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10-02-2013, 03:33 PM | #231 | |||
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10-02-2013, 03:39 PM | #232 |
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Yeah on a 70s detective show this one coin would be the proof that broke down the resolve of the murderer. "I did it! I did it! I confess." If only life was a 70s TV show
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10-02-2013, 04:31 PM | #233 | |||
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10-02-2013, 04:43 PM | #234 |
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But did this Christian hermit excavate the fortifications and plant evidence?
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10-02-2013, 06:15 PM | #235 | |||||||||
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10-02-2013, 06:48 PM | #236 |
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Hermits have been known to excavate caves. Christian hermits have been known to carry manuscript evidence. Over sixteen hundred centuries had passed the excavation site by before the 20th century arrived. Who really knows how this fragment got there? Hopkins openly states it was a mystery. History must deal with uncertainties, and these may be expressed as probabilities.
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10-02-2013, 06:53 PM | #237 |
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Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
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10-02-2013, 06:57 PM | #238 | |||
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10-02-2013, 07:01 PM | #239 | |
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I am tired of dealing with the freak show crowd. Is this all you can do? Just cut a sentence out of context?
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1 . The sources for the history of the mid third century A.D. are listed in the bibliographies of CAH, XII, chs. IV and VI (A. Christensen, N. Ensslin and A. Alföldi). They are discussed in brief in the Appendix: Sources, pp. 710-720 by N. H. Baynes (literary sources) and A. Alföldi (coins). A good bibliography of the modern works which deal with this period in general will be found in the bibliographies to the chapters of CAH quoted above, cf. A. Alföldi, Berytus, IV, 1937, P. 54, n. 23. The evidence regarding the Orient in the mid third century which concerns us here has been subjected to careful analysis by several modern historians, the last contributions being the two substantial articles of A. Alföldi: "Die Hauptereignisse der Jahre 253-261 n. Chr. im Orient im Spiegel der Münzprägung," Berytus, IV, 1937, pp. 41 ff. and "Die römische Münzprägung und die historischen Ereignisse im Osten zwischen 260 und 270 n. Chr.," ibid. V, 1938, pp. 47 ff. (cf. his, Christensen's and Ensslin's chapters in CAH, XII cited above). A new reconstruction of the history of the Orient in mid third century based on the Oracula Sibyllina, XIII and the Res Gestae. of Shapuhr will be found in A. T. Olmstead's substantial paper, "The mid-third Century of the Christian Era," Classical Philology, XXXVII, 1942, pp. 241 ff. and 398 ff. |
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10-02-2013, 07:02 PM | #240 |
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What does any of this have to do with the question of whether Christianity was already in existence in the third century?
Nothing Dura Europos disproves Pete ten year spam quest. |
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