Julian even tries to rebulid the Jewish temple destroyed by Titus.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The denouncement by the Emperor Julian of the christian religion has not before been viewed from the perspective of the Eusebian fiction postulate. Traditonally Julian is viewed as a simple "apostate", or turner-away-from the christian tradition. However <b>this article explores the possibility that Julian was convinced that the entire religion was a fabrication and fiction of wicked men, in a very real ancient historical sense.</b>
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The denouncement by the Emperor Julian of the christian religion has not before been viewed from the perspective of the Eusebian fiction postulate. Traditonally Julian is viewed as a simple "apostate", or turner-away-from the christian tradition. However <b>this article explores the possibility that Julian was convinced that the entire religion was a fabrication and fiction of wicked men, in a very real ancient historical sense.</b>
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