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Originally posted by jmdewey60
reply to post by adjensen
No.
Paul published the New Testament? Are you kidding me?
I am not kidding.
The original New Testament was Romans, First and Second Corinthians, and Galatians, based on the oldest NT manuscripts and how they were constructed and the order of the individual books in them.
source
Originally Christians weren’t even called Christians. They were called "disciples" (i.e., "students") of Jesus of Nazareth. Later, in the city of Antioch, they received the name "Christians" (Acts 11:26). This probably happened in the A.D. 30s. This term spread very quickly—probably to the chagrin of those Jewish individuals who did not wish to acknowledge Jesus as the Messiah (Christ).
Ultimately, however, different groups began to break off from the Christian community, falling into either heresy or schism. These groups still wished to represent themselves as Christian—and many of them were, retaining valid baptism and a profession of faith in Christ. Consequently, a new word was needed to distinguish the Christians belonging to the Church that Christ founded from those belonging to the churches that had split off from it.
The term that was picked was kataholos, which means according to the whole or universal in Greek. The thought was apparently that these were Christians who believed and practiced according to what body of Christians as a whole did, in contrast to what some particular group thought or did. Over the course of time, kataholos came to be represented by the parallel English word "Catholic."
Ignatius of Antioch did not introduce kataholos. However, his letters contain the earliest known uses of it. It may well have been used in other Christian writings prior to this, but we have simply lost them. It certainly was in general use in speech before this point, because Ignatius writes in such a way that he already expects his readers to know this term and what it means. He also uses the term in more than one of his letters, meaning that he expects people in more than one place to know the term.
This indicates that in his day—at the beginning of the second century (circa A.D. 107)—the term was already in widespread use. For it to be used in such a broad manner, it would have required some time to pass into currency in the Christian community, meaning that the term probably was coined sometime in the second half of the first century. We don’t know who first used it, but it was a suitable description of the Church Christ founded and so was already in general use by the time Ignatius wrote.
Originally posted by jmdewey60
My point was that the Catholic Church regards its own opinions over the NT, so doesn't bother interpreting it.
source
In this discussion it is important to keep in mind what the Catholic Church means by tradition. The term does not refer to legends or mythological accounts, nor does it encompass transitory customs or practices which may change, as circumstances warrant, such as styles of priestly dress, particular forms of devotion to saints, or even liturgical rubrics. Sacred or apostolic tradition consists of the teachings that the apostles passed on orally through their preaching. These teachings largely (perhaps entirely) overlap with those contained in Scripture, but the mode of their transmission is different.
They have been handed down and entrusted to the Churchs. It is necessary that Christians believe in and follow this tradition as well as the Bible (Luke 10:16). The truth of the faith has been given primarily to the leaders of the Church (Eph. 3:5), who, with Christ, form the foundation of the Church (Eph. 2:20). The Church has been guided by the Holy Spirit, who protects this teaching from corruption (John 14:25-26, 16:13).
. . . and his consisted of Paul's letters, along with . . .
That wasn't my claim.
. . . I've never heard of a canon such as you claim . . .
Originally posted by greyer
Originally posted by vethumanbeing
There was a reason the teachings were parables (mass produced to affect anyone that could decifer their en-coding almost like a billboard slogan). Think of it as hooks dropped in a river baited with happenstance (we caught one) what specie eats this? Oh the one that fears God? Or a fish, or a swallowing of the highest upon the high. Jinks was shillifying trying to get more time to qualify its existance EXIT strategy, thats all and his skin was not saved to its satifaction. Jesus has problems regarding its betrayal, who could blame it. This man god is very unhappy, has anyone spoken to it lately?
No, during the betrayal Jesus knew that it was actually a divine purpose.
Originally posted by jmdewey60
reply to post by adjensen
. . . and his consisted of Paul's letters, along with . . .
That was what the New Testament consisted of before Marcion.
Are you kidding?
There was no such thing.
Based on what? So Paul was writing letters to the churches and no one paid any attention to them? You are really in some sort of cult induced dream world.
The church, at that point, was not coalesced around scripture, and there was no such canon.
The evidence of the physical books.
What is your historical evidence that there was a limited New Testament canon that preceded Marcion?
Originally posted by jmdewey60
reply to post by adjensen
Are you kidding?
There was no such thing.Based on what? So Paul was writing letters to the churches and no one paid any attention to them? You are really in some sort of cult induced dream world.
The church, at that point, was not coalesced around scripture, and there was no such canon.The evidence of the physical books.
What is your historical evidence that there was a limited New Testament canon that preceded Marcion?
This is what I mean when I talk about cult beliefs.
Paul wrote one physical letter to the Romans (for example,) which was preserved and later copied by people at the church of Rome to give to people in other churches.
The people did not have the same sort of standard of scripture as we would have today, if someone all of a sudden produced a book and wanted it included in the canon. The canon is an invention of institutions.
That's what I meant about Paul maybe not even thinking that the inclusion of his letters would be appropriate for scripture -- it happened at least a hundred years after he died . . .
I'm studying history books about the Bible, while you are spouting partisan rhetoric and saying I don't understand history.
Understand history in its context, or don't bother trying to discuss historical facts.
Originally posted by jmdewey60
He would have made at least two copies in case of shipwreck, or something, while it is being transported. they didn't have Federal Express back then.
while you are spouting partisan rhetoric and saying I don't understand history.
Your claim that the letters of Paul sat in the Vatican vault until there was a council to put them in the canon is a "far cry" from that, too.
You have no way of knowing that, and even if that was the case, writing two copies of the same letter is a far cry from "publishing" them.
This is rather tiring repeating myself over and over.
There was no canon before Marcion, that is an historical fact.
Obviously, you were not "trained" in biblical history.
No, I am relating historical facts, and, as a trained historian, I can very plainly see that you don't understand history.
Originally posted by jmdewey60
reply to post by adjensen
Your claim that the letters of Paul sat in the Vatican vault until there was a council to put them in the canon is a "far cry" from that, too.
You have no way of knowing that, and even if that was the case, writing two copies of the same letter is a far cry from "publishing" them.
If you accept that there was at least one copy, then logic would suggest that the one copy could be made into more, until there was a general distribution of copies wherever there was a demand for them.
My earlier point is there was no necessity for a canon until there was a hierarchical structure to enforce it, and the imperial sanction to commit any amount of violence deemed necessary to carry it out.
Originally posted by greyer
reply to post by vethumanbeing
lol, thanks for starting my day off with a big joke. I don't know how in a million years you would ever expect me to think or believe that. Unfortunately I stay focused on tangible things that mean something in the world called earth, please come back to it.
You were saying that the only people able to make copies of Paul's letters was the Catholic Church.
THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I SAID HAPPENED! Geez, can't you read?
My proposition is that the author, Paul, had letters, which were actual letters to particular people, at specific churches, and "standardized" them himself, and collected the most useful ones, with was Romans, First and Second Corinthians, and Galatians, and had them bound, in that order, the same order in which they are found in the New Testament today, in books, to be sent out to certain cities, and most importantly, to Jerusalem. This is born out by the surviving oldest New Testaments known to current biblical scholarship.
. . . someone else, decades later, determined that they were books that were representative of orthodox Christianity and were included in standardized scripture.
Whatever, I'm not obsessed with being "right" on a forum. If I did say that, I think you probably misconstrued it, or maybe I made a mistake in typing it out, where I was thinking something else. I do that all the time and try to go back and fix mistakes but a lot get through anyway.
Again, go back and read the thread -- you said there was a canon, and it included a handful of Paul's letters and nothing else.
Originally posted by IsidoreOfSeville
Originally posted by MrBigDave
Originally posted by IsidoreOfSeville
Originally posted by MrBigDave
Wrong, Christ was the son of God. Because he not only never said that he was God, but, on the contrary, spoke of the Father, who sent him, as God, and as the only God. “This is life eternal, that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent,” John 17:3.
Did you not read all of John? Did you forget about John 10:30?
Originally posted by MrBigDave
Wrong! It WAS an attempt to unify the population around a combined religion. It is ignorant to just accept what the RCC tells you.
Consider this; also in John 17:20-22 Jesus prays that we all should be one. How can we call be one if we each have our own understanding of the Word? Which is more ignorant friend; following THE institution that Christ himself founded at Pentecost in 33 AD which Christ Himself said the gates of Hades would not prevail against, or an individual (or many individuals) interpretation of scripture?
God bless you.
I have read all of John, and I think that maybe your concept of "one" is off. If Jesus is God because his is "one" with the father, then we are are also God because we are one with Christ and by proxy "one" with God.
[20] Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word; [21] That they all may be one; as thou, Father, [art] in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me. [22] And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them; that they may be one, even as we are one: - Jhn 17:20-22 KJV
Alrighty, I have no problem being corrected. So, how would you interpret that scripture?
And there is no "if." Jesus IS God. Jesus said so Himself.
Originally posted by greyer
reply to post by vethumanbeing
I would 'not' think because I only claim to know what mother nature shows me.
There is no claim I would make of anything that would seem out of this world, besides the US government covering up the existence of beings from out of this world of course.
Originally posted by vethumanbeing
What is that phrase "Do not Mess With Mother Nature" and if she is talking to you kudos. I have all kinds of ideas and thoughts greyer spit out the words see where they land and wonder if a response is forthcoming. You know what? even as garble messaging poetry IT WORKS in the best and most surprising and interesting ways;
almost as if there is a filament as slender as a silk thread that is trying to connect underneath the top heavy dialoge happening communication. I do love the little green men theory, why? because they arent green. Watch all of the faces turn grey/white if you mention such a thing in a hallway at what used to be Hughes Aircraft (hilarious).