GakuseiDon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 10:56 pm
billd89 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 3:19 pm
I'm sold. I recall there have been a few threads on this? I posted a
Reply.
In later time, when Christianity had finally triumphed, the spelling χρηστιανός {=chrestianos} was proscribed as heretical.”
That's interesting. When was "Chrestian" proscribed as heretical, and why? I'd be interested in evidence for that, since it implies that there were a group of heretical Christians that called themselves "Chrestians".
The citation is
here. It is not elaborated. No Strawman, thx.
The Antioch populace, as Tacitus says, called this sect "Chrestiani" c.40-45 A.D. Tertullian's excuse was far from the final word. And the common myth-conception that it was a simple misspelling is blatantly false, disingenuous. The Church Fathers represent a calculated revisionism. What happened to the 'sect'? I suppose the 'savior rabble' lurched from one temple to another...
Background:
This
random blog post makes some interesting points and provides excellent additional detail:
Long before a wandering prophet in Galilee drafted into deity decades after his life on earth was saddled with the epithet, several Hellenistic deities were bestowed with the title, such as Osiris Chreistos, Isis Chreste, Helios Christos, Apollo Chrestos, Serapis Chrestos, Hades Chrestos, Persephone Chreste, Hermes Chrestos, Eileithyia Chreste, and Chrestos Mithras.
1 Enoch, 2nd century
This second century BCE pseudepigraphic, apocalyptic work introduces the title ‘Son of man’ as a designation for the coming messianic figure. Along with the title Eklektos (‘Chosen One’), it uses both terms with which this essay is concerned, Chrestos (‘Righteous One’) and Christos (‘Anointed One’).
I presume all and sundry have seen the
Roger Pearse post:
We also read in J. M. Robertson, Christianity and Mythology, p. 331, that Osiris, the Sun-deity of Egypt, was reverenced as Chrestos. We also read of the heretic Gnostics who used the name Chreistos.
Alien gods? Gnostics? No wonder the "Chrestiani" were deemed heretical. Books were
overwritten, so scorned was the name. Intuitively: yes, the spelling was proscribed as heretical.
Ointment Cup, or "Through Chrestos the Magician"? (
Artifact recovered by divers in the harbor of Alexandria, dated 3rd C BC to 1st C. AD.)