72. A [person said] to him, "Tell my brothers to divide my father's possessions with me."
He said to the person, "Mister, who made me a divider?"
He turned to his disciples and said to them, "I'm not a divider, am I?"
Jesus is one who unites. By uniting heaven and earth, spirit and flesh, this is how the Kingdom is manifested on Earth and in each human being.
What I find fascinating by this study of related verses in different texts is the illustration of multiple attestation - which seems to be a criterion among scholars to test the degree of probability of the authenticity of a saying of Jesus. It was done with the canonical gospels. Is this same criterion of multiple attestation valid with non-canonical texts? Or is this just an example of a saying's popularity among oral traditions? (Which, likewise, could hold true for the canonical gospels.)
1 comment:
I see the relation of this verse to GT 72:
72. A [person said] to him, "Tell my brothers to divide my father's possessions with me."
He said to the person, "Mister, who made me a divider?"
He turned to his disciples and said to them, "I'm not a divider, am I?"
Jesus is one who unites. By uniting heaven and earth, spirit and flesh, this is how the Kingdom is manifested on Earth and in each human being.
What I find fascinating by this study of related verses in different texts is the illustration of multiple attestation - which seems to be a criterion among scholars to test the degree of probability of the authenticity of a saying of Jesus. It was done with the canonical gospels. Is this same criterion of multiple attestation valid with non-canonical texts? Or is this just an example of a saying's popularity among oral traditions? (Which, likewise, could hold true for the canonical gospels.)
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