Nevo wrote:TAK wrote:Nevo:As far as I can tell, scholars are pretty much unanimous in agreeing that the formula is pre-Pauline--and therefore dates to the early to mid-30s.
I am still not fully understanding why this creed is so certain to be within 10 Years of Christ's presumed death.
Regardless I don’t think its unanimous in what it all means..
http://depts.drew.edu/jhc/rp1cor15.html
Perhaps I should have used Kloppenborg's wording: it is "almost universally acknowledged." Robert M. Price, as usual, may be the exception to the rule (although I'm not sure that Price actually denies that v. 3b-5 derives from a pre-Pauline formula).
Well not exactly..
From the link w/ emphasis added:
William O. Walker Jr., has suggested that, contrary to those opinions just reviewed, "in dealing with any particular letter in the corpus, the burden of proof rests with any argument that the corpus or, indeed any particular letter within the corpus... contains no interpolations." Among the reasons advanced by Walker is the fact that
the surviving text of the Pauline letters is the text promoted by the historical winners in the theological and ecclesiastical struggles of the second and third centuries... In short, it appears likely that the emerging Catholic leadership in the churches 'standardized' the text of the Pauline corpus in the light of 'orthodox' views and practices, suppressing and even destroying all deviant texts and manuscripts. Thus it is that we have no manuscripts dating from earlier than the third century; thus it is that all of the extant manuscripts are remarkably similar in most of their significant features; and thus it is that the manuscript evidence can tell us nothing about the state of the Pauline literature prior to the third century.