Questioning Q: A Multidimensional Critique
Biblical Theology Bulletin, Spring, 2006 by John S. Kloppenborg
The above link is to Look Smart's Find Articles reproduction (or try Print Friendly version); see also High Beam Research.
The review is an encouraging one, e.g. "Each of the essays is carefully and thoughtfully argued and deserves a prominent place on reading lists on the synoptic problem" and "On the whole, however, Questioning Q is an excellent example of balanced and thoughtful synoptic scholarship." Kloppenborg is most critical about N. T. Wright's foreword, described as "the only blemish on an otherwise valuable volume," which "invents a silly 'myth'--the combination of heresy and American pop culture--which, he claims, has gripped scholars who write on Q." Kloppenborg goes through each essay in turn, summarises and makes a brief comment. I will leave my fellow contributors to make their own comments (here, should they wish) and will limit my own thoughts to what Kloppenborg says about my own piece, "When is a Text not a Text? The Quasi Text-Critical Approach of the International Q Project":
More disappointing is Mark Goodacre's critique of the models adopted by the International Q Project for reconstructing Q. Goodacre rightly notes that two models are in use: an (earlier) papyrological' model, which imagined "minimal Q" as a tattered papyrus that Matthew and Luke each restored, and restored differently; and a "text-critical" model, which understands the task of reconstructing Q on the analog of text criticism, reconstructing a now-lost Urtext that accounts for later manuscript developments. Goodacre objects to the text-critical model, arguing that a source critical model ought to have been adopted. But Goodacre misunderstands what the models are: they are metaphors, not descriptions of the IQP's procedures, which required the organization of huge bodies of data (scholarly opinion on the reconstruction of Q since 1863), using the analogy of critical editions of the New Testament, which organize manuscript variations around variation points. Goodacre's real objection is that the IQP should have written a book entitled "The Sources of Luke."The comment is a little surprising given that I repeatedly use the word "analogy" to describe what is going on (ad nauseam on 119-20) and never construe the models as "descriptions of the IQP's procedures". One of the key points is to ask what the most appropriate analogies for the enterprise are, and I am attempting to argue that the dominant use of these text-critical models leads the IQP to construe their work in a particular way, which causes them (ironically) to ignore key textual evidence, to avoid engagement with competing source theories and to use a rhetoric more appropriate dealing with extant texts. It is a question of one's choice of natural dialogue partners.
But speaking of dialogue partners, I should add that Kloppenborg exemplifies the best in synoptic scholarship in always listening to and engaging intelligently with opponents, and producing some incisive and helpful critique.
Kloppenborg critiqued: But Goodacre misunderstands what the models are: they are metaphors, not descriptions of the IQP's procedures, which required the organization of huge bodies of data (scholarly opinion on the reconstruction of Q since 1863), using the analogy of critical editions of the New Testament, which organize manuscript variations around variation points. (emphasis added)
ReplyDeleteI think K.'s critique shows the problem with using the text-critical model as a metaphor. The Critical Edition of Q does not cite "manuscript variations" in the apparatus. Textual criticism is about establishing a critical text based on manuscript witnesses. There are no manuscripts of Q.
Perhaps what all K. means by "text-critical model" is the adoption of eclecticism in their reconstructing of Q. I would not object to terming their reconstruction "eclectic," but it is appropriate, as you did Mark, to criticize the appelation of an enterprise that does not involve looking a variations in manuscript witnesses as "text critical." It is misleadingly implies that the evidentiary basis for the critical text of Q is the same as the critical text of Matthew or Luke. It is not, because we have manuscripts of Matt and Luke, not of Q.