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04-18-2009, 01:43 PM | #21 | |||
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mountainman again: Quote:
In your theory though, a conspiracy is needed. You are indeed correct that Constantine did not have to conspire to give orders to his military generals to raze towns and engage in mass murder, but he would have had to engage in a conspiracy to fabricate a religion. This is by your own admission since Eusebius was (according to you) instrumental in writing a completely false history along with totally inventing historical characters. Let us just briefly compare Constantine to the Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten. We know from historical records that Akhenaten radically transformed the nature of Egyptian religion and established the exclusive worship of the Aten. He made enemies of the priests of Amun-Ra. Akhenaten (like Constantine) created a new capitol for his empire. Now look at what happened after their deaths. When Akhenaten died, the priests of Amun-Ra quickly regained their status and in no time the old gods were back in full force. Presumably many common Egyptians never abandoned their old gods in the first place. The Aten cult was recognized as being a recent phenomenon. When Constantine died, no similar dissolution took place in Christianity. From this I assume that Christianity was already widespread before Constantine, therefore his death did nothing to slow the movement down. |
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04-18-2009, 06:27 PM | #22 | |
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Constantine's son Constantinus II supported the Arians and and made an Arian bishop of Constantinople. Furthermore, his father Constantine eventually rescinded his earlier dismissal of Arius. I don't understand why Constantine would need Jesus to be co-eternal with God the Father for his empire to prosper, unless he actually believed such an idea and did not wish to blaspheme the Son. That though would undermine the theory that he simply invented the religion to begin with. He did want a unified church, but I don't think he cared about its theology in any real way. |
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04-18-2009, 08:25 PM | #23 | |
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My point was that the extremity of his dismissal of Arianism suggests that it might be for political reasons. Naturally that would be partly to do with not wanting to blaspheme the Son, but I wondered whether that might not tie in with the idea that Jesus would be undermined if earlier emperors 'outranked' him. |
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04-19-2009, 12:11 AM | #24 | |||||
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Such thinking does not exist with military intelligence or at Scotland Yard. Statements by Constantine regarding Arius are part of the evidence. The evidence is amenable to examination and analysis. Often the evidence points to political tensions, as is the case here. Statements made by Constantine about AriusSurely these statements tell us something about the way that Constantine perceived the author Arius of Alexandria in regard to Arius' belief (or otherwise) in Jesus. Quote:
Do you know for sure that he was not? Surely the case is not closed. Quote:
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04-19-2009, 12:19 AM | #25 | |
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General Background Notes.
Creation of Centralised State Monotheistic Religions in antiquity. Quote:
before the Council of Nicaea when Ardashir creates the Persian State Zoroastrian Religion c.223. Here are some notes from Cambridge Ancient History, Volume XII The Imperial Crisis and Recovery (193 to 324 CE) Chapter 5: SASSANID PERSIA The Sassanian Empire: Political History |
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04-19-2009, 12:33 AM | #26 | |
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04-19-2009, 01:32 AM | #27 |
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mountainman,
Out of curiosity, why did you think my comparison of Akhenaten and Constantine was not a good one? Akhenaten introduced a novel cult to Egypt that had no connection to the Egyptian people. You claim that Constantine did the same in imposing the cult of Christ on his empire. A cult that, you believe, had no organic connection to the Roman population. History shows us that Akhenaten's religion died out with him; (unless you hold to Freud's idea that Moses was a renegade Aten priest), and that his new city was abandoned. The cult of Amun-Ra regained imperial preeminence and the people continued worshipping in their old ways. The priests of the old gods had no need to eradicate the remaining Aten worshippers, there were none. The Aten cult had been artificially imposed from above, we would not expect there to be a lot of loyal Aten worshippers. When Constantine died though, Christianity continued expanding. Constantinople, far from being abandoned, thrived and became the center of one of the greatest empires in world history, a center of culture and religion. If Christianity was a religion that had been forcefully imposed from above; why was a later Roman emperor unable to stamp out the religion with force? |
04-19-2009, 02:36 AM | #28 | ||
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for the pre-existence of an earlier Zorastrian religion that flourished in Parthian Persia. The same cannot be said with the same degree of certaintly with respect to "christianity". |
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04-19-2009, 02:40 AM | #29 | |
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There is no harm in any comparison.
We can learn from them all. But IMO Ardashir's actions were probably well known to Constantine. It was quite recent Political history compared to Akhenaten. Quote:
The new architecture (basilicas) were well established. Also Julian did not have the time: his rule was cut short. Have you read "Julian" by Gore Vidal? |
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04-19-2009, 02:58 AM | #30 |
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fatpie42, if you want to know something about Arius, you could have a look here :
http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/alexander-chart This site, fourthcentury.com is a christian site. They give a translation of many important texts of the controversies of the Fourth Century. There is a letter from Arius to Alexander, the bishop of Alexandria, which describes the credo of Arius. Note that there are many Alexander(s). Note also that the "official" church had time enough to screen the writings of Arius and suppress them. |
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