Karl, 

 

I asked that this conversation be stopped. Your answering George rather than 
addressing Jerry directly does not make this last post any more legitimate. 
Please desist. 

 

Yigal Levin

Co-moderator, B-Hebrew

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of K Randolph
Sent: Thursday, August 01, 2013 7:49 PM
To: George Athas
Cc: b-hebrew; Jerry Shepherd
Subject: Re: [b-hebrew] Ezek 3:26

 

George:

 

On Thu, Aug 1, 2013 at 8:12 AM, George Athas <[email protected]> wrote:

No Karl, Jerry is not a 'perfect medievalist'. The 'ad fontes' ('to the 
sources') motto of the Reformers did not mean to pass over or ignore all 
commentators, or to consult them second. On the contrary, if you read the work 
of the Reformers you will see just how indebted they were to previous 
commentators, especially the Church Fathers. They studied the sources in 
conversation with the contributions of others. Jerry is doing exactly what the 
Reformers were doing. He is engaging in a conversation over the meaning of the 
sources, acknowledging previous contributions with appropriate credit and 
critiquing them where he deems it fitting. He refuses to do his scholarship in 
bleak isolation with the sources only, as though he needs to 'invent the wheel' 
on his own and then maybe see what other 'wheels' people came up with. He is, 
rather, doing the wise thing of listening to others before he speaks—a wholly 
appropriate way of dealing with the sources. It's called scholarship.

 

I don’t know about the other Reformers, but I’m Lutheran background, and Luther 
very definitely quoted the comments of earlier theologians only 
secondarily—approvingly only in so far as they agreed with Scripture first, 
disapprovingly where they disagreed with Scripture. Trained as a Roman Catholic 
theologian in the medieval tradition, he was required to study previous 
commentaries, and he later complained about the amount of time he wasted on 
studying things connected with Roman Catholic theology that contradicted 
Scripture.

 

As I wrote to Jerry, on my part I’m not a professional theologian with scads of 
time on my hands, therefore prioritize my time, Bible first, and if I have time 
(which almost never happens) other writings. I have other writings available 
that I haven’t had time to get to.

 

I can't see where Jerry has committed a logical fallacy

 

Formal training in logic was required for the program I studied. I’ve kept it 
up because logical fallacies are so common.

 

, but I can see where you wilfully choose to sideline the contributions of 
others in order to trump up your own opinion formed largely in isolation. 
Rather than misperceive Jerry's approach and clang publicly over it, I suggest 
your limited time would be better spent going to the commentators in order to 
glean some of the wisdom that might be on offer.

 

Not if it cuts into Bible time.

 

This does not mean surrendering your faculties to them. It just means joining 
the scholarly conversation. If that's not something you see as valuable, then I 
question your need to be on this forum, where we are interested in constructive 
conversation with valued contributions.

 

Unfortunately, I have a bad habit of being feisty, willing to take up a fight 
when offered when it would be wiser at times simply to walk away from the tight 
instead. In the past, there have been people on this list who seemed to be more 
interested in attacking people with whom they disagreed, than in involving 
themselves with constructive conversations, and when they offered a fight I too 
willingly joined them—thankfully two of them are no longer active on this list.

 

One way to control that bad habit is to make a “do not answer” list of people I 
won’t answer no matter what they say, in which case I usually don’t read what 
they have to say so I won’t be tempted to answer—it looks like I should add 
Jerry Shepherd to that list to join two other people on this forum who are 
already on that list. And the first step now that he’s on that list, I won’t 
read the three messages he wrote after you wrote this message.

 

Perhaps you should do as I have suggested many times to Jim Stinehart, namely 
move your views to a blog where you can simply air them without having to 
engage in real conversation.

 

Most people on this list, even where we disagree, have been gentlemen and I 
have learned from them. I have to thank Ruth for clarifying certain aspects of 
linguistics, but others have contributed as well.

 

 

GEORGE ATHAS

Dean of Research,

Moore Theological College (moore.edu.au)

Sydney, Australia

 

Karl W. Randolph.

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