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A friend was telling me that he visited and met King Arther, and something to do with Glastonbury.

2006-08-31 07:45:38 · 15 answers · asked by Bear 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

15 answers

King Arthur came a bit after Jesus was alive. When Jesus was alive, England was still Pagan, as was most of Europe. King Arthur was fictional, but some people will claim Jesus was too, so maybe it works that way.

Perhaps Jesus went during that huge chunk of time during his life that wasn't recorded? It was a long trip back then!

2006-08-31 07:52:13 · answer #1 · answered by Mrs. Pears 5 · 0 0

Well, King Aurthur is fictional. But I know there is a rumour that Jesus came to England. It's the idea that inspired the words of the famous hymn:
'And did those feet, in ancient time, walk upon England's mountains green.
And was the holy lamb of God on England's pleasant pastures seen?
And did the countenance divine shine forth upon our clouded hills?
And was Jerusalem builded here, among these dark satanic mills?'

Don't know about Glastonbury tho. There's also a rumour that he visited Scotland.

2006-08-31 07:58:37 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ROFLMAO
sorta
King Arther was about 800 AD
But yea his uncle was JOSEPH of ARIMATHAEA.
Joseph had tin mines in England, believe he took the boy Jesus with him!

http://www.cabiz.net/heartlink/joseph_of_arimathea.htm

2006-08-31 08:59:26 · answer #3 · answered by Grandreal 6 · 0 0

Bear,
Jesus was a relative of Joseph of Aramathea. There is somethig there to support your rumor. You might have to weed out some information as being spurious, but I think that it could have happened.

The best teaching on the subject was done by Dr. Gene Scott.
http://www.drgenescott.com/listen-live.htm
But you have to catch it when they are replaying it on the above link.

His homepage is http://www.drgenescott.com/ where you can order teaching tapes and CD's. There is an extremely truncated list of what to order from Dolores Press.

This is real good stuff, and Dr. Scott is a Philosophies of Education graduate from Stanford University.

2006-08-31 09:04:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, Jesus never traveled more than 200 miles from where He was born. And King Arthur is just a myth.

2006-08-31 07:52:10 · answer #5 · answered by stullerrl 5 · 1 0

whilst in London you could stay just about everywhere through fact the transport equipment of trains and buses gets you around easily and quickly. to boot as each and all of the nicely-known London vacationer highlights you could take day journeys out of London with the help of practice to thrilling cities inclusive of Windsor, Canterbury and Cambridge in case you have 3 weeks then it fairly is effective to to trip with the help of practice and stay for some days in perhaps York it is an particularly appealing city or Chester. And the obtrusive base in Scotland is Edinburgh and perhaps some days in Inverness. From there you could fly back to London with an airline referred to as easyJet which do affordable flights in case you e book nicely forward.

2016-11-23 16:20:53 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It was part of his 32 A.D."Save Mankind World Tour"

Someone is pulling your leg. King Arthur was supposed to have lived in the Middle Ages, 1500 years after Jesus was supposed to have been here

2006-08-31 07:48:27 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

I think that your friend is conflating "The Life of Brian" and "The Holy Grail."

2006-08-31 07:49:53 · answer #8 · answered by Gestalt 6 · 1 0

Wild... simply wild lol

Altho he did travel thru europe.

2006-08-31 07:52:17 · answer #9 · answered by WhiteHat 6 · 0 0

Dan Brown might be able to help you with that one

2006-08-31 07:51:36 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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