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01-04-2012, 04:27 PM | #11 |
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01-04-2012, 04:28 PM | #12 |
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What's your point with the bayonet bit? I'm not getting it.
Someone who thinks they are Christian and says they are Christian are Christian, in my book. Roman Catholics say they are Christian. I suspect that most of them believe/think they are Christians. If you held a bayonet to their throats, they'd likely say they were Christian, while also thinking that they are Christian. You appear to disagree that all people who think and say they are Christian are actually Christian, even though they think and say that they are Christian. If that's true, why? |
01-04-2012, 04:42 PM | #13 | |
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01-04-2012, 04:45 PM | #14 |
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The Romans were better with spears. Spears made sixty million people say they were Christians, when most of them knew damn well that they detested Christianity, because they had rioted against having to follow it. But they were eventually forced to adopt the New Testament and the Old, in name, despite them having no formal proof of the truth of the Bible's teaching.
So what forced sixty million people to lie in their teeth? Yes, the emperor, but maybe 2% of them, who would not give up belief in the Bible, who 'made' the emperor adopt 'Christianity'. Though the rioters need not have bothered, because the 'Christianity' they had to follow was no different from the old paganisms. Old religion, new name. |
01-04-2012, 04:52 PM | #15 | |
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01-04-2012, 07:29 PM | #16 | |
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DCH:talktothehand: |
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01-04-2012, 08:28 PM | #17 | |||
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01-05-2012, 01:29 AM | #18 | ||||
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01-05-2012, 01:41 AM | #19 | ||
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01-06-2012, 07:57 PM | #20 | ||||||
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All went according to plan, except that the pagan historians of the fourth century were not really going to die. They were only going to sleep for some centuries. They belonged to that classical tradition in historiography for which ecclesiastical history, whatever its merits, was no substitute. Though we may have learnt to check our references from Eusebius — and this was no small gain — we are still the disciples of Herodotus and Thucydides: we still learn our history of the late empire from Ammianus Marcellinus |
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