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On Feb 27, 7:00�am, "
Your remarks appear to imply an orderly transition to the orthodox church hammered together by compromise at coucils like the one held inNicea. Hundreds of years AD Christians were still debating the Trinity. Um, I'm not sure this is right. �Even at Nicaea both sides were Trinitarian. �Possibly you have the �various 5th century Christological controversies in mind here? One of the major points of debate and controversy at Nicea was the "Arian heresy". It would be grossly inaccurate to say that both sides were trinitarian. The Bishop Arius postulated that if Jesus was the son of God then Jesus was created by God and could not be equal to God without creating a second God. Adding the Holy Spirit to the mix created a third, as far as Arius was concerned. Arius was banished from the church. One of his prominent supporters, Eusebius (sp?) backed down from his support of Arius and was allowed to remain in the church even though he refused to sign what is now known as the Nicene Creed. The Creed places great emphasis on a triune diety. some details: http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/g...p/aa082499.htm Um, gnosis *is* secret knowledge. �The gnostics pretended that their ever-changing teachings were apostolic. �The fathers challenged this by pointing out that the churches founded by these apostles knew nothing of them teaching any such thing. �The gnostic response was that these teachings were transmitted privately -- which sort of gives the game away. There is a difference between surpressed knowledge and secret knowledge. Many of the texts that freely circulated in the first few hundred years AD were eventually surpressed by the othodox church. The Gospel of Thomas is an excellent example of a freely distributed text that reflected the gnostic, vs. orthodox philosophy. It's available today in an English translation at Barnes and Noble, how secret can that be? :-) My advice would be: always be wary of anybody who tells you, "You don't have the authority or capacity to understand the message, so hire me to understand it and interpret it for you." Woa, talk about a slippery slope........ Surely. �But this is a classic gnostic position. I would imagine that gnostic Christians were/are not too disturbed to be called "heretics" by the orthodox church. That was the same charge that the Sanhedrin brought against Jesus for such offenses as healing during Sabbat, offering to forgive sins, etc. If the gnostics have a secret, it may well be that the Kingdom of God is spiritual in nature- |
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