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12-04-2006, 08:03 PM | #201 |
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I never did get a satisfactory answer to this question. The only mention of "Christian" in the New Testament comes from Acts and 1 Peter, both works written well after 64 CE, so how do we explain the fact that these people were supposedly identified as "Christians" in 64 CE?
Josephus never wrote about the Christians (aside from the one fraudulent passage), and the Christians themselves apparently didn't even use this term this early that we know of, so how does this term appear here and how could they have been identified as Christians at this early stage? |
12-04-2006, 08:36 PM | #202 | ||
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Why should the question of how many times a word appears in the NT be in any way relevant to the questions of whether members of the Jesus movement -- were known to non-christians by the name "Christians" name before 64 CE or were identified as such in Rome in 64? Quote:
The Dunkers (members of the Church of the Brethren) and the Quakers (members of the Society of Friends) did not use these hostility engendered names of themselves for quite some time after their movement was founded. But that hardly means that they were not known, to or identified by, those outside of their fellowships by/with these names quite early on in their history. Jeffrey Gibson |
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12-04-2006, 10:59 PM | #203 | |
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Vorkosigan |
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12-05-2006, 01:13 AM | #204 | |
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spin |
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