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06-05-2013, 08:22 PM | #31 | |||
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All this is more than interesting. Please allow me to point out the obvious. Constantine is actually quoting Arius in part of the blue highlit text. The full quote runs like this. I have taken the liberty of splitting it into bits... He [ARIUS of Alexandria] says:The first bit “Away! I do not wish God to appear to be subject to suffering of outrages ..." seems to me to be an indirect reference to the Canonical Story of the Jesus/God figure. In the canon (i.e. in the Bible widely published and supported by Bullneck) the Jesus/God figure gets a raw deal in the crucifixion. Arius does not like this story. He does not wish his concept of God to be the subject of suffering and outrages. What next? Well, it seems to me anyway, that because of this wish of Arius, Arius as a result ... on this account I suggest and fabricate wondrous things indeed in respect to faith". Here we have more or less a direct statement that Arius wrote (suggested and fabricated) other very wonderous things about having faith in the divine concept of a god. This suggests that Arius wrote "other stories" at that time, stories that displeased Constantine and his very authoritarian following orthodoxy. The interesting thing for me in this, so far, is that we have the reasons that Arius felt compelled to write against the canonical story of suffering and outrage against the concept of (Bullneck's) god. It provides evidence that Arius THEREFORE wrote and fabricated wonderous things in respect of his (Arius's) conception of what god and faith meant at that time in history. Arius grieved and pained and wounded Constantine and his newly created church by these writings. It's quite simple. Arius wrote some books in response to the Bullneck Bible. These books may have been read in Alexandrian theatres. "the sacred matters of inspired teaching This leads us to the contention that Arius was NOT a "believer". My idea is that Arius was not a Christian theologian at all. My idea is that Arius was a Platonic theologian at the wrong place at the wrong time. An essay on this εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-05-2013, 10:00 PM | #32 | |
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06-05-2013, 10:24 PM | #33 | |||||
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06-05-2013, 11:51 PM | #34 | ||
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FFS the argument is in the essay you snipped. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-05-2013, 11:52 PM | #35 | |||
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Does anyone else have this problem with the essay page? εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-06-2013, 12:07 AM | #36 | |
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06-06-2013, 12:39 AM | #37 |
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The wayback machine has a copy:
Archived 4 9 2013 Your argument with regard to Arius is that Constantine completely rewrote the history, etc. I think the rest of it has been discussed here or in another thread. ETA - the most recent discussion was on this thread. You were not persuasive there. The idea that Arius did not even claim to be a Christian, but was rewritten in history by Constantine and his henchmen to be an unorthodox Christian, has no support anywhere. It makes no sense. |
06-06-2013, 02:13 AM | #38 | |||
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My website has been hacked and infected with malware.
Please do not visit it. I have alerted the operational support. Thanks for the link Toto. Quote:
The key term is identity fraud. The argument presented has an abstract which reads as follows: Quote:
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•(1) The Two Ammonii - Ammonius Saccas the Platonist and Ammonius the Christian •(2) The Two Origen's - Origen the Platonist and Origen the Christian. •(3) The Two Anatolii - Anatolius of Alexandria the Platonist and Anatolius the Christian Bishop What makes perfect sense to me is that Eusebius borrowed a few names from the high profile lineage of the Platonist philosophers and theologians (and mathematicians) to become part of his lineage of Christian bishops, for whom we have no evidence in the archaeology or anywhere outside of Eusebius's thesis in history about the "Early church". Do you think these name duplications are a coincidence? I don't. I am naturally very suspicious about Eusebius. He used fraud in the service of religion more than once. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-06-2013, 05:25 AM | #39 |
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06-06-2013, 05:38 AM | #40 | |||||
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Of whom is Constantine speaking when at 27 (before his "away with you") he says σὲ τὴν κατὰ τὸν τόπον κινεῖσθαι, δέσποτα, κίνησιν οἴεται? Who is the referent of the σὲ in Constantines's address σὲ τῆς ἀφωρισμένης καθέδρας κύκλῳ περιγράφειν τολμᾷ? Jeffrey |
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