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05-23-2013, 04:06 AM | #11 |
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My RSV has Galatians 1.15.16 as:
"But when he who had set me apart before I was born ... was pleased to reveal his Son to me". In my reading that version suggests an 'external stimulus" as opposed to 'in me". Interesting translation Also interesting is that my RSV has a footnote for the word 'to' which says "Greek in". A bob each way? |
05-23-2013, 05:12 AM | #12 | |||
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So it's not you claim? Quote:
Jeffrey |
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05-23-2013, 05:33 AM | #13 | |
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However, there is a meaning in English to be gained from revealing something "in someone", as in the case of a person as a vessel: think of a genetic trait running in a family, which is revealed in a particular descendant. Or the drunkenness of a parent revealed in a child. (Or the word of god revealed in a prophet. But I'd expect to find "revealed through (δια) a prophet", as the notion in Greek, as in Acts 2:16.) |
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05-23-2013, 06:01 AM | #14 | ||
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And one does find this here (note the rethinking of the RSV text by the translators of the NRSV): Quote:
And yet given what appears on p. 31 of JNGNM, one would never know that the Greek of Gal. 1:12 is rendered by anyone anywhere in a way other than the way the NIV renders it, let alone that (as Burton and Betz and a number [if not a "major portion"] of commentators have argued) that the NIV translation is wrong and misrepresents what Paul says. Ah well. In any case, where's the explicit reference to the "voice of Jesus"? Jeffrey |
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05-23-2013, 06:43 AM | #15 | |||
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The other thing that I wonder about is what software you used to write the post I'm responding to. In replying this is part of what I saw in the edit box: [T2][SIZE=2][FONT=Verdana][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][FONT=Verdana][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2][SIZE=2]In any case, where's the explicit reference to the "voice of Jesus"[SIZE=2]? [/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/FONT][/SIZE] [/SIZE][/SIZE] [/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE][/FONT][/SIZE][/T2] |
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05-23-2013, 07:01 AM | #16 | ||
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spin,
I have been busy with something else. But my basic point would be that Galatians is echoing the gospel that Paul wrote and possessed. Matthew 11:27 is being the allusion. So Clement: Quote:
Quote:
Paul is the Paraclete, he is the one whom the Son reveals to know the Father. |
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05-23-2013, 07:24 AM | #17 | |||
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As to what the range of meanings of "in me" might have, have a look at the listing and discussion of them in Martinus C. de Boer's Galatians (pp. 92-94) -- which I do not have readily to hand, otherwise I'd scan and post it here. Here's Betz's discussion of 1:16: Quote:
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Jeffrey |
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05-23-2013, 08:12 AM | #18 | |||
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And when I "assert" that the Pauline epistles come first, I present it as my arrived-at conclusion backed up with a mountain of evidence and argument. Check out my opening posting in that thread. I will do my best to avoid you in future. That won't be difficult, since you never give us anything to actually have to come up with counter-arguments against. Earl Doherty |
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05-23-2013, 08:35 AM | #19 | ||||
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Of course Galatians 1:12 does not directly say, if only because of its ambiguity in the genitive phrase, that Paul claims he has heard the voice of Jesus himself. By phrasing your posting the way you do, you insinuate--falsely--that this is exactly what I am saying, and your query adopts a tone of ridicule. But you are ridiculing a straw man of your own mounting, because I have never said that. What I have said is that Galatians 1:11-12 is a declaration by Paul that he has not gotten his gospel through the process of oral transmission, but through some process of revelation. Whether that is the voice of Jesus, the voice of God, or the voice of his book of Jewish scriptures developing a mouth and speaking directly to him off the pages, is anyone's guess. And it doesn't matter. The fact that he declares revelation the source is supportive of the idea that he has received his "words of the Lord" from a direct revelation from Christ in heaven, since he uses the words "I have a word from the Lord" and in the case of 1 Cor. 11:23 says in the plainest way possible which even you can understand, Jeffrey, "For I received from the Lord..." Now, in any rational forum, this position I have laid out would be accepted for what it is, and either agreed with, or qualified or challenged on an equally respectful and scholarly basis, with counter-arguments and positions laid out in support. What are the odds that this is how Jeffrey will respond? And seeing that the phrase "the voice of Jesus" is in the title and OP of this thread, I will take the opportunity now to post here the response I made to Jeffrey on the other, locked thread. In addition to much scholarly discussion and appeal to the very sources under discussion, you will find further comments about Jeffrey's "games" (without inflammatory language), and my unwillingness to accept them. But such comments are a necessary part-and-parcel of any response to Jeffrey, simply because his postings against me (and others) are so tied up in those games--indeed that's virtually all they constitute--that he cannot be properly answered without taking those games and my criticism of them into account. Earl Doherty |
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05-23-2013, 09:24 AM | #20 | |
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Did Jesus speak to Paul? Yes
Did Paul hear the voice of Jesus? Yes. Jesus spoke to Paul and Paul heard his voice . The following is the interpretation of Martin Luther: Quote:
A Commentary on St. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians Luther, Martin (1483-1546) Graebner, Theodore (Translator) Publisher: Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library • This book is available in PDF, HTML, ePub, Kindle, and other formats. See http://www.ccel.org/ccel/luther/galatians.html |
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