You have not provided obvious evidence. A meme from the internet isn’t obvious evidence.I don't like being trolled,by someone who ignores obvious evidence.
You have not provided obvious evidence. A meme from the internet isn’t obvious evidence.I don't like being trolled,by someone who ignores obvious evidence.
You have not provided obvious evidence. A meme from the internet isn’t obvious evidence.
No, it’s not, they attribute the quote to C. S. Lewis, another form to Chesterton and a third to St. Augustine. There is no evidence that I have found so far that attributes the quote to Aquinas but your meme from the same place that quotes the mythological quote from George Washington about the cherry tree, memes are not reliable sources. You just need to find a reliable source for the quote being from Aquinas, until then it is bogus.Like I said from the start ,do your own research its all over the internet!
The Moses myth is also one of many like it. Have you ever read Joseph Campbell or seen the PBS special with Bill Moyer?
No, it’s not, they attribute the quote to C. S. Lewis, another form to Chesterson and a third to St. Augustine, there is no evidence that I have found so far that attributes the quote to Aquinas but your meme from the same place that quotes the mythological quote from George Washington about the cherry tree, memes are not reliable sources. You just need to find a reliable source for the quote being from Aquinas, until then it is bogus.
Thank youNo. I haven't... but maybe I can find it.
I like Francesca Stavrakopoulou's series on Jerusalem and the story tellers....
Zzzzzzz
The Egyptian myth of Osarseph, who freed a group of enslaved lepers, is incredibly similar to the Exodus story.
One day, King Amenophis of Egypt decided that he wanted to see the gods with his own eyes. He called on one of the kingdom's sages and asked him how he could make his wish come true. The wise man replied that the king could do so if he were to cleanse Egypt of lepers and other impure people.
The king took immediate action. He gathered all the people with disabilities and diseases and expelled them all to the stone quarries east of the Nile, to endure hard labor and be separated from the rest of the population.
When the sage saw the king's acts of cruelty, which were committed because of his prophecy, he feared the rage of the gods and the destructive consequences of his act, and killed himself.
continued
https://www.haaretz.com/1.5047829
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OsarsephThree interpretations have been proposed for the story: the first, as a memory of the Amarna period; the second, as a memory of the Hyksos; and the third, as an anti-Jewish propaganda.
The Moses myth is also one of many like it. Have you ever read Joseph Campbell or seen the PBS special with Bill Moyer?
Proving my point isn’t being obsessive or compulsive, especially when you keep replying with no proof.Obsessive compulsive much?
Proving my point isn’t being obsessive or compulsive, especially when you keep replying with no proof.
No. I haven't... but maybe I can find it.
I like Francesca Stavrakopoulou's series on Jerusalem and the story tellers....
Last night the BBC’s biblical scholar made a crucial and sloppy mistake about Christian belief
“The Bible was written by men with Daddy issues,” says atheist scholar
I do believe there is a Thomas Aquinas, I just don’t believe the quote you attribute to him is his.If you don't believe there was Moses,nothing will prove to you there was a Thomas Aquinas!
Let alone a very well known quote.
Goodnight.
BBC's face of religion is a self-proclaimed atheist who claims God had a wife and Eve suffered from sexism
I do believe there is a Thomas Aquinas, I just don’t believe the quote you attribute to him is his.
another author posing as a biblical scholar......
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/commentandblogs/2011/03/31/last-night-the-bbc%E2%80%99s-biblical-scholar-made-a-crucial-and-sloppy-mistake-about-christian-belief/