I'm back from sifting what seemed to be endless commentaries and articles on Romans 16:11 and with findings I didn't expect.
Good times!
I'll post my take on all that all bit by bit, in response to your posts, Brainache.
...Herodion? A slave named after the King?
Not a slave, but a freedman. And yes, it was customary for a freedman to take the name of a former owner or of their family in gratitude or respect, so there's nothing implausible about Herodion being a freedman of Aristobulos.
At least, as far as I can see.
Paul's encounter with Agrippa and his wife/sister in Acts depicts these Tyrants as being on friendly terms with him. Remember Paul is the hero of Acts, and this book depicts him as hobnobbing with the very people who were oppressing the Jewish people and executing all those early Martyrs. ...
Ah, yes.
Acts. Hardly my idea of a go-to text on an accurate rendering of Paul's story. Do you have any reason that incident is based on anything approaching reality?
... I see he asserts that these must be slaves, but I don't see what he is basing that on other than tradition or dogma.
The idea that Aristobulus had a Jewish slave named after his Grandfather Herod The Great is absurd to me. Herod, Herodion, Herodias etc were family names of the Royal Family (Idumean Arabs BTW, not Jews). What makes this guy think that a Slave would be given a Royal Family name?
It's ridiculous.
Up to a point, you're quite right, Brainache. However, it's no secret freedmen would take on a variant of their patron's family name.
...Are there any other more recent Scholars who agree with Lenski? A lot of stuff has come to light since 1938.
ETA: I just read the intro to this Lenski book and it appears to be more a work of Theology, than of Historical research. It highlights why I prefer Eisenman to religiously trained apologists like Lenski. Eisenman started his career studying Maths and Physics and drifted into Middle East History via study of Islamic Law. His books are logical and refreshingly free of dogma.
Oh, yes.
Lots and lots.
http://classic.net.bible.org/dictionary.php?word=Herodion
he-ro'-di-on (Herodion; Westcott and Hort, The New Testament in Greek Hrodion): A Roman Christian to whom Paul sent greetings (Romans 16:11). The name seems to imply that he was a freedman of the Herods, or a member of the household of Aristobulus, the grandson of Herod the Great (Romans 16:10). Paul calls him "my kinsman," i.e. "a Jew" (see JUNIAS, 1).
http://biblehub.com/romans/16-11.htm
- Salute Herodion my kinsman. Greet them of the household of Narcissus that are in the Lord. This Narcissus may possibly have been the powerful freedman of Claudius, mentioned by Tacitus, 'Ann.,' 11:29, seq.; 12:57; and by Suetonius, 'Claud.,' 28. The fact that he appears from 'Ann.,' 13:1, to have been put to death on the accession of Nero, A.D. 54, is not inconsistent with the supposition. For his human chattels would be likely to pass into the possession of Nero, and so become part of Caeasar's household, and might still be called by their late master's name. This may also have been the case with the household of Aristobulus above referred to. It is observable that, at a later period, the apostle, writing from Rome to the Philippians, sends special greetings from them "that are of Caesar's household" (Philippians 4:23).
Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible
Salute Herodion my kinsman,.... According to the flesh, being of the same nation, a Jew; or of the same tribe, the tribe of Benjamin; or of the same family, and nearly allied in blood to him: though the name is of Attic, or Parthic original, and seems to be a derivative of Herod; this man is reckoned among the seventy disciples, and said to be bishop of Tarsus: See Gill on Luke 10:1.
http://www.awmi.net/bible/rom_16_11
Note 16 at Ro 16:11: The name Herodion came from the Greek word "HERODES" meaning "heroic" (Strong's Concordance). This was the name of a number of kings of Palestine (see note 3 at Lu 3:1), and it is possible that Herodion was named after one of the kings named Herod. If so, that would most likely make Herodion a Gentile, since it would be very unusual for a Jew to name a child in honor of Herod.
Herodion was the third person Paul mentioned in this chapter as being his kinsman (see note 9 at Ro 16:7). If Herodion was a Gentile, as his name could imply, then Paul would have been referring to him as a brother in the Lord and not a natural blood relative.
http://www.middletownbiblechurch.org/romans/romans16.htm
Lightfoot suggests that Narcissus could have been a rich and powerful freedman who was closely connected to the Emperor Claudius, serving as his secretary, and who was later put to death shortly after Nero assumed the throne. If Aristobulus was related to the Herods (see v.10), then he would have been a close ally of Claudius. These two possibilities may give us some help in understanding Philippians 4:22 ("[the saints] that are of Caesar’s household"), because there would have been at least two households within the palace that had believers in them.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~sben0056/essays/paulromanswhy.htm
Lampe claims that the only names which occur both in Rm 16 and on the Jewish inscriptions of Rome are Rufus, Julia and Maria [not necessarily 'Miriam'; it could also designate a freed slave of the Marius family]; a fourth, Apelles (v. 10), occurs in Horace. Paul calls sugge,neij, perhaps representing all Jews as cousins in his attempt to conciliate the Romans, Andronicus, Junia and Herodion (16. 6, 11).
I have many more references, if you're interested in seeing them.
For comic relief, go to this one
http://www.gods-kingdom-ministries.net/daily-weblogs/2011/01-2011/romans-16-part-2/
Now about Eisenman's ideas.
Here's his paper on the subject
http://www.depts.drew.edu/jhc/eisenman.html
But where Paul is concerned, one can go even further. Paul speaks in an unguarded moment in Rom 16:11 of his "kinsman Herodion." Though the name could refer to any person by this name anywhere, still names like Herod and its derivatives (n.b. the parallel with the name of Caesar's son "Caesarion") are not common. Nor is there any indication that the passage is an interpolation. If it were indicative of actual familial relationships with Herodians, which in my view it is, then by itself it explains the hint of Herodian membership and/or activity in the early Christian community in Antioch. It also very easily explains the matter of Paul's Roman citizenship, which is such an important element in these escapes. In turn, it helps explain why Paul is always so convinced of his own Jewishness, while others seem to have misgivings concerning it, and it throws much light on the peculiar manner in which he chooses to exercise this Judaism.
I couldn't find many writers who support his line of thinking.
Jesus' Words Only, Douglas John del Tondo
http://books.google.es/books?id=3VF...&q=Paul Romans Herodion Romans 16:11&f=false
The Dominion of Love: Animal Rights According to the Bible
By Norm Phelps
http://books.google.es/books?id=Lfn...&q=Paul Romans Herodion Romans 16:11&f=false
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/scrolls_deadsea/deadsea_scrollsdeception/scrollsdeception16.htm
http://www.domainofman.com/forum/index.cgi?noframes;read=2302
Not a nice place, but it shows just how far some people have gone with Eisenman's ideas
http://www.terrorism-illuminati.com/gnosticism#.UlUbK1Pef_d
I'd be interested to learn why some translations have it : "Herodion my kinsman", and others have it: "Herodion my fellow Jew". ...
And even more translate the phrase, "Herodion my fellow countryman"
Here's the word in the original:
συγγενής
suggenes
{soong-ghen-ace'}From G4862 and G1085; a relative (by blood); by extension a fellow countryman.
Another thing struck me forcibly in this little Google search.
It's entirely possible the whole Herodion identification is a tempest in a teapot, as the Greek Orthodox Church translates the name as Rodion, not Herodion.
Brainache, I thank you again for inspiring my Google safari. If I've provided you with some food for thought, that's fabulous.
At the very worst, I had a great excuse to 'visit' the Herodion in Palestine.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herodium