Monday, 14 August 2017

Is There Evidence that Luke Originally Did Not Have the Story of Jesus Birth?

written by Dr. Bart D Erhman

This is the second of three posts on the question of whether Bible translations should place the first two chapters of Luke’s Gospel in brackets, or assign them to a footnote.  For background: read the post from yesterday!  Again this is a Blast from the Past, a post I made back in December 2012. .
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In my previous post, ostensibly on the genealogy of Luke, I pointed out that there are good reasons for thinking that the Gospel originally was published – in a kind of “first edition” – without what are now the first two chapters, so that the very beginning was what is now 3:1 (this is many centuries, of course, before anyone started using chapters and verses.) If that’s the case, Luke was originally a Gospel like Mark’s that did not have a birth and infancy narratives. These were added later, in a second edition (either by the same author or by someone else).
If that’s the case then the Gospel began with John the Baptist and his baptism of Jesus, followed by the genealogy which makes better sense here, at the beginning, than it does in the third chapter once the first two are added.
But is there any hard evidence that a first edition began without the first two chapters? One of the reasons it is so hard to say is because we simply don’t have much hard evidence. Our two earliest manuscripts of Luke, P75 and P45, are fragmentary, lacking portions of Luke, including the first two chapters. We can’t say whether they originally had them or not. Our first manuscript with portions of the opening chapters is the third-century P4. But our earliest patristic witness is over a century earlier. As it turns out, the witness is the heresiarch Marcion, and as is well known he didn’t have the first two chapters!

As early as Irenaeus’s Adversus Haereses (1. 27. 2) Marcion was accused of excising the first two chapters of his Gospel because they did not coincide with his view that Jesus appeared from heaven in the form of an adult man in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar – that is that he was not actually born into the world.  But who is to say that Irenaeus, Tertullian, and their successors were right, that these are chapters that Marcion excisedfrom his account?  It is at least possible, has occasionally been recognized, that the version of Luke in circulation in Marcion’s home church in Sinope, on the coast of the Black Sea, didn’t have these chapters, and that his view that Jesus simply appeared on the scene as an adult was surmised from the text as it was available to him.
Marcion interpreted his Gospel in such a way as to suggest that Jesus was a divine being but not a human being (hence he did not have a birth narrative).  But there were other Christians at his time – and earlier – who insisted just the opposite, that Jesus was a human being but not a divine being.   These Christians are often called “adoptionists” because they thought that Jesus was not by nature the Son of God, but that he was a human who was adopted by God to be his son.
I used to think that an adoptionistic Christology was more or less second-rate: Jesus onlywas adopted, he wasn’t the “real thing.”   But a recent book that I’ve read by Michael Peppard, and that I’ve mentioned on this blog, The Son of God in the Roman World, has made me rethink the issue.  Peppard points out that in the Roman world, adopted sons frequently had a higher status than natural sons; if an emperor had sons, but adopted someone else to be his heir, it was the adopted son who would become the next emperor, not the natural sons.  The adopted son was seen as more powerful and influential, as indeed he was.   So for Jesus to be adopted to be the son of God would be a big deal.
I mention this because without the first two chapters, in particular, Luke can be read as having an adoptionist Christology.   In part, that hinges on how you understand the voice that comes from heaven to him at his baptism (the first think that happens to him in this Gospel).  In most manuscripts the voice says: “You are my beloved son in whom I am well-pleased” (an allusion to Isa. 42:1, probably).  But in a couple of manuscript witnesses the voice says something completely different: “You are my son, today I have begotten you” (a quotation of Psalm 2:7).
I have a lengthy discussion of this passage in my book Orthodox Corruption of Scripture, where I argue (at some length) that this latter quotation of Ps. 2:7 is what the text originally said, and that it was changed by scribes who did not like its adoptionistic overtones.   If that’s right, and if that was the beginning episode of this Gospel, then it is indeed easy to see how an adoptionist would have read it in line with his or her particular theological views.
I’m not saying that the first edition of Luke was adoptionist.   I’m simply saying that it would have been particularly amenable to an adoptionistic reading.  Once that is said, though, one does need to wonder: was Luke himself an adoptionist?

Heaven in Judaism and Islam


{Similarities between the Jewish and Muslim beliefs regarding Heaven}
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Be patient for Heaven
In Jewish Apocryphal literature;
“Be hopeful, because formerly you have pined away through evil and toil. But now you will shine like the lights of heaven, and you shall be seen, and the windows of heaven will be opened for you…you are about to be making a great rejoicing like the angels of heaven.” (1 Enoch 104:2,4)
In Islamic literature
“Did ye think that ye would enter Heaven without Allah testing those of you who strived hard (In His Cause) and remained patient?” (Quran 3:142)


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A Celestial Realm Created Before Earth

 Jewish Biblical verses;
"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. The earth was without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving over the face of the waters." Genesis 1:1-2

 Rabbinical writings;
“Seven things were created before the earth was created; Law, repentance, Garden of Eden, Gehenna (Hell), the Throne of Glory, the Temple and the name of the Messiah” (Pesahim 54a), (Sifre Deuteronomy37), and (Nedarim 39b)

Islamic Scripture:
"So He ordained them seven heavens in two periods, and revealed in every heaven its affair; and We adorned the lower heaven with brilliant stars and (made it) to guard; that is the decree of the Mighty, the Knowing." (Holy Koran 41:12)

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Hell can be seen from Heaven
 Rabbinical writings;
“Why did the Holy Blessed One create Gehenna (Hell) and the Garden of Eden? So that one can behold the other. How much space is between them? R. Yohanan said; The breadth of a wall. R. Hanina said; The breadth of a hand. But the Rabbis said; The two are right up against each other. (Pesikta Rabbati 52:3)

Islamic writings:
(Prophet Muhammad speaking to Angel Gabriel in Heaven): “'Who is he?' Gabriel replied, 'He is Adam and the people on his right and left are the souls of his offspring. Those on his right are the people of Paradise and those on his left are the people of Hell and when he looks towards his right he laughs and when he looks towards his left he weeps.” (Sahih BukhariVolume 1, Book 8, Number 345 Narrated Abu Dhar)
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Some Pass Hell Before Entering Heaven

 Rabbinical writings;
Before the Righteous enter Heaven, they are shown Hell (Midrash on Psalms 6:6)


Islamic writings:
(people are placed in Hell temporarily for a set time , depending on their sins , and are then removed from Hell for simply having a atom's weight of Faith in God) {Volume 9, Book 93, Number 532s, Narrated Abu Sa'id Al-Khudri}

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Resting place for the Righteous;

In Jewish Apocryphal literature;
“All the holy ones who are in Heaven will bless Him, and the elect who dwell in the garden of life” (1 Enoch 90:23)

“garden of the righteous” (1 Enoch 90:23)

 Rabbinical writings;
Kings Jeroboam, Ahab, and Manasseh, the men of Sodom, as well as the Hebrew spies cursed by Moses and the generation ordered to wander in the desert wilderness and those who deny the Resurrection of the dead in the Torah and the generation of the Flood have no share in the World to Come (M. Sanhedren 10:1-3)
The righteous merit the Garden of Eden, and the wicked are punished in Gehenna (Hell) the realm of punitive retribution (Midrash Psalms 31, 120a; Hagigah 15a)

Islamic Scripture:
“But give glad tidings to those who believe and work righteousness, that their portion is Gardens” {Quran 2:25}

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Actions and Faith on Earth rewarded in Heaven

Rabbinical writings;
concentrate on study, prayer, and compassionate deeds in order to merit the rewards of the world to come; (M. Avot 1:2), (M. Avot 4:16), (Berakhot 28b), (Sanhedrin 91b).

Islamic Scripture:
”But give glad tidings to those who believe and work righteousness, that their portion is Gardens..” (Quran 2:25)


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Better than This World

Rabbinical writings;
“this world is not at all like the world to come” (Berakhot 17a)
“Better is one hour of bliss in the world to come than the whole life in this world” (M. Avot 4:17)

Islamic Scripture:
Say: Shall I give you glad tidings of things Far better than those? For the righteous are Gardens in nearness to their Lord, with rivers flowing beneath; therein is their eternal home; with companions pure (and holy); and the good pleasure of Allah. For in Allah's sight are (all) His servants,” (Quran 3:15)

“a place equal to a foot in Paradise is better than the whole world and whatever is in it; (Sahih Bukhari, Book 76: Number 572)

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Will have the Scent of Perfume

Rabbinical writings;
“There will be no need to provide balsam or perfume, because a north wind and a south wind will sweep through and sprinkle all the romantic plants of the Garden of Eden so that they will yield their fragrance” (Numbers Rabbah 13:2)

Islamic literature:
“..if one of the women of Paradise looked at the earth, she would fill the whole space between them (the earth and the heaven) with light, and would fill whatever is in between them, with perfume.." (Sahih Bukhari, Book 76: Number 572)

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Will have Servants

Rabbinical writings; 
“Garden on Eden has two gates of ruby, by which stand sixty varieties of pure servants.  The luster of the face of each of them glistens like the splendor of the firmament. When a righteous man arrives, they remove his clothes in which he had been buried, and clothe him in white robes of the clouds of glory.”(Yalkut Shimoni, Bereshit 20)

Islamic Scripture:
“.. they have therein companions pure (and holy); and they abide therein (for ever).” (Quran 2:25)

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Will have flowing wine, milk and honey

Rabbinical writings;
“Each person has a chamber allotted to him according to the honor due to him. From it issues four streams, one of milk, one of wine, one of balsam, and one of honey” (Salkut Shimoni, Bereshit)

Islamic Scripture:
(Here is) a Parable of the Garden which the righteous are promised: in it are rivers of water incorruptible; rivers of milk of which the taste never changes; rivers of wine, a joy to those who drink; and rivers of honey pure and clear. In it there are for them all kinds of fruits; and Grace from their Lord. (Can those in such Bliss) be compared to such as shall dwell for ever in the Fire, and be given, to drink, boiling water, so that it cuts up their bowels (to pieces)?” (Quran 47:15)

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Will See the Glory of God;

In Jewish Apocryphal literature;
“..they shall see with great joy the glory of him who receives them..” (4 Ezra 7:88-92)

Rabbinical writings;
In the world to come, body and soul will stand together before God (Leviticus Rabbah 4:5) , (Sanhedrin 91a)

Islamic Scripture:
”I will make those who follow thee superior to those who reject faith, to the Day of Resurrection: Then shall ye all return unto me, and I will judge between you of the matters wherein ye dispute.” (Quran 3:55)


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Seven Levels:

In Jewish Apocryphal literature;
“seven realms for …the righteous, and afterwards they shall be gathered into their habitations (4 Ezra 7:100-101)

Islamic Scripture
It is He Who hath created for you all things that are on earth; Moreover His design comprehended the heavens, for He gave order and perfection to the seven firmaments; and of all things He hath perfect knowledge.” (Quran 2:29)

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Different Prophets in Different Levels

Jewish Midrash literature;
(Joseph the son of Jacob in the first degree of Heaven, Phineas, son of Elazar in the second degree, Elazar, son of Aaron in the third degree, Aaron the priest in the fourth degree, Manasseh, king of Judah in the fifth degree, Joshua, attendant of Moses in the sixth degree, and Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the seventh degree.) [George Wesley Buchanan]

Islamic literature:

“Gabriel said to the heaven gate-keeper, 'Open the gate.' The gatekeeper asked, 'Who is it?' He said, 'Gabriel.' The gate-keeper,' Who is accompanying you?' Gabriel said, 'Muhammad.' The gate-keeper said, 'Has he been called?' Gabriel said, 'Yes.' Then it was said, 'He is welcomed. What a wonderful visit his is!' Then I met Adam and greeted him and he said, 'You are welcomed O son and a Prophet.' Then we ascended to the second heaven. It was asked, 'Who is it?' Gabriel said, 'Gabriel.' It was said, 'Who is with you?' He said, 'Muhammad' It was asked, 'Has he been sent for?' He said, 'Yes.' It was said, 'He is welcomed. What a wonderful visit his is!" Then I met Jesus and Yahya (John) who said, 'You are welcomed, O brother and a Prophet.' Then we ascended to the third heaven. It was asked, 'Who is it?' Gabriel said, 'Gabriel.' It was asked, 'Who is with you? Gabriel said, 'Muhammad.' It was asked, 'Has he been sent for?' 'Yes,' said Gabriel. 'He is welcomed. What a wonderful visit his is!' (The Prophet added:). There I met Joseph and greeted him, and he replied, 'You are welcomed, O brother and a Prophet!' Then we ascended to the 4th heaven and again the same questions and answers were exchanged as in the previous heavens. There I met Idris and greeted him. He said, 'You are welcomed O brother and Prophet.' Then we ascended to the 5th heaven and again the same questions and answers were exchanged as in previous heavens. there I met and greeted Aaron who said, 'You are welcomed O brother and a Prophet". Then we ascended to the 6th heaven and again the same questions and answers were exchanged as in the previous heavens. There I met and greeted Moses who said, 'You are welcomed O brother and. a Prophet.' (Sahih Bukhari, Book 54: Number 429)

“If you are in doubt”

A recent trend circulating among Christians on social media has caused Muslims to laugh. The good old British stand-up comedians have now bl...