TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sun Nov 20, 2022 5:51 am
I saw nothing of yours that reconciled John to the synoptics.
That is probably because you do not
wish to see.
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sun Nov 20, 2022 5:51 am
Let me give THE breakdown, not mine, not yours
Mary Magdalene arrives at the tomb, first thing. Sees the stone rolled away and runs to the disciples and says Jesus is gone and 'We' (implying the other Mary was with her) do not know where he is'.
Oh, so where are you getting this idea that Mary ran to tell the disciples that Jesus is gone after she sees the stone ran away?
Woww.
Did you draw that conclusion before, or after I provided my breakdown...because you sure as heck wasn't saying that before our earlier discussions.
Are you jacking my hypothesis?
Second, she was not implying the other Mary was with her.
She said
"we do not know where he is", because when she (and the others) arrived at the tomb, the angel sitting on the stone clearly stated
"He (Jesus) is not here".
So obviously, she was speaking on herself and on behalf of the other women who were with her at the tomb
before she ran away when she said "
we do not know where he is", because obviously, the other women didn't know where Jesus was either.
I pointed this out to you in our earlier discussion...and either you forgot it, or it didn't quite resonate, which is why I dare repeat it again.
The disciples rush to the tomb and find it empty. Mary stys there, the angels appear inside and ask why she is crying and then Jesus appears.
Yeah, pretty much.
This is not the same as the synoptic version where both Marys go to the tomb early and the angel is there to explain where Jesus is.
You are right, it is not the same as the synoptic version, because it isn't meant to be the same as the synoptic version.
It was meant to be exactly what it was, which was the story from Mary Magdalene's perspective.
And since Mary Magdalene had already fled the scene before the other women had went inside the tomb, then obviously, her version wouldn't have parts which include going inside the tomb, would it?
No, it wouldn't. Which is why it wasn't included and why it differs than the other versions.
Again, this was explained to you in our earlier conversation, and you offered no rational objections and as far as I'm concerned, it stands.
For good measure, Matthew has them run into Jesus himself on the way to report to the disciples. There is a clear discrepancy in fact a total contradiction, here, and the only effort I can recall that angels appeared in John, is no kind of reconciliation of the contradiction. i can't recall the one you made a page or so back...let's have a look. oh yes.
I already addressed this in the earlier conversation.
Notice, I keep referring to the earlier conversation.
"The reason John has no angel at the tomb saying that Jesus had risen, was because Jesus APPEARED TO MARY HIMSELF, IN PERSON, AT THE TOMB (John 20:14)"
I already pointed out that this only underlines my point - John does not have an angel at the tomb explaining anything and Jesus appearing to explain it later on only means that you can't try the apologetic that the angel HAD appeared and explained everything but John didn't think it important to mention it.
I already explained this.
Plus, of course, Mary tells the disciples that they (She and the other Mary) don't know where Jesus' body is. Duck and dive as you like, i don't see how you can convincingly explain away this contradiction. This significant and severe contradiction that, together with all the others we find, terminally trash the reliability of the resurrection accounts and imply that, as Mark suggests by omission, there was originally no resurrection account and not even an angel explaining everything which (on the evidence of John contradicting this) was something added to the synoptic version.
All of this has been explained, and until I see an adequate response to what I said, then it stands.