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04-16-2007, 05:13 PM | #851 | |
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04-16-2007, 05:22 PM | #852 | |
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04-16-2007, 05:26 PM | #853 | ||
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That would be great. |
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04-16-2007, 05:29 PM | #854 | |||
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that "the tribe of christians" were spoken of as early as the second century CE, on the basis of the inference to the historical truth of such events as published by Eusebius. You have not yet commented upon Apollonius of Tyana and "the tribe of neopythagoreans" who were IMO not fictitious, and related their evolution --- in parallel with "the tribe of christians" (who IMO, and in agreement with your position, are a fictitious (literary only) tribe -- until some point/event in history at which time they became "historical") I believe that this may be very important in understanding why purported authors in the 2nd century CE were writing of philosopher/sage historical figures living to old age, as is clearly the story of Apollonius, known apparently to most of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd centuries, and beyond with Eusebius. Historicity is relative. Cannot be absolutist. I will address this elsewhere. You need to broaden your scope in this. Quote:
This is a little of the substance of the writings of Bishop Irenaeus, and the issue of "Jesus actually lived to old age" is IMO the far lesser of these issues, for their is another issue by which we can be reasonably certain that whoever was the author of Irenaeus, made false reference to an inscription on a statue, which is (I'd think) worth looking at in detail in some thread. Why would the author of Ireneus fictionalise an existing inscription? Here is the data: You understand that the position that I am testing with respect to history, is that Eusebius is writing as the author Irenaeus from the fourth century. IRENAEUS (120-c. 200) Saint, Martyr, Bishop of Lyons; ex- Quote:
epoch in the history of antiquity that this name was first used as a commonality amidst a "tribe of christians". Mainstream resort to the unexamined postulate that the tribe of christians existed in the first century but without a shred of evidence outside the literary tradition. You are now doing a similar handwaving exercise, and palming the big question off to the second century, without having explained how a fiction has suddenly become a living topical literary "fact" of history, to be written about. But of all this, at this time, the false inscription is something concrete and something which one would expect in a grand ecclesiastical fiction. Is this false recitation to the inscription to be regarded as fiction or fraudulent misrepresentation? |
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04-16-2007, 05:32 PM | #855 |
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04-16-2007, 05:42 PM | #856 | ||
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to the extent as to placing an estimate on the number of these gods to be at least equal to the number of gods observed (in the historical sense ) by every living creature on the planet. If you were to name all these gods, it would take you more than a human lifetime, even if I were to give you a Cray supercomputer. |
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04-16-2007, 05:50 PM | #857 |
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04-16-2007, 05:51 PM | #858 |
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04-16-2007, 06:00 PM | #859 |
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04-16-2007, 06:02 PM | #860 | |
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of the Constantine Bibles circa 330 CE would necessarily required its --- at least shall we say temporary --- editorship under the ministrations of Eusebius Pamphilus of Caesarea, at that glorious time in the history of "the tribe of christians". How can you say it "has not been edited into a coherent whole" when clearly this task was historically accomplished? |
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