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By: Nithin Sridhar
March 16, 2007
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(My Intention is not to hurt the beliefs or the feelings of the Christian
community. My article is just to show to the world that the claim on which
the Christian Missionaries are forcibly converting people is falsehood and
hence they have no moral authority to convert people forcibly)
“The question which has so much exercised the minds of men — whether Jesus
was the historic Christ (= Messiah) — is answered in the sense that
everything that is said of Him, everything that is known of Him, belongs
to the world of imagination, that is, of the imagination of the Christian
community, and therefore has nothing to do with any man who belongs to the
real world.”
This has been said by Bauer in 1850-51.
Jesus of Nazareth also known as Jesus Christ is the central figure in the
Christianity. Christianity is a monotheistic religion centered on Jesus of
Nazareth and his life, death, resurrection, and teachings as presented in
the New Testament. Christianity is based on a belief that Jesus is the Son
Of God and the Messiah prophesied in the Old Testament.
The main sources of information regarding Jesus" life and teachings are
the four canonical Gospels of the New Testament: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and
John. The historicity of Jesus Christ as described in the gospels has been
for a long time one of the principal dogmas of all Christian
denominations.
The scope of this article is to analyze the historicity of the Jesus of
Nazareth. Jewish historians, who lived and wrote during the same period or
a little later, fail to notice him as well as the religion supposed to
have been founded by him. It may be Philo, who wrote a history of the
Jews, Justus of Tiberius, or Flavius Josephus who lived from AD 36 or 37
to 99 or 100 knows no Jesus Christ and no Christians. The Greeks and
Romans have left to posterity a vast historical and philosophical
literature written in or referring to the time-bracket when Jesus is
supposed to have lived. But it is unaware of him. Seneca (2 BC-66 AD),
Pliny the Elder (23-79 AD), Martial (40-102 AD), Plutarch(45-125 AD),
Juvenal (55-140 AD), Apuleius (d. 170 AD), Pausanius(d. 185 AD), and Dio
Casius (155-240 AD) do not mention any Jesus or Christ. Referring to Jesus
Christ of the Gospels, Sita Ram Goel, noted scholar and historian writes-“
All languages which have been influenced by Christianity contain the
expression, “gospel truth”. But truth is exactly what we find completely
missing from the gospels when it comes to the life and teaching of their
hero — Jesus of Nazareth. In fact, the gospels violate one of the Ten
Commandments — thou shalt not bear false witness — and can be easily
caught in the act.”.
When we analyze the different gospels we see that there is contradicting
data relating to the year, date and the place of birth of Jesus, his
genealogy and parentage. Luke places the birth of Jesus to 2BC.Where as
John places at 22-15 BC. Eusebius placeshis death in 22 AD, which takes
his birth to 9 BC if he was 30 when he died, to 12 BC if he was 33, and to
28 BC if he was nearing 50. Theyear 1 AD as the year of his birth was
assumed by the sixth century Romanmonk, Dionysius Exiguus. Christmas, the
day of the birth of Jesus is celebrated on 25th December. Referring to the
inconsistency of this date of Christmas, Sita Ram Goel writes-“As for the
date of Christmas, the chances are no better than 1 in 365 that Jesus’
birthday fell on 25 December. A number of different dates have contended
for the title — including 20 May, 19 April, 17 November, 28 March, 25
March and 6 January — and it took nearly five hundred years before 25
December came to be generally accepted The reason for the choice of this
date owes nothing to historical evidence but a great deal to the influence
of other religions. It was no accident that 25 December happened to be the
birthday of the Unconquered Sun’(Sol Invictus), the chief festival of the
Mithraic cult, a popular mystery religion of the late Roman Empire which
shared quite a number of elements with Christianity, notably its emphasis
on rebirth and salvation.” About the place of birth Goel asks-“ Was Jesus
really born in Bethlehem? Unfortunately, even the Christian scriptures
disagree among themselves. Matthew and Luke both say yes, while John (7:
41-2) and Mark (1:9 ; 6:1) give the impression of never even having heard
of Jesus’ supposed birth at Bethlehem but assume that his birthplace was
Nazareth, a small town in the northern region of Galilee, at the opposite
end of the country from Bethlehem.” He continues-“ Nazareth fares no
better as the place of Jesus’ birth. There is no positive proof that this
place existed at the time when he is supposed to have been born. It does
not occur in any Roman maps, records or documents relating to that time.
It is not mentioned in the Talmud. It is not associated with Jesus in any
of the writings of Paul. Josephus who commanded troops in Galilee does not
mention it. It appears for the first time in Jewish records of the seventh
century”. In clears words Goel demonstrates that even if we assume that
Jesus was a historical Character and not a myth there are only few
evidences about the time and place of birth of Jesus which are
contradictory among themselves.
Mathew and Luke try to trace Jesus back to King David. But here also both
differ in facts and figures. Matthew accommodates 28 and Luke 41
generations of Jesus’ ancestors in the same span of time. There are only
three names that are common in the two family trees. Even the name of
Joseph’s father and Jesus’ grandfather is not the same. About Virgin Mary,
Goel quotes Ian Stephens- “Tamar was a temple prostitute; Rahab was the
madam of a brothel; Ruth, the most moral, indulged in some pretty
shameless sexual exploitation; and Bathsheba committed adultery with King
David. Was the author of the Matthew genealogy implying something about
the only other woman mentioned, Mary herself?”. Further, Goel quotes
Michael Arnheim -“ The real reason for floating the myth of virgin birth
seems to be that “there had always been a question mark hanging over
Mary’s sexual morality” and that “it was clearly a subject which caused
the early Christians acute embarrassment”. In fact, there has been a
long-standing tradition among the Jews that Jesus was the fruit of an
adulterous union between Mary and a Roman soldier named anthera”. These
are beautifully summarized by Will Durant when he says-“The virgin birth
is not mentioned by Paul or John, and Matthew and Luke trace Jesus back to
David through Joseph by conflicting genealogies; apparently the belief in
the virgin birth rose later than in the Davidic descent.”
When the Gospels are studied in the light of the prevalent Jewish laws and
administration in Palestine, some difficulties arises in the story of
Gospels. Goel quotes Paul Winter-“ Jewish scholars have examined the
gospel accounts in the light of Jewish laws and administration prevailing
in Palestine at the time Jesus is supposed to have been tried by the
Jewish authorities. They have come to the conclusion that the whole story
of Jesus being tried by the Jewish authorities for blasphemy sounds
spurious.
Firstly, they hold that in terms of the Jewish law it was not blasphemy
for any Jew to claim to be the Messiah or the Son of God. Secondly, they
point out that sessions of the Sanhedrin could not be held at the times
and in the ways mentioned in the three gospels. Finally, they maintain
that if Jesus had been found guilty of blasphemy for saying something
which is not mentioned in the gospels, the Jewish authorities at Jerusalem
were quite competent to get him stoned to death, the penalty prescribed by
Jewish law, and were not at all called upon to hand him over to the Roman
governor for getting him crucified. The very fact that Jesus was crucified
and not stoned to death goes to prove that he must have violated a Roman
and not a Jewish law”. We can further recognize the contradictions among
the Gospels about the details of Crucifixion. Regarding Resurrection Goel
writes-“ We are entitled to dismiss the gospel stories of Resurrection
like the rest of Jesus’ miracles. We are entitled not to treat it as
history at all. But as Resurrection happens to be the core of the
Christian creed, we will better see what sort of puerile invention it is.”
According to scholars, Jesus’ appearance after his death formed no part of
the original gospel of Mark and has been appended to it later. Now Mark
being one of the four Gospels, which is written about thirty years after
Jesus’ death, it is impossible to imagine that Mark had failed to
recognize this, if Jesus really had appeared after his death. The accounts
of Resurrection of all the four Gospels differ in their details. Goel
writes-““There seems even less prospect,” observes James P. Mackey, “of
arriving at a concordant account of the details of the appearances of
Jesus than there is in the case of the empty tomb stories, when at least
Mary Magdalene is consistently a principal character. That has to be
recognized at the very outset. Apart from the major discrepancy amongst
the gospels as to whether the appearances of Jesus took place in Galilee
or in and around Jerusalem, all the appearance stories have different
settings, details and messages. As Reumann, I think, it was, pointed out,
there is not even, as in the case of passion narratives, an agreed
framework for the appearance narratives within which discrepancies of
detail occur and by comparison to which they could reasonably he counted
as negligible...”Further, the Jewish tradition confirms that the story of
Resurrection and Ascension were created by the disciples.
Gospels claims to be the witness and the recorders of truth. But on closer
observation we see that it had been distorted over the years and also that
they contradict each other. Goel observes-“We have, however, seen that the
gospels contradict and cancel out each other when it comes to the salient
features in the story of Jesus — the date and year and place of his birth,
his ancestry and parentage, his ministry, his trial and death, and his
resurrection. This claim on behalf the gospels, therefore, falls to the
ground”. Goel continues-“ In fact, this claim was dismissed most
forcefully by David Friedrich Strauss who published his two-volume work,
The Life of Jesus Critically Examined, in 1835-36. “Because of the
discrepancies he found, he cogently argued that none of the gospels could
have been by eye-witnesses, but instead must have been the work of writers
of a much later generation, freely constructing their material from
probably garbled traditions about Jesus in circulation in the early
Church.”
Will Durant, noted historian observes that-“Matthew relies more than the
other evangelists on the miracles ascribed to Jesus, and is suspiciously
eager to prove that many Old Testament prophecies were fulfilled in
Christ... The Fourth Gospel does not pretend to be a biography of Jesus;
it is a presentation of Christ from the theological point of view, as the
divine Logos or Word, creator of the world and redeemer of mankind. It
contradicts the synoptic gospels in a hundred details and in its general
picture of Christ... In summary, it is clear that there are many
contradictions between one gospel and another, many dubious statements of
history, many suspicious resemblances to the legends told of pagan gods,
many incidents apparently designed to prove the fulfillment of Old
Testament prophecies, many passages possibly aiming to establish a
historical basis for some later doctrine or ritual of the Church.”
On every points Gospels contradict themselves and no other evidences
corroborated their stories. Gospels and its Jesus Christ had been proved
to be a product of imagination and not of reality. Albert Schweitzer, the
world famous theologian and missionary, has traced in a well-known book
published in 1906 the progress of Christology from Hermann Samuel Reimarus,
who wrote in the middle of the eighteenth century, to Wilhelm Wrede whose
book on this subject was published in 1901. “The study of the Life of
Jesus,” he says, “has had a curious history. It set out in quest of the
historical Jesus, believing that when it had found Him it could bring Him
straight into our time as a Teacher and Saviour...” Coming to the
“Results”, he mourns, “There is nothing more negative than the result of
the critical study of the Life of Jesus. The Jesus of Nazareth who came
forward publicly as the Messiah, who preached the ethic of the Kingdom of
God, who founded the Kingdom of Heaven upon earth, and died to give His
work its final consecration, never had any existence. This image has not
been destroyed from without. It has fallen to pieces, cleft and
disintegrated by the concrete historical problems which came to the
surface one after another, and in spite of all the artifice, art,
artificiality, and violence which was applied to them, refused to be
planed down to fit the design on which Jesus of the theology of the last
hundred and thirty years had been constructed and were no sooner covered
over than they appeared again in a new form..” He concludes, “We thought
that it was for us to lead our time by the roundabout way through the
historical Jesus, as we understood Him, in order to bring it to the Jesus
who is a spiritual power in the present. This roundabout way has now been
closed by genuine history.”
The basic foundation on which Christianity survived so long has been
crushed. The Jesus of Nazareth or the so called Jesus Christ, the Son of
God, the Savior, is no more a Historical Character, but the invention the
followers of the monotheistic theology of Christianity. Today Christianity
has been reduced to a hollow religion without any historical or
philosophical foundation. This plight of Christianity is well explained by
Michael Arnheim. He writes-““By the early twentieth century the so-called
‘quest for the historical Jesus’ was bogged down in negativism. The
Gospels, according to an influential schools of Protestant theologians,
were to be taken as theological rather than as historical documents, and
they could yield no authentic information about the life and deeds, or
even the sayings and teachings, of Jesus. Such a conclusion might have
been expected to have a cataclysmic effect upon Christianity. For, after
all, there could surely be no Christianity without Christ, and there could
be no Christ without Jesus? But if Jesus were so shadowy a figure as to
belong more to the realm of myth and legend than to that of history and
fact, the whole edifice of Christianity must surely crumble?”
Today, the Church and the Christians who for centuries had been committing
atrocities against people of other religions in the name of Jesus, who had
been proselytizing people in order to save them has no justification.
There is no Christianity without Jesus and Jesus has been proved a myth.
Hence Christianity can no longer claim to be the Only True Religion.
Bibliography, Jesus Christ, An Artifice for Aggression
Sita Ram Goel, VOICE OF INDIA
Nithin Sridhar
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