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07-29-2013, 01:42 PM | #1 | |
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Van Manen
This sounds quite good!
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07-29-2013, 02:45 PM | #2 |
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He makes to many false assumptions to be taken with any amount of seriousness.
One can simply imply that the original movement with the apostles died when Jesus died. The movement that exist today started right after his death throughout the Diaspora as people took the legends home with them when that Passover that Jesus died was over. We also do not know The Petrinists, as he states, were not just Proselytes and Gentiles in Jerusalem who held on to a tighter hold of Jewish law, that Paul argued with. James, Peter and similar are all typical names for the time period. |
07-29-2013, 02:52 PM | #3 |
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07-29-2013, 03:56 PM | #4 | |
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It states it for me under that tricky little word called conclusion Regarding Van Manen’s outline of the oldest church history we must conclude that most scholars do not accept anymore the arguments he used in the books and the articles he wrote after his ‘conversion’.[111] The succession of Petrinism, Paulinism, Judaism and Catholicism cannot be upheld. On the contrary, we think we know now that at the very beginning of Christianity a surprising diversity could be found in the Christian communities.[112] These different movements, whatever they may be called, existed next to one another, not necessarily after one another. The way Van Manen described the history of oldest Christianity made the conclusion inevitable that the ‘Pauline’ epistles were inauthentic. This outline of the history of the early church and consequently the inauthenticity of the Pauline epistles are the identifying marks of the Dutch Radicals. |
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07-29-2013, 04:11 PM | #5 |
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So the winds of scholarly opinion have shifted on this issue. Does this invalidate all of van Manem's work, so that no one has to take him seriously? Did you miss the many positive references in the article?
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07-29-2013, 05:48 PM | #6 | |
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First these are not winds as you so call them. Is this your personal bias for Price showing again?
His methodology was shown to be faulty with more current research on the topic at hand. Quote:
Good lord, you could follow Herman Detering and Price if you wanted a modern version of radical Pauline scholarships. |
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07-29-2013, 06:29 PM | #7 | |||
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07-30-2013, 09:02 AM | #8 | |
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I think starting from a position that none of it is authentic has fascinating implications, for example the beliefs about gnosticism being later than xianity... |
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07-31-2013, 03:25 PM | #9 |
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I find this interesting. Some year ago, I download the ante-Nicene fathers and extensively searched them for teachings on predestination, determinism, and free will stemming mainly from Romans. There was nothing, as if Paul never existed. Not until Augustine did all of that seem to become problematic dogmas based on Paul. It may well be that Paul's Romans as we know it did not exist in the form we know it today during the first two centuries. If it did, its a problem that needs explaining, why did no early theologians seem to know Romans 8 - 11? Why did the doctrine of predestination seem to not interest anybody?
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07-31-2013, 03:54 PM | #10 | |||
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There are no records or commentary from the first century that supports your assertion/s. I think these points are pertinent - Quote:
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