Peter Kirby wrote:
When Carrier refers to:
the fact that Paul and Philo assign all the same unusual attributes to the same figure
Pretty much anyone (other than some hardcore conservative Christians, perhaps) would already be fully aware that Paul and Philo are both first century Jews and are both drawing on a rich tradition of Hellenistic philosophy and Jewish thought around the turn of the era. Both authors held beliefs about an intermediary figure, whatever it is named. Both were informed by a shared cultural and religious background.
These "coincidences" do not necessitate Carrier's particular explanation of them.
I disagree. You are claiming that it's not a coincidence that Paul and Philo adored an archangel with x, y, z attributes (beyond their name).
You are claiming that it was usual for Jews be adoring an archangel (beyond his name) and not only God. This is absurd. The Jews were monotheists. Philo was an eccentric person with all his allegories. Philo was NEO-PLATONIC. His Logos was the Platonic Adam. Philo was influenced entirely from neo-platonism.
Philo and Paul and some Jew from Qumran were the
unique people adoring an archangel (respectively: the Logos, Christ Jesus and Melchizedek).
Therefore, IF two archangels are adored by two Jews in two different places is already a COINCIDENCE.
IF two archangels share the same attributes is another coincidence.
But IF these two archangels share the same name, too, then that is not more a coincidence.
Regarding the first premise:
Does Philo say why he identifies the figure in Zechariah 6 as the archangel Logos? And, if so, what is the reason given? Here is the passage.
http://www.earlyjewishwritings.com/text ... ook15.html
But those who conspired to commit injustice, he says, "having come from the east, found a plain in the land of Shinar, and dwelt There;"{16}{#ge 11:2.} speaking most strictly in accordance with nature. For there is a twofold kind of dawning in the soul, the one of a better sort, the other of a worse. That is the better sort, when the light of the virtues shines forth like the beams of the sun; and that is the worse kind, when they are overshadowed, and the vices show forth. (61) Now, the following is an example of the former kind: "And God planted a paradise in Eden, toward the East,"{17}{#ge 2:8.} not of terrestrial but of celestial plants, which the planter caused to spring up from the incorporeal light which exists around him, in such a way as to be for ever inextinguishable.
(62) I have also heard of one of the companions of Moses having uttered such a speech as this: "Behold, a man whose name is the East!"{18}{#zec 6:12.} A very novel appellation indeed, if you consider it as spoken of a man who is compounded of body and soul; but if you look upon it as applied to that incorporeal being who in no respect differs from the divine image, you will then agree that the name of the east has been given to him with great felicity. (63) For the Father of the universe has caused him to spring up as the eldest son, whom, in another passage, he calls the firstborn; and he who is thus born, imitating the ways of his father, has formed such and such species, looking to his archetypal patterns.
This premise is simply incorrect. If you look at the passage itself, you could easily find out why Philo says that he identified this figure as being the same as the Logos (if anything is said by Philo in this regard). Again:
A very novel appellation indeed, if you consider it as spoken of a man who is compounded of body and soul; but if you look upon it as applied to that incorporeal being who in no respect differs from the divine image, you will then agree that the name of the east has been given to him with great felicity.
Philo says that the
name "East" (or "Rising") is
inappropriate for a man, made of both body and soul, and appropriate for an incorporeal being, such as the Logos is. That's what Philo says in this quote from Zechariah 6:12.
Nothing like Carrier's "Philo said that he identified a figure in Zechariah 6 as the archangel Logos because the Logos was the Son of God and the High Priest" is actually said by Philo. Either you might argue that Philo doesn't give his reasons for making the identification explicitly in his text, or you'd have to argue that the reasons given are not those that Carrier describes. Either way, the premise is wrong.
I disagree again, and entirely. For Philo Logos is already impliciter Son of God and High Priest
everywhere the name 'Logos' appears. Philo is saying that a man should
not be called 'Anatole' because only the Logos should be called 'Anatole'. But accordingly Philo can
not confute Zech directly. Philo, after all, is not a heretic until this point.
Philo is an harmonizer, not a debunker of Zech. Philo has to harmonize his belief (that Anatole is the logos
and only the Logos) with the reading of Zech 6:12 (who gives to a man the title 'Anatole').
Therefore the solution for Philo is only one: to mean Joshua son of Josedec as the man that is hailed Anatole. In this way the harmonization is made:
via Joshua son of Josedec, the original author of Zechariah is saying,
in the eyes of Philo, that the man hailed Anatole is a high priest (Joshua
was a high priest) and a son of God (Joshua
was son of Josedec, i.e. son of Jeova the Right). This means that, for Philo, the man Joshua is only an allegory of the archangelic Logos (the true
legitimate entity to be hailed Anatole). Joshua can remain a mortal historical man, but he, with his name and his role, is simbolic of a divine entity: the archangelic Logos.
This makes sense, of course, because the text of Zechariah itself also does not identify the high priest Joshua with the expected future messianic figure of 'the man named Branch' (Hebrew) / 'East' (Septuagint).
Neither Philo nor the author of Zechariah makes the identification that Carrier does.
It's
impossible that the author of Tanak Zech 6:12 (where ''apparently'' the Joshua is the Anatole, according to many scholars and academics) - even if you assume that the Tanak is written after the Septuagint - reflects a view about Joshua and the Anatole that is late and after-Philo. Because it's
impossible that some Jews could have made a so big favour to Christians, assuming in their Tanak a reading of Zech 6:12 where the Tsemach is Joshua ''apparently'' (according to many scholars and academics).
Therefore it's possible, even
likely, a reading of Zech 6:12 by some Jews pre-Philo where the Joshua is ''apparently'' the Anatole.
Remember that the talmudist says that the
Messiah ben Joseph is the messianic suffering Branch mentioned in Zechariah. This reflects securely a pre-christian view.
And Joshua son of Josedec is the
suffering high priest in Zech 6. A coincidence?