by Cicero » Sun Dec 31, 2017 3:50 pm
I'll come back on the παραδιδωμι-related points in a few days, as I don't have access to BDAG where I am now and I don't like debating complex semantic issues from memory.
Where the Didache is concerned, "range of estimates" tends not to be very informative. The broad consensus is that it's a late 1st century document and the primitive nature of the document strongly supports that view. That it shows evidence of disparate sources in some way or another is pretty much self-evident, granted the nature of the document, so I don't think source criticism is a particularly salient issue here either. Furthermore, I do not dispute that the resurrection was widely held by Christians at the time of the Didache, nor do I claim that Paul's writings are unimportant.
Whatever your view of the Didache, it demands an explanation. This holds no matter how many early Christian documents support Paul's narrative. Two branches of a tradition are two branches of a tradition: the fact that one is represented by a single text and the other is represented by 20 texts is much less relevant. Positing an explosive, kerygma-based early Christianity does not seem to me to be the most parsimonious explanation for why what is ostensibly one of the most primitive documents we possess lacks that kerygma. I do not pretend that this is a conclusive argument and far be it from me to rest on laurels: when documentation is as sparse as it is for early Christianity the very concept of laurels is moot. Granted, however, that our methodological approach is one of "which view is more likely than the alternative"? -- which, I think, is the only rational approach -- I think it may fairly be pointed out
1) That the Didache is a primitive text, making historically plausible claims, giving no indication that it represents a fringe or heretical view within the Christian community of its time and strongly indicating the opposite.
2) That the Didache presents a Eucharist which is radically different from Paul's but is nonetheless easily explained within a more symbolically oriented Christianity (of the sort which, in my view, the most primitive layers of Christianity force us to posit anyway).
3) That the opposing tradition is best represented in the letters of a man who, though indisputably very early and of great interest, displays a (professedly) idiosyncratic theology and an interest in mystical revelation which does not (to put it mildly) immediately excite confidence.
4) That the theory "the Didache's symbolic meal of fellowship is a later development of Paul's Last Supper" is less plausible than "the Pauline historicised narrative is a later development of a symbolic meal early Christians shared" -- a reasoning which, I think, is broadly in line with what we know of the usual developments in human mythology (and also, although you will probably not share this premise, the developments we see in other early Christian stories).
5) That one may, on basis of this data, conclude that it is more likely than not that the Eucharist story is not based on a historical event.
I see two counter-arguments to my own view: the first is the arguably distasteful nature of the Eucharist ceremony, which may muddy the "usual direction of evolution"; I don't think this is a particularly strong argument, however, as one would still expect a reference to Jesus' institution of the feast in the Didache, or at least a reference either to Atonement or to the kerygma in relation to it.
Secondly, someone else's argument (that Matthew and Mark represent a different textual tradition to Luke and Paul) was one of which I was not aware and it is well taken. That being said, I am inclined to regard this as a result of the fact that Luke had access to 1 Corinthians while Matthew only had access to Mark. The chronology still easily allows for a narrative indirectly derived from the Pauline tradition. That is not, however, necessary: even if the tradition cannot be traced to Paul is still more likely to be secondary.