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Old 09-25-2013, 09:57 AM   #91
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The quality of the parchment page image in the archive.org version is horrendous. I'd recommend instead this one from the 2006 Gorgias Press reprint.

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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
For the sake of the discussion let's assume that the archaeologically derived terminus ad quem is secure and that the fragment is a genuine relic of the mid 3rd century. The author of the fragment is not a professional scribe so we are not looking at the professional preservation of any "holy writ" rather some kind of personal copy or composition.

An image of the fragment is above, and on the WIKI page we find Kraeling's reconstruction. This does not show how the reconstruction was arrived at.

Let's start with the 3rd line containing a translation of "the crucified one":

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GREEK: [Γαλιλαι]α̣ς ορωσαι τον στ[αυρωθεντ]α. υυυ ην δε
ENGLISH: [Galile]e to see the crucified.
I take it that the translator thinks that "στα" is the nomina sacra for σταυρος (cross/stauros) ΣΤΣ which otherwise first appears c.200 CE.

Would this be correct?
Actually, this is one of three instances of Nomina Sacra, all of which have thin line across top:

Line 03 CTA (ΣTA, Sigma Tau Alpha, first three letters of ΣΤΑυρος = Cross)

Line 10 IH (IĒ, Iota Eta, first two letters of ΙΗσους = Jesus)

Line 13 ΘY (Theta Upsilon, first & last letters of ΘεοΥ = of God)

DCH
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Old 09-25-2013, 10:12 AM   #92
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Have you ever wondered why Ben Sira knows of Nehemiah but shows no knowledge of Ezra whatsoever?
I never noticed that before but it is interesting. You mentioning this is one of the good things about being at this forum. As to the bad aspects of the forum ...
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Old 09-25-2013, 10:16 AM   #93
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Duvduv

It is true that the Samaritans vilify Ezra and perhaps to spin's point, Ezra doesn't appear to be his real name. Look at 4 Ezra:

"In the thirtieth year after the ruin of the city I Salathiel (the same is Ezra) was in Babylon and lay troubled upon my bed."

Maybe Ezra was a name that only a certain faction of the Jews called Shealtiel (שְׁאַלְתִּיאֵל)
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Old 09-25-2013, 10:52 AM   #94
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Ezra is considered also have been the prophet Malachi in Jewish tradition, so what?

The Arabs called him Uzayr, but where they got the idea that any Jews considered him equivalent to the Arabian Christians notion of Jesus is a mystery to me.
http://www.answering-islam.org/Quran...s/009.030.html

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Duvduv

It is true that the Samaritans vilify Ezra and perhaps to spin's point, Ezra doesn't appear to be his real name. Look at 4 Ezra:

"In the thirtieth year after the ruin of the city I Salathiel (the same is Ezra) was in Babylon and lay troubled upon my bed."

Maybe Ezra was a name that only a certain faction of the Jews called Shealtiel (שְׁאַלְתִּיאֵל)
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Old 09-25-2013, 12:02 PM   #95
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But the Samaritans might not have recognized the name Ezra because they knew him by another name. 'Ezra' may have been the specifically Jewish way - or perhaps a specifically Jewish sectarian way - of identifying Shealtiel. There may have been Sadducean Samaritans who recognized that Moses did not write the existing Torah. Indeed as has been noted by Boid many of the beliefs of the modern Samaritans agree with Dosithean (= sectarian) halakhah.
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Old 09-25-2013, 12:50 PM   #96
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Then you will want to examine whether the mention of Samaritans (Cuthites) in several places in the Talmud refer to the same Samaritans as today, or referred to SOME OTHER sect of Samaritans who had a closer and friendlier association with rabbinic Jews so as to make issues of the validity of their performing circumcision, ritual slaughter and baking of matzah a question worthy of halachic examination.

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But the Samaritans might not have recognized the name Ezra because they knew him by another name. 'Ezra' may have been the specifically Jewish way - or perhaps a specifically Jewish sectarian way - of identifying Shealtiel. There may have been Sadducean Samaritans who recognized that Moses did not write the existing Torah. Indeed as has been noted by Boid many of the beliefs of the modern Samaritans agree with Dosithean (= sectarian) halakhah.
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Old 09-25-2013, 01:33 PM   #97
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If I want to hear Jews slander other people I can comb through your posts about the Christians here at the forum. No need to reach for a book.
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Old 09-25-2013, 01:49 PM   #98
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Huh?? Is this a case of projection??

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If I want to hear Jews slander other people I can comb through your posts about the Christians here at the forum. No need to reach for a book.
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Old 09-25-2013, 03:00 PM   #99
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I am happy with Jews. I happy being with Christians. I am happy being with atheists. I am happiest being with naked ladies. But I discovered today I am very uncomfortable being naked in front of two fully dressed women. One was okay but for some reason having two women examining me was disconcerting.
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Old 09-25-2013, 05:00 PM   #100
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Hmmm ...

"Ezra's" genealogy just happens to be the exact same as that of the High Priest Jehozadak:

EZRA 7:1-5 NEHEMIAH 11:10-11 CHRONICLES 6:3-15
     
Ezra * Jehozadak
Seraiah Seraiah Seraiah
Azariah * Azariah
Hilkiah Hilkiah Hilkiah
Shallum Meshullam Shallum
Zadok Zadok Zadok
* Meraioth *
Ahitub Ahitub Ahitub
Amariah * Amariah
Azariah * Azariah
* * Johanan
* * Azariah
* * Ahimaaz
* * Zadok
* * Ahitub
* * Amariah
Meraioth * Meraioth
Zerahiah * Zerahiah
Uzzi * Uzzi
Bukki * Bukki
Abishua * Abishua
Phinehas * Phinehas
Eleazar * Eleazar
Aaron * Aaron

In Ezra 3:1-7, Zerubbabel completes an Alter and with Joshua son of Jehozadak offers sacrifices in the 2nd year of Darius I (520/519 BCE), celebrating the feast of Booths for 7 days starting the 1st day of the 7th month = Sept 27, 520 BCE Julian.

Yet in Nehemiah 8:13-18 it is said that the first thing Ezra does when He arrives in Judah to assume governorship (in the 7th year of Artaxerxes, which would be 458/457 for Art. I, 398/397 for Art II, or 352/351 for Art. III), is to celebrate the feast of Booths as if it was the very first time it had been done since the times of Joshua the son of Nun, and chooses the 15-21st day of the 7th month = Oct 17-23, 458 BCE, Oct 12-18 398 BCE, or Oct 14-20 352 BCE, respectively.

No matter how one dates matters, Ezra's celebration of Booths would have taken place at very least 62 years after Zerubbabel's celebration, and Zerubbabel's celebration would have occurred many centuries after the times of Joshua son of Nun.
Neh 8:17 The whole community that returned from the captivity made booths and dwelt in the booths -- the Israelites had not done so from the days of Joshua son of Nun to that day -- and there was very great rejoicing.
The only thing that could possibly save this inconsistency is for the "times of Joshua son of Nun" to include periods when priests still routinely officiated in the temple, and somehow include Joshua son of Jehozadak in this period, or assume that the Ezra and Zerubbabel traditions are two variants of the same set of events, or some garbling of them plus details from the governorship of Nehemiah.

DCH

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Originally Posted by stephan huller View Post
Duvduv

It is true that the Samaritans vilify Ezra and perhaps to spin's point, Ezra doesn't appear to be his real name. Look at 4 Ezra:

"In the thirtieth year after the ruin of the city I Salathiel (the same is Ezra) was in Babylon and lay troubled upon my bed."

Maybe Ezra was a name that only a certain faction of the Jews called Shealtiel (שְׁאַלְתִּיאֵל)
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