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12-13-2009, 04:12 PM | #191 | ||
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12-13-2009, 06:07 PM | #192 | ||||
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Well, I don't know the answer to your excellent riddle. The context is important: I challenged Jeffrey's assertion that one required expertise in Koine Greek to properly assess Earl's book. Peter, in his quote above, was, in my opinion, supporting Jeffrey's point of view. I tried, and probably failed, to illustrate by means of a simple example, that one could challenge both the veracity of the English translations of the ancient Greek texts, as well as their proper interpretations, without possessing an overwhelming skill with Koine Greek, i.e. contrary to Peter and Jeffrey's insistence to the contrary. Let me try once more. The word in consideration is eqnikos, translated variously in many different English texts, as "Gentile", "Pagan", "Heathen", "Ungodly", but which, in my opinion, ought to be translated as "different ethnic type". My opinion is that eqnikos, originally, had nothing to do with religion. It was certainly not a word, in my opinion, to juxtapose to the Hebrew speaking Jews. It was rather, a word to distinguish Greeks from non-Greeks. If I am correct, then, those many scholars, with walls full of diplomae, who have crafted the many, many faulty English translations of the Greek new testament, will need to offer an apology..... Jeffrey properly challenged me to demonstrate the idea that eqnikos originally did not relate to "gentile", i.e. all the rest of the world, except the Jews, and I am trying to find some author from two or three centuries before the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in 70CE, who uses this word, eqnikoi, so that we can find out the answer to Jeffrey's other question, i.e. why do I insist that it is wrong to translate this word as "gentile". Jeffrey has a wall full of diplomae, sustaining his knowledge of Greek. I have none, nor should I, for I am utterly clueless about Greek. Nevertheless, I persist in arguing that Jeffrey errs on this point: Gentile is a word which dates, perhaps from the fifth or sixth century, I don't know exactly when, but, it represents the non-Jewish population of the world, i.e. including the Greeks. The Greek word for non-Greek peoples, including the Hebreic/Aramaic speaking Jews, is eqnikos. Gentile is a word that distinguishes Jews from non-Jews. It has nothing to do with Greek literature, including the new testament. Quote:
Finally, to answer this riddle, as best I can: Yes, we need to know a bit of Arabic, though, in my opinion, the English translations of the Quran, are far less muddled than those of the Greek New Testament. Maybe I am wrong about that....My reading of the Quran has thus far focused on its oft-stated need to kill people like me, so, I haven't a lot of interest to continue with a study of its contents... avi |
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12-13-2009, 07:16 PM | #193 | |||
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12-13-2009, 07:50 PM | #194 | |
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12-13-2009, 07:56 PM | #195 | |
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Do you know what confirmation bias is? If not, please look it up. |
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12-13-2009, 10:24 PM | #196 | ||||
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Thanks, I have. I'm just assuming you are making a general point. Any other little digs? No? Then shall we get back to my question? It was: Quote:
* Do we have any evidence for a Christianity that didn't have a Jesus Christ at its core AND thought that God was born in the form of a man? That had "narrations" about a suffering God, etc? * Do we have any evidence for any sect of Gnostic Christianity that had those characteristics? |
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12-13-2009, 11:47 PM | #197 | |
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We have evidence that there were varieties of Christianity that we don't know much about, possibly that we know nothing about. All of these seem to have some version of Jesus Christ at the core, although there were debates over his substance. Some Christians seem to have interpreted the narratives about Jesus Christ allegorically. We have evidence that documents were edited to conform to orthodoxy. Do you think you can prove that Tatian must have believed in an orthodox version of Jesus because there is no surviving evidence of a Christian sect based on an alternative version of Christianity with a purely spiritual Jesus? |
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12-14-2009, 12:05 AM | #198 | |||||
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1. We have Tatian's Address, which is consistent with orthodoxy. 2. Tatian wrote many letters apparently, and Irenaeus -- a contemporary to Tatian, was clear that Tatian was not a heretic until after Justin Martyr died. 3. We have no evidence at all of any Christianity that lacked a "Jesus Christ" at its core. 4. We have at least one example of a historicist writing an apologetic to the pagans without referring to either "Jesus" or "Christ" (Tertullian's "Ad nationes") Is there any reason to doubt Tatian's suffering God "born in the form of a man" is Jesus? |
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12-14-2009, 05:03 AM | #199 | |
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The word "Christian" was not even derived from Jesus. The word "Christian" is derived from the Greek word for "anointing". The word "Christ" predates the Jesus stories by hundreds of years. Since the days of the Emperor Claudius almost all of Samaria were called Christians because they believed in a magician and Holy One Simon Magus and Meander. Theophilus of Antioch claimed there were Christians because they were anointed. Athenagoras of Athens called himself a Christian but did not mention Jesus. He believed in God and his LOGOS. Octavius in the writing of Municius Felix converted Caecilius without ever telling him one thing about Jesus only God. And further Octavius claimed he abhorred the sacrifice of humans and the use of blood. It is simply NOT true that "We have no evidence at all of any Christianity that lacked a "Jesus Christ" at its core. |
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12-14-2009, 05:45 AM | #200 | |
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