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8829
I recently ran across the following passage in Herbert C. Youtie, "Response," in *Jewish Languages: Theme and Variations*, ed. Herbert H. Paper (Cambridge MA: ...
John C. Poirier
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Jan 2, 2003
8:04 pm
8830
If Youtie is primarily a scholar of Jewish Studies, he might also have in mind the Jewish NT scholar Samuel Sandmel. I don't have the citation handy, but...
Ken Olson
kaolson@...
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Jan 2, 2003
8:27 pm
8831
Another early supporter of the Goulder hypothesis is Morton Scott Enslin, who predates even Farrer, if I am not mistaken, in rejecting the Q hypothesis, while...
Maluflen@...
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Jan 4, 2003
5:52 pm
8832
... Surely Markan priority predates the Q idea. It's the default hypothesis. tim Synoptic-L Homepage: http://www.bham.ac.uk/theology/synoptic-l List Owner:...
Tim Reynolds
molad@...
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Jan 4, 2003
9:58 pm
8833
Happy New Year to all. I'm just working through Keith F. Nickle, _The Synoptic Gospels: An Introduction_ (Revised and Expanded Edition; Louisville:...
Mark Goodacre
M.S.Goodacre@...
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Jan 7, 2003
10:35 am
8834
Mark, I have Keith F. Nickle, _The Synoptic Gospels_ (Atlanta: John Knox press, 1980). ... This is found on page 81, with footnote 21, and continues with the...
Ken Olson
kaolson@...
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Jan 7, 2003
1:49 pm
8835
On Tue, 07 Jan 2003 10:34:37 -0000 Mark Goodacre <M.S.Goodacre@...> ... While misrepresentation of other's views is unfortunately not uncommon in this ...
Stephen C. Carlson
scarlson@...
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Jan 7, 2003
4:18 pm
8836
... Oh well, Nickle did cite Farmer's SYNOPTIC PROBLEM after all. ... Stephen Carlson -- Stephen C. Carlson...
Stephen C. Carlson
scarlson@...
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Jan 8, 2003
12:49 am
8837
TCG - An Online Textual Commentary on the Greek Gospels: http://www-user.uni-bremen.de/~wie/TCG/index.html I would like to thank the folks from Bibleworks,...
Wieland Willker
willker@...
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Jan 9, 2003
10:33 am
8838
I've been wondering over the last few days whether we might almost suspect that we are at the beginning of a renaissance in the study of the Synoptic Problem....
Mark Goodacre
M.S.Goodacre@...
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Jan 10, 2003
2:48 pm
8839
It seems to me that Kloppenborg's interest in the Synoptic Problem is key: the fact that someone who is as intensely interested in Q as Kloppenborg should also...
John C. Poirier
poirier@...
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Jan 10, 2003
3:12 pm
8840
Mark, Add to this a 2001 Duke dissertation by Stephen Hultgren that I am reviewing for CBQ: Stephen Hultgren, _Narrative Elements in the Double Tradition: A...
Zeba Crook
zeba.crook@...
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Jan 10, 2003
3:12 pm
8841
It is widely accepted that Jesus' native language would have been an eastern one (Aramaic, or possibly Hebrew). Therefore there must have been at least one...
Ron Price
ron.price@...
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Jan 10, 2003
6:08 pm
8842
An interesting question, Ron, but I must disagree with your premise. Although Aramaic was the most widely spoken language in first-century Galilee, Greek was...
John C. Poirier
poirier@...
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Jan 10, 2003
7:23 pm
8843
... John, Admittedly my main criticism is directed at the 2ST, in which it is posited that Q was written in Greek, in spite of its supposed origin in an area...
Ron Price
ron.price@...
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Jan 11, 2003
11:25 am
8844
... Larry, I was referring to Jesus' impact on his *original* followers. On the Farrer and 2ST theories, the synoptic gospels contain no trace of any document...
Ron Price
ron.price@...
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Jan 13, 2003
8:52 am
8845
I was referring to Jesus' impact on his *original* followers. On the Farrer and 2ST theories, the synoptic gospels contain no trace of any document in any...
SRose63911@...
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Jan 13, 2003
9:14 am
8846
... Susan, All ancient sources should be considered on their merits. I don't know of any critical scholar who thinks that any of the Nag Hammadi documents were...
Ron Price
ron.price@...
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Jan 13, 2003
9:11 pm
8847
... Larry, You seem to be describing a democratic community. But James was an autocratic and extremely conservative leader who exerted his control from the...
Ron Price
ron.price@...
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Jan 13, 2003
9:12 pm
8848
Ron, The tannaitic Rabbis who opposed the religious use of Aramaic were usually open to the religious use of Greek. There is nothing at all strange about a...
John C. Poirier
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Jan 13, 2003
9:55 pm
8849
Larry Swain wrote: ...assuming that Jesus taught ONLY in Aramaic in the first place. As a casual observer to some of the comments on this list the last week or...
R. Steven Notley
notley@...
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Jan 13, 2003
10:13 pm
8850
... That the DSS were written in Hebrew does not warrant the conclusion that Hebrew was a language prominent in Palestine. In the first place, the Hebrew in...
Jeffrey B. Gibson
jgibson000@...
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Jan 13, 2003
10:53 pm
8851
... This is not true. Literary Hebrew is prominent among the Dead Sea Scrolls. But other documents such as 4QMMT are colloquial not literary. No less a ...
R. Steven Notley
notley@...
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Jan 13, 2003
11:34 pm
8852
... Jeffrey makes some very good points. As I follow the discussion, however, it seems to me that we also need to pay attention to the physical evidence as...
Thomas R. W. Longstaff
tlongst@...
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Jan 13, 2003
11:59 pm
8853
"Thomas R. W. Longstaff" wrote: What do we know of languages in use from ostraca and public inscriptions (which clearly people would be expected to read and ...
R. Steven Notley
notley@...
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Jan 14, 2003
4:20 am
8854
... I know of no evidence of monolingual "pockets" in first century Judaea. Certainly, the most widespread sector of society represented by proto-Pharisaism ...
R. Steven Notley
notley@...
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Jan 14, 2003
12:18 pm
8855
DaGoi@... wrote:What are the evident dividing lines between the aramaic use and the hebrew ... I know of no evidence of monolingual "pockets" in first...
R. Steven Notley
notley@...
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Jan 14, 2003
12:22 pm
8856
... - "Lazare" is aramaic (vs "Eleazar" which is hebrew) and the case in common with names in NT. (Is greek form of "Jesus" closer to aramaic or hebrew ?) -...
Emmanuel Fritsch
emmanuel.fritsch@...
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Jan 14, 2003
1:04 pm
8857
Steven, I’m with Jeffrey Gibson on this one. The writings of Qumran are inadmissible as evidence for the principal spoken language of first-century...
John C. Poirier
poirier@...
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Jan 14, 2003
1:23 pm
8858
... The Aramaic vs. Hebrew origins for names preserved in NT Greek is certainly open to question and tricky at best. Often what is presumed to be Aramaized...
R. Steven Notley
notley@...
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Jan 14, 2003
2:08 pm
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