tlb wrote:tlb wrote:Why would there be a copy on Earth? In 314PD Austin Grayson leads his followers in a sub-light colony ship to abandon Earth and on 988PD they found Grayson, 10 years later he dies; meanwhile Earth goes though a "Final War" that ends 943PD, leaving Earth devastated by the effects of bioweapons and genetically-engineered "super soldiers." What little that might have been left behind could easily have been destroyed during the war.
Anyway, why would the Masadans accept a foreign "bible", even it was claimed to be Austin's original work? Certainly not from their enemies who could be passing off a forgery.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:Indeed.
First, I don't think Austin Grayson would have left a copy in a well-preserved and intentional location (like the National Archives or Library of Congress). I'd expect that they kept most of those a secret anyway.
Second, any copies that had been left behind would be lost to history because of the Final Wars. A lot of records would have been lost. I don't know what our record-keeping is going to look like in the next 400 years, but we are right now creating more content than we can index. We are losing information not because it ceases to exist, but because it is buried in the noise of everything else. Lose those indices and the data is practically gone.
But it is possible some colonies kept copies, maybe just accidentally. It would be easy to simply copy all of Wikipedia and all other sources of knowledge and put them in your colony ship (in multiple redundant backups), because you never know what information you may need on your new planet.
That brings to the final problem that tlb alluded to: authenticating such a copy. It would be extremely difficult to prove that it is an Austin Grayson original text.
This is all objective. I'm not even going into the subjective bits.
cthia wrote:I think perhaps I have been misunderstood. I am talking about the original text that Austin Grayson himself subverted. The original colony of Grayson was following some kind of "denomination" on Old Earth in Idaho. Austin Grayson altered the original teachings to fit with life in space, and to conform to his -- not the original -- teachings of God.
Although, and I have always wondered about this, it seems Austin Grayson may have incorporated both Mormon and Muslim teachings.
But those texts would certainly still exist in even millions of more Bibles than before the Final War, because of the Final War. If ever man needed religion, would have been then.
There is a saying that floats around in religious circles. Paraphrased. "When man is at his lowest point, when he is lying on his back on his death bed and can only look up, believers that have backslid and non-believers alike, that is when they will all call out to the Lord.
It is believed that a copy of the Bible will always be saved even in the face of Armageddon.
If Masada is not going to be interested in an off-world copy of the original teachings of Austin (because of the possibility of forgery), then why would they care about anything that was pre-Austin. They fought a civil war over whoever was interpreting Austin correctly; anything else might be of historical interest, but the Faithful are only interested in their religious "truth".
You said that Masada would reject anyone saying that they were religiously oppressed, but they would reject even stronger the statement that Austin's teaching subverted something truer. Even Grayson would reject that statement, although they would be more likely to take a historical interest in prior materials.
Good points.
I said Masada would reject
heathens suggesting "oppression." The Faithful, or some of the people of the Faithful, can arrive at certain conclusions on their own.
But you are forsaking
the original post (third post of this page) that spawned this
hope & epiphany. I am specifically talking about a splinter group that
might want to leave Masada and practice their own brand of religion. Or even establish a new religion on Masada.
I am suggesting a splinter sect that falls right smack dab in the middle between what is taught on Grayson and what is taught on Masada. Which, ironically, would become the "New Moderates" worshipping to a rewritten text that would be like the
New Testament of Austin Grayson.At any rate, an off-world copy of the original manuscript that was taught in Idaho is easy to verify. Send a respresentative to Old Earth to visit an authentic church in Idaho that is still practicing that denomination.
It is my notion of "the lesser of two evils."
Everyone is talking about educating the people of Masada. But what form would that education take? General education or religious education? At any rate, changes will not occur overnight. It starts with a small sect that grows into a full blown denomination. A branch of the branch of the Faithful ... of the branch of Austin Grayson ... of the branch of Idaho, if you will.
The roots of Faith.