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Loading... The Hymn of Jesusby G. R. S. Mead, G. R. S. Mead (Author)
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Just as many other settings of the Sayings and Doings of the Lord existed prior to and alongside of the canonical Gospels, so were there, prior to and alongside of the subsequently selected or canonical Acts, many other narratives professing to record the doings and sayings of the Apostles and Disciples of the Lord. Most of these originated in circles which were subsequently called heretical, and many of them were later on worked over by orthodox editors to suit doctrinal preconceptions, and so preserved for the edification of large numbers in the Catholic or General Church No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)229.9Religions Bible Apocrypha Apostolic epistles and canons; ClementinesLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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PREAMBLE
Just as many other settings of the Sayings and Doings of the Lord existed prior to and alongside of the canonical , so were there, prior to and alongside of the subsequently selected or canonical Acts, many other narratives professing to record the doings and sayings of the Apostles and Disciples of the Lord.
Most of these originated in circles which were subsequently called heretical, and many of them were later on worked over by orthodox editors to suit doctrinal preconceptions, and so preserved for the edification of large numbers in the Catholic or General Church.
As Lipsius says: "Almost every fresh editor of such narratives, using that dom which all antiquity was ont ee allow itself in dealing with literary moments, would recast the materialis lay before him, excluding whatever mig not suit his theological point of view dogmatic statements, for example, speeches, prayers, etc., for which he would substitute other formule of his own composition, and further expanding and abridging after his own pleasure, or as the immediate object which he had in view might dictate."
Some of these edited and re-edited documents, though for the most part they have come down to us in a very fragmen tary condition, still preserve distinct,traces of their Gnostic origin; and Lipsius has shown that their Gnosticism is not to be ascribed to third century Manichæism, as had been previousy assumed by many, but to the general Gnosis of the second century. There was a of religious romances in the second
centuri...