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03-11-2008, 04:14 AM | #501 | |
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03-11-2008, 05:26 AM | #502 | ||
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03-11-2008, 06:00 AM | #503 | |||
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But that is not what you are arguing when you challenge what you call "Eusebian authenticity." You are instead arguing that Eusebius is Thucydides, Philo, Josephus, Tacitus, Lucian, Polybius, Lucian, Philo, Gaius, Dio Cassius and evryone else who purported to write anything in the first few centuries regarding Christianity. That all those names are just noms de plum that Eusebius used. You should be arguing this case, not arguing the implications, or step one and six. It doesnt matter what number of postulates or explicates exist. This claim is serious enough. Stay here and work on this. Forget all else. Just start a thread showing us how you prove that Eusebius wrote Antiquities of the Jews and War. All else is irrelevant. Start on this. Then move to Tacitus. Did you include Ignatius, Polycarp? I dont know. If you can prove only one of the putative authors is in fact Eusebius, then a reasonable person can think your theory is worth looking into. What is your proof that Eusebius wrote Matthew and Mark? Let us start there please. Which of these books were written by someone other than Eusebius. And how do you know? |
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03-11-2008, 06:06 AM | #504 |
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And according to your hypothesis mountainman, how do we know Constantine is not Eusebius? How do you know Eusebius existed at all? Maybe the mafia thug constantine invented an author called Eusebius?
I would like to know how you rule out things because "anything goes" is written all over your theory. |
03-11-2008, 11:44 AM | #505 | ||
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03-11-2008, 11:45 AM | #506 | ||
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The only shame I see here is your admission of ignorance in a field of study, followed by a dismissive opinion about it. I'm not saying you have to be theologian to come to a conclusion about the historicity of the Christian Scriptures. I would say that you need to study the field a bit if you want to make claims about what it says on the subject. |
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03-11-2008, 11:35 PM | #507 | |
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1 The date of writing of any book of the NT. 2. The authors of any book of the NT. 3. The actual time of circulation of the any book of the NT. 4. The history of main characters of the NT. 5. The veracity of any event in the NT. I fail to see how a person could claim that there is enough evidence that Christianity, as it relates to Jesus Christ, started in the 1st century when it is obvious that there is none. |
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03-12-2008, 01:50 AM | #508 |
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03-12-2008, 02:37 AM | #509 | |
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Too funny, Millard. You've discovered historiography and you're so serious. Which writers on historiography have you read that cover these "past 50 years" for you to decide which is the "most significant movement" in the field? how would you rate the work of the following from the "past 50 years" in your analysis? E.H. Carr, Graham Chapman, Keith Jenkins, Michael Palin, Paul Ricoeur, W.H. Walsh and Hayden White? spin |
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03-12-2008, 01:03 PM | #510 | ||
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