“The Lost Tomb Of Jesus?”

February 27th, 2007

Filed under: Current Events — admin @ 7:46 am

What Next, you know that guy, James Camron that did the documentary on the Tatanic a few years back (or was it last year); well now he’s calling his latest venture a factual documentary of the “The Lost Tomb of Jesus” and get this; His family (son) and all of this is supposed to be justified by the ultimate DNA evidence.

I found a very interesting article on this topic, check it out and come back and give your thoughts about it.

Could it be! Why and or Why Not?

Gnostic: What is it and should today’s Christian accept its teaching…

January 10th, 2007

Filed under: Current Events — admin @ 12:41 pm

There are some within Christiandom that believe there is more to the Revelation of God that the 66 books of the Bible that we have today. For example, the Catholics include in the middle of their Bible the Aprocrophal books. There are even some evangelicals that believe that there is more to the Bible (The Word of God) then what we have. Of lately there has been a surge in the interest of the Gnostic Gospels, and I would imagine what prompted that was the so called lost book of Jude.

But have you ever wondered, are these books (like the Scriptures) authored by the Holy Spirit, are these new found so called lost Gospels like all of the 66 books of the Bible  (The INSPIRED WORD OF GOD) and is profitable for reproof, correction and instruction in righteousness…

Lets Talk About It…

Gnosticism, esoteric religious movement that flourished during the 2nd and 3rd centuries ad and presented a major challenge to orthodox Christianity. Most Gnostic sects professed Christianity, but their beliefs sharply diverged from those of the majority of Christians in the early church. The term gnosticism is derived from the Greek word gnosis (“revealed knowledge”). To its adherents, Gnosticism promised a secret knowledge of the divine realm. Sparks or seeds of the Divine Being fell from this transcendent realm into the material universe, which is wholly evil, and were imprisoned in human bodies. Reawakened by knowledge, the divine element in humanity can return to its proper home in the transcendent spiritual realm.

To explain the origin of the material universe, the Gnostics developed a complicated mythology. From the original unknowable God, a series of lesser divinities was generated by emanation. The last of these, Sophia (“wisdom”), conceived a desire to know the unknowable Supreme Being. Out of this illegitimate desire was produced a deformed, evil god, or demiurge, who created the universe. The divine sparks that dwell in humanity fell into this universe or else were sent there by the supreme God in order to redeem humanity. The Gnostics identified the evil god with the God of the Old Testament, which they interpreted as an account of this god’s efforts to keep humanity immersed in ignorance and the material world and to punish their attempts to acquire knowledge. It was in this light that they understood the expulsion of Adam and Eve from Paradise, the flood, and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.

Although most Gnostics considered themselves Christians, some sects assimilated only minor Christian elements into a body of non-Christian Gnostic texts. The Christian Gnostics refused to identify the God of the New Testament, the father of Jesus, with the God of the Old Testament, and they developed an unorthodox interpretation of Jesus’ ministry. The Gnostics wrote apocryphal Gospels (such as the Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Mary) to substantiate their claim that the risen Jesus told his disciples the true, Gnostic interpretation of his teachings: Christ, the divine spirit, inhabited the body of the man Jesus and did not die on the cross but ascended to the divine realm from which he had come. The Gnostics thus rejected the atoning suffering and death of Christ and the resurrection of the body. They also rejected other literal and traditional interpretations of the Gospels.

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