You’re clearly not going to let up with your spurious assertions, dejudge.
No matter how often disproved, you mean to keep on repeating them, willfully and deceitfully. It doesn’t even look as if you particularly care what you post – getting a reaction of sorts, any excuse to keep on posting for its own sake, the sole motivation; one swag of rubbish supersedes another.
Take this nonsense of yours: “Effectively, gMatthew, gLuke, gJohn, Acts of the Apostles and the Entire Pauline Corpus were composed AFTER the SHORT gMark.”
In lieu of all that we do know and that’s been said, do you actually think there’s anyone here who doesn’t instantly recognize this for what it is! Unmitigated bollocks!
The same goes for your claims that Justin Martin did not mention the Gospel or Recollections of Peter, and, yes, I know only too well where you got your second-hand quotes.
The underlying Greek is not only ambiguous but displays faulty construction, with the result that some interpreters translate the passage as referring to Peter, and others to Him, here meaning Christ. The trouble with Memoirs of Christ is that there is simply no such manuscript, nor does Justin use the phrase anywhere else.
Apart from which Justin relies in his writings on the Gospel of Peter in various places, as for others, as already pointed out, so what difference does it make! (Except to give you something to score brownie points with, that is.) Elsewhere Justin only refers to Memoirs of the Apostles, another text that, as far as we know, never existed (even though pakeha added it to his reading list!), which here refers to the Gospel of the Twelve Apostles. Neither do I mean to waste any more time on any of this.
Scholars argue that the author of gLuke used gMark and gMatthew or similar sources? There are similar passages in gLuke, gMatthew and gMark”?
Naturally there exist numerous parallel passages in the synoptic gospels, seeing only 24 verses of Mark are not found in the other two combined! Scholars have struggled to explain the order of the canonical passages for centuries, as well as the similarities, delivering all kinds of wondrous theories, as well as conjuring a common source document, ‘Q’. Working on the fallacy that they are first-century productions no doubt only serves to compound the confusion.
The synoptic gospels weren’t the only compilations floating about around that time, and if one assumes the existence of some preceding, if not fragmentary composition, one variously relied on by all three authors, the contradictions are readily reconciled.
The notion that Luke should mention a number of gospels etc, subsequently deemed apocryphal, yet omit to mention the other inspired canonical gospels, is plain absurd. Why would he refer to discredited writings yet omit to mention those recognized as authorized and inspired? In fact, Origen, Jerome, Epiphanius, and Venerable Bede, by affirming that Luke only arrived after all of the gospels listed, thereby also reject apostolic origin.
And the fact that Luke came first isn’t only based “because they were not mentioned”. Both internal analysis (derived from some of the earliest manuscripts, as also for Marcion’s gospel) combined with the need to refute Marcion’s gospel, suggests that Luke was indeed the first. Successive church fathers avow that Matthew came first (as well as having been first written in Hebrew), as no doubt explained by the fact that the early Oracles were originally wrongly attributed to him.
Here and elsewhere you’ve trumpeted for who knows how long that Ephraem did not mention Paul. In fact, he asserts that Paul preached from Jerusalem to Spain! As for your citation of Empedocles, Celsus, and others, you’ll of course keep on citing them anyway.
Whatever Marcion preached, analysis demonstrates that every manuscript used by Marcion, after the first eight used by Luke, appears pretty well in both gospels; even using a similar style. I already pointed this out before and I’m really not interested in forever repeating myself just because simply nothing registers or penetrates your preconceived fancies.