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08-01-2011, 12:18 AM | #31 | |
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You can't ignore what Eusebius actually wrote about the gospel of Peter and then quote him for the proposition that the Christian holy writ was ridiculed in Greco-Roman theater, and claim that is evidence that the gospel of Peter was pagan satire. There is just no connection. |
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08-01-2011, 03:07 AM | #32 | ||
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08-01-2011, 03:20 AM | #33 | ||||
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08-01-2011, 11:53 AM | #34 | |
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Andrew Criddle |
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08-01-2011, 01:46 PM | #35 | ||
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For the curious, here is a web page with an English translation. DCH |
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08-01-2011, 06:43 PM | #36 | ||||
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The indication that this gospel was not written in the 4th century is summarised above, and is entirely a result of using the literary testimony of Eusebius as an historical authority on the history of the heretics. It is not crazy to question the perceived authority of Eusebius on the history of the heretics. Here is what Erhman writes: Quote:
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The gospel of Peter was written by vile heretics who made fun of the crucifixion and the cross of salvation. But when was it authored? It appears to be the case that in matters of chronography of the heretics, people (Biblical Historians?) are using Eusebius as a guide and reliable sign-post in error, and that other people are unwilling for some reason to discuss other quite viable options (that do not contradict the known and available evidence) . |
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08-02-2011, 01:25 AM | #37 | ||||||
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If you want to reject what Eusebius says about gPeter, you need some reason. however slight, for him to back date the gospel. Why would he do that? It was a heretical gospel and he did not rely on it for any sort of authority. :huh: Quote:
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08-02-2011, 03:08 PM | #38 | |
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Goodacre does NOT like the story of the walking cross so he rejects it and accepts the parts he likes even though without the walking cross the story of the three men with their heads EXTENDED to heaven would still be IMPLAUSIBLE. Goodacre presented an AD HOC argument not a solution. The story is STILL considered IMPLAUSIBLE with or without the walking cross. |
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08-02-2011, 07:03 PM | #39 | ||||||||||
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The Vita Constantini Reference to "Ridicule of the Holy Scriptures" You need to be aware that this work from Eusebius is generally classified outside of his other works that primary concern "Church History" or the epoch prior to Nicaea. Is Constantine really Moses in disguise? Is Eusebius writing a hagiography? Eusebius is writing c.337 CE on the death of the Boss, and he is recounting events in his own life-time, not somewhere down the long and lonely untrodden path of centuries ago. He states: "the sacred matters of inspired teaching were exposed to the most shameful ridicule in the very theaters of the unbelievers.Admissions in Vita Constantini have always been examined in a different light than admissions made in Historia Ecclesiastica or most of his other works. The way I read the above is that he is not lying, and that Constantine met with some resistance, and the last of the persecutors would soon be stamped out, and that soon there would be harmony and golden sunrises because Constantine would fight for the Jesus in the canonical books. Quote:
Not everyone was a believer in the ultimate authority of Constantine's Bible. The Apocryphal material was very popular with the common people, and the non canonical books are mentioned for centuries as being related to, or being preserved by various heretical groups, and particularly those who were characterized as "Arian" in that they maintained one or more of the 5 sophisms of Arius which are present on the earliest of the Nicaean Creeds out of Nicaea, as a disclaimer clause, as an anathema. Either Eusebius, or his preservers, ameliorated the massive controversy over the sudden appearance of books (both canoical and non canoical) by spreading out their authorship and writing a presentation of a false history in which some of these heretical books were authored before Nicaea. Quote:
I am using it for both, and in fact prefer the term "universal church" as used by Arnaldo Momigliano, which I have posted here and there a few times. Quote:
Allow me to be more specific. It is anti-Canonical-Christian. My argument is that the Constantine Bible was met with academic Greek authorship of competitive stories, such as the books authored by Arius of Alexandria. It was anti-Christian orthodoxy where the orthodoxy is clearly defined by the canon of the books inside Constantine's Bible. Quote:
The academic Classicists have already defined the terrain. The Greeks were masterful exponents of political satire from the beginning and this freedom of speech was well developed in Alexandria c.325 CE when they received the "Good News" about the status of the Constantine Bible. All academics recognise the satire of Emperor Julian against Constantine and Jesus. Moreover sources of Athanasius disclose that he compares Arius three times to Sotades, a known historical political Greek satirist of the epoch BCE. IMHO the walking talking cross is a political 4th century Greek satire against the cross defined in the (canonical) books of the Constantine Bible. The stories in Constantine's Bible were mimicked and parodied, and performed in the theatres of the unbelievers. These people were the heretics - they would not accept Constantine's Bible. They wrote their own story of Jesus and the Cross. How heretical can you get? Constantine's mother's successful archaeological expedition to the "Holy Land" is incidental to the history of the heretical walking talking cross. |
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08-03-2011, 06:20 AM | #40 | ||
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The idea of a walking, talking cross is almost unbelievably absurd so we should think of changing it? The idea of Peter passing a camel through the eye of a needle in the Acts of Peter and Andrew is almost unbelievably absurd so we should think of changing it Of course not! The Gnostic Gospels and Acts are incredibly jammed-pack full of such absurdities, and they have been called a "textual critic's nightmare" for perhaps just this reason. Why is the author presenting an absurdity in a Gnostic Gospel? I think the explanation is that the Gnostic authors thought that the original Jesus stories were absurd. |
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