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06-22-2013, 10:13 AM | #101 |
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And you see the understanding that Jesus began his ministry in a sabbatical year finally solves Irenaeus's perplexing statement in Book Two of Against Heresies that Jesus was 'almost fifty' when crucified. You see if we start with the forty nine year parallel between 20 and 69 CE then it is clear - as I noted - the year of Jesus's crucifixion and the destruction of the temple occurred in Jubilee years. The anchor however is the 49 years between Jesus coming down from heaven (= 6000 AM according to Marcion, Barnabas and Malalas) and the destruction. This was THE proof of Jesus's divinity for early Christians.
The difficulty for Irenaeus was that he and his ilk wanted to make the 6000 years from Jesus's birth (to stress Jesus's humanity). The solution? Transform the 49 years from the coming down from heaven to 69 CE now to birth - crucifixion. In other words, he couldn't simply abandon the significance of numerology. Jesus was still associated with a '49th year' only now it was birth to crucifixion. |
06-22-2013, 11:39 PM | #102 |
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One of the obvious difficulties with the year 6000 concept is that it does not fall on a 49th year as far as I can see. All Samaritan documents agree that there are 2794 years exactly from Creation to Entry. Year 1 of Entry is Year 2795 of Creation, since Creation was in the first Year of Creation, starting on 1/1/1. In fact 1 + 49 x 57 = 2794.
I can't find a way of making 6000 fall on a 49th year. If we start from entry and add another 57 49th years (i.e. 2794 + 2793 = 5587). That's 114 49th years. If we add 8 more 49 years (a total now of 122) we arrive at the last 49th year before the year 6000 (= 5979 AM). In three more sabbatical years (= 21 years) the year 6000 arrives which by its very nature would mean that the traditional date of Jesus' birth (1 CE) would have been a Jubilee and the earlier year the last forty ninth year before 6000 AM. Of course the earliest Christian heretics - as Adamantius notes - did not venerate a 'birth day' for Jesus. He floated down from heaven, likely on 21 CE. So what was the original significance to the world reaching the 6000 year milestone? The dawn of a new age I imagine. The Book of Jubilees has the giving of the law on Sinai occurred nine years into the fiftieth jubilee period. Adding forty years for the period of the wilderness wanderings, the book of Jubilees implies that the entry into Canaan occurred in a jubilee year, a date explicitly claimed by the calculation of 4Q379. |
06-23-2013, 12:29 AM | #103 | |||
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Believe it or not I think I found an important clue in Malalas. Here is the section on Jesus:
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06-23-2013, 10:01 AM | #104 |
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Another important note. When I wrote that all the Samaritan manuscripts had 2794 years for the entry into Canaan I forgot to mention that the oldest text the Asatir actually reads 2796 which is very significant because it creates two different sabbatical year cycles. As the Samaritan calculate their calendar's from the Era of Entry (owing to it embodying the core Samaritan theological concept of the Ruuta = period of divine favor commencing with the appearance of Moses).
The Samaritan's calculate their chronologies from the Era of Entry not the Era of Creation. So if you add back in the 215 year shortening of the sojourn in Egypt (caused by a variant reading in the Samaritan text) the difference between Era of Creation and the Era of Entry has an effect. For the year 6000 = 2796 + 215 = 3011 + (49 x 61 =) 2989 = 6000 AM |
06-23-2013, 10:25 AM | #105 |
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Of course even the chronology of the Asatir doesn't make 21 CE or any date near 21 CE 6000 AM. The point is that sabbatical years could have been calculated according to Entry rather than Creation.
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06-23-2013, 10:32 AM | #106 |
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It also worth noting that 'Clement' of Alexandria is understood to have written a chronography of some sort:
Incipit namque historian chronica quod etiam pari modo explanauerunt Clemens uel Theophilus et Timotheus dilectissimi Dei episcopi chronographi, et dilectus autem Dei chronographus Eusebiusg Pamphiliensis. 'Theophilus' is probably Theophilus of Antioch. 'Timothy' is otherwise unknown. |
06-23-2013, 10:48 AM | #107 |
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According to a letter of the Syriac writer Severus Sebokt (d. 666/7) to the Cypriot priest Basilius, Bardaisan held that the present world would last for 6000 years; this information was later quoted by George the Arab.
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06-23-2013, 10:50 AM | #108 |
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Aphrahat does not indicate whether the adjustment of time in scripture has any implications for escha- tology. He adopts from "our great sages" a 6,000-year periodiza- tion of world history followed by a 'sabbath'- and makes no effort his own time within that scheme. The idea of 6000 + a 'sabbath' (7 x 7) would follow it seems 21 CE as 6000 plus 49 years. http://books.google.com/books?id=QAW...ear%22&f=false
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06-23-2013, 12:51 PM | #109 | |
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Here is the passage in question from Aphraates Demonstrations
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06-23-2013, 01:02 PM | #110 |
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It is especially interesting to see the manner in which Aphraates interprets Hebrews chapter 4 as referring to the forty-nine year period between Jesus's appearance and the destruction of the temple. This would strongly suggest that Hebrews was composed between before 69 CE. It would be interesting to see how other Fathers interpreted this section of text. It might be useful to trace the concept of 'Sabbath' in the early Church Fathers. Aphraates - like Malalas - only says he is perpetuating the teachings of wise masters before him.
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