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05-06-2013, 05:20 AM | #61 | |
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And if not apostles, in what sense are "gospels" "memoirs"? And if there were "memoirs" where are they now? Why would such undoubtedly valuable documents disappear? |
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05-06-2013, 08:23 AM | #62 | ||
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Please see the thread "Dating Paul," with the discussion around postings at the 850s, especially Jake Jones' posting #856 with his link:http://books.google.com/books?id=nhh...%20450&f=false
In any event, the difference is not realistic. No one has any more actual proof for the existence of a Justin Martyr than one does for the existence of a Jesus or a Paul, yet all three appear in the church writings under the name of Eusebius from the 4th or 5th century, and/or its interpolations over the centuries. The bottom line is that there is no evidence for the existence of any actual Christian communities, leaders, writers, etc. in the second century, and that includes a Justin, an Irenaeus and a Marcion. Quote:
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05-06-2013, 08:30 AM | #63 | ||
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Indeed, Mr. Justin only mentions a "John" but never cites a Matthew, Mark, Luke, gospel John or Paul. His arguments always revolve around prophetic revelation and fulfillment of prophecies, which would have nothing to do with a Paul anyway. And as I mentioned, his Memoirs of the Apostles make no distinction whatsoever among competing and contradictory stories among the gospels. For whatever it is worth, the church integrate an apologia justifying the emerging religion in relation to Judaism, but with a flavor of antiquity, at least back to the second century, on the heels of the appearance of the Christ in the FIRST century.
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05-06-2013, 08:33 AM | #64 | |||||||
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Hi Sheshbazzar,
I tend to agree that Justin Martyr's knowledge/lack of knowledge of the Gospels would tend to put him early, probably before 200 C.E., when knowledge of the four gospels are starting to spread fairly widely. On the other hand, I tend to think that we are getting writings by Christians in the name of a philosopher named Justin and probably not from a philosopher named Justin. One reason is that the writer claims that he, Justin, was a student of Plato. The works of Justin Martyr do not indicate that he was a student of Plato's. For example, in the "First Apology," we find this: Quote:
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He also mentions Rhadamanthus and Minos in "The Laws" (Book I and XII): Quote:
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As for Justin Martyr's mention of the idea of a thousand years of punishment, that too indicates a lack of knowledge of Plato. Plato mentions this belief only once at the end of "the Republic" (book X). Quote:
The eternal punishment that the writer says Christ offers is not analogous. It is not meant to improve the soul for the next life that the soul has. It is an irrational punishment, an unlimited torture for a limited crime. What the writer shows is that he does not know Plato's writings first hand and he does not understand them. It is most probable that he has never been a student of Plato. Rather, he is relying on summaries of Plato's writing, probably by Plutarch, Philo, Josephus and others. My guess is that there really was a Platonic philosopher named Justin, but he never published anything. He may have been friendly to Christians. Shortly after his death, Christians used his reputation to forge works in his name and further their cause. Warmly, Jay Raskin Quote:
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05-06-2013, 08:48 AM | #65 | |
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Obviously neither "Mark" nor "Luke" were Apostles. So was he just thinking about GMatthew and GJohn? It's an easy slip to link the "memoirs" with the gospels, there is a vague sort of resemblance in the concepts, but I don't think it's really warranted, the resemblance is too vague IMHO. |
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05-06-2013, 09:15 AM | #66 | ||
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In my view, this is putting the cart before the horse. The few quotations from the 'Memoirs' that Justin does cite do not exactly correspond to any of the readings of our 'received' Gospel texts. In his hundreds of quotes of OT Scripture, Justin is noteworthy for his reproduction in exacting conformity to the wording provided within the LXX texts, he does not ad-lib or introduce any 'free' alterations or renderings of those texts. In light of this established methodical carefulness in his quotations, in it is quite unlikely that he would in any way deviate from, or alter whatever rendering actually existed within 'The Memoirs of The Apostles' he cited. I believe what we are seeing in Justin are accurate quotations from what were the early proto-gospels, the writings of several variant but anonymous early gospel texts that Justin and the primitive church of his day were familiar with, and from out of which all of the latter independently identifiable Gospels, thoroughly edited and revised, eventually evolved. Justin could only refer to these early texts as the 'Memoirs' because the church, that is to say the orthodoxy had not at that early date as yet attached the four now familiar names. In spite of how popular and common the practice, there is no rational reason to assume, apart from blind conformity to church tradition, or 'faith' commitments, that there were only four gospels that Justin was familiar with, or that 'the Memoir' texts he employed were a 'harmonization' of any earlier existing Gospels similar to the latter evolved ones that we are now familiar with. Putting the horse in front of the assumption cart for a change, Justin used primitive Christian writings called 'The Memoirs of the Apostles'. These most likely were NOT any 'harmonizations' of our familiar Gospels, but their predecessors. . |
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05-06-2013, 09:47 AM | #67 | ||||
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You very well know that Justin did NOT claim that Matthew, Mark, Luke and John wrote the Memoirs of the Apostles. Please, please, please!!! You must first read the writings attributed to Justin. Justin's Dialogue with Trypho CIII Quote:
Who added "According to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John"? The stories of Jesus in the Canon are compatible with the Memoirs of the Apostles. The so-called Memoirs have not disappeared at all. Luke 22:44 KJV Quote:
It is found in "Against Heresies" supposedly composed by Irenaeus c 180 CE which appears to be a massive forgery written by multiple authors. The supposed Memoirs of the Apostles have not disappeared they were probably manipulated and falsely attributed to fictitious characters called Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Before "Against Heresies" there were no known gospels acknowledged as "according to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John". |
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05-06-2013, 10:02 AM | #68 | |
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05-06-2013, 10:36 AM | #69 | |
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Again, Justin did not claim he was a Platonist.
Justin specifically described that in his search for knowlegde of God that he attempted to follow different philosophical teachings including those of a Stoic, then a Peripatetic, then a Pythagorean, and after a Platonist. Justin also declared he was not satisfied with their teachings about God. Justin's Dialogue with Trypho II Quote:
It is also clear that it was Justin himself virtually without any help from any known actual Jesus cult teachers or philosophers who composed his works. Justin fundamentally relied on writings called the Memoirs of the Apostles and the Septuagint to develop his writings about his Jesus. |
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05-06-2013, 12:22 PM | #70 |
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No it doesn't. All it proves is that there was a text that reflected certain aspects of the Christ sect in relation to the fulfillment of prophecies that came to be expressed in gospels, and no proof that it had been composed in the 2nd century.
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