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11-14-2005, 05:48 AM | #121 | ||
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Apparently he picked the wrong island. |
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11-14-2005, 07:08 AM | #122 | |
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Indeed for non-jewish christians in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd century "scripture" was septuagint and what other writings was available to them that circled around among them. Paul's letters as they became available, the source we today know as "Q" and the gospels as they were written and came known. Most of these people did not understand hebrew and so did not have access to the hebrew bible. Alf |
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11-14-2005, 07:54 AM | #123 | |
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How could he then make so many mistakes about Judean Geography, Judean customs etc etc? Again, assuming John were an eyewitness. Why did he write the gospel so much later than the others? Assuming Matthew and Luke are both correct. When exactly was Jesus born? What was the name of Joseph's father? Alf |
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11-14-2005, 08:09 AM | #124 | ||
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I am generally very sceptical to ANYTHING that Eusebius claims. I want to prefer to see it proven or at least supported by other writers before I accept his claims. Healthy septicism is valuable in general but with Eusebius it is an absolute must. Alf |
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11-14-2005, 08:18 AM | #125 | ||
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For example in the roman calendar "4 days before Nones" would be what we would think of as 3 days before Nones. The romans simply included both end points. I don't know if greek counted the same way but wouldn't surprise me if they did. However, it still would make only 3 days and 2 nights and not 3 days and 3 nights though. Alf |
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11-14-2005, 08:21 AM | #126 | ||
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This is very sad since it is correct what you say, that he was one of the few who had access to such a big library. It is really sad for christians today that there wasn't a person with more integrity that had access to that same library. One would think that an all powerful god would have arranged things better this way for the christians. It appears that this god if he had any finger into what happened has tried his best to discredit the bible as he could. Alf |
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11-14-2005, 11:53 AM | #127 | ||
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Eusebius is certainly sometimes wrong and IMO sometimes distorts by deliberate omission. However it is harder to find clear examples of him making positive statements he knew to be false. Andrew Criddle |
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11-14-2005, 12:09 PM | #128 | |
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More on this here: http://www.tertullian.org/rpearse/eusebius/pe_data.htm It should, at least, make us read Eusebius with quite a grain of salt as you allude to as well. Julian |
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11-14-2005, 05:15 PM | #129 | ||
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On another note, Mark and Luke may have used Matthew (I know, you think Mark was written first, but I haven't seen any evidence to convince me of that) as they wrote their gospels. There may have even been a logia, although I doubt it. Even if these theories were true, they don't mean that Mark and Luke were not in contact with eyewitness to the events. Mark may have heard the accounts from Peter and used Matthew as he wrote his gospel. (Moses probably used records passed down from Adam when he wrote the Pentateuch.) This doesn't prevent them from writing accurate history. Mark may have been the boy who fled naked from the garden and been an eyewitness himself to much of the story. This doesn't prevent him from using another eyewitness' document when recording the story that he remembered and lived through. Luke using Matthew doesn't contradict his introduction where he said that he checked everything out carefully with eyewitnesses. The point is, the people who were alive at the time said that Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John all wrote accurate histories of Jesus. That's the history. Attempts to disprove this without any evidence from the people who were alive then and knew what went on are unconvincing to say the least. One last item that you are leaving out is that the early church considered them not just history, but history inspired by God without error. God would have no problem giving the story to four different people in exactly the same words. |
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11-14-2005, 05:24 PM | #130 |
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How many days are there in a long weekend, when you get Friday off? Three. What's the third day of that weekend? Sunday.
I guess this doesn't seem like that big a deal. People are lazy about conflating "third day" with "three days later", but at least in the creed, it's "on the third day..." |
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