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05-16-2013, 09:08 PM | #41 | |
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I don't think that the forum is limited by anything that is politically correct, comfortable or conventional. That would make it far too stuffy.
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05-16-2013, 09:37 PM | #42 | |||||
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It still doesn't show that Eusebius forged a completely imaginative work that invented a religion that did not exist before Constantine. The conventional, secular view of Eusebius is that he was something of a spin doctor, that he either forged documents or enhanced them, or uncritically used forged material. That's pretty much normal for history - but it still doesn't give a motive for inventing a completely new religion - and not doing a better job of that invention. Remember - you are not just arguing that Eusebius invented stuff, which is not controversial. You are arguing that there was a massive effort at forgery to create an entirely new religion with a fake history. Quote:
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05-17-2013, 09:42 PM | #43 | |||||
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It's not just the "TF" but a mass of forgeries that appear in and around the epoch of Nicaea. Why there are so many PSEUDO-<Insert a name here> writings dated to the early 4th century? Quote:
I don't know. Pious forgeries litter the centuries of the advance of the Christians out of the Nicaean Council and Constantine's Twenty-Year Long Service Party. So avi brings up a good point in highlighting the pitiful state of the manuscript tradition for Justin. The ms tradition for the Pliny letters used to cite attestation to Chrestians or Christians has similar problems. Roger Pearse has done some really good work documenting the ms traditions for various ancient mss and placing these in the public domain. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-17-2013, 09:52 PM | #44 | |
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I am not sure I understand your question. My claim is that modus operandi of using fake sources, forged documents and other fake sources arguing with the earlier fake sources (which is a novelty!) is common to both the Historia Augusta and the Historia Ecclesiastica. Someone appears to have been flooding the 4th century high technology Greek and Latin codex market with entertaining pseudo-history. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-17-2013, 10:00 PM | #45 | ||
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IN EUSEBIUS WE TRUST. Take Big E out of the picture and we are left with Vaticanus, Alexandrianus, Sinaticus, Bezae, ..... Get the drift. No one dares to take Eusebius out. The implications are not pretty. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-17-2013, 10:20 PM | #46 | ||||
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My response to this is that there were not asking the right questions. The "right" questions have been subject until recent times by state and national blasphemy laws. All centralised monotheistic state religions and their holy writs are the works of regimes who had the supreme military control of their empire. Quote:
Thanks for the equanimous attitude Shesh. We are all interested in walking down the road of learning all about Christian Origins, to some extent. My presence on the road is provisional - it's always been provisional. If someone can find unambiguous evidence that satisfies the hypothesis that the nation of Christians (not Chrestians) existed before the 4th century, then I shall turn the team around and take the cart back to the barn. Quote:
And such is the basis of objective discussion. Best wishes Shesh. Pete εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-17-2013, 11:24 PM | #47 | ||
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Using your own terminology above - there was a riotous diversity of pagans (none of which had read the bible) at Nicaea when the Constantine Bible was wheeled in on a cart. The pagans were shocked with the holy writ. The result was their manufacture of a riotous diversity of "Gospels and Acts and Revelations and Letters". These pagan people who did not want to join the new orthodoxy. These people the orthodox labelled as heretics. These heretics were converted by the sword over the period 325-381 CE. They had already decided they were running with a centralised monotheistic state. They needed to conform the people to the holy writ. And they did. When the orthodox victors wrote their history, they asserted that the conflict between the books of Constantine and the books of the Gnostic Gospels and Acts etc, had occurred prior to Nicaea, and that many of these "gnostic gospels and acts" were known to the "Early Christians". This I find to be a false assertion by the victorious heresiologists. I think that the pagans just reacted to the Constantine Bible by publishing the Gnostic Gospels and Acts. Action reaction, not over 3 centuries, but over a few years, say 325-336 CE. The investigation of the non canonical gospels and acts suggests that it is not too far fetched to explore the hypothesis that all of this material, and this includes many of the Old Testament Apocrypha, appeared as a literary response to the political appearance of the Constantine Bible as the holy writ of the (riotous diverse) pagans. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-18-2013, 07:16 PM | #48 | ||
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Another very interesting point made by MM despite it being out of sync with conventional wisdom....
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05-20-2013, 04:31 PM | #49 |
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MM, if you are around to pursue this subject why not continue if you have time? It's very interesting. And for my adversaries - no, I haven't had a chance to look into the fragments yet.
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05-20-2013, 07:36 PM | #50 | ||
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Roman senators who wished to support the Lord God Caesar Constantine would support his important publications of propaganda. They would jump on the Emperor's bandwagon. And the more committed Constantine was to his own agenda, the faster (and the higher) the senators would jump. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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