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Old 02-27-2012, 02:33 PM   #81
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With the exception of a more detailed Eschatology, Islam doesn't seem to state (or introduce) anything that hasn't already been found within the realm of Christendom, in some form or another.

Certain Gnostics also deny the Crucifixion (and subsequent Resurrection of Christ).

There are two different ideas here. One is the early gnostic idea that Jesus was not actually crucified. Islam seems to have adopted that idea from early Christian non-orthodox sects.
Islam may have more reasonably adopted that idea from post Nicaean sects, for example when was the Gospel of Barnabas authored? The present text advertises Muhammad. It also describes that Judas was crucified instead of Jesus.

There is plenty of evidence for a docetic Jesus after Nicaea. A very docetic Jesus was being presented in codices that were being manufactured in the mid 4th century. The burning ofthis material only served to have such codices secreted out of the Roman Empire elsewhere. Photios finds a stack of these books in Bagdad centuries afterwards.

Some of this further evidence from the Nag Hammadi codices is as follows:

For example NHC 7.3 The Apocalypse of Peter (Gnostic) states

Quote:
"He whom you saw on the tree, glad and laughing, this is the living Jesus. But this one into whose hands and feet they drive the nails is his fleshly part, which is the substitute being put to shame, the one who came into being in his likeness. But look at him and me.".

"The Bishops are dry canals"
NHC 7.2 The Second Treatise of the Great Seth states

Quote:
"For my death, which they think happened, (happened) to them in their error and blindness, since they nailed their man unto their death...It was another, their father, who drank the gall and the vinegar; it was not I. They struck me with the reed; it was another, Simon, who bore the cross on his shoulder. I[t] was another upon Whom they placed the crown of thorns...And I was laughing at their ignorance." (Jesus as purported narrator).

Elsewhere ....

"we were hated and persecuted, not only by those who are ignorant, but also by those who think that they are advancing the name of Christ, since they were unknowingly empty, not knowing who they are, like dumb animals. They persecuted those who have been liberated by me, since they hate them..."
NHC 11.1 The Interpretation of Knowledge states:

Quote:
"Our generation is fleeing since it does not yet even believe that the Christ is alive"

"He died - not his own death"

"He was nailed so that they might keep him in the Church."

Which brings us back to the question of the war of codices that was commenced within the Roman Empire immediately after the Council of Nicaea, and which persisted for many centuries thereafter.

Islam wanted its own authoritative "Holy Writ" and simply copied the success that Constantine's Church had achieved by the sword in the 4th century. Earlier, in turn, Constantine simply copied the 3rd century success of Ardashir and his centralised state monotheistic religion.

But Islam did not have to go back to any "Early Christians" of the epoch prior to the time of Nicaea to get their raw materials, since the post Nicaean Gnostic black market was literally awash with docetic renditions of Jesus.
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Old 02-27-2012, 02:47 PM   #82
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..... the early gnostic idea that Jesus was not actually crucified. Islam seems to have adopted that idea from early Christian non-orthodox sects.
From antichrist sects. First, the Bible says that to deny Jesus' crucifixion is to deny that there is a christ at all. Second, the Bible says that to deny Jesus' crucifixion is of Satan.
Arius of Alexandria is described by multiple sources as an antichrist , so that makes the Arians an antichrist sect. The specifications for what constitutes an antichristian OPINION is found in the letters of John. Anyone who refused to confess that Jesus had appeared in the flesh (i.e. the equivalent of appearing in HISTORY) was therefore to be known in christian heresiological circles as antichrist .

It is very reasonable to suspect that the early Islamic scribes who assembled the Quran had access to the works of many Arian minded heretics, and that they used the opinions in these works rather than the opinion which they would have found by way of studying the Constantine Bible, or any of the orthodox christian heresiologists.
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Old 02-27-2012, 03:00 PM   #83
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With the exception of a more detailed Eschatology, Islam doesn't seem to state (or introduce) anything that hasn't already been found within the realm of Christendom, in some form or another.

Certain Gnostics also deny the Crucifixion (and subsequent Resurrection of Christ). The author, Dan Brown maintains the view that Christ survived the Crucifixion.

The other is the idea that comes out of Protestant Rationalism that Jesus was crucified, but dead people don't come back to life, so therefore Jesus was not really dead when he was taken down from the cross, and was revived by spices and healing rituals in secret. This is sometimes called the "swoon theory," especially by Christian apologists who try to explain why it is improbable.
The Muslim evangelist, Ahmed Deedat, was also an ardent proponent of the "swoon theory". Some Muslim theorists believe in the "substitution theory", where Simon (voluntarily), Judas (involuntarily), or Paul/Horus? (involuntarily) was placed on the cross. I've also heard about a particular variant of the "swoon theory" that appears to be relatively popular with people of the Indo-Pak Subcontinent-that Jesus was a Yogi of sorts that practiced deep breathing techniques and also had the ability to induce coma-like states.
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Old 02-27-2012, 03:00 PM   #84
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Just to be clear, Dan Brown is a fiction writer.
One might say similarly of Pagels and Ehrman.
One might not, if one is being careful about language, and if that one prefers to avoid the libel laws.

If the NT is a fiction book, Pagels and Ehrman are fiction book reviewers, writing copious commentaries upon fiction piled upon fiction. One thing we know for a certainty is that the book dedicated to Constantine, and known as the "Historia Augusta" is a massive fiction book, or if you prefer, a "mockumentary".

One thing we dont know for a certainty is the role that Eusebius played with respect to the warlord Constantine, around about the time of Nicaea, and whether the "Historia Ecclesiastica" and other works are also exemplars of a fictional "mockumentary".

The Christian history behind its "Holy Writ" represented by Eusebius and his continuators is paralleled in a lineage of Islamic identities a few centuries later with respect to their own "Holy Writ" and its history. After the supreme victory, and the formation of a revolutionary centralised monotheistic state (held together by the sword and avoidance of poison) by which the "Holy Writ" was officially "Canonized", it was just the usual heresiological politics.

Convert or kill the unbelievers.

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Ever since Jacob Burckhardt dismissed him as "the first thoroughly dishonest historian of antiquity," Eusebius has been an inviting target for students of the Constantinian era. At one time or another they have characterized him as:
a political propagandist [1],
a good courtier [2],
the shrewd and worldly adviser of the Emperor Constantine [3],
the great publicist of the first Christian emperor,[4]
the first in a long succession of ecclesiastical politicians, [5]
the herald of Byzantinism, [6]
a political theologian, [7]
a political metaphysician [8], and
a caesaropapist. [9]
It is obvious that these are not, in the main, neutral descriptions. Much traditional scholarship, sometimes with barely sup- pressed disdain, has regarded Eusebius as one who risked his orthodoxy and perhaps his character because of his zeal for the Constantinian establishment. Scholars have often observed, for example, that his literary works in defense of the new order depict Constantine and his reign in eschatological terms that rival and even supplant the Incarnation and Parousia in salvation history.

To be sure, this assessment relies on abundant documentation: in the Life of Constantine and in the Tricennial Oration, delivered on the thirtieth anniversary of Constantine's reign, as well as in other books, Eusebius gave an enthusiastic Christian endorsement

. Religion and Politics in the Writings of Eusebius:
Reassessing the First "Court Theologian"

--- MICHAEL J. HOLLERICH
Assistant professor of religious studies
in Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, California.



[1] Erik Peterson, Der Monotheismus als politisches Problem (Munich, 1951 ), p. 91;
[2] Henri Grégoire, "L'authenticité et l'historicité de la Vita Constantini attribuée ê Eusèbe de Césarée," Bulletin de l'Académie Royale de Belgique, Classe des Lettres, 39 ( 1953 ): 462-479, quoted in T. D. Barnes, Constantine and Eusebius (Cambridge, Mass., 1981 ), p. 401;
[3] Arnaldo Momigliano, "Pagan and Christian Historiography in the Fourth Century," in The Conflict between Paganism and Christianity in the Fourth Century, ed. A. Momigliano (Oxford, 1963 ), p. 85;
[4] Robert Markus, "The Roman Empire in Early Christian Historiography," The Downside Review 81 ( 1963 ): 343;
[5] Charles N. Cochrane, Christianity and Classical Culture (1940; reprint, Oxford, 1966 ), p. 183;
[6] Hendrik Berkhof, Die Theologie des Eusebius von Caesarea (Amsterdam, 1939 ), pp. 21-22;
[7] Hans Eger, "Kaiser und Kirche in der Geschichtstheologie Eusebs von Cäsarea", Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 38 ( 1939 ): 115;
[8] Per Beskow, Rex Gloriae. The Kingship of Christ in the Early Church (Uppsala, 1962 ), p. 318;
[9] J. M. Sansterre, "Eusèbe de Césarée et la naissance de la théorie 'césaropapiste,'" Byzantion 42 ( 1972 ): 593

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Old 02-27-2012, 03:17 PM   #85
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With the exception of a more detailed Eschatology, Islam doesn't seem to state (or introduce) anything that hasn't already been found within the realm of Christendom, in some form or another.
Read the Qur'an, sometime. It's nothing better than contradiction of the Bible; but suicidally. If a deity is so inept as to permit his beloved humanity to go wandering in the dark so long, he's not a deity worth having.


One must properly understand the point. The point is that Allah himself revealed that he had blundered, very badly indeed. Not just with the crucifixion, but with the whole biblical record from Genesis onwards. So we are asked to believe.

Why is a farcical notion so often apparently believed?
Not quite. An illusory Crucifixion would only serve to confirm a thematically consistent Yahweh of the Old Testament, namely, A God that always seems to provide a last minute exit plan for his Representatives (in this case, the Logos, known as "Kalimatullah" or "Word of God", in Islam). Examples of divine intervention exit plans:

-God providing safety in the form of an Ark for Noah
-God saving Jonah with a whale (or whale shark?)
-God saving Abraham from Nimrod's fire (by calming the flames)
-God saving Moses by parting the sea (via Khidr?)
-God saving Jesus from execution
-God saving Muhammad by commanding that a spider seal the entrance of a cave with a web (and then a dove proceeded to lay an egg at the focal point of that web). Muhammad and Abu Bakr took refuge in the cave.
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Old 02-27-2012, 03:27 PM   #86
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-God saving Muhammad by commanding that a spider seal the entrance of the cave with a web (and then a dove proceeded to lay an egg at the focal point of that web)
-God saving the Christian provenance in the Roman Empire by commanding that Constantine convince himself that he'd had a religious experience.

Muhammad may have already known that Constantine had already himself already stated in his "Oration" that the dove sent out by Noah landed on Mary's head.


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p.137

"What is perhaps most remarkable in Roman paganism is that
there was no basic objection to conversion: all that was
required was acceptance of the consequences of one's own
conversion. This is really what Constantine, not a very
sophisticated mind, understood better than everyone else.
He converted. The problem of Christian opposition to the
Empire was solved by one stroke. Or almost."


On Pagans, Jews and Christians: Arnaldo Momigliano, 1987
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Old 02-27-2012, 04:57 PM   #87
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..... the early gnostic idea that Jesus was not actually crucified. Islam seems to have adopted that idea from early Christian non-orthodox sects.
From antichrist sects. First, the Bible says that to deny Jesus' crucifixion is to deny that there is a christ at all. Second, the Bible says that to deny Jesus' crucifixion is of Satan.
Arius of Alexandria is described by multiple sources as an antichrist , so that makes the Arians an antichrist sect.
But for that reason? Multiple sources could be wrong- mistaken, or mendacious. Arius was surely heretical, was antichrist, because he argued with his own sacred text. He in effect denied that there was a christ, denying atonement, the function of the christ— if there is a christ. Atonement, in the biblical perspective, requires a perfect sacrifice. Only one is perfect; deity. Ergo, only one can be sacrificed; deity. So the sacrifice of the Arian 'christ' was not actually that of a christ. The term 'Arian Christianity' is therefore a misnomer, and 'Arianism' is more accurate. (It is possible that the Arian controversy was contrived, in order to make the imperial party look orthodox, when it was anything but.)

Theology may be said to have fairly close correlation of its truth (as defined by the Bible) with the moral behaviour of its adherents. Any particular heresy is always classifiable as either legalist or liberal, though the end results in terms of personal morality may turn out to be very similar. Legalism motivates, very strongly at times, but in a wrong direction. It supplants faith, that generates love, with one or more man-made rules, kept out of sense of duty. Liberalism removes motivation, simply removing the necessity to keep normal moral 'rules' by removing motivation to keep them, indulging harmful behaviour. Anything that detracts from the deity and perfection of Jesus reduces gratitude for atonement, and therefore encourages less than ideal moral behaviour.

Islam is both liberal and legalist. It denies any sacrifice, so totally removes any incentive to do good. One may suppose that the incentive of Islam is to make a superficial, social 'goodness' that provides immunity from the gospel, that would create real goodness. So Islam may be simply a negative reaction to Christianity, and has not a shred of authenticity of its own.

Constantinianism, when developed, was as legalistic as Islam, teaching that water baptism, or taking a piece of bread, or carrying out any particular religious duty, pleased deity. This denied Christianity equally effectively by saying that humanity did not need atonement, even though there was nominal agreement that Jesus had died. The circumcision party was the first legalist group, that was explicitly, scripturally condemned, never to rise again; but there were many other ways to destroy faith by legalism, including the most superstitious ideas, and they were found at their most developed in the medieval Holy Roman Empire, so called.

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The specifications for what constitutes an antichristian OPINION is found in the letters of John. Anyone who refused to confess that Jesus had appeared in the flesh (i.e. the equivalent of appearing in HISTORY) was therefore to be known in christian heresiological circles as antichrist .
John's definition has to be taken in its historical context, that was evidently early and undeveloped; and in the context of other NT authors, who widened the scope considerably. What can be learned from John is that there were many antichrists, some of whose successors the empire would have termed 'fathers'. All the other NT writers except James were of a similar view, and some antichrists were already within the church, they wrote.

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It is very reasonable to suspect that the early Islamic scribes who assembled the Quran had access to the works of many Arian minded heretics, and that they used the opinions in these works rather than the opinion which they would have found by way of studying the Constantine Bible, or any of the orthodox christian heresiologists.
Islam may have taken up the Arian theme, though it may be that the very simple expedient of taking Jesus off the cross was the product of unsophisticated minds. Islam is legalist as far as justification before deity is concerned, though, as with Constantinianism, there is no way of knowing, at death, whether one has been justified. Fasting, regular formal prayer, pilgrimage and charity, added to a mere recitation, make for a set of duties that at least seem pious. One may suppose that they were partly copied from the Bible, but they make an arbitrary overall criterion, without any rationale or motivation. It's theology that humans, not deity, would devise. It may seem to be what Paul called 'a form of godliness, but denying its power'.
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Old 02-27-2012, 11:36 PM   #88
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..... the early gnostic idea that Jesus was not actually crucified. Islam seems to have adopted that idea from early Christian non-orthodox sects.
From antichrist sects. First, the Bible says that to deny Jesus' crucifixion is to deny that there is a christ at all. Second, the Bible says that to deny Jesus' crucifixion is of Satan.
Arius of Alexandria is described by multiple sources as an antichrist , so that makes the Arians an antichrist sect.
But for that reason? Multiple sources could be wrong- mistaken, or mendacious. Arius was surely heretical, was antichrist, because he argued with his own sacred text.
In the context of the claims made above, namely:




The warlords Constantine and Muhammad .... [also see Ardashir c.222CE]


1) were supreme military commanders of their respective empires;

2) during this epoch of supremacy they each implemented centralized monotheistic state religions;

3) that these religions were characterized by the "canonization" of a "Holy Writ"

4) that on obtaining supreme military power, they publically executed key satirists (dissidents, etc)


Arius fits in at #4. It is known that Constantine wanted him dead for a long time, and if the story of Athanasius can be believed, Arius was finally poisoned in the city of Constantine c.336 CE.

They key evidence is the Original Nicaean Creed which basically says:

We the undersigned do hereby believe what Constantine says,
and not what Arius of Alexandria says.


Quote:
... (It is possible that the Arian controversy was contrived, in order to make the imperial party look orthodox, when it was anything but.)
Constantine himself said of Arius ...
He brought state orthodoxy into the light;
He hurled his wretched self into darkness.
He ended his labors with this.
The art of political leadership... consists in rivetting the attention of the people against a single political adversary and taking good care that that that this spotlight of attention is always switched on.

We do not really have all that many sources for Arius. Recent books only serrve to stress how little we know about the person who was supposedly ejected from the council of Nicaea for his OPINION.

This opinion has always been seen to be a theological opinion, because that is what has been stated by the heresiologists who represent the theology in the 4th 5th and subsequent centuries. It may have been more than theological .....




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Quote:
The specifications for what constitutes an antichristian OPINION is found in the letters of John. Anyone who refused to confess that Jesus had appeared in the flesh (i.e. the equivalent of appearing in HISTORY) was therefore to be known in christian heresiological circles as antichrist .

John's definition has to be taken in its historical context, that was evidently early and undeveloped; and in the context of other NT authors, who widened the scope considerably.
This brings us to the hypothetical historical context of "John". When were the letters of John written?


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It is very reasonable to suspect that the early Islamic scribes who assembled the Quran had access to the works of many Arian minded heretics, and that they used the opinions in these works rather than the opinion which they would have found by way of studying the Constantine Bible, or any of the orthodox christian heresiologists.

Islam may have taken up the Arian theme, though it may be that the very simple expedient of taking Jesus off the cross was the product of unsophisticated minds.

It is also possible that Jesus was the product of unsophisticated minds. The Arian theme, mirrored in Islam, is a reaction against the so-called Nicaean agreement which effectively subsidized another 50 Bibles and burned the literature of the Greek academic tradition.


Quote:
Islam is legalist as far as justification before deity is concerned, though, as with Constantinianism, there is no way of knowing, at death, whether one has been justified.

People felt secure in knowing that they had the right to leave property to the respective churches.


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Fasting, regular formal prayer, pilgrimage and charity, added to a mere recitation, make for a set of duties that at least seem pious.

It is likely that the mass movements from the cities to the deserts in the Roman Empire, on the wings of the Nicaean agreement, had to do with people attempting to flee from the Constantinian revolution. We know that the tax exempt bishops lived well in the 4th century, even though c.350 CE, land tax had tripled within living memory.
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Old 02-28-2012, 06:59 AM   #89
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Just to be clear, Dan Brown is a fiction writer.
One might say similarly of Pagels and Ehrman.
Sure we might, if we redefine fiction as anything you disagree with.
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Old 02-28-2012, 07:02 AM   #90
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No matter what people call it, it is not Protestant. Just in case anyone should suppose that it might be.
Who appointed you to be the judge of that?
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