When the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of His glory’ (Mat 25:31). ‘Then the King will say to those on His right hand, Come, you blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world’ (Mat 25:34). At that time Christ will sit on the Davidic throne and it is the Lord Jesus Christ who will establish the kingdom on earth ” it will not be established by Israel, the Church or various church denominations. The Messianic kingdom does not already exist; believers will only inherit the kingdom when Christ returns to the earth. Then the Lord will restore the kingdom to Israel (cf. Acts 1:6).
Category Archives: Jesus Christ
Extraordinary Evidence About Jesus in the Dead Sea Scrolls
Extraordinary Evidence About Jesus in the Dead Sea Scrolls
If someone had asked a minister in 1947 to prove that the original Hebrew Scriptures from the Old Testament were reliably copied without error throughout the last two thousand years, he might have had some difficulty in providing an answer. The oldest Old Testament manuscript used by the King James translators was dated approximately A.D. 1100. Obviously, that old manuscript from A.D. 1100 was a copy of a copy of a copy, etc. for over two thousand years. How could we be sure that the text in the A.D. 1100 copy of the Scriptures was identical with the original text as given to the writers by God and inspired by Him? However, an extraordinary discovery occurred in the turbulent year before Israel became a nation. A Bedouin Arab found a cave in Qumran near the Dead Sea which ultimately yielded over a thousand priceless manuscripts dating back before A.D. 68, when the Roman legions destroyed the Qumran village during the Jewish war against Rome.
An Arab shepherd boy discovered the greatest archeological finds in history in 1947. When the ancient Hebrew scrolls from these caves were examined by scholars they found that this Qumran site contained a library with hundreds of precious texts of both biblical and secular manuscripts that dated back before the destruction of the Second Temple and the death of Jesus Christ. Once the Bedouins recognized the value of the scrolls they began searching for additional documents in every valley and cave near the Dead Sea. The most incredible discovery was the immense library of biblical manuscripts in Cave Four at Qumran that contained every single book of the Old Testament with the exception of the Book of Esther. Multiple copies of several biblical texts such as Genesis, Deuteronomy and Isaiah were found in Cave Four. Scholars were able to reach back a further two thousand years in time to examine biblical texts that had lain undisturbed in the desert caves during all of the intervening centuries. The scholars discovered that the Hebrew manuscript copies of the most authoritative Hebrew text, Textus Recepticus, used by the King James translators in 1611, were virtually identical to these ancient Dead Sea Scrolls. After carefully comparing the manuscripts they discovered that, aside from a tiny number of spelling variations, not a single word was altered from the original scrolls in the caves from the much copied A.D. 1100 manuscripts used by the Authorized King James Version translators in 1611. How could the Bible have been copied so accurately and faithfully over the many centuries without human error entering into the text? The answer is found in the overwhelming respect and fear of God that motivated Jewish and Christian scholars whose job was to faithfully copy the text of the Bible. In a later chapter dealing with the Hebrew Codes beneath the text of the Bible, I will share how the Masoretic scribes meticulously copied the text of the Scriptures over the centuries.
The Essenes were a Jewish community of ascetics that lived primarily in three communities: Qumran at the Dead Sea, the Essene Quarter of Jerusalem (Mount Zion), and Damascus. They appear to have existed from approximately 200 B.C. until the destruction of their communities in Jerusalem and Qumran by the Roman armies in A.D. 68. During the first century there were three significant Jewish religious communities: the Pharisees, the Sadducees, and the Essenes. The Essenes established their religious community near the shores of the Dead Sea. In their love for the Word of God they faithfully copied each Old Testament scroll in their Scriptorium in the village of Qumran. New evidence indicates that these men of God were aware of the new religious leader in Israel known as Jesus of Nazareth and the group of writings about Him known as the New Testament. The Christian historian Eusebius, who wrote around A.D. 300, believed that the Essenes were influenced in their beliefs by Christianity.
When the scrolls were first discovered, many Christian scholars naturally wondered if they might contain evidence about the new faith of Christianity. Despite overwhelming interest, the vast majority of scrolls were not translated for publication in the intervening forty-nine years. For almost fifty years, the hopes of Christian scholars were frustrated by the decision of the small group of original scroll scholars to withhold publication and release of a significant number of these precious scrolls. Some scholars speculated publicly that there might be evidence about Christ in the unpublished scrolls but the original scroll scholars vehemently denied these claims. While some scroll scholars had published part of their assigned texts, after forty-five years the team responsible for the huge number of scrolls discovered in Cave Four had published only twenty percent of the five hundred Dead Sea Scrolls in their possession.
Quotes from the New Testament in the Dead Sea Scrolls
Finally, after a public relations campaign demanded the release of the unpublished scrolls to other scholars, the last of the unpublished scrolls were released to the academic world. To the great joy and surprise of many scholars, the scrolls contain definite references to the New Testament and, most importantly, to Jesus of Nazareth. In the last few years several significant scrolls were released that shed new light on the New Testament and the life of Jesus. One of the most extraordinary of these scrolls released in 1991 actually referred directly to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
The Crucified Messiah Scroll
In 1991 the world was astonished to hear that one of the unpublished scrolls included incredible references to a “Messiah” who suffered crucifixion for the sins of men. The scroll was translated by Dr. Robert Eisenman, Professor of Middle East Religions of California State University. He declared, “The text is of the most far-reaching significance because it shows that whatever group was responsible for these writings was operating in the same general scriptural and Messianic framework of early Christianity.” Although the original scroll team still claimed that there was no evidence about early Christianity in the unpublished scrolls, this new scroll totally contradicted their statements. This single scroll is earth-shaking in its importance. As Dr. Norman Golb, Professor of Jewish History at the University of Chicago said, “It shows that contrary to what some of the editors said, there are lots of surprises in the scrolls, and this is one of them.”
This remarkable five-line scroll contained fascinating information about the death of the Messiah. It referred to “the Prophet Isaiah” and his Messianic prophecy (Chapter 53) that identified the Messiah as one who will suffer for the sins of his people. This scroll provides an amazing parallel to the New Testament revelation that the Messiah would first suffer death before He would ultimately return to rule the nations. Many scholars believed that the Jews during the first century of our era believed that, when he finally came, the Messiah would rule forever without dying. The exciting discovery of this scroll reveals that the Essene writer of this scroll understood the dual role of the Messiah as Christians did. This scroll identified the Messiah as the “Shoot of Jesse” (King David’s father) the “Branch of David,” and declared that he was “pierced” and “wounded.” The word “pierced” remind us of the Messianic prophecy in Psalms 22:16: “They pierced my hands and feet.” The prophet Jeremiah (23:5) said, “I will raise unto David a righteous branch.”
The scroll also describes the Messiah as a “leader of the community” who was “put to death.” This reference pointing clearly to the historical Jesus of Nazareth is creating shock waves for liberal scholarship that previously assumed that the Gospel account about Jesus was a myth. Jesus is the only one who ever claimed to be the Messiah who was crucified. The genealogies recorded in both Matthew and Luke’s Gospels, reveal that Jesus was the only one who could prove by the genealogical records kept in the Temple that He was the lineage of King David as the “Son of Jesse.” Since the tragic destruction of the Temple and its records in A.D. 70 it would be impossible for anyone else to ever prove their claim to be the Messiah based on their genealogical descent from King David. Additionally, the scroll identified the Messiah as “the sceptre” which probably refers to the Genesis 49:10 prophecy, “The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of the people be.” This scroll confirms the historical truthfulness of the New Testament record about Jesus and His crucifixion. The evidence from the scroll suggests that the Jewish Essene writer acknowledged that Jesus of Nazareth was the “suffering Messiah” who died for the sins of His people.
The “Son of God” Scroll
Another fascinating scroll discovered in Cave Four known as 4Q246 refers to the hope of a future Messiah figure. This is another of the scrolls that was unpublished until recently. Amazingly, the text in this scroll refers to the Messiah as “the son of God” and the “son of the Most High.” These words are the exact wording recorded in the Gospel of Luke.
The Text of Scroll 4Q246 – the Son of God Scroll:
“He shall be called the son of God,
and they shall designate [call] him son of the Most High.
Like the appearance of comets, so shall be their kingdom.
For brief years they shall reign over the earth and shall trample on all;
one people shall trample on another and
one province on another until the people of God shall rise and all shall rest from the sword.”
Compare the words in the scroll 4Q246 text to the inspired words found in Luke 1:32 and 35: “He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David… And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God” (Luke 1:32-35).
Anyone comparing these two first century texts will be startled by the amazing similarity of concept and wording describing the Messianic leader. One of the great differences between Christian and Jewish conceptions of the promised Messiah revolves around His relationship to God. While the Jews believe the Messiah will be a great man, such as Moses, with a Divine mission, the Christians believe that the Bible teaches that the Messiah would be uniquely “the Son of God.” The Jewish view usually held that the concept of a “son of God” violated the primary truth of monotheism found in Deuteronomy 6:4 “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord.” The Christians believed that Jesus’ claim to be the Son of God was not a violation of Deuteronomy 6:4. Rather, Christians believe in the Trinity, the doctrine that the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are revealed in the Bible to be One God, revealed in three personalities. As Christians, we do not believe in three separate gods. Therefore, Christians understand the statements about Jesus as the Son of God to be in complete conformity to the truth of monotheism – there is only one God. It is fascinating in this regard to consider the presence of these statements in this first century Jewish text: “He shall be called the son of God, and they shall designate [call] him son of the Most High.”
The presence of these statements in the Dead Sea Scrolls suggests that some of the Essenes either accepted the Messianic claims of Jesus to be the Son of God or anticipated this concept. Either possibility opens up new areas for exploration. Another possibility that must be considered is this: Is it possible that this scroll 4Q246 is a direct quote from the writer hearing the words of the Gospel of Luke that was now widely circulating according to early Christian witnesses? Luke, the physician, claimed that he wrote the Gospel of Luke as an eyewitness of the events he personally observed. In Luke 1:1-3, he says: “Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to set forth in order a declaration of those things which are most surely believed among us, Even as they delivered them unto us, which from the beginning were eyewitnesses, and ministers of the word; It seemed good to me also, having had perfect understanding of all things from the very first, to write unto thee in order, most excellent Theophilus.”
The discovery of the virtually identical wording “the Son of God” from Luke 1:32 and 35 with the scroll found buried in a cave in A.D. 68 stands as a tremendous witness to the early existence and transmission of the Gospel records within thirty-five years of Christ. If the Gospels were written and distributed within thirty-five years of the events of the life of Jesus (as the Gospels claim) then they stand as the best eyewitness historical records we could ever hope to possess. It would be almost impossible to distribute the Gospel accounts to thousands of people in Israel within three and a half decades of the events unless they were true accounts. If the Gospel records were untrue, many witnesses would have stood up and denied their accuracy. However, the records of the first century reveal that no one denied the facts about the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. In fact, all of these ancient historical records confirm the truth of the Gospels.
Other New Testament Quotes Identified in the Scrolls
In 1971, a Spanish biblical scholar named Jose O’Callaghan studied some of the small fragments of scrolls discovered in Cave Seven at Qumran. He was looking for correspondences between these fragments of Greek scrolls and the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament that was widely used by Jesus and the apostles.
These fragments are quite small containing only small portions of each verse. After almost two thousand years, the elements and insects have significantly damaged these manuscripts. In some cases only small fragments containing parts of a verse on three or four lines remain from an original scroll. It required considerable detective work to determine the precise text in these tiny fragments.
One day he carefully examined several small scroll fragments located in a photo page in The Discoveries of the Judean Desert of Jordan. To his great surprise O’Callaghan noticed that several did not fit any Old Testament text. These fragments were listed as “Fragments not identified.” To his amazement Dr. O’Callaghan found that these Greek language fragments bore an uncanny resemblance to several verses in the New Testament. He read the Greek words “beget” and a word that could be “Gennesaret,” a word for the Sea of Galilee. The fragment containing “Gennesaret” appears to be a quotation of the passage referring to the feeding of the five thousand found in Mark 6:52,53 which states: “For they considered not the miracle of the loaves: for their heart was hardened. And when they had passed over, they came into the land of Gennesaret, and drew to the shore.”
If these texts are actually portions of these Christian writings they would be the earliest New Testament texts ever discovered. The New York Times responded, “If O’Callaghan’s theory is accepted, it would prove that at least one of the Gospels, that of St. Mark, was written only a few years after the death of Jesus.” The Los Angeles Times headlined, “Nine New Testament fragments dated A.D. 50 to A.D. 100 have been discovered in a Dead Sea Cave.” It stated that “if validated, [they] constitute the most sensational biblical trove uncovered in recent times.”
Other Scroll Fragments and the New Testament
Dr. Jose O’Callaghan ultimately identified eight different scroll fragments from Cave Seven that appear to be quotes from New Testament passages. The scholarly magazine Bible Review ran a fascinating article on Dr. O’Callaghan, these scrolls, and their possible connection with the New Testament in an article in December, 1995.
The fragments appeared to O’Callaghan to be portions of the following verses from the Gospels and Paul’s Epistles:
“For the earth bringeth forth fruit of herself. . .” (Mark 4:28).
“And he saw them toiling in rowing; . . .” (Mark 6:48).
“And Jesus answering said unto them, Render to Caesar. . .” (Mark 12:17)
“And when they had eaten enough, they lightened the ship. . .” (Acts 27:38).
“And not only so, but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ. . .” (Romans 5:11-12).
“And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness. . .” (1 Timothy 3:16).
“For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer. . .” (James 1:23-24).
As one example of Dr. O’Callaghan’s study, he examined a small scroll fragment known as 7Q5 that contained only twenty Greek letters on five lines of text. Many of the thousands of scroll fragments that were successfully identified from the Qumran site are equally small. Another scroll scholar, Carsten Thiede, agrees with O’Callaghan that portions of the Mark 6:52,53 passage appears in this scroll fragment. While other scroll scholars disagree with the identification of this fragment as a verse from the New Testament they do admit that almost all of the scrolls found in Cave Seven were written in the period between 50 B.C. and A.D. 50, which is consistent with the time of the writing of the Gospel of Mark.
Naturally, as with other matters connected with the controversial Dead Sea Scrolls, many scholars disagreed with the conclusions of Dr. O’Callaghan. The debate still continues twenty years later. At this stage we cannot be certain that O’Callaghan’s conclusion is correct. More work needs to be done. However, the recent publication of the discovery of Scroll 4Q246 and its identical reference to “the Son of God” as found in Luke 1:32 and 35 provide strong support for the possibility that these fragments are related to these New Testament passages. In addition, I have great hopes that the new archeological exploration of recently detected caves at Qumran may provide new evidence including New Testament references. Many of these mysteries will be solved when the final four hundred unpublished scrolls are finally published in the next few years. The new dig at Qumran may also uncover additional scrolls that will help us understand more clearly the Messianic beliefs of this group of religious men and women who lived at this desert site during the time when Jesus walked the earth.
When we consider the total amount of evidence that confirms the biblical record about Jesus of Nazareth we can have confidence that we know more about the life and resurrection of Christ than we know about any other person in the ancient world. God has not left us in darkness concerning the truthfulness of the miracles, prophecies and teaching of His Son, Jesus Christ.
Jesus Did Exist
1. Non Christian Sources
[Links to English translations provided in each case]
- Mara bar Serapion – in a letter generally dated to the first century (c. 73 A.D.) – speaks of the Jews executing their “wise king” shortly before their kingdom was abolished, though he lives on in his teaching. This letter doesn’t mention Jesus by name, but most scholars agree no other Jewish figure from the period except Jesus fits the ‘identikit’ of king, teacher and martyr.
- Jewish historian Josephus (c 37-100 A.D.) mentions Jesus twice in his Jewish Antiquities. The uncontroversial reference (20.200) tells how a Jewish high priest, Ananus, organised the death of James, whom he describes as the brother of Jesus, “called the Christ”.
- The more controversial reference as it comes to us from Josephus in the existing text today (18.63-64) appears to have been embellished at some point by a copyist (likely a well-meaning but misguided Christian). Historians disagree about reconstructing the original underlying text. The reference to his resurrection is especially disputed. But a majority agree that Josephus at least reports that Jesus had a reputation as a wise man, wonder-worker and teacher; was called the Christ, and was crucified under Pilate; further, that members of the “tribe of Christians” are named after him.
- Rome’s greatest historian, Tacitus (56-120 A.D., in his Annals (15.44) records how Emperor Nero blamed the Christians for the fire of Rome. Tacitus makes clear his revulsion of Christianity, but nevertheless confirms that the movement got its name from Christ, a man who was executed during the reign of Tiberius by the governor Pontius Pilate, and indicates that this superstitious devotion to Christ (as he sees it) continued after his death, spreading to Rome.
- Pliny the Younger, a Roman administrator, writes c. 110 A.D. in a letter to Emperor Trajan that (despite official persecution) Christians continued to meet and sing hymns to Christ as to a god.
- Another Roman historian, Suetonius, in Life of Claudius 25.4 (c. 120 A.D.) reports that Emperor Claudius expelled the Jews from Rome because of a riot caused at instigation of “Chrestus”. Most experts think is likely a confusion for the name of “Christ”, and it is certainly consistent with information from Acts 18:2.
- The Jewish Talmud (dating 100-200 A.D.) reports (baraitha Sanhedrin 43a) that Yeshu (= Jesus) was hanged around Passover for practising sorcery (most likely a reference to his exorcisms).
- Lucian of Samosata (115-200 A.D.) in his The Death of Perigrinus (11-13) mocks the founder of the Christian movement as a Palestinian man and “crucified sophist”, who persuaded his followers they were all brothers and to deny the Greek gods.
There are a couple of other secular references to Jesus’ existence dating from the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D., but together from these early non-Christian sources we can determine the following details were known and reported of Jesus:
- his existence in Palestine during the reign of Emperor Tiberius;
- his activity as a teacher/wise man;
- his reputation as some sort of wonder worker;
- the attribution by some to him of the title “Christ” (= Messiah in Hebrew);
- the time and manner of his crucifixion near Passover;
- the involvement in this execution of the Roman governor Pilate;
- the flourishing of a movement that worshipped him decades after; and
- that he had a brother named James.
2. Christian Sources
Of course, this is all consistent with the Bible. And far more information about Jesus’ life can be obtained from the sources within the New Testament, especially the canonical Gospels – Matthew, Mark, Luke, John. These are now quite widely considered to fit into the genre of Graceo-Roman biography. In addition, the Epistles of Paul (dating even earlier) and James give important incidental information regarding his life and teaching. Academics consider much of the material in these sources helpful for insights into the historical Jesus.
SCHOLARLY CONCLUSIONS
So when ancient historians have reviewed this evidence, they uniformly conclude (across the worldview divides, to account for bias) – conservative, liberal, Christian, Jewish, agnostic and atheist alike – that Jesus existed as a person of history. They have varying interpretations as to the claims of his divinity and resurrection.
But they all agree: Jesus is beyond fiction. Here is a sampling of their verdicts.
Rudolph Bultmann (German Professor of New Testament, liberal), 1958, p 13, Jesus and the Word, (Collins/Fontana)…
“Of course the doubt as to whether Jesus really existed is unfounded and not worth refutation. No sane person can doubt that Jesus stands as founder behind the historical movement…”
Michael Grant (English classicist), 1977, p 200, Jesus: An Historian’s Review of the Gospels (Charles Scribner’s Sons)
“To sum up, modern critical methods fail to support the Christ-myth theory. It has ‘again and again been answered and annihilated by first-rank scholars.’ In recent years, ‘no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non-historicity of Jesus’–or at any rate very few, and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger, indeed very abundant, evidence to the contrary.”
Robert Van Voorst (American Professor of New Testament), 2000, p 16, Jesus Outside the New Testament: An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence (Eerdmans)…
“Contemporary New Testament scholars have typically viewed their [i.e. Jesus mythers] arguments as so weak or bizarre that they relegate them to footnotes, or often ignore them completely.”
Geza Vermes (British Professor of Jewish Studies), 2008, p ix, The Resurrection (Doubleday)…
“Let me state plainly that I accept that Jesus was a real historical person. In my opinion, the difficulties arising from the denial of his existence, still vociferously maintained in as small circle of rationalist ‘dogmatists,’ far exceed those deriving from its acceptance.”
Craig A. Evans (American Professor of New Testament), 2009, p 3, in C.A. Evans & N.T. Wright, Jesus, the Final Days: What Really Happened (Westminster John Knox)…
“No serious historian of any religious or nonreligious stripe doubts that Jesus of Nazareth really lived in the first century and was executed under the authority of Pontius Pilate, the governor of Judea and Samaria.”
(The quotes above are less than half the samples provided to establish this point by Michael Licona in his magisterial, The Resurrection of Jesus: A New Historiographical Approach (IVP/Apollos; 2010), p 63, fn 125.)
Bart Ehrman (American Professor of Religious Studies, sceptical), 2011, p 285, Forged: Writing in the name of God…
“He certainly existed, as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity, Christian or non-Christian, agrees.”
From a different angle, the atheist journalist, Matthew Parris, warned in The Spectator this year against a watered-down or decaf view of Jesus. In his judgment,
“One of the reasons we can be pretty sure Jesus actually existed is that if He had not, the Church would never have invented Him. He stands so passionately, resolutely and inconveniently against everything an established church stands for. Continuity? Tradition? Christ had nothing to do with stability. He came to break up families, to smash routines, to cast aside the human superstructures, to teach abandonment of earthly concerns and a throwing of ourselves upon God’s mercy.”
Jesus is beyond fiction, and before lazily dismissing him, the genuinely open-minded should grapple with the key primary documents concerning his life, found in the New Testament!
Debunking the Parallels between Jesus and Krishna
Ronald V. Huggins, B.F.A., Th.D.
Post date: September 11, 2014
Key Classical Indian Sources for the Stories of Krishna’s Life: Mahabharata (= M, c. 300 BC- c. 300 AD), Harivamsha (c. 450 AD), Vishnu Purana (= VP c. 400-500 AD), Bhagavata Purana (= BP, c. 950 AD).1 The most influential telling is the last mentioned, the BP.
Common False Claims: (1) Krishna was born of the virgin Devaki / Devaka /Yasoda (2) on December 25th and was (3) crucified (4) between two thieves (5) for our sins,2 (6) rose from the dead and ascended into heaven, and (7) and he was born/died c. 1200 BC.
The Real Story:
(1) Krishna wasthe 8th son ofVasudeva and Devaki. The name of their first son was Kirtiman.3 The BP credits the pregnancy to “mental transmission”4 through the mind of Vasudeva into the womb of Devaki. That detail is from a late source (c. 950 AD), does not really represent a virgin birth, since Devaki was not a virgin, and is not present in the earlier accounts of Krishna’s birth in the H (c. 450 AD) and VP (c. 400-500 AD). The names Devaka (used by Christopher Hitchens and the source he plagiarized5) and Yasoda (used by Kersey Graves6) are errors deriving from a basic ignorance of the story.
(2) The celebration of Krishna’s birthday is one of the most prominent festivals in India, which takes place in the late summer or early fall (Bhadra in the North of India, Shravana in the South).7 The idea that that his birthday was celebrated on December 25 derives from no other source than ignorant and/or dishonest English-speaking “Freethinkers” who falsely claimed that Shravana “answers to our December.”8
(3) Krishna was not crucified. He died when the hunter Jara shot him in the sole of his foot. In most stories it was said to be an accident9; in one story, Jara was actually a demon getting revenge for being killed by Krishna in a previous life.10 The reason Krishna died the way he did was that with the exception of the soles of his feet his body was invincible due to a boon granted him by the sage Durvāsas.11
(4) Crucified between two thieves? Nothing like that at all in the authentic Hindu sources.
(5) Krishna died not for our sins but in fulfillment of two curses made against him and his clan: (i) the curse of the widow Gandhari, for not stopping the battle in which her husband Dhritarashtra died,12 and (ii) the curse of the Brahmanas, for a stunt Krishna’s son, Samba, played on some holy men.13
(6) Krishna’s spirit does ascend, but his body remains on earth and is cremated.14
(7) The date 1200 BC as the time of Krishna’s birth/death is not correct.15 Traditionally Krishna’s death took place just around 3100 BC, marking the beginning of the Age of Kali.16
Crucified Krishna
Crucified Krishna
PICTURES FALSELY PUT FORWARD AS REPRESENTING KRISHNA CRUCIFIED KRISHNA
(1) The image to the left, often erroneously said to represent the crucified Krishna, is actually a bronze Irish crucifix figure known since the 19th century, of a sort that is extremely common not only in Ireland but also throughout Europe. Here is a similar one from France dated to the 13th century and currently in the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, MO (right).17
Bronze French Krishna
Bronze French Krishna
Celtic Market Cross Illistration
Celtic Market Cross
(2) The picture to the left, though often claimed to represent Krishna crucified, is actually a drawing of the 12th century AD Celtic Market Cross at Tuam, Country Galway, Ireland, portraying Jesus crucified. To the right is an old photograph of it, with a detail revealing its proximity to the Ulster Bank.18 It still exists, but was moved in 1992 from the square to St. Mary’s Cathedral in the same city.19
Celtic Market Cross
Celtic Market Cross Photograph
1. I am following the dates given in Wendy Doniger, The Hindus: An Alternative History (New York: Penguin Press, 2009).
2. Kersey Graves, The World’s Sixteen Crucified Saviors (4th ed. rev. and enl.; Boston: Colby and Rich, 1876), 140.
3. BP 10.1.56-57, p. 13.
4. BP 10.2.17, 10.2.16-18,
5. Christopher Hitchens, god is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (New York, Boston: Twelve, 2007),23. Hitchens’s source is an atheist book published in the 1930s entitled Essays on Freethinking, by Chapman Cohen (1868-1954). Hitchens actually reprints the portion he plagiarized in the collection The Portable Atheist (2007).
6. Graves, Sixteen Crucified Saviors, 50. Graves simply gets the characters mixed up.
7. See, e.g., “Krishna Jayanti: Birthday of the God of Divine Love,” Hinduism Today (April, May, June 2010): 30; John Stratton Hawley, At Play with Krishna: Pilgrimage Dramas from Bridavan (with Shrivatsa Goswami; Dehli: Motilal Banarsidass, 1992 [orig. ed. Princeton University Press, 1981]): 62.
8. Graves, Sixteen Crucified Saviors, 69.
9. M 16:4 (Mausala-parvan, “Book of the Clubs”); VP 5:37, and in the BP 11.30.27-40.
10. Vettam Mani, Purāṇic Encyclopedia (Dehli: Motilal Banarsidass, 1975), 429.
11. M 13:159 (Anusasana Parva “Book of Instructions”), M 16:4 (Mausala-parvan, “Book of the Clubs”).
12. M 11:25 (Sitrī-parva “Book of the Women”).
13. M 16:3 (Mausala-parva, “Book of the Clubs”); VP, 5:37; BP 11.5.2-23 & 11.30.33.
14. M 1:2 (Adi-parva, “Book of the Beginning”); M 16:7(Mausala-parva, “Book of the Clubs”); VP 5.38; BP 11.30.2.
15. The claim appears, e.g., in Graves, Sixteen Crucified Saviors, 65. It was, however, at one time though to be correct: See, e.g., James Tod, “On the Religious Establishments of Méwar,” Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2.1 (1829): 299.
16. “Kali Yuga,” in Roshen Dalal, Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide (New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 2010), 187.
17. For several other examples, see http://huntmuseum.com/collection.aspx and then select from the menus as follows: All Object Types: “Religious/Ritual Equipment,” All Materials: “Metal” Key word in Title: “Corpus,” Key word in Description: “Crucifix Figure.” Or if you would prefer to go directly to the crucifixes most similar to the one claimed as Krishna here, simply enter in the Registration Number for each as follows: CG064, CG 066, CG 068, HCM 040, HCM 046, HCM 047.
18. T. H. Mason’s photo reproduced from Arthur Kingsley Porter, The Crosses and Culture of Ireland (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press; London: Oxford University Press, 1931), pl. 194.
19. See further, Maggie McEnchroe Williams, “Constructing the Market Cross at Tuam: The Role of Cultural Patriotism in the Study of Irish High Crosses,” in From Ireland Coming: Irish Art from the Early Christian to the Late Gothic Period and Its European Context (ed. Colum Hourihane; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001), 141-60.
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Monogenes
The phrase “only begotten Son” occurs in John 3:16, which reads in the King James Version as, “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” The phrase “only begotten” translates the Greek word monogenes. This word is variously translated into English as “only,” “one and only,” and “only begotten.”
It’s this last phrase (“only begotten” used in the KJV, NASB and the NKJV) that causes problems. False teachers have latched onto this phrase to try to prove their false teaching that Jesus Christ isn’t God; i.e., that Jesus isn’t equal in essence to God as the Second Person of the Trinity. They see the word “begotten” and say that Jesus is a created being because only someone who had a beginning in time can be “begotten.” What this fails to note is that “begotten” is an English translation of a Greek word. As such, we have to look at the original meaning of the Greek word, not transfer English meanings into the text.
So what does monogenes mean? According to the Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (BAGD, 3rd Edition), monogenes has two primary definitions. The first definition is “pertaining to being the only one of its kind within a specific relationship.” This is its meaning in Hebrews 11:17 when the writer refers to Isaac as Abraham’s “only begotten son” (KJV). Abraham had more than one son, but Isaac was the only son he had by Sarah and the only son of the covenant. Therefore, it is the uniqueness of Isaac among the other sons that allows for the use of monogenes in that context.
The second definition is “pertaining to being the only one of its kind or class, unique in kind.” This is the meaning that is implied in John 3:16 (see also John 1:14, 18; 3:18; 1 John 4:9). John was primarily concerned with demonstrating that Jesus is the Son of God (John 20:31), and he uses monogenes to highlight Jesus as uniquely God’s Son—sharing the same divine nature as God—as opposed to believers who are God’s sons and daughters by adoption (Ephesians 1:5). Jesus is God’s “one and only” Son.
The bottom line is that terms such as “Father” and “Son,” descriptive of God and Jesus, are human terms that help us understand the relationship between the different Persons of the Trinity. If you can understand the relationship between a human father and a human son, then you can understand, in part, the relationship between the First and Second Persons of the Trinity. The analogy breaks down if you try to take it too far and teach, as some Christian cults (such as the Jehovah’s Witnesses), that Jesus was literally “begotten” as in “produced” or “created” by God the Father.
accept Jesus as your Saviour
You have to accept Jesus as your Saviour to have any chance of Salvation
Romans 10:9
Because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
John 3:16
“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.
Acts 2:38
And Peter said to them, “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Revelation 3:20
Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me.
Acts 4:12
And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved
Adam and Jesus
Lets compare Adam and Jesus
Adam was created. Jesus has always existed.
Adam sinned. Jesus was never sinned.
Adam ate the fruit of sin. Jesus became the fruit of salvation.
Adam took from a tree. Jesus was put on a tree.
Adam was made from dirt. Jesus was made of Mary.
Adam died in his transgressions. Jesus died in your transgressions.
Adam and Eve disobeyed God. Jesus and Mary obeyed God.
Adam was cursed for all mankind. Jesus lifted curse for all mankind.
Adam was a taker of life. Jesus was a giver of life.
Adam had children. Jesus was celibate.
Adam was tempted by Satan. Jesus resisted Satan.
Adam stayed dead. Jesus rose again.
Adam is/was mortal and he was never part of the God combination. He was purely a created being, not a person co-equal with God.
Consider verses 11-18 in Psalm 22:
“Be not far from me, for trouble is near; For there is none to help.12 Many bulls have surrounded me; Strong bulls of Bashan have encircled me. 13 They open wide their mouth at me, As a ravening and a roaring lion. 14 I am poured out like water, And all my bones are out of joint; My heart is like wax; It is melted within me. 15 My strength is dried up like a potsherd, And my tongue cleaves to my jaws; And Thou dost lay me in the dust of death. 16 For dogs have surrounded me; A band of evildoers has encompassed me; They pierced my hands and my feet. 17 I can count all my bones. They look, they stare at me; 18 They divide my garments among them, And for my clothing they cast lots.
The term ‘dogs’ was used by the Jews to refer to Gentiles (cf. Matt. 15:21-28)
Anti-Yashua crowd
The anti-Yashua crowd will go to any length to negate Him! They are adamant that He cannot be Messiah because His lineage came through a woman (since Joseph wasn’t His biological father; just someone who “adopted” Y’shua…), and they insist the genealogy (according to Judaism), must come through the male. Also, according to the anti-Y’shua crowd, women cannot inherit or pass on an inheritance. Hence, on several levels, Y’shua’s messiahship – according to them – is null and void.
Well, let’s examine what SCRIPTURE says:
Numbers 27:8 Moreover, say to the people of Israel, ‘If a man dies and does not have a son, you are to have his inheritance pass to his daughter. 9 If he doesn’t have a daughter, give his inheritance to his brothers. 10 If he has no brothers, give his inheritance to his father’s brothers. 11 If his father doesn’t have brothers, give his inheritance to the closest relative in his family, and he will possess it. This will be the standard for judgment to be used by the people of Isra’el, as ADONAI ordered Moshe.'”
That, all by itself, negates the idea that women cannot have an inheritance. Now, let’s move on to the genealogy thing, where we see that Mary should be disqualified to transfer the rights of her lineage to her son, Yeshua – except for a little known exception to the rule! Read on….
In Matthew 1:1-16 and Luke 3:23-38 we are presented with two genealogies of Yeshua. On the surface these different listings would appear to be a contradiction in the scriptures. Not only are the two genealogies listed in the reverse chronology from each other, but the genealogy found in Matthew’s gospel is the lineage of Yeshua’s mother, Mary, while the genealogy found in Luke’s gospel is the lineage of Yeshua’s earthly father Joseph. (Note: this is completely opposed to most teachings! But there is no doubt that Matthew’s genealogy is that of Mary, and not her husband Joseph, as is usually assumed.)
However, many people fail to realize or address a major problem associated with the genealogical listing found in Matthew’s gospel – the lineage of Mary. Once you have established that the line is indeed Mary’s, you must deal with a second difficulty: The rights of the line are NOT passed through the mother; but rather, through the father. Even though Mary, through her lineage, was of the Davidic bloodline (as was her husband, Joseph), she should be excluded from being able to pass those rights of the bloodline because she was female (Deuteronomy 21:16).
So, it is not enough to prove that Mary was an unblemished descendant of David; she had to be a male to transfer the rights. Therefore, she would be disqualified to transfer the rights to her son Yeshua – EXCEPT for a little known exception to the rule.
AND LOOK AT THIS! In Numbers 26 we are introduced to Zelophehad. Zelophehad, we are told, had no sons; only daughters. In Numbers 27, following the death of Zelophehad, the daughters of Zelophehad came before Moses and argued their plight. Because their father had died with no sons, all of their rights of inheritance were to be lost and they felt this was unfair. So Moses prayed to YHWH and He gave Moses an exception to the rule! He told Moses that the inheritance CAN flow through a female, IF they fulfill two requirements: There must be no male offspring in the family (Numbers 27:8) and if the female offspring should marry, they must marry within their own tribe (Numbers 36:6).
Now, returning to Mary. On the surface she should be unable to transfer the rights to her Son. But when you research you find that Mary had NO brothers, she was of the line of David, AND received the inheritance of her father because her father had no sons, AND Mary did indeed marry within her own tribe to Joseph.
End of argument!
why Jesus felt forsaken and cried out the first verse of Psalm 22
Hakeem Toluwaloju Abina these words of Jesus are very significant and it’s worth spending a moment to appreciate their context and meaning. I don’t see Satan as anymore involved at this stage, he hardly needed to be. Jesus is now suffering the consequences of the damage Satan has ever done in the entire history of humanity.
These words of Jesus were not some delirious random cry of anguish. They came at the lowest point of Jesus ordeal.
They broke the preceding 3 hours of darkness:
“When it was noon, darkness came over the whole land until three in the afternoon. And at three Jesus cried out with a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lemá sabachtháni?” which is translated, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Mark 15:33-34 HCSB)
It was during that 3 hour period that Jesus had felt complete abandonment and isolation for the first and only time.”Forsaken” is the ultimate spiritual separation. It is something God ordinarily promises never to do (Deuteronomy 31:6; Hebrews 13:5). But this was no ordinary moment. Jesus is literally being “made sin” having the sins of the world put upon Him. He knew forsakenness for our sake so that our sins should never separate us from God again. This is the sinners portion:
“But your iniquities have separated you from your God; your sins have hidden his face from you, so that he will not hear.” (Isaiah 59:2)
God is holy and righteous, so much so that unholy men are in danger if they try to draw close to him — “For the LORD your God is a consuming fire” (Deuteronomy 4:24; cf. Hebrews 12:29). We must keep our distance. Our sins and iniquities have caused a separation between us and God — a great gulf or chasm between us. The Hebrew verb is bādal, “divide, separate, sever.” That he has “hidden his face from you” (Isaiah 59:2b) means that we can’t experience communion with him or sense his presence in our lives. “He will not hear” (Isaiah 59:2c).
If our sins are enough to separate us from God, we cannot imagine how having the entire weight of the sins of the world made Jesus feel. His desolation, abandonment and forsakenness were total and absolute. The Father who cannot look upon sin turned away. The 3 hours darkness – a supernatural event of real palpable darkness, reminiscent of the total darkness that covered all Egypt for three days (Exodus 10:21-22) in both cases unexplained by any celestial event – both symbolised and physically manifested that turning away.
And finally Jesus knew Psalm 22. He knew its references to His ordeal. He knew it was about Him. Now He shouted it aloud to the world. This was no apt Scripture quotation for the sake of a dramatic conclusion. Jesus wasn’t just quoting the Scripture. It was no time for that.
This was the prophetic word being fulfilled. The Scripture was being fulfilled in the hearing of the witnesses to the crucifixion. Jesus was being, living and dying the events not just foretold but preordained by Psalm 22. At that moment Jesus was expressing the desolation He knew and felt, the question “why” is rhetorical – He was not asking for an answer. It is for us to reason why He had to die.
The Cold Case Homicide Mystery Of Jesus Is Solved!
Kevin Simington
Atheists and sceptics have long since given up any serious claims that Jesus never existed, due to the substantial corroboration of various aspects of his life and death by extra-biblical first and second century sources. These included Romans, Greeks and Jews who were not Christians but who wrote dispassionately about Jesus. Being unable to assert Jesus’ non-existence, atheists have therefore concentrated their efforts on seeking to disprove his resurrection. This has given rise to a variety of theories regarding the disappearance of his body; the two most popular being the swoon theory and the theft theory.
The swoon theory is the idea that Jesus didn’t really die on the cross but merely swooned and then later revived in the cool of the tomb. Despite being in a weakened state from blood loss and hours of suffering, Jesus then supposedly rolled back a two-tonne stone and convinced everyone that he was in the prime of health, having risen from the dead!
Detective J. Warner Wallace was recently interviewed by CNN and explained that he had been a supporter of this theory prior to his investigation but was soon convinced if its impossibility. “As a homicide detective, I’ve seen a lot of dead people, and I know what dead people look like,” he said. He went on the explain that the precise descriptions of Jesus’ dead body by the eye-witnesses at the time left no doubt as to Jesus’ death.
In particular, the description in John’s Gospel of water and blood flowing out of Jesus’ chest cavity after it was pierced is conclusive evidence of death by cardiac failure, resulting in massive build-up of fluid in the chest. Referring to John, the writer of the Gospel in question, Wallace stated to CNN, “He was either so clever that he included some little-known biological fact that nobody would discover for 1800 years or he just reported what he saw. And as a result, we have a good piece of hidden science that confirms that Jesus actually died of cardiac arrest and was dead at the point of the body being taken off the cross.”
Wallace also discussed the overwhelming evidence disproving the theory that the disciples somehow stole the body and then spent the rest of their lives suffering for a lie (and eventually dying for that lie!).
Of course, J. Warner Wallace is merely the most recent in a long line of sceptics and atheists who have set out to disprove the resurrection of Jesus, only to become convinced of its historical reality and convert to the Christian faith themselves.
Sir William Mitchell Ramsay (1851 – 1939) was one such reluctant convert. He was an archaeologist and historian who spent 18 years trying to disprove the biblical account of Jesus, studying the historical evidence in archaeological sites all around the world. His research was funded by the British Infidel Society who hoped he would be able to disprove the ‘Christian myth’ once and for all. But Ramsay could not disprove it. In fact, after examining all the evidence, he was converted to Christianity himself – much to the horror of the Infidel Society!
Others have sought to disprove the events of Easter and similarly failed; among them Malcolm Muggeridge, Albert Henry Moss, Lee Strobel, Andy McDowell and the great Oxford scholar, C. S. Lewis himself (the author of the Narnia books). Each of them not only failed to disprove the resurrection but were converted to Christianity through the overwhelming weight of historical evidence. C. S. Lewis recounts his own reluctant conversion: “In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed; perhaps, that night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England.”
It is the reluctance of these learned scholars to be converted that makes their eventual conversions all the more significant.
This Easter, I am unashamed to be a follower of the resurrected Christ. Unlike the many sceptics with whom I have conversed over the years, what I believe is not based upon wishful thinking or some narrow-minded worldview. I have actually bothered to check out the evidence for myself, and I am utterly convinced that Jesus rose from the dead.
Of course, the resurrection of Jesus is completely inconvenient. It shatters my illusion that I am a free agent to live as I please, with no ultimate accountability. It confronts me with the earth-shaking reality that there is a God who created me, before whom I will one day stand. The resurrection of Jesus de-thrones me. It turns my world upside down. It drives me to my knees in repentance for my sins. It opens my arms wide in thankfulness for my undeserved forgiveness. It opens my eyes to a life that can now be lived with meaning and purpose.
What about you? Have you bothered to check out the evidence for yourself?
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Kevin Simington (B.Th. Dip. Min.) is a theologian, apologist and social commentator. He is the author of 12 books, and his latest, “7 Reasons to Believe”, is now available. Connect with Kevin on Facebook or his SmartFaith Blog.