Agreed... |
Posted by
Tiglath
(Guest)
davidchibo@hotmail.com
- Thursday, September 23 2004, 15:39:55 (CEST) from 203.173.7.176 - 203-173-7-176.dyn.iinet.net.au Australia - Windows XP - Internet Explorer Website: Website title: |
.....provided you do both. You still haven't filled in your idea (b and c) of what you think he was doing. By all means send Moffett a balanced letter to him asking him what this incident by the CofE may have been intended for but meanwhile fill in b abd c and post this on Beth and AINA. All I ask is that you let a jury of our peers decide whos option(s) are more logical. Thanks, Tiglath P.S. Post the letter to Moffett so that we can see it as well. ------------------------------------------ Dear friends, I need your opinions on a couple of historical quotes that have recently been brought to my attention. Now I'd like you to first read the quotes below then honestly vote on which of these you believe is the more accurate of the 3 options. Just vote for now and we can comment on the quotes later. Thank you, Paul Younan ------------------------ About 420 an alarmed Zoroastrian high priest came before Yazdegerd to complain that Christian evangelism was inducing mass apostasy from the state religion. The Christian cause was not helped by some arrogant attacks on fire temples by sincere but fanatical Christians, the most violent of whom were often converts from Zoroastrianism. The Shah could scarcely ignore open desecration of the state temples and the destruction of religious peace in his realm. He empowered the Zoroastrian clergy to persuade apostates from the national religion to renounce their conversion to Christianity and return to the faith of the empire "Not, however, by death, but by fear and a certain amount of beating." *A History of Christianity in Asia, Samuel Moffett Volume 1 - Beginnings to 1500 p. 159, Paragraph 2 Later in the reign of Yazdegerd, the Persian bishop, Abdas of Susa destroyed a Zoroastrian temple in the city; the king ordered the bishop to restore the building at his own expense. Abdas refused and the result was the order by the king to destroy all churches. *A Brief History of Christianity in Iran, By Massoume Price, December 2002 --------------------- Was the Church of East Bishop's use of violence and disruption of religous peace..... a. ....an attempt to gain new influence and followers from the Zoroastrian faith? b. < Your main point that you believe may explain these quotes. > c. < Your second point that you believe may explain these quotes. > --------------------- |
The full topic:
|
Content-length: 2779 Content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, image/pjpeg, application/vnd.ms-excel, application/vnd.ms-powerpoint, applicatio... Accept-encoding: gzip, deflate Accept-language: en-au Cache-control: no-cache Connection: Keep-Alive Cookie: *hidded* Host: www.insideassyria.com Referer: http://www.insideassyria.com/rkvsf2/rkvsf_core.php?I_ll_one_up_you-7kot.RfzA.REPLY User-agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322) |