JESUS,
CHILD OF DESTINY?
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
March 15, 2015
From
English scholar M. R. James’ (1862-1936) The
Apocryphal New Testament (1924), we are told that Jesus claimed his godhead
in the cradle. Several such works after
Mark’s gospel made such claims. In any
case, the story of Jesus invades history, but this does not mean it is
historical.
Much
as we cannot lay bare the Four Gospels
by modern historical techniques, we can analyze to the point of obsession the
fragments of first century writers that sporadically become available to us
through new discoveries. Much as these
fragments are valued they invariably fail to restore a true sense of the time
much less the story of Jesus. In many
cases, they seem as wistful in their impact as they seem promising in their
revelations.
Luke
places the birth of Jesus in a particular year in the reign of Herod and at the
time of the universal census commanded by Emperor Caesar Augustus. None of this is verifiable. In fact, it may not even be true. Christians believe it to be so as a matter of
faith and choose as well to see it as a matter of historical fact.
Moreover,
the Incarnation in traditional
Christianity is the belief that the second person of the Blessed Trinity, also
known as God the Son or the Logos (Word) "became
flesh" by being conceived in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary as
Jesus Christ, fully God and fully human.
Christians would say that this was something that happened in history
just as Pearl Harbor and the Second World War were events that happened in
history.
The
Jesus Story bears a remarkable resemblance to Greek mythology. For example, the legendary story of Semele,
who was human, but also the mother of the god Dionysus.
According
to Greek legend, Semele was one of the many love interests of Zeus, who engaged
in a love affair with this lovely mortal.
His wife Hera, angry with Zeus’s infidelity, decided to get her revenge,
targeting the unfortunate Semele.
Hera,
the Queen of the Olympian gods disguised herself and appeared to Semele one day
to make Semele doubt her lover’s claims to immortality, convincing the poor
mortal woman to demand proof of his divinity. Unfortunately, Semele accepted
this advice.
The
next time she was with Zeus, she requested that she be granted whatever she
asked of him. Zeus reluctantly agreed. And so Semele ordered Zeus to reveal
himself in all of his divine glory. As much as Zeus wanted to resist, he could
not, and when the god showed himself to the woman, she was incinerated by the
heat of his thunderbolts.
Semele,
who was pregnant at the time, died immediately. But Zeus rescued the unborn
child and placed him in his thigh. When the child was ready to be born, the
immortal Dionysus emerged.
To
debate the historical probability that Jesus was born in Bethlehem and of the line
of David is as impossible to verify as his having been divine. The Fourth Gospel very specifically states
that Jesus was not born in Bethlehem, and that he was not born of the King David
line. Yet the Fourth Gospel is no more
historical than Luke. Furthermore, it
was Emperor Augustus Josephus who mentions a census in 6 C.E. before the
imposition of a poll tax. King Herod
died in 4 C.E. So, Jesus had to be born
before that census. Even so, Luke’s
gospel, for many scholars, has the “look of history.”
In
the four gospels, Jesus is a very special person chosen by God, sent forth by
God, and raised up by God, but never quite God Himself. He is however invested with quasi-divine
powers. But in non-canonical or Apocryphal
Gospels (James, Thomas, Peter, etc.), he is God.
The
word "Apocrypha" means "things put away" or "things
hidden." It comes from the Greek
through the Latin.
The
general term is applied to the books that were considered by the church as
useful, but not divinely inspired. As such, to refer to Gnostic writings as
"apocryphal" is misleading since they would not be classified in the
same category by orthodox believers.
The
term as used by scholars is "falsely inscribed" or "falsely
attributed" in the sense that the writings were written by anonymous
authors who affixed the name of an apostle to the work, such as the “Gospel of Peter,” yet there
is no evidence that Apostle Peter ever wrote, but clear evidence that Apostle
Paul did.
Almost
all the books written in both the Old and New Testaments called
"Apocrypha" in the Protestant tradition are “falsely
attributed.” Likewise, “Apocrypha” is
synonymous in the Catholic and Orthodox tradition as in the Protestant tradition
(see Wikipedia, “New Testament Apocryphal”).
Unfortunately,
within the limits of history and historical methodology, the existence of Jesus
cannot be definitively proven; nor his place of birth, where it happened, when
it happened, who his parents were, and how his mother became pregnant.
The
Virginal Conception of Mary, mother of Jesus, was unknown to the early
Christian community. As with many other
dogmas that became instituted within Roman Catholicism over the centuries, this
is but one. No mention of this is in
the Gospel of Mark or in the Epistles of Paul.
All
New Testament Gospels mention that Jesus was brought up in Nazareth in the
reign of King Herod. That would suggest
that he was born before 4 C.E., which was the year Herod died.
The
Gospel of Matthew tells of Herod’s jealous rage when he heard that a rival king
had been born, commanding that all children under two be slain. Josephus tells us Herod was cruel, corroborating
this by telling us how Herod had forty-five prominent Jews killed for resisting
his occupation of Jerusalem. These Jewish
leaders resented his subservience to the Romans and claimed he was not a good
Jew, but was, indeed, a Roman sympathizing polytheist (Antiquities, XIV, 11-16).
Matthew
has Jesus, Mary and Joseph during the “Massacre
of the Innocence” fleeing to Egypt to avoid the slaughter thus fulfilling
the prophecy of Scripture, “Out of Egypt did I call my son” (Hosea 11:1). There is no evidence that Jesus ever went to
Egypt. But the canonical gospels as well
as the Gospel of St. Thomas has an angel informed Mary and Joseph of the death
of Herod and that it was safe to return to Judea. The Gospel of St. Thomas also has Jesus and family
fleeing to Egypt (M. R. James, pp. 14-16, and 49-70).
When
grown up, Jesus started preaching at the synagogue in Nazareth, where we are
told he joined his father, Joseph, in the carpenter trade (Matthew 13:55). But was he or his father actually carpenters? A. N. Wilson writes:
In
the old Jewish writings, the word “craftsman” or carpenter had a metaphorical
meaning, in the language that Joseph and Jesus would have spoken. Aramaic, the word is “nagger” and it would
either mean a craftsman or a scholar, a learned man (Wilson, op. cit., p. 83).
Yet,
the Gospel of Thomas makes it clear that Jesus was in fact a carpenter’s
apprentice and was able to lengthen pieces of wood rather than make them
shorter (James, op. cit., p. 63)
Wilson
continues:
The
Catholic Church, partly in order to steal a march on the Communist Party, and
partly to express its keenly held belief in the sanctity of work, has
instituted the feast of St. Joseph the Worker on May Day (Wilson, op. cit., p. 83).
Of
Jesus’s childhood the canonical Gospels tell us nothing, but the Apocryphal
Gospels fill in this disappointing gap with stimulating wonder. For example, when Jesus was five-years-old,
he made some clay sparrows on the Sabbath Day, spread out his hands, saying, “Go forth into the height and fly; ye shall
not meet death at any man’s hands.”
The clay birds flew away (James, op. cit., p. 55).
The
Gospel of Thomas not only displays the power of Jesus, but reveals his spite as
well. Thomas shows the young Jesus
sending people away mad, deaf or blind, then later making them again better
when they return. Jesus even strikes
people dead, solely for his amusement, then brings them back to life again (James,
op. cit., p. 62).
One
of Jesus’s most remarkable tricks is recorded in the Arabic Gospel and Syriac
History, but not in any Greek or Latin text.
Jesus
is shown attempting to join the play other children in their game, but the
children terrified run away and hide in a cellar nearby. When Jesus asked the woman of the house if
she has seen the children, she answered “No.”
Jesus
hears commotion in the cellar, and asked, “What
is that noise?” The woman says it is
her goats. Jesus answers, “Let the goats come out.” When the cellar door is opened to the woman’s
horror, all the children have been turned into goats.
The
woman goes to Mary and Joseph and implores them to use their influence with
Jesus to turn the goats back into children.
Jesus complies. “Come my playfellows,” he calls out, “let us play together.”
When
the goats are fully human again, their mother tells the children, “See that you
do everything that Jesus the Son of Mary commandeth you to do” (James, Ibid, pp.
62, 68).
We
don’t see Jesus cruelty in the Four Gospels, but we can imagine here in the
21st century a child with such powers behaving precisely as Jesus is said to
have behaved. We know children can be spiteful,
even cruel, some of us have only to look back to our own childhood to find such
evidence.
In
these four gospels, which give little insight into his childhood, we are led to
assume he behaved in a human sense very well.
We do find him when he is twelve-years-old sitting in the Temple with
teachers and rabbis asking them learned questions.
When
Mary discovers where Jesus has been, she complains, “My child, why have you
done this to us?” Jesus answers, “Why are you looking for me? Did you not know that I must be in my
Father’s house?” (Luke 2:48, 49, Jerusalem Bible).
Interestingly
enough, certainly most readers who have had children can relate to this, nearly
all of the references to Jesus in family are ones of conflict, in which the
child Jesus demonstrates quite early that he has his own mind. Mary, the mother of Jesus is very
understanding and patient with this Jesus in the bible, while Jesus is nearly
always rude towards her.
The
Synoptic Gospels even suggest that Jesus is mad. We know from Mark’s gospel that Jesus came
from a large family with four brothers, James, Joset, Simon and Jude as well as
sisters ((Mark 6:3).
Evidence
of Jesus existence outside the annals of Christianity are rare but
significant. Tacitus in his Annals tells of a Christian ringleader
who was condemned to death during the reign of Tiberius by the prosecutor
Pontius Pilate (Tacitus: Annals XV: 44).
Pliny
the Younger wrote to the Emperor Trajan saying the Christians sang hymns to
Christ as to a god (Pliny: Letters X: 96-97).
Flavius
Josephus (c37-100 C.E.) refers to James the brother of Jesus, head of the
Jerusalem Christian Church, calling his brother, Jesus, “the Messiah.”
(Josephus XVIII).
Josephus
speaks of Jesus as a wise man, a doer of wonderful works, a teacher of such men
who receives the truth with pleasure, and the race of Christians so named after
him, are not extinct even now (Josephus, op. cit., XVIII).
It
is interesting to note that as the Apocryphal Gospels are discovered they
invariably emphasize Jesus’s exceptionality and even his strangeness. The 20th century Christian preferred
an idealized Jesus with a divine nature.
A century of technological explosion has changed the calculus of life
and living, and was bound to change the sense of people with and about themselves
and this small planet.
In
Jewish historian Josephus, a man who once lived and wrote about what he
observed, we have an authentic almost contemporary voice that confirms there
was a Jesus, and in the time Josephus observed him, he was not thought of as God,
nor as a heretic, but as a wise man and a doer who did wonderful deeds
(Josephus, Ibid, XVIII.III-3). In
contrast, none of the gospel writers of the New
Testament ever refer to Jesus as a “wise man” (Geza Vermes, “Josephus
Portrait of Jesus Reconsidered” in Occident
and Orient: A Tribute to the Memory of A. Scheiber, 1988, 373ff).
Now
in the 21st century, the climate in which Christians find themselves
is that their religion is on trial, rightly
or wrongly, Christianity (and other religions as well) has been accused of
being the problem rather than the answer.
As this explorer has found, there is more information available than
ever before on Christianity. Paradoxically,
it widens rather than reduces the reader’s apprehension. It simply doesn’t hold together, for reason.
Mythmakers
from the conception of Christianity have been busy formulating appealing
themes, creating stories and presenting acts beyond human comprehension as probable
if at all possible.
Once
Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire in the early
fourth century, evidence that conflicted with the Orthodox view of Jesus was
destroyed or buried. The irony is that
here early in the 21st century belief in something larger than
ourselves, or what we can touch, feel, see, experience and understand has never
been more important, because we find the mind is never enough.
A
proportion of the Jesus stories described here may seem fanciful, but they have
survived! Granted, turning children into
goats, killing and bringing people back to life, changing water into wine,
walking on water, or turning clay sparrows into flying birds has little chance
to seem credible. Then you come to a
story that has the pulse of the real where a woman of the street drops behind the
feet of Jesus, weeping, wetting his feet with her tears, then wiping them with
the locks of her flowing hair, kissing his feet and anointing them with perfume
(Luke 7:37-44). Jesus is rebuked by his host
for allowing such a sinner to be in his presence much less conducting herself
in this style. The action of Jesus
demonstrated his humanity and accessibility, and like the Publican and the Pharisee, that humility and confession prove a
healthier soul.
Given
Christianity would become a Gentile faith, another story seems beyond invention. It is the story of the Canaanite woman demanding
Jesus heal her daughter. His reply was
that it wouldn’t be worth the scraps from the Jewish table to its dogs to do so,
that is, to Gentiles.
New
discoveries of the Jesus Story such as Nag Hammadi in Upper Egypt of a cache of
Gnostic writings in 1945, the Dead Sea Scrolls near Qumran in 1947, and other
discoveries show Jesus was a morally serious man, that he may not have said
precisely what the gospels and apocryphal gospels say, but it is clear he had a
theology from the beginning, and no discovery has diminished that fact.
The
aim is still to one day reveal the historical Jesus, which means getting beyond
what we already know, or is recorded in the referenced sources here, as well as
getting beyond the Roman Catholic Church’s very specific view of what is
conceived as the Catholic faith.
Catholicism has
survived and triumphed, and Protestantism has not shown much more interest in
the Semitic origins of Jesus. As the
impact of traditional Christianity continues to dwindle, perhaps the Qumran
Scrolls, and other writings, which in all probability were written during the
lifetime of Jesus will be able to depart from myth to embrace some sense of
history. One thing is certain. The Jesus Story shall survive.
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