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Old 06-01-2006, 06:50 PM   #21
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Still moving along now to 4. Ignatius. A quick trip to Wiki tells me that he was an early Christian bishop who died around 100 C.E. He wrote quite a few letters which constitutue some of the earliest Christian writings. Again, Patriot, did you even read this list, or just cut and pasted it without any idea what it is a list of? Do you really think that letters of Christian bishops who died 70 years after Jesus is what people mean by "extra-biblical references?" I mean, true, it didn't actually make it into the bible, but I think most people are talking about non-Christian sources, and a little more contemporary, don't you?
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Old 06-01-2006, 07:12 PM   #22
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben C Smith
Since the topic is extrabiblical references to Jesus, this statement is misleading. Eusebius is not the only father who quotes Papias, nor even the only father who quotes Papias referring to Jesus. Irenaeus also does so, as well as Philip Sidetes and others. Furthermore, the very title of his known work (in five volumes) was Exegeses of the Sayings of the Lord, as several ancients attest.

I have the relevant texts laid out on my site.

Ben.
Hi Ben,

You make the inference that Eusebius is not the author Irenaeus,
or the author Philip Sidetes, or indeed Papias.

From your web page Eusebius writes:
Quote:
And there are extant five writings of Papias which are given the title of Exegesis of the Oracles of the Lord. Of these Irenaeus too makes mention as his only writings, thus saying as follows: These things Papias too, who was a earwitness of John and companion of Polycarp, and an ancient man, wrote and testified in the fourth of his books. For there are five books arranged by him.
Perhaps two centuries separate the purported existence of Eusebius
and these other ancient men whom (Constantine through) Eusebius
wants us to think he is quoting.

We are led inexhorably to make the inference that these ancient
men
have an existence independent of the fourth century scribe
Eusebius.

But why do we make this inference?
Is it a leap of faith?




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www.mountainman.com.au
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Old 06-01-2006, 07:26 PM   #23
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Still moving down the list to 5. Iranaeus, a bishop of Lyons who is thought to have been born between 115 and 135 CE, and died around 200 CE. Patriot, as I move down this list, I'm just completely befuddled as to what it is supposed to be a list of, early church fathers? Why on earth would you consider the writings of the early Christian leaders to be unbiased corroboration of the life of Jesus?
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Old 06-01-2006, 07:28 PM   #24
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben C Smith
Since the topic is extrabiblical references to Jesus, this statement is misleading. Eusebius is not the only father who quotes Papias, nor even the only father who quotes Papias referring to Jesus. Irenaeus also does so, as well as Philip Sidetes and others. Furthermore, the very title of his known work (in five volumes) was Exegeses of the Sayings of the Lord, as several ancients attest.

I have the relevant texts laid out on my site.

Ben.
Well, let's say we would all agree on the existence of a person named jesus who lived about 2K years or so ago, and upon whom the legend of the christ is based (the same kind of thing probably explains Beowulf).

OK. This raises the question "So what?". Is there some alleged extra-biblical, eye-witness accounts somewhere concerning walking on water, raising the dead, healing lepers, casting demons out of the insane into swine, and having a mother who was a virgin and a father who was a ghost?

IOW, is there any historical (non-biblical) evidence for the legend of the christ being historical - any more so than there is historical evidence for the tigers in Little Black Sambo actually having spun around a circle and turned into actual butter?

BTW, Ben, what do you make of the info on this site:

http://www.atheists.org/christianity/realbible.html

If even one tenth of this is true, then why would anyone view christianity as anything other than a man-devised religion?
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Old 06-01-2006, 08:54 PM   #25
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I, too, am trying to get a handle on when early Christian writings appeared. I read an LTE in our local paper by a priest saying that because the Bible gospels were written "a few years" after Jesus' death, they are true and the Gnostic Gospels which were written around 325, are not. Of course, a priest would have this view.

I came across this site Early Christian Writings,with a timeline. Do the learned amongst you agree with these dates, or do they need updating?
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Old 06-01-2006, 08:58 PM   #26
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gilly54, you might want to spend a minute with the basic questions sticky in this forum. Also you can post questions there and the brilliant people in this forum will fill you in.
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Old 06-01-2006, 11:01 PM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gilly54
...
I came across this site Early Christian Writings,with a timeline. Do the learned amongst you agree with these dates, or do they need updating?
We recommend that site all the time. The dates there are the scholarly consensus of dates, probably accurate to within a century or two.

If you study the question of dating, you will find a lot of uncertainty, and the more you read, the less certain you may become.
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Old 06-01-2006, 11:30 PM   #28
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Oddly enough, Peter Kirby, sitting next to me, is laughing right now. He'll be glad that the "learned amongst you" approve of his site.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
We recommend that site all the time. The dates there are the scholarly consensus of dates, probably accurate to within a century or two.
Or according to some, a century or three.
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Old 06-02-2006, 01:39 AM   #29
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Does the ECW list need another column, for example letters of Paul - Marcionite - 140?
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Old 06-02-2006, 01:49 AM   #30
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Berthold
Siblings of Jesus are mentioned in the bible. Catholic interpretation explains them away as "a way of speaking about cousins".

The bible also says that Joseph did not "know" his wife until she had delivered her firstborn. Catholicism puts one on top, asserting, "afterwards, neither".

ha, shows how much i paid attention in RE classes
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