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06-14-2013, 01:48 AM | #121 | |||||||
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Here is the more complete response.
I can see your position and it is reliant upon conditional logic. Quote:
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The expected ridicule would be summarised as [Ha ha - look at this silly Christian story book. The cross walks and talks!] Quote:
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Arius has been ridiculed and demonised as a master heretic by all Christians following Nicaea. There are ample references in Constantine's letter of 333 CE that Arius ridiculed the church. He is supposed to have pained and wounded and grieved the church by his books which were antichristian. Quote:
My position is that, using your terminology above, the nation itself, not the church was divided, the people were arguing about having to join a new centralised monotheistic state church. (This would be the "orthodox" faction versus the pagans.) As a result, non-Christian unbelievers ridiculed the newly appeared orthodox holy writ (i.e.the bible) in their theaters. [Ha ha - look at those silly Christians!!!!] As evidence, my claim is that the gnostic acts and gospels are samples of this literary ridicule, which was most likely read or performed in the theatres of the pagans. Eusebius's description of the appearance of the Acts of Pilate is generally taken to be related to the rule of Diocletian, but my claim is that this description fits in perfectly 325 CE with Arian controversy over books. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-14-2013, 04:44 AM | #122 |
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Strangely enough it ostensibly didn't bother the regime or the non-Arians to be sitting together at Nicaea or for some rulers to be Arians. Or for Arian ideas to survive among the Visigoths.
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06-15-2013, 01:40 PM | #123 | |
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I am more inclined to think that the books of the NT as we know them were around since the later half of the 2nd century (the time of Irenaeus, who clearly accepts all of them, and only them, as authoritative). The fly in that ointment, though, is the fact that almost every single manuscript of the NT seems to have, or be derived from, four uniformly ordered and named sets of books (4 Gospels; Pauline Letters; Acts & the General epistles; and then the Revelation of Jesus to his Servant John). David Trobisch makes a good case that this phenomenon being due to being due to the publication of these sets of books by an authoritative body (perhaps, he says, by Polycarp of Smyrna in Asia Minor). Irenaeus bishop of Lugdunum (now part of France) came from Asia Minor and claimed to have once been a student of Polycarp. He believes that there are little clues in some of these books that spell out Polycarp's name or those of his associates, etc. But nothing really prevents dating them to the 4th century, if one can explain away the paleographic evidence, which compares these manuscripts against the fonts and scribal techniques found in secular documents, that show that some mss may have been copied as far back as the early 2nd century. It would also require explaining away the other early Christian literature that quote NT books, from the epistles of Barnabas and that to Mathetes, Justin's Dialogue with a Jew, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen, as compositions of the 4th century or later projected back into the 2nd through fourth centuries. But I would expect anachronisms in these texts pointing to the 4th century or later, and I am not aware of any that seem especially strong to me. There is evidence that the surviving mss of Josephus had been tampered with because of two places that describe the governorships of Pilate and his immediate predecessor. Josephus gives the specific number of years of their governorships, where everywhere else the coming and going of governors are dated to years of the emperor's reign. Eusebius, when he uses Josephus to disprove the 21 CE date of Jesus' death in the Acts of Pilate published by Maximinus II Daia (the Junior Augustus ruling the SE corner of the empire), some time between 310 (when the retired Augustus Maxentius seized control of Italy and N Africa from the control of Constantine) & 312 CE (when Constantine regains control), cryptically says "if the testimony of Josephus is to be believed" regarding the start of Pilate's governorship, which suggests the 12th year of Tiberius (26 CE). This is open acknowledgment that some folks did not think the text of Josephus regarding the start of Pilate's governorship was correct. I think what happened was the Acts of Pilate published by Maximinus Daia were genuine, possibly retrieved from evidence used to determine whether Pilate overstepped his bounds as governor when he was recalled by Tiberius in 36 CE. These Acta were sort of a personal diary of official acts performed by Roman officials, and not sent to Rome as regular reports as many say. As Tiberius was dead by the time Pilate got there in early 37 CE, chances are he had to answer before his successor Gaius (Caligula). Pilate was banished (allowed to retire) to Vienna in Gaul, so there must have been some findings by the officers in charge of the inquiry, but not enough to deserve a stricter punishment, such as confiscation of his properties or suicide. As evidence for an imperial inquest, a copy of Pilate's Acta may have been in one of several Roman archive, or the emperor's own Acta may have recorded this incident related from Pilate's Acta. When Maximinus Daia entered in an alliance with Maxentius in 311, these records might have become available to him. DCH |
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06-16-2013, 07:23 AM | #124 |
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For all the discussion about the alleged conflict with the Arian "heresy," it is interesting how little is mentioned about the fact that they were not considered heretics when the so-called bishops of all stripes were invited to the alleged Nicaea Council was called in 325. The the emperors who sided with the Arians were not routinely called heretics, and we don't see routine condemnation of the entire Visigoth regime that allegedly belong to this horrible "heretical" sect of Arianism.
And for all the power in the hands of the regime religion it is interesting that there were always decrees and councils against heresies that never seemed to get wiped out, IF such sects even actually existed. |
06-18-2013, 06:47 AM | #125 | ||
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06-18-2013, 07:00 AM | #126 | |
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The fragments of the history of Philip of Side strongly suggest that there were very many philosophers ALSO at this council, and that Arius was not on the side of the bishops, but on the side of the philosophers. When wearing Christian glasses, these philosophers appear to be Christians. When the Christian glasses are removed, these philosophers do not have to be Christian philosophers at all. BTW my website has now been cleared with google after being subject to hacking. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-18-2013, 07:32 AM | #127 | ||
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Hi, MM. This must have implications for the religious identity of some emperors in addition to the fact that the Council accommodated the "heretics" before they were labeled as "heretics." No explanation of that among the apologists I imagine.
Then there is the matter of the Visigoths, or at least the Visigoth ruling elite, and whether "Arian" meant what people think it means, as opposed to a Greek monotheistic philosophy. But unless I am mistaken, even the Visigoths did not leave over any texts, philosophical or "Christian." Quote:
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06-18-2013, 08:19 AM | #128 |
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The Fragment is very interesting however it is also very confusing. It is really hard to follow the narrative.
Here's a brief reference to him: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_of_Side |
06-19-2013, 08:47 AM | #129 |
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In any case, on the other thread dealing with Arius Toto posted the following:
There is in fact no evidence that Arius was anything other than a Christian. Further discussion will waste time and resources at best, and at worst lead to the sort of bickering and insults that dragged the old forum down. But this logic can be applied to virtually every subject that is debated on the Forum simply because there is no empirical corroborative evidence, and claims must be based on circumstantial evidence, inference and reliance on the claims of ancient biased Christian writers. What else is there? It cannot be empirically proven or disproven that Arius was a Christian, and the same goes for a host of issues, not the least of which are Marcion or Justin. Therefore, it would seem to me that it is valuable to pursue these matters using whatever arguments from evidence, inference, context, content, etc. since there is really no other way of making an argument. |
06-19-2013, 09:42 AM | #130 | |
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With the other issues you mention, there are open questions of interpretation of the evidence, and there is the possibility of a productive discussion. |
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