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#1
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I would like to discuss this Gospel. If you are familiar with it leap right in, if you are not here is a link to it
What do you think about this Gospel, does anything here speak to you, if so, why? is there anything you disagree with, if so, again why? Kiwimac
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+++ Divide By Cucumber Error. Please Reinstall Universe And Reboot +++ - Terry Pratchett, Hogfather |
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#2
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muahahahhahahaahah
i love all this interest in the Gnostic forum all of a sudden ![]() It's a rather intricate gospel to discuss... would you perhaps rather select a verse or so at a time to share your opinion and then have the rest of us give ours? There's a discussion of John too... if i could ever get my lazy arse back into it.... |
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#3
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I'm interested in Thomas' relationship to Q; redactions of Thomas; how many early churches knew of it; how many churches used it in worship or rejected it; and when it was written and by which group.
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From each according to his interest rate, to each according to his credit. ![]() -Capitalist Manifesto-
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#4
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I'll keep looking for more in for for you Nate |
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#5
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__________________
From each according to his interest rate, to each according to his credit. ![]() -Capitalist Manifesto-
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#6
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perhaps this is better:
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#7
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#8
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl...y/qthomas.html
For New Testament scholars, one of the most interesting things about this gospel is that its author (who calls himself Didymos Judas Thomas) appears to have used sayings from the same collection used by Matthew and Luke. But for this author and his community, the meaning of these sayings was clearly very different. The Gospel of Thomas, therefore, provided exciting new evidence for the existence of an earlier collection of sayings used by a variety of Christian communities. In 1989, a team of researchers led by James M. Robinson of the Institute for Antiquity and Christianity in Claremont, CA, began a most unlikely task: the "reconstruction" of the Gospel of Q. Robinson and his team are accomplishing this by a highly detailed literary analysis of Matthew, Luke, and Thomas. Their painstaking work goes "verse by verse, word by word, case ending by case ending." After nearly ten years of work, the results of their efforts are soon to be published as the Critical Edition of Q. The "recovery" of the Q gospel has stimulated a debate about the nature early Christian communities, and by extension, the origins of Christianity itself. One scholar, Burton Mack, has advanced a radical thesis: that at least some Christian communities did not see Jesus as a Messiah; they saw him as a teacher of wisdom, a man who tried to teach others how to live. For them, Jesus was not divine, but fully human. These first followers of Jesus differed from other Christians whose ritual and practice was centered on the death and the resurrection of Jesus. Their did not emerge as the "winners" of history; perhaps because the maintaining the faith required the existence of a story that included not only the life of Jesus but also his Passion. Which leads in to a useful site: http://www.gnosis.org/naghamm/nhl_thomas.htm
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My life is an open book; if you don't like the read, put me back on the shelf ....................
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#9
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Although there is some bits about God being everywhere, not just in the Church or preisthood, that's why i reckon it was rejected. Also, it doesn't really flow with the other four gospels in the NT, which were all chosen for their underlying themes of faith, substitutionary atonement and continuity with the Tanach. A sayings Gospel is too open to radical interpretation.
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Artificial Life on your PC |
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#10
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Ehrman, Bart (2003). The Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 0195141830. Anyway, the characteristics for locating and defining Gnosticism before the forth century is a shady business anyway, so I know exactly where you're coming from. I suspect that Thomas is just as Gnostic as the canonical Paul, John, and Marcion. I'm sticking with the conventional view that Thomas is a Gnostic or at least proto-Gnostic (and a lot of other stuff in the NT fits here as well, but I'm back into the gray area ) document until some other classification is useful to me in an argument |