Thank you,you managed to sum up exactly how i feel much better than i could have!Originally Posted by jebus
Jebus, sorry if my post came across as arrogantly suggesting that Christians believe everything the church/scriptures say. I was more trying to say that people just aren't aware of the fascinating editing that occured. The process is called "biblical criticism" and shows the links between the 4 main gospels and their influences.
"The Derry fans were fantastic in both matches. They sang their hearts out all the time and created an even better atmosphere than the Cup Final. They were brilliant. - David Graham, Gretna striker
Thank you,you managed to sum up exactly how i feel much better than i could have!Originally Posted by jebus
You call her ignorant, naive and stupid for treating a work of fiction as a factual source.Originally Posted by jebus
You can't spell failure without FAI
come on john, some of the bible happened im sureOriginally Posted by John83
Originally Posted by Roverstillidie
Sure, but it's supposed to be true. The Da Vinci code doesn't even claim that.
You can't spell failure without FAI
Have to ask yourself,who took it upon themselves to include or exclude books from the bible.
...and why? ...and for who's benefit?Originally Posted by Dassa
" I wish to God that someone would be able to block out the voices in my head for five minutes, the voices that scream, over and over again: "Why do they come to me to die?"
OK then I have to ask myself for my own benefit.
Last edited by Dassa; 19/04/2006 at 5:29 PM.
Originally Posted by Dassa
The Roman emperor Constantine is supposed to have had a hand in it. He chose to go down a different path to his predecessors, who had pilloried the Christians, and converted to Christianity himself. He gave some story of having seen three crosses (I think) over Rome as he rode home from war, but it's generally thought that it was mostly oppertunism on his behalf that caused him to convert.Originally Posted by Lionel Ritchie
Anyway, he wanted a unified church - much easier to deal with. The details are a little hazy - it's a while since I read about this stuff, but I think taxation came into it. The church at that time was pretty divided - plenty of squabbling. There wasn't a canon as such. Constantine pushed for a single canonical scripture, a unified church (look up the council of Nicea if you want to see more of what he did) and he got it (tax breaks are kind of interesting to most people).
The books chosen were picked to get a reasonably consistant gospel. The rejected gospels were considered spurious, uncanonical or even heritical in some cases.
For more info, I'd suggest starting with a Google search like this one. Be careful though, most of the stuff you'll find has a slant on it.
You can't spell failure without FAI
Cheers, lets face it everything is told for a reason with a slant of some sort in it.Originally Posted by John83
This months issue just arrived in the post today and thatOriginally Posted by pineapple stu
was the cover story. Didnt get a chance to read it yet.
Larry Be Wyse
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