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11-05-2007, 06:50 PM | #41 | ||
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You do understand that my quote above refers to the search for the AHISTORICAL Jesus, and not to the search for the HJ which has been in full swing over the last few hundred years. Noone appears to be me at the moment. Please see my response to Hex below. Hopefully that will clarify my position in regard to the search for the AHISTORICAL Jesus. Best wishes, Pete Brown PS: Thanks for the extract re: Prosenes |
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11-05-2007, 06:52 PM | #42 | ||||
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we need to look at the fourth century
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Hey Hex, Thanks for this question. The answer is essentially yes. Quote:
philospher Apollonius of Tyana who appears with a substantial measure of historicity in antiquity. Constantine calumnifies Apollonius, destroys temples of his patronage, and has the resident priests executed as a prelude to his imperial summons to Nicaea. You can rest assured that Constantine had control of the empire and the new church structure between the years 324 and 337. We have no "non-christian" historians speaking from the time of Constantine; Ammianus' account begins with the rule of his son Constantius, his earlier books "unpreserved". Ammianus informs us, essentially, of torture of the upper classes. Where before there were two arms of imperial power (the civilian administration and the military) there was now a third arm - that of the new structure set in place by Constantine - the church. The highways were covered with galloping bishops. Constantine may be blamed for starting it. But not for its perpetuation, since it was a tax-exempt power structure. It is my opinion that it was "common knowledge" of the Eastern empire academics in the fourth century that the NT was a base fiction, thrown together by Constantine. The Emperor Julian championed this reaction to Constantine, in writing c.363 CE, but the preservation of literature was in the hands after he died, of the Christian emperors and their minions of christian Bishops, such as Cyril. Cyril, in the early fifth century admits that the church was having problems of credibility, and that Julian's treatise was "turning many away", and that "Julian wrote LIES AGAINST THE CHURCH. We have lost Julian's 3 books. Only Cyril's writings remain. My opinion is that Cyril of Alexandria, in his treatise AGAINST JULIAN, censored this "common knowledge" that the eastern (Greek speaking) academics considered the NT a fiction of Constantine's, such that apart from Julian's opening statement (which Cyril dared not censor at the time) we have no other evidence of the implementation of this NT fiction -- yet. The only notion of "conspiracy theory" entertained by my thesis, is that the christian regime had the power and the resources to cover-up after Constantine, as the Nicene Oath was still much prosperous for many of the families and descendants of the original Nicene Fathers, whom Constantine coerced to sign the Nicene Oath, in allegience to himself. See the statements and the cunning evident in the response of Cyril AGAINST JULIAN here. Quote:
Systematically on a number of fronts: 1) C14 dating citations with respect to "NT literature" will start to form a bell curve as more "arrive" (we only have 2 at present). Any pre-Constantinian C14 citation will refute my thesis. However the distribution of future C14 citations -- the more citations there are -- the more the bell curve sits over the fourth century. 2) Archaeological finds from 000-300 such as the papyri at Pompei just now being examined. The more of these which come to light, which dont mention "christian" the more likely we have a sudden appearance in the 4th CE. 3) Archaeological finds relating to Apollonius of Tyana. We have recently found an inscription epitaph to him. He was an author and a sage of high repute enough to have the wife of the Roman Emperor Severus, Julia Domna, commission a biography to be written of this author --- by Philostratus. The writings of Apollonius are lost. Eusebius quotes him as an authority on the abstinence of sacrifice. Were his writings to be found, would they be similar to any of the "NT" texts? This includes Arabic texts where Apollonius is referred to as Balinus. 4) Discovery of texts by Ammianus Marcellinus - his Books 1 to 13 -- what would they say about the history of the empire (and christians) from 92 CE throug to 351 CE, and C's obit. 5) There is a huge amount of scholarship on the archaeology, papyri, and literature remains from the fourth century. To date, all such evidence has been interpretted based upon the traditional postulate that Christianity existed before Constantine. However, if in fact Constantine implemented this new religion by means of his military supremacy, fraudulently and with the invention of fictions, by re-examining the old evidence with a new postulate (or perspective), such a search may turn up unexpected confirmation of 4th CE invention. 6) We could ask to have a look around the Vatican's archives, or perhaps sponsor a spy on the inside. 7) The 4th century is the key IMO. Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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11-05-2007, 08:37 PM | #43 | |||
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the "early christian sources" from all other sources and approach this task with a critical skepticism --- which itself of course is open to critical skepticism. There is nothing personal in any of this. I enjoy catching waves just as much as the next surfer. We share a common history, but what is that history? We should be interested in the evidence and we should have an open mind, that is where I am coming from. I appreciate your scholarship and research, as I have appreciated that in many contributors here. I hope everyone understands this basis. as a student of ancient history. Best wishes, Pete Brown Quote:
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11-05-2007, 09:23 PM | #44 | ||
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"Hellenic" tolerance of many religious traditions during this period, with more inscriptions turning up to "Hermes" and to "the Pythagoraean tradition". We will slowly perceive a great unity in the prenicene epoch under an ancient umbrella of tolerance, very rich in its literature (Second Sophistic) and inscriptions, art, etc. The Judaic "Hebrew Texts" are part of this phenomenom, and part of this mixing pot of ancestry in the Roman Empire, coordinated for 1000 years by the "Pontifex Maximus" at least in Rome. The cohesiveness of the Second Sophistic and all its underlying archaeological parallels will become apparent, as will - perhaps - the absence of "anything christian". Constantine hit the eastern empire hard. Alot harder than Mao hit Tibet. Or Pol Pot, or Hitler, or anyone since. Records of a boundary event centered on the "Council of Nicaea" will become apparent perhaps to future researchers in the field of ancient history. Just an after-thought. Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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