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08-24-2013, 02:37 AM | #1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Robert Eisler on Josephus' "Testimonium"
Spurred by Ken Olson's recent article on the Testimonium Flavianum, I've just spent a couple of days scanning and formatting the chapter in Robert Eisler's Messiah Jesus & John the Baptist in which he "reconstructs" the text of Josephus' testimony about Jesus (now found in Antiquities Book 18) for a couple of days.
For the sake of argument, and to see if John Meier, Alice Whealey and Ken Olson have really advanced the subject beyond what Eisler did back in 1930, as they seem to think, here is the received text of Josephus and Eisler's "reconstruction" side by side. I have 30+ OCDR'd pages (including Unicode Greek passages) available in a Word 2010 document if anyone wants to see them.
Pick away DCH |
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08-24-2013, 12:19 PM | #2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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J P Meier's reconstructed Testimonium
Here is the reconstruction of Josephus' Testimonium offered by John P. Meier:
Meier doesn't even attempt to imagine whether the original text might have been different, but seems to assume that the original was rather what is there now with a few added sentences. DCH |
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08-24-2013, 12:36 PM | #3 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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If there was an original text different than the received text, I think problems of transmission are introduced, right? Carrier discusses this in his critique of Whealey. Isn't the easiest solutin that there was one insertion containing the wholenTF? To me, this solution easily does away with the problems, for example the clear interruption beteween the previous and folloowing paragraohs. |
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08-25-2013, 07:25 AM | #4 |
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I suppose they think Mormons are named after John Smith.
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08-25-2013, 08:27 AM | #5 | ||
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[59] If we judge this short passage about James to be authentic, we are already aided in the much more difficult judgment about the second, longer, and more disputed text in Ant. 18.3.3 §63-64. This is the so-called Testimonium Flavianum (i.e., the “testimony of Flavius Josephus”). Almost every opinion imaginable has been voiced on the authenticity or inauthenticity of this passage. Four basic positions can be distilled.13Meier, who on one hand I love because his endnotes are about three times as long as the chapter itself, on the other hand has this unfortunate habit of always finally deciding on a non-controversial explanation that miraculously preserves all tenets of Christian faith. DCH |
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08-25-2013, 05:51 PM | #6 | ||
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Also, while the association of Josephus' perceived "sloppiness" with this being an example of his "patchwork" style is often asserted, but I haven't seen a strong demonstration of it. Does Josephus digress? Did he write in a period before footnotes? Yes, of course, to both of those. However, I find it typical in Josephus that when he does digress he provides indicator to his reader that he has done so or that he is going to do so. He provides road signs. In both the case of the TF and the case of the John the Baptist passage, he does not do so. Here we have two passages, both supportive more or less of the Christian story, and both are clean breaks from what precedes and what follows. That's two for two. The evidence does not add up on the side of any part of the TF being original to Josephus. |
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08-25-2013, 07:51 PM | #7 | |
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In the case of the TF the linkage to what comes before is the most generic possible: "About this time..." (18.63). That would allow the passage to be inserted almost anywhere. Compare that with 18.65, "About this time another [= other of two] outrage threw the Jews into an uproar...". This time marks a second terrible problem for the Jews and where was the first terrible problem? 18.55-62 with Pilate dipping into the temple treasury to fund an aqueduct. The quaint little christian testimony of 18.63-64 unhooks the second outrage narrative from the first and has nothing to do with Jewish outrages at all. The second outrage is delayed in the text, signaled in 18:65 but held up until 18.81. Yet Josephus is clear in 18.65, "I shall first give... and shall come back to the fate of the Jews...", always keeping in mind the theme. As a matter of discourse analysis the TF simply doesn't fit because it is unrelated in subject matter and it interrupts a complex linkage of signposts used by Josephus to let the reader know what he intends to talk about. They hold his narrative together... at least, they did until the TF interrupted the flow of the narrative. When we come to the passage about John the Baptist (18.116-119), it certainly interrupts the chronology of the narrative, but the signposting is typical of the author, specifically relating the passage with what came before, "But to some of the Jews the destruction of Herod's army seemed to be divine vengeance..." and finishes just as specifically, "yet the verdict of the Jews was that the destruction visited upon Herod's army was a vindication of John, since god saw fit to inflict such a blow to Herod." At the same time, while the TF was a nugget of christian material, the John passage did not reflect gospel ideas at all. There seems to be good reason to consider the TF as a candidate for christian production, but it doesn't seem to be the case with the John passage. |
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08-25-2013, 09:33 PM | #8 | |||
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"So" follows "This was the charge...," and has nothing to do with the John the Baptist passage. |
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08-25-2013, 11:36 PM | #9 |
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Grog, the awesome Roger Viklund summarizes some of Norden's arguments here:
http://rogerviklund.wordpress.com/20...it-in-context/ |
08-26-2013, 02:24 AM | #10 | ||||
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Vitellius δε got himself ready for war...The normal place for δε is the second element in the clause. It has a number of conjunctive uses, but one seems most relevant here according to L&S, see II.2 to resume after an interruption or parenthesiswhich is what is to be expected if the narrative is interrupted by the John detail. There would be no need for the δε had there been no interruption. I don't think there is anything supporting an insertion of the John material. |
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