, 11:22 AM | #18 | |
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Or should I say things that I don't believe in, rather than saying what I believe to be true? Yours, Yuri. |
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08-29-2002, 12:28 PM | #19 | |
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08-29-2002, 09:48 PM | #20 | ||
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