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Topic: Nag Hamadi


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In the News (Wed 16 Dec 09)

  
  EgyptSearch Forums: refusing to convert to Islam
Our son, the soldier Hani Sarofim Nasrala, from the village of Rahmaneya Kebly in the city of Nag Hamadi of the Qena governorate, was a soldier in the southern sector of the city of Aswan.
We found him drowned in the Nile near the city of Nag Hamadi.
An official report was filled at the Nag Hamadi police station under the number 5251 year of 2006.
www.egyptsearch.com /forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=next_topic;f=10;t=002031;go=newer   (368 words)

  
  Nag Hammadi Library
The texts discovered at Nag Hammadi available in the Gnostic Society Library are indexed in alphabetical order, and by their location in the original codices.
This leaves a small number of scriptures of the Nag Hammadi Library which may be called "unclassifiable." It also must be kept in mind that the passage of time and translation into languages very different from the original have rendered many of these scriptures abstruse in style.
The most readily comprehensible of the Nag Hammadi scriptures is undoubtedly The Gospel of Thomas, with The Gospel of Philip and the The Gospel of Truth as close seconds in order of easy comprehension.
www.gnosis.org /naghamm/nhl.html   (1052 words)

  
 purevolume™ | Nag Hamadi
nag hamadi is a five piece metal/hardcore band from freehold, new jersey.
All songs, lyrics and pictures © Nag Hamadi.
You must be logged in as a “LISTENER” to add comments.
www.purevolume.com /naghamadi   (74 words)

  
 Amazon.com: The Nag Hammadi Library: Books: James M. Robinson   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The Nag Hammadi Library was discovered in 1945 buried in a large stone jar in the desert outside the modern Egyptian city of Nag Hammadi.
Acclaimed by scholars and general readers alike, The Nag Hammadi Library is a work of major importance to everyone interested in the evolution of Christianity, the Bible, archaeology, and the story of Western civilization.
The Nag Hammadi library is a collection of religious texts that vary widely from each other as to when, where, and by whom they were written.
www.amazon.com /Nag-Hammadi-Library-James-Robinson/dp/0060669357   (869 words)

  
 Nag Hammadi - InfoSearchPoint.com   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Nag Hammâdi is a village in the middle of Egypt, called Chenoboskion in classical antiquity, about 225 kilometres north-west of Aswan with some 30.000 citizens.
Nag Hammadi is mostly known for being the site where thirteen buried codices, containing mostly Gnostic works, but including a copy of Plato's Republic, were found.
Most famous of these works must be the Gospel of Thomas, of which the Nag Hammadi codices contain the only complete copy.
www.infosearchpoint.com /display/Nag_Hamadi   (294 words)

  
 The Nag Hammadi Gospels - More Accurate than the Four Gospels - Christian Forums   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The Nag Hammadi scrolls were suppose to be destroyed but their owners cared so much for these texts that they hid them, buried them, hoping that a future generation might receive more insight from them.
Actually, the overwhelming majority of the Nag Hamadi texts look to have been written in the second century or later; and at least some of them were written to counter or elaborate upon points made in the current canonical texts.
This said, there are a (very) few nag hamadi texts that either likely do date from the 1st century AD, or incorporated traditions that originated directly from the 1st century church.
www.christianforums.com /t123929   (1405 words)

  
 NAG HAMADI..SECRETS OF THE FRAUD
The Gnostic Nag Hamadi,..and of course the defamed and proved fraudulent scholarship of the theosophists and Madam Blatvsky..
Following is a link to and snips from research on the Fraudulent nature and scholarship of the Nag Hamadi and the Gnostic..(called theosophists) today.
It is not surprising, he points out, that the "Gospel of Mary," for example, presents demeaning portraits of Peter and the Apostles (written long after their deaths) when the Gnostic goal at the time was undermining the Bishops.
www.rumormillnews.com /cgi-bin/archive.cgi?noframes;read=70269   (2133 words)

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