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03-05-2012, 03:33 AM | #21 | |
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03-05-2012, 03:38 AM | #22 | |
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03-05-2012, 04:10 AM | #23 | |
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Do you expect no disagreement in matters of religion? Sometimes disagreement becomes ‘septic’ and stern corrective measures are applied by the stronger party against the heretics, enemy of the people, communists, anarchists, republicans, rebels ... and sometimes the disagreement is perceived as benign and then scholars and idle posters have a field day |
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03-05-2012, 04:23 AM | #24 | ||||||||||
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Aside from this quibble, I am in reasonable agreement with everything else you have written here (and elsewhere), particularly the following .... Quote:
Constantine had to legislate against rich pagans trying to buy their way into the lucrative positions of tax-exempt bishops that Constantine was appointing - hand over fist - all over the dioceses of the eastern and western empire. He was of course the "Bishop of Bishops". I suspect that he may have given the loyal barbarian chieftains who had accompanied him on his campaign trail the choice of being the bishop of their own dioceses. I have reason to think that Ossius, for example, who presided over many so-called "Christian councils", is to be more appropriately seen as a military agent than a religious agent Quote:
The underground nature of any extant "Early Christian church" (or house church) is supported by the Sahara Desert of evidence. Quote:
Probably not Crispus either. Quote:
I suspect they had appointed also certain "readers" who were acquainted with not only Greek, but also the special "nomina sacra" that appear to be universally employed in the earliest greek codices. The bishops themselves (in the early days under Constantine) may not have needed to read. In fact if they were appointed in part from his army then this immediately explains why there were no female bishops. Quote:
The torture of the upper classes is described in Ammianus. It is no wonder that many thousands of people fled to the deserts of the empire between the years 325 and 360 CE. |
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03-05-2012, 04:31 AM | #25 | |
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Could you be more specific. Can you cite Epiphanius? You are aware that Epiphanius's heresies included Platonism, Hellenism and Pythagoreanism? Epiphanius is not regarded as an historian.
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03-05-2012, 04:51 AM | #26 |
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What was the advantage that the Nestorians had to survive which the Arians didn't have a century earlier?
It appears that despite all the writings and councils including Chalcedon the empire was still dealing with heresies and pagans under Justinian. The regime was always pushing the Trinity etc.but still didn't manage to eliminate their enemies for a long time. Or they didn't really care about it. |
03-05-2012, 04:52 AM | #27 | ||||
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Maybe they could have. It doesn't follow that they would have. |
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03-05-2012, 05:10 AM | #28 |
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The ongoing battle also suggests that there were still many elements believing in the Christ who still rejected the Pauline teachings and perhaps the so-called canonical gospels as well, and not just isolated pockets of gnostics or judaizers.
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03-05-2012, 05:11 AM | #29 | |
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Of course, there was non-Arian opposition to trinitarianism, also. The defining characteristics of medieval orthodoxy were to a significant extent controverted at their origins. |
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03-05-2012, 06:31 AM | #30 |
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