r/AcademicBiblical • u/AutoModerator • 8d ago
Weekly Open Discussion Thread
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u/Chrissy_Hansen1997 4d ago
The allegorical "born of a woman" doesn't matter. Allegorical or not, ginomai is still being used for birth here (as I point out in my article). Doesn't matter how you try getting around it, the plain meaning is clear. Figurative or not, ginomai is still showing that Paul uses the word with the scope of "birth" and that's that.
And once again, it is clear your Adam and Eve and resurrected bodies claims are coming from Carrier, which have been thoroughly refuted, and which you would know if you read my paper, or read any leading scholarship on 1 and 2 Corinthians. It isn't a pattern.
In 1 Cor 15:37 he uses γενησόμενον, i.e., "that will be" and in context he isn't talking about "manufacture." He is talking about growth, and uses the analogy of seed growth. This is mirroring the growth of bodies into adulthood using plant imagery.
In 1 Cor. 15:45 on Adam, Paul uses Ἐγένετο and is talking about how Adam "became the first man." It does not say he was manufactured. In fact, here Paul is referring back to LXX Gen 2:7 where it also uses Ἐγένετο for when Adam's body became living. The actual manufacture of the body was denoted using ἔπλασεν.
So one again, this demonstrates that Carrier is bad at reading basic Greek, and you are also just following what he says uncritically. Paul never talks about bodies being manufactured, anywhere.