Will something like this (a model of what a first-century fragment with text from Mark 1 might be like) be published soon? |
Remember
the announcement in 2012 about the existence of a first-century manuscript-fragment
from the Gospel of Mark?
Here we are five years later, and after various rumors have come and
gone, it has still not been published.
This has led some folks to suspect that the announcement might have been
premature, or that the dating must be wildly inaccurate, or even that it was
all some sort of groundless claim.
However, footage of a discussion
between Scott Carroll and Josh McDowell from 2015, provided by Hezekiah
Domowski, was found by Elijah Hixson, and was recently described by Peter Gurry
at the Evangelical
Textual Criticism blog.
We already
had the means to deduce – if one is willing to take the reports about the
fragment at face value – that that the papyrus fragment is very early (possibly
from the first century), and that it probably contains text from Mark chapter
1, and that Dirk Obbink
was probably involved in analyzing its contents, and that Scott Carroll had
seen the fragment.
Now some of
the “probably” factor seems to be diminished.
We also learn in this video that the Green Collection does not have the
manuscript, or, at least, that Scott Carroll was confident that someone else
owned it in 2015.
I made a
full transcript of the discussion between Scott
Carroll and Josh
McDowell, and then checked it against the transcript made by Peter
Gurry. I have added a few embedded links
and pictures. Here it the transcript:
McDowell: How was it
discovered, and who –
Carroll: I can give
you some basic information. It’s in the
process –
McDowell: He’s
limited on what he can share, because it’s being published right now and all,
and the owner of it might want to remain anonymous, et cetera. So he’s limited
on what he can share with us.
Carroll:
Correct. These things are tricky. I first worked with the papyrus in 2012; so,
it was discovered earlier than that. It
wasn’t discovered by me. Although the
group that’s working on its publication did some [??] – it’s very tempting,
when you get the press, and Fox
News, and other press agencies are after [it?]; you want to get information
on it, and some stuff was leaked, and they contacted me, I think, about a year
ago, wanting some definitive information on how it was extracted from a
mummy-covering. And I was not involved
in that process.
When I saw
it, I can tell you, it was relaxed, which means it was flat. If it had been extracted – if it was extracted
from a context like that, there’s no evidence of it, to me. It looks like it was just a text that was
found. Now, a lot of the texts that come
to light in this kind of context, like, if I went back to the picture, and we
looked at the pile, you can see that a lot of this stuff has white on it; and that’s,
like, the residue of the plaster. So
these things came from mummy-coverings.
McDowell: Isn’t that interesting. I thought it was [??] –
Carroll: No, no. So, they probably were in a burial-setting, or
something like that, and over time, it just separated, one from another, but we
can look and it was originally part of it. Now, this Mark may have been in that kind of
context; I’m not sure.
I saw it in,
at Oxford University ,
at Christ Church College, and it was in
the possession of an outstanding and well-known, eminent classicist. I saw it again in 2013. There were some delays with its
purchasing. And I
was working at that time with the Green Family Collection, which I had the
privilege of organizing and putting together for the Hobby Lobby family, and
hoped that they would, at that time, acquire it. And they delayed, and didn’t. We
were preparing an exhibit for the Vatican Library, and I wanted this to be
the showpiece in that exhibit.
McDowell: Why wouldn’t?
Carroll: I know; wouldn’t that have been awesome? But it was not the timing, and so it was passed on, and delayed. It has since been acquired. I can’t say by whom. It is in the process of being prepared for publication. And what’s important to say –
Carroll: I know; wouldn’t that have been awesome? But it was not the timing, and so it was passed on, and delayed. It has since been acquired. I can’t say by whom. It is in the process of being prepared for publication. And what’s important to say –
McDowell: What does
that mean? ‘The process of being prepared’? What does that mean?
Carroll: It’s a
lengthy process. Actually, going through
– especially with this, because it’s gonna get – it’s gonna go out there, and there
are gonna be people immediate trying to tear it down, questioning its
provenance, where it came from, what it dates to – especially the date. So they want an ironclad argument on the
dating of this document, so that it won’t be – um, they have a responsibility
to do that. This is going to be very
critical, and raise – it’ll be a major flashpoint in the media when this
happens.
McDowell: Who’s the
main person responsible in the publishing [process?]?
Carroll: Well, the
most important person of note is Dirk Obbink, who is –
McDowell: This is a
lot more information than we heard last time.
Carroll: Yeah, it
is. Dirk Obbink is an outstanding
scholar; he’s one of the world’s leading specialists on papyri. He directs the
collection – for students who are in here, you may remember hearing the word ‘Oxyrhynchus’
Papyri – he is the director of the Oxyrhynchus
papyri. I can’t speak to his own
personal faith position; I don’t think he would define himself as an evangelical
in any sense of the word, but he is not – he doesn’t have a derogatory attitude
at all. He’s a supportive person.
He
specializes in the dating of handwriting.
And as he was looking at the – both times I saw the papyrus, it was in
his possession – so, it was at Oxford, at Christ Church, and actually on his
pool-table, in his office, along with a number of mummy-heads. So, you have these mummy-heads –
McDowell: So you
played pool –
Carroll: No. And, you’ve got that document there, and
that’s the setting – it’s kind of surreal.
And Dirk, Dirk was wrestling with dating somewhere between 70 A.D. and
120, 110, 120.
McDowell: That early?
Carroll: Yes, A.D.
McDowell; Whoa. That’s [??] an old manuscript. And Mark!
Carroll: Mark is one that
the critics have always dated late, so this is, like, I can hear their
arguments being formulated now. So this
is what the later authors were quoting.
McDowell: Folks, make
sure: that is all tentative. And you may say that, right?”
Carroll: Yeah, yeah.
Carroll: Yeah, yeah.
McDowell: That is just
an assumption in there. So don’t go out
and say, “There’s a manuscript dated 70 A.D.”
How long do we have to wait, probably, to know specifically?
Carroll: “I would
say, in this next year, all right. Any
delays that are going to happen over the next couple of months are delays with the
publisher to publish this. If the route
is to go to a major journal, they’ll of course want it to happen quickly, but
there’ll be some delays through the whole academic process and all.
McDowell: So keep
that in mind; that, don’t go out and say, well, Dr. Scott Carroll says it’s
dated between 70 A.D. – we don’t really know yet. But those are probably the parameters for
it. But it will be – now this is my
opinion – the oldest ever discovered.
Carroll: Yeah; I
think this without question. With
manuscripts, um, the
Rylands John fragment, it’s always like, 115 through 140 or maybe even
later than that; so it’s kind of pushed to around the middle of the second
century. This is gonna be earlier than
that; textbooks will change with this discovery.
McDowell: So When
this hits the media, you will hear about it.
Carroll: Yes, you
will.
McDowell: It’ll be on
every program. So, be careful about what
you share from tonight. It’s good to be able
to be updated and to hear [??]; I didn’t know that. [Changing the subject:] What is one of the most significant
discoveries that have been made in the last four or five years?
And there the video ends.
10 comments:
Thank you James. I hope they soon go forward with publishing it so everyone can see what's going on.
Interesting! Any idea what verses are there?
Chad,
If I recall correctly, an early report mentioned that the fragment contains text from Mark chapter 1.
I'm puzzled by the comment that "Mark is one that the critics have always dated late." I grew up with what I understand was a consensus that Mark was the first of the gospels, and it was written sometime between shortly after the First Jewish War and maybe 85, so this fragment doesn't change that at all.
Now I know that the Church Fathers gave Matthew priority, but they also put Matthew as well as Mark and Luke in the time of Paul, which is earlier than 70 AD.
Unless by critics he's referring to the mythicest community, I admit to being puzzled.
John Roth,
I place the production-date for the Gospel of Mark in the mid-60's. Dan Wallace has expressed a view that it is about a decade earlier. Others think that it must be after 69 (partly because of the accuracy of Jesus' prophecies about the destruction of Jerusalem that Mark records -- they consider them prophecies "ex eventu") -- but not very long after that, because the Gospel of Mark is assumed (in the dominant solution to the Synoptic Problem) to have been used by Matthew and Luke in the 70's (and some scholars even push the composition of Luke into the 80's, though this view raises some difficulties). But in any event, Mark is typically considered the earliest of the four canonical Gospels, by conservatives and liberals alike. (There are of course exceptions, especially among those who subscribe to different solutions to the Synoptic Problem.)
So, yes, Carroll's statement is puzzling. I just categorize this sort of statement as sensationalism. It doesn't worry me much.
the idea is that if this is a COPY (unless it is THE original) and it dates to 70-110 then the date of the writing in its original would be about 50 or so... time to get around the Roman Empire enough for someone to make enough copies that at least ONE would survive. Again, unless this fragment is the FIRST which is HIGHLY doubtful since the original would have passed around enough times to become worthless as a text to study or read.
If they were to put such a fragment on display in a monter in a museum, or publish high resolution images, the Internet crowd wouldn't hesitate to transcribe it and date it to any time within Mark's lifetime if at all possible, and the debate would be wonderful, after which super-experts could research it more carefully and be credible.
My gut-feeling says we are waiting for the ink to dry.
Robert Lawrence
"the idea is that if this is a COPY (unless it is THE original) and it dates to 70-110 then the date of the writing in its original would be about 50 or so... "
That's a pretty big assumption. The idea that a copy could only be found in Egypt only if it had been in existence for 20 or more years: any number of scenarios could put an early copy in Egypt early on. Just off the top of my head, assume someone who had one of the first copies traveled to Egypt and brought it as a present. The problem here is that your assuming that distribution would have to be local and spread from there. There's nothing inherently wrong with that, but it assumes way too much. Further, you seem to be assuming that the date of the manuscript is the same as its arrival in Egypt. Why could a document copied, in say the year 75, not find it's way into Egypt, in say the year 100 or later
Simon "Man of Cyrene" Johnson
If the date of the fragment can be determined with some degree of confidence, which I suspect the experts are concentrating on just now, then we would have one of the greatest New Testament finds for centuries which would put some arguments, doubts to rest. Can you imagine when comparing the text of this fragment to the text of a fragment or manuscript 1000 years older that the text of the new Mark fragment and it turns out to be exact word for word? This would definitely send a ton of literature written about the unreliability of New Testament texts to the flames, as Dan Wallace is famous in saying.
Here's the update: the manuscript is not from the 1st century.
https://danielbwallace.com/2018/05/23/first-century-mark-fragment-update/
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