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02-21-2008, 04:13 AM | #121 | |
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here realise, that the mainstream HJ "theory of ancient history" does not cut it in any way whatsoever for the first century. The 2nd and 3rd centuries are then the subject of massive conjectures, and a frightening lack of non-literary evidence, for the existence of the Eusebian Nation of Christians, struggling with their crosses (yet to be invented in the 4th century), towards the legitimacy of the light offered by "The Boss" and his Basilicas. Fiction examines the ground afresh. Nobody has yet formally challenged the authenticity of Eusebius. His detailed history stands today at face value with the mainstream, almost as it did 1700 years ago. The Eusebian fiction postulate is a succinct way of summarising the essence of the basis of the consistency of the dismissal of testament due to political fraud. Or if they have formally challenged Eusebius, they have not explored and analysed the logical implications of the possibility that Eusebius was the first mega fat cat public servant, who lied through his teeth, because he was paid well in gold, and because he wanted to keep on the right side of his megalomaniacal warlord Constantine, who executed people, even his immediate family, at the drop of a soldier's helmet. Ancient history only requires consistency of interpretation, and then simplicity of political interpretation. The consistent dismissal of everything written by an 'apologetic source' as fiction may in fact be the appropriate approach by which we finally understand the mystery of christ. The key is to try and bring in as much detailed evidence as possible, and see where it leads. Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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02-21-2008, 04:23 AM | #122 | ||
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non canonical Paul vs canonical Paul
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These all look highly non canonical in comparison to the 14 specifically canonised letters which I took from the list in the Decretum Gelasianum of c.491 CE. I notice your site is continually expanding is various dimensions from the above pages, and others. DO you anywhere discuss the genre of the non canonical texts as a whole set? There are very few resources about that make the attempt to pull all the non canonical texts together into a coherent whole. Sure, many sites list them all, but commentary and discussion of the entire set of this literature - the flip-side of the canon - seems scarce. DO you know any resources? Do you have any plans to examine this aspect of the big picture? As an example, your page above on 3 Corinthians has a whole host of docetic references in it, such as: Quote:
Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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02-21-2008, 05:04 AM | #123 | ||||||
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Ben. |
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02-21-2008, 05:38 AM | #124 | ||
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This is Eusebius in Church History 2.17.6 Quote:
Fiction, in the the days of Eusebius, was universally accepted as authentic. Not now, Eusebius, not today, we are living in a World where fiction is universally accepted as inauthentic. |
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02-21-2008, 07:02 AM | #125 | |||
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Thanks for the Koester in Ancient Christian Gospels (or via: amazon.co.uk) reference.
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Yes, I meant the NC "Acts of John". Quote:
Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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02-21-2008, 07:23 AM | #126 | |||
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02-21-2008, 08:15 AM | #127 | |
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These sources had the right to remain silent, but they did not, so everything they said can be used against them. |
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02-21-2008, 08:33 AM | #128 | |
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I'm wondering if there are any ancient writers who did not accept fantasy and magic as reality, hell, even most modern writers do, but that doesn't mean everything they write is part of an elaborate plot to deceive. I'm not arguing we should just accept everything they say as historically authoritative, but I don't see any validity at all in summarily dismissing them. There is no obvious motive for them to fabricate Paul. |
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02-21-2008, 08:44 AM | #129 |
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02-21-2008, 10:24 AM | #130 | |
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