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08-05-2009, 09:09 PM | #111 | ||
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08-05-2009, 10:15 PM | #112 | ||
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If anything, it's the insistence that the bible is infallible and outside of all the other works that could have been accepted as canonical that hurts it's case for historical value. The fact that many competing contemporary works were lost or intentionally destroyed also does the historical value of the bible no favor. It is the Church that has set the bible apart from the surrounding world, not its critics. |
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08-06-2009, 04:56 AM | #113 | ||
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What is the relevance on the church's view of the bible to the actual historical value of the bible. What is true about the bible is true no matter what the church says about it or how it groups it. Explain to me the relationship between the actual historical value of the bible and what the church says about it. Why, it they are individual sources, does that necessarily imply that they contradict? Why can't individual sources exist that do not contradict. Why would there individuality have any bearing on whether they contradict or not? Indvidual books written by individual people, quickly transmitted, copied, and distributed to Christians, wherever they could be found. Other books, not viewed as authentic were not universally accepted and were not copied and transmitted universally. Your analysis of the historical value of the books should not be dependant on the churches view of canonicity. Likewise, my view of canonicity does not rob each book of being an individual witness. |
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08-06-2009, 05:03 AM | #114 | |
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08-06-2009, 07:30 AM | #115 | ||
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This assumed harmony of the gospels itself is Church tradition, and doesn't seem to be the case in early Christianity. |
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08-06-2009, 07:51 AM | #116 | ||
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The harmony of the gospels was accepted by the early church but this is a moot point and has no bearing on the number of witnesses. |
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08-06-2009, 08:04 AM | #117 | ||
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The earliest sort of "harmony" of the fourfold gospels is Justin Martyr in the mid-2nd century. If you believe differently, I ask that you present some evidence of a "harmony" of "gospels" prior to Justin. |
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08-06-2009, 08:06 AM | #118 | |
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If the gospels are really proto-catholic propaganda then how useful can they be for non-Christian historians? |
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08-06-2009, 08:18 AM | #119 | ||
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08-06-2009, 08:33 AM | #120 | ||
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I think many modern commentators use the date of AD70 simply because they rule out the possibility that Jesus could have predicted the future. I do not beleive there is an evidence (internal or external) that would pin the gospels to the year AD70 besides this assumption. |
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