> Luke would know a technical eclipse was impossible at Passover, and he knew it was the Passover (Lk. 22.1). I don't have an explanation.
I did mean Luke, thanks for the correction. And I agree with this statement, but then the obvious conclusion is that Luke was thinking of a supernatural event (which makes the lack of external corroboration even more glaring).
> I don't get where the contradiction is that I'm supposed to explain.
The reason for the name Akeldama according to Acts is the fact of Judas’ messy death there: "he fell headlong, his body burst open and all his intestines spilled out. Everyone in Jerusalem heard about this, so they called that field in their language Akeldama, that is, Field of Blood."
> according to Matthew it is the fact that they used blood money to buy it
The chief priests picked up the coins and said, “It is against the law to put this into the treasury, since it is blood money.” So they decided to use the money to buy the potter’s field as a burial place for foreigners. That is why it has been called the Field of Blood to this day.
I find this particularly fascinating because it indicates yet again that a precise geographical setting is no guarantee of accuracy.
> This is an abductive case, and we are dealing with plausibilities based on the evidence we have.
No, we’re not. We’re dealing with likelihoods based on the evidence we have. That means choosing the most parsimonious explanation in any given case, and not unnecessarily multiplying assumptions.
> It would be odd to insert a totally allegorical section smack in the middle of a historical narrative.
Why? Remember, we don’t necessarily need to assume the Gospel writers themselves meant the story as allegory, just that it originated that way.
But they may well have. Matthew really emphasises the parallellism. "Whom do you choose, Jesus ho Barabbas or Jesus ho Christos?"
> Your theory doesn't hold because the theological angle is all wrong. Hopefully that helps.
Early Christians beg to differ. E.g. Origen:
Hear in the Gospels what Pilate said to the priests and the Jewish people: "Which of these two do you want me to send out to you, Jesus, who is called the Christ, or Barabbas?" Then all the people cried out to release Barabbas but to hand Jesus over to be killed. Behold, you have a he-goat who was sent "living into the wilderness," bearing with him the sins of the people who cried out and said, "Crucify, crucify." Therefore, the former is a he-goat sent "living into the wilderness" and the latter is the he-goat which was offered to God as an offering to atone for sins and he made a true atonement for those people who believe in him.
Jerome:
They have rejected Christ, but accept the Antichrist; we have recognized and acknowledged the humble Son of God, that afterwards we may have the triumphal Savior. In the end, our he-goat will be immolated before the altar of the Lord; their buck, the Antichrist, spit upon and cursed, will be cast into the wilderness. Our thief enters Paradise with the Lord; their thief, a homicide and blasphemer, dies in his sin. For them, Barabbas is released; for us, Christ is slain.
In short, one goat is released with the sins of the community. The other goat is killed for those sins. It works perfectly.
Other Christian texts have a slightly different perspective (e.g. Barnabas and Justin Martyr seem to identify Jesus with both goats) but clearly the interpretation required for the Barabbas story existed.
>He doesn't imply it but states it explicitly.
Okay, I thought you were disputing that.
>I don't see the problem towards which you seem to think you're pointing.
In brief: why did the Jewish leaders take Jesus’ words more seriously than the disciples themselves?
> we do know of isolated cases
Even leaving the “custom” aspect to one side, we really don’t, not comparable ones. Only one of your examples described dangerous prisoners being released in a rebellious province and that story involved the exchange of a hostage held by the sicarii, not a willing release.