tzor wrote:Deadpool809 wrote:The early Catholic Church, in an attempt to homogenize the Christian factions and consilidate power for the throne actively promoted a faith with a deified Christ, stamping out any Gnostic (or any other) belief about Jesus by any means necessary. Books not included in the "Canon" were burned, and anything that suggested that Christ was a man was destroyed. As much as possible anyway.
Right, tell me another story. The early "Catholic" Church, was disorganized and for the most part persecuted. They weren't a position to do much of anything. It took hundreds of years to finalize the list (you know that is what "canon" means right) of recognized books. Revelation was not on a lot of the church's lists for the first few centuries.
The impact of the Gnostic sects has been mostly forgotten because of the Reformation, but they were a serious challenge to the Church's authority. They were prolific writers, while the sucessors of the Apostles were not. They also argued from the same scriptures that the "Catholic" Church used as well.
Last and far from least, it wasn't the Christians who finally extinguished most of the gnostic communities, it was Islam.
It isn't a "story" - it is history. The whole point of the formation of the Catholic Church was to increase the power of the Roman Emperor - if Faith is controlled by the State, then the State has more power. The whole idea of Jesus as divine was essential to their control, and starting with Constantine, military might was used to suppress heretics. The organization you say was persecuted stopped being so during Constantine's reign, and that is when it started its rise towards becoming the successor to the power of the Roman Empire.
Of COURSE the Romans weren't the only ones responsible for exterminating Gnostics. Hell, the Muslim's didn't even finish the job - there are still some around today in Iraq and other Middle Eastern nations. But the Catholic Church became the defining voice of the Christian faith for centuries, because of the power they achieved. Part of that power came because they consolidated their version of the faith (by force, and not conversion), and brutally suppressed anyone in their sphere of influence that disagreed with it.
Gnostic texts were dropped from the bible for various reasons, and destroyed as heretical when found. Sometime because it presented a view of Christ as anything other than divine and perfect (including texts describing Christ as a child - the powerful son of God who used his power to kill in a fit of rage), as anything other than the literal Son of God, anything written by a woman, and especially anything that portrayed him as being human - and stories about his wife would fit that bill.
You can call it stories if you like - I call that blind devotion to a faith. I am not saying you are wrong about who and what Jesus was, but you are completely wrong if you feel the Catholic Church was in any way innocent, seeking after the truth. Especially for the vast bulk of its history. It was an organization devoted to acquiring and maintaining power, and through the centuries used extraordinary means to suppress any belief that contradicted the one that made them God's voice on Earth.
Not attacking the Catholic faith - just those that brought it to power.
And I am sorry - quoting the Bible to prove anything kills your argument. You can't prove that the Bible is 100% true and unaltered when history proves that it is very much altered.And stories passed down over a few generations before finally being written down does not constitute first-hand accounts. Oral tradition is shakey at best, and when you have a hundred+ year game of telephone going on, crossing borders and languages... well, let's just say that I very much doubt that Christ's literal words are transcribed in the Bible. I believe the general history presented in the New Testament is more-or-less true, but the specifics are very much a product of whatever chronicler finally put the story to paper.