Matthew is not just Q but also M and Antiochan as well as borrowed from Mark. With hints of OT. It's more Stewart than Matthew... or should that be Stew-Art!
What do you mean it's Q? The above diagram has Q as one of Matthew's sources! It "contains Q" but it itself is not Q. You see the dark blue square called "Source Q"? You see the green box called Matthew? It doesn't say "Matthew (Q)". They are different boxes and different colors. The above diagram confirms exactly what I said. Q is a hypothetically different document shared by Matthew and Luke (proto-Luke).
From Wiki:
"The
Two-source hypothesis (or
2SH) is an explanation for the
synoptic problem, the pattern of similarities and differences between the three Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke. It posits that the
Gospel of Matthew and the
Gospel of Luke were based on the
Gospel of Mark and a hypothetical sayings collection from the
Christian oral tradition called
Q."
See? Q is not Matthew. Q is not Luke. Q is Q. The blue bits in Matthew and Luke are from a second document outside of Mark scholars call Q. Hence the "Two document" hypothesis, Mark and Q.
Again however, this is no longer that well supported and scholars are seeing that Luke basically ripped off Matthew and Mark, that there is no "Q" at all. Here's a good article getting explaining why:
Why Do We Still Believe in Q? - Richard Carrier
I actually agree with your point, see in Islam we have a method called "Tadabbur" - which means to reflect on the Qur'an, but this requires contextual study of the verses.
"Contextual study" is the use of the rational mind to come up with thoughts about God. As I said before, "You don't approach God as a series of deductive conclusions." The best you end up with is your best ideas at the time, which is not a reflection of God, but of your own mind.
With relation to how the Christians butcher this up with their linear reading of the New Testament though, is thoroughly different. For example, on another forum, some years ago, two Christians were arguing the meaning of a particular allegorical verse from the New Testament, each Christian was claiming to have the "holy Ghost" guiding them... and they were directly contradicting each other's interpretations.
A couple of things here, some Christians do exactly what you say doing "contextual study". I find flaw with that as well for the exact same reasons I said above. But the second group you cite are magical thinkers. They like to play ouija board with the Bible. "God told me this is what this means!", is prerational twaddle. There are plenty of magical thinkers in all religions, as that is actually a stage of development common to all humans, inside and outside of religion. It's the level of superstition. They don't yet realize the subjective nature of interpretations and how they are reflections of their own personalities and culture, and ascribe some sort of magical quality to them.
Then you move up to the "rational" stage, where they imagine that using "Contextual study" will bring them into a truer, more accurate interpretation and thus, "the Truth" of it's meaning. This too is flawed, just like the magical thinker's "God told me" is. Now it's "God put it in the scripture, and "My reason" told me. Though it is "better" in that it is more sophisticated, the latter has exactly the same problem as the former, in that it cannot see the factors of why no matter how you approach reading it, via the ouija board methodology, or the "contextual study" method, they are still all mediated through language and culture, and at best are a reflection of themselves projected out onto the universe as Truth with a capital T. Here's a more detailed explanation of the fallacy of this line of thought:
The Impossibility of Scriptural Authority
The reason was simple, they were both taking a dogmatic approach without methodology
No, "God told me," is not a dogmatic approach, but a magical thinking approach. It's methodology is like summoning up spirits to tell you the secrets of the universe. It has a methodology, just a prerational one.
, and in total ignorance of context and the actual cotext - instead, they had cherry picked the verse to push a particular narrative - which happened to oppose the narrative of the other. So I asked - "whose holy ghost is winning?". Shortly after, I got a PM from one of them claiming they'd have enough of Christianity and they now wanted to be Muslim. I told them no thanks. Whimsical Christians make for bad Muslims
You don't know ANY Muslims who are magical thinkers??? You must not get out much.
How about those who butcher the Qur'an to have make it read that it was talking about science facts magically, without the benefit of actual science? That's magical thinking too, like trying to read verses of the Bible to say "He stands upon the circle of the earth" to say they knew before anyone else did that the earth was spherical. I've seen plenty of similar type arguments from Muslims trying to use such thin, shaky interpretations as grounds to prove the Qur'an was "divinely inspired," claiming that it knew these things before anyone else did. It's pure garbage on both sides in both religions, from a rational point of view, that is.
Aside from that, do you believe in "Jinn"? Aren't they magical creatures? I know Buddhists who have magical beliefs too. But as you know, they do not define the way the religion is believed or practiced by everyone within it. It's only how they translate it based on their particular developmental lens, just as you translate it with yours. It's just different lenses or filters, reflective of the different stages.
You might find Fowler's work on the Stages of Faith to be helpful to properly "contextualize" what you see, in all religions. I think you might find it informative, and I'd enjoy discussing it with you as I use it extensively in understanding the context of stage development the person is speaking from.
Chart of James Fowler's Stages of Faith | psychologycharts.com
Spirituality is THE penultimate Intellectual pursuit of Objective Truths.
According to whom? All you will end up with as the result of exploring objective truths all the way to their "end", is unanswerable paradoxes (the "deficient" phase of the Mental Epoch spanning the last 2000 years, according to Gebser). Dialectical thought falters at a certain point, and can go no further. Many scientists understand this too well, hence why you have Khun talking of the need for new paradigms. What do you think you were before you could reason? Dead? Spirituality embraces the whole person, body, mind, and soul. It not only embraces rationality, it embraces the non-rational. All you have in the pursuit of objective truths, is the external aspect of the world and yourself. It does not develop or pursue any knowledge of the subjective self. This is a poor form of
Logical Positivism, you are espousing here. Nothing better than that. Knowledge of Self, or God, is not realized at the end of a good argument. It's when you've reached the end of your good argument and find yourself short of the mark, that you let go, and then you know.
Your idea of Spirituality has more holes in it than I care to shoot arrows through.
By all means, give it a shot if you think there are holes. I actually doubt you understand what, or how I think and believe, or practice these things in order to make such a boastful claim like this. There is tons of support, objectively, surrounding exactly what I am saying about these things, which I've only in this current post begun to touch on. So by all means, confidently shoot forth your arrows. My wager is they will land several hundred yards short of where I'm standing.
Mines? appeal more to those who are actually in search of truths, whilst knowing all truth is never convenient, neither is it always pretty
You think that mystics are not in search of truth? You know nothing then.