354 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
354 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
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Jesus Christ
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by
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Barbara G. Walker
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The Jesus who was called Christos, "Anointed," took his title from
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Middle-Eastern savior-gods like Adonis and Tammuz, born of the Virgin
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Sea-goddess Aphrodite-Maria (Myrrha), or Ishtar-Mari (Hebrew Mariamne).
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Earlier biblical versions of the same hero were Joshua son of Nun
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(Exodus 33:11), Jehu son of Nimshi, whom Elijah anointed as a sacred
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king (1 Kings 19:16), and Yeshua son of Morah, The Book of Enoch said
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in the 2nd century B.C.E. that Yeshua or Jesus was the secret name
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given by God to the Son of Man (a Persian title), and that it meant
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"Yahweh saves."
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In northern Israel the name was written Ieu. It was the same as Ieud
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or Jeud, the "only-begotten son" dressed in royal robes and sacrificed
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by god-king Isra-El. Greek versions of the name were Iasion, Jason, or
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Iasus -- the name of one of Demeter's sacrificed consorts, killed by
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Father Zeus after the fertility rite that coupled him with his mother.
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Iasus signified a healer Therapeuta, as the Greeks called the
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Essenes, whose cult groups always included a man with the title of
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Christos. The literal meaning of the name was "healing moon-man,"
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fitting the Hebrew version of Jesus as a son of Mary, the almah or
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"moon maiden."
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It seems Jesus was not one person but a composite of many. He played
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the role of sacred king of the Jews who periodically died in an
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atonement ceremony as surrogate for the real king. "The Semitic
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religions practiced human immolations longer than any other religion,
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sacrificing children and grown men in order to please sanguiary gods.
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In spite of Hadrians's prohibition of those murderous offerings, they
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were maintained in certain clandestine rites." The priesthood of the
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Jewish God insisted that "one man should die for the people... that the
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whole nation perish not" (John 11:50). Yahweh forgave no sins without
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bloodshed: "without shedding blood is no remission" (Hebrews 9:22).
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Middle-Eastern traditions presented a long line of slain and
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cannibalized Saviors extending back to prehistory. At first kings, they
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became king-surrogates or "sacred" kings as the power of real
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monarchies developed. The Gospels' Jesus was certainly not the first of
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them, though he may have been one of the last. One passage hints at a
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holy man's understandable fear of such brief, doomed eminence: "When
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Jesus therefore perceived that they would come and take him by force,
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to make him a king, he departed again into a mountain himself alone"
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(John 6:15).
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This Jesus seems to have made little or no impression on his
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contemporaries. No literate person of his own time mentioned him in
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any known writing. The Gospels were not written in his own time, nor
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were they written by anyone who ever saw him in the flesh. The books
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were composed after the establishment of the church, some as late as
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the 2nd century A.D. or later, according to the church's requirements
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for a manufactured tradition. Most scholars believe the earliest book
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of the New Testament was 1 Thessalonians, written perhaps 51 A.D. by
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Paul, who never saw Jesus in person and knew no details of his life
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story.
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the details were accumulated through later adoption of the myths
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attached to every savior-god throughout the Roman empire. Like Adonis,
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Jesus was born of a consecrated temple maiden in the sacred cave of
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Bethlehem, "The House of Bread." He was eaten in the form of bread, as
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were Adonis, Osiris, Dionysus, and others; he called himself the bread
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of God (john 6:33). Like worshippers of Osiris, those of Jesus made him
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apart of themselves by eating him, so as to participate in his
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resurrection: "He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth
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in me, and I in him" (John 6:56).
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Like Attis, Jesus was sacrificed at the spring equinox and rose again
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from the dead on the third day, when he bacame God and ascended to
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heaven. Like Orpheus and Heracles, he "harrowed hell" and brought a
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secret of eternal life, promising to draw all men with him up to glory
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(John 12:32). Like Mithra and all the other solar gods, he celebrated a
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birthday nine months later at the winter solstice, because the day of
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his death was also the day of his cyclic re-conception.
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From the elder gods, Jesus acquired not only his title of Christos
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but all his other titles as well. Osiris and Tammuz were called Good
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Shepherd. Sarapis was Lord of Death and King of Glory. Mithra and
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Heracles were Light of the World, Sun of Righteousness, Helios the
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Rising Sun. Dionysus was King of Kings, God of Gods. Hermes was the
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Enlightened One and the Logos. Vishnu and Mithra were Son of Man and
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Messiah. Adonis was the Lord and the Bridegroom. Mot-Aleyin was the
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Lamb of God. "Savior" was applied to all of them.
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Mystery cults everywhere taught that ordinary men could be possessed
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by spirits of such gods, and identifed with them as "son" or alter
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egos, as Jesus was. It was the commonly accepted way to acquire
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supernatural powers, as shown by some of the charms used by magicians:
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"Whatever I say must happen....For I have taken to myself the power of
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Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and the great god-demon Iao Ablanathanalba...for
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I am the Son, I surpass the limit....I am he who is in the seven
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heavens, who standeth in the seven sanctuaries; for I am the son of the
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living God....I have been united with thy sacred form. I have been
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empowered by thy sacred name. I have recieced the effluence of
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goodness, Lord, God of gods, King,....havein attained that nature equal
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to the God's"
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the skeptical Celsus noted that beggars and vagabounds throughout the
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Empire were pretending to work miracles and become gods, throwing fits,
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prophesying the end of the world, and aspiring to the status of saviors:
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Each has the convenient and customary spiel, "I am the god," or "a
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son of God," or "a divine spirit," and "I have come. For the world
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is about to be distroyed, and you, men, because of your injustice,
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will go (with it). But I wish to save, and you shall see me again
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coming back with heavenly power. Blessed is he who worships me
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now! On all others, both cities and countrysides, I shall cast
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eternal fire. And men who (now) ignore their punishments shall
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repent in vain and groan, but those who believed in me I shall
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preserve immortal."
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Of course this "conspicuously false" doctrine was the central message
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of the Gospels too. Persian eschatology passing through a
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Jewish-Essenic filter predicted "the Son of Man comeing in a cloud with
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power and great glory" (Luke 9:27, 21:27). Jesus promised the end of
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the world in his own generation. The rest of the Gospel material was
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largely devoted to the miracles supposed to demonstate his divine
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power, since religions generally "adduce revelations, apparitions,
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prophecies, miracles, prodigies and sacred mysteries that they may get
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themselves valued and accepted." Even these miracles were derivative.
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Turning water into wine at Cana was copied from a Dionysian ritual
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practiced at Sidon and other places. In Alexandria the same Dionysian
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miracle was regularly shown before crowds of the faithful, assisted by
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an ingenious system of vessels and siphons, invented by a clever
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engineer named Heron. Many centuries earlier, priestesses at Nineveh
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cured the blind with spittle, and the story was repeated of many
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diffrent gods and their incarnations. Demeter of Eleusis multiplied
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loaves and fishes in her role of Mistress of Earth and Sea. Healing the
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sick, raising the dead, casting out devils, handling poisonous serpents
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(Mark 16:18), etc., were so commonplace that Celsus scorned these
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"Christian" miracles as "nothing more then the common works of those
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enchanters who, for a few oboli, will perform greater deeds in the
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midst of the Forum. ... The magicians of Egypt cast ou evil spirits,
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cure diseases by a breath, and so influence some uncultured men, that
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they produce in them whatever sights and sounds they please. But
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because they do such things shall we consider them the sons of God?
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Magicians often claimed that their prayers could bring flocks of
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supernatural beings to their assistance. Thus Jesus declared that his
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prayer could summon twelve legions (72,000) of guardian angels (Matthew
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26:53). Magicians also communed with their followers by the standard
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mystery-cult sacrament of bread-flesh and wine blood. In texts on
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magic, "a magician-god gives his own body and blood to a recipient who,
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by eating it, will be united with him in love."
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The ability to walk on water was claimed by Far-Eastern holy men ever
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since Buddhist monks praised it as the mark of the true ascetic. The
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Magic Papyri said almost anyone could walk on water with the help of "a
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powerful demon." Impossibilities have always been the props of
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religious credulity, as Tertullian admitted: "It is believable because
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it is absurd; it is certain because it is impossible.
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However, repetitive miracles were not so believable as original ones.
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Therefore early Christians insisted that all the older deities and
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their miracle-tales were invented by the devil, out of his
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foreknowledge of the true religion, so the faithful would be confused
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by past "imitations." Pagan thinkers countered with the observation
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that "The christian religion contains nothing but what Christians hold
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in common with heathens; nothing new, nor truly great." Even St.
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Augustine, finding the hypothesis of the divil's inventions hard to
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swallow, admitted that "the true religion" was known to the ancients,
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and had existed from the beginning of time, but it began to be called
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Christian after "Christ came in the flesh."
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Nevertheless, adherents of the true religion violently disagreed as
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to the circumstances of its foundation. In the first feew centuries
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A.D. there were many mutually hostile Christian sects, and many
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mutually contradictory Gospels. As late as 450, Bishop Theodore of
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Cyrrhus said there were at least 200 diffrent Gospels revered by the
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churches of his own diocese, until he destroyed all but the approved
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canonical four. The other Gospels were lost as stronger sects
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overwhelmed the weaker, wrecked their churches, killed the believers
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and burned their books.
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One scripture, later thrown out of the canon, said Jesus was not
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crucified. Simon of Cyrene suffered on the cross in his place, while
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Jesus stood by laughing at the executioners, saying, "It was another
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who drank of the gall and vinegar; it was not I....it was another,
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Simon, who bore the cross on his shoulder. It was another upon whom
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they placed th crown of thorns. But I was rejoicing in the height....
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And I was laughing at their ignorance." Believers in this scipture
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were persecuted and forced to sign an abjuration reading: "I
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anathematize those who say that Our Lord suffered only in appearance,
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and that there was a man on the cross and another at a distance who
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laughed."
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Some Christians interpreted Jesus's noli me tangere ("Touch me not")
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to mean he came back from the death as an incorporeal spirit, after the
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manner of other apotheosized heroes, such as the Irish hero Laegaire,
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who also told his people not to touch him. Later, an unknown Gospel
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writer inserted the story of doubting Thomas, who insisted on touching
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Jesus. This was to combat the heretical idea that there was no
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resurrection in the flesh, also to subordiinate Jerusalem's numicipal
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god Tammuz (Thomas) to the new savior.
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Actually, the most likely source of primary Christian mythology was
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the Tammuz cult in Jerusalem. Like Tammuz, Jesus was the Bridegroom of
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the Daughter of Zion (John 12:15). Therefore his bride was Anath,
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"Virgin Wisdom Dwelling in Zion," who was also the Mother of God. Her
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dove decended on him at his baptism, signifying (in the old religion)
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that she chose him for the love-death, Anath broke her bridegroom's
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reed scepter, schourged him and pierced him for fructifying blood. She
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pronounced his death curse, Maranatha (1 Corinthians 16:22). As the
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Gospels said of Jesus, Anath's bridegroom was "forsaken" by El, his
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heavenly father. Jesus's cry to El, "My God, God, why hast thou
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forsaken me?" seems to have been a line written for the second act of
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the sacred drama, the pathos or Passion (Mark 15:34).
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Of course this Passion was originally a sexual one. Jesus's last
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words "it is done" from consummatum est which would be better
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interpeted as "it is consummated", this was interpreted as a sign that
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his was finished, but could equally apply to his marriage (John 19:30).
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As a cross or pillar represented the divine phallus, so a temple
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represented the body of the Goddess, whose "veil" (hymen) was "rent in
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the midst" as jesus passed into death (Luke 23:45). As usual when the
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god disappeared into the underworld, the sun was eclipsed (Luke 23:44).
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In their ignorance of astronomical phenonema, Christians claimed that
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the moon was full at the same time -- Easter is still a full-moon
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festival -- though an eclipse of the sun can only occur at the dark of
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the moon. The full moon really meant impregnation of the Goddess.
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The parting of Jesus's garment recalls the unwrapping of Osiris when
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he emerged from the tomb as the ithyphallic Min, "Husband of his
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Mother." If Jesus was one with his heavenly father, then he also
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married his mother and begot himself. A 4th-century scripture said in
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the underworld he confronted his mother as Death, Mu. She was also the
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Bride disguised as Venus, the evening star, presiding over the death of
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the sun. Jews still recall her in a ritual greeting to the evening
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star. "Come. O friend. let us welcome the Bride."
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Like Pagans, early Christians identified the Bride with the Mother.
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They said Jesus "consummated on the cross" his union with
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Mary-Ecclesia, his bride the church. Augustine wrote: "Like a
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bridegroom Christ went forth from his chamber, he went out with a
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presage of his nuptials....He came to the marriage bed of the cross,
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and there, in mounting it, he consummated his marriage...., he lovingly
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gave himself up to the torment in place of his bride, and he joined
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himself to the woman for ever." John 19:41 says, "In the place where he
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was crucified there was a garden; and in the garden a new sepulchre,
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wherein was never man yet laid." A garden was the conventional symbol
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for te body of the mother/bride at that time; and a new tomb was the
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virgin womb, whence the god would be born again. On the third day,
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Jesus rose from the tomb/womb like Attis, whose resurrection was the
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Hilaria, or Day of Joy. Jesus's resurrection day was named after
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Eostre (Easter), the same Goddess as Astarte, whom the Syurians called
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Mother Mari.
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Three incarnations of Mari, or Mary, stood at the foot of Jesus's
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cross, like the Moerae of Greece. One was his virgin mother. The second
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was his "dearly beloved" Mary magdalene. The third Mary must have
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represented the Crone, so the resembled that of the three Norns at the
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foot of Odin's sacrificial tree. The Fates were present at the
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saacrifices decreed by Heavenly Fathers, whose victims hong on trees or
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pillars "between heaven and earth." Up to Hadrian's time, victims
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offered Zeus at Salamis were anointed with sacred ointments -- thus
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becomeing "Anointed Ones" or "Christ" -- then hung up and stabbed
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through the side with a spear. Nothing in Jesus's myth occurred at
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random; every detail was part of a formal sacrificial tradition, even
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to the "processiong of palms" which glorified sacred kings in ancient
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Babylon.
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Far-Eastern tradition were utilized too. The Roman empire was well
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aware of the teachings ande myths of Buddhism. Buddha images in classic
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Greek style weere made in Pakistan and Afghanistan in the first century
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A.D. Buddhist ideas like the "footprints of Buddha" appeared among
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Christians. Bishop Sulpicus of Jerusalem reported that, as in India,
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"In the dust where Christ trod the marks of His step can still be seen,
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and the earth still bears the printy of this feet." Buddhist metaphors
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and phrasing also appeared in the Gospels. Jesus's formula, "Dearly
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Beloved," was the conventional way for Tantric deities to address their
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teachings to Devi, their Goddess.
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Scholars' efforts to eliminate paganism from the Gospels in order to
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find a historical Jesus have proved as hopeless as searching for a core
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in an onian. Like a mirage, the Jesus figure looks clear at a distance
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but lacks approachable solidity. "His" sayings and parables came from
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elsewhere; "his" miracles were twice-told tales. Even the Lord's Prayer
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was a collection of sayings from the Talmud, many derived from earlier
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Egyptian prayers to Osiris. The Sermon on the Mount, sometimes said to
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contain the essence of Christianity, had no original material; it was
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made up of fragments from Psalms, Ecclesiastes, Isaiah, Secrets of
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Enoch, and the Shemone Esreh. Moreover, it was unknown to the author
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of the oldest Gospel, pseudo-Mark.
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The discovery that the Gospels were forged, centuries later than the
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events they described, is still not widely known enven though the
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Catholic Encyclopedia admits, "The idea of a complete and clear-cut
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canon of the New Testament existing from the beginning...has no
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foundation in history." No extant manuscript can be dated earlier then
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the 4th century A.D.; most were written even later. The oldest
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manuscripts contradict one another, as also do even the present canon
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of synopic Gospels.
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The church owed its canon to the Gnostic teacher Marcion, who first
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collected Pauline epistles about the middle of the 2nd century. Later
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he was excommunicated as a heretic because he denied that the
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scriptures were mystical allegories full of magic words of power. The
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epistles he collected were already over a century old, if indeed they
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were written by Paul; much of their material was made up of forged
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interpolations.
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The most "historical" figure in the Gosples was Pontius Pilate, to
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whom Jesus was presented as "king" of the Jews and simultaneously as a
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criminal deserving the death penalty for "blasphemy" because he called
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himself Christ, Son of the Blessed (Luke 23:3; Mark 14:61-64). This
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alleged crime was no real crime. Eastern provinces swarmed with
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self-styled Christs and Messiahs, calling themselves Sons of God and
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announcing the end of the world. None of them was executed for
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"blasphemy." The beginning of the story probably lay in the traditon of
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sacred-king sacrifice in Jerusalem long before Pilate's administration,
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when Rome was trying to discourage such barbarisms.
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From 103 to 76 B.C., Jersalem was governed by Alexander Janneaus,
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called the Aeon, who defended his throne by fighting challengers. One
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year, on the Day of Atonement, his people attacked him at the alter,
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waving palm branches to signify that he should die for the earth's
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fertility. Alexander declined the honor and instituted a persecution of
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his won subjects. Another king of Jerusalem took the name of Menelaus,
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"Moon-king," and practiced the rite of sacred marriage in the timple.
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Herod also made a sacred marriage, and had John the Baptist slain as a
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surrogate for himself.
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If there was a Jesus cult in Jerusalem after 30 A.D., it completely
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disappeared forty years later when Titus conquered the city and
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outlawed many local customs including human sacrifice. Jerusalem was
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wholly Romanized under Hadrian. It was newly named Aelia Capitolina and
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rededicated to the Goddess. The temple became a shrine of Venus.
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|
Tacitus described the siege of Jerusalem, but his writing is abruptly
|
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|
cut off at the moment when Roman forces entered the city -- as if the
|
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|
final chapters were deliberately distoryed -- so no one knows what the
|
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|
Romans found there. However, Romans did express disapproval of the Jews
|
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|
or Christians cannibalistic sacraments. Porphyry called it "absurd
|
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|
beyond all absurdity, and bestial beyond every sort of bestiality, that
|
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|
a man should taste human flash and drink the blood of men of his own
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|
genus and species, and by doing should have eternal life."
|
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|
From the Christians viewpoint, a real historical Jesus was essential
|
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|
to the basic premise of the faith: the possibility of immortality
|
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|
through identifcation with his own death and resurrection. Welhausen
|
|||
|
rightly said Jesus would have no place in history unless he died and
|
|||
|
returned exactly as the Gospels said. "If christ hath not been raised,
|
|||
|
your faith is vain" (1 Conrinthians 15:17). Still, despite centuries of
|
|||
|
reseach, no historical Jesus has come to light. It seems his story was
|
|||
|
not merely overlaid with myth; it was mythic to the core.
|
|||
|
Like all myths, it revealed much about the collective psychology that
|
|||
|
created it. In earlier pagan religions, the Mother and Son periodically
|
|||
|
ousted tyhe Father from his heavenly throne. The divine son of
|
|||
|
Christianity no longer challenged the heavenly king, but tamely
|
|||
|
submitted to his fatal command: "Not my will, but thine, be done" (Luke
|
|||
|
22:42). Some early sects said the Father who demanded his son's blood
|
|||
|
was cruel, even demonic. These were suppressed, but scholars have
|
|||
|
discerned in Christianity "an original attude of hostility toward the
|
|||
|
father figure, which was changed in the first two Christian centuries
|
|||
|
into an attitude of passive masochistic docility.
|
|||
|
If orthodox Christianity demanded subordination of the Son, it was
|
|||
|
even more determined to subordinate the Mother. The Gospels Jesus
|
|||
|
showed little respect for his mother, which troubled the in its
|
|||
|
Renaissance efforts to attract women to the cult of Mary. "Any hero who
|
|||
|
speaks to his mother only twice, and on both occasions addresses her as
|
|||
|
`Woman,' is a difficult figure for the sentimentalbiographers."
|
|||
|
Together with Jesus's avowed opposition to marriage and the family
|
|||
|
(Matthew 22:30; Luke 14:26), women's primary concerns, New Testament
|
|||
|
sexism tended to disgust educated women of the old world.
|
|||
|
But the Jusus who emulated Buddha in advocationg poverty and humility
|
|||
|
eventually became the mythic figurehead for one of the world's
|
|||
|
pre-eminent money-making organizations. The cynical Pope Leo
|
|||
|
X exclaimed, "What profit has not that fable of Christ brought us!"
|
|||
|
Modern theologians tend to sidestep the question of whether Jesus was
|
|||
|
in fact a fable or a real person. In view of the complete dearth of
|
|||
|
hard evidence, and the dubious nature of the soft evidence, it seems
|
|||
|
Christianity is based on the unbiquitous social phenomena of credulity:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
An idea is able to gain and retain the aure of essential truth
|
|||
|
through telling and retelling. This process endows a cherished
|
|||
|
notion with more veracity than a library of facts...Documentation
|
|||
|
plays only a small role in contrast to the act of re-confirmation
|
|||
|
by each generation of scholars. In addition, the further removed
|
|||
|
one gets from the period in question, the greater is the strenth
|
|||
|
of the conviction. Initial incredulousness is soon converted into
|
|||
|
belief in a probability and eventually smug assurance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- W. Arens The Man-Eating Myth.
|