The
question of the
historical
existence of
Jesus has hit
the news with
the recent,
intriguing
lawsuit in Italy
by Luigi
Cascioli, who is
suing a priest,
Rev. Enrico
Righi, over his
published
assertion that
"Jesus did
indeed
exist."
Such a claim,
Cascioli says,
is a deception,
an "abuse
of popular
belief,"
which is against
Italian law. The
lawsuit
refreshingly
demands that
Righi prove that
Jesus existed.
In
his defense,
Righi and
obliging media
have trotted out
many alleged
evidences for
Jesus, long ago
discounted, yet
which continue
to pepper the
credulous
writings of
conservative
religious
authors and
scholars.
According
to the
Associated
Press, Righi
"cited many
known observers,
including
non-Christian
ones, who have
written about
the existence of
Jesus, such as
the Jewish
historian
Flavius
Josephus,
considered by
scholars to be
the most
important
non-Christian
source on
Christ's
existence."
Here
is the paragraph
that currently
appears in The
Antiquities of
the Jews,
written by
Josephus around
95 C.E.:
"Now, there was about this time, Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man, for he was a doer of wonderful works--a teacher of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew over to him both many of the Jews, and many of the Gentiles. He was [the] Christ; and when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men amongst us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him, for he appeared to them alive again the third day, as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other wonderful things concerning him; and the tribe of Christians, so named for him are not extinct to this day."
If
this is
the strongest
and earliest
extra-biblical
evidence for the
historical
Jesus, then the
scholarship is
on the shakiest
grounds. That
passage from
Josephus has
been shown
conclusively to
be a forgery,
and even
conservative
scholars admit
it has been
tampered with.
But even were it
historical, it
dates from more
than six decades
after the
supposed death
of Jesus.
The
Associated Press
chose to omit
the fact that
scholars have
largely
discounted the
Josephus
paragraph- as a
later
interpolation.
The passage,
although widely
quoted by
believers today,
did not show up
in the writings
of Josephus
until centuries
after his death,
at the beginning
of the fourth
century.
Thoroughly
dishonest church
historian
Eusebius is
credited as the
real author. The
passage is
grossly out of
context, a clear
hint that it was
inserted at a
later time.
All
scholars agree
that Josephus, a
Jew who never
converted to
Christianity,
would not have
called Jesus
"the
Christ" or
"the
truth," so
the passage must
have been
doctored by a
later
Christian--evidence,
by the way, that
some early
believers were
in the habit of
altering texts
to the advantage
of their
theological
agenda. The
phrase "to
this day"
reveals it was
written at a
later time.
Everyone agrees
there was no
"tribe of
Christians"
during the time
of
Josephus--Christianity
did not get off
the ground until
the second
century.
If
Jesus were truly
important to
history, then
Josephus should
have told us
something about
him. Yet he is
completely
silent about the
supposed
miracles and
deeds of Jesus.
He nowhere
quotes Jesus. He
adds nothing to
the Gospel
narratives and
tells us nothing
that would not
have been known
by Christians in
either the first
or fourth
centuries. In
all of Josephus'
voluminous
writings, there
is nothing about
Jesus or
Christianity
anywhere outside
the tiny
paragraph cited
so blithely by
the Associated
Press.
This
paragraph
mentions that
Jesus was
foretold by the
divine prophets,
but Josephus
does not tell us
who those
prophets were or
what they said.
This is
religious
propaganda, not
history. If
Jesus had truly
been the fulfillment
of Jewish
prophecy, then
Josephus would
have been the
exact person to
confirm it.
And
this is
the "most
important"
historical
evidence for
Jesus!
The
other phrase
from Josephus
that Righi and
AP cite concerns
James, the
so-called
"brother of
Jesus," and
is likewise
flimsy. It says
that a man named
James was stoned
to death, which
is not mentioned
in the bible.
Many scholars
believe the
"brother of
Jesus"
phrase is a
later
interpolation,
and that
Josephus was
referring to a
different James,
possibly the
same James that
Paul mentions in
Acts, who led a
sect in
Jerusalem.
Contradicting
Josephus,
Hegesippus wrote
a history of
Christianity in
170 C.E. saying
that James, the
brother of
Jesus, was
killed in a
riot, not by
sentence of a
court.
Righi
also cited Pliny
the Younger,
who, in the
early second
century (112),
reported that
"Christians
were singing a
hymn to Christ
as to a
god."
Notice how late
this reference
is; and notice
the absence of
the name
"Jesus."
The passage, if
accurate, could
have referred to
any of the other
self-proclaimed
"Christs"
(messiahs)
followed by Jews
who thought they
had found their
anointed one.
Pliny's account
is not history,
since he is only
relaying what
other people
believed. No one
doubts that
Christianity was
in existence by this
time. Offering
this as proof
would be the
equivalent of
quoting modern
Mormons about
their beliefs in
the historical
existence of the
Angel Moroni or
the miracles of
Joseph
Smith--doubtless
useful for
documenting the
religious
beliefs, but not
the actual
facts.
Tacitus,
another
second-century
Roman writer who
alleged that
Christ had been
executed by
sentence of
Pontius Pilate,
is likewise
cited by Righi.
Written some
time after 117
C.E., Tacitus'
claim is more of
the same late,
second-hand
"history."
There is no
mention of
"Jesus,"
only "the
sect known as
Christians"
living in Rome
being
persecuted, and
"their
founder, one
Christus."
Tacitus claims
no first-hand
knowledge of
Christianity. No
historical
evidence exists
that Nero
persecuted
Christians--Nero
did persecute
Jews, so perhaps
Tacitus was
confused. There
was certainly
not a
"great
crowd" of
Christians in
Rome around 60
C.E., as Tacitus
put it, and,
most damning,
the term
"Christian"
was not even in
use in the first
century. No one
in the second
century ever
quoted this
passage of
Tacitus. In
fact, it appears
almost
word-for-word in
the
fourth-century
writings of
Sulpicius
Severus, where
it is mixed with
other obvious
myths. Citing
Tacitus,
therefore, is
highly suspect
and adds
virtually
nothing to the
evidence for a
historical
Jesus.
Such
are the straws
believers must
grasp in order
to prop up their
myth.
Historians
have no evidence
of a historic
Jesus dating
from the early
first century,
even though many
contemporary
writers
documented the
era in great
detail. Philo of
Alexandria, for
example, wrote
in depth about
early
first-century
Palestine,
naming other
self-proclaimed
messiahs, yet
never once
mentioning a man
named Jesus.
Many other
contemporary
writers covered
that era, yet
there is not a
single mention
of any
existence,
deeds, or words
of a man named
Jesus.
Timothy
Freke and Peter
Gandy, in their
book The
Jesus Mysteries,
explain how the
myth and legend
of Jesus could
easily have
arisen without a
historical
founder. The
Jesus story was
pressed from the
same template as
other mythical
savior-gods who
were killed and
resurrected,
such as Osiris,
Dionysus, Mithra,
and Attis.
Early
Christians
agreed that
Christianity
offered
"nothing
different"
from paganism.
Arguing with
pagans around
150 C.E., Justin
Martyr said:
"When we
say that the
Word [Jesus],
who is the first
born of God, was
produced without
sexual union,
and that he,
Jesus Christ,
our teacher, was
crucified and
died, and rose
again, and
ascended into
heaven; we
propound nothing
different from
what you believe
regarding those
whom you esteem
sons of Jupiter
(Zeus)."
Fourth-century
Christian
scholar Fermicus,
in attempting to
establish the
uniqueness of
Christianity,
met at every
turn by pagan
precedents to
the story of
Jesus, in
exasperation
concluded:
"The Devil
has his
Christs!"
The
Gospels are not
history; they
are religious
propaganda,
contradictory,
exaggerated, and
mythical. The
earliest
Christian
writings, the
letters of Paul,
are silent about
the man Jesus:
Paul, who never
met Jesus, fails
to mention a
single deed or
saying of Jesus
(except for the
ritualistic Last
Supper formula),
and sometimes
contradicts what
Jesus supposedly
said. To Paul,
Jesus was a
heavenly
disembodied
Christ figure,
not a man of
flesh and blood.
There
is serious doubt
that Jesus ever
existed. It is
impossible to
prove he was a
historical
figure. It is
much more
plausible to
consider the
Jesus character
to be the result
of myth-making,
a human process
that is indeed
historically
documented.
In
covering Luigi
Cascioli's
fascinating
lawsuit, the
media need to
stop acting like
a megaphone for
religion, and
start doing some
balanced
reporting.
Here
are a few
references
relating to the
historical
Jesus:
The
Jesus Mysteries:
Was the
"Original
Jesus" a
Pagan God? by
Timothy Freke
& Peter
Gandy (1999,
Three Rivers
Press)
Did Jesus Exist?
by G. A. Wells
(1975,
Pemberton)
The Jesus
Puzzle:
Challenging the
existence of an
historical Jesus
by Earl Doherty
(1999, Canadian
Humanist
Association)
Deconstructing
Jesus by Robert
Price (2000,
Prometheus
Books)
The Jesus Legend
by G. A. Wells
(1996, Open
Court)
The Historical
Evidence for
Jesus by G. A.
Wells (1982,
Prometheus
Books)
Jesus in History
and Myth by
Joseph R.
Hoffman and G.
A. Larue (1986,
Prometheus
Books)
Jesus: Myth or
History? by A.
Robertson (1949,
Watts)
Pagan Christs by
J. M. Robertson
(1911, London)
The Quest of the
Historical Jesus
by Albert
Schweitzer
The Christ
Conspiracy: The
Greatest Story
Ever Sold by
Acharya S (1999,
Adventures
Unlimited)
Misquoting
Jesus: The Story
Behind Who
Changed the
Bible and Why by
Bart D. Ehrman
(2005, Harper
San Francisco)
(to document
gospel
discrepancies)
See
also Did
Jesus Really
Rise From the
Dead? by
Dan Barker.
Dan
Barker,
Foundation
co-president and
a former
minister who is
now an atheist,
is author of
Losing Faith in
Faith: From
Preacher to
Atheist, which
includes a
section on the
question of
Jesus'
historicity.
Barker has also
widely debated
the topic.
posted by Brian Worley Ex-Minister.org