R
Randy_Carson
Guest
Dr. Tait-Indeed. No disagreement there.
But it’s also nonsense to argue, as you did (on the other thread), that because some things in the NT are confirmed by outside evidence therefore everything else should be taken on trust.
As I keep saying, you have to look at the specifics of each story or saying. Of course the general nature of the text in which it’s found (the specific Biblical book, not the NT as a whole when we’re talking about historicity) is highly relevant. Mark and Luke appear to be far more interested in history than Matthew. That’s one of the reasons why a historical argument based on material unique to Matthew is such a bad one. But you cannot proceed first by proving “general reliability” and then deducing the reliability of a specific story from that. There is no shortcut for looking at each story on its own merits.
That is not the same thing as saying that the NT is unreliable unless confirmed by outside evidence.
On the other hand, texts clearly written with the explicit purpose of awakening or nurturing or defending religious faith are suspect in ways that other texts may not be. Emphasis on may–all texts have an agenda of some sort, but some agendas are more consuming than others. Historians prefer casual, matter-of-fact, indirect references in documents with other concerns, when they can get them. Any text that sets out to tell you something is regarded with suspicion on that point by a critical historian. And by definition, all the NT documents set out to tell us some key things about Jesus, in one way or another.
Thus, Acts is likely to be more trusted for what it says about Festus than for what it says about Paul, because Festus isn’t the focus and there’s no reason for him to be mentioned except that he happened to be the procurator at the time. If, on the other hand, we had a document written as an apologia for Festus’ governorship which happened to mention his dealings with a troublesome Jew named Paul, then that would be gold for historians interested in Paul.
It isn’t about “outside” evidence being more valuable than NT evidence, but about any text being open to suspicion on matters that clearly lie at the heart of the author’s agenda. That’s when you want corroboration the most, from a source that is more likely to be mentioning the point in question only incidentally, just because it happens to be true.
Edwin
My apologies for the delay in responding to your previous posts. That is high on my to-do list. However, I would like to take a quick moment to ask a question regarding this point you’re making.
A Notre Dame fan will understandably exhibit great enthusiasm regarding his team’s win over Duke in the ACC tournament, but does that prevent him from reporting the events of the game accurately or disqualify him as a reliable eyewitness?
Similarly, a Christian author such as Matthew, John or Luke may be firm believers in the resurrection of Christ, but does that prevent them from reporting events of the Last Supper accurately or disqualify them reliable as eyewitnesses?
And is this how you proceed with everything in your own life? If you have been married for x number of years, and in all that time, you have never known your wife to lie to you about anything, have you concluded that your wife is a trustworthy person who simply does not lie? Or do you still seek to verify each separate “story” she tells you about the debits in your check book?
It seems that we are destined to clash, ultimately, on this one point: whether general reliability of Matthew is sufficient to accept that Jesus promised to build a Church. I will say yes, and argue that there are numerous ways we can see that Jesus did intend to do this. You will say no and point to the lack of multiple attestation for Mt. 16:18. Yet others, such as Blomberg, would argue that this is NOT how historians approach other ancient texts, and from this I conclude that there is some sort of “reverse bias” at work in your thinking as seen in this statement:
“Any text that sets out to tell you something is regarded with suspicion on that point by a critical historian. And by definition, all the NT documents set out to tell us some key things about Jesus, in one way or another.”
Blomberg would simply ask for a level playing field. And so do I.