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01-30-2013, 02:46 PM | #111 | ||
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We have Apologetic sources that made references to Epistle Hebrews and also argued that Jesus was on earth, crucified under Pilate at the about 30 years of age. In the Stromata, many passages from Epistle Hebrews were referenced and this is what the author stated. Clement's Stromata 1 Quote:
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01-30-2013, 03:03 PM | #112 | ||||
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01-30-2013, 03:13 PM | #113 |
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Where does God live? This is established in the literature from the beginning. He's not giving the instructions to build "some house." Come on. This is really getting frustrating. It's like having a conversation with a cat (but the cat at least keeps quiet). If you don't know anything ...
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01-30-2013, 05:17 PM | #114 |
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No, stephan I am expecting you be able to provide some actual textual references from the Torah that support your Christian theology derived claims that 'There was always the idea of a heavenly Tabernacle and an earthly Tabernacle'
If there was you should be able to easily provide the Torah references that demonstrate that this popular Christian statement has any basis in fact. SHOW ME where in the ancient writings of The Torah, that it ever claims that the Tabernacle that was to be constructed by the Israelites was ever understood by them, or by the Torah's writers to be a duplicate of some 'heavenly' Tabernacle. |
01-30-2013, 10:27 PM | #115 |
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I'd say horse shit but I don't want to get you in trouble again
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01-31-2013, 01:29 AM | #116 | |
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See why I'm not much impressed with your Christian theology sourced Hey'sooce caca, horse shit assertion. |
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01-31-2013, 09:56 AM | #117 | ||
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And I am not sure whether Sheshbazzar is not right in claiming that the Hebrew bible did not envision a heavenly sanctuary. The earthly sanctuary was created according to God's directions, but it doesn't seem to say that God's directions were taken from an existing heavenly sanctuary. Of course that had changed by the time Hebrews was written, though perhaps not universally. By the way, I recall that the Babylonians had a concept of heavenly counterparts to earthly things, even to ritual elements, but I cannot provide a reference offhand, since my early notes are not computerized. Possibly the Jews came to adopt Babylonian precedents. Earl Doherty |
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01-31-2013, 10:20 AM | #118 |
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But this is where having a knowledge of a parallel culture comes in handy. It's not just about 'the Jews' and 'their Bible.' This is a Samaritan broadside in effect because the Samaritans have numerous references to the 'proper' interpretation of the material, sectarian interpretation and interest in the concept of the heavenly versus earthly sanctuary and most importantly this association with a group that is often depicted as being Christian or related to Christianity (= Dositheanism). The starting point for familiarizing oneself with the Dositheans is Stanley Isser's otherwise atrocious book Dositheus. But he did commission a specialist in Arabic to translate the relevant portions of Abu'l Fath's discussion of the Samaritan sect.
The parallels between the Dosithean interest in the heavenly versus earthly sanctuary is well established in scholarly discussions of Hebrews. But it is important to also bring in to the discussion John chapter 4 and Stephen the Protomartyr's critique of Judaism in Acts which is generally acknowledged to reflect Dosithean concerns. The point then is that it is impossible to imagine two contemporary parallel interests in the heavenly versus earthly sanctuaries which are so closely related but ultimately independent of one another especially when there is little or no evidence of a compatible Palestinian Jewish interest in the heavenly tabernacle replacing or abolishing the earthly sanctuary. The interest in a 'tabernacle' as opposed to a temple is also odd for a first century Jewish text but at home in a Samaritan cultural milieu. In the end then it is difficult if not impossible to read Hebrews as being separate and unrelated to the larger Dosithean interest in the rejection of the earthly sanctuary and earthly sacrifices. This especially true when the prominent Samaritan heretic Simon is associated with Dositheus and more importantly when the identity of the author of Hebrews has been (deliberately) obscured and oddly uncertain in early Christian circles. I can't think of a parallel example of so much confusing and disagreement being associated with a text in the early canon. The provenance seems to be a difficulty. |
01-31-2013, 10:24 AM | #119 | |
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An example of the research of my teacher Rory Boid on the Dosithean figure of 'Sakta' (= tabernacles or booths) who is generally recognized to be the leader of a Samaritan Christian sect:
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01-31-2013, 07:20 PM | #120 | |
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Earl Doherty |
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