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As 1QpHab [the Damascus Document of Qumran] previously, the text’s audacity raised hostility from rival Essenian factions, the tensions resulting once again in a change of paradigm from a heavenly actor to an earthly prophet scheduled for a trial.........
The repeated antagonisms between community factions—celestial utopia versus the historical nucleus of the founder’s execution—concerned Essenian writers, not yet Jewish-Christians....Thomas as an early Jewish-Christian text subjected to the canonical gospels (as logia 13 mentioning Simon-Peter and Matthew seems to indicate), meaning thatthe Jesus of the Thomas wisdom sayings, be it a later edition of Thomas, is held to be the Jesus of the synoptics: a Jewish prophet. Inverting primacy, meaning the gospel’s reliance on Thomasine Jesus sayings has also able partisans[1]. Martijn Linssen, departing from Jewish-Jesus interactions[2] prospected a radically different approach where Is or Isus in the Coptic Thomas represented a different sacrality, a Greek/Coptic deity,[3] and not the Jewish prophet Jesus, unlikely to have been recorded under a divine name by supposed early Jewish-Christians. If originally unrelated to the biblical Jesus, how and when did the divine Coptic Isus and selected Coptic sayings reach the gospels?
[1] Detlev Koepke “The Jesus of the Gospel of Thomas” (Metanoia 2021) considers the sayings as Jesus’ original teachings that spread to the gospels.
[2] Martijn Linssen. “Absolute Thomasine Priority” Academia.edu 2019
[3] The Copts kept the name IC or IHC sacred, an overlined nomen sacrum. IS or Isus may be related to IaSo the Greek goddess of healing. However, as Copts, therefore Egyptians, the name could be related to Isis, the goddess of revival. (Personal note from Linssen)...........
Marcion could start introducing divine Hellenistic mysticism[1] into aYeshua eliminated, recording selected Coptic sayings known to Marcion via Ephesian Gnostics and Valentinius increased the wisdom and authority of the divine Son Isus.
[1] A. Harnack, Marcion the Gospel of the Alien God, p.82: Marcion declares Jesus Christ is “the Son of the Father, by nature God” closely replicating the Gnostic’s “God’s Word that is His Son Isus”
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Ἰησοῦς
fascinating....
Chris Albert Wells is a university teacher and professor of surgery who currently lives on the French Riviera.
Celsus, a Roman philosopher and observer of early gospels wrote around 175 CE soon after Marcion’s days. As a privileged observer, he stands as a contemporaneous and extra-biblical witness. His arguments survive in Origen’s Contra Celsum written c. 248 CE.[1] In Contra Celsum 2.27 we learn that the attempted gospels were revised in their first written forms three, four or many times, remodeled to refute objections. Celsus does not refer to four Gospels as a collection and knows of no individual canonical evangelist’s name.
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the overlined nomen sacrum Isus survives in its primitive form. The Coptic/Gnostic IC or IHC still appears in Greek—IΣ or IHΣ—within the fourth century Christian Codex Siniaticus and Vaticanus and the fifth century codices, Alexandrinus, Ephraemi and Bezae
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The biblical Jesus reached prominence later than Hippolytus (170-235) Origen (185-254 CE) and Cyril of Jerusalem (315-387) for whom the ‘wisdom sayings’ [Sermon on the Mount] were heretical.
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that mentions nineteen times the prophet whose name was changed, “Jesus (Joshua)”, [1] Justin and Tertullian already equating Jesus (unrecorded in early Christian codices) with Joshua implies later redactors defending new policies. Neither connect Jesus/Joshua to the wisdom sayings but to the Creator’s Christ and Scripture implying a broader commitment: securing the counter-reform.
[1] The earliest Dialogue manuscript dates to the 14th century. Works of Tertullian come from medieval manuscripts, none older than the late 8th century.
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[1]. HE 1.13.1-22) connectedSyria[2]
[1] The evangelists were not known before the later second century. John becoming the favorite disciple and gospel writer is also necessarily, as Thomas, a later updating.
[2] Walter Bauer “Orthodoxy and Heresy in Earliest Christianity” (Ch.1, Edessa) considers “the story designed to establish apostolic origins to obscure Edessan Christianity’s heretical roots.” Bauer had incorrectly generalized the Christian map according to early Western pro-Judaism under Rome’s influence and Eastern Marcionite predominance.
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