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06-02-2013, 09:40 AM | #11 | ||||
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06-02-2013, 05:33 PM | #12 |
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The silence regarding Paul's activities is quite explainable in the context.
First consider the Mithraic cultus. The first person to talk about it was the Roman poet, Statius at the end of the first century and that was because it hit the city and had an impact there. This doesn't mean that every new religion that hit the city need be registered by a Roman writer, but that no writings of the Mithras religion are to be seen anywhere and that out only word comes by chance comment in an extraneous work. Yet the Mithras religion had existed in Rome for some time prior to Statius for it to come to his attention yet not feel he needs to explain it. The Pauline religion according to his letters initially found its home among the poor and illiterate in Anatolia. We have later glimpses in Lucian of Samosata's Passing of Peregrinus that the christians he knew were just as lowly and Julian even later stresses the fact in his Against the Galilaeans. We can only work from written reports that survive from antiquity, but there is no reason to believe that any written reports had to be written by those communities Paul indicates he founded. Just like the Mithraic cult that never left any literature, we cannot expect the illiterates of Paul's proselytism to have left any literature. Some may have been able to read, but you need a culture of writing to find production of literature. I cannot say that those communities did survive, or even if they existed in the first place, but the little evidence we have allows for a quiet evolution of the Jesus cultus, just as we have with the Mithraic religion before Statius deigned to refer to them, but unlike the Mithras religion the christians didn't leave us with cultic installation because that was not required by the religion. (Worship was done anywhere people could meet.) |
06-02-2013, 07:22 PM | #13 | |
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The evidence for Mithraism cannot be the evidence for the Pauline writings and teachings Only Acts of the Apostles mentioned the activities of Paul in the Canon and if Acts is not historically reliable then you have no way of corroborating any thing you said. You are obligated to show the source of antiquity that support your inventions. There is none. The very writers of the Jesus cult did not know when Paul really lived, when he really died and what he really wrote. In antiquity, there was a tradition that Paul was alive after gLuke was composed which may mean Paul lived in the 2nd century or later. |
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06-02-2013, 07:38 PM | #14 | ||
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06-02-2013, 07:40 PM | #15 |
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Yes, aa,
Maybe someone noticed that Paul was still alive at the end of Acts and that Acts said it was written after Luke. That makes Paul still alive after 63 CE or a few years thereafter. Nothing about Paul in Acts happens after about 64 CE. Paul did not likely live into the 2nd century, particularly since there is an early tradition that he was martyred soon after the conclusion of Acts. So much for reasoning. Has someone heard specifically about the tradition that Paul was still alive after Luke was written? Oh, spin, I won't answer if aa replies. Sorry for my intrusion on your private war. |
06-03-2013, 12:37 AM | #16 |
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06-03-2013, 08:43 AM | #17 | |||
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The same author of Acts of the Apostle writes about the Ascension of Jesus as if he was writing history when it is known fiction. The very same author of Acts wrote about the day of Pentecost when the Holy Ghost came down from heaven as if he was writing history when he was writing known fiction. Acts of the Apostles cannot be used as a credible historical source when its contents are known to be fiction. Essentially, Acts of the Apostles, is worthless historically except that is documented Canonised fiction. On what date did Jesus Ascend? See Acts 1 On what date did the Holy Ghost come down from heaven? See Acts 2 On what date did "scales" fall from the eyes of Saul/Paul after he was blinded? See Acts 9 There is an abundance of evidence that clearly shows that the supposed Bishops of the Church is largely based on fiction. There were no established Bishops or even persons called Bishops of the Jesus cult. There were Presidents of the Jesus cult based on Justin Martyr and Lucian of Samosata. Justin's First Apology Quote:
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06-07-2013, 10:57 PM | #18 | |
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Thomas Brodie, mythicist priest: Beyond the Quest for the Historical Jesus—Book review (Pt. 2)
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εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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06-08-2013, 12:08 AM | #19 | ||||
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It is found in writings attributed to Eusebius that ALL fourteen Epistles of Paul are undisputed except Hebrews. Church History 3 Quote:
Justin, Aristides, Municius Felix, and Arnobius showed that the Jesus cult was developed WITHOUT Paul and the Pauline Corpus. Justin Martyr even claimed that it was the Memoirs of the Apostles and the books of the Prophets that were read in the Churches. See "First Apology" Quote:
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06-08-2013, 12:37 AM | #20 | |
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Whether Acts is a reflection of true events is a separate issue to the dating of the NT codices. |
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