Thank you for your very kind words. I am embarrassed.
Doug
the archaeologist digs and then sifts through remnants from the past, assembling the discoveries into patterns so that stories of the past may be brought back to life.. with almost 850 direct quotations from 50 books, my study sifts remnants from the first 200 years of christianity and sorts them into patterns that may help others to assemble a vessel that can hold ideas, or to form a skeleton where muscle and flesh, heart and mind, may be applied.
a comprehensive contents listing is provided at the rear of this study.. my study, “the jesus-followers’ first 200 years” is available at:.
http://www.jwstudies.com/the_jesus-followers__first_200_years.pdf .
Thank you for your very kind words. I am embarrassed.
Doug
the archaeologist digs and then sifts through remnants from the past, assembling the discoveries into patterns so that stories of the past may be brought back to life.. with almost 850 direct quotations from 50 books, my study sifts remnants from the first 200 years of christianity and sorts them into patterns that may help others to assemble a vessel that can hold ideas, or to form a skeleton where muscle and flesh, heart and mind, may be applied.
a comprehensive contents listing is provided at the rear of this study.. my study, “the jesus-followers’ first 200 years” is available at:.
http://www.jwstudies.com/the_jesus-followers__first_200_years.pdf .
When I set out on this Study, I had no idea that it would turn out like this. When I started, I told a friend that I wanted to discover the “Real Paul”. I wanted to remove the veneers, the assumptions, to remove his clothes and leave him naked. I wanted to know his mind. So my mental working title was “Nude Paul”. As with every Study, this one took me by the hand into places I had never thought about, creating thoughts I had never considered. In the process, I removed many veneers, many clothes, exposing a nudist colony.
This Study has affected me more than any other I have prepared. The others are intellectual expositions; this one is personal. I am shocked at what I have produced. Its influence on me is shown by the fact that I do not discuss my other Studies in this way. (For those in Australia, I get my copy printed double sided and coil bound at Officeworks.)
It has shown me that there is so much more that I need to pursue. It is only a stepping stone. For example, I now see that the Gospel of Thomas needs to be explored, especially the people who produced it. It is likely as old as the earliest canonised Gospels, produced by another sect. Indeed the spectrum of the non-canonised documents should be explored. But there are only so many years that remain, so I need to be judicious in considering what to explore. Right now, I am thinking of the influence of Bishop Anselm.
Only now, after arriving at this picture of the early followers of Jesus, am I able to appreciate the book: “Blaming Jesus for Jehovah: Rethinking the Righteousness of Christianity” by Robert Price.
I hope that those of you who are expert in this era can add to the story - and provide corrections.
Doug
the archaeologist digs and then sifts through remnants from the past, assembling the discoveries into patterns so that stories of the past may be brought back to life.. with almost 850 direct quotations from 50 books, my study sifts remnants from the first 200 years of christianity and sorts them into patterns that may help others to assemble a vessel that can hold ideas, or to form a skeleton where muscle and flesh, heart and mind, may be applied.
a comprehensive contents listing is provided at the rear of this study.. my study, “the jesus-followers’ first 200 years” is available at:.
http://www.jwstudies.com/the_jesus-followers__first_200_years.pdf .
The archaeologist digs and then sifts through remnants from the past, assembling the discoveries into patterns so that stories of the past may be brought back to life.
With almost 850 direct quotations from 50 books, my Study sifts remnants from the first 200 years of Christianity and sorts them into patterns that may help others to assemble a vessel that can hold ideas, or to form a skeleton where muscle and flesh, heart and mind, may be applied. A comprehensive Contents listing is provided at the rear of this Study.
My Study, “The Jesus-followers’ first 200 years” is available at:
http://www.jwstudies.com/The_Jesus-followers__First_200_years.pdf
Doug
let me ask you only one question.
first i need to clarify a few things.
in the new world translation, john 1:1 reads: “in [the] beginning the word was, and the word was with god, and the word was a god.” then in isaiah 9:6 (nwt) we read: “for there has been a child born to us, there has been a son given to us; and the princely rule will come to be upon his shoulder.
OneGenTwoGroups,
It would be interesting to survey Bible scholars (and I do not mean fundamentalists) to see how many hold to the Trinitarian formula.
It is one thing to expose the Trinity doctrine but quite another to explain and defend the Watchtower's ideas. For me, the Watchtower's explanation is fraught with as many difficulties as what the Trinity faces.
Have you tabulated the contradictory statements in the John Gospel? or in Paul?
Doug
let me ask you only one question.
first i need to clarify a few things.
in the new world translation, john 1:1 reads: “in [the] beginning the word was, and the word was with god, and the word was a god.” then in isaiah 9:6 (nwt) we read: “for there has been a child born to us, there has been a son given to us; and the princely rule will come to be upon his shoulder.
Hi Tenacious,
I need to make a correction here, as it was the writer of Peter who said people were misusing Paul. I Timothy was written when the Jesus-followers were moving from their first blush of emotional enthusiasm to the consideration of church structure and hierarchy. As I said, we are looking at the first part of the second century.
Of the 13 writings attributed to Paul, the general consensus held by the majority of scholars is that 7 were genuinely written by Paul. In chronological order: 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Philemon, Philippians and Romans. Further, some of these epistles are collections of letters; some scholars identify 4 letters in 2 Corinthians, others see 6 letters.
The others attributed to Paul, such as Colossians, Ephesians, and so on were written well after his death.
His genuine writings are our earliest written record. Mark's Gospel was the earliest record about Jesus' life and preaching, and it was written anonymously about 70 CE, some 40 years after Jesus' death. Matthew's Gospel (also anonymous) followed some 15 years later.
All the best with you research. You will find it exciting and challenging.
Doug
let me ask you only one question.
first i need to clarify a few things.
in the new world translation, john 1:1 reads: “in [the] beginning the word was, and the word was with god, and the word was a god.” then in isaiah 9:6 (nwt) we read: “for there has been a child born to us, there has been a son given to us; and the princely rule will come to be upon his shoulder.
Tenacious,
Regarding Thomas worshipping Jesus (John 20:24-29). (Chapter 21 was added later.)
I do not know if you have studied the Christology of the Gospel of Thomas, but the people who wrote the Fourth Gospel ("John") had also developed their own Christology but had arrived at different conclusions. In this passage, the writers of John were reflecting upon the Thomasine community. Read the story again, this time realising that this is not a literal historical account but a story designed to denigrate the Christology of the Thomasines. This methodology is also employed at several other accounts in John, such as the mythical Nicodemus and the Blind Man who could now see.
Regarding 1 Timothy. It was written at the beginning of the second century (Paul died in 64 CE). At that time, a Gnostic named Marcion relied on Paul's writings, even producing the first collection of Paul's letters. Marcion made so much use of Paul's writings that the proto-orthodox gave Paul a wide berth.
The person who wrote 1 Timothy was complaining about the way that people (no doubt the Marcionites) were using Paul. In that context (early decades of the second century) attempts made against Marcion included the writing of Acts of the Apostles. (2 Peter is likely the last canonised writing, coming later in the second century, almost 100 years after Peter's death.)
Doug
let me ask you only one question.
first i need to clarify a few things.
in the new world translation, john 1:1 reads: “in [the] beginning the word was, and the word was with god, and the word was a god.” then in isaiah 9:6 (nwt) we read: “for there has been a child born to us, there has been a son given to us; and the princely rule will come to be upon his shoulder.
Crabby,
Instead of jumping around the Scriptures like a knight on a chess board, stick with the immediate passage and drill down into the complete context of John's Gospel.
Discover the back story of the Gospel -- the group that wrote it, what their experiences were, and how they arrived at their high Christology. Climb back into the times when it was written and the reasons that that group had for the Christological statements they were making. At the same time, research the Thomasine Christians, whose experiences matched those of the Johannines, although their soteriology and Christology were markedly different.
Doug
1 chronicles 18:4. .
na .
na .
Samuel and Kings are part of the history assembled during the 6th century BCE. This is known as the Deuteronomic History (Deuteronomy, Judges, Joshua, Samuel and Kings).
Chronicles was written about 200 years later, during the Persian era, by a person whose religious leanings did not align with those who penned the DH. Hence the need to write Chronicles. (I presume it's in two parts due to the physical limitations imposed by the length of a scroll.)
There is any number of subtle indications in Chronicles which indicate the writer's religious politics. Off the top of the head, I think that the story surrounding Manasseh shows this.
Doug
gen.1:26 "and god went on to say "let us make man in our image according to our likeness.....etc,etc,.. the key words here are "us" and " our" ,he is including other life forms just like him in using plurals.. he did not say " i" will make man in "my" image ,using the singular vernacular.
the same is also noted in gen 3:22 "and jehovah god went on to say " here the man has become like one of " us".
again he is using the plural and not the singlar language clearly showing their were other life forms on an equal footing to him.. also satan via the serpent also knew the difference between good and bad before he tempted eve , showing he was on a par with jehovah god in knowing that fact along with the other gods in heaven.. another scripture that comes to mind is 1 cor.8:5 "........just as their are many gods and many lords,,,".
Smiddy,
The name of the God in Genesis 1 is EL. He was the chief God who with his wife Asherah had 70 sons. This group was known as the Elohim. While EL was a kindly God, Yahweh was a minor fierce warrior. It is likely he originated in a southern neighbour of Israel/Judah.
Until the 6th century BCE neo-Babylonian period, the majority of the Henrews were polytheists. The Yahweh-alone party did not get their way until the nation went through the Captivity, and we now read their propaganda.
The creation myth at Genesis 2 (which was written earlier than the Genesis 1 account by a different group) uses the name YHWH. The group that wrote Genesis 1 did not use "YHWH" until it was revealed to Moses at the burning bush, but employed EL and Elohim.
Anyway, how does anyone really know what these gods said to one another at Genesis 1? Any eyewitnesses?
The writings attributed to Moses are pretty much myth from beginning to end. They are not literal history; they are religious stories with moral teachings.
Doug
i am going to start a thread comparing the septuagint to the masoretic text.for those who do not know what the septuagint and the masoretic text are, here's an introduction on wikipedia:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/septuagint.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/masoretic_text.
i think that, more than anything else, the fact that the septuagint and the masoretic text are so different, is what made me stop believing in the bible.. since the new testament writers quoted from the septuagint, not from the masoretic text, one would think that the septuagint should be in all the current bibles, but the case is that most bibles today use the masoretic text as the basis of their old testament.
The scrolls were written in Greek (from left to right) whereas the subsequently added paleo-Hebraic characters read from right to left. These ancient characters had long stopped being used.
Nowhere does the Watchtower ever follow that example. It never inserts the paleo-Hebraic characters into its texts. It uses a nonsensical word.
As for the New Testament texts, there is no example of Hebrew characters (HWHY) or their Greek equivalents. No one today has any idea what the initial writers wrote, whether in the OT or in the NT.
Reproducing texts in those days, which was needed given nature of the materials being used, required laborious copying by hand. Errors occurred during that process and at the same time the copying provided opportunities for deliberate amendments, often to suit later understandings (like the Watchtower does today).
Doug