Why are the biblically inherited fandom terms used to describe canonicity limited to "canon" and "apocrypha"? Where are my agrapha? My pseudepigrapha? My acheiropoieta?
seen from Germany

seen from Belgium

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
Why are the biblically inherited fandom terms used to describe canonicity limited to "canon" and "apocrypha"? Where are my agrapha? My pseudepigrapha? My acheiropoieta?
pick up the stone and you will find me, split the wood and i am there.
Un agraphon talmudique : Jésus et les toilettes du Temple
Un agraphon talmudique : Jésus et les toilettes du Temple
Je continue ma série sur les agrapha, avec cette fois un agraphon qui ne provient pas des écrits émanant des disciples de Jésus, mais de ceux de ses adversaires, les pharisiens.
Le récit qui nous intéresse se trouve, avec quelques variantes, dans trois écrits rabbiniques différents : la Tosefta, le Talmud de Babylone et le Midrash de Qohélet (un commentaire du livre de l’Ecclésiaste).
Je vous…
View On WordPress
Les agrapha : les paroles extracanoniques de Jésus
Les agrapha : les paroles extracanoniques de Jésus
On désigne par le terme d’« agrapha », pluriel d’« agraphon », qui veut dire en grec « non-écrit », les paroles de Jésus qui ne sont pas contenues dans les quatre évangiles canoniques (Matthieu, Marc, Luc et Jean).
Les débuts de la recherche
A côté des paroles de Jésus contenues dans nos évangiles, les premiers chrétiens avaient aussi parfois l’habitude d’en citer d’autres qui ne se trouvent pas…
View On WordPress
...και̣ π̣ροσευχεσθε υπερ των εχθρων υμων. ο γαρ μη ων κατα υμων υπερ υμων εστιν. ο σημερον ων μακραν αυριον εγγυς υμων γενησεται... ...And pray for your enemies. For he who is not against you is for you. He who today is far off — tomorrow will be near to you... —Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 1224
ECA: Second Clement
This post is part of our ongoing series examining Early Christian Authority.
The Apostolic Fathers
The Second Epistle of Clementrepresents the oldest extant non-canonical Christian homily, a sermon that urges followers of Christ to recognize their debts to God and repent of their sins while displacing themselves from the sinful world and committing themselves to self-control and good works. This…
View On WordPress