Mark Goodacre's academic blog. Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins at Duke University, in the Religious Studies Department. Visit my homepage, follow me on twitter, or contact me by email.
Well, the thing is, Jim, that now that I own a copy of Q, I would not want to lose it. It would be terribly careless if everyone who owned a copy of Q were to lose it, wouldn't it?
You are holding a figment of IQP's imagination. It's not real, or a text let alone a manuscript. I have three copies - don't ask how I ended up with three, but two are for sale.
but since you say q doesnt exist can you really be holding it????
ReplyDelete;-)
Well, the thing is, Jim, that now that I own a copy of Q, I would not want to lose it. It would be terribly careless if everyone who owned a copy of Q were to lose it, wouldn't it?
ReplyDeleteha! awesome.
ReplyDeleteWhat I would really never want to see is your endorsement of the Critical Edition of Q in a blurb on the back cover... :-)
ReplyDeleteYou are holding a figment of IQP's imagination. It's not real, or a text let alone a manuscript. I have three copies - don't ask how I ended up with three, but two are for sale.
ReplyDeleteHaving taken at look at Jim's list I am most concerned about number 3 - I hope Chris has bought board shorts for the week away in Suffolk (aka Focus)
ReplyDeleteKnow thine enemy.
ReplyDeletePhil
LOVE your enemy ;-)
ReplyDelete