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Quote:
Originally Posted by radarmark
First of all, no one can really read Old Avestan. Second of all it is mere supposition that the rest of the Yazad is "younger". Your argument is a lot like someone saying the Priestly text in the OT is the oldest and ignoring the fact that both E and J could (and most likely are) older. Oh, and add to that the fact that the vast majority of the corpus is "lost". Once one starts dating Zoroastrain texts to before Denkard, one is really on thin ice (there just are no texts to date).
That most of the Avestan corpus is unfortunate. Maybe we should excavate Afghanistan in search of the legendary Avestan scripture that was supposed to have been written on cowhides. Unfortunate as it may be it hardly seems relevant when taking into account what the existing (scripture or oldest) compositions do take into account: (see the problem is you assume it is the oldest with no justification… that is precisely what I meant with the analogy to the Priestly text being the eldest… what I expect I an academic citation that says “due to textual analysis, we believe the Gathas are the eldest of the Yazad” and not “they are from the older language”… the two problems here are 1) they may not be older and 2) by textual analysis some of the non-Gathic Yazad may be older )
1. one universal God (if not the entire concept influenced the OT the universalism of this god did)
2. a son of God (as evidenced in Alcaibides and confirmed by Zoroastrian tradition; Zoroaster was immaculately conceived)
3. Tano-Mathro or Word Made Flesh
4. Kwarena or Halo
5. Spenta Mainyu or the Holy Ghost
6. the Menog or Spirit World
7. Amesha Spentas or angels
8. Angra Mainyu or the Devil
9. Daevas or demons
10. Gurodemana or Heaven
11. Drugodemana or Hell
12. Irista or the Resurrection
13. Frasho-Kereti or Judgment Day
Most of these expressions appear in the Gathas, and the language of the Gathas are more archaic than the Young Avestan compositions.
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, and 13 weren't mentioned in the OT (I fail so see the relevance vis a vis my argument, I never said these terms were not there…. I believe the translations are not rigorous and accepted we do not really have a context to put them into, except a Parsi one and there, they use lots of differing translations for these)
Your right it's not relevant to your argument. I just thought it was an interesting detail because the average person would see the NT as a continuem of the OT, but really the NT has so many elements that are not mentioned in the OT, rather they can be found in Zoroastrian scripture. Even angels and demons only appear in the intertestimentary material and Ethopian Cannon of the OT.
And correct my if I'm wrong, but the Codex Sinaiticus and Vaticanus are our earliest versions of the NT but they don't mention dates either. The OT doesn't have dates. The earliest secondary sources of the NT Justin Martyer's version of the Nativity or the First and Second Clement don't have dates. (Yes, but we have outside sources with which to validate them… because of the inconsistencies in the traditional Parsi dating and the fact that Zoroastrianism is well headed to extinction we cannot be as sure as them in the dating… it is not a matter of dates given in the text themselves, but independent corroboration).
There is a long stream of secondary sources, Iranian and Greco-Roman, that confirm elements from Zoroastrian scripture and tradition. Ahuramazda is a metathesized contraction of the Avestan loanword Mazda Ahura which appears in Acheamenid inscriptures. And the Avestan language is an authentic language. Loanwords like this show the Avestan language must have been in use prior to the Acheamenid inscriptions before Darius 500 BC.
Xanthus of Lydia (450BCE), Eudoxus of Cnidus (410-347BCE) Theopompus (380BCE) Alcibiades (300/2BCE) Cicero (106-43 BCE)Trogus Pompeius (100BCE) , Diodorus Siculus (60-30BCE) Pliny (77-70 CE) Plutrach (100-200CE) Diogenes Laertius (300CE) Porphyry (234-305 CE) Agathias (530-582/94 CE) Suidas (1000 CE) all mention Zoroaster.
The earliest Greek references (secondary sources) to Zoroaster begin with Xanthus of Lydia 450 BC and are consistent up until the 1st millenium CE. They do also attest to a worldview that has accepted that Zoroaster was very ancient, more ancient than the Egyptians dating to 6000 years before Christ. (possible, but not bloody likely… Moulton’s Early Zorastrianism, Jackson’s Zoroaster, have pretty definitive lists and Appendix V of the latter even gives all the quotes… these are the source of the Hemming-Gershevitz-Gnoli-Kellens dating of 618-541 B.C.E. based on “258 years before Alexander per Ammainus”)
I'm not agreeing with the Greco-Roman placement of Zoroaster in time all I'm saying is that this was how the Greco-Romans thought.
I don't even think Herodotus mentioned dates. If that's right, then what your saying is that the dates for all the Greek authors' works that refer to Zoroaster are on thin ice too. (Again, it is not a matter of dates in the text, but when independent verification can be done… We have lots of data on Ammainus).
All I'm saying is that if you're going to place Zoroastriasm when the Denkard, and leave out lingiustic, arachological evidence, secondary sources, it's just as easy to say Herodotus and all the other Greek authors date to a later period.
Yes, Zoroastrianism is important. Yes, by my definition it is monotheistic (but so are Shaivism, Shaktism, Smartism, Vaishnavism and Vendanta).
I understand. I'm just more concerned with how much influence these religions had on the Abrahamic faiths or at least how much in common they had with the Abrahamic faiths.