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I'm glad you liked his writings! Yes, his refutations of Christian arguments were brilliant. If I'm not mistaken, his essay was taken almost exclusively from polemics by various Christian apologists because they destroyed his original work. It's a real shame he didn't last, he'd have settled the Temple controversy once and for all.
originally posted by: pthena
a reply to: hjesterium
I looked up Julian after you referenced him on another thread. Brilliant! I'm thinking too bad he didn't live longer.
Oh, great catch! I didn't notice that before. Yeah, nowhere in the gospels did Jesus teach to care about a physical Temple, he even predicted the Temple's destruction (Luke 19:44, 21:5-6). Also, this means that the story about him being moved to anger upon seeing merchants buying/selling in the Temple is pure legend.
originally posted by: pthena
The disciples wanted to put up monument buildings. They were prevented.
I don't know enough about the purpose of al-Aqsa to say whether it was proper or not. But I don't think it's wrong to raise a monument to a spiritual thing.
originally posted by: pthena
Compare al-Aqsa, Muslims did that, set up a monument to a spiritual thing. Not a proper thing to do.
Like the term "Deva"?
originally posted by: pthena
I noticed that when comparing terms used in Hindu vs terms used in Zoroastrian: good is bad, bad is good, depending on which side of a stream you live on.
I appreciate your honesty.
originally posted by: pthena
To be perfectly honest, I am doing this for others. I care nothing at all for lands and buildings on the other side of the World.
originally posted by: Dalamax
Probably the Rus. They’d probably have a claim on the Ukraine as well.
a reply to: quintessentone
Like the term "Deva"?
How would you react if people were campaigning to remove historic buildings in America?
Interesting story, but how did your classmate feel about the house?
originally posted by: quintessentone
originally posted by: Dalamax
Probably the Rus. They’d probably have a claim on the Ukraine as well.
a reply to: quintessentone
Looks like the majority may be Poles.
Soon they built a town which they called Gniezno (a “nest” in the Slavic language). The town became the capital of their nation and the first capital of Poland. And so the three brothers separated: Czech decided to go south and Rus chose the east where they started their own countries.
originally posted by: pthena
a reply to: NorthOfStuffx2
Things are burned, looted, and toppled long before ruinous decay sets in.
Earthquakes.
Destroyed 746 CE
Destroyed 1033 CE by Jordan Rift Valley earthquake.