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czeaiter
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I recommend that book too.
I think this (“εχηγεομαι”) is “exegeomai” - not “proskuneo” (“proskuneo”).εχηγεομαι
You are correct. It should have been προσεκύνησαν.HarryStotle:![]()
I think this (“εχηγεομαι”) is “exegeomai” - not “proskuneo” (“proskuneo”).εχηγεομαι
If you cannot see the progression here, or want to deny it is a progression,good luck with that. You wil not get very far engaging Ehrman if you cannot agree on a starting point.Ehrman alludes to facts anyone can see:
- Mark begins with the baptism of Jesus
- Luke begins with the Annunciation of Jesus and parallel conception of the Baptist.
- John begins with the creation of the cosmos.
Why is it that only the beginning of each Gospel marks its furthest point of “progress in its Christology?”Dovekin:![]()
If you cannot see the progression here, or want to deny it is a progression,good luck with that. You wil not get very far engaging Ehrman if you cannot agree on a starting point.Ehrman alludes to facts anyone can see:
- Mark begins with the baptism of Jesus
- Luke begins with the Annunciation of Jesus and parallel conception of the Baptist.
- John begins with the creation of the cosmos.
I have also talked about a progression in Christology.
It is one heck of a leap to go from the former set of observations to the latter set of conclusions! Worse yet, by leaving Matthew out of his discussion, he avoids a potentially serious stumbling block to his theory! (I mean… ignoring 25% of the Gospels, in order to avoid a major hole in one’s theory… that’s good scholarship, isn’t it?Ehrman alludes to facts anyone can see:
Ehrman then interprets these theologically:
- Mark begins with the baptism of Jesus
- Luke begins with the Annunciation of Jesus and parallel conception of the Baptist.
- John begins with the creation of the cosmos.
- Mark sees Jesus as adopted by God.
- Luke sees Jesus as divine from the Annunciation.
- John sees Jesus as divine from the creation.
No one has suggested that we do that. But by addressing the beginnings of the gospels, we can address some issues more easily. It gives some insight into the positions of the evangelists and what they felt was important, what unfolds over the course of the gospels.after reporting all the words and miracles of Jesus in each Gospel we are going to rely on where each begins to mark its place in the “progression” by looking only at the beginning?
That is largely the position I work from.In time the Church came to the orthodox view expressed in John, that Christ was God and was with God always.
I don’t understand what’s so shocking about this.
Right, but not in the way that Ehrman suggests. The histories of the Church don’t suggest that the common understanding was ‘adoptionism’, followed by ‘divine at conception’, followed by ‘divine always.’I thought it was commonly agreed that the early Church took some generations coming to a common understanding of Christ’s divinity.
And that’s the erroneous view we’re railing against, here. It wasn’t consecutive and tied to a common understanding of a particular Gospel, in a chronological ordering.Ehrman suggests that at first some followers believed Christ became divine when He was raised to Heaven; some that He became divine at His adoption by God; some that He was divine from His conception as God’s son. In time the Church came to the orthodox view expressed in John, that Christ was God and was with God always.
It’s that he miscasts the historical development of the understanding of Christ’s divinity.I don’t understand what’s so shocking about this.
OK. Perhaps you can find the citation, in a context that addresses Matthew in the context of his claims as presented here.He addresses Matthew elsewhere I am sure, and I am sure it fits in with the idea presented here.
When I get a chance, I’ll have to get back to Ehrman and Brown, then. But, if you can help out and provide citations…It was a way to critique Ehrman based on a comparison with Brown’s handling of it.
Right. Pitre makes this claim, as well, and demonstrates how Jesus is claiming divinity, but in ways that would be clear to Jews.In the past 20 years, some scholars have questioned this, and asserted that the other gospels assert the divinity of Jesus as strongly as John.
Nor does Ehrman. In fact he specifically denies that this was a succession of common understandings.Right, but not in the way that Ehrman suggests. The histories of the Church don’t suggest that the common understanding was ‘adoptionism’, followed by ‘divine at conception’, followed by ‘divine always.’
Nor does Ehrman suggest that it was.It wasn’t consecutive and tied to a common understanding of a particular Gospel, in a chronological ordering
Ok, then. You’re claiming that @Dovekin is in error, then? Since, after all, he states:Gorgias:![]()
Nor does Ehrman. In fact he specifically denies that this was a succession of common understandings.Right, but not in the way that Ehrman suggests. The histories of the Church don’t suggest that the common understanding was ‘adoptionism’, followed by ‘divine at conception’, followed by ‘divine always.’
Nor does Ehrman suggest that it was.It wasn’t consecutive and tied to a common understanding of a particular Gospel, in a chronological ordering
There is an obvious progression in the gospel beginings in the order Mark, Luke, John, no matter when they were written. There are also clear lines from those beginings to the later controversies.
Dovekin:
I thought it would be obvious I meantThere is an obvious progression in the gospel beginings in the order Mark, Luke, John, no matter when they were written. There are also clear lines from those beginings to the later controversies.
Not the theological interpretation that followed in that note.Ehrman alludes to facts anyone can see:
- Mark begins with the baptism of Jesus
- Luke begins with the Annunciation of Jesus and parallel conception of the Baptist.
- John begins with the creation of the cosmos.
“No matter when” was actually meant to mean no matter what order they were written in.