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06-15-2006, 05:49 PM | #61 | ||
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With this definition, there are no 100% pure Christians until post-canon formation - which is tautological and therefore not a theory at all. If you wish to have an interesting and valuable theory, then it MUST address precursors. We can't really do this for you because you are the one proposing. So you have to fill in here for us. I am inferring that under your theory, the correspondence between Pliny and Trajan regarding Christians is a set of forgeries. |
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06-15-2006, 05:49 PM | #62 | ||
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is not evidence of history. Our position is that this literature is all sourced from the fourth century sponsorship of Constantine. The literature certainly evidences fights among creeds of "the tribe of christians" purposefully, in order to foster the inference that there was in fact "a tribe of christians" on the planet before the fourth century. But the literature is a fabrication and a fiction of wicked men according to Julian, and we are presently giving Julian the benefit of the doubt, and testing the integrity of the postulate that the literature is a fiction. A 4th century fiction, containing more calumny than most modern novels. Quote:
two valid carbon dated results in respect of NT manuscripts: 1) Nag Hammadi - dated by the bindings to c.360 CE (and I dont have any error bars for this one). 2) The recent GJudas - dated 280 CE (+/- 60 years) Pete Brown |
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06-15-2006, 05:56 PM | #63 | |
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Do you know how many non Christian texts have been carbon dated, not very many, which means that since there are endless possibilities in history to speculate about possible forgery, we can make up anything we want using your criteria, as pretty much only a tiny tiny number of manuscripts have been carbon dated, and most of those are recent finds. That is my point. |
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06-15-2006, 06:04 PM | #64 | ||
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imperial mafia thug, and very intelligent. Quote:
historians clearly indicate: 1) Constantine called the council of Nicaea. 2) Constantine summoned attendees to the council in writing. 3) Constantine's grand entrance into the DAY 1 of the Council. 4) Constantine burns the written opinions of attendees in council 5) Constantine exhorts harmony and united appearance of the church. 6) Constantine quotes all sorts of inspiring wisdom. 7) Constantine apparently calls the council on account of the words of Arius. 8) Disclaimer clause on the Nicaean creed is Anti-Arius. 9) The 22 sub-creeds establish a church structure and regulation system which all point back to the central Roman coffers, and is precisely what one would expect to be imlemented by a new emperor to re-take the eastern empire (after 40 years of dual augustas) for taxation and the control and securement of revenue, etc. The above are hurriedly listed, and should not be considered to be an exhaustive list of evidence why I consider that Constantine used the Council of Nicaea to implement christianity out of the whole cloth in the fourth century. Pete Brown |
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06-15-2006, 06:17 PM | #65 | |
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the mainstream theory to have been written prior to the fourth century. The following list of the authors of antiquity has authors who certainly do not reference christians, listed alongside authors who, usually via Eusebius, are the authors you are alluding to with Pliny. A color coded one list available sorts out the "christian authors" from the "pythagoraean philsophers", "Roman emperors", "historians",etc: http://www.mountainman.com.au/essenes/article_029.htm Philo-Judaeus Seneca (the Elder) Apollonius of Tyana Jesus of Nazareth Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Peter & Judas Jude Pontius Pilate Barnabas Pliny the Elder Trajan (Emperor) Musonius Rufus Clement of Rome Flavius Josephus Plutarch, Mestrius Ignatius of Antioch Cornelius Tacitus Thallus Polycarp Pliny the Younger Seutonius Papias Hadrian (Emperor) Quadratus Simon Magus Phlegon Aristo of Pela Agrippa Castor Second Century Justin Martyr Aquila of Sinope (of Pontus) Hermas Valentinius Aristides the Philosopher Hegesippus Marcion of Sinope Melito of Sardis Basilides Theophilus Tatian Irenaeus of Lyons Lucian of Samosata Marcus Aurelius Polycrates of Ephesus Dionysius (of Alexandria) the Great Dionysius of Corinth Pinytus of Crete Saint Apollonius Mathetes Rhodo Serapion of Antioch Athenagoras Bardesanes Clement of Alexandria Julius Africanus Tertullian Minucius Felix Dio Cassius Hippolytus Flavius Philostratus Caius Apollonius ?? Alexander (of Cappadocia,Jerusalem) Origen Apollinaris Claudius Diognetus Ammonius Saccas Third Century Cornelius (of Rome) Novatian Decius Trajan (Emperor 249-251) Plotinus Dionysius of Rome Mani the Prophet Cyprian of Carthage Gregory Thaumaturgus Cassius Dionysius Longinus Gallenius Malchion Commodianus Porphyry Diocletian (Emperor 284-305) Victorinus Iamblichus of Chalcis Hermias Peter of Alexandria Pamphilus Methodius Victorinus of Petau Malchion (of Antioch) Anatolius of Laodicea in Syria Phileas of Thmuis Galerius Sabinus Arnobius Alexander of Alexandria Eusebius Pamphili of Caesarea Constantine I (Emperor 306-337) Hierocles Aphrahat/Aphraates Lactantius Athanasius Alexander of Lycopolis Author Unknown Miltiades (Pope 311-314) Maximin of Trier Donatus Magnus Thanks for being persistent. Pete Brown |
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06-15-2006, 10:27 PM | #66 | ||
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I'm a believer in forgeries. This is a little larger scope than I've had in mind. Well, more than a little... Quote:
One of the major problems in such an approach vs how I have come to see things is that in your scenario a complete "cold start" is fabricated, including that the "bishops" who were invited to Nicea were not actually bishops at all - since there were no Christians. Instead they must be by inference part of the conspiracy. Because they are damned well aware they are not heads of any church because no churches exist. So they all go back and start churches from scratch - pretending that there are centuries of prehistory to Christianity. Meanwhile, scribes are busy on eclectic revisions of texts and creation of phony controversies, etc. You must be proposing something like this. |
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06-16-2006, 02:19 AM | #67 | |
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is very small at the moment, but this will not always remain so, as I am sure further tests will be conducted. Pete Brown |
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06-16-2006, 06:39 AM | #68 | |
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Stephen |
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06-16-2006, 07:29 AM | #69 | |
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06-16-2006, 08:19 AM | #70 | |
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Stage 1: 312-324 CE Constantine takes Rome and implements a mini-proto-Nicaea (see below) He consolidates his position, constantly looking east, planning supremacy. He promotes the new religion in the west, and send literature to the east. Eventually this results in the Arian controversy. (NOTE: Our hypothesis sees the Arian controversy as the reaction of the eastern empire against the new testament texts, and the new religion. The controversy is stated by the dogmatic assertion of a series of phrases by Arius, such as: * there was time when he was not. * he was made out of nothing existing) Stage 2: 324-325 CE Constantine takes the eastern empire, and has Lucinus strangled. He calls the Council of Nicaea on account of the words of Arius. (See the above words of Arius). He summons attendees to the council. There were no "christian bishops" in the eastern empire, as per your own reasoning, the only "christian bishops" in attendance being those whom Constantine had "cultivated in Rome". The pope didn't make it, but sent some juniors in his stead. Our hypothesis is that the attendees summoned to Nicaea were the patrician level land-holders, governors, nobility and other important key people of the eastern empire, whom Constantine had just conquered. They were summoned to Nicaea to discuss how the new empire was going to fuction for the maintenance phase under the taxation and regulation and administrative and new religious regimes, which were to be implemented by Constantine. Stage 3: 325 CE Nicaean Council Meeting: what happened? Constantine ran the show. His mercanery barbarian storm troops were milling around outside. He entered the meeting, not with his troops, but his family. He berated the attendees for their discord, and quoted chapter & verse. He pointed out the need for perceived harmony. He burnt their written petitions in their presence. He wined and dined them for 4 months. He gave them presents and promises of civil works (new churches). He supported those people who supported him. Who was with Constantine, and who was with Arius? Constantine sold the package of christianity to the attendees. The package was subscribed to voluntarily. Signatures were collected to attest comitment to Constantine. The big DISCLAIMER CLAUSE got rid of the words of Arius. Stage 4: 326-337 CE Constantine implements a new and strange ROMAN church. He wanted to get rid of the Hellenic culture and religions. He did not to pay tribute to any of the old traditional Roman religions. These were all Hellenic is nature. (See Julian's summaries). He wanted their treasure, lands, temples, statues, etc, for himself. Once the one true religion was implemented, all else became taxable. Adherance to the words of Arius ceased being controversial. It became the Arian Heresy, and the downhill slide started. The attendees at Nicaea became key figures in a power network that distributed favors from Rome to the eastern empire, and taxation revenue, lands, etc, etc back to Roman central. The 22 sub-clauses on the Nicaean creed define the nature of this administrative network, which was established by agreement at Nicaea, and which through common interest perpetuated itself throughout the next 12 years of Constantine's reign, and thereafter. They knew they were not christian bishops when they set out from their homes in the eastern empire after being summoned to the council. But there were some bishops from the western empire present, and they all acted in complete accord with the new and strange religion, in a new and strange fashion, and the bishop Eusebius was there, and he was certainly a christian bishop, because he had just in fact finished writing a history of "tribe of christians", and of their texts, and they even had a copy of Josephus, and Josephus mentions the chritians back then, so they certainly exist somewhere. But they became the christian bishops of Constantine by signing the Nicaean creed, and when they returned home, they were full of food, and had presents, and would represent Constantine to their local communities and cities, and be a key figure standing in the (new and strange Roman universal christian) channel of power between the supreme imperial thug, and his remote subjects. New church structres would be built by the new civil administration of Constantine, and every one of those new christian bishops would get a big cut of the action. They became important men overnight. It was a complete cold start. When Constantine burnt their written petitions, things warmed up considerably. They were reminded of where they were, and who was in their presence. Constantine was a thug, acting in some ways benevolently, but why? All they had to do was to agree with Constantine, and disagree with the words of Arius, whatever these words meant. In fact, it was clear that these words meant entirely different things to different parties. Noone really had to worry about what these words meant, so long as they disagreed with them. So they signed the creed, in expectation of future glory of the new Roman church. Pete Brown www.mountainman.com.au/essenes |
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