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12-14-2011, 10:48 AM | #31 |
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Yeah but citing the Church Father's in this way is like taking the testimony of the ghetto wife at face value that her husband's other woman is a hoe. You're allowing our understanding to be defined by the enemies of “heresy.” Maybe Simonians (whatever the fuck that means) or a Simonian said something like what you are saying in the right or wrong circumstance in the same way that a husband or wife say certain things in a heated exchange. This doesn't mean that any of this represents anything “real” or essential to the genesis of the “heresies.”
My point is that we have to start with what is possible within Judaism and Samaritanism rather than the inflamed testimony of the biased Fathers |
12-14-2011, 01:15 PM | #32 | |
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Ephrem on the Son not being the Stranger, not being the unknown Father.
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12-14-2011, 01:30 PM | #33 | |
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Another passage from Book One of Ephrem which argues against Jesus being the Son of the Creator - a position the Marcionites did not likely hold in the first place:
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12-14-2011, 02:05 PM | #34 | |
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Here is another interesting reference from Book Three:
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At first glance you read this and you go down the checklist - not the Maker, not the son of the Maker etc. But then you have to take into account that it doesn't say that Jesus wasn't formerly the Creator but rather that they don't call him (now) the Maker. It is a fundamental principle of the Pauline tradition that what is old (= man) is transformed into a wholly new creation. I am not so sure this isn't the case here too. |
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12-14-2011, 02:13 PM | #35 | |
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Here is something interesting I picked from CAL. The word Ephrem uses to denote the 'strangeness' of the Marcionite god (= nwkry) has several meanings in Aramaic/Syriac:
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12-14-2011, 02:32 PM | #36 | |
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Interestingly the beloved Mandaean god Anus-Uthra also applies the epithet 'nukraya' to himself and - at least according to Burkitt developed from a Christian interest of the healing of Mary Magdalene:
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12-14-2011, 08:32 PM | #37 | |
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Unfortunately, he used much of his brain power and his unusual ability to go incredibly long periods without sleep to produce apologetic material that is, at best, written towards the popular level of apologetics. He became incredibly popular among the inhabitants that he was elected bishop of Salamis, and he is said to have founded several monasteries. His thoughts weren't that deep, though. Folks far and wide would write to him to ask questions, and he'd send back these long treatises that probably generated a lot of laughs as someone read them to the the men lounging about after the eucharist each Sunday. Laughs as in funny, as he had this tendency to make what many considered clever little digs at the heretics he skewered in them. As all the descriptions of the man's writings indicate, he was known to quote works he approved of verbatim (The entire first book of Irenaeus' Against Heresies is contained in one of them) and this appears to be what he does with most of the works he doesn't approve of as well. However, what is not known is what form those works came to him. Were they in summaries by other writers like Irenaeus or Justin or others, and if so, how accurate were the summaries? IIRC, he had a low opinion of Eusebius ("damn closet Arian"). DCH |
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12-14-2011, 09:27 PM | #38 |
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It's funny when Epiphanius speculates how Origen castrated himself. I think he says Origen poured some sort of potion on his genitals to make his private parts shrivel. I wonder where on earth did he get this information?
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12-14-2011, 11:52 PM | #39 | |
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Eusebius.
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BTW since this thread is (indirectly) about Marcion are there any Marcionite inscriptions and/or "house churches"? Has the Meggido Prison archaelogical dig been associated to Marcion or the Marcionites? They must have coexisted with the Manichaeans in the 3rd and possibly 4th centuries. |
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12-15-2011, 12:47 AM | #40 |
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Can't you just stand in front of an x-ray machine for a few days
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