Ed1Wolf,
Why do you ignore what people write and demand that they repeat it over and over again?
No, I provided a quote from Polycarp that obviously quotes from Luke.
Answered before.
Polycarp and early writers repeat only a few one-line quotes that could have come from Q, word of mouth, other gospels, etc. They do not give enough to know the phrases come from our gospels.
Why do you ignore what people write and demand that they repeat it over and over again?
I also demonstrated that Clement most likely knew the gospel accounts of the crucifixion by his quotes and commentary from Isaiah 53.
Answered before.
Clement uses Isaiah 53 as his source on the crucifixion. He never said he had another source. He never references the gospels as his source on the crucifixion. And he could have heard of the story from many sources, including Q, word of mouth, other gospels, etc.
Why do you ignore what people write and demand that they repeat it over and over again?
You just demonstrated that the number of extant early documents prior to 180 is very small.
Answered before.
We have the epistles, Clement, the Shepherd, the epistle of Barnabas, Thomas, and other writings from early Christianity before 180 AD. Before the middle of the second century, the gospels are on the margins, except for a few one line teachings that are similar to the gospels.
Why do you ignore what people write and demand that they repeat it over and over again?
It is certain that there were many many more than just those but due to the church being very poor during that time most of them have not survived.
Absolutely! That was my very point early in this thread. Papias, who wrote in the early first century, and said Mark had written a book, might have been referring to any number of books. He does not give us enough information to know what book he was talking about.
Because you keep referencing much later "gospels" and act as if they are just as accurate as the much earlier canonical gospels. I am just trying to keep you straight in your historical understanding.
I never, ever referenced a later gospel and acted as if it was just as accurate as contemporary writings.
I repeat. I never, ever referenced a later gospel and acted as if it was just as accurate as contemporary writings.
Please read what I actually write.
Please.
I am not claiming absolute certainty, I am just referring to all the edits that we know about.
There are a lot of edits we know about. There are over 200,000 different variations in the New Testament manuscripts. There are more distinct variant readings in the New Testament then there are words in the New Testament. Some are significant. The ending of Mark after 16:8 was added. The story of the woman in adultery was added. And Matthew is a complete edit of the book of Mark.
And among those there is no evidence of any other edits.
How do you know there were no (or few) edits before 150 AD?
How do you know there were no (or few) edits before 150 AD?
I must have asked you that a dozen times. You refuse to answer.
We have no clear knowledge of the custody of those books before the middle of the second century. We don't know what care was used in copying them.
You are only assuming that there were other edits, due to your anti-supernaturalist presuppositions.
Answered before.
Please repeat after me:
I am saying we do not know what edits were done before the middle of the second century.
Please. Repeat. Those. Words.
I have said this over and over. You refuse to acknowledge what I am saying.
Why do you ignore what people write and demand that they repeat it over and over again?
Just like the theory of evolution, most evolutionists believe that there were transition forms that are missing in the fossil record even though there is no evidence of such transition forms. So it is we believe that there are no other edits because there is no evidence of such edits.
Huh? We believe there are transitional fossils, because many thousands of transitional fossils have been found. See
(A few) transitional fossils .
And we believe there were variations in the New Testament because over 200,000 variations have been found.