Hello you all,
it is a bit awkward, but I'm one of those lurkers, with perhaps much less
reason then the others, not being a professor, doctor, or even a student,
but just someone, fascinated by the Middle ages, and then especially the
south of France, and their heresy. I've had this very long e-mail
discussion with a friend trying to sort out some of the beginnings of this
dualistic belief that Catharism is, but we never came to some sort of
solution. It toke us way back in time, with lots of deveating stuff, like
the first Nicéen concile in 325 AC.
I have read all I could lay my hands on, but still a lot of questions, (and
that are the simple ones) remain. Can anyone explain how a dualistic
believe can still be called monotheïsm, although in the strict terms, there
are two almoust equivalent gods in the term ? This might be for you a very
silly question but it is one I never found an exceptable answer for
Thanks in advance
Kristin
"Dieu bénit l'homme, non pour avoir trouvé mais pour avoir cherché (H. Balzac)
Kristin
Dieu bénit l'homme, non pour avoir trouvé, mais pour avoir cherché (Balzac)
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