I was honestly sorry to have learned that my interest in knowing how you had felt about that, sabro, would have drawn a response of that quality. I would have expected as much from those who more often than not, tend to speak through megaphones. . .
I appreciate the honesty implied in your wording, and do not hold it against you as a person. I would yet like to point out a number of things; just for the record, and for those who may be following.
I am fully aware that what I'd set out to do on this thread, and what I have, in fact, been doing, could be considered inappropriate in structure for the likes of a forum such as this is. In order to run alongside the 'C:C/M' and support it, as I had described in the opening, I had planned to use this as a kind of data/statistc collection box, with explanation and discussion on those. That would cause it to end up being more of a 'study notes' structure than of a dialog/inter-communication like structure. That could be a miscalculation on my part.
The time spent, is not in finding, but in writing up what I have found; the 'finding' element having essentially finished. I would in no way whatsoever deny that I do have an 'agenda'--though not necessarily for this forum nor just through this means of communicating--in sharing what I and others have learned through more careful and broarder research than the greater majority of the 'simply churched'. It is not on the Gospel accounts alone, by any means, that is just one point among others, and I will admit, it isn't for everyone--not all can wade through the volume.
There are yet a great number of things, in the line of thought that I've been working on which need to be pointed out, yet I am at a bit of a loss at the moment--do I continue in detail?, only present the major lines of thought?, or just drop it all altogether.
You see, it's kind of like this, to be brief here, the three synotptic narratives are three distinctly individual works by non-witnesses to the events written on. All the three canoical works are considered to most likely have been based on a source labeled 'Q', and Matthew's as most likely being intertwined with the Didache and the Logia, out of Syria during the seventh to eighth decade of the first century. (Matthew and the Didache: Two Documents from the Same Jewish-Christian Milieu? ;Assen: Van Gorcum, 2005--this is an assembled scholarship work) According to John is even more 'evangelizing' than the other three, but likewise has roots in oral tradition--even considering the Muratorian Fragment's claim of John and Andrew both being among those who compiled it. The oral tradition makes the body of Christian history, and to a large degree, teaching.
Therefore, even though occasional parallels had obviously been drawn on from Hellinistic and Rabbinic stories, and some embelishment occured (Narrative Parallels to the New Testament, [SBL RESOURCES FOR BIBLICAL STUDY 22]. Fancis Martin 1988; STUDIES IN THE EARLY TEXT OF THE GOSPELS AND ACTS D.G.K Taylor 1999) the narratives are giving the historical account to the degree that they can well be 'classified as instances of Greco-Roman Biography.' (ibid) They can thus be tested on their historicity as equally as any biography from that era and culture can.
There is so much more I can add here. . .I'll let this sit for a while, think about what to do, then come back. If there are any comments by others, on the presentation structure, I'd like to hear you. On hold--for a while. MM
I appreciate the honesty implied in your wording, and do not hold it against you as a person. I would yet like to point out a number of things; just for the record, and for those who may be following.
I am fully aware that what I'd set out to do on this thread, and what I have, in fact, been doing, could be considered inappropriate in structure for the likes of a forum such as this is. In order to run alongside the 'C:C/M' and support it, as I had described in the opening, I had planned to use this as a kind of data/statistc collection box, with explanation and discussion on those. That would cause it to end up being more of a 'study notes' structure than of a dialog/inter-communication like structure. That could be a miscalculation on my part.
The time spent, is not in finding, but in writing up what I have found; the 'finding' element having essentially finished. I would in no way whatsoever deny that I do have an 'agenda'--though not necessarily for this forum nor just through this means of communicating--in sharing what I and others have learned through more careful and broarder research than the greater majority of the 'simply churched'. It is not on the Gospel accounts alone, by any means, that is just one point among others, and I will admit, it isn't for everyone--not all can wade through the volume.
There are yet a great number of things, in the line of thought that I've been working on which need to be pointed out, yet I am at a bit of a loss at the moment--do I continue in detail?, only present the major lines of thought?, or just drop it all altogether.
You see, it's kind of like this, to be brief here, the three synotptic narratives are three distinctly individual works by non-witnesses to the events written on. All the three canoical works are considered to most likely have been based on a source labeled 'Q', and Matthew's as most likely being intertwined with the Didache and the Logia, out of Syria during the seventh to eighth decade of the first century. (Matthew and the Didache: Two Documents from the Same Jewish-Christian Milieu? ;Assen: Van Gorcum, 2005--this is an assembled scholarship work) According to John is even more 'evangelizing' than the other three, but likewise has roots in oral tradition--even considering the Muratorian Fragment's claim of John and Andrew both being among those who compiled it. The oral tradition makes the body of Christian history, and to a large degree, teaching.
Therefore, even though occasional parallels had obviously been drawn on from Hellinistic and Rabbinic stories, and some embelishment occured (Narrative Parallels to the New Testament, [SBL RESOURCES FOR BIBLICAL STUDY 22]. Fancis Martin 1988; STUDIES IN THE EARLY TEXT OF THE GOSPELS AND ACTS D.G.K Taylor 1999) the narratives are giving the historical account to the degree that they can well be 'classified as instances of Greco-Roman Biography.' (ibid) They can thus be tested on their historicity as equally as any biography from that era and culture can.
There is so much more I can add here. . .I'll let this sit for a while, think about what to do, then come back. If there are any comments by others, on the presentation structure, I'd like to hear you. On hold--for a while. MM