The NWT of John 1:1; Some Questions For Leolaia and Narkissos

by FireNBandits 40 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Leo, it was the Ignatian Epistles that opened my--at the time--evangelical mind to the sub-apostolic and early post-apostolic Church! I had to literally sit down and colllect myself after reading several of his letters. Since that time I've followed the various arguments as to which epistles are genuine, and to what degree they're genuine, but at the time of my first exposure I was dumbfounded. A clearly liturgical worship, an understanding of the Eucharist as the Body and Blood of Christ conferring immortality, a clearly hierarchial structure very close to that of the modern Orthodox and catholic churches...it was heady stuff indeed. It still is. It's a far cry from the fictions invented by fundamentalists and evangelicals who have little or no knowledge of the early church they so venerate. I continue to find Ignatius edifying, probably because of the influence of John's evangel.

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Hello Jospeh

    Football strikes me as a monumental waste of time, yet many others enjoy it very much. I prefer womens figure skating. Studying these matters is not a waste of my time as I find it very interesting and downright absorbing. I'm aware of the purpose the writers of John's evangel had in writing: "These are written that you may believe." They make no secret of it. John didn't have to establish the identity of the Logos because the philosophy of the Logos was well known in his time. However, times have changed and human thought has moved far away from that particular Greek philosophical system. So, we moderns need to do some study to understand the thought world which "John" inhabited and took for granted that his readers and hearers understood. That's a part, but only a part, of what I'm doing. It's a mistake to divorce any writing, not just the evangel of John, from it's historical moorings and then attempt to interpret it. The mind-boggling disunity of evangelicals and fundamentalists is a sad testament to this truth.

    Martin

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Yes, Doug, and I feel badly for these abused men. It's my understanding that some of them have taken, or are currently taking, the WTS to court. Do you have any information about this? if so, let me know. Thank you. It's good to "meet" you Doug.

  • JosephMalik
    JosephMalik

    So, we moderns need to do some study to understand the thought world which "John" inhabited and took for granted that his readers and hearers understood.

    Martin,

    This is what I did. All this hoopla about how the verse should be translated is not where the answer is. It is a distraction to the point where it has concealed such understanding for thousands of years. That is why it keeps getting recycled over and over. How much of this is enough? What we should be doing is: 2Ti 2:14 Of these things put them in remembrance, charging them before the Lord that they strive not about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers. 15 Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.

    Joseph

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Hey NVR, save a seat for me. I'l bring some herb.

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Hello Joseph

    Thank you for the enlightenment.

    Martin.

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    I read the verse in Timothy and I am in no way being "controversial" with Leolaia and Narkissos. Rather, I'm seeking to learn what I cn from two genuine scholars that I both respect and like. I was unaware this was, in the words of "Paul" in 2 Timothy 2:14b, "epi katastrophe ho akouo." It's best to ignore those things that upset one, and allow others to enjoy their own lives and to ask whatever questions that suit their fancy. Relax and enjoy your brief time here.

    Sincerely,
    Martin

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    FireNBandits....I can only briefly talk about this right now, but my personal opinion about such attempts at synthesis (like those in the early church, like that of your friend Jim) is quite different from yours. By themselves, texts are static and lifeless, especially after they lose their original readership. They are rather artifacts of evolving theological views which themselves, on account of their authoritative basis, shape later development indirectly through their appropriation in theological debates. There is indeed an artificiality in an out-of-context use of texts that is interested less in the texts themselves than solving current theological problems, but that is where these texts subsequently live -- through citation, transformation, and reinterpretation in dialogic interaction. In other words, whatever the texts may have meant to their first readers, what has continual significance is what they mean to people today.

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Leolaia, if you're asking ME what I think of the Ignatian parallel, I think it's spot on!

    Danke.
    Martin

  • FireNBandits
    FireNBandits

    Hi Leo

    I have apparently been vague once more. No surprise there.

    I find the NT texts, as well as the deuterocanonicals, the pseudopigrapha, and even the Nag Hammadi texts all very interesting and alive. I enjoy delving into the thought world of the people that wrote them, in trying to make them live for me, today, in the thought world I inhabit. This is why I asked for you and Narkissos to comment. I knew what I'd be given would be very lively.

    It's creeds that I find lifeless and brittle because they do not seem to grow or live. They're static.

    The NT will always be a source of new thoughts and inspiration, but not the Nicene creed, or the Chaalcedonian creed. They're of historical interest to me, however.

    Sincerely,
    Martin



Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit