Homebound, I apologize for my last post, it was a bit over the top. I shouldn't have replied with such a snapping response. I have been working many long hours lately, and I'm a bit tired and burnt out. It was frustrating to come home exhausted at 10pm (every day for 3 weeks straight) and then scan the requested documents for you instead of catching up on stuff I should have been doing instead, and then have them brushed off so lightly. That's not an excuse for my grumpiness, just an explanation.
I looked over several other of Riplinger's quotes of Westcott last night. The more I dug, the more amusing it became. I found a few examples where she provides a "quote" but when you check the footnotes, you see that she has
constructed the quote by gluing together a few words here and there
from completely different pages, AND OFTEN COMPLETELY DIFFERENT BOOKS (written years apart!), yet she tries to pass them off as a single quotation! This is textual butchery, this is deliberate deception and misrepresentation!
E.g.
"[T]he revelation of the Divine in man realized in and through Christ. . .Man is divine. . .Every type of essential human excellence coexists in Christ. . .humanity has been raised in the Son of Man to the right hand of God."(31) (page 361 of the electronic edition)
Now look at the footnote - look how she had to jump around pages (skipping over approximately 150 pages in one instance!),
and even three books, to concoct that mess!:
31 Historic Faith, pp. 111, 105, 253, The Epistles of St. John: The Greek Text With Notes and Addenda, p. 70; The Gospel According to St. John: The Authorized Version With Introduction and Notes, p. 246.
e.g. #2
"[T]he knowledge of Christ,. . .has its analogues in human power. . .the Son of Man gives the measure of the capacity of humanity. . .Nothing implies that the knowledge of the Lord was supernatural."(36) (page 366 of the electronic edition)
Now look at the footnote, which again shows the quote was constructed from combining phrases from more than one book, and jumping *backwards* 20 pages in one of the books:
36 Historic Faith, pp. 258-259; The Gospel of St. John, pp. 66, 46.
I'll scan all the above later, it should be good for a chuckle.
Oh this one is funny: on page 518 of the electronic edition, she's discussing places where the KJV has "faith" and some other versions have "faithfulness", and how that is so terrible. She then provides a quote where "a noted dissenting new version editor points out this error in these new versions", and provides a quote. Who is this "dissenting" new version editor that she is quoting for *support* of her argument? Why, it's our old friend Westcott himself, but she's not going to tell the reader that in the text! The footnote on the quote says "69 The Life of Westcott, Vol. II, p. ?."

Note also the page number!

Wow, great.
As Ransom would say, "Ya gotta laugh"
[ October 02, 2003, 01:15 PM: Message edited by: BrianT ]