by jimwalton » Tue Dec 01, 2020 11:27 am
> Matthew basically just knocks the prophecies out like a checklist, in my interpretation in order to legitimize the story to the jews,
It's true that Matthew uses a lot of prophecies and that he is writing to legitimize Jesus aimed at a Jewish audience. So I perceive his writing intent as purposeful, whereas you perceive his writing intent as malicious.
> He no doubt had the prophecies in front of them
The weakness of this perspective is that Matthew used "prophecies" that were never perceived as Messianic prophecies, such as Isaiah 7.14, so I can't agree with your assessment. Matthew isn't just rolling down the text and checking off boxes; instead, he sees what happened in history and he's searching the Scriptures (under the superintendency of the Holy Spirit to see what's true (cf. Acts 17.11, and we might assume Paul was doing the same thing for 14 years in Gal. 2.1).
> Just like stated below, you have to make the text fit this interpretation, we have no evidence this was the case
I'm not twisting the text into the template. What I'm saying is this: (1) We have very little information about the registration/census in Palestine, and even in Rome. (2) The information we DO have comes from one source, Josephus, and it's a questionable source. (3) We do find a similar kind of situation in Egypt that might help us understand. We have only a keyhole view of the situation, so we bring whatever information we have to bear on it to try to yield a little understanding. We don't have much, but the little we have doesn't prove Luke to be false.
> And the text states the reason for them going to Bethlehem, because it was there ancestral land.
I wrote this last night in response to a different comment, and I think it also pertains to your comment: "Correct, but what does that tell us. Not much; too nonspecific. Is there an expectation that after 1000 years, EVERYONE who descended from David had to go to Bethlehem? I don't think so, so we still don't really know what's going on.
"I am one of the two primary genealogists for our family. We have traced several of our threads back 1000 years. Amazing. I mean, I'm astounded that it's possible, and on about 4 different lines. It turns out (WAAAAY back) that one of our ancestors is Lord Hugh de Berges (born 1070). That means we're (VERRRRRY remotely) related to Princess Diana, and therefore William (the presumptive next king of England), William the Conqueror, Winston Churchill, 5 US presidents, Count Von Bismarck, King Henry VIII, Charlemagne, Hugh Jackman, Madonna, and MILLIONS of others. Millions of us in 1000 years.
Who are you expecting converged on Bethlehem that year? Did every Jew anywhere in the Empire who could trace their lineage back to David have to go to Bethlehem (possibly thousands or tens of thousands of them)? Luke doesn't actually say that. 'One's own town' could mean many things; it's possible Luke added the 'because he was of the house and lineage of David' to reinforce the Davidic connection, not because everyone of Davidic descent had to return to Bethlehem."
> I was being generous to say she had a donkey, If you want to put her walking for 30 hrs be my guest. but I see you have switched epistemologies here: "the text doesn't mention a donkey" so no donkey, "the text doesn't mention Joseph owning land but he must because otherwise"... This is problematic.
You're missing my consistency. If the text doesn't say it, we don't take a stand on it. If the text doesn't say she rode a donkey, we don't assume a donkey. If the text doesn't say Joseph owned land there, we can't assume he did.
But she had to get from Nazareth to Bethlehem in some way. We presume cart, donkey, or walking. With Joseph being a carpenter, we might expect he owned a cart and a pull animal. We also know that people in that day, era, and region often walked, so they might not have thought a second thing about it; it was not considered a burden. We don't know how preggo she was, and was also know that for some women pregnancy is the best time of their lives and for others, the worst. The average person walks 2-3 mph, so for a 7-hr day, they could make 20 miles in a day. Joe and Mary could make the 100-mi trip in less than a week, even at a slow pace. The fact is, we don't know how she traveled, but these scenarios are not unlikely, uncommon, or unreasonable.
What about Joe owning land there? The truth is, we don't know how "he was of the line of David" factored into the registration picture. As I mentioned above, maybe it was Luke's mechanism to tie this narrative into Davidic lineage and that he was not providing the *reason* Joe was going there. So we try to suggest some reasonable alternatives. There's nothing renegade about my suggestions.
> my problem is that it almost certainly didn't happen.
Um, you stand on swampy ground here, and I'll explain why in the next comment.
> Josephus the Jewish historian would have almost certainly mentioned it, let alone any other historians...
Neither Philo nor Josephus—very prominent writers of the era—mention Emperor Claudius's expulsion fo all Jews from Rome in c. AD 49-50. Only Suetonius and Luke mention it, and each give it only one line. For a modern example, Ronald Reagan, in his autobiography, wrote only 2 sentences about his first marriage, from which two of his children were born! So we can't conclude Josephus "would have almost certainly mentioned it" if it were true, since he didn't mention the Claudius expulsion, of MUCH more import to him as a Jewish-Roman historian. So this logic doesn't hold.
> Bethlehem is beside Jerusalem, where the a lot of Jewish historians lived and worked out of, an order to kill all the first born infants of Jewish decent in Bethlehem and its vicinity would very likely have been documented.
> Bethlehem is beside Jerusalem.
Yep, 6 miles away.
> where the a lot of Jewish historians lived and worked out of,
Hmm. You'd have to name these for me.
> an order to kill all the first born infants of Jewish decent in Bethlehem and its vicinity would very likely have been documented.
As already commented, not necessarily. Bethlehem was a tiny and insignificant town. Herod often did murderous things. I've already shown that the historians of the day didn't always include even important events. I'm not convinced it's "likely."
> Macrobius was 5 centuries later, and making a remark about a quip not documenting history.
Yes, he was 5 centuries later, but still assessed by experts as a reliable historian. I've read biographies of Martin Luther, who was also 500 years ago. Should I trust them, or just reject them outright just because it's 500 years?
> I hope the tone of this isn't off putting
Nope. I'm enjoying the conversation.
> I am just trying to be frank as to why I am skeptical and not dress up my words unneccesarily.
That's fine. Glad to talk.
> Matthew basically just knocks the prophecies out like a checklist, in my interpretation in order to legitimize the story to the jews,
It's true that Matthew uses a lot of prophecies and that he is writing to legitimize Jesus aimed at a Jewish audience. So I perceive his writing intent as purposeful, whereas you perceive his writing intent as malicious.
> He no doubt had the prophecies in front of them
The weakness of this perspective is that Matthew used "prophecies" that were never perceived as Messianic prophecies, such as Isaiah 7.14, so I can't agree with your assessment. Matthew isn't just rolling down the text and checking off boxes; instead, he sees what happened in history and he's searching the Scriptures (under the superintendency of the Holy Spirit to see what's true (cf. Acts 17.11, and we might assume Paul was doing the same thing for 14 years in Gal. 2.1).
> Just like stated below, you have to make the text fit this interpretation, we have no evidence this was the case
I'm not twisting the text into the template. What I'm saying is this: (1) We have very little information about the registration/census in Palestine, and even in Rome. (2) The information we DO have comes from one source, Josephus, and it's a questionable source. (3) We do find a similar kind of situation in Egypt that might help us understand. We have only a keyhole view of the situation, so we bring whatever information we have to bear on it to try to yield a little understanding. We don't have much, but the little we have doesn't prove Luke to be false.
> And the text states the reason for them going to Bethlehem, because it was there ancestral land.
I wrote this last night in response to a different comment, and I think it also pertains to your comment: "Correct, but what does that tell us. Not much; too nonspecific. Is there an expectation that after 1000 years, EVERYONE who descended from David had to go to Bethlehem? I don't think so, so we still don't really know what's going on.
"I am one of the two primary genealogists for our family. We have traced several of our threads back 1000 years. Amazing. I mean, I'm astounded that it's possible, and on about 4 different lines. It turns out (WAAAAY back) that one of our ancestors is Lord Hugh de Berges (born 1070). That means we're (VERRRRRY remotely) related to Princess Diana, and therefore William (the presumptive next king of England), William the Conqueror, Winston Churchill, 5 US presidents, Count Von Bismarck, King Henry VIII, Charlemagne, Hugh Jackman, Madonna, and MILLIONS of others. Millions of us in 1000 years.
Who are you expecting converged on Bethlehem that year? Did every Jew anywhere in the Empire who could trace their lineage back to David have to go to Bethlehem (possibly thousands or tens of thousands of them)? Luke doesn't actually say that. 'One's own town' could mean many things; it's possible Luke added the 'because he was of the house and lineage of David' to reinforce the Davidic connection, not because everyone of Davidic descent had to return to Bethlehem."
> I was being generous to say she had a donkey, If you want to put her walking for 30 hrs be my guest. but I see you have switched epistemologies here: "the text doesn't mention a donkey" so no donkey, "the text doesn't mention Joseph owning land but he must because otherwise"... This is problematic.
You're missing my consistency. If the text doesn't say it, we don't take a stand on it. If the text doesn't say she rode a donkey, we don't assume a donkey. If the text doesn't say Joseph owned land there, we can't assume he did.
But she had to get from Nazareth to Bethlehem in some way. We presume cart, donkey, or walking. With Joseph being a carpenter, we might expect he owned a cart and a pull animal. We also know that people in that day, era, and region often walked, so they might not have thought a second thing about it; it was not considered a burden. We don't know how preggo she was, and was also know that for some women pregnancy is the best time of their lives and for others, the worst. The average person walks 2-3 mph, so for a 7-hr day, they could make 20 miles in a day. Joe and Mary could make the 100-mi trip in less than a week, even at a slow pace. The fact is, we don't know how she traveled, but these scenarios are not unlikely, uncommon, or unreasonable.
What about Joe owning land there? The truth is, we don't know how "he was of the line of David" factored into the registration picture. As I mentioned above, maybe it was Luke's mechanism to tie this narrative into Davidic lineage and that he was not providing the *reason* Joe was going there. So we try to suggest some reasonable alternatives. There's nothing renegade about my suggestions.
> my problem is that it almost certainly didn't happen.
Um, you stand on swampy ground here, and I'll explain why in the next comment.
> Josephus the Jewish historian would have almost certainly mentioned it, let alone any other historians...
Neither Philo nor Josephus—very prominent writers of the era—mention Emperor Claudius's expulsion fo all Jews from Rome in c. AD 49-50. Only Suetonius and Luke mention it, and each give it only one line. For a modern example, Ronald Reagan, in his autobiography, wrote only 2 sentences about his first marriage, from which two of his children were born! So we can't conclude Josephus "would have almost certainly mentioned it" if it were true, since he didn't mention the Claudius expulsion, of MUCH more import to him as a Jewish-Roman historian. So this logic doesn't hold.
> Bethlehem is beside Jerusalem, where the a lot of Jewish historians lived and worked out of, an order to kill all the first born infants of Jewish decent in Bethlehem and its vicinity would very likely have been documented.
> Bethlehem is beside Jerusalem.
Yep, 6 miles away.
> where the a lot of Jewish historians lived and worked out of,
Hmm. You'd have to name these for me.
> an order to kill all the first born infants of Jewish decent in Bethlehem and its vicinity would very likely have been documented.
As already commented, not necessarily. Bethlehem was a tiny and insignificant town. Herod often did murderous things. I've already shown that the historians of the day didn't always include even important events. I'm not convinced it's "likely."
> Macrobius was 5 centuries later, and making a remark about a quip not documenting history.
Yes, he was 5 centuries later, but still assessed by experts as a reliable historian. I've read biographies of Martin Luther, who was also 500 years ago. Should I trust them, or just reject them outright just because it's 500 years?
> I hope the tone of this isn't off putting
Nope. I'm enjoying the conversation.
> I am just trying to be frank as to why I am skeptical and not dress up my words unneccesarily.
That's fine. Glad to talk.