This should make the author of Caesar's Messiah smile.
@0nlyThis
7 ай бұрын
More accurately put: "Was Titus Flavius the Son of Man that Jesus' literary creators had him predict?
@GrimeyCrunchdog
7 ай бұрын
Yes
@soobright
9 күн бұрын
As a devout follower of SENECA’s teachings, there is no possible resemblance to PAUL’s writings
@marcobelli6856
7 ай бұрын
Christ himself was Caesar (Iulius). If there was tampering by the Flavians after the Julian dinasty I don’t know but probably yes. Atwill recognised the Flavians hand but cannot see Caesar staring at him directly in the eyes.
@1stHuemanAmerican
7 ай бұрын
JaintReal
@lovetwentyfourseven7428
5 ай бұрын
Its Montanus, Montanus is the coming of the overcomer, the son of man! he his born in the lifetime of John, he is born in fulfillment, Titus Vespasian is the man of Torahlessness, which wouild lead to the destuction to come, and then the Son of man the overcomer would come!
@wowojeejee
Ай бұрын
No one wrote about Jesus during his presumed lifetime. Paul, the lunatic preacher, was the first one to write about him around 60CE, without seeing a real Jesus. Every leading Christian scholar since Erasmus, 500 years ago, has maintained that the gospels were originally written in Greek from 70 to 140 CE (Mark after the year 70, Luke about 110, Matthew about 130, and John no earlier than 140 CE). This proves that they were not written by Christ's apostles, disciples or by any of the early Christians. Written by Greek high priests (bishops). The new testament was written in a form of koine Greek which was the common language of the Eastern Mediterranean from the conquests of Alexander the Great (335-323 BC) until the evolution of Byzantine Greek (c. 600). Only 2 gospels mention the vir-gin birth and all 4 gospels contradict each other for a total of 194 times. Search for: 194 contradictions in the new testament. Nazareth did not exist until the 2nd century. Only Matthew mentions the wise men and the sermon on the mount.
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