by jimwalton » Sat Apr 07, 2018 5:00 am
You know as well as I that the authorship of Matthew is highly debated. We can have that discussion if you like, but it's a different question than the one at hand. Regardless, the author of Matthew, in the 1st century, chose phoneuó to express the wording of Jesus in Matthew 5.
As to the character of the author of Matthew, whether you read superficially or deeply, the author of Matthew comes across as an educated person of intelligence, comfortable with the technicalities of the Law, with a good grasp of his material and the story he is trying to tell. The level of Greek fits a man who was probably tried-lingual. There is nothing in the Gospel that would lead someone do discredit or even doubt his character.
If you have evidence that leads us to doubt his character or choice of term, I'd be glad to hear it. And, frankly, if ultimately the account is that unworthy, your argument fails as well as mine. Why are we discussing the author's choice of term if the whole thing is unreliable? You started off the discussion with, "The Greek work phoneuó is used in the Bible." But if the author is untrustworthy and the account is unreliable, why are you pursuing the discussion? You are making your case on the author's choice of terminology, and now you seem to be saying we can't trust the author's choice of terminology.
You know as well as I that the authorship of Matthew is highly debated. We can have that discussion if you like, but it's a different question than the one at hand. Regardless, the author of Matthew, in the 1st century, chose phoneuó to express the wording of Jesus in Matthew 5.
As to the character of the author of Matthew, whether you read superficially or deeply, the author of Matthew comes across as an educated person of intelligence, comfortable with the technicalities of the Law, with a good grasp of his material and the story he is trying to tell. The level of Greek fits a man who was probably tried-lingual. There is nothing in the Gospel that would lead someone do discredit or even doubt his character.
If you have evidence that leads us to doubt his character or choice of term, I'd be glad to hear it. And, frankly, if ultimately the account is that unworthy, your argument fails as well as mine. Why are we discussing the author's choice of term if the whole thing is unreliable? You started off the discussion with, "The Greek work phoneuó is used in the Bible." But if the author is untrustworthy and the account is unreliable, why are you pursuing the discussion? You are making your case on the author's choice of terminology, and now you seem to be saying we can't trust the author's choice of terminology.