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whosebob
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Is the Q theory compatible with Catholic teaching?
JMJ + OBT
Hegesippus, the Authors of the Gospels essay I linked to above is entirely dedicated to answering this question.
In Christ.
IC XC NIKA
Is the Q theory compatible with Catholic teaching?
It wasn’t.…if scripture was written after the death of the last apostle…
Thanks for the link.JMJ + OBT
Hegesippus, the Authors of the Gospels essay I linked to above is entirely dedicated to answering this question.
In Christ.
IC XC NIKA
Dave do you believe in the Q theory? And doesnt the Q theory date the Gospels well after the death of the last one? So how can one hold this view?It wasn’t.
Dave do you believe in the Q theory? And doesnt the Q theory date the Gospels well after the death of the last one? So how can one hold this view?
Hegesippus,Dave do you believe in the Q theory? And doesnt the Q theory date the Gospels well after the death of the last one? So how can one hold this view?
Which version? And is there a compelling reason that I should?Dave do you believe in the Q theory?
The version of the Q theory I was taught in my bachelor’s studies by the fine Jesuits of Gonzaga University many moons ago did not present it as necessarily including a post-1st century authorship of the canonical writings of the NT. In fact, in my NT course, it was taught that most Bible scholars held that all of the NT was written by at least AD 95.And doesn’t the Q theory date the Gospels well after the death of the last one? So how can one hold this view?
Dave, thanks for the response, I did not know that there was more than one Q theory, so please excuse my ignorance. I do not know if there is a compelling reason to believe in such a theory.Which version? And is there a compelling reason that I should?
The version of the Q theory I was taught in my bachelor’s studies by the fine Jesuits of Gonzaga University many moons ago did not present it as necessarily including a post-1st century authorship of the canonical writings of the NT. In fact, in my NT course, it was taught that most Bible scholars held that all of the NT was written by at least AD 95.
Whether or not the sacred authors had before them some source of written tradition is irrelevent, in the final analysis. That source was not canonized, therefore it is not part of the deposit of faith once and for all delivered from the apostles to the Holy Apostolic Church. If it were important enough to care about, I figure it would have been better preserved by the Church, in accordance with the will of God.
If you get a chance, I recommend you read the following article by C.S. Lewis regarding his opinion of such modern biblical theories. Many literary critics have used the same techniques to dream up theories about writings by C.S. Lewis, giving their “learned” opinion as to his motives and sources, and they have been 100% wrong, according to Lewis. This should make us quite suspicious about the veracity of these methods.
Modern Theology and Biblical Criticism
by C.S. Lewis
I would like to thank you and yes that makes a lot of sense. This discussion with my friend is ongoing about scripture, and what we have to believe, as Catholics, about scripture. My friend I believe is influenced by a heterodox priest, yet really smart. I am sure I will have more questions as the discussion continues.JMJ + OBT
One of the (not so) subtle reasons for late dating the synoptics is the bias of many modern scholars who hold that supernatural phenomenon don’t exist at all or should only be considered to be truly supernatural when no other possibility is feasible.
Case in point: in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, Jesus predicts the destruction of the Temple in A.D. 70; it is hard for many skeptical modern scholars to believe that a man could really make a prophecy – which would be a supernatural phenomenon – so it’s easier for them to assume that these words were atrributed to Jesus after the Temple’s destruction, i.e. the composition of the Gospels wasn’t completed until after A.D. 70.
Does that make sense?
In Christ.
IC XC NIKA
Since it’s a theory, one is free to hold some of it and discard the rest, especially where it contradicts, or might lead you to contradict, official Catholic teaching. Theories are not doctrines, and they are only as strong or valid as the data behind them (speculation doesn’t count). The good thing about theories is that you can pick and choose what’s useful and what’s not – kind of “cafeteria theoretics.”Now I want to know if a Catholic can believe in the Q theory because the theory dates the Gospels after the death of the last apostle. So in short, can a Catholic believe the Q theory and if they do, must they say that the Q source was around before the death of the last apostle?
JMJ + OBTI am disturbed by what I read in “Bismarck and the 4 Gospel”. Is what the author saying true, that Markan priority gained respect because of the anti catholic position of Bismark?The following may be helpful to you and your friend:
I am disturbed by what I read in “Bismarck and the 4 Gospel”. Is what the author saying true, that Markan priority gained respect because of the anti catholic position of Bismark?
Not at all … Look, I would start with the following three documents, keeping in mind that the first two are “straight from the top” with regards to the Magisterium; and the third one, though not as authoritative as the others, is still a strong “official” Catholic guide to intepreting the Holy Bible:This may take a little bit, I was brought up in a fundamentalist Protestant church where I was taught to beleive that the Bible was written by, dictated by God to human robots who were like automatic writting machines … Am I wrong, are we as Catholics supposed to be fundie bible worshippers as well?