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01-03-2012, 12:50 PM | #71 | ||||
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Sorry to write, that I remain completely unrepentant. Let me try again, this time, rewriting the text, in a more familiar English fashion, at least that will clarify the issues involved. I start with one verse before the three we had been discussing earlier: Acts 4:24 οἱ δὲ ἀκούσαντες ὁμοθυμαδὸν ἦραν φωνὴν πρὸς τὸν θεὸν καὶ εἶπαν· δέσποτα, σὺ ὁ ποιήσας τὸν οὐρανὸν καὶ τὴν γῆν καὶ τὴν θάλασσαν καὶ πάντα τὰ ἐν αὐτοῖς, Someone took pains, there, a couple thousand years ago, to write THEOS, not kyrios. God, is what is under discussion here. Not some human lord or other.... Acts 4:25 and 26, in plain English, not word for word. Which, moreover, having heard in unison, they cried out to God, beseeching him to remember the words of God's servant, their father, David, who had reiterated that the Gentiles and their leaders had sought in vain to destroy Israel, by attacking him, David, God's anointed. Acts 4: 27: again, not word for word: Similar enemies today, including Herod, Pontius Pilate, Gentiles, and the people of Israel currently living in Jerusalem, seek to attack another of God's holy servants, Jesus, who had been anointed by God himself (i.e. unlike David, who had been anointed by the people of Israel, not God.) Quote:
I defy you to locate EVEN ONE LONELY Christian, who will confess to THINKING "anoint", upon hearing the English word "Messiah", rather than THINKING "saviour", upon hearing that word. Were you to set up a laboratory, for example at the famous EEG lab at U.Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, you could demonstrate that the electrical signals recorded from the Frontal (motor) Cortex, upon hearing the word Messiah, would be located over the side contralateral to the hand which would push the button representing "saviour", not the side contralateral to the hand which pushes the button to express "anointed". NO NATIVE SPEAKER of ENGLISH, having been exposed to Christianity from childhood, THINKS of Messiah as "someone who has had olive oil poured over him", but rather as someone who will save them, so that they could emigrate to Heaven, upon attaining death. Quote:
How do you explain that Codex Sinaiticus uses abbreviations willy nilly (DAD, KY, XY, IX,) with none of them explained? What is the algorithm for employing these abbreviations? Why was the algorithm changed later, with publication in the fifth century and beyond, employing full names, rather than abbreviations? What were the rules regarding the macra, and where were they enumerated? Why are there macra over some abbreviations, but not others? How do you explain that Kyrios crept into the language, inappropriately replacing theos? I am unable to explain something as simple as derivation of "ain't", let alone adoption of spellings consistent with a Greek grammar, of which I am wholly ignorant. Quote:
Alexander was born in 356 BC in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedonia. He was son of Philip II, King of Macedonia, and Olympias, the princess of neighboring Epirus. 2. Flavia Iulia Helena was probably born in the city of Drepanum in Bithynia. Bithynia is just across the sea from Greece, today, on the Turkish border, but had been, from the time of Alexander, several centuries earlier, regarded as Greek territory (Troy, Homer) Constantine's father was from Moesia, a stone's throw north from Epirus. |
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01-03-2012, 01:43 PM | #72 |
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You shouldn't try to have it both ways. If you're completely unrepentant then you're not sorry.
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01-03-2012, 01:47 PM | #73 | ||||||||||||||
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Then your contention fails. Quote:
What on earth do the nomina sacra have to do with algorithms? Quote:
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01-03-2012, 07:02 PM | #74 |
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Careful. Denying that Alexander was Greek just might start another war in the Balkans.
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01-03-2012, 07:06 PM | #75 |
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I remember in Toronto my hometown there was a statue dedicated to 'Alexander the Greek' and the Macedonians objected. They wanted him to be recognized as 'Alexander of Macedon.' It was a big deal for a news cycle. Thousands of people marching in the streets on both sides making a lot of noise. But then the unruly mobs were ultimately subdued by a couple of Turkish tourists. as I remember ...
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01-04-2012, 05:46 AM | #76 | ||
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Today, they are all just greeks. They spoke Greek, which, by definition, means: THEY THOUGHT in Greek, because Greek was their native language. Thinking, that's the key to understanding culture, not the location of the father's homeland. As you, Maklelan, are very well read, may I suggest you read a bit about Twin studies, where the twins were separated at birth, and raised in different environments (one Jewish, one Catholic, for example). Quote:
I claim, WITHOUT evidence, that no native speaker of English, having been exposed to Christianity as a child, associates the English word Messiah, with the act of pouring olive oil on the top of someone's head--"anointment". I also claim, WITHOUT evidence (other than having very cold fingers now, as I type, in January, and very hot fingers in July), that the earth is tilted 23.5 degrees on its axis. I defy you to provide evidence to the contrary of either of my two suppositions, thereby refuting either contention. |
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01-04-2012, 05:57 AM | #77 | |||
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no /h/ on Moshiah? hmmm. Quote:
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01-04-2012, 07:03 AM | #78 | ||
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Nope, not a shred.
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01-04-2012, 07:09 AM | #79 | |||||
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01-17-2012, 04:21 PM | #80 | ||
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In the absence of any response from the author, your post # 17 relies on late 4th century evidence. It is not assinine to ask when the first written form of the name of Jesus and Christ appears in the non-encrypted full form in the historical record. We are lead to believe that this Jesus Christos was some sort of an important person in the pre-4th century antiquity, and that the "Christians" were known by name of "Christians". But is this necessarily the case? Your substantial "proof" provided is very late and obviously cannot have any bearing on the question being asked. In fact it is assinine to use late 4th century evidence to demonstrate claims in the pre-4th century epoch. You (and others) may have faith in the CLAIM that the name of Jesus and Christ and the Christians are pre-4th century phenomena, but you do not appear to have any evidence to support the CLAIM. In fact the evidence available appears to weaken the claim, on the basis of the non-neglible evidence for the use and physical appearance of other terms such as "Jesus Chrestos" and "Chrestians". |
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