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05-28-2009, 09:25 AM | #11 | |
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How do you know that early xtians were not exactly that before getting their later makeovers from Irenaeus and others? |
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05-28-2009, 09:39 AM | #12 | |
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Because Roman magistrates were expected to ACT. They had to maintain order and, the letter makes clear that the "crime" of the xtians was the holding of secret meetings. They were regarded as seditious but those who demonstrated their loyalty to the empire were released. Those who did not, and who were not citizens, were dealt with the way traitors were normally dealt with. It would have taken months for even the Roman cursus publicus to get Pliny's letter to Trajan and return with a reply. I see nothing wrong with a junior officer seeking confirmation of his decisions from his boss. I wouldn't put too much stock in the obsequious language. He was writing to an emperor who was worshipped as a "god." A little ass-kissing is to be expected. |
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05-28-2009, 11:24 AM | #13 | ||
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It would appear to me that Jews may have been commonly referred to or called by outside sources the "anointed ones" or "Christ" when transliterated to Greek, hence the word "Christians". Jesus "Christians" appear to be after the Pliny letter. |
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05-28-2009, 11:46 AM | #14 | |||
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The remainder of the so-called Christians had either denied that they were Christians or had cursed Christ. There were no Christians left in Pliny's custody, they were either executed or sent to Rome. The letter is just absurd. It may have been forged. |
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05-28-2009, 11:51 AM | #15 | ||||||||
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I agree, and that answers Ben C. Smith's comment: "Pliny is not seriously in question at present; but all things are open to question." Here's another good response: Quote:
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05-28-2009, 12:41 PM | #16 |
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Drews' Witnesses to the Historicity of Jesus is also available on wikisource.
There are some exhaustive threads on the subject of Christianos vs. Chrestianos if you search the forum - e.g. Thread on Tacitus. |
05-28-2009, 01:47 PM | #17 | |||
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The Encyclopedia Biblica says Quote:
Andrew Criddle |
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05-28-2009, 04:06 PM | #18 | ||
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While I do not seriously doubt the authenticity of the Pliny letter, I do find it interesting that he would write to the emperor so many letters. I didn't count exactly, but if a table I saw in the Internet is correct, he wrote about 68 letters to Trajan, apparently during his 18(+?) months as governor of Pontus-Bithynia. That would be an average of almost 4 a month, and we only have the ones deemed suitable for publication!
However, Pliny the Younger was probably the first governor of a Senatorial province to be appointed by an emperor. This was unprecedented! Senatorial governors had an appointment of a single year, while imperial governors usually were appointed for 3 years, so he was serving a compromise term. He was also charged with setting the finances of the province in order (mainly righting expenses to match revenues), but there was much wrong there or so many preceding governors would not have faced charges from the populace. I suppose he wanted to proceed cautiously and not overstep his authority, and in the process asked for a lot of input from the emperor. As for their "crimes," I do not think it was "secret" meetings as they stated, and he accepted as fact, their statement that they ceased them upon his order to cease all such meetings by voluntary associations. Maybe he was tooting his own horn here, and overstated the success of his order. No, he seems to be wondering what the crimes was for which the "christians" were to be punished. He basically says that they seemed like any other voluntary association adhering to a superstitious cult. The Romans often tolerated "eastern" and Egyptian cults among the masses, but periodically had to chastise Roman citizens who took them up (such as order them to publicly burn their sacred books and vestments). I have to imagine that he was not happy to see the well respected Roman and Greek temples neglected in preference for a superstitious cult. Perhaps this was the reason why the province had fallen to pieces, and he needed to find a simple and quick solution for it: Execute the obstinate non-citizens, send obstinate citizens to the emperor for trial, and grant amnesty to those who renounced it by example of public sacrifice to the emperor's genius. He claims that his solution was having an effect, but how much of this claim was real and how much was "spin" is open to question. DCH Quote:
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05-28-2009, 07:11 PM | #19 | |
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aa, The letter may have been unnecessary....I wish I had a buck for everytime I saw someone kissing up to the boss when I was working... but it makes no sense as xtian forgery. It does not tell the tale that they wanted told. Now, if it had said, "they refused to worship our gods or make sacrifice to you and said that they would willingly prefer death to cursing their christ," THAT would make sense as a xtian forgery. But it doesn't say that. And Trajan comes off as a cross between Gandhi and Oliver Wendell Holmes. I would much rather have had Trajan as US Attorney General than that moron that Bush appointed. |
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05-30-2009, 05:57 PM | #20 | |||
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what is known as a "priority date". They were unconcerned about anything else. In the style of the "Testimonium Flavianum" they - at some stage in later preceedings - could cite ancient historical mentions. Quote:
Socrates critical questioning "a menace to the State". |
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