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Old 02-28-2013, 01:31 PM   #31
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I think this is just Christian speak. Christians are always talking about how hard it is to stick to the Christian path. They talk about how the disciples fled after Jesus was arrested, or some earlier followers fled before they heard about the resurrection - and now this generation is fleeing because they can't see that Christ is alive in them.

You can find similar complaints today about how the younger generation is losing faith.

I don't see that this has anything to do with a gnostic generation fleeing the orthodox church after Nicaea.

Let this be the last thread on this passage, and the last time that you cite it without knowing the first thing about what it means.
It might mean the Diocletian persecution. Many did sacrifice etc which led to the Docetist controversies later.

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Old 02-28-2013, 03:35 PM   #32
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It might mean the Diocletian persecution.

But when did the Gnostics flee from the Christians in the rule of Diocletian?

The Christians had no power until Nicaea. No one would have needed to flee from Christians until then.

After Nicaea many were fleeing from the Christians.


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Many did sacrifice etc which led to the Docetist controversies later.
Are you thinking about the Donatists?
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Old 03-09-2013, 03:43 AM   #33
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MM, why would the gnostics have to bother fleeing if all they had to do was mask their teachings behind the veil of the official religion using a system of lampooning of the official religion itself? Or do you mean that the fleeing had to take place once their attempts at veiled teachings were simply deemed "heretical"?

Duvduv I am going to answer this again.

See post # 20 for the summary of these two groups as discussed by Philip L. Tite, McGill University.

According to the text I am discussing in the OP [NHC 11.1] the large majority of people (including the author of NHC 11.1) described as Group 1, were fleeing because they were being "reproached and humiliated" by the second group, Group 2. I am entertaining the hypothesis that Group 1 represents the pagans of the Eastern Empire when Constantine & Co. (Group 2) became supreme 324 CE on the basis that we have evidence that Constantine destroyed pagan temples and in some cases publically executed their chief priests. There is also the evidence that he had pagan philosophers and magistrates of the city of Antioch tortured, in order that they might confess their errors, following the Council of Antioch.

The notion conveyed in "They fled without having heard that the Christ had been crucified" is IMO that the Christian Crusade being conducted by the Emperor Constantine in the eastern empire was through the use of military force before the use of religious reason. That is, Constantine focussed on the military aspects of destroying the pagan temples, prohibiting their use, and making all pagan priests very very nervous, before he supplied anyone with Bibles and his "Holy Message".


We have discovered no records from the massively pagan generation which witnessed Nicaea. The reconstructed history for this momentous event (aside from Big E.) is being sourced largely from "Church Historians" writing from the 5th century, one hundred years afterwards.


Was NHC 11.1 written by the losers of Constantine's Holy War in the east?


The OP is suggesting however that the text of NHC 11.1 (and perhaps other texts within the Nag Hammadi Codices) are actually sourced from this pagan generation in refuge. The Coptic NHC manuscript is dated to the mid 4th century by its cartonage.




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Old 03-09-2013, 04:04 AM   #34
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Are we here only to preach the Lord Jesus, even back-handedly?
Where have you gone sv?




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