Thanks, Narkissos!
Till next time, take care,
rick
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rick_here
JoinedPosts by rick_here
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2
Need online link for "The Testament of Moses" (or Assumption of Moses)
by rick_here inkirby's "early christian writings" (link) no longer works, at least in my browser (firefox).
i can't find anything online (via goooogle).
thanx in advance, .
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rick_here
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2
Need online link for "The Testament of Moses" (or Assumption of Moses)
by rick_here inkirby's "early christian writings" (link) no longer works, at least in my browser (firefox).
i can't find anything online (via goooogle).
thanx in advance, .
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rick_here
Kirby's "early christian writings" (link) no longer works, at least in my browser (Firefox).
I can't find anything online (via Goooogle).
Thanx in advance,
rick
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The effects of exiting a cult
by Sirona ini consider jehovahs witnesses to be a cult, or at least a high control group (cult-like).. i recognise within myself some side effects of having been a jw.
here is an interesting article dealing with cults (it does list some extreme cult tactics).
i'm going to quote just part of the article regarding the effects on someone who has left a cult.
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rick_here
Greetings everyone,
I'm Rick and have been "around" JWDF for just about a year. However, due to a crashing of a hard drive, a new ISP, and username (my nic); I now appear as a "newbie."
I was originally referred to JWDF by an ex-JW I met at Beliefnet. com (where I have approximately 12,500 posts). This person and I "met" on a thread that was discussing "apocalyptic literature" (such as the book of Revelation). He knew that this "topic" was often posted about here, so I came.
Thank you, Sirona, for the article and for being so "open" about your struggles... I can relate.
I have never been a Jehovah's Witness. I, too, have a background by way of my upbringing, in a "cult-like" group. To wit, I was raised in a family of hyper-dispensationalist (and exceedingly strict/separatist) Pentecostals. I had a teenage rebellion phase, but returned to my childhood faith (or religion), at age 19. Two years later, I had joined the Assemblies of God church (leaving the "separatist" church of my upbringing behind) and was enrolled at the A/G's main Bible College in their headquarter city of Springfield, Missouri.
During around my junior year, I had a crisis of faith. I had taken courses in hermeneuitcs & exegesis ("how to interpret the Bible") and found, in my devotional readings, that the A/G were teaching false doctrines. Namely, both premillennialism (which is shared by JW's) and the "pre-tribulational rapture of the church." The Tim LaHaye "Left Behind" book series are the current out-cropping of this strange and non-biblical teaching.
I left the college 11 hours short of a Bachelor's degree due to this. I reasoned (as a young person), "If they are wrong about these things, what else are they wrong about?" In fact, I wound up leaving any kind of faith in Jesus Christ behind (outside of his being an important religious figure)... and eventually became an atheist, in 1999.
1999, however, proved to be something "else" to me. After around 6 months of being an atheist (it's all myths & bullshit) -- I had a "revelation of Jesus Christ," as Paul once said it. I can't adequately explain this in words (even to people I know well) but I can say I have been a "christian"... ever since.
Yet since 1999, I haven't been able to find a church that I feel really "at home" in. I'm, more or less these days, a "conservative" (evangelical) christian but almost all protestant-evangelical churches "teach" the heresies of (both) premillennialism and the "pre-trib rapture" (premillennial dispensationalism).
I thank God that I exited the branch of Christianity that promotes these false doctrines and atrocities.
I'm still trying to find "my place" among believers....
Thanks again,
rick
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Early Christology question
by M.J. inmy knowledge about this is limited to some quotes of what various early church fathers taught and what they said about "heresies", in addition to the nt.
could some of the more knowledgeable folks on this board give their input as to what schools of thought were out there in the 1st century regarding christ's nature, the worship of christ, etc.?
leolaia in another post mentioned how there were three principle factions around the question of salvation.
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rick_here
M.J.,
I should have said that this is a "hypothesis" (of mine); that God can be identified as EL, the Most High God, and His Son, (among other divine sons) is Yahweh...Jesus. In any event, this probably wouldn't reflect Margaret Barker's view exactly.
Here's an article from Bryan T. Huie that has some quotes from Margaret Barker and some Early (Apologist) Fathers, Ignatius and Justin:
Who Is Jesus Christ?
Bryan Huie's articles are rather long but jam-packed with information! (Btw, I don't go along with 'everything' he says).
So, M.J., I know you didn't ask for more input. Yet this article -- as well as Huie's other articles on "The Godhead" -- just have so much in them that I like to pass them on....
rick
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Why were apocalyptic books included in the NT canon?
by logansrun inall right folks -- especially you scholarly ones -- let me state a question i've been having: .
from my understanding of christian history the proto-catholic church selected the books to be included in the nt canon after the first century was concluded (nt canon finalized in mid 2nd century?).
included in this canon were books which include some apocalyptic sayings of jesus (especially in mark) that obviously were not fulfilled, such as mark 9:1 "truly i say to you, there are some standing here who will not taste death before they see that the kingdom of god has come with power.
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rick_here
Luke 22 (RSV):
66. When day came, the assembly of the elders of the people gathered together, both chief priests and scribes; and they led him away to their council, and they said,
67. "If you are the Christ, tell us." But he said to them, "If I tell you, you will not believe;
68. and if I ask you, you will not answer.
69. But FROM NOW ON the Son of man shall be seated at the right hand of the power of God."
70. And they all said, "Are you the Son of God, then?" And he said to them, "You say that I am."
71. And they said, "What further testimony do we need? We have heard it ourselves from his own lips."
(caps, underline, italics, bold, mine)....
rick
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New discovery of a lost gospel
by Leolaia inthe lost gospel of judas, thought to be the same gospel mentioned by irenaeus (cf.
adversus haereses 1.31.1), is currently being prepared for publication.
http://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2004/07/exciting-news-about-coptic-gospel-of.html.
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rick_here
The texts cited regarding Christians as being of a "third (race)" seem to me as a kind of "dispensationalist view" of we, as a people. First, were the Jews, the Chosen People. This obviously separated them from all other peoples (the Gentiles).
In the Preaching of Peter the "third race" do come across as being a new generation of people. But this is from a (purely) human perspective, along dispensational (or "covenant" lines)....
As such, this doesn't address the "births from heaven" theme that the apocalyptic literature points to: the arrival of evil (spirits) into the world and of the "descent of Son of Man and his seed."
Two differing topics, here, imo.
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Early Christology question
by M.J. inmy knowledge about this is limited to some quotes of what various early church fathers taught and what they said about "heresies", in addition to the nt.
could some of the more knowledgeable folks on this board give their input as to what schools of thought were out there in the 1st century regarding christ's nature, the worship of christ, etc.?
leolaia in another post mentioned how there were three principle factions around the question of salvation.
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rick_here
M.J. posted:
My knowledge about this is limited to some quotes of what various early Church fathers taught and what they said about "heresies", in addition to the NT. Could some of the more knowledgeable folks on this board give their input as to what schools of thought were out there in the 1st century regarding Christ's nature, the worship of Christ, etc.?
As Narkissos has pointed out, post-first century "conflicts" regarding Christology are wide and varied, depending on what (exact) time frame is in question. In other words, the differences of opinion in Christology ("who Jesus Christ was") in the early centuries evolved along lines of, and in the context of, current debates of those specific times.Did each of these also correspond with a differing view of Christ? .... I've read about the Gnostic view and I've also read vague references to an early "Angel-Christology" which the first Chapter of Hebrews may have been written to refute.
"The Gnostics", per se, as non-proto-orthodox groups, weren't really identified as such till the mid to late second century. "They" weren't any certain sect, but represented a multitude of belief-sytems that were, then, currently being defined as 'not having orthodoxy' (orthodox simply means, "having the correct opinion of"). "(Christian) orthodoxy" was still developing in the second century and probably didn't have any patent or succint definitions till after the Council of Nicaea, in 325 AD. We look back to these developments in hindsight and often fail to see their true historical significances.
Ironically, I've found in the writings of "The Apologists" (the earliest of the Early Fathers of the second century) certain themes that seem to go-along-with what Margaret Barker has observed. Keeping in mind that, in the second century, we are speaking of proto-orthodoxy (in its formative stages).
As to "Angel-Christology"... in their writings these earliest Apologists/Fathers seem to fully support ideas that see Jesus Christ as (both) the (OT) Angel of Yahweh and of Christ actually being Yahweh Himelf (incarnated)
However, a clear distinction is made here.
Yahweh (or Jehovah) was one of the "sons of God" (of the Father-God: EL, or El-Elyon). Yahweh, or Jehovah, is the incarnate Jesus, the deity who was appointed over Israel by His Father: EL.But it seems that from what I've read, the worship of Christ among early Christians was pretty consistent.
The earliest Christians, who were Jewish, believed in One God (EL, "the father of the gods and of humanity") and in One Lord (Jesus Christ) (Yahweh, His Son, sent to the people of Israel).
rick
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19
Early Christology question
by M.J. inmy knowledge about this is limited to some quotes of what various early church fathers taught and what they said about "heresies", in addition to the nt.
could some of the more knowledgeable folks on this board give their input as to what schools of thought were out there in the 1st century regarding christ's nature, the worship of christ, etc.?
leolaia in another post mentioned how there were three principle factions around the question of salvation.
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rick_here
(From the back cover of The Great Angel: A Study in Israel's Second God by Margaret Barker, (Westminster, John Knox Press, 1992):
What did "Son of God," "Messiah," and "Lord" mean to the first Christians when they used these words to describe their beliefs about Jesus? In this groundbreaking, clearly written book, Margaret Barker goes against protocol and treats these three titles collectively. She explores the possibility that in the expectations and traditions of first-century Palestine they belonged together, and that the first Christians fit Jesus' identity into an existing pattern of belief. Barker claims that pre-Christian Judaism was not monotheistic and that the roots of Christian Trinitarian theology lie in a pre-Christian Palestinian belief about the angels - a belief derived from the ancient religion of Israel in which there was a High God and several Sons of God. Yahweh was a Son of God, manifested on earth in human form as an angel or in the Davidic King. Jesus was a manifestation of Yahweh, acknowledged as Son of God, Messiah, and Lord....Barker supports her thoughtful investigation with canonical and deutero-canonical works and literature from Qumran and rabbinic sources. Her stimulating book will shed new light on the origins of Christianity and is an excellent source for Old and New Testament scholars and anyone interested in Jesus as a person.
I'm about half-way thru Barker's book and am finding so much information that it's a bit hard to digest! Not in the sense of it being, in any sense, "unpalatable" (or radical)... it's the exact opposite; entirely "enlightening" (for lack of vocabulary). -
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New discovery of a lost gospel
by Leolaia inthe lost gospel of judas, thought to be the same gospel mentioned by irenaeus (cf.
adversus haereses 1.31.1), is currently being prepared for publication.
http://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2004/07/exciting-news-about-coptic-gospel-of.html.
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rick_here
Narkissos,
Looking at the context of 1 Enoch 39 (again) I think you are probably right; it does seem to refer to the same "fall of the angels" earlier in the book.
Yet, there also appears to be something significant regarding "births" (and/or "two families") in both biblical and non-canonical literature.
Sorry if I got a bit side-tracked.
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New discovery of a lost gospel
by Leolaia inthe lost gospel of judas, thought to be the same gospel mentioned by irenaeus (cf.
adversus haereses 1.31.1), is currently being prepared for publication.
http://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2004/07/exciting-news-about-coptic-gospel-of.html.
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rick_here
1 Enoch 39
1. And it shall come to pass in those days that elect and holy children will descend from the
2. high heaven, and their seed will become one with the children of men.
The "second spiritual birth"... initiated by Jesus (the Son of Man) who descended from heaven.