Originally posted by Elok
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We know of a Zoroastrian influence on Jewish belief- the whole subgroups of angels in mystical Hebrew thought, for instance, and there was a Buddhist influence on Iranian architecture and Buddhists living in the eastern parts of the Iranian territories, and when the Greeks had discovered the benefits of the monsoon wind trade routes were shortened somewhat between the Mediterranean and India and South East Asia.
The characteristics of the some of the Essenes in their daily lives- eschewing certain food products & marriage & carnality, their pacifism and so on, seem an awful lot like the more committed of the Jains for instance- but that's not to say that two distinctly different groups could arrive at some of the same kinds of notions about how to approach the seeming dichotomy between the divine and the worldly.
Gnostics were not christians.
There is a difference between a heretic Christian and a non-Christian, as you might appreciate, were you not such a clot. But then y'are, Blanche, y'are.
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