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#1 |
Assistant to the Regional Manager
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: The Orgasmatron
Posts: 24,338
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Spong--expounding upon Goulder--gives a thorough examination in his book "Liberating the Gospels". Midrash was a tool perhaps used by the Evangelists. Here is a good example from Liberating The Gospels:
... They are written, to a greater or lesser degree, in the midrashic style of the Jewish sacred storyteller, a style that most of us do not begin even now to comprehend. This style is not concerned with historic accuracy. It is concerned with meaning and understanding. The Jewish writers of antiquity interpreted God’s presence to be with Joshua after the death of Moses by repeating the parting of the waters story (Josh. 3). At the Red Sea that was the sign that God was with Moses (Exod. 14). When Joshua was said to have parted the waters of the Jordan River, it was not recounted as a literal event of history; rather it was the midrashic attempt to relate Joshua to Moses and thus demonstrate the presence of God with his successor. The same pattern operated later when both Elijah (2 Kings 2: ![]()
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Ἓν οἶδα ὅτι οὐδὲν οἶδα |
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