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Old February 13th, 2009, 12:29 PM
Derek Jackson Derek Jackson is offline
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WI Christians simply used the Gospels as the central 'bibile' of their faith?
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Old February 13th, 2009, 12:37 PM
bernooch bernooch is offline
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Without all the doctrines of Pauline Christianity....hrm...very interesting christianity....you'd have three gospels that present Yeshua as a somewhat human being...and John's Gospel of the super-divine Christ...You'd still have serious doctrinal issues...especially without the development of the divine Christ character in Paul's letters....

Probably end up with a "Jewish Christianity" like the Ebionites...or the very early Jerusalem Church led by James the brother of Jesus...you know...Gentiles still welcome but have to observe the Noahide laws etc...


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WI Christians simply used the Gospels as the central 'bibile' of their faith?
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Old February 13th, 2009, 04:22 PM
Nicole Nicole is offline
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Hm, I suppose St. Paul's writings could still end up like the writings of the Church Fathers and held in high regard. Though, if you still get something like Protestantism, they could throw them out with impunity... and in any case they'd be less important.
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Old February 13th, 2009, 05:23 PM
ZaphodBeeblebrox ZaphodBeeblebrox is offline
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Originally Posted by Derek Jackson View Post
WI Christians simply used the Gospels as the central 'bibile' of their faith?
Do they Throw out The Old Testament, As Well ...

'Cause that Alone, Could Make for a Kinder, Gentler, Christianity ...

Speaking as a Jew; The Tanakh Portrays G-d as a Horrible Xenophobe, And Coming at it Very Frankly, That Never Quite Meshed up with Jesus' Ultimate Message, Of LOVE thy Neighbour as thyself!

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Old February 13th, 2009, 08:04 PM
el t el t is offline
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Gospel Truth.

Is this history?
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Old February 13th, 2009, 08:07 PM
False Dmitri False Dmitri is offline
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Is this history?
An alternate New Testament would make for a different Christianity. So yes.
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Old February 13th, 2009, 08:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Derek Jackson View Post
WI Christians simply used the Gospels as the central 'bibile' of their faith?
As in, either they integrate the Book of Revelation, Acts of the Apostles, and the various Epistles into the NT, or they're never written?
Interesting. That would make for a far different Christianity, and a far different world history.
Though I think it's too much to assume that they'd toss out the Old Testament. Not even the OTL Gnostics threw that out.
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Old February 13th, 2009, 08:33 PM
bernooch bernooch is offline
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Marcion tossed out the Old Testament I believe...and he was the first person to compile what became known as a Testament...If I recall Marcion was gnostic or gnostic-esque
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Old February 13th, 2009, 11:01 PM
DuQuense DuQuense is offline
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?Is this just the Four Gospels of OTL, or does it include the Gospels of the Other Disciples?
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Old February 14th, 2009, 01:57 AM
rcduggan rcduggan is offline
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IIRC the Paulicians -- proto-Bogomils of Bulgaria, ancestors of the Cathars and Tondrakians -- used only two gospels as the entire scripture. They were a significant power in Anatolia until the 870s when their capital was destroyed by Basil I the Macedonian, Roman (Byzantine) Emperor. The religion decried the use of icons, as well as various earthly indulgences. It was Christian, but Gnostic-influenced.

A possible POD would be for a more successful Paulician movement that converts the Byzantine Empire. (There was a thread about just that here.) We could have analogues of Cyril and Methodius that spread Paulician ideas in Europe. Eventually there could be a TTL reformation of sorts in which Catholicism or part of it is forcibly redefined to only recognize a few of the gospels.
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