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06-09-2011, 10:34 AM | #81 | |
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Thanks Jay. I'm not knowledgable enough to judge such things at a high level, but on a common sense level this seems to explain the general situation before the 3rd C.
I think we all agree that the story presented in the gospels and Acts was a carefully crafted narrative intended to support the beliefs and ambitions of catholic apologists and patristic writers long after the events of the 1st C. Quote:
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06-09-2011, 11:24 AM | #82 | ||
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Your ASSERTION is EXTREMELY SIGNIFICANT and MUST ALWAYS be taken into account when analyzing the NT CANON. The NT CANON was CAREFULLY CRAFTED and cannot be EXPECTED to be an HERETICAL document. Now, based on the very books of the NT Canon it was TOTALLY unnecessary for any single sect to have FOUR CONTRADICTORY Jesus stories. If one examines the birth narrative of Jesus in gMatthew and gLuke it is EASILY seen that one of the stories MUST be FALSE which would INDICATE that EACH CULT would ONLY need ONE Jesus story just to appear credible. Even ORIGEN, supposedly AFTER Tertullian, up to the middle of the 3rd century, did claim that that there was NO ORTHODOXY among MANY Christians about Jesus. This is EXTREMELY SIGNIFICANT. Examine Origen's "De Principiis" Quote:
It is KNOWN that it was the 4th century when ALL CHRISTIAN CULTS that believed any version of the Jesus story would have to UNITE to form a UNIVERSAL Church so it is most likely the 4th century when FOUR VERSIONS of the Jesus stories were SELECTED and a CANON was USED in ALL CHURCHES. |
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06-09-2011, 11:52 AM | #83 |
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Stephan argues that Irenaeus was the great harmonizer, glossing over the Easter controversy (among others). I suspect every religion needs someone like this.
The Jews tried to unify their system with the Talmuds, but eventually there was a backlash against this (Karaites). In modern times we see Orthodox challenged by more liberal perspectives. The Muslims have the Sunnis and Shiites. Seems to be a never-ending process. |
06-09-2011, 02:36 PM | #84 | |
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The name Irenaeus already suggests a peace-maker of the canon as Origen already implies:
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06-09-2011, 05:34 PM | #85 | |||
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I have written as essay which is not yet peer reviewed, but which argues the case that the best explanation for the all the available evidence is that the noncanonical material was not authored between 100-400 CE, but between the years of 325-336 CE. It is located here. Quote:
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