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BluhdoftheLamb
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at least that's how it is handled in contemporary Luther bibles.
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at least that's how it is handled in contemporary Luther bibles.
If you want utter nonsense, look no further than a mentality that essentially boils down to:
"Tradition is right because it's tradition."
Funny how no one has said what you accused others of, either.Funny how no one has said that.
And of course, Theodosius the Great's ruthless and thorough persecution of ALL other religions (and factions within Christianity) except for his own had nothing to do with that. At all. Not even a little.Nonsensical cliché-rant over?
1: At one point, 2/3rds of the bishops were Arians, and had the sympathy of the Emperor, who did what he could to get that heresy pushed through. Unsuccessfully.
Thank God for Julian the Apostate who didn't give a fiddlestick about Christological disputes - his brief reign gave Orthodoxy the time to catch its breath and "strike back", ending up as the dominant position within the Church by the time of the ascension of Theodosius the Great.
The same applied to other Christian groups that were considered heretical, and to quite a few Non-Christian religions as well. The Isis mysteries, Mithraism - most of them faced persecution at one point or the other, yet continued to grow.2: For the first 325 years, the Church was persecuted, many times ending in martyrdom. And yet, it still continued to just grow and grow. Your "evil Christians are evil, and have always just used power to get rich" is ridiculous nonsense.
Random criteria? Not at all. They had a very clear image in mind, and sifted the extant body of texts according to this. Personal power played a VERY minor factor in this. This was about ideology, about promoting a very narrowly defined world view, about consolidating a specific set of exclusivist criteria with regards as to who was to be considered a champion of the "true" faith and who was to be condemned as a dangerous aberrant.3: The most successful "faction" shouldn't be considered correct BECAUSE it's the most successful one, but because it's the one that is in accordance with Scripture.
Yes, Scripture. If you're now going to throw back the ridiculous notion that Scripture was just decided by a bunch of old men based on random criteria to make themselves more powerful, it just shows how little you know about the actual process.
And of course, Theodosius the Great's ruthless and thorough persecution of ALL other religions (and factions within Christianity) except for his own had nothing to do with that. At all. Not even a little.
The difference between pagan Rome persecuting or prohibiting specific religions and Christian Rome persecuting and prohibiting specific religions is this: Roman paganism was pretty inclusivistic; if a specific religion was indexed, it was either because their beliefs undermined the Roman state cult and were thus perceived as a challenge to the Empire, or because their practices were perceived as somehow dangerous to the fabric of society.
With Theodosius the Great, however, persecution reached an all-new level, as Christian exclusivism all but demanded the thorough elimination of all "false" religions.
Random criteria? Not at all. They had a very clear image in mind, and sifted the extant body of texts according to this. Personal power played a VERY minor factor in this. This was about ideology, about promoting a very narrowly defined world view, about consolidating a specific set of exclusivist criteria with regards as to who was to be considered a champion of the "true" faith and who was to be condemned as a dangerous aberrant.
Well, pretty much the whole New Testament ought to hit the bin, then.The criteria were:
1: Authorship - MUST have been by an Apostle or close associate thereof
This is pretty much exactly what I was talking about the whole time. Not "evil" Christians rubbing their hands in glee as they quest for personal power, but the most successful faction establishing "truth" by popularity/success.2: General acceptance in the Church - some gnostic nonsense used only by a heretical sect in one of Rome's upper class suburbs can hardly be said to be inspired.
See above.3: Accordance with the faith of the Church - again: Gnostic nonsense doesn't need to be considered. Also known as: Consistency.
Few non-canonical texts have survived the ascent of the most successful Christian faction. Who knows what has been lost to the pyre and/or careful editing? After all, they even added a resurrection scene to the gospel of "Mark".4: Antiquity: Written during the time of the Apostles. Only the books of the current NT fits this criteria - the vast horde of gnostic nonsense doesn't.
Well, pretty much the whole New Testament ought to hit the bin, then.
Not a single gospel nor acts was written by an eyewitness, least of all by the people they were traditionally attributed to, most non-Pauline (and even some Pauline) epistles are pseudepigrpahical, and don't even get me started on the Book of Revelation.
Well, pretty much the whole New
Few non-canonical texts have survived the ascent of the most successful Christian faction. Who knows what has been lost to the pyre and/or careful editing?
After all, they even added a resurrection scene to the gospel of "Mark".
That view is out of date by at least a century. I think only the most radical of scholars hold this view,[...]
In an alternate Bizarro universe.
Few non-fundamentalist "scholars" embrace the Augustinian hypothesis these days.
And if you see this...
... and then say: "Yeah, those are totally independent eyewitness accounts", don't expect me to take you seriously ever again.
Well, pretty much the whole New Testament ought to hit the bin, then.
Not a single gospel nor acts was written by an eyewitness, least of all by the people they were traditionally attributed to, most non-Pauline (and even some Pauline) epistles are pseudepigrpahical, and don't even get me started on the Book of Revelation.
This is pretty much exactly what I was talking about the whole time. Not "evil" Christians rubbing their hands in glee as they quest for personal power, but the most successful faction establishing "truth" by popularity/success.
See above.
Few non-canonical texts have survived the ascent of the most successful Christian faction. Who knows what has been lost to the pyre and/or careful editing? After all, they even added a resurrection scene to the gospel of "Mark".
I don't think it's accurate to say that the mainstream of Biblical scholarship has reversed itself on that issue in the last century. I've done a fair amount of reading on the topic and it's seems to me that the question of authorship is really up in the air for the most part. The majority of scholars seem to reject the classical attributions of authorship for many of the books and claim that the real authors are as of yet unknown. It was normal for people to author religious texts pseudonymously and to attribute them to authoritative figures like that. People will often admit this when it comes to the texts they don't like (say the so called "Gnostic" Gospels for example) but then tend to ignore that fact when it comes to the ones they like. The problem of authorship is even noted in the writings of a lot of the Catholic ,Eastern Orthodox, and mainline Protestant theologians I've read. Some of the more conservative scholars will admit to the problem with the traditional attributions of authorship as well. Just yesterday I was reading the Harper Collins Study Bible and the Cambridge Study Bible and both of them note in the introductions to a lot of the books that they are thought to be pseudonymous.That view is out of date by at least a century.
Evidence would be required from the people claiming a specific author.And your proof?
Considering that in ancient Rome there were more Christians killed by the armies of the first Christian State because of perceived heretic beliefs than were killed in the Coliseum, I'd have to agree with the armies comment.Your claim does not jibe with the history. All of the doctrine that matters was written and complete by the first 100 years, and no armies were involved. The weeding out process that followed is done by sheer merit, and is plain to see which ideas have merit and which do not.
I don't think it's accurate to say that the mainstream of Biblical scholarship has reversed itself on that issue in the last century. I've done a fair amount of reading on the topic and it's seems to me that the question of authorship is really up in the air for the most part. The majority of scholars seem to reject the classical attributions of authorship for many of the books and claim that the real authors are as of yet unknown.
Is it though? The authorship of all four of the Canonical Gospels have been called into question in most of the books I've read on the subject at least. I don't think anyone has yet provided any sort of solid conclusive evidence attributing them to any single person. All we have in favor for the most part is the word of 2nd century Church Fathers. The best case scenario is a "maybe" at most. The Gospels appear to be composite works integrating other early sources rather than reports of a single eyewitness giving their own account too.Indeed, but no scholar I know of present an opinion as radical as the one she expressed.
Considering that in ancient Rome there were more Christians killed by the armies of the first Christian State because of perceived heretic beliefs than were killed in the Coliseum, I'd have to agree with the armies comment.
.
I don't think anyone has yet provided any sort of solid conclusive evidence attributing them to any single person.