Monday, November 30, 2009

Mark's (Seemingly Unrecognized) Other Writings

I can tell you how I ended up befriending anyone worth befriending in the field of Samaritan studies. I stumbled upon John MacDonald's English translation of the Memar Marqah back when I still living in Toronto.

It quite simply changed my life.

Then I started noticing - and reading that other scholars documented - uncanny parallels between the Samaritan writings of Mark (Marqe) and the Christian writings of the New Testament canon and especially the Pauline texts.

I would of course go one step further and say 'the Marcionite recension' of those writings, but I don't want to get ahead of myself.

I don't think that people who are unfamiliar with these Samaritan writings can understand what we are talking about here. Mark is a revelation from the moment you look at his writings.

It is simply so unlike anything that any of us are familiar with it is astounding.

The Samaritans must have had hundreds of generations of Biblical exegetes BEFORE the time of Mark. Yet Mark never mention any previous interpretations of the Torah (I think there is allusion to a figure named 'ben Eden' but it is difficult to tell what this means).

As I have noted many times before, Mark was nothing short of a messiah within Samaritanism. His knowledge of the inner meaning of Moses' intention in writing the Torah makes manifest what appears elsewhere in the writings of the Samaritans - he was a messianic figure 'like Moses.' [Deut 18:18]

The question however which has raged through Samaritan studies is deciding upon a date for Mark. Here is MacDonald's overview of that discussion (I have substituted the more familiar 'Mark' for Marqah throughout):

the Samaritan themselves for centuries have regarded Mark as the man of the greatest possible distinction, whom they revered as they revered no other outside of their Bible. From the 14th century on liturgical compositions were often modeled on Mark's style ... [his] family must have lived in the time of the Roman government of Syria (Syria = Palestine, Lebanon, Syria of today).

As far as dating the Memar is concerned therefore he have several factors that indicate the 2nd - 4th centuries A.D. - The use of Greek words, the Aramaized Roman names of Mark's family, the ideological outlook, the midrashic material, the philosophical and scientific passages, the language and style, and, as we shall see below, the long textual tradition. All this is in addition to the inescapable fact that Mark does not betray any definite signs of the Islamic influences so prominent in later Samaritanism. The Samaritan chronicles themselves especially from the 11th century, place Mark at about that time. In addition there is the fact that of all the hundreds of Samaritan family names known to us, only Mark, Nanah (a diminutive form of John), and Tite (Titus) are Roman.

Perhaps in the future it will be possible to trace the history of Christianity in Samaria more exactly so that we may discover why Mark shows some knowledge of St. John's gospel while later writers use it in such a way to prove actual dependence at times verbatim, on it. [MacDonald Memar Marqah p. xxi]


Of course the Samaritan Mark never borrowed from 'John' any more than 'Paul.' I have argued elsewhere that one and the same Mark wrote Samaritan and Christian writings and those Christian writings included a Diatessaron-like single long gospel which was the source for the separated texts of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.

MacDonald's student Alexander Broadie has presented important evidence for connecting Mark's writings to those of Philo of Alexandria. My best friend in the world Rory Boid - and the leading expert on the Samaritans - is writing a text dating Mark to the late first century/early second century.

In my mind the fact that Mark alludes to the establishing of proselytes proves a date earlier than the Bar Kochba revolt. But that's another story ...

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Top Ten Reasons for Thinking Deuteronomy was Written in the Persian Period AT THE VERY EARLIEST

I read this at Jim West's site. I very interesting article. What's with all these smart people in Finland? I almost went out with a Finnish girl in high school - Jasmine Saarinen. Very pretty girl. 'Almost went out' means I was very attracted to her but it wasn't mutual. In that case, I almost went out with about two thousand women that year alone ...

Friday, November 27, 2009

What's the Burden of Proof Need for Getting Someone to Quit a Destructive Habit?


I know I have a crazy-sounding theory. One which has never before been posited by historians or religious scholars. At least so far as we know ...

I happen to think that one man named Mark was behind all the Marks reported to be involved in the establishment of messianic religious faiths in late first century. Their names are Mark (Sam. Aram 'Marqe') the son of Titus, St Mark of Alexandria, Marcus of the 'Marcosian sect' and 'Marcion' of the 'Marcionites.'

The common denominator is that they all happened just happened to be involved in re-engineering the religion of Moses.

Just think of the coincidence here.

We're not talking about four Jewish Marks who worked as butchers, bakers and candlestick makers. We're talking about four Marks who ALL claimed to have met God. Four Marks who had a vision come down to them from the highest heavens. Four Marks who were involved in a religion which claimed to surpass the traditional Jewish faith within the same cultural milieu, at the same time and likely in the same parts of the world.

Quite a coincidence, don't you think?

Maybe I am wrong about one of those faiths being a mere 'mirror image' of the other four. I might be wrong to suppose that one report about Mark came to us in Jewish Aramaic and another in Samaritan Aramaic and Greek.

Maybe I was wrong about the Greek Mark being related to the Samaritan Mark, the Mark in the south of France and the Mark who went to Alexandria. Or maybe the Samaritan Mark being related to the Greek Mark, the Mark in the south of France and the Mark who went to Alexandria.

But I simply can't be wrong about at least some of the reports about this messianic Mark fellow being garbled, confused or deliberately manipulated accounts of the one historical Mark in the first century who claimed to have had a vision from the God in the highest heaven to establish a cult superior to the traditional covenant of Israel.

I just can't be.

The only reason people haven't seen it before is because successful scholars train themselves to 'keep their eye on the ball.' To write papers which lead to advancement and avoid leading them to what might aptly be described as 'career suicide.'

Why argue for something that can't be proved? Because it's probably true.

How can it be true if it can't be proven with the existing evidence? But what are the alternatives? How could there be four Marks engaged in the same purpose at the same time and the same cultural milieu?

Those people will keep denying any other possibility other than what has always been held to be 'true.' They will keep raising the bar on the burden of proof and in the process effectively argue to absurd lengths that 'everything is a coincidence.'

Indeed why isn't there a stigma attached to being a 'coincidence theorist'?

The answer of course is that seeing everything but the accepted truths as 'mere coincidence' helps edify the status quo.

Has the narrative of the Acts of the Apostles ever been proved to have any degree of historical accuracy or truth? Of course not!

Then why is it the starting point of every theory about the origins of Christianity that has ever been taken seriously in scholarship?

There is an UNCONSCIOUS conspiracy to keep things as they are. In organism the principle is known as osmosis. In human beings, intellectual complacency.

I have shown over the last few posts a handful of the uncanny parallels between the 'apostle' of the Samaritan tradition, a man who founded their entire religion and was called 'the apostle' of the tradition because he was 'like Moses' ('the apostle' is a traditional title of Moses within Samaritanism because he was 'sent' by God) and 'the apostle' of Christianity.

If we limit our scope to just Christianity. I don't believe there was ever an apostle who was ever given the name 'Paulos' by his parents. The Catholic tradition AGREES with me. Even in their tradition 'Paulos' is a name that this individual who came to take on the title 'Apostolos' assumed after his baptism.

So Irenaeus and I are in agreement so far. There was never an apostle who was given the name 'Paulos' from birth.

With me so far?

The apostle obviously had a name before he assumed the appellation 'Paulos.'

The Marcionites did not accept Acts so they could not have accepted its story that it was a name developed from 'Saulos.' They didn't accept the story of the conversion on the road to Damascus or his alleged 'reconciliation' with Peter recorded in the same 'fraudulent' (at least according to the Marcionites) book of Acts.

The testimony of the apostle himself in his epistle disputes the claims of Acts.

So what was the original name of the apostle according to the Marcionites?

The short answer is that we don't know how the Marcionites or any of the early heresies identified 'the apostle' beyond this title. Irenaeus does testify however against 'those who do not recognise Paul as an apostle.' [AH iii.15.1] The Church Father points to Luke and his composition of Acts to prove that the Apostle was indeed NAMED Paul but the problem is that the Marcionites did not use Acts.

We end up back to where we started save for one important lead.

Tertullian makes clear over and over again that the Marcionites held that the man who wrote the gospel ALSO WROTE the apostolic letters attributed by the Catholics to a man whose name was Saulos but who changed his name to Paulos.

The Catholics again, on the authority of Luke, deny the Marcionite claims and - following Irenaeus' lead in Book 3 of Against the Heresies, argue that the gospel of Luke was the gospel Paulos used.

In my Against Polycarp I point to the fact that the Ignatian correspondances never mention this Irenaean formula and point to the idea that the original idea of Polycarp was that John wrote the gospel used by Paul.

Of course the Marcionites would point to repeated statements in the apostolic letters that support their contention that the same man who wrote the gospel ALSO wrote the apostolic letters. At the same time Tertullian reports that the Marcionites were emphatic that their gospel was not identified by them as 'the gospel of Paul.'

My solution to the dilemma is to point to at least sixteen pieces of evidence which infer that the gospel of the Marcionites was in fact our Gospel of Mark. This understanding comes from Hippolytus' explicit testimony to this effect, the fact that Marcionite textual variants from Luke actually resemble western readings of the gospel of Mark, the fact that the title of the Marcionite gospel according to Tertullian was 'the gospel of Christ' [Mark 1.1], the fact that the Marcionite in Adamantius' treatise supports this understanding, the fact that Aphraates' testimony confirms the name Marcionite (Marqioni) meant 'those of Mark' in Aramaic, the fact that only Mark has an enthronement ending and Origen reports that the Marcionites learned from their gospel that Marcion (i.e. Mark) ended up enthroned, the fact that the Marcionites and the Alexandrian tradition of St. Mark were originally both monophysite AND monarchian, the fact that both traditions emphasized Jesus as the angelic presence of the Father, the fact that both traditions engaged in the ritual castration of its presbytery, the fact that both demonstrated a marked interest in asceticism, the fact that Origen's patron Ambrose was a Marcionite and the fact that Roman legal codes against the heresies never recognize that a sect called 'Marcionite' ever existed.

These are only some of the proofs. However before we get distracted let's go back to our original observation over the last few posts that Mark the founder of the surviving Samaritan cult has been recognized by MacDonald among others to constantly echo Christian - and specifically 'Pauline' - theological formulas. MacDonald explains this as a result of Marqe being influenced by Christianity. But I am not so sure.

My friend Rory Boid is at present working on a paper which will date the Samaritan Mark to the late first century - the exact time that the Christian Mark was publishing his gospel.

The point of this post is to ask however - even if this is a theory which sounds utterly crazy to those unfamiliar with Samaritanism - what is the burden of proof here? Indeed the alternative proposal first put forward by Irenaeus that Mark was one of four evangelists through whom the Holy Spirit 'magically' worked.

While no scholar accepts this explanation almost no one before me has utterly ridiculed it. While the evidence shows that Mark wrote the original gospel and the other gospels were copied from that original text, all scholars still feel it is there duty to reconcile science with Irenaeus' fable about four winds and four evangelists.

For some reason no one will follow the testimony preserved in Arabic historians and dated to between the second to fifth centuries by modern scholars that the Roman government was involved in the final codification of the fourfold gospel, employing turncoat presbyters - presbyters who strangely resemble the Marcionite portrait of Irenaeus. (cf AH iv.30.1]

My point here is to ask - what is the burden of proof that is required to take my theory that the same Mark wrote the gospel of Mark AND the Mimar Marqe seriously by other scholars?

We know that Irenaeus' model doesn't work. Science cannot accept the idea that a wind was responsible for the manufacture of the gospel. Nevertheless every scholar and his uncle feels it as his duty to modify Irenaeus' argue to make it sound plausible. I have talked to these professors and they inevitably develop some complicated theory which has ABSOLUTELY NO WITNESSES in antiquity (besides Irenaeus again) and which effectively serves only to so confuse its readers that only an equally pedantic professor from a rival university dare stand up and posit an equally boring and complicated theory - none of which has any basis in fact or reality.

The end result is that with all these unworkable theories is that they effectively cancel each other out and we are always returned to accepting the fourfold canon which Irenaeus presents to the world without citing any elders to support it.

The question I have is why do we have to always go through Irenaeus. The Syrian Church didn't use four 'separated' gospels until the fifth century. They didn't go through Irenaeus - why do we?

The bottom line for me is - if ten generations of scholars in the modern era can't find a formula to explain how the quaternion was developed isn't it about time to consider the possibility that the whole 'Irenaeus hypothesis' is simply untenable?

Of course the question always comes back to the same point. What is the burden of proof? What is the burden of proof to DENY Irenaeus' authority? What is the burden of proof to accept a theory that denies the authority of Irenaeus?

I think it all comes down to habit. This is a habit which causes even the brightest of minds to become utterly irrational. It blinds even our most enlightened guides. The question I put before them is the same question that therapists put before alcoholics, people in dysfunctional relationship, or those who can't control their urges to gamble or do harm to their family.

In short - 'what's the burden of proof to get someone to quit a destructive habit'? In this case, an almost two thousand year old psychological addition to Irenaeus' quaternion?

The answer is undoubtedly as we have seen - whatever it takes to preserve our dependence. No crack addict has ever been as dependent on his dealer as scholars are on the UNCORROBORATED testimony of that Church Father who thrived along with his Church under one of the bloodiest rulers in history.

Remember, the first golden age of the Catholic Church happened under Commodus. With everyone dying all around them, the Irenaeus feels compelled to answer charges that he and the other Catholoci who sat in the Imperial court of Commodus sold their souls to the Devil.

His words, yes we receive money from Caesar, but think of all the good we do [cf Irenaeus AH iv.30.1]...

It was in this horrible age that none of us would want to live through - a true holocaust for all humanity that Irenaeus introduces our fourfold gospel canon. And not only that! While everyone else was ducking and hiding for cover, Irenaeus manages to strengthen his hold over the church and help 'hunt down' those who defy his vision of orthodoxy.

Why isn't Irenaeus afraid like everyone else in the period? Where did he get his confidence and his authority? Indeed why is everyone listening to Irenaeus in all corners of the Empire and accepting HIS VISION and HIS UNDERSTANDING of orthodoxy when it is clear that there were so many conflicting notions about what orthodoxy even was?

Why do bishops of other Sees fear him when he is so far away in Rome ... in Rome, sitting in that stupid, insignificant little Imperial court that happens to be piling up dead bodies in almost every corner of the Empire, searching for any sign of 'enemies' and those who secretly oppose Commodus' authority? ...

Yes it's all just a coincidence. It just HAS TO be a series of coincidences. Divert your eyes. Move along. Nothing going on here.

Be still while we slip this needle under your skin ...

More on Mark, the Seventh Day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread and Christian Baptism

I have already established that the Apostle intended to have people baptized on the seventh day of Passover (the Jews and Samaritans call the same day by different names). It has already been established in the literature that Christians of Alexandria, Syria and Aramaic speaking parts of the work continued this practice and ended up treating Holy Week as a 'Feast of Unleavened Bread' with Easter Sunday as the day of baptism. I have already shown that Mark (Marqe), already identified as the Apostle of the reformed Samaritan cultus (marginal note Leningrad Manuscript Mimar Marqe) Samaritan cultus, saw the day the Israelites crossed the Red Sea IN THE EXACT SAME MANNER as the Apostle of Christianity.

Now I would like to augment that with a strange statement that never made sense to me in the Christian Apostle's writings. In the same work which assured us that the Apostle was proscribing Christians to continue to venerate a Christian version of the Feast of Unleavened Bread (1 Cor 5.6 - 8) and furthermore confirmed that baptism was to be associated with the last day of that feast (1 Cor 10.1 - 3) he actually INTRODUCES THAT DISCUSSION with a reference to the idea that the catechumen who are baptized emerge with crowns or to use the language of the apostle 'already you have become rich. You have become kings—and that without us. How I wish that you really had become kings so that we might be kings with you.' (1 Cor 4:8)

I had always noticed that this association of 'kingship' with baptism existed among the Mandaeans. It also appears in the references to the idea of the initiate 'reigning' in the Gospel of the Hebrews. I also knew that Jewish tradition understood that the Israelites received crowns and armor during the Exodus. Yet it all came together when I was cleaning up my desk today and read this in the writings of the Samaritan apostle Mark:

The water closed in over Pharaoh and all his people. Not even one of them survived, while all of Israel went forth like kings after having been slaves, exulting in their redemption [Mimar Marqe 2.3]

That closes the book my friends on a cult associated with Mark who employed Aramaic prayers, had a deep interest in kabbalah and had a baptism ritual called 'redemption.'

Irenaeus makes explicit the Marcosian interest in establishing this redemption baptism with establishing the initiates as reigning kings when we read:

Others, again, lead them to a place where water is, and baptize them, with the utterance of these words, "Into the name of the unknown Father of the universe--into truth, the mother of all things--into Him who descended on Jesus--into union, and redemption, and communion with the powers." Others still repeat certain Hebrew words, in order the more thoroughly to bewilder those who are being initiated, as follows: "Basema, Chamosse, Baoenaora, Mistadia, Ruada, Kousta, Babaphor, Kalachthei." The interpretation of these terms runs thus: "I invoke that which is above every power of the Father, which is called light, and good Spirit, and life, because Thou hast reigned in the body." [AH i.21.3]

I have demonstrated that others have already PROVEN the connection between a Christian baptism called 'redemption' and the seventh day of Passover. They are ignored by most people because it demonstrates that our existing liturgy has nothing to do with Jesus or the early Church which - surprise, surprise - was ENTIRELY ROOTED IN JEWISH PRACTICE.

I will not allow this situation to last very much longer ...

Thursday, November 26, 2009

I Think I Finally Figured Out Why the Marcosian Baptism Ritual Was Called 'Redemption'

If the readers have been following my posts they will know that I have proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that the original Apostle and his original followers - i.e. 'those of Mark' (Aramaic 'Marcionites' Greek 'Marcosians) not only maintained a Christian version of the Festival of Unleavened Bread but secured ritual baptism on the seventh day of that festival. This was rooted in the Apostle's statement in the Letter to the Corinthians (Marcionite 'letter to the Alexandrians') connecting Christian ritual water immersion to the final day of the celebration of the 'redemption' of the people of Israel. That this last day was identified as a 'redemption' is clear from the Song of Moses:

Thou stretchedst out Thy right hand--the earth swallowed them. Thou in Thy love hast led the people that Thou hast redeemed; Thou hast guided them in Thy strength to Thy holy habitation. [Exodus 15.13]

The LXX reads:

Thou hast guided in thy righteousness this thy people whom thou hast redeemed [ελυτρωσω] by thy strength, thou hast called them into thy holy resting-place.

There can be no doubt that this is the actual reason why the Marcosians called their baptism a redemption - i.e. it was done on the day of redemption, the seventh and last day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread.

ALL Jewish traditions emphasize the seventh day of Passover (the Jews and the Samaritans call the same day - 21 Nisan - by different names) as a day of redemption. I am only ever interested in the Sephardim so we read in Dobrinsky that among the Syrian Jews there are series of prayers and songs (all what you'd expect) as well as a special piyyut Yom Leyabasha, the song of Moses is chanted in the Shaharit service and he notes "the theme of the entire limud of the seventh night of Passover is redemption and faith." [p. 259]

The Moroccan and Turkish Jews have much the same thing but interestingly have a festival called Mimouna which has been argued to come from "emunah", which means "faith" in Hebrew, faith in the sense that redemption for the Jewish people will come in the month of Nisan, as it came to pass in the month of Nisan during the exodus from Egypt.

Dobrinsky notes that "on Maimuna day, Jews make it a point to draw water from all kinds of wells and to pour water on their feet and also on the threshold of their homes. The connection with water is either the Keriat Yam Suf (the Splitting of the Red Sea)or the washing away of the danger of lethargy, which was believed to take root at that season of the year ... the custom of going to the seashore to relax or to a spring or brook where there is water directly relates to the fact that the last day of Pesach (the seventh day in Israel) was the actual day of the Splitting of the Red Sea. There was also a tradition to take the bones (which were saved from the night of the Seder) and throw them into the water on the day of Maimuna." [p. 267]

And the connection with 'redemption' is recognized throughout the festival as Dobrinsky notes again deriving its association with emuna (faith):

Some in fact refer to the celebration as Emuna instead of Maimuna. The derivation of the concept is from the teaching that Benisan nigalu ubienisan atidim lehigael ('In the month of Nisan the Jews were redeemed, and in the month of Nisan they will be redeemed again').

Thus since Nisan is almost over after Pesah has concluded and the promised redemption has not yet happened, this holiday is designed to assure the Almighty that the people have not lost faith, but that they do, indeed, have the abiding emuna that the redemption will be forthcoming in the month of Nisan in the future. This faith is expressed in the joyous outlook which the holiday portrays in its many forms of celebration." [pp 268 - 269]


I haven't work all of this out in my head yet but given that I have already established in my own mind at least that I know the day Jesus was arrested and crucified (15 Nisan), buried (16 Nisan) and it seems pretty straight forward that Christians WERE NOT originally baptized on the third day. They waited until the end of the Festival of Unleavened Bread (21 Nisan).

Yet it is not as simple as that because there is a very ancient tradition going back as far as anyone can remember that those outside of Israel added an eighth day to their celebration. Is this the origin of the dispute over the 'Sunday'? I think so and it reconciles almost everything in the calendar.

Notice Irenaeus' treatise 'the Ogdoad' written during the height of the disputes (and reconciliation with the Quartodecimianists) as Charles Hill notes. A look at the language of the Marcosians (a group which included Clement) notes that there are references everywhere to Jesus who is six descends "being the glorious Ogdoad" (Irenaeus,. Adv. Haer. I.I4.6-7).

I can't help but think that you had the Romans who argued that the 'ogdoad' HAD TO BE the Sunday of the Roman calendar, while the older traditions identified 'the ogdoad' as the extra day added on the week BECAUSE THE LITURGY OF CHRISTIANITY WAS ESTABLISHED IN ALEXANDRIA NOT IN JERUSALEM.

This would not only reconcile (and clarify) the dispute between the so-called 'Quartodecimianists' (who must have simply venerated the 'ogdoad' relative to the fourteenth of Nisan regardless of whether it was a Sunday or not. It also explains why the Gospel of Peter identifies the resurrection on a Sunday the 21 of Nisan (as many scholars have noted this is already a development away from the original system; a reconciliation - notice the emphasis on it being on the Sunday).

It also FINALLY resolves why the Marcosians were so interested in the number 30 in association with the redemption.

You see I am absolutely certain that the only year that the Passion could have occurred is 37 CE. I spend a great deal of time in my Real Messiah proving that and it is based on Jack Finegan's tables of when Passover occurred and takes into account all the evidence of the Church Fathers and especially the Alexandrian tradition.

Given this evidence it is beyond a shadow of a doubt in my mind that 15 Nisan was 23 Martius (March) that year, 16 Nisan was 24 Martius and 22 Nisan the day that ended the Feast of Unleavened Bread in Alexandria (and the rest of the Diaspora) was 30 Martius.

Not only can we now incorporate Talley's report that Macarius of Memphis that Friday was the original day of baptism for the tradition of St. Mark BUT THE DAY JESUS WAS CRUCIFIED (THE SIXTH DAY) IS NOW AT ONCE THE DAY OF THE BAPTISM OF THE CATECHUMEN AND IT WAS ALSO AN OGDOAD (I.E. AN 'EIGHTH DAY).

The genius of this system is that it easy to see how the controversy over the dating of Easter was resolved in stages - i.e. first by the 'third day' resurrection i.e. Sunday 25 Martius (17 Nisan) and then by Victor's compromise that Easter would fall wherever Sunday landed on the period during the Feast of Unleavened Bread.

By the way - the month of 'Martius' goes back to the god of war Mars which also happens to be the root of the name of the Evangelist himself i.e. 'Marcus' ...

The Adaptation of the Quartodecimian Festival of Unleavened Bread in the Account of Victor in the Liber Pontificalis

I have been arguing here that the original understanding of the Resurrection had it occur on 21 Nisan. It is well established that Origen knew of this understanding and the argument is unmistakable in the Marcionite version of our letter to the Corinthians (in the Marcionite canon - 'the letter to the Alexandrians'). I have discovered that many academic papers have already anticipated my discovery of the existence of a 'Christian festival of Unleavened Bread' (which is strangely both reassuring and disappointing!). Yet no one seems to have uncovered this one.

Eusebius makes clear that Irenaeus was key to reconciling the Quartodecimianists to the habit of others who always celebrated Easter on Sunday. I don't know what we can make of anything related to Irenaeus and the Commodian Era. But have a look at what is written in the Liber Pontificalis about the compromise during the reign of Commodus:

He [Victor] instituted an inquiry among the clergy concerning the cycle of Easter and the Lord's Day for Easter and he gathered together the priests and the bishops. Then Theophilus bishop of Alexandria was questioned and in the assembly it was decided that the Lord's Day between the 14th day of the moon in the first month and the twenty first day of the moon should be kept as the Holy Feast of Easter. [Book of Popes p. 19]

What I find so interesting about this is (a) it reflects the exact situation Eusebius cites from Irenaeus' writings (i.e. that the exact 'orthodoxy' of Easter calculation was not yet determined - at least from the Roman chair) (b) that the Alexandrian Church was made to accommodate themselves to this new orthodoxy (c) that the Roman practice of celebrating Easter on Sunday was colliding with (at least according to the Liber Pontificalis) the Alexandrian practice of celebrating a 'Christian' Festival of Unleavened Bread where (at least traditionally) baptism must have been celebrated on 21 Nisan (just as Origen declares).

The more I look at it the more I think that Schenke's point that LGM 1 (the first addition mentioned in Secret Mark) was - like the story of the Transfiguration with its 'after six days' - originally conceived by Mark as a 'preview' of the Resurrection, now certainly identified (at least in Alexandria) as the seventh day Festival of Unleavened Bread, the day the Apostle uses to introduce baptism in relation to the crossing of the Red Sea.

I think Origen's language in Peri Pascha is decisive on this point for he speaks of two weeks - one before, the other after (it must be imagined) the fourteenth of Nisan each as 'creation' weeks, one 'invisible,' the other 'visible.' This seems to reflect the LXX (and SP) idea that God completed his work on the sixth day even though a seven day week is still inferred.

Isn't it Interesting that the Gospel of Peter Seems to Place the Resurrection on the 21st of Nisan?

Now early on the Lord's day Mary Magdalene, a disciple (fem.) of the Lord-which, being afraid because of the Jews, for they were inflamed with anger, had not performed at the sepulchre of the Lord those things which women are accustomed to do unto them that die and are beloved of them-took with her the women her friends and came unto the tomb where he was laid. And they feared lest the Jews should see them, and said: Even if we were not able to weep and lament him on that day whereon he was crucified, yet let us now do so at his tomb. But who will roll away for us the stone also that is set upon the door of the tomb, that we may enter in and sit beside him and perform that which is due? for the stone was great, and we fear lest any man see us. And if we cannot do so, yet let us cast down at the door these things which we bring for a memorial of him, and we will weep and lament until we come unto our house.

And they went and found the sepulchre open : and they drew near and looked in there, and saw there a young man sitting in the midst of the sepulchre, of a fair countenance and clad in very bright raiment, which said unto them: Wherefore are ye come? whom seek ye? not him that was crucified? He is risen and is departed; but if ye believe it not, look in and see the place where he lay, that he is not here: for he is risen and is departed thither whence he was sent. Then the women were affrighted and fled.

Now it was the last day of unleavened bread, and many were coming forth of the city and returning unto their own homes because the feast was at an end. But we, the twelve disciples of the Lord, were weeping and were in sorrow, and each one being grieved for that which had befallen departed unto his own house. But I, Simon Peter, and Andrew my brother, took our nets and went unto the sea: and there was with us Levi the son of Alphaeus, whom the Lord ... (For Fragment II see Apocalypse of Peter.)


Could this then be the reason why the neaniskos is baptized 'after six days'? I don't know but it definitely shows that there were gospels which associated the Resurrection on a Sunday AT THE END OF THE FEAST OF UNLEAVENED BREAD ...

Evidence that the Catholic Tradition DISPLACED an Earlier Tradition Which Celebrated Baptism on the 7th Day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread

The Holy Week before Easter is called the Week of Unleavened Bread. The 'vigil' of Easter in this Christian calendar is also called the last day of the Holy Week. The fact that during the vigil the ceremony of baptism is performed suggests a possible link between baptism and the Crossing of the Sea. [J van Goudouver Biblical Calendars p. 129]

Similarly Clemens Leonard demonstrates in a side by side comparison the idea goes back to Epiphanius' Diataxis and the Syriac Didascalia. In these earliest Semitic traditions Christians and Jews celebrated the week of Unleavened Bread TOGETHER the Jews celebrating and the Christian fasting AGAINST them. These ideas are also demonstrated as being present in Aphraates the Persian Sage (who famously used the Diatessaron).

These sources make absolutely clear that the original Christian tradition not only celebrated the feast of the Unleavened Bread WITH (or against) the Jews but fixed baptism on the seventh day. This tradition was ultimately changed by identifying the week BEFORE Passover leading up as a festival of Unleavened Bread.

Aphraates testimony is of particular interest:

In his Demonstration on Passover, Aphraates the Persian Sage gives another reason why the week before Easter has to be kept. 'When Passover [that is the fourteenth day of the month] falls on a Sunday we must keep it on a Monday [because it was forbidden to fast on a Sunday] so that the whole week can be celebrated with his Passion and with his 'Unleavened.' Because after Passover there follows seven days of Unleavened Bread, until the twenty-first day. When the Passover falls on another day on another day of the week [other than Sunday], we will not be troubled by it. Our festal day is the Friday ... We are bidden to celebrate the feast from its beginning to its end.' [van Goudouver p 178]

Got to go to sleep ...

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The 'Apostle Mark' in his Samaritan Writings on the Baptism in the Sea

Did you know Mark (Marqe ben Tite) in his Samaritan writings is identified as 'the Apostle' (Leningrad marginal note)? Well, if I am going to tell it to you step by step I should say I THINK that the Samaritan Marqe ben Tite is one and the same with the figure of the Evangelist Mark (by way of Marcus Julius Agrippa). I sound like some kind of kook, right? Well, that's my working hypothesis right now. It's a theory that I have been working on - piece by piece - for some time now.

I happen to have one of the world's leading experts in the field of Samaritan studies who at least tentatively accepts some of my ideas. I also have a supporter in one of the leading members of the six hundred or so surviving Samaritans in the world - Benyamim Tsedaka. He will be staying with me in the middle of December so I can develop these ideas even further.

He's a wealth of information - and a wonderfully nice fellow. His only fault is that he can only go to restaurants where they serve fish. Sort of limits the places you can go out together to eat.

Whether you like them or not most of my strange ideas have their basis in something. It doesn't mean that I one day might be proved wrong. I'm happens all the time. But for the moment, my theory that one Mark wrote in Alexandria and Palestine is still standing. My friend Rory Boid of Monash University tells me he is working on dating the liturgy to the late first century/early second century drawing on a lot of preliminary work carried out by Hans Kippenberg before him.

In any event I have sent an email to Rory to help me with some references I have run across to 'the baptism in the Sea.' I am not able on my own to improve on MacDonald's translation but until I get Rory's improvement here is just one of the interpretations in the Mimar Marqe (Teachings of Mark) where the parting of the Sea of Reeds (Red Sea) sounds like a baptism. It is drawn from an imaginative conversation that Mark creates between Moses and the Sea. He writes

It was as though Moses said to it [the Sea], "Their entry [i.e. Israel] is like entry into water that purifies, sanctifying and cleansing from all impurity." Thereupon the Sea fell silent at these words and recognized that he was an apostle. So then the True One said to Israel, "You will be safely borne for me, and I will exalt you."

It was as though mercy said to them, "I will not shun you, but I will glorify you whither you go. The pillar of cloud will magnify your camps, so that no blemish will be seen on you. The pillar of fire will shine on them, that every spy may be discovered among them. The angels too will go with them, destroying the evil ones who would oppose them. The great glory will fight for them and manifest their greatness among all the nations."

The Sea began to address Israel with words that benefit those who seek to learn, "Come safely, O holy people. Cross over me in safety, for before you are mighty and exalted heralds. Come safely, you who are like your fathers. God revealed Himself to and delivered them with his power. There are excellent signposts leading the way before you, that you may cross over safely and be guided aright. Come safely and do not be hesitant, for I am now going to let you cross me." [Mimar Marqe II.6]


Now it has to be recognized that Mark is not writing about the 'redemption' which will come in the messianic age but only recounting what happened to Israel 'the first time.' Nevertheless I think the reader can see how the Marcosians developed the idea of an 'angel baptism' from these basic building blocks. More to follow ...

Why Peter Jeffery's (and Morton Smith's) Arguments About the Alexandrian Liturgy Are Essentially Stupid But Ultimately Led Me to the Truth

My favorite saying in any book by the ancient Church Fathers is the one which Celsus of Rome, the great pagan critic of Christianity, characterizes the many of arguments WITHIN the second century Church as amounting to little more than fights "over the shadow of an ass.' [iii.1] That's how I feel about Jeffrey's central proof that To Theodore is a forgery. It's much ado about nothing.

So once we go beyond the scurrilous attacks against Morton Smith's character and the fact that Jeffrey's begins with an assumption that to Theodore is a forgery without presenting so much as a scrap of evidence to prove that claim, the question we are left with is there anything of substance in his book The Secret Gospel of Mark Unveiled (Imagined Rituals of Sex, Death, and Madness in a Biblical Forgery)?

I am trying to be charitable to Professor Jeffrey and the one thing I can say that he has any (presumed) authority to write about is the relationship between ancient Christian liturgy and Smith's (and subsequently Talley's) implausible attempts to make Secret Mark 'fit' within the forty day fast which preceded Easter Sunday. If he had written a book debunking this essentially stupid argument put forward by these two men I would have credited his book as representing an important contribution to the literature on Secret Mark and the Letter to Theodore.

Nevertheless, as Jeffrey does throughout his book, he presents the fact that Morton Smith comes up with a stupid argument as proof that To Theodore is a forgery which is the yet another stupid argument - but this time a stupid argument with malice as it attached to all the inflammatory nonsense cited earlier. It is not the kind of thing you'd expect from an otherwise respected professor who teaches at a respected university like Notre Dame but then again stupidity laced with malice can appear anywhere I suppose.

I can't account for why Morton Smith and Thomas Talley attempt to tie the first addition to the Gospel of Mark mentioned in the Letter to Theodore (hereafter referred to as 'LGM 1') directly to the existing liturgy of the Church. As I said it is a stupid argument because the existing liturgy was created in the post-Nicene period, centuries after the time Clement was writing.

The point however is that I don't need to explain this line of reasoning. It has nothing to do with the question of whether or not To Theodore is a forgery. Indeed as Jeffrey again presents no convincing evidence for anyone to doubt that To Theodore was anything other than Smith claimed it was - i.e. an ancient letter that he found written into a book in the library at the Mar Saba monastery, we should let the discovery stand until something can actually prove its authenticity.

It was very difficult for me to get through Jeffrey's book for this reason alone. I am used to reading texts with substantive arguments laid out in a logical manner. As Jeffrey himself admits his arguments are cumbersome and his points are laid out in a manner which makes them almost impossible to read. Of course - as is always with the case in Jeffrey's book - he finds away to turn around these short-comings as yet another proof for To Theodore being a forgery:

I had great difficulty organizing this book; in some ways it was the most difficult thing I have ever tried to write. Almost every section of the book as it now stands was somewhere else in an earlier draft. Eventually I came to the conclusion that, since the subject was an act of deception, it was bound to keep collapsing in on itself. A 'real' subject, I think, would have an inherent structure, so that one could write a coherent narrative simply by describing that structure." (p. 241)

It is logic like this which had most of the people I have ever known to attempt to read this book wanting to put it down. A discernibly circular logic is present throughout - everything strange about Smith or his discovery To Theodore leads us back to the 'fact' that the work is a forgery. It is the point where Jeffrey's begins and ends each thought, each point throughout the book. It's something of a 'perverted obsession' on the part of the book's author.

Indeed since Jeffrey's recent presentation on Secret Mark at the SBL was heavily indebted to a psychological examination of Morton Smith, let me - as someone whose original major was psychology - offer up a psychological assessment of the difficulties that ALL scholars - both those FOR and AGAINST the authenticity of To Theodore have had with matching LGM 1 with any existing liturgy.

Jeffrey and scholarship in general naturally assume that what has survived as 'Christianity' is 'Christianity as it has always been.' This is stupid. Nevertheless it is a stupidity which anyone who has had to suffer through countless books on the origins of Christianity has had to endure. The Christianity of the apostolic period was certainly not that of the late second century period nor again was the faith of this period the same as that of the fourth and so on down to the present day. The only reason that anyone would seriously entertain a stupid idea like that is because it appeals to the selfish need of those who study religion to 'strengthen their faith.'

I have a tip for those people - study less and go to Church more.

Whatever the case may be the result of this projection of what each of us WANTS TO BE TRUE about earliest Christianity is always the same - we feel are shocked when a document like To Theodore is discovered because it completely challenges those presuppositions nurtured by our selfish needs as believers.

To this end we use words like 'strange' or 'dangerous' to describe things that are really only different. Jeffrey's does exactly this when on p 61 he says "if this story [in Secret Mark] does reflect an early Christian initiation rite, it was a very odd one [emphasis mine], lacking many of the ritual elements that occur in other early liturgical sources." [p. 61]

Notice the emphasis on the word 'very odd.' If I was to count the number of times that Jeffrey's identifies Smith or the letter to Theodore as 'strange,' 'odd' or 'bizarre' I would have almost as many entries as there are Smiths in the phone book.

This is the way that Jeffrey choses to develop his argument and there can be no doubt that a number of scholars go along with him (although it must be said that the majority of the 'hoaxers' in academia prefer Carlson's approach) yet it is difficult for me not to see parallels between the language that the ancient heresiologists like Irenaeus of Rome used to attack those traditions outside of the Catholic Church.

The Marcionites are accused of 'forgery' when they happen to possess a gospel text which differs from what is deemed acceptable or orthodox. Instead of speaking in a scientific manner and acknowledging that DIFFERENCES exist between the Orthodox canon and that of the Marcionites Irenaeus anticipates Jeffrey's approach and accuses them of something nefarious - 'he [Marcion] mutilates the Gospel which is according to Luke, removing all that is written respecting the generation of the Lord, and setting aside a great deal of the teaching of the Lord, in which the Lord is recorded as most dearly confessing that the Maker of this universe is His Father.' [Irenaeus AH i.27]

Hippolytus points to an identical 'corrupting' effort on the part of 'Marcion' (it is again impossible for this follower of Irenaeus to even consider that the Marcionite gospel is an INNOCENT text which displays textual variants from our existing gospels) but again specifies that these 'corruptions' were made in relation to the gospel of Mark - 'When, therefore, Marcion or some one of his hounds barks against the Demiurge, and adduces reasons from a comparison of what is good and bad, we ought to say to them, that neither Paul the apostle nor Mark, he of the maimed finger, announced such (tenets). For none of these (doctrines) has been written in the Gospel according to Mark.' [Hippolytus AH vii.18]

I have noted time and again that in the same way that Irenaeus and Tertullian argue on behalf of a Marcionite corruption of the Gospel of Luke, Hippolytus and Adamantius develop an argument that the Marcionites corrupted the Gospel of Mark. The latter claims are ignored by scholars for a simple PSYCHOLOGICAL reason - the need for order and the unconscious need to affirm the accepted assumptions of 'the herd.' In the field of animal behavioral sciences this used to be called 'the herd mentality.'

As Marcion and the Marcionites became little more than a caricature (I am not sure that the sect was anything more than a caricature from the very beginning) the idea that the Marcionites corrupted 'Luke' became firmly established and the the other suggestion was ignored. The deciding factor in my mind is the fact that Ulrich Schmid and other experts have long noted is that the majority of those 'variants in Luke' which Tertullian and Epiphanius point to suddenly become a whole lot bizarre when you compare them against so-called 'western readings' of the Gospel of Mark.

In other words, the Marcionite gospel when compared against Luke looks like a hack job. When a line by line comparison with the Gospel of Mark is undertaken the Marcionite gospel looks in many ways like an unremarkable western text of this gospel with 'additional material' from other sources added to it. My overview of Schmid's findings are presented here for the serious reader.

The moral of the story is that if we want to truly understand Secret Mark we can't simply begin by assuming that everything we have inherited from the Catholic Church is true and that everything else is false. We can't begin by calling people and texts names - i.e. 'weird,' 'very odd' etc. either. With either approach we are demonstrating our lack of objectivity and all pretense that we are employing something approaching a 'scientific methodology' is severely compromised.

Jeffrey and Carlson begin by wanting to press charges against Smith without demonstrating any crime has been committed. They act like Irenaeus insofar as the 'crime' in the case of both Smith and the letter to Theodore is that they are contradicting our inherited assumptions and established 'faith' about the way the Church and its canon developed.

If Smith were alive and these people were to have put him on trial it would properly have been called a 'witch hunt.' There is again no evidence that a crime has been committed. The whole purpose of either author is to maintain the original orthodoxy which Smith's discovery has challenged.

Getting back to our discussion of Jeffrey's attempt to attack Smith (and Talley's) attempt to reconcile LGM 1 with the established liturgical practices of Alexandria, what ALL these writers - Jeffrey, Smith and Talley - have failed to take into account thoroughly enough is that NO ONE thinks that the forty day fast which preceded Lent was in use by anyone in Alexandria before the fourth century.

Jeffrey begins the fourth chapter of his book with the blunt statement that 'the Secret Gosepl cannot be made to fit into the history of nocturnal worship or Christian initiation in Alexandria.' [p. 71] Taken as a bald statement - and identifying 'history' as written documents that have come down to us from the earliest period - Jeffrey's statement is indeed correct. He is right for taking to task Smith and Talley for trying to reconcile to reconcile the two. I also take them to task for this attempt because it is a very stupid argument.

Yet as is true for the whole of Jeffrey's work there is a (deliberate) conflation here where disproving Morton Smith's INTERPRETATION of Secret Mark is taken to be the same as disproving the Letter to Theodore. Jeffrey's cannot produce one shred of evidence that to Theodore is a fake or - using our earlier analogy - that a crime has been committed. In other words, there is nothing in any page of Jeffrey's book that suggests that Smith just happened to do a bad job interpreting a text he happened to have discovered quite innocently.

Indeed there is a strange tautology here which Carlson neatly manages to avoid. If as Jeffrey's infers that Smith was some delusional madman who made essentially stupid misguided interpretations of Secret Mark which DID NOT MATCH the reality of Alexandrian liturgical practice, this would seem to suggest that he was incapable of pulling off the meticulous work necessary for the manufacture of a text which perfectly resembles (a) the letter writing habits of people at the time of Clement of Alexandria (b) the language of Clement of Alexandria in introducing Secret Mark in To Theodore and (c) the language of Secret Mark which so closely resembles what is represented in the Gospel of Mark.

As many before me have noted, the manufacture of To Theodore was a superhuman effort, hardly the thing that the 'insane' person that Jeffrey portrays in his book could have pulled off. I was stunned by the insight of Helmut Koester's argument in the recent BAR issue. He tells of Smith's struggle to understand his discovery based on his unfamiliarity (and hostility) to the methods of form criticism - the very skill necessary to pull off the forgery. It seems ludicrous to me to suggest that if Smith miraculously obtained these skills through some supernatural event (radioactive spider bite, gamma rays etc) that he would even have bothered to develop the utterly unnecessary argument of attempting to reconcile the contents of the letter with the existing Alexandrian liturgy.

As Koester notes it took Smith so long to actually explain his discovery because he didn't have the necessary tools needed for manufacturing it. This struggle is also witnessed in his many letters to Scholem.

Now the purpose of my writing this post wasn't to stop here at what is in fact the original stalemate. I want us to go back to Jeffrey's initial observation that "if this story [in Secret Mark] does reflect an early Christian initiation rite, it was a very odd one, lacking many of the ritual elements that occur in other early liturgical sources." Irenaeus happens to mention a sect which had what he also identified as an 'odd' baptismal practice a group which Irenaeus gives the name 'Marcosians' (the name is translated as 'Markite' in Hippolytus) and a sect to which Clement certainly belonged.

The point then is that Irenaeus' comments against 'those of Mark' are unquestionably directed against the very Alexandrian community of St. Mark for which Clement was a spokesman in the late second century, early third century. If the reader doesn't want to take my word for it here is a sampling of how other scholars have tried to 'downplay' the original association between Clement and the Marcosians:

" ... for on comparison of the sections just cited from Clement and from Irenaeus [regarding the Marcosians] the coincidences are found to be such as to put it beyond doubt that Clement in his account of the number six makes an unacknowledged use of the same [Marcosian] writing as were employed by Irenaeus." [William Smith A Dictionary of Christian Biography p. 161]

"Clement of Alexandria, himself infected with Gnosticism, actually uses Marcus number system though without acknowledgement (Strom, VI, xvi)." [Arendzen JP. Marcus. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IX]

"Irenaeus gives an account of Marcus and the Marcosians in 1.13 - 21 ... Hippolytus and Epiphanius (Haer 34) copy their accounts from Irenaeus, and probably had no direct knowledge of the works of Marcus or of his sect. Clement of Alexandria, however, knew and used his writings." [Philip Schaff note on Eusebius Church History iv.11.4]


So we have already moved beyond the myopic arguments which Jeffrey question Smith's attempts to fit LGM 1 within the existing Alexandrian liturgy. Smith was stupid. The text goes back to a much earlier period witnessed by the testimony of Irenaeus and the practices of a sect he identifies as 'Marcosian.' Clement was indeed a Marcosian. Jeffrey should acknowledge this in the same way as he would undoubtedly accuse someone who engaged in sodomy of being a homosexual. As such Clement's repeated use of ideas and texts associated with 'the Marcosians' warrants our identification of him as a 'Marcosian'.

I would go one step further and identify Marcus as St. Mark and the Marcosians as the Alexandrian mystical tradition associated with the same Evangelist but the reader will have to evaluate my arguments in that regard at the previously mentioned post.

The point of course is that with our identification of Clement as maintain the beliefs of the Marcosians, the reference of LGM 1 and its baptism ritual immediately become easily identifiable as 'the redemption' ritual which Irenaeus connects with Mark chapter 10 - the exact place where LGM 1 appears in Secret Mark. We read Irenaeus remark that:

it happens that their (i.e. Marcosian) tradition respecting redemption is invisible and incomprehensible, as being the mother of things which are incomprehensible and invisible; and on this account, since it is fluctuating, it is impossible simply and all at once to make known its nature, for every one of them hands it down just as his own inclination prompts. Thus there are as many schemes of "redemption" as there are teachers of these mystical opinions. And when we come to refute them, we shall show in its fitting-place, that this class of men have been instigated by Satan to a denial of that baptism which is regeneration to God, and thus to a renunciation of the whole faith.

They maintain that those who have attained to perfect knowledge must of necessity be regenerated into that power which is above all. For it is otherwise impossible to find admittance within the Pleroma, since this [regeneration] it is which leads them down into the depths of Bythus. For the baptism instituted by the visible Jesus was for the remission of sins, but the redemption brought in by that Christ who descended upon Him, was for perfection; and they allege that the former is animal, but the latter spiritual. And the baptism of John was proclaimed with a view to repentance, but the redemption by Christ was brought in for the sake of perfection. And to this He refers when He says, "And I have another baptism to be baptized with, and I hasten eagerly towards it."(Mark x.38) Moreover, they affirm that the Lord added this redemption to the sons of Zebedee, when their mother asked that they might sit, the one on His right hand, and the other on His left, in His kingdom, saying, "Can ye be baptized with the baptism which I shall be baptized with?"(ibid) Paul, too, they declare, has often set forth, in express terms, the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; and this was the same which is handed down by them in so varied and discordant forms. [Irenaeus Against the Heresies i.20]


I am sorry people but Jeffrey's argument is stupid. I have just disproved it in less than a few paragraphs and it is actually uncanny how closely his characterization of To Theodore's ritual resembles that which appears in Irenaeus' description of the Marcosian baptism.

Just as Jeffrey identifies LGM 1 as a 'very odd one lacking many of the ritual elements that occur in other early liturgical sources,' Irenaeus begins his analysis of the Marcosian ritual as being 'incomprehensible' and that the Marcosians are a 'class of men have been instigated by Satan to a denial of that baptism which is regeneration to God, and thus to a renunciation of the whole faith.' I would make go on to suggest that Jeffrey's demonization of Morton Smith develops from the exact same sensibility - Jeffrey is above all else a believer who THINKS like Irenaeus when he comes across a description of the very same ritual which prompted the Church Father to lash out against Clement's sect.

To use the language of the period - the 'spirit' of Irenaeus pervades Jeffrey's approach to the same material.

Now I don't want to perpetuate a personal attack against Jeffrey but his argument is stupid and ultimately maliciously so. A smart man like him should have at least considered the possibility that just because he couldn't find a pre-existent liturgical use of LGM 1 didn't mean there wasn't one out there. There is a strange arrogance in Jeffrey's thought that all that there is to be known about Christianity is already established and To Theodore CAN ONLY represent something falsified - either by the Devil or one of his agents.

It just so happens that I have indeed found the original context both for Irenaeus' attack against the Marcosian 'redemption' ritual and LGM 1 in the Letter to Theodore. I think the evidence suggests that the two were one and the same thing.

In my estimation the evidence does indeed suggest that there really was a secret Gospel of Mark held by the Alexandrian Church of St Mark and that this text did indeed make mention Jesus baptizing one of his disciples in the period leading up to the Passover when Jesus was crucified. The fact that this goes against our accepted notions of how 'the liturgy is supposed to look' and we suppose ritual baptism is supposed to be placed in relation to that liturgy is utterly irrelevant.

As many scholars have noted before me, there was ALWAYS great variation among the various surviving Christian traditions. Some organized the baptizing of the catechumen in relation to the Epiphany, others in relation to Passover.

Jeffrey ignores the fact (or just isn't aware) that Manichaeans maintained a thirty day fast before Passover just as the thirty day Islamic fast of Ramadan originally coincided with Passover. Indeed I happen to think there is good circumstantial evidence to suggest that the 'Marcosians' (i.e. the original followers of St. Mark) had a thirty day fast before Easter and that the first day of this thirty day fast would correspond with the Jewish celebration of Purim. As I have again noted such an association would explain why the thirty day period was called 'the redemption' as Sephardic custom (i.e. the Jewish traditions of the Middle East) connect Purim to Passover as 'redemption to redemption.'

In short it is a 'redemption' period where - in those thirty days - the community prepares for the ultimate redemption of the people of the Israel.

I have written about these arguments extensively at this post but I would like to clarify that I have yet to write an academic article on the subject. The exact nature of how the thirty day 'redemption' to 'redemption' developed into the thirty day fast period of the followers of Mark, Mani and Mohammed is still nothing more than speculative research.

The point I want to make again is that Jeffrey's attempt to simply dismiss the details of Secret Mark merely because they don't fit into HIS inherited presuppositions or those of his Church is a very dangerous development in scholarship. It reminds me of those trials faced by the very 'heresies' in the fourth and fifth centuries. There can be no question that To Theodore is an INNOCENT reporting of a variant gospel of Mark which was indeed used as part of a variant liturgy in Alexandria exactly as the text suggests. The facts of the matter that Irenaeus reports the same thing about the use of Mark chapter 10 and a baptism ritual that no longer appears their in our canon and the 'Marcosian' community which is universally regarded by scholarship on the sect as having developed from Egypt.

I would however like to take matters one step further and turn Jeffrey's argument around against him.

As I am a Jew I find all this talk about liturgy relating to scripture as very puzzling as - it is clear from the earliest sources - baptism is identified by the Apostle in relation to one scriptural event which happened AFTER Passover - i.e. the baptism into the sea. In Jewish tradition the event occurred on the shvi'i shel Pesach (שביעי של פסח "seventh [day] of Passover").

The Israelites came to the sea crossing after three days of travel (Ex. 12-14, confirmed by Num. 33:5-8) but as Steve Mason notes tradition declares that they only "actually crossed it on the second feast (that is, on the seventh day of Passover)."

I don't want to get into a detailed account of the idea that Christian baptism practices were organized BEFORE Easter but they are thoroughly refuted by Maxwell E Johnson here. It is only worth citing his conclusion "prior to the post-Nicene context of the fourth century, the Alexandrian tradition knew neither Easter baptism knew neither a pre-paschal Lent longer than one week of the Paschal feast .... only in the Post-Nicene context of the fourth century does Paschal baptism along with a Roman 6 re-interpretation as incorporation into the death and resurrection of Christ, become a near universal Christian idea. Even then it does not appear to become the only dominant custom outside of Rome or northern Italy." [emphasis his p. 209 - 210]

The point of course is that no one knows when, how or what the pre-Nicene Paschal liturgy looked like or when, how or what the Alexandrian baptismal initiation looked like. Jeffrey can attempt to impose his inherited model on that blind spot in our knowledge but it is of little use for serious scholars in the field. I however can offer up a little insight into the redemption ritual of the Marcosian heretics and demonstrate that they match perfectly the understanding developed by Irenaeus.

Let me start with the attack against those who calculated Easter according to the Jewish method (the so-called Quartodecimianist heresy). Scholars have long suspected that the 'heresy' here went beyond whether or not Easter fell on Sunday. One might well imagine that use of a Jewish calendar to CALCULATE Easter extended into an identification of baptism on twenty first of Nisan. For when you look again at the Apostle's words in the letter to the Corinthians it is impossible to imagine that he could have imagined it otherwise:

For I do not want you to be ignorant of the fact, brothers, that our forefathers were all under the cloud and that they all passed through the sea. They were all baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea. They all ate the same spiritual food and drank the same spiritual drink; for they drank from the spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that rock was XC. Nevertheless, God was not pleased with most of them; their bodies were scattered over the desert. Now these things occurred as types (for us) [1 Cor 1 - 5]

Yet how is the baptism into the cloud in the sea a 'type' for the post-Nicene model for baptism when Christians baptize on a day OTHER THAN WHAT Scripture dictates. It makes no sense at all. Indeed it seems to be utterly illogical that the Apostle could announce that events in the Jewish liturgical year on 21 Nisan represented a 'type' for the community BUT SOMEHOW the first Jewish converts to Christianity KNEW that they shouldn't have maintained their baptism rituals on 21 Nisan.

Indeed it might be worth noting to my readers that a little earlier in the same letter there is clear evidence that the Marcionionites might well have identified something significant occurred at the end on the seventh day. The received text of 1 Cor 5:6 - 8 reads

Your boasting is not good. Don't you know that a little yeast leavens the whole lump? Get rid of the old yeast that you may be a new batch without yeast—as you really are. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Therefore let us keep the Festival, not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness, but with bread without yeast, the bread of sincerity and truth.

Epiphanius clearly testifies to the fact that the Marcionite reading was different the underlying sense being that adding 'leaven' to the festival of the unleavened bread was corruption. So:

Your boasting is not good. Don't you know that a little yeast corrupts the whole lump?

I can't believe that a hundred years of Marcionite scholarship hasn't recognized that the Marcionite text is undoubtedly arguing on behalf of the original integrity of the feast of unleavened bread WITHIN the Christian liturgy. It is worth noting that Tertullian's version of 1 Corinthians AGREED with the Marcionite variant:

he [the Apostle] subjoins: "Know ye not, that a little leaven spoileth the savour of the whole lump? [On Modesty]

This is undoubtedly WHY Tertullian never even bothers to cite this 'Marcionite variant' as a variant. The Montanist and Marcionite canons agreed AGAINST Irenaeus' reading.

My suggestion of course is that the original ALEXANDRIAN reading of 1 Cor 5: 6- 8 simply said:

Your boasting is not good. Don't you know that a little yeast corrupts the whole lump? Get rid of the old yeast that you may be a new batch without yeast—as you really are. For Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us. Let us keep the feast not with the old leaven, nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.

Indeed the fact that the Apostle was originally understood to be talking about a Christian adoption of the Jewish Feast of Unleavened Bread is acknowledged by Origen who, in his Commentary on Matthew, identifies the 'leaven' here as Jewish sectarian teaching - viz. "it is the mark of the clear-sighted and careful to separate the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees and every food that is not of "the unleavened-bread of sincerity and truth from the living bread, even that which came down from heaven, so that no one who eats may adopt the things of the Pharisees and the Sadducees, but by eating the living and true bread may strengthen his soul " [Comm. Matt. xvi.5] but nonetheless understands the apostle to advocating the tradition Jewish Festival of Unleavened Bread as part of the Christian liturgical year. We read:

Another feature of the Jewish festival [of Passover] is unleavened bread; all leaven is made to disappear out of their houses; but we keep the feast [1 Corinthians 5:8] not with the old leaven, nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." Whether there be any passover and any feast of leaven beyond the two we have mentioned, is a point we must examine more carefully, since these serve for a pattern and a shadow of the heavenly ones we spoke of, and not only such things as food and drink and new moons and sabbaths, but the festivals also, are a shadow of the things to come. In the first place, when the Apostle says, Our passover is sacrificed, Christ, one may feel with regard to this such doubts as these. If the sheep with the Jews is a type of the sacrifice of Christ, then one should have been offered and not a multitude, as Christ is one; or if many sheep were offered it is to follow out the type, as if many Christs were sacrificed. But not to dwell on this ... [Comm. John. x.13]

As I have said time and again the ignorance about Jewish practices continues to hinder the development of an accurate understanding of their tradition. Origen is of course very elusive about what the exact relationship his Alexandrian tradition presumes to be between 'Passover' (which he acknowledges INCLUDES the seven days of the Festival of the Unleavened Bread') and the Christian Easter service. The only clue he gives is a word which will show up later in the same letter by the Apostle - i.e. type or typos.

Origen says that just as there was only one lamb established as a typos for all the lambs sacrificed later in all the homes of the Israelites but goes out of his way to deny the idea that the passover slaughter was a 'type' of the Passion. This is because - while commenting on this same section of text - reasons:

the lamb [of Passover] is sacrificed by the saints or the Nazarites while the Savior is sacrificed by criminals and sinners ... [so] the Passover is indeed a type of Christ but not of his Passion [kai tupos men XC estin to pascha] [Peri Pass. xii. 25]

I think this is a critical distinction as the Apostle - as we shall see - later identifies the parting of the Sea of Reeds as a 'typos' of baptism.

Indeed I don't want to get to far a field from my original purpose but - ALL commentators have acknowledged that only Holy Week seems to have been maintained by the Alexandrians from the very beginning. How interesting then is Origen's seems to hint at a baptism a week after Easter in his one and only attempt to divulge the sacred mysteries of the Alexandrian community. He writes:

I will therefore try, with God's grace, to expound the spiritual meaning [of the Christian adoption of Passover] in order that the power of salvation accomplished in Christ may become manifest to those who love instruction, as it is written: To all who received him, he gave power to become children of God; who were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God (John 1:12 - 13) For adoption in Christ has given us the power of so tremendous a salvation, we who are not born of the blood and the will of man and women, and whom He recognizes as His brothers ... [alluded to by] the words up to the fourteenth (cf. Exod. 12.6) a number of the second week, this signifies a repose of two weeks which came between the first creation (i.e. seven days) i.e. the invisible one, and the second creation the visible one. [Peri Pasch. 40.34 - 41.11; 42.15 - 22)

I am beginning to suspect that Holy Week was in Alexandria followed by a second week which corresponded to old Festival of the Unleavened Bread of the Jews on 21 Nisan. This why Origen stresses time and again that the Passion IS NOT A TYPE of the Passover. The Alexandrians must have celebrated Holy Week in the week ending on 14 Nisan and then followed that with an adaptation of the seven days of the Feast of Unleavened Bread culminating in their 'redemption' ritual.

In order to get to solidify this understanding we need to accept the Marcionites as a(nother) heretical Markan sect (or indeed the same sect reported by different Church Fathers). Origen's patron Ambrose was a (reformed) Marcionite and he secretly adopts many of the central tenets of their redemption theology. As we have seen at least half the early Church identified them as using a variant text of Mark. As I have demonstrated from my ongoing correspondence with Professor Rory Boid of Monash University the name 'Marcionite' is an Aramaism, it means 'those of Mark.' The Marcionites consistently identified Jesus as 'Chrestos' rather than 'Christos' and this distinction will ultimately help us crack the 'redemption code' as it were which has so dogged these ignorant Gentiles.

The ignorant Gentiles have typically followed the Church Fathers in translating the use of the Marcionite title for Jesus as 'good.' This displays once again a jarring lack of understanding for Jewish tradition. Look at the passage cited above in the letter to the Corinthians. XC - a nomen sacrum which original meant chrestos among the Greeks (it was used to mark manuscripts where readings were 'correct' and later adapted by Catholics to denote 'Christ' or christos - clearly does not mean 'Christ' or messiah here.

Getting beyond the issue that no Jew ever could believe that someone like Jesus was the messiah, no Jewish person would ever imagine that the messiah would be standing beside Moses directing the people out of Israel. The term obviously means chrestos here. This exactly how the Marcionites would have read their manuscripts and it clearly demonstrates how the title Chrestos developed from the Hebrew word yashar as attested in numerous LXX witnesses. This argument is laid out here.

The point again is that given Paul's earliest reference to baptism as involving XC guiding the Israelites through the sea any Jewish person would immediately recognize the identity of this supernatural figure EVEN WITHOUT THE LXX MEANING OF CHRESTOS. Jesus is called yashar because he is angel Israel, the supernatural 'column' identified in Exodus 13:21 -22 "the LORD preceded them, in the daytime by means of a column of cloud to show them the way, and at night by means of a column of fire to give them light. Thus they could travel both day and night. Neither the column of cloud by day nor the column of fire by night ever left its place in front of the people."

Again the point isn't what Jeffrey's Roman tradition holds to be true when trying to sort out the authenticity of To Theodore but what bits and pieces we can grab to make sense of the text from the writings of Irenaeus on the Marcosians (of which Clement was again a member).

There can be no doubt that Irenaeus writes that "Paul, too, they declare, has often set forth, in express terms, the redemption which is in Christ" [AH i.20] It has also been noted that Irenaeus reports the Marcosians use the same language when they talk about their redemption baptism INTO Jesus as Paul does about the ancient Israelites.

Paul says that the Israelites were baptized "into the cloud and in the sea" just as the Marcosians lead their catechumen "to water, and while they baptize them they repeat the following words: Into the name of the unknown father of the universe, into truth, the mother of all things, into the one that descended, into Jesus." [εἰς τὸν κατελθόντα εἰς τὸν ᾽Ιησοῦν] [Eusebius/Book IV/Chapter 11;AH. i. 21. 3] I have noted elsewhere that all studies of the redemption ritual from references in the Excerpts of Theodotus and the Nag Hammadi literature have identified it as an angelic baptism where those of us 'dead' mortals receive 'aeonic' or angelic life through union with the angel Jesus in the water.

Of course a careful scrutiny of Clement's writings reveals the one instance when he cites the words of 1 Corinthians 10 he does so in a context which - in my mind at least - reinforces that it was done IN RELATION to the Jewish dating of the event on the seventh day of Passover. After criticizing the heretics for ignoring the Old Testament Clement writes:

Our Gnostic then alone, having grown old in the Scriptures, and maintaining apostolic and ecclesiastic orthodoxy in doctrines, lives most correctly in accordance with the Gospel, and discovers the proofs, for which he may have made search (sent forth as he is by the Lord), from the law and the prophets [emphasis mine]. For the life of the Gnostic, in my view, is nothing but deeds and words corresponding to the tradition of the Lord. But “all have not knowledge. For I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren,” says the apostle, “that all were under the cloud, and partook of spiritual meat and drink;”[1 Cor. x. 1, 3, 4] clearly affirming that all who heard the word did not take in the magnitude of knowledge in deed and word. [Strom 7.16]

I have repeated over and over here that regardless what Jeffrey's Roman tradition held regarding the ritual of baptism I strongly suggest that the original force of the writings of Paul, the Marcosian appeal to the Apostle as a witness for their redemption baptism and Clement of Alexandria's distinction between the heretics who ignore 'the Law and the prophets' and the true understanding of Paul's words in 1 Corinthians chapter 10 which develop from traditional Jewish usage means the most likely date for the Marcosian baptism occurred on the seventh day of Passover.

Of course, I might be wrong about this. This is still a working hypothesis but more information on my understanding of the Markan tradition appears here. However Jeffrey's whole approach of attacking Morton Smith's INTERPRETATION of the Letter to Theodore and presenting that as clear proof that the letter itself is 'very odd' is down right stupid. Smith, Talley and Jeffrey are wrong in attempting to link the description of Secret Mark to the Paschal liturgy. After all, Jesus' baptism had nothing to do with the Paschal liturgy why should LGM 1? It is an unnecessary assumption, a stupid assumption and one which Smith, Talley and Jeffrey should never have made given the reality of Alexandrian tradition.

Important Discussion of the Diatessaron from Curt Peters

Here is what is developed in Curt Peters, Das Diatessaron Tatians (1939) partly his own discoveries, partly from previous studies.

(a) The Diatessaron is founded on the Gospel of the Hebrews and probably includes the whole text of it. The reason Epiphanius confused the Diatessaron with the Gospel of the Hebrews is that it WAS the Gospel of the Hebrews with additions, and might even have been commonly called the Gospel of the Hebrews.

(b) It was not named the Diatessaron by its author. That name comes from the later WRONG GUESS that it was made by combining the Canonical Four. The older name is Diapente, “product of five”, that is, the Gospel of the Hebrews as base, with Matthew Mark Luke John fitted in. Even this name is not original.

(c) Tatian changed the dialect from Western Aramaic to International Standard Eastern Aramaic, i.e. Syriac.

(d) The wording of the Diatessaron is far superior in literary quality and in clarity and in logic to the wording of the Canonical Four, at all levels, from paragraph to sentence to phrase to choice of single word. I take this to mean it was NOT re-worded from the Canonical Four, but is an original long Gospel similar to the source from which the Canonical Four were excerpted and re-worded.

(e) None of the extant extensive textwitnesses give us the pure text of the Diatessaron. All have been adapted to the Canonical Four. This applies to the Syriac quotations, and to the Syriac text from which the Arabic was translated, and the Latin text from which the Dutch was translated. The original wording can,, however, be seen in some fragments in the European transmission. I add that it was this adapted text that made people guess that the book was a combination of the Canonical Four. I add further that I doubt whether ANYTHING in the original Diatessaron was lifted from the Canonical Four, except where something was missing in the Gospel of the Hebrews. Even then, I think it was taken from the ORIGINAL john used by the Valentinians and so on. Peters adds that the original wording can be reconstructed verse by verse by comparing the extant Syriac quotations, the Arabic, the Dutch, quotations in Armenian, and quotations in some mediaeval Latin works. The rule is, whatever is furthest from the Canonical Four is closest to the Diatessaron. Imagine that the Arabic is not the Diatessaron, but the Diatessaron altered in content and wording to agree with the Canonical Four.

(f) The Diatessaron was accepted immediately in Rome and translated immediately into Latin and vigorously promoted.

(g) I add that it is hard to see Tatian as a follower of Justin. Why would a follower of Justin promote the Gospel of the Hebrews against the Canonical Four? Have we got a true picture of Tatian? Or is it a fiction designed to hide his true affiliations?

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

I Just Received Photos of the Best Preserved Synagogue in Egypt

I received some wonderful pictures of the Eliyahu Hanavi Synagogue in Alexandria from my friend Harry Tzalas. I added a description of the site from the Jewish Press.

You may wonder what I was doing in Alexandria on the Mediterranean shore, a city teeming with almost as many Muslims, as there are Jews in Israel. Actually, I was an accidental or incidental tourist for a few days, joining my husband who was doing some consultancy work there. We stayed first at the Metropole, a pleasant period hotel downtown, near the seafront. It had an old-fashioned cage-like elevator with an intricate parquet floor and high-ceilinged rooms with gilt moldings.

Unfamiliar outdoor sounds were the rumbling of the trolley cars and the ubiquitous honking of car horns. It was close to the market place where live chickens and furry black-and-white rabbits were on sale - and not as pets. Market vendors squatted on rickety crates in the grime, selling mangoes and other merchandise. It was a picturesque scene, bordering on the squalid. There were juice bars festooned with piles of sugar cane, and a drink vendor circulated with glasses and urn strapped to his chest. Conscientious storekeepers swilled water onto the pavements, converting solid dirt into rivulets of liquid dirt.

On Friday our first stop was the Eliyahu HaNavi synagogue-the only surviving one. The Jewish community of Alexandria was of ancient origin and existed for almost 2,000 years. The thriving community started after Alexander the Great conquered Judea in 334CE and transported many Jews to his new city. So magnificent was the synagogue there, that the rabbis said of it, "He who has not seen it, has not seen the glory of Israel" (Talmud Sukkah 51b). Speaking of grandeur, in a vast edifice of the Hellenistic period, the officers of the Alexandrine congregation would wave a flag to signal congregants on distant benches when to respond.

A pleasant couple, Victor and Denise Balassiano, graciously guided us during our visit. When Victor attended the Jewish day school on the synagogue campus, his class numbered 50 children. It closed in 1970, and now the 66 year-old Victor says that he and Denise nee Messeca are among the last half-dozen Jews left in Egypt. Though their two daughters are now in the United States, and their son in Jerusalem, Victor still wishes to serve "the community," as he has done in various positions for 36 years. Besides this forlorn remnant of a once-proud congregation, there are a few intermarried Jews who sometimes require community services. The Israeli consulate assists by importing a minyan for Yom Kippur and procuring kosher items for festivals, and the Joint also helps them.

The synagogue on Nabi Daniel Street is protected by Egyptian guards. It is an imposing, buff-colored, stone building with rose marble pillars, arched stained glass windows, wrought iron chandeliers and a lofty women's gallery. The prevailing impression is one of size and emptiness. I was disturbed when a couple of dogs from outside entered and began circling the aisles. Built almost 130 years ago, after the Napoleonic invasion, the synagogue complex includes edifices that were formerly the Jewish school, the rabbinate offices incorporating a mikveh, the old age home and other buildings, which are now rented out to Egyptians. Palm and shade trees adorn its manicured grounds within a wrought iron fence. A sukkah frame stands there too.


Sephardic names of founders and officers appear on a wall plaque: Rabbi Shlomo Hazzan, Yosef Hakkim, Shlomo Laniado. A silver ner tamid adorns a graceful ark of light gray marble, thronged by a row of silver lanterns. On this site are 50 Torah Scrolls, many of them collected from other defunct synagogues. The Egyptian government watches over them jealously, and all efforts to bring them to Israel have, so far, failed.

 
Stephan Huller's Observations by Stephan Huller
is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.