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06-09-2013, 09:39 PM | #11 | |
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On the Giants, 60-1: Three Kinds of Men 159
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06-09-2013, 09:43 PM | #12 | |
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06-09-2013, 09:56 PM | #13 | |
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When aa5874 talks about Jesus being "born of a ghost", I always get this idea of Casper, the friendly ghost. I think if aa5874 were consistent with this nonsense, he'd charge that Julius Caesar was a myth because he was a god. Then again, if we look at a precursor to the Jesus miraculous birth we turn to the birth of Hatshepsut, as depicted on a wall at the Luxor temple in Egypt. Her father was not as it seemed the pharaoh Tuthmosis I, but Amun in the guise of Tuthmosis I. Obviously Hatshepsut was a myth as well. She didn't rule Egypt upon the death of her husband Tithmosis II, nor did she build at the Karnak temple nor at Deir el-Bahri. She couldn't, for she must have been a myth because she was born of a god, not a human. One should add though that the birth narratives were added to the gospel tradition and Mk gave no sign of knowing anything of the birth of Jesus. When dealing with traditions, it is hard to claim that one fragment must dictate the nature of the subject. If Julius Caesar was a god, wouldn't we have known about it in a more convincing manner? But they claimed he was, yet no-one would assert that Caesar was a myth, just as no-one would claim that Hatshepsut was a myth. aa5874's fundamental and often repeated argument is simply fallacious. It is an assertion that ultimately has no foundation. It merely assumes from what could be apocryphal that Jesus could not have existed. Trying to be deductive about such fuzzy things as tradition is utter nonsense. I love it. |
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06-09-2013, 10:20 PM | #14 | ||
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06-09-2013, 10:39 PM | #15 |
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For God does not seem to have availed himself of any other animal existing in creation as his model in the formation of man; but to have been guided, as I have said before, by his own reason alone. On which account, Moses affirms that this man was an image and imitation of God, being breathed into in his face in which is the place of the sensations, by which the Creator endowed the body with a soul. Then, having placed the mind in the dominant part as king, he gave him as a body of satellites, the different powers calculated to perceive colours and sounds, and flavours and odours, and other things of similar kinds, which man could never have distinguished by his own resources without the sensations. And it follows of necessity that an imitation of a perfectly beautiful model must itself be perfectly beautiful, for the word of God surpasses even that beauty which exists in the nature which is perceptible only by the external senses, not being embellished by any adventitious beauty, but being itself, if one must speak the truth, its most exquisite embellishment [On the Creation 137]
"And the man whom he had formed," Moses says, "God placed in the Paradise,"{10}{#ge 2:8.} for the present only. Who, then, is he in reference to whom he subsequently says that "The Lord God took the man whom he had formed, and placed him in the Paradise to cultivate it and to guard It."{11}{#ge 2:15.} Must not this man who was created according to the image and idea of God have been a different man from the other, so that two men must have been introduced into the Paradise together, the one a fictitious man, and the other modelled after the image of God? [Allegorical 1.53] Gen 37:15 "And a man found him wandering in the plain" ... But some say that the proper name of the man who found him wandering in the plain is not mentioned, and they themselves are in some degree mistaken here, because they are unable clearly to discover the true way of this business, for if they had not been mutilated as to the eye of the soul, they would have known that of one who is truly a man, the most proper, and appropriate, and felicitous name is this very name of man, being the most appropriate appelation of a well regulated and rational mind. [That the Worse 22] Using such a power as this with reference to the most divine thing that is in us, namely, our mind, "Isaac goes forth into the Plain;"{12}{#ge 24:63.} not for the purpose of contending with any body, since all those who might have been his antagonists, are terrified at the greatness and exceeding excellence of his nature in all things; but only washing to meet in private, and to converse in private with the fellow traveller and guide of his path and of his soul, namely God. (30) And the clearest possible proof of this is, that no one who conversed with Isaac was a mere mortal. Rebecca, that is perseverance, asks her servant, seeing but one person, and having no conception but of one only, "Who is this man who is coming to meet us?" For the soul which perseveres in what is good, is able to comprehend all self-taught wisdom, which is named Isaac, but is not yet able to see God, who is the guide of wisdom. (31) Therefore, also, the servant confirming the fact that he cannot be comprehended who is invisible, and who converses with man invisibly, says, "He is my lord," pointing to Isaac alone. [ibid 29] and it is said in the sacred scriptures, "I give thee as a God to Pharaoh," and yet what is given is the patient, not the agent; but he that is truly living must be the agent, and beyond all question cannot be the patient. (162) What then is inferred from these facts? Why, that the wise man is called the God of the foolish man, but he is not God in reality, just as a base coin of the apparent value of four drachmas is not a four drachma piece. But when he is compared with the living God, then he will be found to be a man of God; but when he is compared with a foolish man, he is accounted a God to the imagination and in appearance, but he is not so in truth and essence. [ibid 159] And every soul that is beginning to be widowed and devoid of evils, says to the prophet, "O, man of God! hast thou come to me to remind me of my iniquity and of my sin?"38 For he being inspired, and entering into the soul, and being filled with heavenly love, and being amazingly excited by the intolerable stimulus of heaveninflicted frenzy, works in the soul a recollection of its ancient iniquities and offences: not in order that it may commit such again, ùbut that, greatly lamenting and bitterly bewailing its former error, it may hate its own offspring, and reject them with aversion, and may follow the admonitions of the word of God, the interpreter and prophet of his will. (139) For the men of old used to call the prophets sometimes men of God, and sometimes seers, 39 affixing appropriate and becoming names to their enthusiasm, and inspiration, and to the foreknowledge of affairs which they enjoyed. [On the Unchangeable 135] We must therefore flee, without ever turning back, from all associations entered into for the purposes of sin; but the alliance made with the companions of wisdom and knowledge must be confirmed. (41) In reference to which I admire those who say, "We are all one man's sons, we are men of Peace,"{8}{#ge 42:11.} because of their well-adapted agreement; since how, I should say, could you, O excellent men, avoid being grieved at war, and delighted in peace, being the sons of one and the same father, and he not mortal but immortal, the man of God, who being the reason of the everlasting God, is of necessity himself also immortal? (42) For they who make out many beginnings of the origin of the soul, being devoted to the evil which is called polytheism, and turning each individual of them, to the honour of different beings, having caused great confusion and dissension both at home and abroad, from the beginning of their birth to the end of their life, filling life with irreconcilable quarrels; (43) but they who rejoice in one kind alone, and who honour one as their father, namely right reason, admiring the wellarranged and all-musical harmony of the virtues, live a tranquil and peaceful life, not an inactive and ignoble one, as some persons think, but one of great manliness, and sharpened, and vigorous against those who endeavour to break the confederacy which they have formed, and who are always studying to bring about a violation of the oaths which have been taken; for it has come to pass that the men of peace have become men of war, sitting down to attack and to oppose them who seek to overturn the firmness of the soul. [On the Confusion of Tongues 40] But whoever is raised on high to such a sublime elevation will never any more allow any of the portions of his soul to dwell below among mortal men, but will draw them all up to himself as if they were suspended by a rope; for which reason a sacred injunction of the following purport was given to the wise man, "Go thou up to the Lord, thou, and Aaron, and Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel."{85}{#ex 24:1.} (169) And the meaning of this injunction is as follows, "Go up, O soul, to the view of the living God, in an orderly manner, rationally, voluntarily, fearlessly, lovingly, in the holy and perfect numbers of seven multiplied tenfold." For Aaron is described in the law as the prophet of Moses, being loudly uttered speech prophesying to the mind. And Nadab is interpreted "voluntary," that is to say, the man who honours the Deity without compulsion; and the interpretation of the name Abihu is, "my father." This man is one who has not need of a master by reason of his folly, more than of a father by reason of his wisdom, namely such a father as God the ruler of the world. (170) And these powers are the body-guards of the mind which is worthy to bear sovereign sway, which ought also to attend upon the king, and conduct him on his way. But the soul is afraid by itself to rise up to the contemplation of the living God, if it does not know the road, from being lifted up by a union of ignorance and audacity; and the falls which are caused by such a union of ignorance and great rashness are very serious; (171) on which account Moses prays that he may have God himself as his guide to the road which leads to him. For he says, "If thou wilt not thyself go with me, then do not thou lead me Hence."{86}{exodus 33:5.} [On the Migration 168] |
06-09-2013, 11:23 PM | #16 | |||
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Then when I stumbled upon that incantation bowl with the name אישו I thought - I can work with this. I immediately recognized the Hebrew parallel and contacted my friend Benny and he's sending me the Samaritan prayers where Moses is so-called from the middle period. Now if we assume that there is this parallel, the idea that Jesus was Moses or the heavenly being that Moses became, and that he conquered Rome, it reminds me of the hymn or prayer cited by Celsus in the second century: Quote:
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But no I haven't worked out exactly how this was accomplished. More reading necessary. |
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06-09-2013, 11:27 PM | #17 |
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FWIW - no Joshua symbolism at all in Irenaeus. Neither Against Heresies or Proof of Apostolic Preaching.
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06-09-2013, 11:48 PM | #18 | ||
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A strange proof that I hadn't noticed before. The Marcionite interpretation of the visit to the synagogue (Luke 4:31 - 37). God goes in the synagogue and teaches a strange teaching and then:
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06-09-2013, 11:59 PM | #19 | ||
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A similar interpretation is given by the Marcionites here and in the Dialogue of Adamantius (De Recta in Deum Fide) about the Blind Man of Jericho narrative:
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06-10-2013, 12:04 AM | #20 | |
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Another insinuation possibly that Marcion's god wasn't named 'Jesus.' Luke 21:8. What does it mean to 'come in my name'?
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