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05-16-2013, 03:14 PM | #31 | |||
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However the key characteristic relating the two works IMO is the invention of fake sources which purposefully disagree and argue with the earlier fake sources. The following from livius.org on the "HA": Quote:
Eusebius and those who in the following centuries preserved his work asserted in sources such as Irenaeus that these books were authored in the 2nd century, and not in the 4th century when the orthodoxy hit the fan. They invented pre-Nicaean heretics and retrojected the controversies over the so-called heretical gnostic gospels and acts into their pseudo-history. The Historia Augusta is more of a novel and a fiction than a history and facts and it can be therefore classified as a pseudo-historical account. My argument is that the Church History is precisely of the same genre. Extracted from livius.org on the "HA": The senatorial audience preferred novels and fictions, not history and factsWhen the Historia Augusta is dated is a question not without its controversies, but one of the options being discussed is that it may have been written during the rule of Constantine, since it is dedicated in part to Constantine. Therefore it cannot be out of the question that the Church History and the "Historia Augusta" were both produced in the same imperially sponsored scriptorium, for the edification of the senatorial audience of the 4th century. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-16-2013, 03:23 PM | #32 | |
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Someone bent our received history after Nicaea. There is a massive hole in evidence for the period 325-353 CE and when the political history of the Roman Empire resumes with Ammianus we have attestations to imperial Christian state inquisitions of the pagans in which "numbers without end" were tortured and executed on account of their "religious fraud". εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-16-2013, 03:35 PM | #33 | |
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Detail of the 11th century copy of Annals, the gap between the 'i' and 's' is highlighted in the word 'Christianos'. There is also the matter of the Pliny Trajan letter exchange mentioning "Christians" which was suddenly "found" in a tenth book of Pliny and published by Giovanni Giocondo, but was just as mysteriously and suddenly "lost". εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-16-2013, 04:01 PM | #34 | |||
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It doesn't make any sense that Eusebius or the 4th and 5th century church would forge writings by one whom they accounted as being an early Saint and Martyr, that would contain material that directly countered the most important claims made by 3rd, 4th, and 5th century church authorities. It might be explicable if Justin and his writings were being heavily trounced by Eusebius and Co. and continuators, as with their many other paper 'heretics' of dubious historicity. But Justin is held up as a Saint and Martyr, yet Eusebius and latter church writers, with few exceptions, just skirt around any mention or discussion of these 'heretical' points of Justin's writings that are so damaging to the claims of he Orthodox church, and then his works quietly 'disappear' for a thousand years. And recovered, even to this day stand as a witness against the fundamental claims of the 'Holy Roman Catholic Church', and 'Pauline' Christianity. |
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05-16-2013, 04:09 PM | #35 | ||
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05-16-2013, 04:18 PM | #36 |
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The 'editor' likely thought he was fixing a mistake. 'Adjusting' one single letter to conform with the most common spelling is on a far different level than composing and inserting entire paragraphs into an ancient text.
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05-16-2013, 04:31 PM | #37 | |
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05-16-2013, 04:58 PM | #38 | |
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His job was to act as Constantine's codex supplier, and to tender a thesis in ancient history for the Greek reading senatorial class explaining and making legitimate the new and strange codex religion for the pagan empire. This so-called history featured fake dates, faked sources and other faked sources to disagree with them, and abounded in fake documents, such as Justin's Apology to the Emperor, and the Emperor's Rescript to Justin, the Letter of Aristeas, the Letter of Jesus Christ... In the year 381 CE Theodosius established orthodoxy by imposing as law on the empire the Nicaean Trinity but our earliest sources for Nicaea, from the 5th century, one hundred years afterwards, do not mention any trinity. What happened at Nicaea - the second most important event in the history of Christian origins - has disappeared from the record. Eusebius could not have known where Constantine's Chrestian or Christian monotheistic state tidal wave was taking the pagan empire. He was in the back office pumping out the codices and forging documents. The life-raft mentality which followed the wave at some point put Eusebius's Church History on the list of books to be buried and made apocrypha. IMO JUSTIN MARTYR: (c. 100-165): Saint, Martyr, a foremost Christian Apologist was a small cog in a large forgery mill. εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia |
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05-16-2013, 07:44 PM | #39 | |
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Incredibly, as far as I could tell, no one so far has been interested in discussing the implications of these important points made by MM.
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05-16-2013, 08:20 PM | #40 |
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With all due respect to mountainman and his opinion, and I count him as a friend, it must be recognized that his opinion is a very unconventional 'outlier' position among Biblical and historical scholarship.
Without getting into the arguments pro and con of his views, one must weigh the likelihood that thousands of other scholars have been in error in these matters. It's up to the individual if they are convinced enough by his arguments to want to climb aboard his cart. For the present I am content to just walk along and observe what holes it might fall into and in what direction it is headed. Always interested in whatever interesting and supported information he has to offer, but not committed to his theory. |
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