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09-01-2013, 02:57 PM | #11 | |||
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Marcion could NOT have written or most likely did not write the Pauline Corpus. Marcion's God was NOT the God of the Jews and Marcion's Son of God was NOT Jesus of the Canon. Marcion preached ANOTHER GOD and ANOTHER Son. Ephraim the Syrian wrote Against Marcion and there is virtually NOTHING about the Pauline Corpus and gLuke. There are several Jesus cult writers that either did NOT acknowledge the Pauline Corpus or claimed Marcion did NOT use the Pauline Corpus. See Justin' writings, Hippolytus Refutation of All Heresies, and Origen' "Against Celsus". Marcion's Son of God was a Phantom and without birth. Paul's Jesus was the Son of God but made of a woman. The Pauline Corpus is incompatible with the teachings of Marcion. |
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09-01-2013, 05:54 PM | #12 | ||
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09-01-2013, 06:54 PM | #13 | |
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Anything written about that time has only survived because either it was buried in the Egyptian sand, or Christian monks made copies before the originals disintegrated. It sounds like you are trying to reproduce Remsberg's list of writers who could have mentioned Jesus but didn't. This list has been the subject of lengthy commentary in this forum, which you can find by checking the archives. There is extensive discussion of whether any of these authors could have been expected to mention Jesus or the events in the gospels. |
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09-01-2013, 07:20 PM | #14 | ||
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See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Sea_Scrolls Josephus mentioned characters that were of far less significance than Jesus, the Son of God, the Logos and God the Creator who supposedly abolished the Laws of the Jews. It is claimed that the Pauline writers were in Rome, and in other MAJOR cities of the Roman Empire telling Roman citizens that they must BOW to the name of Jesus the Lord in heaven, earth and even under the earth. By the time Josephus wrote Antiquities of the Jews and his Autobiography there should have been documented Gospels and Epistles circulating in the Roman Empire. The Pauline Corpus is completely uncorroborated and shows NO influence on non-apologetic writers who wrote of events BEFORE and AFTER c 70 CE up to c 180 CE. |
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09-02-2013, 12:46 AM | #15 | |
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There might be some category confusions in your query, when you refer to "documents". Documentary texts are things like letters and legal contracts on papyrus, dug out of the sands of Egypt, where what we have is the original. There are undoubtedly papyri from this period; but by definition these tend not to be useful. A man drawing up a house-sale is not interested in current events. Our other source is literary texts. These are primarily transmitted by copying. The earliest copy known today of most ancient literary texts is medieval or later, and for most of them only one copy survived the middle ages. These are texts like Josephus, etc. The word "contemporary" can mean various things, but is always a red flag, because ancient historians tend not to use it. It gets used by modern historians, who have far more data than they can possibly use, and have to find some axiom to cut down the sheer volume of testimony. Ancient historians have to use *everything*. This is why discussions about the origins of Christmas in the 4th century AD reference the unknown scholiast on Dionysius bar Salibi, writing in the 13th century AD. For all first century history the main sources are Tacitus, Suetonius, and Cassius Dio, supplemented by Josephus for Jewish affairs. There is quite a lot of literary work centred on Rome, of course, but it rarely mentions outside affairs. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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09-02-2013, 01:21 AM | #16 | |
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Even if 99% of ancient literature is lost the remaining 1% consists of thousands of manuscripts about Jesus of Nazareth, born of a Ghost and a Virgin, the Logos and God Creator.
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In any event, a piece of papyri which shows an actual date for a house sale in antiquity is an extremely useful significant piece of data to be used in paleography and carbon testing. Ancient Legal contracts found on papyri, especially those that are found with the date of the contracts, are literally goldmine for those involved in Paleography and C-14 testing. |
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09-02-2013, 11:22 AM | #17 | |||
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The 1% of surviving texts is, of course, skewed by what was important to the people who copied. Thus we lack quite a bit of 2-3rd century texts, because they were out of fashion in the 4th century when the roll was abandoned in favour of the modern book or codex. We have quite a bit of 1st century work because writers like Tacitus and Juvenal came back into fashion then. Equally the text that exists in most copies is the bible; because most medieval copyists were monks. The texts that are next in line are the important church writers such as Augustine or Chrysostom; and for the same reason. But beyond these broad influences, a lot of texts survived (or didn't) by sheer accident. Quote:
All the best, Roger Pearse PS: Eusebius did not have AD or BC either; but he created an "A.A." (Anno Abrahae, year from Abraham), from the earliest date he felt he could actually date, and thereby created the concept of a single system of numbering the years for all nations and periods of history. AD was invented by Dionysius Exiguus in the 6th century. |
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09-02-2013, 11:42 AM | #18 | ||
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09-02-2013, 11:51 AM | #19 | |||
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Besides, one could easily argue the other way -- the massive amount of literature created and preserved by the church is de facto "proof" that a miracle man did exist in the middle east -- what else would have caused them to write so much and preserve it for centuries? |
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09-02-2013, 05:57 PM | #20 | ||
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