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- May 24, 2015
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I will leave new sources. However, your claim that "nobody in all the history of Christianity" has translated or interpreted John 1:1 like this is incorrect. All you have to do is type (with the quotation marks) "in the beginning was the reason" into Google, and you will see that there are plenty of people that believe Logos means Reason. But for your sake, I will leave better resources this time.
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No one has provided a translation of John 1:1-14 that looks anything like your distorted translation.
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"logos,( Greek: “word,” “reason,” or “plan”) plural logoi, in Greek philosophy and theology, the divine reason implicit in the cosmos, ordering it and giving it form and meaning."
http://www.britannica.com/topic/logos
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Here, you ignore the well documented concept of the Logos as a divine person in Greek thought, in a failed attempt to appeal fallaciously to the authority of the Encyclopedia Brittanica.
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Here is an interesting source:
"New Catholic Encyclopedia | 2003 | CROSSAN, D. M.; PETER, C. J. | 700+ words
COPYRIGHT 2003 The Gale Group Inc.
The word Logos (λόγος) has various meanings in Greek: reckoning, account, explanation, reason, narrative, saying, term, word, etc. But it is the use of this word in the expression, λόγος θεο[symbol omitted], "Word of God," as employed in the Johannine writings of the New Testament, that makes it a term of prime theological significance."
http://www.encyclopedia.com/article-1G2-3407706819/logos.html
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Another irrelevant appeal to authority; although if I might dare to answer fallacy with fallacy, I shall go down the ad hominem route and point out that Jean Dominic Crossan is a known heretic.
That said, I don't need to, because the absuridty of your translation is that you could have selected any one of the provided meanings and still missed the mark. Logos as a concept embraces all of the above, so to translate John 1:1 as saying, for example, "In the beginning was the Explanation" would be just as valid or invalid.
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William Tydale, in 1532 a.d. believed the Logos was an "it"...
"In the beginnynge was the worde and the worde was with God: and the worde was God.
The same was in the beginnynge with God.
All thinges were made by it and with out it was made nothinge that was made."
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Ah, now the appeal to authority is conflated with one of the earliest attempted translations of the NT and the linguistic anachronisms it contains. See the Geneva Bible for an example as to how this should look (Tyndale was of course a contributor to that). Note also Tyndale, unlike you, was a Trinitarian.
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http://thebiblecorner.com/englishbibles/tyndalebible/john/1.html
Here is a translation from Samuel Buckley, recorded by John LeClerc in The Harmony of an Evangelist in 1701:
"Before the Creation of the World, Reason did exist, for Reason was then in God; indeed was God himself, it not being possible for God to be without it. Reason, I say, did exist in God before the Creation of the World, every portion of which was created with the greatest Reason; nor can any thing be produc'd that has been made without it."
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Not a translation, but an obscure 18th century paraphrase from a Gospel harmony. About as useful for our purposes as the Jefferson Bible.
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Here is an article from gotquestions, just in case anyone here accepts it as a reliable source:
"Logos is the Greek term translated as “word,” “speech,” “principle,” or “thought.” In Greek philosophy, it also referred to a universal, divine reason or the mind of God."
http://www.gotquestions.org/what-is-the-Logos.html
Pope Benedict XVI said in 2005:
"In the so necessary dialogue between secularists and Catholics, we Christians must be very careful to remain faithful to this fundamental line: to live a faith that comes from the "Logos," from creative reason, and that, because of this, is also open to all that is truly rational."
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I find your attempt to invoke Pope Benedict XVI to defend your Soccinianism to be hysterically funny. It is also dishonest; my point has never been that Logos cannot be translated as Reason, but rather, that your mistranslation, which attempts to show that Logos does not refer to our Lord, is entirely wrong.
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You do realize that Appeal to Authority is a logical fallacy, don't you? You are assuming that every Greek scholar that has ever lived wrote down their translation and was able to obtain a publisher. Ad Hominem is also a logical fallacy, which I assumed you were using in your "Post Modernism" statement. I can see that Eusebius has influenced you. Here is a quick reference to several logical fallacies:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fallacies
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Oh, the irony! It burns! I feel my flesh crisping under the scorching heat of such pure distilled postmodern irony, spwen at me like the venomous discharge of a blowviper.
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Also, I did not say that my interpolation was valid "because it doesn't require a belief in the trinity". I said that an interpolation would be essential if one were to attempt to show how John is describing a triune god-man.
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Such an interpolation is not essential, because the early Church Fathers used John 1:1 to refute Arius without interpolation.
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Nobody has made any attempt at explaining to me why my translation is wrong. If it is wrong, then I will correct it. I am not allowed on any forum besides Controversial Theology, so perhaps one of you could do me a solid and find someone who is fluent in the obsolete Koine Greek language. In the Book of Hebrews, there are at least 168 terms not found in any other New Covenant writings, and 10 terms that are not found in any Koine or Classical Greek manuscript ever found:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07181a.htm (another Catholic source)
But perhaps someone can explain where my Greek is incorrectly translated. Maybe they can even explain how John is describing a triune, incarnate god-man that is called God the Son. I would like if this could be done without contradicting John 17:3:
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In addition to @Der Alter, @Cappadocius I believe has some not inconsiderable knowledge of Christology and is EO and I believe knowledgeable in this field; assuming he condescends to reply.
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"These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee:
As thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him.
And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent."
Thank you and God bless.
Read the Panarion of St. Epiphanius, Volume II, in refutation of Arius and Paul of Samosata.
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