Q&A:Plagiarism: Difference between revisions

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    ==Jesus' Sermon on the Mount on Moses==
    ==Jesus' Sermon on the Mount on Moses==


    The Sermon on the Mount (also referred to as the Olivet Discourse) is recorded in Matthew 5:1-7:29.  As with the question, it appears that the individual asking the question does not understand what plagiarism is.  Plagiarism is trying to pass of someone else's idea as your own.  There are a couple of reasons why Jesus' references to Moses are not plagiarism:


    #Jesus is constantly saying throughout the Sermon on the Mount - ''“You have heard that it was said to those of old..."''
    - and then he quotes one of the ten commandments.  He is not trying to pass off the ten commandments as his own invention or idea.  He is telling the people - ''"You all know where i got this from"''.  If you do that, it's not plagiarism.  If William Branham had said - ''"Clarence Larkin picked the following dates for the seven church ages and I agree with him"'' - then it would not have been plagiarism.  The problem is that William Branham said that he got all of his revelations from God when he actually got more than a few of them from Clarence Larkin and others.
    #Moses did not write the ten commandments, God wrote them on the tablets of stone.  Who was Jesus?  The author of the ten commandments.  You can't plagiarize from yourself.


    ==Joshua and Samuel who quoted Jasher and Enoch==
    ==Joshua and Samuel who quoted Jasher and Enoch==

    Revision as of 06:13, 29 May 2013

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    Someone emailed us with the following question. Presumably, with the attempt to excuse William Branham's repeated plagiarism of others.

    Q: Would you apply Jeremiah 23:30 to the following :

    1. Paul on Aratus' poem "Phainomena" in Acts 17:28?
    2. Jesus' Sermon on the Mount on Moses?
    3. Joshua and Samuel who quoted Jasher and Enoch verbatim?

    Paul on Aratus' poem "Phainomena"

    Acts 17:28 states:

    ...for in Him we live and move and have our being, as also some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also His offspring.’

    This cannot be considered plagiarism for the following reasons:

    1. Paul did not write the Book of Acts, Luke did. What we have here is Luke relating Paul's speech on Mars Hill.
    2. Paul clearly states that he is quoting someone else - a poet. So he is putting everyone on notice that these are not his words.

    Not sure how anyone could construe this as plagiarism. Plalgiarism is defined as the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own. Paul is not trying them to pass them off as his own ideas.

    Jesus' Sermon on the Mount on Moses

    The Sermon on the Mount (also referred to as the Olivet Discourse) is recorded in Matthew 5:1-7:29. As with the question, it appears that the individual asking the question does not understand what plagiarism is. Plagiarism is trying to pass of someone else's idea as your own. There are a couple of reasons why Jesus' references to Moses are not plagiarism:

    1. Jesus is constantly saying throughout the Sermon on the Mount - “You have heard that it was said to those of old..."

    - and then he quotes one of the ten commandments. He is not trying to pass off the ten commandments as his own invention or idea. He is telling the people - "You all know where i got this from". If you do that, it's not plagiarism. If William Branham had said - "Clarence Larkin picked the following dates for the seven church ages and I agree with him" - then it would not have been plagiarism. The problem is that William Branham said that he got all of his revelations from God when he actually got more than a few of them from Clarence Larkin and others.

    1. Moses did not write the ten commandments, God wrote them on the tablets of stone. Who was Jesus? The author of the ten commandments. You can't plagiarize from yourself.

    Joshua and Samuel who quoted Jasher and Enoch