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08-20-2006, 03:36 PM | #11 |
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There are a number of threads concerning the existence
or otherwise or archeological evidence for the inference that there was anything "christian" in the pre-Nicaean Epoch. http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.php?t=167773 the unutterable inference of mainstream BC&H and http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.php?t=168491 archeological evidence for pre-Nicaean christianity? Some of the items usually cited (eg: Dura-Europos) have been listed and outlined further here: http://www.mountainman.com.au/essenes/article_070.htm Pete Brown |
08-20-2006, 07:50 PM | #12 |
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Did Constantine believe in "turning the other cheek" and "loving your enemies"? Judging by his military exploits, I doubt it.
And didn't he wait until he was on his death bed before officially converting, thereby allowing himself the maximum amount of sinning before gaining absolution? |
08-20-2006, 09:20 PM | #13 | ||
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08-20-2006, 10:03 PM | #14 |
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Actually, he did not postpone his conversion until his death bed. He postponed his baptism. This became common practice among "Christian" Emperors and other public officials who realized that being in public life always required a certain amount of sinning either regardless of their piety, or due to their lack of it. Also, postponing baptism kept them out from under the direct authority of the Church for as long as possible. As an example, Theodosius I (emperor from 379-395) was the only emperor to reign as a full-fledged member of the church - and that was due to an accident. Theodosius allowed himself to be baptized when he thought he was dying from an illness, which he instead survived. As a result, when Theodosius later ordered the slaughter of innocent civilians in Thessalonica after rioters there killed a few of his soldiers, Bishop Ambrose was able to excommunicate him and make it stick. Ambrose later allowed Theodosius do some nominal penance to lift the excommunication. Nevertheless, it was a humiliating thing for an emperor to have happen. That's why emperors always postponed baptism for as long as possible.
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08-21-2006, 07:21 PM | #16 | ||||||||||||||
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That's why he hired Eusebius Pamphilus of Caesarea, the right man for the right job, as editor-in-chief of what Julian later refers to as "the fabrication of the Galilaeans". He did not need to understand any form of theological complexity for his Roman fiction, so long as his newly created church continued to assist his interests. Quote:
of a monument which still stands upon which, although there are ample references to the ancient Hellenic traditional "gods and goddesses", and "sol invictus", there appears to be absolutely no reference whatsoever to christianity. I wonder why? Quote:
He was wise enough to last another 12 years, which in those days was not simply an academic exercise. Quote:
Our thesis is that the "Arian controversy" is in fact the controversy over Constantine's forced implementation of the new Roman religion called "christianity" upon the empire, at Nicaea, now that he at last had become the supreme thug. The Arian controversy arose in the east as a result IMO of Constantine sending manuscript propaganda to the eastern side of the Roman empire during the period 317-324 CE. The Alexandrians were justifiably incensed that the respectable authors of antiquity, such as Origen, Josephus, and others, had ever made any reference whatsoever to this newly fabricated set of manuscripts under Constantine. Quote:
In our opinion, the words of Arius are the words of someone who, being clever in disputation, and not being able to say to the face of Constantine "this is a work of fiction" instead selected to say the words that are even unto this very day preserved in the exclusion clause on the Nicaean Oath (ie: it is not a creed, in terms of the general non-ecclesiastical definition and valid distinction between a creed and an oath. See for example, "The Diggers Oath", Eureka Stockade). These words are: "before he was born he was not" and "he was made out of nothing existing" and "he is from another subsistence or substance" and "he/it is subject to alteration or change" Our thesis is that Arius was saying that the new testament is a fiction from beginning to end, in other words, a fabrication. But he did not have Julian's protection at the time of facing Constantine at Nicaea, for which very reason Constantine purportedly called the council -- the words of Arius. He did not want to die. Instead, he used words that were very clever in disputation. The above words, or close enough. Quote:
Constantine summoned a whole stack of important people to appear before him at the Council of Nicaea, immediately after becoming supreme. Our thesis is that, apart from the christian bishops that Constantine had bred during his beta-site in Rome (312 CE), none of the other attendees were bishops, but in fact importangt land-holders, importantg and key administrators under the previous eastern regime of Lucinius, brought in to the meeting in order to sit down and talk turkey with the new supreme imperial mafia thug, in control of the ROman empire. They did not walk in as bishops of the new and strange Roman religious order, but it is our thesis that most of them walked out of the meeting as one of COnstantine's new bishops of christianity, for they all became very very important men (almost) overnight. Signature were obtained at the request of Constantine to seal the oath of alliegence to his new ROman religious order, which served primarily administrative fuctions, and tax collection functions throughout the new acquired territories riled by Constantine. Arius was banished as the strawman, whose arguments were written down by the acadedmics of the newly created Roman church as involving theology, whereas our thesis is that the statements of Arius, and the whole Arian controversy, relate to the historical illegitamacy of the new religion, and the fabrication and perversion of writings. Quote:
"Absolute power corrupts absolutely" --- Lord Acton. Quote:
Constantine needed no skills as a theologian since he was collecting tithes from his own new and strange Roman religious order, building churches for the faithful, and generally trying to convert as many people as possible, by gross tax-exemption measures, to a new religious order that was clearly not the same traditional Hellenic religious order that he was plundering for gold, and ordering the execution of its philosopher/priests, a practice which continued well after his death. The new and strange fabrication of the Galilaeans overcame the literature of the ancient Greeks, and that of the Second Sophistic, and of Apollonius of Tyana, by supreme imperial oath, at Nicaea, signed by his attendees, in the presence of the THRICE-BLESSED APOSTLE OF GOD, the thug Constantine. Agreement had been planned for decades prior to Nicaea, by Constantine. Of course he was agreeable to his new Roman religion. Our thesis is that the following staged progression was enacted: Stage 1: 312-324 CE Constantine takes Rome and implements a mini-proto-Nicaea (see below) He consolidates his position, constantly looking east, planning supremacy. He promotes the new religion in the west, and send literature to the east. Eventually this results in the Arian controversy. (NOTE: Our hypothesis sees the Arian controversy as the reaction of the eastern empire against the new testament texts, and the new religion. The controversy is stated by the dogmatic assertion of a series of phrases by Arius, such as: * there was time when he was not. * he was made out of nothing existing) (See above for full listP Stage 2: 324-325 CE Constantine takes the eastern empire, and has Lucinus strangled. He calls the Council of Nicaea on account of the words of Arius. (See the above words of Arius). He summons attendees to the council. There were no "christian bishops" in the eastern empire, as they did not then exist. The only "christian bishops" in attendance being those whom Constantine had "cultivated in Rome". The pope didn't make it, but sent some juniors in his stead. Our hypothesis is that the attendees summoned to Nicaea were the patrician level land-holders, governors, nobility and other important key people of the eastern empire, whom Constantine had just conquered. They were summoned to Nicaea to discuss how the new empire was going to fuction for the maintenance phase under the taxation and regulation and administrative and new religious regimes, which were to be implemented by Constantine. Stage 3: 325 CE Nicaean Council Meeting: what happened? Constantine ran the show. His mercanery barbarian storm troops were milling around outside. He entered the meeting, not with his troops, but his family. He berated the attendees for their discord, and quoted chapter & verse. He pointed out the need for perceived harmony. He burnt their written petitions in their presence. He wined and dined them for 4 months. He gave them presents and promises of civil works (new churches). He supported those people who supported him. Who was with Constantine, and who was with Arius? Constantine sold the package of christianity to the attendees. The whole package was subscribed to voluntarily. New churches were going to be built on lands new you. Signatures were collected to attest comitment to Constantine. The big DISCLAIMER CLAUSE got rid of the words of Arius. Stage 4: 326-337 CE Constantine implements a new and strange ROMAN church. He wanted to get rid of the Hellenic culture and religions. He did not to pay tribute to any of the old traditional Roman religions. These were all Hellenic is nature. (See Julian's summaries). He wanted their treasure, lands, temples, statues, etc, for himself. Once the one true religion was implemented, all else became taxable. Adherance to the words of Arius ceased being controversial. It became the Arian Heresy, and the downhill slide started. The attendees at Nicaea became key figures in a power network that distributed favors from Rome to the eastern empire, and taxation revenue, lands, etc, etc back to Roman central. The 22 sub-clauses on the Nicaean creed define the nature of this administrative network, which was established by agreement at Nicaea, and which through common interest perpetuated itself throughout the next 12 years of Constantine's reign, and thereafter. They knew they were not christian bishops when they set out from their homes in the eastern empire after being summoned to the council. But there were some bishops from the western empire present, and they all acted in complete accord with the new and strange religion, in a new and strange fashion, and the bishop Eusebius was there, and he was certainly a christian bishop, because he had just in fact finished writing a history of "tribe of christians", and of their texts, and they even had a copy of Josephus, and Josephus mentions the chritians back then, so they certainly exist somewhere. But they became the christian bishops of Constantine by signing the Nicaean creed, and when they returned home, they were full of food, and had presents, and would represent Constantine to their local communities and cities, and be a key figure standing in the (new and strange Roman universal christian) channel of power between the supreme imperial thug, and his remote subjects. New church structures would be built by the new civil administration of Constantine, and every one of those new christian bishops would get a big cut of the action. They became important men overnight. It was a complete cold start. When Constantine burnt their written petitions, things warmed up considerably. They were reminded of where they were, and who was in their presence. Constantine was a thug, acting in some ways benevolently, but why? All they had to do was to agree with Constantine, and disagree with the words of Arius, whatever these words meant. In fact, it was clear that these words meant entirely different things to different parties. Noone really had to worry about what these words meant, so long as they disagreed with them. So they signed the creed, in expectation of future glory of the new Roman church. Constantine was the supreme imperial mafia thug who forced the new and strange religion down the throat of the Hellenic culture until the highways were full of galloping bishops. Julian was the young supreme imperial Hellenic philosopher who wrote, within 40 years of the Nicaean council:
Pete Brown www.mountainman.com.au/essenes |
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08-21-2006, 07:43 PM | #17 | |
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Ammianus Marcellinus provides sufficient evidence for the conspiratorial behaviour of the next-in-line imperial thug Constantius II, and generally views in a favourable manner the behaviour of Julian. The only conspiracy involved here was the fabrication of the Galilaeans, the generation of fictitious histories and supporting material, and the perversion of ROman and Jewish historians by insertion of historical priority dates such that the inference that there were in fact any christians prior to Constantine might be given some substance. Pete Brown |
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08-22-2006, 02:37 AM | #18 | |
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Best wishes Bede |
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08-22-2006, 05:13 AM | #19 | |
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"Ammianus Marcellinus about Constantius II" Emperor Constantius II is described extensively in the Res Gestae. Michel R. Mulder studies Ammianus' image of Constantius. "Christianity in Ammianus Marcellinus" The intriguing matter of fourth-century arising Christianity is dicussed by Bouke A. van Laƫthem. "Julian in the eyes of Ammianus Marcellinus" Contrary to Christian authors, Ammianus was an admirer of the famous "Apostate" emperor, as Michel Mulder points out. Best wishes, Pete |
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08-22-2006, 06:01 AM | #20 |
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I'm afraid I fail to see the relevance of this. The writers you linked to are clearly trapped within the prevailing 'Julianist' paradigm and are reading Amminanus accordingly. But when we realise that Ammianus is simply inventing the history in order to further the ambitions of his imperial master, all becomes clear.
Thus Ammianus's history is essentially a ficticious account of the 4th century that is intended to show the pagan Julian in a good light and deliberately suppresses his mass executions of Christians and wholesale destruction of Christian literature. That is why so much Tacitus was lost. It contained information on the historical Jesus and early Christians that Julian didn't want to conflict with his own propaganda. Best wishes Bede |
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