I'm going to answer two posts in one here, so bear with me.
Thank you, Nestorius, for taking the time to write what you did. You have obviously put a lot of thought into it. I will in no way deny how Christianity has grown and developed over the centuries. Some of the ages where not much thought was put into the saving of others is something that saddened God greatly. The past as you have described it is not the first time that this has happened.
In the Old Testament, we see Israel, God's own chosen people, go away from Him to worship other false gods and come back to Him over and over again. Even in the New Testament, we see some churches moving away from the origional teachings of both Christ and the Apostles, some to a degree that they were hindering the Gospel message rather than spreading it. This has happened many times since Creation, and is still happening today, sadly, in many churches in the US and elsewhere.
Does this disqualify Christianity as the truth? It is true that in the time of Constantine, there were many churches, or "sects," that had different views of what they worshipped, and some even had different texts (there were many various other texts floating around at the time of Constantine). It wasn't this way in the very beginning in the time of the founding of the first churches right after Christ's death.
Constantine brought together the Counsil of Nicea in order to put a remedy to this, in which the texts were gathered and studied closely. Our Bible as we see it today came largely in part from that council. Texts were studied to verify origional authorship, as well as the doctine they produced, whether or not they were contradictory. Most of the "lost gospels" that float around today are obvious contradictions to the "true Gospel" that exists today. One of the main reasons we can rely on the Bible as it is compiled today is that, through the translations, they can be traced back (through over 50k pieces of writings) to the origional manuscripts. The four Gospels were found to have been written by their name-sakes (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John) as well as the various epistles. The same can be said for the OT writings.
Now, as far as the belief of Christianity being a relatively new religion, with many of its aspects taken, it is believed, from various mystery pagan cults and religions before Christianity, this idea is destroyed by the finding of the Ebla Tablets.
The Ebla Tablets were written around 2300 BC and are at least 4310 years old, and are the oldest findings in the area of religion, stating that monotheism (worship of a single, all-powerful deity) was first, and contain the oldest creation accounts outside of the Bible, predating the once oldest accounts of Babylonia by 600 years, and even backs up the patriarchal narratives.
Quoted in these tablets is this passage:
Lord of heaven and earth:
the earth was not, you created it,
the light of day was not, you created it,
the morning light you had not [yet] made exist.
Whats more, the oldest accounts of creation most closely mirror the Bible's account
where other accounts don't even come close.
The names of Ur, Sodom and Gomorrah, the cities of the plane, are listed
in the EXACT ORDER they appear in the Bible, proving these were not made-up cities to simply tell a moral story, and also contain the Biblical names of Adam, Eve and Noah among others.
The Ebla Tablets also destroy the notion that there was no writing at the time of Moses, since the Ebla Tablets date to 1400 years before Moses. This is further reinforced by the fact that Moses was in Egypt, and Egypt had a fully developed writing system, as well as advanced mathematics.
On to the next post.
If that is the case, there is no absolute truth. If you have 2 sides, each to believe that they know the truth, then by your logic, there is no truth. Therefore, any religion that contradicts the other is false (ie Christianity and Islam), just for examples. THAT is not my belief. AH, there i go again. Beliefs.
When I said both cannot be true, what I meant was that one would naturally be false while the other is true. Of course, two "truths" can both be false, while the real truth remains out there to be attained.
If there is no absolute truth, is that an absolute truth?
If you say that nothing can be known, in your haste you said that truth was impossible. And is it true that truth is impossible? For, if no proposition is true, then at least one proposition is true--the proposition, namely, that no proposition is true.
If truth is impossible, therefore, it follows that we have already attained it.