Jabin said:
Quote:
The absence of any reference to the gospels (not even mark) by paul pushes the likely dates for the gospels back until after his death.
Wouldn't you consider that to be rather weak evidence for dating either the Gospels or of Paul's letters? Couldn't there be any number of other reasonable explanations for Paul not mentioning any of the Gospels other than them not yet being written? And aren't those explanations substantively different than the absence of references I mentioned in the book of Acts?
In a word no.
Dating pauls letters is much less controversial except for the letters most scholars consider written by someone else.
There could be reasonable explanations for "someone" alive at the time writing letters with a christian theme and not mentioning the gospels, or quoting jesus, or even referencing an event only known through the synoptics. But most of those reasons are very weak when applied to paul.
If paul was a christian who rarely if ever quoted scripture in his letters at all, it would be much less glaring. Or if there was never a topic of his conversation that would have been bolstered by quoting jesus, or referring to a parable, ect. then it would make sense for him not to.
Instead we have close to 100 quotes in his letters from the OT. In fact we can tell he used the LXX. That doesn't include references to scripture itself, just quotes.
If we examine the possibilities that paul knew of the gospels and the reasons he might not have made a single quote of jesus own words, single reference to them individually or collectively as scripture, recommendation to read them and learn them, allusion to a story only known through them, reference to a parable ect. and compare that to him simply not having access. Not having access is a dramatically stronger argument.
This is further bolstered by paul never mentioning hell. A concept thoroughly grounded in the gospels and thoroughly absent in the OT.
This is hardly the only evidence that the gospels weren't around. The gospels not surprisingly at all are heavily referenced by multiple sources after a certain period and utterly absent before. This is exactly what you would expect if they came into being in the interim.
Most scholars to their credit try to be pretty objective. The largest part of this isn't poking holes in the opponents argument, it's poking holes in your own. To this end and absence of references to the gospels by ANYONE in the early date range is problematic. A complete absence from paul when paul knew about them rests on extremely ad hoc and weak ground.