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03-31-2011, 10:29 PM | #101 |
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Surprise, surprise. Release of the images are pending a book and a movie deal for Elkington it would seem:
http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/201...d-but-cautious |
03-31-2011, 10:41 PM | #102 |
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Someone asked about the "I will walk uprightly" business. I can't see a connection with Revelations unless they mean Rev. 3.4 which is a stretch and might demonstrate the kind of desperate logic we are dealing with here. Christ promises that the remnant in Sardis who remain pure "will walk with me, dressed in white for they are worthy." I don't see a real connection. The text is probably Jewish and the money making machine around the discovery is trying to connect it with one billion Christians rather than 10 million Jews.
I think 'uprightly' is probably the Hebrew tamym which also means 'perfect' or 'unblemished.' It appears in Psalm 15:2 "LORD, who shall sojourn in Thy tabernacle? Who shall dwell upon Thy holy mountain?. He that walks uprightly" - הוֹלֵךְ תָּמִים ... and then a list of other characteristics and then "He that doeth these things shall never be moved." It's like the ending of Stairway to Heaven - to be a rock and not to roll. Rabbinic exegesis of the passage suggests that David here has reduced the 613 commandments established by Moses down to 11. "He that walketh uprightly" is taken to mean Abraham, to whom such an expression was said in Gen. 17. 1 "walk before Me, and be thou perfect" - הִתְהַלֵּךְ לְפָנַי, וֶהְיֵה תָמִים For what it's worth - sorry for being so predictable - but if tamym is the word here it has a value of 490 which is 70 x 7, a concept at the core of Daniel's messianic prophesy. Marqe (Mark) the founder of the Samaritan religion takes an active interest in the word tamym. There are so many 'codes' seen in the word, I can't remember everything he says. From memory, there is something about the yod being placed between two mems which is symbolic of some messianic principle. He also takes special interest in the third and fourth verses of Deuteronomy 32: I will proclaim the name of the LORD, [I will] praise the greatness of our God! He is the Rock (tsur), his works are perfect, and all his ways are just,” to show that at the end of time humanity itself would become transformed by a power referred to in the Torah as “the glory.” The Rock, or tsur, is equated with the very concept of tamym po’olo [Deut 32:4] and tsur is taken not in its Hebrew meaning 'rock' but its Aramaic meaning 'image.' So the tamym po'olo is the one who will come, "the Rock" and the very "perfect work” of God much like “the rock was Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:4). Getting back to more familiar interpretation of the material, I think the reference to Abraham walking blamelessly before God with the promise to David and his successors favor if they walked before him (1 Kings 8:25; 9:4; 2 Chron 6:16; 7:17; see also 2 Kings 20:3; Is 38:3). The rabbinic tradition usually connects Gen 17.1 the 'walking blamelessly' business with circumcision from what I remember. Abraham was uncircumcised before and then circumcised after the command. For what it is worth in Hebrew Gen 17.1 is read as a double imperative 'Walk before me and be perfect' I am not sure that people get this sense with the English translation. The bottom line again is that I don't think the object is Christian and we should take everything that comes out of the spin-factory related to this product with a grain of salt. |
04-01-2011, 12:35 AM | #103 | |
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On the lead codices starts to trace the forgery.
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04-01-2011, 06:39 AM | #104 | ||
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OTOH, one might reasonably expect a forger to make more effort to find some plausible and interesting text, especially if they've gone to all that metallurgical and metalworking effort. Which consideration would then point more in the direction of D C Hindley's observations - some kind of 300 CE tourist souvenir (garbled text carelessly chosen to look vaguely right - but that would have to be either coincidental with the tombstone text mentioned, or it would have to be the case that that bit of tombstone text was something more widely available and copyable in the past). |
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04-01-2011, 07:59 AM | #105 | |
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Eisenbrauns jumps on the wagon (or use this link: http://www.eisenbrauns.com/pages/04012011 )
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04-01-2011, 02:49 PM | #106 | |
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Skeptical observers have pronounced theses plates - FAKE.
Kinderhook plates Quote:
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04-01-2011, 03:35 PM | #107 | |
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Paleobabble: lead codices looking like a hoax
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04-01-2011, 07:37 PM | #108 | ||
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I think what we have here was a factory with a furnace that melted lead and bronze to produce fake antiquities to sell to tourists and naive collectors in recent times. Since the bronze plaque must have been produced after the tombstone went on display 50 years ago (ca 1961), I'd now guess that the enterprise was abandoned before any got on the market. I suggest the 1967 Arab-Israeli war was the reason. So there they sat, piled in a corner of that cave, where folks possibly lived or Bedouin camped for decades, getting all beat up and corroded, before someone sees an opportunity to make a buck from them. I'm amazed that Elkington, even after being informed that he had a fake bronze plaque, went on the promote lead codices that have exactly the same type of artwork, only now in gibberish Hebrew. By this point he must have known he was working with fake antiquities! Didn't he think the inquiries he had made to experts would leak out? Or did he think they were wrong and shopped experts until he found one or more who were willing to entertain their antiquity? DCH |
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04-01-2011, 10:00 PM | #109 | |
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Thus far, it appears that such a claim is innacurate, at best. There doesn't seem to be such a sentence in Revelation, despite what has been referenced in media reports about the lead codices. And that leads me to seriously doubt that 'a Roman cross outside a city wall' clearly appears on one of the lead sheets. |
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04-02-2011, 10:25 AM | #110 |
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