Brakelite
Well-Known Member
- Feb 6, 2020
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I have no love for the Papacy, but I need to pull you up on the above statement. While it is true that during the dark ages, from about the 6th century on, the Catholic Church in Rome certainly produced a lot of fraudulent documents which were claimed as true and used to their advantage for hundreds of years, such as the donation of Constantine, but prior to the 6th century, the Catholic Church's sphere of influence and authority was limited to Alexandria, Rome, and a few satellite towns and villages in a fast diminishing empire, being taken over by Germanic tribes that were converted to Christianity by missionaries that were by no means connected to Rome.but with the Roman Catholic Church (RCC) controlling all the documentation
The Goths converted by Wulfilas being one example, and the indigenous Celtic people of Britain and Ireland another.
There were also vast regions to the east unaffected by Roman imperialism, either pagan or papal, that had their own organized mission outposts which established the Christian faith as far east as China, and possibly Japan. By the 13th century there were Christian kingdoms throughout Mongolia, China, Persia, and everywhere along the great silk road. And they had scriptures, carefully voted and ordered by Christian writers, and they belief to a rich taken heritage of learning and educational literacy that far outshine the West.
The early center for those missions endeavors was Antioch in Syria. In the 4th century Lucian of Antioch translated the scriptures into the common language of the people, and these translations formef the basis for the KJV... The received text... We have today. These were unaffected by any possible,. Whether real or imaginary... Alterations subtractions, additions, or other frauds by the Catholic Church. Rome at that time did not have that power or influence.
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