I'm happy with the consensus of G.Mark @ ~70 and 1 Clement @ ~96.Bernard Muller wrote:So when do you think gMark was written at the earliest?
Do you think gMark was written after 1 Clement?
But I don't think Clement knew G.Mark - the gospels seem to have remained in their own small circles for some time. The first appearance of written Gospels in the wider Christian community would be Papias and Aristides, maybe Ignatius - later culminating with Justin.
It looks like the Gospels were largely UNknown until about 120-130.
Thus I think Barnabas, 1 Clement, and probably even the Didakhe - did NOT know any of our written Gospels.
Instead, there were many stories and traditions growing around Jesus Christ, from at least the time of Paul, and probably earlier - including attaching him to episodes in the Tanakh. That was the source for those three early books.
G.Mark had also drawn on those traditions at any earlier stage, but it and the other Gospels remained cloistered for some decades - it appears the Gospels were not considered Christian doctrine at first.
But they are in the LXX too, no need to invoke G.Mark.Bernard Muller wrote: But the fourteen other words in 1 Clement are exactly the same and in the same sequence as in gMark.
I do not think oral transmission can explain such a close similarity, but one copying on the other would.
Actually, that wasn't quite correct, sorry.Bernard Muller wrote: I am surprised about your number: nearly a hundred times. Where did you get that? I do not think "Clement" cited epistles that much. But beside an epistle written to the Corinthians, I do not know of any other identifications. "Clement" quoted & paraphrased quite a lot of 'Hebrews" without indicating where he got all that. The same thing applies for many OT quotes: little or no indication of the sources.
The numbers are actually the count of the foot-notes from the online copy of 1 Clement at the Church Fathers, although they have split it up into chapters now, and the foot-notes are gone. Some of the references in the foot-notes are not formal citations. Here is one line of my list of NT foot-notes :
I can't easily reproduce the foot-notes here without losing formatting, to check the details, please view my page:Kapyong wrote:5 Eph. v. 21; 1 Pet. v. 5. 8 1 Pet. ii. 17. 10 Tit. iii. 1. 15 Literally, "Christ;" comp. 2 Cor. i. 21, Eph. iv. 20.
http://kapyong.5gbfree.com/ClementRome.html
Under "Other NT References" are 44 references.
Under "OT References" are rather more - about 100 probably a fair call.
Kapyong

