Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 12:05 pm
Then why don't you start a thread on it?
We are talking here about first and second century Christianity.
We are talking here about first and second century Christianity.
Your source on the web for daily archaeology news!
https://archaeologica.org/forum/
Wow, what a misconception. There was a group that saw Satan as the actual good guy with the bible as a propaganda pace made to mislead us into following the bad guy. I can't remember the name of that group off hand, I'll look it up. Anyway that is a complete mis-categorization of Gnosticism.rich wrote:Ishtar wrote:
But ish - that's the point - without knowing what the OT actually said before the Yahwists got into it - we can only draw a blank. We don't know that Yahweh was in the original - do we? And I can point to some inferences that do point to Yahweh as the demiurge - quite a few. And isn't that what gnosis was about - an evil creator god that wasn't the real god? And the serpent that gave man the "true" wisdom?I also know enough about Yahweh to know where he comes from and how he got into the Hebrew Bible.
However, some do compare Yahweh to the demiurge - and so you're in good company.
So can we now get back to the early Christianity, which is what this thread is about?
It actually evolves in the OT. Job presents Satan as 'the adversary', Isaiah presents 'Lucifer' as a fallen angel but that is debatable since Lucifer, like the serpent, may or may not have been Satan. The point is that the OT really doesn't present Satan because they couldn't deal with the problem of an all powerful God who couldn't overcome evil and didn't want to incorporate Zoroastrian solutions to the problem.rich wrote:I believe in the OT it was referred to as "the Anger of the Lord" - and Satan also. And if I recall right it was the Anger of the Lord that led Moses to lead the people out of Egypt as well as gave hime the laws. - But - the inference is to a quality of Yahweh - which is the duality again.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnosticismdemiurge
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
demiurge [Gr.,=workman, craftsman], name given by Plato in a mythological passage in the Timaeus to the creator God. In Gnosticism the Demiurge, creator of the material world, was not God but the Archon, or chief of the lowest order of spirits or aeons. According to the Gnostics, the Demiurge was able to endow man only with psyche (sensuous soul)—the pneuma (rational soul) having been added by God. The Gnostics identified the Demiurge with the Jehovah of the Hebrews. In philosophy the term is used to denote a divinity who is the builder of the universe rather than its creator.
Appears to me what the gnostics were saying - maybe I'm misinterpretiung the encyclopedias.Gnosticism (Greek: γνώσις gnōsis, knowledge) refers to a diverse, syncretistic religious movement consisting of various belief systems generally united in the teaching that humans are divine souls trapped in a material world created by an imperfect god, the demiurge, who is frequently identified with the Abrahamic God: called "Yahweh" or "Jahveh" for the true name of God is the ineffable Tetragrammaton.[1] The demiurge may be depicted as an embodiment of evil, or in other instances as merely imperfect and as benevolent as its inadequacy permits. This demiurge exists alongside another remote and unknowable supreme being that embodies good. In order to free oneself from the inferior material world, one needs gnosis, or esoteric spiritual knowledge available to all through direct experience or knowledge (gnosis) of God.[2][3] Jesus of Nazareth is identified by some Gnostic sects as an embodiment of the supreme being who became incarnate to bring gnosis to the earth. In others he was thought to be a gnosis teacher, and yet others, nothing more than a man.
Sorry, I was editing my post as you posted.rich wrote:Ok - then show me how Yahweh did not show evil as well as good tendencies and how he does not relate to the demiurge.
Jesus was a common Jewish name which means Yaweh saves, a perfect name for a savior. Worshipping Steve Christ just wouldn't be the same.rich wrote:Exactly - except I'm saying why would the gnostics use the name "Jesus". It doesn't add up.
When did I say that? Are you claiming that some Jewish sects weren't Gnostic? That's going to be difficult when the underlying theology of both was Zoroastrianism.rich wrote:Are you claiming that alll the Jewish mystics were gnostics then and that there wasn't another school of Jewish mysticism?
which means Yaweh saves, a perfect name for a savior.