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To: Godzilla
Absolutely none. In the 1220s, the monks at Glastonbury produced forged documents tracing their religious foundation to contemporaries of Jesus, including St Philip. There is no mention made at all in these documents of Joseph of Arimathea, as there certainly would have been if British tradition had linked him to the foundation at Glastonbury. Nor is there any mention of this mission in the earliest historical work on the conversion of Britain, Bede's eighth-century book History of the English Church and People,...

Nathanael didn't know Jesus even though their towns were five miles apart, and that Jesus was the only one asked for a stranger's tax with the fish-coin miracle. This tells me that Joseph the carpenter died when Jesus was young and whoever it was that took care of Jesus had him away a lot. At the crucifixion, Joseph of Arimathea claimed Jesus's body when every other disciple fled showing he was related to Jesus and must have been his guardian from when he was younger. A look at the history of Christianity shows Britain developed just about as fast as the places near Jerusalem. Looking at the history of southern England establishes that the Phoenicians had voyaged to England to mine for tin in their whole history so the route was well established. Dan had ships, they learned the tin routes from the Phoenicians making the connection to Israel and Judea, and therefore later to Joseph. Many artifacts show than a boy and his uncle are the ones that spread Christianity in that area even before the ministry in Jerusalem. Everyone knows that Jesus was mostly gone from history as a boy, it's easy to see where he was and how Britain got a huge jump on the teachings of Christ.

...nor indeed is it mentioned in any historical sources until the legend appears in the works of French poets. Nor do any of the early church historians make any mention of JoA's myth.

Tertullian says around 200AD that Christianity was well-established in Britain. It was spread there somehow.

125 posted on 12/28/2009 7:35:29 PM PST by Partisan Gunslinger
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To: Partisan Gunslinger
Everyone knows that Jesus was mostly gone from history as a boy, it's easy to see where he was and how Britain got a huge jump on the teachings of Christ.

Jesus was not teaching until he was baptized by John the Baptist - not before. No jumps here excepts leaps in logic.

Tertullian says around 200AD that Christianity was well-established in Britain. It was spread there somehow

Then Tertullian is no help - rgumentum ex silentio. Tertullian does not speak of JoA

129 posted on 12/28/2009 8:54:20 PM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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