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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55575 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55575)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Historical Christ;, by Fred. C. Conybeare
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Historical Christ;
- Or, An investigation of the views of Mr. J. M. Robertson,
- Dr. A. Drews, and Prof. W. B. Smith
-
-Author: Fred. C. Conybeare
-
-Release Date: September 18, 2017 [EBook #55575]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORICAL CHRIST; ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
-Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
-made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE HISTORICAL CHRIST;
-
- OR,
-
- AN INVESTIGATION OF THE VIEWS OF Mr. J. M. ROBERTSON,
- Dr. A. DREWS, and Prof. W. B. SMITH
-
- BY
-
- FRED. C. CONYBEARE, M.A., F.B.A.,
-
- HONORARY FELLOW OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, OXFORD;
- HON. LL.D. OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ST. ANDREWS;
- HON. DOCTOR OF THEOLOGY OF GIESSEN
-
-
- [ISSUED FOR THE RATIONALIST PRESS ASSOCIATION, LIMITED]
-
-
- LONDON:
- WATTS & CO.,
- 17 JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.
- 1914
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PREFACE vii
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. HISTORICAL METHOD 1
- II. PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS 81
- III. THE ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE 96
- IV. THE EPISTLES OF PAUL 125
- V. EXTERNAL EVIDENCE 154
- VI. THE ART OF CRITICISM 167
- VII. DR. JENSEN 202
-
- EPILOGUE 214
- INDEX 227
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-This little volume was written in the spring of the year 1913, and is
-intended as a plea for moderation and good sense in dealing with the
-writings of early Christianity; just as my earlier volumes entitled
-Myth, Magic, and Morals and A History of New Testament Criticism were
-pleas for the free use, in regard to the origins of that religion,
-of those methods of historical research to which we have learned
-to subject all records of the past. It provides a middle way between
-traditionalism on the one hand and absurdity on the other, and as doing
-so will certainly be resented by the partisans of each form of excess.
-
-The comparative method achieved its first great triumph in the
-field of Indo-European philology; its second in that of mythology
-and folk-lore. It is desirable to allow to it its full rights in
-the matter of Christian origins. But we must be doubly careful
-in this new and almost unworked region to use it with the same
-scrupulous care for evidence, with the same absence of prejudice
-and economy of hypothesis, to which it owes its conquests in other
-fields. The untrained explorers whom I here criticize discover on
-almost every page connections in their subject-matter where there
-are and can be none, and as regularly miss connections where they
-exist. Parallelisms and analogies of rite, conduct, and belief
-between religious systems and cults are often due to other causes
-than actual contact, inter-communication, and borrowing. They may
-be no more than sporadic and independent manifestations of a common
-humanity. It is not enough, therefore, for one agent or institution
-or belief merely to remind us of another. Before we assert literary
-or traditional connection between similar elements in story and myth,
-we must satisfy ourselves that such communication was possible. The
-tale of Sancho Panza and his visions of a happy isle, over which he
-shall hold sway when his romantic lord and master, Don Quixote, has
-overcome with his good sword the world and all its evil, reminds us
-of the naïf demand of the sons of Zebedee (Mark x, 37) to be allowed
-to sit on the right hand and the left of their Lord, so soon as he
-is glorified. With equal simplicity (Matthew xix, 28) Jesus promises
-that in the day of the regeneration of Israel, when the Son of Man
-takes his seat on his throne of glory, Peter and his companions shall
-also take their seats on twelve thrones to judge the twelve tribes
-of Israel. The projected mise en scène is exactly that of a Persian
-great king with his magnates on their several "cushions" of state
-around him. There is, again, a close analogy psychologically between
-Dante's devout adoration of Beatrice in heaven and Paul's of the risen
-Jesus. These two parallels are closer than most that Mr. Robertson
-discovers between Christian story and Pagan myth, yet no one in his
-senses would ever suggest that Cervantes drew his inspiration from
-the Gospels or Dante from the Pauline Epistles. In criticizing the
-Gospels it is all the more necessary to proceed cautiously, because
-the obscurantists are incessantly on the watch for solecisms--or
-"howlers," as a schoolboy would call them; and only too anxious to
-point to them as of the essence of all free criticism of Christian
-literature and history.
-
-Re-reading these pages after the lapse of many months since they were
-written, I have found little to alter, though Prof. A. C. Clark, who
-has been so good as to peruse them, has made a few suggestions which,
-where the sheets were not already printed, I have embodied. I append
-a list of errata calling for correction.
-
-
-Fred. C. Conybeare.
-
-March 1, 1914.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-HISTORICAL METHOD
-
-
-[Orthodox obscurantism the parent of Sciolism] In Myth, Magic, and
-Morals (Chapter IX) I have remarked that the Church, by refusing to
-apply in the field of so-called sacred history the canons by which
-in other fields truth is discerned from falsehood, by beatifying
-credulous ignorance and anathematizing scholarship and common sense,
-has surrounded the figure of Jesus with such a nimbus of improbability
-that it seems not absurd to some critics of to-day to deny that he
-ever lived. The circumstance that both in England and in Germany the
-books of certain of these critics--in particular, Dr. Arthur Drews,
-Professor W. Benjamin Smith, and Mr. J. M. Robertson--are widely read,
-and welcomed by many as works of learning and authority, requires
-that I should criticize them rather more in detail than I deemed it
-necessary to do in that publication.
-
-[B. Croce on nature of History] Benedetto Croce well remarks in his
-Logica (p. 195) that history in no way differs from the physical
-sciences, insofar as it cannot be constructed by pure reasoning,
-but rests upon sight or vision of the fact that has happened, the
-fact so perceived being the only source of history. In a methodical
-historical treatise the sources are usually divided into monuments
-and narratives; by the former being understood whatever is left to
-us as a trace of the accomplished fact--e.g., a contract, a letter,
-or a triumphal arch; while narratives consist of such accounts of
-it as have been transmitted to us by those who were more or less
-eye-witnesses thereof, or by those who have repeated the notices or
-traditions furnished by eye-witnesses.
-
-[Relative paucity of evangelic tradition] Now it may be granted that
-we have not in the New Testament the same full and direct information
-about Jesus as we can derive from ancient Latin literature about
-Julius Cæsar or Cicero. We have no monuments of him, such as are the
-commentaries of the one or the letters and speeches of the other. It
-is barely credible that a single one of the New Testament writers,
-except perhaps St. Paul, ever set eyes on him or heard his voice. It
-is more than doubtful whether a single one of his utterances, as
-recorded in the Gospels, retains either its original form or the idiom
-in which it was clothed. A mass of teaching, a number of aphorisms
-and precepts, are attributed to him; but we know little of how they
-were transmitted to those who repeat them to us, and it is unlikely
-that we possess any one of them as it left his lips.
-
-[and presence of miracles in it,] And that is not all. In the four
-Gospels all sorts of incredible stories are told about him, such as
-that he was born of a virgin mother, unassisted by a human father;
-that he walked on the surface of the water; that he could foresee the
-future; that he stilled a storm by upbraiding it; that he raised the
-dead; that he himself rose in the flesh from the dead and left his
-tomb empty; that his apostles beheld him so risen; and that finally
-he disappeared behind a cloud up into the heavens.
-
-[explains and excuses the extreme negative school] It is natural,
-therefore--and there is much excuse for him--that an uneducated man
-or a child, bidden unceremoniously in the name of religion to accept
-these tales, should revolt, and hastily make up his mind that the
-figure of Jesus is through and through fictitious, and that he never
-lived at all. One thing only is certain--namely, that insofar as the
-orthodox blindly accept these tales--nay, maintain with St. Athanasius
-that the man Jesus was God incarnate, a pre-existent æon, Word of God,
-Creator of all things, masked in human flesh, but retaining, so far as
-he chose, all his exalted prerogatives and cosmic attributes in this
-disguise--they put themselves out of court, and deprive themselves of
-any faculty of reply to the extreme negative school of critics. The
-latter may be very absurd, and may betray an excess of credulity in
-the solutions they offer of the problem of Christian origins; but
-they can hardly go further along the path of absurdity and credulity
-than the adherents of the creeds. If their arguments are to be met,
-if any satisfactory proof is to be advanced of the historicity
-of Jesus, it must come, not from those who, as Mommsen remarked,
-"reason in chains," but from free thinkers.
-
-[Yet Jesus is better attested than most ancients] Those, however,
-who have much acquaintance with antiquity must perceive at the outset
-that, if the thesis that Jesus never existed is to be admitted, then
-quite a number of other celebrities, less well evidenced than he,
-must disappear from the page of history, and be ranged with Jesus in
-the realm of myth.
-
-[Age of the earliest Christian literature] Many characteristically
-Christian documents, such as the Epistle of Barnabas, the Shepherd
-of Hermas, and the Teaching of the Apostles, are admitted by Drews to
-have been written before A.D. 100. [1] Not only the canonical Gospels,
-he tells us, [2] were still current in the first half of the second
-century, but several never accepted by the Church--e.g., spurious
-gospels ascribed to Matthew, Thomas, Bartholomew, Peter, the Twelve
-Apostles. These have not reached us, though we have recovered a large
-fragment of the so-called Peter Gospel, and find that it at least
-pre-supposes canonical Mark. The phrase, "Still current in the first
-half of the second century," indicates that, in Dr. Drews's opinion,
-these derivative gospels were at least as old as year 100; in that
-case our canonical Gospels would fall well within the first. I will
-not press this point; but, anyhow, we note the admission that within
-about seventy years of the supposed date of Jesus's death Christians
-were reading that mass of written tradition about him which we call
-the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. They were also reading
-a mass of less accredited biographies--less trustworthy, no doubt,
-but, nevertheless, the work of authors who entertained no doubt that
-Jesus had really lived, and who wished to embellish his story.
-
-[If Jesus never lived, neither did Solon,] If, then, armed with
-such early records, we are yet so exacting of evidence as to deny
-that Jesus, their central figure, ever lived, what shall we say of
-other ancient worthies--of Solon, for example, the ancient Athenian
-legislator? For his life our chief sources, as Grote remarks (History
-of Greece, Pt. II, ch. 11), are Plutarch and Diogenes, writers who
-lived seven and eight hundred years after him. Moreover, the stories
-of Plutarch about him are, as Grote says, "contradictory as well
-as apocryphal." It is true that Herodotus repeats to us the story of
-Solon's travels, and of the conversations he held with Croesus, King of
-Lydia; but these conversations are obviously mere romance. Herodotus,
-too, lived not seventy, but nearly one hundred and fifty years later
-than Solon, so that contemporary evidence of him we have none. Plutarch
-preserves, no doubt, various laws and metrical aphorisms which were
-in his day attributed to Solon, just as the Christians attributed an
-extensive body of teaching to Jesus. If we deny all authenticity to
-Jesus's teaching, what of Solon's traditional lore? Obviously Jesus
-has a far larger chance to have really existed than Solon.
-
-[or Epimenides,] And the same is true of Epimenides of Crete, who
-was said to be the son of the nymph Balte; to have been mysteriously
-fed by the nymphs, since he was never seen to eat, and so forth. He
-was known as the Purifier, and in that rôle healed the Athenians
-of plagues physical and spiritual. A poet and prophet he lived,
-according to some, for one hundred and fifty-four years; according
-to his own countrymen, for three hundred. If he lived to the latter
-age, then Plato, who is the first to mention him in his Laws, was
-his contemporary, not otherwise.
-
-[or Pythagoras,] Pythagoras, again, can obviously never have lived
-at all, if we adopt the purist canons of Drews. For he was reputed,
-as Grote (Pt. II, ch. 37) reminds us, to have been inspired by the
-gods to reveal to men a new way of life, and found an order or
-brotherhood. He is barely mentioned by any writer before Plato,
-who flourished one hundred and fifty years later than he. In the
-matter of miracles, prophecy, pre-existence, mystic observances,
-and asceticism, Pythagoras equalled, if he did not excel, Jesus.
-
-[or Apollonius of Tyana] Apollonius of Tyana is another example. We
-have practically no record of him till one hundred and twenty
-years after his death, when the Sophist Philostratus took in hand
-to write his life, by his own account, with the aid of memorials
-left by Damis, a disciple of the sage. Apollonius, like Jesus and
-Pythagoras, was an incarnation of an earlier being; he, too, worked
-miracles, and appeared after death to an incredulous follower, and
-ascended into heaven bodily. The stories of his miracles of healing,
-of his expulsions of demons, and raising of the dead, read exactly
-like chapters out of the Gospels. He, like Jesus and Pythagoras,
-had a god Proteus for his father, and was born of a virgin. His birth
-was marked in the heavens by meteoric portents. His history bristles
-with tales closely akin to those which were soon told of Jesus; yet
-all sound scholars are agreed that his biographer did not imitate the
-Gospels, but wrote independently of them. If, then, Jesus never lived,
-much less can Apollonius have done so. Except for a passing reference
-in Lucian, Philostratus is our earliest authority for his reality;
-the life written of him by Moeragenes is lost, and we do not know
-when it was written. On the whole, the historicity of Jesus is much
-better attested and documented than that of Apollonius, whose story
-is equally full of miracles with Christ's.
-
-[Miracles do not wholly invalidate a document] The above examples
-suffice. But, with the aid of a good dictionary of antiquity,
-hundreds of others could be adduced of individuals for whose reality
-we have not a tithe of the evidence which we have for that of Jesus;
-yet no one in his senses disputes their ever having lived. We take
-it for certain that hundreds--nay, thousands--of people who figure
-on the pages of ancient and medieval history were real, and that,
-roughly speaking, they performed the actions attributed to them--this
-although the earliest notices of them are only met with in Plutarch,
-or Suidas, or William of Tyre, or other writers who wrote one hundred,
-two hundred, perhaps six hundred years after them. Nor are we deterred
-from believing that they really existed by the fact that, along with
-some things credible, other things wholly incredible are related of
-them. Throughout ancient history we must learn to pick and choose. The
-thesis, therefore, that Jesus never lived, but was from first to last
-a myth, presents itself at the outset as a paradox. Still, as it is
-seriously advanced, it must be seriously considered and that I now
-proceed to do.
-
-[Proof of the unhistoricity of Jesus, how attainable] It can obviously
-not pass muster, unless its authors furnish us with a satisfactory
-explanation of every single notice, direct or indirect, simple or
-constructive, which ancient writers have transmitted to us. Each
-notice must be separately examined, and if an evidential document
-be composite, every part of it. Each statement in its primâ facie
-sense must be shown to be irreconcilable with what we know of the
-age and circumstances to which it pretends to relate. And in every
-case the new interpretation must be more cogent and more probable
-than the old one. Jesus, the real man, must be driven line by line,
-verse by verse, out of the whole of the New Testament, and after that
-out of other early sources which directly or by implication attest his
-historicity. There is no other way of proving so sweeping a negative
-as that of the three authors I have named.
-
-[How to approach ancient documents] For every statement of fact in
-an ancient author is a problem, and has to be accounted for. If it
-accords with the context, and the entire body of statement agrees
-with the best scheme we can form in our mind's eye of the epoch,
-we accept it, just as we would the statement of a witness standing
-before us in a law court. If, on the other hand, the statement does not
-agree with our scheme, we ask why the author made it. If he obviously
-believed it, then how did his error arise? If he should seem to have
-made it without himself believing it, then we ask, Why did he wish
-to deceive his reader? Sometimes the only solution we can give of
-the matter is, that our author himself never penned the statement,
-but that someone covertly inserted it in his text, so that it might
-appear to have contained it. In such cases we must explain why and in
-whose interest the text was interpolated. In all history, of course,
-we never get a direct observation, or intuition, or hearing of what
-took place, for the photographic camera and phonograph did not exist
-in antiquity. We must rest content with the convictions and feelings
-of authors, as they put them down in books. To one circumstance,
-however, amid so much dubiety, we shall attach supreme importance; and
-that is to an affirmation of the same fact by two or more independent
-witnesses. One man may well be in error, and report to us what never
-occurred; but it is in the last degree improbable that two or more
-[Value of several independent witnesses in case of Jesus] independent
-witnesses will join forces in testifying to what never was. Let us,
-then, apply this principle to the problem before us. Jesus, our authors
-affirm, was not a real man, but an astral myth. Now we can conceive of
-one ancient writer mistaking such a myth for a real man; but what if
-another and another witness, what if half a dozen or more come along,
-and, meeting us quite apart from one another and by different routes,
-often by pure accident, conspire in error. If we found ourselves in
-such case, would we not think we were bewitched, and take to our heels?
-
-[The oldest sources about Jesus] Well, I do not intend to take to my
-heels. I mean to stand up to the chimeras of Messrs. Drews, Robertson,
-and Benjamin Smith. And the best courage is to take one by one the
-ancient sources which bear witness to the man Jesus, examine and
-compare them, and weigh their evidence. If they are independent,
-if they agree, not too much--that would excite a legitimate
-suspicion--but only more or less and in a general way, then, I
-believe, any rational inquirer would allow them weight, even if none
-were strictly contemporaries of his and eye-witnesses of his life. In
-the Gospel of Mark we have the earliest narrative document of the New
-Testament. This is evident from the circumstance that the three other
-evangelists used it in the composition of their Gospels. Drews, indeed,
-admits it to be one of the "safest" results of modern discussion
-of the life of Jesus that this Gospel is the oldest of the surviving
-four. He is aware, of course, that this conclusion has been questioned;
-but no one will doubt it who has confronted [The Gospel of Mark used
-in Matthew and Luke] Mark in parallel columns with Luke and Matthew,
-and noted how these other evangelists not only derive from it the
-order of the events of the life of Jesus, but copy it out verse
-after verse, each with occasional modifications of his own. Drews,
-however, while aware of this phenomenon, has yet not grasped the
-fact that it and nothing else has moved scholars to regard Mark as
-the most ancient of the three Synoptics; quite erroneously, as if he
-had never read any work of modern textual criticism, he imagines that
-they are led to their conclusion, firstly by the superior freshness
-and vividness of Mark, by a picturesqueness which argues him to
-have been an eye-witness; and, secondly, by the evidence of Papias,
-who, it is said, declared Mark to have been the interpreter of the
-Apostle Peter. In point of fact, the modern critical theologians,
-for whom Drews has so much contempt, attach no decisive weight in
-this connection either to the tradition preserved by Papias or to the
-graphic qualities of Mark's narratives. They rest their case mainly
-on the internal evidence of the texts before them.
-
-[Contents of Mark] What, then, do we find in Mark's narrative?
-
-Inasmuch as my readers can buy the book for a penny and study it
-for themselves, I may content myself with a very brief résumé of
-its contents.
-
-It begins with an account of one John who preached round about Judæa,
-but especially on the Jordan, that the Jews must repent of their sins
-in order to their remission; in token whereof he directed them to take
-a ritual bath in the sacred waters of the Jordan, just as a modern
-Hindoo washes away his sins by means of a ritual bath in the River
-Jumna. An old document generally called Q. (Quelle), because Luke and
-Matthew used it in common to supplement Mark's rather meagre story,
-adds the reason why the Jews were to repent; and it was this, that
-the Kingdom of Heaven was at hand. [Drews's account of Messianism]
-Drews, in his first chapter of The Christ Myth, traces out the idea
-of this Kingdom of God, which he finds so prominent in the Jewish
-Apocalyptics of the last century before and the first century after
-Christ, and attributes it to Persian and Mithraic influence. Mithras,
-he says, was to descend upon the earth, and in a last fierce struggle
-overwhelm Angromainyu or Ahriman and his hosts, and cast them down
-into the nether world. He would then raise the dead in bodily shape,
-and after a general judgment of the whole world, in which the wicked
-should be condemned to the punishments of hell and the good raised
-to heavenly glory, establish the "millennial kingdom." These ideas,
-he continues, penetrated Jewish thought, and brought about a complete
-transformation of the former belief in a messiah, a Hebrew term
-meaning the anointed--in Greek Christos. For, to begin with, the Christ
-was merely the Jewish king who represented Jahwe before the people,
-and the people before Jahwe. He was "Son of Jahwe," or "Son of God"
-par excellence; later on the name came to symbolize the ideal king
-to come--this when the Israelites lost their independence, and were
-humiliated by falling under a foreign yoke. This ideal longed-for
-king was to win Jahwe's favour; and by his heroic deeds, transcending
-those of Moses and Joshua of old, to re-establish the glory of Israel,
-renovate the face of the earth, and even make Israel Lord over all
-nations. But so far the Messiah was only a human being, a new David
-or descendant of David, a theocratic king, a divinely favoured prince
-of peace, a just ruler over the people he liberated; and in this
-sense Cyrus, who delivered the Jews from the Babylonian captivity,
-the rescuer and overlord of Israel, had been acclaimed Messiah.
-
-At last and gradually--still under Persian influence, according to
-Drews--this figure assumed divine attributes, yet without forfeiting
-human ones. Secret and supernatural as was his nature, so should the
-birth of the Messiah be; though a divine child, he was to be born in
-lowly state. Nay, the personality of the Messiah eventually mingled
-with that of Jahwe himself, whose son he was. Such, according to Drews,
-were the alternations of the Messiah between a human and a divine
-nature in Jewish apocalypses of the period B.C. 100 to A.D. 100. They
-obviously do not preclude the possibility of the Jews in that epoch
-acclaiming a man as their Messiah--indeed, there is no reason why
-they should not have attached the dignity to several; and from sources
-which Drews does not dispute we learn that they actually did so.
-
-[John and Jesus began as messengers of the divine kingdom on earth]
-Let us return to Mark's narrative. Among the Jews who came to John to
-confess and repent of their sins, and wash them away in the Jordan,
-was one named Jesus, from Nazareth of Galilee; and he, as soon as
-John was imprisoned and murdered by Herod, caught up the lamp,
-if I may use a metaphor, which had fallen from the hands of the
-stricken saint, and hurried on with it to the same goal. We read
-that he went to Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, and saying:
-"The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand; repent ye,
-and believe in the gospel or good tidings."
-
-The rest of Mark is a narrative of what happened to Jesus on this
-self-appointed errand. We learn that he soon made many recruits,
-from among whom he chose a dozen as his particular missionaries
-or apostles. These, after no long time, he despatched on peculiar
-beats of their own. [Jesus's anticipations of its speedy advent]
-He was certain that the kingdom was not to be long delayed, and on
-occasions assured his audience that it would come in their time. When
-he was sending out his missionary disciples, he even expressed to
-them his doubts as to whether it would not come even before they had
-had time to go round the cities of Israel. [He confined the promises
-to Jews] It was not, however, this consideration, but the instinct
-of exclusiveness, which he shared with most of his race, that led
-him to warn them against carrying the good tidings of the impending
-salvation of Israel to Samaritans or Gentiles; the promises were not
-for schismatics and heathens, but only for the lost sheep of the
-house of Israel. Some of these details are derived not from Mark,
-but from the document out of which, as I remarked above, the first
-and second evangelists supplemented Mark.
-
-[Was rejected by his own kindred] Like Luther, Loyola, Dunstan,
-St. Anthony, and many other famous saints and sinners, Jesus, on the
-threshold of his career, encountered Satan, and overthrew him. A
-characteristically oriental fast of forty days in the wilderness
-equipped him for this feat. Thenceforth he displayed, like Apollonius
-of Tyana and not a few contemporary rabbis, considerable familiarity
-with the demons of disease and madness. The sick flocked to him to
-be healed, and it was only in districts where people disbelieved
-in him and his message that his therapeutic energy met with a
-check. Among those who particularly flouted his pretensions were
-his mother and brethren, who on one occasion at least followed him
-in order to arrest him and put him under restraint as being beside
-himself or exalté. [His Parables all turn on the coming Kingdom]
-A good many parables are attributed to him in this Gospel, and yet
-more in Matthew and Luke, of which the burden usually is the near
-approach of the dissolution of this world and of the last Judgment,
-which are to usher in the Kingdom of God on earth. We learn that the
-parable was his favourite mode of instruction, as it always has been
-and still is the chosen vehicle of Semitic moral teaching. [No hint in
-the earliest sources of the miraculous birth of Jesus] Of the later
-legend of his supernatural birth, and of the visits before his birth
-of angels to Mary, his mother, and to Joseph, his putative father,
-of the portents subsequently related in connection with his birth at
-Bethlehem, there is not a word either in Mark or in the other early
-document out of which Matthew and Luke supplemented Mark. In these
-earliest documents Jesus is presented quite naturally as the son of
-Joseph and his wife Mary, and we learn quite incidentally the names
-of his brothers and sisters.
-
-[Late recognition of Jesus as himself the Messiah] Towards the middle
-of his career Jesus seems to have been recognized by Peter as the
-Son of God or Messiah. Whether he put himself forward for that rôle
-we cannot be sure; but so certain were his Apostles of the matter
-that two of them are represented as having asked him in the naivest
-way to grant them seats of honour on his left and right hand, when
-he should come in glory to judge the world. The Twelve expected to
-sit on thrones and judge the twelve tribes of Israel, and this idea
-meets us afresh in the Apocalypse, a document which in the form we
-have it belongs to the years 92-93.
-
-[His hopes shattered at approach of death] But the simple faith
-of the Apostles in their teacher and leader was to receive a
-rude shock. They accompany him for the Passover to Jerusalem. An
-insignificant triumphal demonstration is organized for him as he
-enters the sacred city on an ass; he beards the priests in the temple,
-and scatters the money-changers who sat there to change strange coins
-for pilgrims. The priests, who, like many others of their kind, were
-much too comfortable to sigh for the end of the world, and regarded
-enthusiasts as nuisances, took offence, denounced him to Pilate as a
-rebel and a danger to the Roman government of Judæa. He is arrested,
-condemned to be crucified, and as he hangs on the cross in a last
-moment of disillusionment utters that most pathetic of cries: "My God,
-my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" He had expected to witness the
-descent of the kingdom on earth, but instead thereof he is himself
-handed over helpless into the hands of the Gentiles.
-
-Such in outline is the story Mark has to tell. The rival and
-supplementary document of which I have spoken, and which admits of
-some reconstruction from the text of Matthew and Luke, consisted
-mainly of parables and precepts which Jesus was supposed to have
-delivered. It need not engage our attention here.
-
-[The mythical theory of Jesus] Now the three writers I have
-named--Messrs. Drews, Robertson, and W. B. Smith--enjoy the singular
-good fortune to be the first to have discovered what the above
-narratives really mean, and of how they originated; and they are
-urgent that we should sell all we have, and purchase their pearl
-of wisdom. They assure us that in the Gospels we have not got any
-"tradition of a personality." Jesus, the central figure, never
-existed at all, but was a purely mythical personage. The mythical
-character of the Gospels, so Drews assures us, has, in the hands of
-Mr. J. M. Robertson, led the way, and made a considerable advance
-in England; he regrets that so far official learning in Germany
-has not taken up a serious position regarding the mythic symbolical
-interpretation of the latter. [3] Let us then ask, What is the gist
-of the new system of interpretation. It is as follows:--
-
-[Jesus = Joshua, a Sun-god, object of a secret cult] Jesus, or Joshua,
-was the name under which the expected Messiah was honoured in a certain
-Jewish secret society which had its headquarters in Jerusalem about
-the beginning of our era. In view of its secret character Drews warns
-us not to be too curious, nor to question either his information or
-that of Messrs. Smith and Robertson. This recalls to me an incident
-in my own experience. I was once, together with a little girl,
-being taken for a sail by an old sailor who had many yarns. One of
-the most circumstantial of them was about a ship which went down in
-mid ocean with all hands aboard; and it wound up with the remark:
-"And nobody never knew nothing about it." Little girl: "Then how
-did you come to hear all about it?" Like our brave old sailor,
-Dr. Drews warns us (p. 22) not to be too inquisitive. We must not
-"forget that we are dealing with a secret cult, the existence of
-which we can decide upon only by indirect means." His hypothesis,
-he tells us, "can only be rejected without more ado by such as seek
-the traces of the pre-Christian cult of Jesus in well-worn places,
-and will only allow that to be 'proved' which they have established
-by direct original documentary evidence before their eyes." In other
-words, we are to set aside our copious and almost (in Paul's case)
-contemporary evidence that Jesus was a real person in favour of a
-hypothesis which from the first and as such lacks all direct and
-documentary evidence, and is not amenable to any of the methods of
-proof recognized by sober historians. We must take Dr. Drews's word
-for it, and forego all evidence.
-
-But let our authors continue with their new revelation. By Joshua, or
-Jesus, we are not to understand the personage concerning whose exploits
-the Book of Joshua was composed, but a Sun-god. The Gospels are a
-veiled account of the sufferings and exploits of this Sun-god. "Joshua
-is apparently [why this qualification?] an ancient Ephraimitic god
-of the Sun and Fruitfulness, who stood in close relation to the Feast
-of the Pasch and to the custom of circumcision." [4]
-
-[Emptiness of the Sun-god Joshua hypothesis] Now no one nowadays
-accepts the Book of Joshua offhand as sound history. It is a
-compilation of older sources, which have already been sifted a good
-deal, and will undergo yet more sifting in the future. The question
-before us does not concern its historicity, but is this: Does the Book
-of Joshua, whether history or not, support the hypothesis that Joshua
-was ever regarded as God of the Sun and of Fruitfulness? Was ever such
-a god known of or worshipped in the tribe of Ephraim or in Israel at
-large? In this old Hebrew epic or saga Joshua is a man of flesh and
-blood. How did these gentlemen get it into their heads that he was a
-Sun-god? For this statement there is not a shadow of evidence. They
-have invented it. As he took the Israelites dryshod over the Jordan,
-why have they not made a River-god of him? And as, according to Drews,
-he was so interested in fruitfulness and foreskins, why not suppose he
-was a Priapic god? They are much too modest. We should at least expect
-"the composite myth" to include this element, inasmuch as his mystic
-votaries at Jerusalem were far from seeing eye to eye with Paul in
-the matter of circumcision.
-
-[The Sun-myth stage of comparative mythology] There was years ago
-a stage in the Comparative History of Religions when the Sun-myth
-hypothesis was invoked to explain almost everything. The shirt of
-Nessus, for example, in which Heracles perished, was a parable of the
-sun setting amidst a wrack of scattered clouds. The Sun-myth was the
-key which fitted every lock, and was employed unsparingly by pioneers
-of comparative mythology like F. Max Müller and Sir George Cox. It
-was taken for granted that early man must have begun by deifying
-the great cosmic powers, by venerating Sun and Moon, the Heavens,
-the Mountains, the Sea, as holy and divine beings, because they,
-rather than humble and homelier objects, impress us moderns by their
-sublimity and overwhelming force. Man was supposed from the first to
-have felt his transitoriness, his frailty and weakness, and to have
-contrasted therewith the infinities of space and time, the majesty
-of the starry hosts of heaven, the majestic and uniform march of
-sun and moon, the mighty rumble of the thunder. Max Müller thought
-that religion began when the cowering savage was crushed by awe of
-nature and of her stupendous forces, by the infinite lapses of time,
-by the yawning abysses of space. As a matter of fact, savages do not
-entertain these sentiments of the dignity and majesty of nature. On
-the contrary, a primitive man thinks that he can impose his paltry
-will on the elements; that he knows how to unchain the wind, to oblige
-the rain to fall; that he can, like the ancient witches of Thessaly,
-control sun and moon and stars by all sorts of petty magical rites,
-incantations, and gestures, as Joshua made the sun stand still till
-his band of brigands had won the battle. It is to the imagination
-of us moderns alone that the grandeur of the universe appeals, and
-it was relatively late in the history of religion--so far as it can
-be reconstructed from the scanty data in our possession--that the
-higher nature cults were developed. The gods and sacred beings of
-an Australian or North American native are the humble vegetables and
-animals which surround him, objects with which he is on a footing of
-equality. His totems are a duck, a hare, a kangaroo, an emu, a lizard,
-a grub, or a frog. In the same way, the sacred being of an early
-Semite's devotion was just as likely to be a pig or a hare as the sun
-in heaven; the cult of an early Egyptian was centred upon a crocodile,
-or a cat, or a dog. [5] In view of these considerations, our suspicion
-is aroused at the outset by finding Messrs. Drews and Robertson to be
-in this discarded and obsolete Sun-myth stage of speculation. They
-are a back number. Let us, however, examine their mythic symbolic
-theory a little further, and see what sort of arguments they invoke
-in favour of it, and what their "indirect" proofs amount to.
-
-[Examples of the Sun-god theory of Jesus. The Rock-Tomb] Why was Jesus
-buried in a rock-tomb? asks Mr. Robertson. Answer: Because he was
-Mithras, the rock-born Sun-god. We would like to know what other sort
-of burial was possible round Jerusalem, where soil was so scarce that
-everyone was buried in a rock-tomb. Scores of such tombs remain. Are
-they all Mithraic? Surely a score of other considerations would equally
-well explain the choice of a rock-tomb for him in Christian tradition.
-
-[The date of birthday] Why was Jesus born at the
-winter-solstice? Answer: Because he was a Sun-god.
-
-Our author forgets that the choice of December 25 for the feast of
-the physical birth of Jesus was made by the Church as late as 354
-A.D. What could the cryptic Messianists of the first half of the first
-century know about a festival which was never heard of in Rome until
-the year 354, nor accepted in Jerusalem before the year 440? Time is
-evidently no element in the calculations of these authors; and they
-commit themselves to the most amazing anachronisms with the utmost
-insouciance, or, shall we not rather say, ignorance; unless, indeed,
-they imagine that the mystic worshippers of the God Joshua knew all
-about the date, but kept it dark in order to mystify all succeeding
-generations.
-
-[The twelve disciples] Why did Jesus surround himself with twelve
-disciples? Answer: Because they were the twelve signs of the Zodiac
-and he a Sun-god. We naturally ask, Were the twelve tribes of Israel
-equally representative of the Zodiac? In any case, may not Christian
-story have fixed the number of Apostles at twelve in view of the
-tribes being twelve? It is superfluous to go as far as the Zodiac
-for an explanation.
-
-[The Sermon on the Mount] Why did Jesus preach his sermon on the
-Mount? Answer: Because as Sun-god he had to take his stand on the
-"pillar of the world." In the same way, Moses, another Sun-god,
-gave his law from the Mount.
-
-I always have heard that Moses got his tables of the law up top of
-a mountain, and brought them down to a people that were forbidden to
-approach it. He did not stand up top, and shout out his laws to them,
-as Mr. Robertson suggests. In any case, we merely read in Matthew v
-that Jesus went up into a mountain or upland region, and when he had
-sat down his disciples came to him, and he then opened his mouth and
-taught them. In a country like Galilee, where you can barely walk
-a mile in any direction without climbing a hill, what could be more
-natural than for a narrator to frame such a setting for the teacher's
-discourse? It is the first rule of criticism to practise some economy
-of hypothesis, and not go roaming after fanciful and extravagant
-interpretations of quite commonplace and every-day occurrences.
-
-[The last Judgment] Why was it believed that Jesus was to judge men
-after death? Answer: Because he was a Sun-god, and pro tanto identical
-with Osiris.
-
-Surely the more natural interpretation is that, so soon as Jesus
-was identified in the minds of his followers with the Messiah or
-Christ, the task of judging Israel was passed on to him as part of
-the rôle. Thus in the Psalms of Solomon, a Jewish apocryph of about
-B.C. 50, we read that the Messiah will "in the assemblies judge the
-peoples, the tribes of the sanctified" (xvii, 48). Such references
-could be multiplied; are they all Osirian? If Mr. Robertson had paid
-a little more attention to the later apocrypha of Judaism, and made
-himself a little better acquainted with the social and religious
-medium which gave birth to Christianity, he would have realized how
-unnecessary are these Sun-mythic hypotheses, and we should have been
-spared his books.
-
-[The Lamb and Fish symbolism] Why is Jesus represented in art and
-lore by the Lamb and the Fishes? Answer: As a Sun-god passing through
-the Zodiac.
-
-This is amazing. We know the reason why Jesus was figured as a Lamb
-by the early Christians. It was because they regarded the paschal
-lamb as a type of him. Does Mr. Robertson claim to know the reasons
-of their symbolism better than they did themselves?
-
-And where did he discover that Jesus was represented as Fishes in Art
-and Lore? He was symbolized as one fish, not as several; and Tertullian
-has told us why. It was because, according to the popular zoology of
-the day, fishes were supposed to be born and to originate in the water,
-without carnal connection between their parents. For this reason the
-fish was taken as a symbol of Jesus, who was born again in the waters
-of the Jordan. A later generation explained the appellation of ichthys
-(ichthus), or Fish, as an acrostic. The letters of the Greek word are
-the initials of the words: Iesous Christos Theou uios soter--i.e.,
-Jesus Christ of God Son, Saviour; but this later explanation came
-into vogue in an age when it was already heretical to say that Jesus
-was reborn in baptism; nor does it explain why the multitude of the
-baptized were symbolized as little fishes in contrast with the Big
-Fish, Christ.
-
-[The two asses] Why did Jesus ride into Jerusalem before his death on
-two asses? Answer: Because Dionysus also rides on an ass and a foal
-in one of the Greek signs of Cancer (the turning point in the sun's
-course). "Bacchus (p. 287) crossed a marsh on two asses."
-
-Mr. Robertson does not attempt to prove that the earliest Christians,
-who were Jews, must have been familiar with the rare legend of Bacchus
-crossing a marsh on two asses; still less with the rare representation
-of the zodiacal sign Cancer as an ass and its foal. It is next to
-impossible; and, even if they were, what induced them to transform the
-myth into the legend of Jesus riding into Jerusalem on two donkeys
-at once? If they had so excellent a legend of Bacchus on his asses
-crossing a marsh, why not be content with it? And the same question
-may be asked in regard to all the other transformations by which these
-"mystic sectaries," who formed the early Church, changed myths culled
-from all times and all religions and races into a connected story of
-Jesus, as it lies before us in the Synoptic Gospels.
-
-Mr. Robertson disdains any critical and comparative study of the
-Gospels, and insists on regarding them as coeval and independent
-documents. Everything inside the covers of the New Testament is
-for him, as for the Sunday-school teacher, on one dead level of
-importance. All textual criticism has passed over his head. He has
-never learned to look in Mark for the original form of a statement
-which Luke or Matthew copied out, and in transferring them to their
-Gospels scrupled not to alter or modify. Accordingly, to suit the
-exigencies of his theory that the Gospels are an allegory of a
-Sun-god's exploits, he here claims to find the original text not in
-Mark, but in Matthew; as if a transcript and paraphrase could possibly
-be prior to, and more authoritative than, the text transcribed and
-brodé. Accordingly, he writes (p. 339) as follows: "In Mark xi and Luke
-xix, 30, the two asses become one.... In the Fourth Gospel, again, we
-have simply the colt." And yet by all rules of textual criticism and
-of common sense the underlying and original text is Mark xi, 1-7. In
-it the disciples merely bring a colt which they had found tied at a
-door. The author of the Gospel called of Matthew, eager to discern in
-every incident, no matter how commonplace, which he found in Mark, a
-fulfilment of some prophecy, or another, drags in a tag of Zechariah:
-"Behold, the King cometh to thee, meek, and riding on an ass and upon
-a colt, the foal of an ass." Then, to make the story told of Jesus
-run on all fours with the prophecy, he writes that the disciples
-"brought the ass and the colt, and put on them their garments, and he
-(Jesus) sat on them." He was unacquainted with Hebrew idiom, and so
-not aware that the words, "a colt the foal of an ass," are no more
-than a rhetorical reduplication [6] of an ass. There was, then, but
-one animal in the original form of the story, and, as the French say,
-it saute aux yeux that the importation of two is due to the influence
-of the prophecy on the mind of the transcriber. Why, therefore, go
-out of the way to attribute the tale to the influence of a legend of
-Bacchus, so multiplying empty hypotheses? Mr. Robertson, with hopeless
-perversity, takes Dr. Percy Gardner to task for repeating what he
-calls "the fallacious explanation, that 'an ass and the foal of an
-ass' represents a Greek misconception of the Hebrew way of saying
-'an ass,' as if Hebrews in every-day life lay under a special spell
-of verbal absurdity." [7] [Jewish abhorrence of Pagan myths] But did
-Hebrews in every-day life mould their ideas of the promised Messiah
-on out-of-the-way legends of Bacchus? Were they likely to fashion a
-tale of a Messianic triumph out of Gentile myths? Do we not know from
-a hundred sources that the Jews of that age, and the Christians who
-were in this matter their pupils, abhorred everything that savoured
-of Paganism. They were the last people in the world to construct
-a life of the Messiah out of the myths of Bacchus, and Hermes, and
-Osiris, and Heracles, and the fifty other heathen gods and heroes
-whom Mr. Robertson rolls up into what he calls the "composite myth"
-of the Gospels. But let us return to his criticism of Dr. Gardner. Why,
-it may be asked, was it à priori more absurd of Matthew to turn one ass
-into two in deference to Hebrew prophecy, than for Hebrews to set their
-Messiah riding into the holy city on two asses in deference to a myth
-of Bacchus crossing a marsh on two of them? Is it not Mr. Robertson,
-rather than [Robertson on Drs. Gardner and Carpenter] Dr. Gardner,
-who here lies under a special spell of absurdity? "A glance at the
-story of Bacchus," writes Mr. Robertson, "crossing a marsh on two asses
-... would have shown him that he was dealing with a zodiacal myth." The
-boot is on the other foot. Had Mr. Robertson chosen to glance at the
-Poeticon Astronomicon of Hyginus, a late and somewhat worthless Latin
-author, who is the authority for this particular tale of Bacchus,
-he would have read (ii, 23) how Liber (i.e., Dionysus) was on his
-way to get an oracle at Dodona which might restore his lost sanity:
-Sed cum venisset ad quandam paludem magnam, quam transire non posset,
-de quibusdam duobus asellis obviis factis dicitur unum deprehendisse
-eorum, et ita esse transvectus, ut omnino aquam non tetigerit.
-
-In English: "But when he came to a certain spacious marsh, which he
-thought he could not get across, he is said to have met on the way
-two young asses, of which he caught one, and he was carried across
-on it so nicely that he never touched the water at all."
-
-Here there is no hint of Bacchus riding on two asses, and
-Mr. Robertson's entire hypothesis falls to the ground like a house of
-cards. The astounding thing is that, although he insists on pages 287
-and 453 [8] that Bacchus rode on two asses, and that here is the true
-Babylonian explanation of Jesus also riding on two, he gets the Greek,
-or rather Latin, myth right on p. 339, and recognizes that Dionysus
-was only mounted on one of the asses when he passed the morass or
-river on his way to Dodona. Thus, by Mr. Robertson's own admission,
-Bacchus never rode on two asses at all.
-
-[The Pilate myth] Why was Jesus crucified by Pilate? For an
-answer to this let us for a little quit "the very stimulating and
-informing works," as Dr. Drews calls them, of Mr. Robertson, and
-turn to Dr. Drews's own work on The Witnesses to the Historicity of
-Jesus. [9] For there we find the true "astral myth interpretation"
-in all its glory. The Pilate of Christian legend was, so we learn,
-not originally an historical person at all; the whole story of
-Christ is to be taken in an astral sense; and Pilate in particular
-represents the story of Orion, the javelin-man (Pilatus), with the
-Arrow or Lance constellation (Sagitta), which is supposed to be very
-long in the Greek myth, and reappears in the Christian legend under
-the name of Longinus.... In the astral myth the Christ hanging on
-the cross or world-tree (i.e., the Milky Way) is killed by the lance
-of Pilatus.... The Christian population of Rome told the legend of
-a javelin-man, a Pilatus, who was supposed to have been responsible
-for the death of the Saviour. Tacitus heard the myth repeated, and,
-like the fool he was, took it that Pilate the javelin-man was no other
-than Pilate the Roman procurator of Judæa under Tiberius, who must
-have been known to him from the books of Josephus. [10] Accordingly,
-Tacitus sat down and penned his account of the wholesale massacre
-and burning of Christians by Nero in the fifteenth book of his Annals.
-
-We shall turn to the evidence of Tacitus later on. Meanwhile it
-is pertinent to ask where the myth of Pilatus, of which Drews here
-makes use, came from. The English text of Drews is somewhat confused;
-but presumedly Orion, with his girdle sword and lion's skin, is no
-other than Pilatus; and his long lance, with which he kills Christ,
-further entitles him to the name of Longinus. Or is it Pilatus who
-stabs Orion? It does not matter. Let us test this hypothesis in its
-essential parts.
-
-[The Longinus myth] Firstly, then, Longinus was the name coined
-by Christian legend-mongers of the third or fourth century for the
-centurion who stabbed Jesus with a lance as he hung on the cross. How
-could so late a myth influence or form part of a tradition three
-centuries older than itself? The incident of the lance being plunged
-into the side of Jesus is related only in the Fourth Gospel, and is
-not found in the earlier ones. The author of that Gospel invented it
-in order to prove to his generation that Jesus had real blood in his
-body, and was not, as the Docetes maintained, a phantasm mimicking
-reality to the ears and eyes alone of those who saw and conversed
-with him. This Gospel, even according to the Christian tradition of
-its date, is barely earlier than A.D. 100, and the name Longinus was
-not heard of before A.D. 250 at the earliest. Yet Drews is ready to
-believe that it was on the lips of Christians in the reign of Nero,
-say in A.D. 64.
-
-Secondly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean the
-"javelin-man" for the earliest generations of Roman Christians? The
-language current among them was Greek, not Latin, as the earliest
-Christian inscriptions in the catacombs of Rome testify. The language
-of Roman rites and popes remained Greek for three centuries. Why,
-then, should they have had their central myth of the crucifixion in
-a Latin form?
-
-Thirdly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean a javelin-man
-even to a Latin? Many lexicographers interpret it in Virgil in the
-sense of packed together or dense, and in most authors it bears the
-sense of bald or despoiled.
-
-[Inadequacy of the mythic theory] But, letting that pass, we ask what
-evidence is there that Orion ever had the epithet Pilatus in this
-sense? What evidence that such a myth ever existed at all? There is
-none, absolutely none. It is not enough for these authors to ransack
-Lemprière and other dictionaries of mythology in behalf of their
-paradoxes; but when these collections fail them, they proceed to coin
-myths of their own, and pretend that they are ancient, that the early
-Christians believed in them, and that Tacitus fell into the trap; as if
-these Christians, whom they acknowledge to have been either Jews or the
-converts of Jews, had not been constitutionally opposed to all pagan
-myths and cults alike; as if a good half of the earliest Christian
-literature did not consist of polemics against the pagan myths, which
-were regarded with the bitterest scorn and abhorrence; as if it were
-not notorious that it was their repugnance to and ridicule of pagan
-gods and heroes and religious myths that earned for the Christians,
-as for the Jews, their teachers, the hatred and loathing of the pagan
-populations in whose midst they lived. And yet we are asked to believe
-that the Christian Church, almost before it was separated from the
-Jewish matrix, fashioned for itself in the form of the Gospels an
-allegory of a Sun-god Joshua, who, though unknown to serious Semitic
-scholars, is yet so well known to Mr. Robertson and his friends that
-he identifies him with Adonis, and Osiris, and Dionysus, and Mithras,
-and Krishna, and Asclepius, and with any other god or demi-god that
-comes to hand in Lemprière's dictionary. After hundreds of pages of
-such fanciful writing, Drews warns us in solemn language against the
-attempts "of historical theologians to reach the nucleus of the Gospels
-by purely philological means." The attempt, he declares, is "hopeless,
-and must remain hopeless, because the Gospel tradition floats in
-the air." One would like to know in what medium his own hypotheses
-float. [Joshua the Sun-god a pure invention of the mythic school] Like
-Dr. Drews, Mr. Robertson adopts the Joshua myth as if it were beyond
-question. His faith in "the ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God"
-is absolute. This otherwise unknown deity was the core of what is
-gracefully styled "the Jesuist myth." On examination, however, the
-Joshua Sun-god turns out to be the most rickety of hypotheses. Because
-the chieftain who, in old tradition, led the Jews across the Jordan
-into the land of promise was named Joshua, certain critics, who are
-still in the sun-myth phase of comparative mythology--in particular,
-Stade and Winckler--have conjectured that the name Joshua conceals
-a solar hero worshipped locally by the tribe of Ephraim. Even if
-there ever existed such a cult, it had long vanished when the book
-of Joshua was compiled; for in this he is no longer represented as a
-solar hero, but has become in the popular tradition a human figure,
-a hero judge, and leader of the armies of Israel. Of a Joshua cult
-the book does not preserve any trace or memory; that it ever existed
-is an improbable and unverifiable hypothesis. We might just as well
-conjecture that Romulus, and Remus, and other half or wholly legendary
-figures of ancient history, were sun-gods and divine saviours. But
-it is particularly in Jewish history that this school is apt to
-revel. Moses, and Joseph, and David were all mythical beings brought
-down to earth; and the god David and the god Joshua, the god Moses,
-the god Joseph, form in the imagination of these gentlemen a regular
-Hebrew prehistoric Pantheon. I say in their imagination, for it is
-certain that when the Pentateuch was compiled--at the latest in the
-fifth century B.C.--the Jews no longer revered David, and Joshua, and
-Joseph as sun-gods; while of what they worshipped even locally before
-that date we have little knowledge, and can form only conjectures. In
-any case, that they continued to worship a sun-god under the name of
-Joshua as late as the first century of our era must strike anyone who
-has the least knowledge of Hebrew religious development, who has ever
-read Philo or Josephus, or studied Jewish sapiential and apocalyptic
-literature of the period B.C. 200-A.D. 100, as a wildly improbable
-supposition. [Supposed secrecy of early Christian cult a literary
-trick] Sensible that their hypothesis conflicts with all we know about
-the Jews of these three centuries, these three authors--Messrs. Drews,
-Robertson, and W. B. Smith--insist on the esoterism and secrecy of the
-cryptic society which in Jerusalem harboured the cult. This commonest
-of literary tricks enables them to evade any awkward questions, and
-whenever they are challenged to produce some evidence of the existence
-of such a cult they can answer that, being secret and esoteric, it
-could leave little or no evidence of itself, and that we must take
-their ipse dixit and renounce all hope of direct and documentary
-evidence. They ask of us a greater credulity than any Pope of Rome
-ever demanded.
-
-[Joshua ben Jehozadak also a Sun-god] The divine stage of Joshua,
-then, if it ever existed, was past and forgotten as early as 500
-B.C. It has left no traces. Of the other Joshuas, who meet us in the
-pages of the Jewish scriptures, the most important one is Jeshua or
-Joshua ben Jehozadak, a high priest who, together with Zerubbabel,
-is often mentioned (according to the Encyclopædia Biblica) in
-contemporary writings. Not only, then, have we contemporary evidence
-of this Joshua as of a mere man and a priest, but we know from it
-that he stooped to such mundane occupations as the rebuilding of the
-Temple. He also had human descendants, who are traced in Nehemiah xii,
-10 fol. down to Jaddua. Of this epoch of Jewish history, in which
-the Temple was being rebuilt, we have among the Jewish and Aramaic
-papyri lately recovered at Elephantine documents that are autographs
-of personages with whom this Joshua may well have been in contact. His
-contemporaries are mentioned and even addressed in these documents,
-so that he and his circle are virtually as well evidenced for us as
-Frederick the Great and Voltaire. Is it credible in the face of such
-facts that the authors we are criticizing should turn this Joshua,
-too, into a solar god? Yet Drews turns with zest to the notice of
-this Joshua, the high priest in Zechariah iii, as "one of the many
-signs" which attest that "Joshua or Jesus was the name under which
-the expected Messiah was honoured in certain Jewish sects." Unless
-he regards this later Joshua also as a divine figure, and no mere
-man of flesh and blood, why does he thus drag him into his argument?
-
-[The suspicion that the compilers of the Old Testament burked
-evidence favourable to the Sun-myth hypothesis] But, after all,
-Messrs. Drews and Robertson are uneasy about the book of Joshua, and
-not altogether capable of the breezy optimism of their instructor,
-Mr. W. B. Smith, who, in Ecce Deus (p. 74), commits himself to the
-naive declaration that, "even if we had no evidence whatever of
-a pre-Christian Jesus cult, we should be compelled to affirm its
-existence with undiminished decision." Accordingly, they both go
-out of their way to hint that the ancient Jews suppressed the facts
-of the Joshua or Jesus Sun-God-Saviour cult. Thus Mr. Robertson
-(Christianity and Mythology, p. 99, note 1), after urging us to
-accept a late and worthless tradition about Joshua, the Son of Nave,
-remarks that "the Jewish books would naturally drop the subject." How
-ill-natured, to be sure, of the authors of the old Hebrew scriptures to
-suppress evidence that would have come in so handy for Mr. Robertson's
-speculations. Dr. Drews takes another line, and in a note draws our
-attention to the fact that the Samaritans possessed an apocryphal book
-of the same name as the canonical book of Joshua. This book, he informs
-us, is based upon an old work composed in the third century B.C.,
-containing stories which in part do not appear in our Book of Joshua.
-
-He here suggests that something was omitted in canonical Joshua by its
-authors which would have helped out his hypothesis of a Joshua Sun-god
-cult. He will not, however, find the Samaritan book encouraging,
-for it gives no hint of such a cult; of that anyone who does not mind
-being bored by a perusal of it can satisfy himself. Drews's statement
-that it is based on an old work composed in the third century B.C. is
-founded on pure ignorance, and the Encyclopædia Biblica declares it
-to be a medieval production of no value to anyone except the student
-of the Samaritan sect under Moslem rule.
-
-[The evidence of El Tabari about Joshua] Mr. Robertson thinks he has
-got on a better trail in the shape of a tradition as to Joshua which
-he is quite sure the old Jewish scripture writers suppressed. Let us
-examine it, for it affords a capital example of his ideas of what
-constitutes historical evidence. "Eastern tradition," he writes,
-"preserves a variety of myths that the Bible-makers for obvious
-reasons suppressed or transformed." In one of those traditions
-"Joshua is the son of the mythical Miriam; that is to say, there was
-probably an ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God, Jesus, the son of
-Mary." So on p. 285 we learn that the cult of Jesus of Nazareth was
-"the Survival of an ancient solar or other worship of a Babe Joshua,
-son of Miriam." And he continually alludes to this ancient form of
-devotion, not as a mere hypothesis, but as a well-ascertained and
-demonstrable fact. [11]
-
-Let us then explore this remarkable tradition by which "we are
-led to surmise that the elucidation of the Christ myth is not yet
-complete." For such is the grandiose language in which he heralds
-his discovery. And what does it amount to? An Arab, El Tabari, who
-died in Bagdad about the year 925, compiled a Chronicle, of which
-some centuries later an unknown native of Persia made an abridgement
-in his own tongue, and inserted in it as a gloss "the remarkable
-Arab tradition," as it is called in the Pagan Christs (p. 157) of
-Mr. Robertson, albeit he acknowledges in a footnote that it is "not
-in the Arabic original." He asks us accordingly, on the faith of an
-unknown Persian glossator of the late Middle Ages, to believe that the
-canonical Book of Joshua originally contained this absurd tradition,
-and why? Because it would help out his hypothesis that Jesus was an
-ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God, worshipped by a cryptic society
-of Hebrews in Jerusalem, both before and after the beginning of the
-Christian era; and this is the man who writes about "the psychological
-resistance to evidence" of learned men, and sets it down to "malice and
-impercipience" that anyone should challenge his conclusions. As usual,
-Dr. Drews, who sets Mr. Robertson on a level with the author of the
-Golden Bough [12] as a "leading exponent of his new mythico-symbolical
-method," plunges into the pit which Mr. Robertson has dug for him, and
-writes that, "according to an ancient Arabian tradition, the mother of
-Joshua was called Mirzam (Mariam, Maria, as the mother of Jesus was)."
-
-[W. B. Smith's hypothesis of a God Joshua] The source from which
-Messrs. Drews and Robertson have drawn this particular inspiration is
-Dr. W. B. Smith's work, The Pre-Christian Jesus (Der Vorchristliche
-Jesus). This book, we are told, "first systematically set forth the
-case for the thesis of its title." Let us, therefore, consider its
-main argument. We have the following passages in Acts xviii, 24:--
-
-
- Now a certain Jew named Apollos, an Alexandrian by race, a learned
- man, came to Ephesus; and he was mighty in the Scriptures. This
- man had been instructed in the way of the Lord; and, being fervent
- in spirit, he spake and taught carefully the things concerning
- Jesus, knowing only the baptism of John: and he began to speak
- boldly in the synagogue. But when Priscilla and Aquila heard him,
- they took him unto them, and expounded unto him the way of God
- more carefully. And when he was minded to pass over into Achaia,
- the brethren encouraged him, and wrote to the disciples to receive
- him: and when he was come, he helped them much which had believed
- through grace: for he powerfully confuted the Jews, publicly,
- showing by the Scriptures that Jesus was the Christ.
-
-
-Availing ourselves of the canons of interpretation laid down by Drews
-and Robertson, we may paraphrase the above somewhat as follows by
-way of getting at its true meaning:--
-
-"A certain sun-myth hero, as his name Apollos signifies, came to
-Ephesus, which, being the centre of Astarte or Aphrodite worship,
-was obviously the right place for such a hero to pilgrimage unto. He
-was mighty in the Jewish Scriptures, and had been instructed in the
-way of the Lord Joshua, the Sun-God-Saviour of ancient Ephraim. He
-spake and taught carefully the things concerning this Joshua (or
-Adonis, or Osiris, or Dionysus, or Vegetation-god, or Horus--for
-you can take your choice among these and many more). But he knew
-only of the prehistoric ritual of baptism of Cadmus or of Oannes-Ea,
-the ancient culture-god of the Babylonians, who appeared in the form
-of a Fish-man, teaching men by day and at night going down into the
-sea--in his capacity of Sun-god." This Cadmus or Oannes was worshipped
-at Jerusalem in the cryptic sect of the Christists or Jesuists under
-the name of John. His friend Apollos, the solar demi-god, began to
-speak boldly in the synagogue. Priscilla (presumably Cybele, mother
-of the gods), and Aquila, the Eagle-God, or Jupiter, heard him; she
-took him forthwith and expounded to him the way of Jahve, who also
-was identical with Joshua, the Sun-god, with Osiris, etc.
-
-[His forced and far-fetched interpretations of common phrases]
-Professor W. B. Smith is a little more modest and less thorough-going
-in his application of mythico-symbolic methods. He only asks us to
-believe that the trite and hackneyed phrase, "the things concerning
-Jesus," refers not, as the context requires, to the history and
-passion of Jesus of Galilee, but to the mysteries of a prehistoric
-Saviour-God of the same name. We advisedly say prehistoric, for he was
-never mentioned by anyone before Professor Smith discovered him. The
-name Jesus, according to him, means what the word Essene also meant, a
-Healer. [13] Note, in passing, that this etymology is wholly false, and
-rests on the authority of a writer so late, ignorant, and superstitious
-as Epiphanius. Now, why cannot the words, "the things about Jesus,"
-in this context mean the tradition of the ministry of Jesus as it had
-shaped itself at that time, beginning with the Baptism and ending with
-the Ascension, as we read in Acts i, 22? [Apollos and the Baptism of
-John] It cannot, argues Professor Smith, because Apollos only knew the
-baptism of John. The reference to John's baptism may be obscure, as
-much in early Christianity is bound to be obscure, except to Professor
-Smith and his imitators. Yet this much is clear, that it here means,
-what it means in the sequel, the baptism of mere repentance as opposed
-to the baptism of the Spirit, which was by laying on of hands, and
-conferred the charismatic gifts of the Holy Ghost. The Marcionites, and
-after them the Manichean and Cathar sects, retained the latter rite,
-and termed it Spiritual or Pneumatic Baptism; while they dropped as
-superfluous the Johannine baptism with water. It would appear, then,
-that Apollos was perfectly acquainted with the personal history of
-Jesus, and understood the purport of the baptism of repentance as a
-sacrament preparing followers of Jesus for the kingdom of Heaven,
-soon to be inaugurated on earth. Perhaps we get a glimpse in this
-passage of an age when the mission of Jesus in his primitive rôle
-as herald of the Messianic kingdom and a mere continuer of John's
-mission was familiar to many who yet did not recognize him as the
-Messiah. For, after instruction by Priscilla and Aquila, Apollos set
-himself to confute the Jews who denied Jesus to have been Messiah,
-which, as a mere herald of the approaching kingdom of God, he was
-not. We know that Paul regarded him as having attained that dignity
-only through, and by, the fact of the Spirit having raised him from
-the dead; and did not regard him as having received it through the
-descent of the Spirit on him in the Jordan, as the oriental Christians
-presently believed. Still less did Paul know of the later teaching of
-the orthodox churches--viz., that the Annunciation was the critical
-moment in which Christ became Jesus. In any case, we must not interpret
-the words, "the things about Jesus," in this passage in a forced and
-unnatural sense wholly alien to the writer of Acts. This writer again
-and again recapitulates the leading facts of the life and ministry of
-Jesus, and the phrase, "the things concerning Jesus," cannot in any
-work of his bear any other sense. Moreover, the same author uses the
-very same phrase elsewhere (Luke xxiv, 19) in the same sense. Here
-Cleopas asks Jesus (whom he had failed to recognize), and says:--
-
-
- Dost thou alone sojourn in Jerusalem, and not know the things
- which are come to pass there in these days? And he said unto him,
- What things? And they said unto him, the things concerning Jesus
- of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before
- God and all the people: and how the chief priests and our rulers
- delivered him up to be condemned to death, and crucified him.
-
-
-Such, then, were "the things about Jesus," and to find in them, as
-Professor W. B. Smith does, an allusion to a pre-Christian myth of
-a God Joshua is to find a gigantic mare's-nest, and fly in the face
-of all the evidence. He verges on actual absurdity when he sees the
-same allusion in Mark v, 26, where a sick woman, having heard "the
-things concerning Jesus," went behind him, touched his garment, and
-was healed. Her disease was of a hysterical description, and in the
-annals of faith-healing such cures are common. What she had heard of
-was obviously not his fame as a Sun-god, but his power to heal sick
-persons like herself. [Magical papyrus of Wessely] Professor Smith
-tries to find support for his hardy conjecture in a chance phrase in
-a magical papyrus of Paris, No. 3,009, edited first by Wessely, and
-later by Dieterich in his Abraxas, p. 138. It is a form of exorcism
-to be inscribed on a tin plate and hung round the neck of a person
-possessed by a devil, or repeated over him by an exorcist. In this
-rigmarole the giants, of course, are dragged in, and the Tower of
-Babel and King Solomon; and the name of Jesus, the God of the Hebrews,
-is also invoked in the following terms: "I adjure thee by Jesus the
-God of the Hebrews, Iabaiae Abraoth aia thoth ele, elô," etc. The age
-of this papyrus is unknown; but Wessely puts it in the third century
-after Christ, while Dieterich shows that it can in no case be older
-than the second century B.C. It is clearly the composition of some
-exorcist who clung on to the skirts of late Judaism, for he is at
-pains to inform us in its last line that it is a Hebrew composition
-and preserved among pure men. In that age, as in after ones, not a few
-exorcists, trading on the fears and sufferings of superstitious people,
-affected to be pure and holy; and the mention of Jesus indicates some
-such charlatan, who was more or less cognisant of Christianity and of
-the practice of Christian exorcists. He was also aware of the Jewish
-antecedents of Christianity, and did not distinguish clearly between
-the mother religion and its daughter. That is why he describes Jesus
-as a Hebrew God. We know from other sources that even in the earliest
-Christian age Gentiles used the name of Jesus in exorcisms. The author
-of the document styles Jesus God, just as Pliny informs us that the
-Christians sang hymns "to Christ as to God"--Christo quasi deo. How
-Professor Smith can imagine that this papyrus lends any colour to
-his thesis of a pre-Christian Jesus it is difficult to imagine.
-
-[Jesus a Nazoræan in what sense] Still less does his thesis really
-profit by the text of Matthew ii, 23, in which a prophecy is adduced
-to the effect that the Messiah should be called a Nazoræan, and this
-prophecy is declared to have been fulfilled in so far as Jesus was
-taken by his parents to live at Nazareth in Galilee.
-
-What prophecy the evangelist had in mind is not known. But
-Professor W. B. Smith jumps to the conclusion that the Christians
-were identical with the sect of Nazoræi mentioned in Epiphanius as
-going back to an age before Christ; and he appeals in confirmation
-of this quite gratuitous hypothesis [14] to Acts xxiv, 5, where the
-following of Jesus is described as that of the Nazoræi. It in no way
-helps the thesis of the non-historicity of Jesus, even if he and his
-followers were members of this obscure sect; it would rather prove the
-opposite. Drews, following W. B. Smith, pretends in the teeth of the
-texts that the name is applied to Jesus only as Guardian of the World,
-Protector and Deliverer of men from the power of sins and dæmons, and
-that it has no reference to an obscure and entirely unknown village
-named Nazareth. He also opines that Jesus was called a Nazarene,
-because he was the promised Netzer or Zemah who makes all things new,
-and so forth. Such talk is all in the air. Why these writers boggle
-so much at the name Nazoræan is not easy to divine; still less to
-understand what Professor Smith is driving at when he writes of those
-whom he calls "historicists," that "They have rightly felt that the
-fall of Nazareth is the fall of historicism itself." Professor Burkitt
-has suggested that Nazareth is Chorazin spelt backwards. Wellhausen
-explains Nazoræan from Nesar in the name Gennessaret. In any case,
-as we have no first-century gazetteer or ordnance survey of Galilee,
-it is rash to suppose that there could have been no town there of the
-name. True the Talmuds and the Old Testament do not name it; but they
-do not profess to give a catalogue of all the places in Galilee, so
-their silence counts for little. [15] All we know for certain is that
-for the evangelist Nazoræan meant a dweller in Nazareth, and that he
-gave the word that sense when he met with it in an anonymous prophecy.
-
-[Mr. Robertson on myths] I feel that I ought almost to apologize
-to my readers for investigating at such length the hypothesis of a
-pre-Christian Jesus, son of a mythical Mary, and for exhibiting over
-so many pages its fantastic, baseless, and absurd character. But
-Mr. Robertson himself warns us of the necessity of showing no
-mercy to myths when they assume the garb of fact. For he adduces
-(p. 126) the William Tell myth by way of illustrating once for all
-"the fashion in which a fiction can even in a historical period find
-general acceptance." Even so it is with his own fictions. We see them
-making their way with such startling rapidity over England and Germany
-as almost to make one despair of this age of popular enlightenment. It
-is not his fault, and I exonerate him from blame. [His methods those of
-old-fashioned orthodoxy] For centuries orthodox theologians have been
-trying to get out of the Gospels supernaturalist conclusions which were
-never in them, nor could with any colour be derived from them except
-by deliberately ignoring the canons of evidence and the historical
-methods freely employed in the study of all other ancient monuments and
-narratives. They have set the example of treating the early writings of
-Christianity as no other ancient books would be treated. Mr. Robertson
-is humbly following in their steps, but à rebours, or in an inverse
-sense. They insist on getting more out of the New Testament than
-any historical testimony could ever furnish; he on getting less. In
-other respects also he imitates their methods. Thus they insist on
-regarding the New Testament, and in particular the four Gospels, as a
-homogeneous block, and will not hear of the criticism which discerns
-in them literary development, which detects earlier and later couches
-of tradition and narrative. This is what I call the Sunday-school
-attitude, and it lacks all perspective and orientation. Mr. Robertson
-imbibed it in childhood, and has never been able to throw it off. For
-him there is no before and after in the formation of these books,
-no earlier and later in the emergence of beliefs about Jesus, no
-stratification of documents or of ideas. If he sometimes admits it,
-he withdraws the admission on the next page, as militating against
-his cardinal hypothesis. He seems never to have submitted himself to
-systematic training in the methods of historical research--never,
-as we say, to have gone through the mill; and accordingly in the
-handling of documents he shows himself a mere wilful child.
-
-[Thus he insists on the priority in Christian tradition of the Virgin
-Birth legend] His treatment of the legend of the Virgin Birth is an
-example of this mental attitude, which might be described as orthodoxy
-turned upside down and inside out. The Gospel of Mark is demonstrably
-older than those of the other two synoptists who merely copied it
-out with such variations, additions, omissions, and modifications
-as a growing reverence for Jesus the Messiah imposed. It contains,
-no more than the Pauline Epistles and the Johannine Gospel, any hint
-of the supernatural birth of Jesus. It regards him quite simply and
-naturally as the son of Joseph and Mary. In it the neighbours of Jesus
-enumerate by way of contumely the names of his brothers and sisters. I
-have shown also in my Myth, Magic, and Morals that this naturalist
-tradition of his birth dominates no less the whole of the Gospels
-of Matthew and Luke apart from the first two chapters of each, and
-that even in the first chapter of Matthew the pedigree in early texts
-ended with the words "Joseph begat Jesus." I have shown furthermore
-that the belief in the paternity of Joseph was the characteristic
-belief of the Palestinian Christians for over two centuries, that
-it prevailed in Syria to the extent of regarding Jesus and Thomas as
-twin brothers. I have pointed out that the Jewish interlocutor Trypho
-in Justin Martyr's dialogue (c. 150) maintains that Jesus was born a
-man of men and rejects the Virgin Birth legend as a novelty unworthy
-of monotheists, and that he extorts from his Christian antagonist
-the admission that the great majority of Christians still believed
-in the paternity of Joseph.
-
-[His exceptional treatment of Christian tradition] Now Mr. Robertson
-evidently reads a good deal, and must at one time or another have
-come across all these facts. Why, then, does he go out of his way to
-ignore them, and, in common with Professors Drews and W. B. Smith,
-insist that the miraculous tradition of Jesus's birth was coeval with
-the earliest Christianity and prior to the tradition of a natural
-birth? Yet the texts stare him in the face and confute him. Why does he
-shut his eyes to them, and gibe perpetually at the critical students
-who attach weight to them? The works of all the three writers are
-tirades against the critical method which tries to disengage in the
-traditions of Jesus the true from the false, fact from myth, and to
-show how, in the pagan society which, as it were, lifted Jesus up
-out of his Jewish cradle, these myths inevitably gathered round his
-figure, as mists at midday thicken around a mountain crest.
-
-[In secular history he uses other canons and methods,] Their
-insistence that in the case of Christian origins the miraculous
-and the non-miraculous form a solid block of impenetrable myth
-is all the more remarkable, because in secular history they are
-prepared, nay anxious, for the separation of truth from falsehood,
-of history from myth, and continually urge not only its possibility,
-but its necessity. Mr. Robertson in particular prides himself on
-meting out to Apollonius of Tyana a measure which he refuses to
-Jesus the Messiah. [e.g., in criticizing the story of Apollonius]
-"The simple purport," he writes in the Literary Guide, May 1, 1913,
-"of my chapter on Apollonius was to acknowledge his historicity,
-despite the accretions of myth and more or less palpable fiction to
-his biography." And yet there are ten testimonies to the historicity
-of Jesus where there is one to that of Apollonius; yet Apollonius was
-reputed to have been born miraculously, and his birth accompanied by
-the portent of a meteor from heaven, as that of Jesus by a star from
-the east. Like Jesus, he controlled the devils of madness and disease,
-and by the power of his exorcisms dismissed them to be tortured in
-hell. Like Peter, he miraculously freed himself from his bonds; like
-Jesus, he revealed himself after death to a sceptical disciple and
-viva voce convinced him of his ascent to heaven; like him, he ascended
-in his body up to heaven amid the hymns of maiden worshippers. In
-life he spent seven days in the bowels of the earth, and gathered a
-band of disciples around him who acclaimed him as a divine being;
-long after his death temples were raised to him as to a demigod,
-miracles wrought by his relics, and prayer and sacrifice offered to
-his genius. So considerable was the parallelism between his story
-and that of Jesus that the pagan enemies of the Christians began
-about the year 300 to run his cult against theirs, and it was only
-yesterday that the orthodox began to give up the old view that the
-Life of Apollonius was a blasphemous réchauffé of the Gospels. "There
-is no great reason to doubt that India was visited by Apollonius of
-Tyana," writes Mr. Robertson (Christianity and Mythology, p. 273);
-and yet his visit in the only relation we have of it is a tissue of
-marvels and prodigies, his Indian itinerary is impossible, and full of
-contradictions not only of what we know of Indian geography to-day,
-but of what was already known in that day. Yet about his pilgrimage
-thither, declares Mr. Robertson, there is no more uncertainty than
-about the embassies sent by Porus to Augustus, and by the king of
-"Taprobane" to Claudius. "There is much myth," he writes again, p. 280,
-"in the life of Apollonius of Tyana, who appears to be at the bottom
-a real historical personage." In the Gospels we have the story of
-Jairus's daughter being raised to life from apparent death. "A closely
-similar story is found in Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana,
-the girl in each case being spoken of in such a way as to leave open
-the question of her having been dead or a cataleptic." So writes
-Mr. Robertson, p. 334, who thinks that "the simple form preserved
-in Matthew suggests the derivation from the story in Philostratus,"
-overlooking here, as elsewhere, the chronological difficulties. We can
-forgive him for that; but why, we must ask, does the presence of such
-stories in the Gospel irrevocably condemn Jesus to non-historicity,
-while their presence in the Life of Apollonius leaves his historical
-reality intact and unchallenged? Is it not that the application of his
-canons of interpretation to Apollonius would have deprived him of one
-of the sources from which the mythicity of Jesus by his anachronistic
-methods could be deduced?
-
-[The early passion play of the Sun-god Joshua] Mr. Robertson endeavours
-in a halting manner to justify his partiality for Apollonius. "We
-have," he writes (Pagan Christs, p. 283, § 16), "no reason for doubting
-that there was an Apollonius of Tyana.... The reasons for not doubting
-are (1) that there was no cause to be served by a sheer fabrication;
-and (2) that it was a much easier matter to take a known name as a
-nucleus for a mass of marvels and theosophic teachings than to build it
-up, as the phrase goes about the canon, 'round a hole.' The difference
-between such a case and those of Jesuism and Buddhism is obvious. In
-those cases there was a cultus and an organization to be accounted for,
-and a biography of the founder had to be forthcoming. In the case
-of Apollonius, despite the string of marvels attached to his name,
-there was no cultus."
-
-Let us examine the above argument. In the case of "Jesuism"
-(Mr. Robertson's argot for early Christianity) there had to be
-fabricated a biography of Jesus, because there existed an organized
-sect that worshipped Jesus.
-
-The organized sect consisted, according to Mr. Robertson,
-of "Christists" or "Jesuists," and the chief incident for which
-they were organized was an annual play in which the God Jesus was
-betrayed, arrested, condemned, was crucified, died, was buried, and
-rose again. Ober Ammergau has supplied him with his main conception,
-and his annually recurring "Gospel mystery play," as he imagines it
-to have been acted by the "Jesuists," who were immediate ancestors
-of the Christians, is a faithful copy of the modern Passion Play. He
-supposes it to have been acted annually because the hypothetical
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, whose mythical sufferings and death it
-commemorated, was an analogue of Osiris, whose sufferings and death
-were similarly represented in Egypt each recurring spring; also
-of Adonis, of Dionysus, of Mithras, and of sundry vegetation gods,
-annually slain to revive vegetation and secure the life of the initiate
-in the next world. Be it remarked also that the annually slain God
-of the Jesuists was not only an analogue of these other gods, but a
-"composite myth" made up of their myths. As we have seen, Mr. Robertson
-is ready to exhibit to us in one or another of their mythologies the
-original of every single incident and actor in the Jesuist play.
-
-Such was the cultus and organization which, according to Mr. Robertson
-and his imitator Dr. Drews, lies behind the Christian religion. The
-latter began to be when the "Jesuist" cult, having broken away from
-Judaism, was also concerned to break away from the paganism in contact
-with which the play would first arise.
-
-[The Gospels a transcript of this play] A biography of the Founder
-of the cult was now called for, by the Founder oddly enough being
-meant the God himself, and not the hierophant who instituted the
-play. The Christian Gospels are the biography in question. They are
-a transcript of the annually performed ritual drama, just as Lamb's
-Tales from Shakespeare are transcripts of Shakespeare's plays.
-
-The first performances of the play, we learn, probably took place in
-Egypt. It ceased to be acted when "it was reduced to writing as part
-of the gospel." How far away from Jerusalem it was that the momentous
-decision was taken by the sect to give up play acting and be content
-with the transcript Mr. Robertson "can hardly divine." He hints,
-however, that some of the latest representations took place in the
-temples built by Herod at Damascus and Jericho and in the theatres
-of the Greek town of Gadara. "The reduction of the play to narrative
-form put all the Churches on a level, and would remove a stumbling
-block from the way of the ascetic Christists who objected to all
-dramatic shows as such."
-
-But where did the play come from? What inspired it? Mr. Robertson makes
-a tour round the Mediterranean, and collects in Part II, Ch. I, of his
-Pagan Christs a lot of scrappy information about mock sacrifices and
-mystery dramas, all of them "cases and modes of modification" of actual
-human sacrifices that were "once normal in the Semitic world." He
-assumes without a tittle of proof, and against all probability, that
-the annual sacrifice of a king or of a king's son, whether in real
-or mimic, held its ground among Jews as a religious ceremony right
-down into our era, and was "reduced among them to ritual form, like
-the leading worships of the surrounding Gentile world." He fashions
-a new hypothesis in accordance with these earlier ones as follows:--
-
-[Joshua or Jesus slain once a year] "If in any Jewish community,
-or in the Jewish quarter of any Eastern city, the central figure in
-this rite (i.e., of a mock sacrifice annually recurring of a man got
-up to represent a god) were customarily called Jesus Barabbas, 'Jesus
-the Son of the Father'--whether or not in virtue of an old cultus of
-a God Jesus who had died annually like Attis and Tammuz--we should
-have a basis for the tradition so long preserved in many MSS. of the
-first gospel, and at the same time a basis for the whole gospel myth
-of the crucifixion."
-
-Here we have a whole string of hypotheses piled one on the other. Let
-us see which have any ground in fact, or cohere with what we know of
-the past, which are improbable and unproven.
-
-[Hypothesis of human sacrifice among Jews] That human sacrifice was
-once in vogue among the Jews is probable enough, and the story of
-the frustrated sacrifice of Isaac was no doubt both a memory and
-a condemnation of the old rite of sacrificing first-born children
-with which we are familiar in ancient Phoenicia and her colony of
-Carthage. That such rites in Judæa and in Israel did not survive the
-Assyrian conquest of Jerusalem is certain. The latest allusion to them
-is in Isaiah xxx, 27-33. This passage is post-exilic indeed; but,
-as Dr. Cheyne remarks (Encycl. Biblica, art. Molech, col. 3,187):
-"The tone of the allusion is rather that of a writer remote from
-these atrocities than of a prophet in the midst of the struggle
-against them."
-
-We may then assume (1) that the custom of human sacrifice disappeared
-among Jews centuries before our era; (2) that in the epoch 100
-B.C. to 100 A.D. every Jew, no matter where he lived, would view
-such rites and reminiscences with horror. As a matter of fact, Philo
-dwells in eloquent language on the horror and abomination of them as
-they were still in his day sporadically celebrated, not among Jews,
-but among pagans.
-
-This being so, is it likely that any Jewish community would keep up
-even the simulacrum of such rites? In Josephus and Philo, who are
-our most important witnesses to the Judaism that just preceded or was
-contemporary with early Christianity, there is no hint of such rites
-as might constitute a memory and mimicry of human victims, whether
-identified with a god or not. No serious pagan writer of that age
-ever accused the Jews of keeping up such rites openly or in secret
-among themselves. [Evidence of Apion accepted by Mr. Robertson]
-Apion alone had a cock-and-bull story of how Antiochus Epiphanes,
-when he took Jerusalem (c. 170 B.C.), found a Greek being fattened up
-by the Jews in the adytum of the temple about to be slain and eaten
-in honour of their god. Of course Mr. Robertson catches at this,
-and writes (Pagan Christs, p. 161) that, "in view of all the clues,
-we cannot pronounce that story incredible." What clues has he? The
-undoubted survival of ritual murder among the pagans of Phoenicia
-in that age is no clue, though it explains the genesis of Apion's
-tale. And Mr. Robertson has one other treasure trove--to wit, the
-obscure reading "Jesus Barabbas" in certain MSS. of Matthew xxvii, 17:
-"Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I release unto you? (Jesus)
-Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ?"
-
-[The sacrificing of the mock king] It has been plausibly suggested
-that the addition Jesus is due to a scribe's reduplication, such
-as is common in Greek manuscripts, of the last syllable of the
-word humin = unto you. The in in uncials is a regular compendium
-for Iesun Jesus. In this way the name Jesus may have crept in before
-Barabbas. The entire story of Barabbas being released has an apocryphal
-air, for Pilate would not have let off a rebel against the Roman rule
-to please the Jewish mob; and the episode presupposes that it was
-the Sanhedrin which had condemned Jesus to death, which is equally
-improbable. What is probable, however, is that the Syrian soldiery
-to whom Pilate committed Jesus for crucifixion were accustomed to the
-Sacæa festival of Babylonian origin, and perhaps to the analogous Roman
-feast of the Saturnalia. In such celebrations a mock king was chosen,
-and vested with the costume, pomp, and privileges of kingship perhaps
-for as long as three days. Then the mimicry of slaying him was gone
-through, and sometimes the mock king was really put to death. Among
-Syrians the name Barabbas may--it is a mere hypothesis--have been the
-conventional appellation of the victim slain actually or in mock show
-on such occasions; and the soldiers of Pilate may have treated him en
-Barabbas. Loisy suggests in his Commentary on the Synoptics that this
-was the genesis of the Barabbas story. That a pagan soldiery treated
-Jesus as a mock king, when they dressed him in purple and set a crown
-of thorns on his head, and, kneeling before him, cried "Hail King of
-the Jews," is quite possible; and serious scholars like Paul Wendland
-(Hermes, Vol. XXXIII (1898), fol. 175) and Mr. W. R. Paton long ago
-discerned the probability.
-
-But it was one thing for Syrians and pagans to envisage the
-crucifixion of Jesus under the aspect of a sacrifice to Molech,
-quite another thing for Jews--whether as his enemies or as his
-partisans--to do so; nor does the Gospel narrative suggest that
-any Jews took part in the ceremony. Perhaps it was out of respect
-for Jewish susceptibilities--and they were not likely to favour any
-mockery of their Messianic aspirations--that Pilate caused Jesus to
-be divested of the purple insignia of royalty and clad in his usual
-garb before he was led out of the guardroom and through the streets
-of Jerusalem on his way to Golgotha.
-
-[Evidence of Philo] We read in Philo (In Flaccum, vi) of a very similar
-scene enacted in the streets of Alexandria within ten years of the
-crucifixion. The young Agrippa, elevated by Caligula to the throne
-of Judæa, had landed in that city, where feeling ran high between
-Jews and pagans. The latter, by way of ridiculing the pretensions of
-the Jews to have a king of their own, seized on a poor lunatic named
-Carabas who loitered night and day naked about the streets, ran him
-as far as the Gymnasium, and there stood him on a stool, so that all
-could see him, having first set a mock diadem of byblus on his head
-and thrown a rug over his shoulders as a cloak of honour. In his hand
-they set a papyrus stem by way of sceptre. Having thus arrayed him,
-as in a mime of the theatre, with the insignia of mock royalty, the
-young men shouldering sticks, as if they were a bodyguard, encircled
-him, while others advanced, saluted his mock majesty, and pretended
-that he was their judge and king sitting on his throne to direct the
-commonwealth. Meanwhile a shout went up from the crowd around of Marin,
-which in the Syrian language signified Lord.
-
-This passage of Philo goes far to prove that the mockery of Jesus
-in the Gospels was no more than a public ridiculing of the Jewish
-expectations of a national leader or Messiah who should revive the
-splendours of the old Davidic kingdom. In any case, the mockery
-is conducted at Jerusalem by Pilate's soldiers (who were not Jews,
-but a pagan garrison put there to overawe the Jews), at Alexandria by
-such Greeks as Apion penned his calumnies to gratify. Mr. Robertson's
-suggestion that the mock ceremony of the crucifixion was performed
-by Jews or Christians is thus as absurd as it is gratuitous. It was
-held in bitter despite of Jews and Christians, it was a mockery and
-reviling of their most cherished hopes and ideals; and yet he does
-not scruple to argue that it is "a basis for the whole gospel myth
-of the crucifixion."
-
-[Evidence of the Khonds] Thus he is left with the single calumny
-of Apion, which deserves about as much credence as the similar
-tales circulated to-day against the Jews of Bessarabia. That is the
-single item of evidence he has to prove what is the very hinge of his
-theory--the supposition, namely, that the Jews of Alexandria first,
-and afterwards the Jews of Jerusalem, celebrated in secret once a year
-ritual dramas representing the ceremonial slaying of a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, Son of the Father and of the Virgin Miriam. It is a far cry to
-the horrible rites of the Khonds of modern India; but Mr. Robertson,
-for whom wide differences of age and place matter nothing when he
-is explaining Christian origins, has discovered in them a key to the
-narrative of the crucifixion of Jesus. He runs all round the world and
-collects rites of ritual murder and cannibal sacraments of all ages,
-mixes them up, lumps them down before us, and exclaims triumphantly,
-There is my "psychological clue" to Christianity. The most superficial
-resemblances satisfy him that an incident in Jerusalem early in our
-era is an essential reproduction of a Khond ritual murder in honour
-of the goddess Tari. Was there ever an author so hopelessly uncritical
-in his methods?
-
-[Origin of the Gospels] The Gospels, then, are a transcript of a mock
-murder of the Sun-god Joshua annually performed in secret by the
-Jews of Jerusalem, for it had got there before it was written down
-and discontinued. One asks oneself why, if the Jews had tolerated
-so long a pagan survival among themselves, they could not keep it
-up a little longer; and why the "Christists" should be so anxious
-"to break away from paganism" at exactly the same hour. Moreover,
-their breach with paganism did not amount to much, since they kept
-the transcript of a ritual drama framed on pagan lines and inspired
-throughout by pagan ideas and myths; not only kept it, but elevated it
-into Holy Scripture. At the same time they retained the Old Testament,
-which as Jews they had immemorially venerated as Holy Scripture; and
-for generations they went on worshipping in the Jewish temple, kept
-the Jewish feasts and fasts, and were zealous for circumcision. What
-a hotchpotch of a sect!
-
-[How could a Sun-god slain annually be slain by Pontius Pilate?] It
-occurs to me to ask Mr. Robertson a few questions about this
-transcript. It was the annual mystery play reduced to writing. The
-central event of the play was the annual death and resurrection of a
-solar or vegetation god, whose attributes and career were borrowed
-from the cults of Osiris, Adonis, Dionysus, and Co. All these gods
-died once a year; and, I suppose, had you asked one of the votaries
-when his god died, he would have answered, Every spring. Now all the
-Gospels (in common with all Christian tradition) are unanimous that
-Jesus only died once, about the time of the Passover, when Pilate was
-Roman Governor of Judæa, when Annas and Caiaphas were high-priests and
-King Herod about. This surely is an extraordinary record for a Sun-god
-who died once a year. And it was not in the transcript only that
-all these fixities of date crept in, for Mr. Robertson insists most
-vehemently that Pilate was an actor in the play. "Even the episode,"
-he writes (Pagan Christs, p. 193), "of the appeal of the priests and
-Pharisees to Pilate to keep a guard on the tomb, though it might be a
-later interpolation, could quite well have been a dramatic scene." In
-Mark and Matthew, as containing "the earlier version" of the drama,
-he detects everywhere a "concrete theatricality." Thus he commits
-himself to the astonishing paralogism that Pilate and Herod, Annas and
-Caiaphas, and all the other personages of the closing chapters of the
-Gospels, were features in an annually recurring passion play of the
-Sun-god Joshua; and this play was not a novelty introduced after the
-crucifixion, for there never was a real crucifixion. On the contrary,
-it was a secret survival among paganized Jews, a bit of Jewish pagan
-mummery that had been going on long ages before the actors represented
-in it ever lived or were heard of. Such is the reductio ad absurdum of
-the thesis which peeps out everywhere in Mr. Robertson's pages. And
-now we have found what we were in search of--namely, the cultus and
-organization to account for which a biography of Jesus had to be
-fabricated. The Life of Apollonius, argues Mr. Robertson, cannot have
-been built up round a hole, and as there was no organized cult of him
-(this is utterly false), there must have been a real figure to fit the
-biography. In the other case the organized and pre-existing cult was
-the nucleus around which the Gospels grew up like fairy rings around
-a primal fungus. It is not obvious why a cult should exclude a real
-founder, or, rather, a real person, in honour of whom the cult was
-kept up. In the worship of the Augustus or of the ancient Pharaoh,
-who impersonated and was Osiris, we have both. Why not have both
-in the case of Jesus, to whose real life and subsequent deification
-the Augusti and the Pharaohs offer a remarkable parallel? But there
-never was any pre-Christian cult and organization in Mr. Robertson's
-sense. It is a monstrous outgrowth of his own imagination.
-
-
-[Historicity of Plato falls by the canons of the mythicists] And
-as in the case of Apollonius, so in the case of other ancients,
-he is careful not to apply those methods of interpretation which he
-yet cannot pardon scholars for not applying to Jesus. Let us take
-another example. Of the life of Plato we know next to nothing. In
-the dialogues attributed to him his name is only mentioned twice;
-and in both cases its mention could, if we adopt Mr. Robertson's
-canons of interpretation, be with the utmost ease explained away as
-an interpolation. The only life we have of him was penned by Diogenes
-Laertius 600 years after he lived. The details of his life supplied
-by Aristoxenus, a pupil of Aristotle, are obviously false. The only
-notices preserved of him that can be claimed to be contemporary are
-the few derived from his nephew Speusippus. Now what had Speusippus
-to tell? Why, a story of the birth of Plato which, as Mr. Robertson
-(p. 293) writes, scarcely differs from the story of Matthew i, 18-25:
-
-"In the special machinery of the Joseph and Mary myth--the warning in a
-dream and the abstention of the husband--we have a simple duplication
-of the relations of the father and mother of Plato, the former being
-warned in a dream by Apollo, so that the child was virgin-born."
-
-Again, just as the Christians chose a "solar date" for the birthday
-of Jesus, so the Platonists, according to Mr. Robertson, p. 308,
-"placed the master's birthday on that of Apollo--that is, either at
-Christmas or at the vernal equinox."
-
-Now in the case of Jesus such legends and events as the above suffice
-to convince Mr. Robertson that the history of Jesus as told in the
-Gospels is a mere survival of "ancient solar or other worship of a
-babe Joshua, son of Miriam," of which ancient worship nothing is
-known except that it looms large in the imagination of himself,
-of Dr. Drews, and of Professor W. B. Smith. On the other hand, we
-do know that a cult of Apollo existed, and that it is no fiction of
-these modern writers. Surely, then, it is time we changed our opinion
-about the historicity of Plato. Is it not as clear as daylight that
-he was the survival of a pre-Platonic Apollo myth? We know the rôle
-assigned to Apollo of revealer of philosophic truth. Well, here were
-the dialogues and letters of Plato, calling for an explanation of
-their origin; a sect of Platonists who cherished these writings and
-kept the feast of their master on a solar date. On all the principles
-of the new mythico-symbolic system Plato, as a man, had no right
-to exist. "Without Jesus," writes Drews, "the rise of Christianity
-can be quite well understood." Yes, and, by the same logic, no less
-the rise of Platonism without Plato, or of the cult of Apollonius
-without Apollonius. What is sauce for the goose is surely sauce for
-the gander. With a mere change of names we could write of Plato what
-on p. 282 Mr. Robertson writes of Jesus. Let us do it: "The gospel
-Jesus (read dialogist Plato) is as enigmatic from a humanist as from
-a supernaturalist point of view. Miraculously born, to the knowledge
-of many (read of his nephew Speusippus, of Clearchus whose testimony
-'belongs to Plato's generation,' of Anaxilides the historian and
-others), he reappears as a natural man even in the opinion of his
-parents (read of nephew Speusippus and the rest); the myth will not
-cohere. Rationally considered, he (Plato) is an unintelligible portent;
-a Galilean (read Athenian) of the common people, critically untraceable
-till his full manhood, when he suddenly appears as a cult-founder."
-
-[The Virgin Birth no part of the earliest Gospel tradition] Why does
-Mr. Robertson so incessantly labour the point that the belief in
-the supernatural birth of Jesus came first in time, and was anterior
-to the belief that he was born a man of men? This he implies in the
-words just cited: "Miraculously born, to the knowledge of many, he
-reappears as a natural man." A story almost identical with that of
-the Massacre of the Innocents by Herod was, Mr. Robertson tells us
-(p. 184), told of the Emperor Augustus in his lifetime, and appears in
-Suetonius "as accepted history." And elsewhere (p. 395) he writes:
-"It was after these precedents (i.e., of Antiochus and Ptolemy)
-that Augustus, besides having himself given out, like Alexander,
-as begotten of a God, caused himself to be proclaimed in the East
-... as being born under Providence a Saviour and a God and the
-beginning of an Evangel of peace to mankind." Like Plato's story,
-then, so the official and contemporary legends of Augustus closely
-resembled the later ones of Jesus. Yet Mr. Robertson complacently
-accepts the historicity of Plato and Augustus, merely brushing aside
-the miraculous stories and supernatural rôle. Nowhere in his works
-does he manifest the faintest desire to apply in the domain of profane
-history the canons which he so rigidly enforces in ecclesiastical.
-
-Yet there are passages in Mr. Robertson's works where he seems,
-to use his own phrase, to "glimpse" the truth. Thus, on p. 124 of
-Christianity and Mythology he writes: "Jesus is said to be born
-of a Virgin; but not in the original version of the first gospel;
-and not in the second; and not in the fourth; and not in any writing
-or by any mouth known to or credited by the writers of the Pauline
-Epistles. Here we see how a myth may be superimposed on a cult."
-
-Does not this mean that a cult of Jesus already existed before
-this myth was added, and that the myth is absent in the earliest
-documents of the cult? Again, on p. 274, he writes that "the Christian
-Virgin-myth and Virgin-and-child worship are certainly of pre-Christian
-origin, and of comparatively late Christian acceptance." Yet, when
-I drew attention in the Literary Guide of December 1, 1912, to
-the inconsistency with this passage of the later one above cited,
-which asserts that, "Miraculously born, to the knowledge of many,
-he reappears as a natural man," he replied (January 1, 1913) that
-"a reader of ordinary candour would understand that 'acceptance'
-applied to the official action of the Church." It appears, therefore,
-that in the cryptic secret society of the Joshua Sun-God-Saviour, which
-held its séances at Jerusalem at the beginning of our era, there was
-an official circle which lagged behind the unofficial multitude. The
-latter knew from the first that their solar myth was miraculously
-born; but the official and controlling inner circle ignored the
-miracle until late in the development of the cult, and then at last
-issued a number of documents from which it was excluded. One wonders
-why. Why trouble to utter these documents in which Jesus "reappears as
-a natural man," long after the sect as a whole were committed to the
-miraculous birth? What is the meaning of these wheels within wheels,
-that hardly hunt together? We await an explanation. Meanwhile let us
-probe the new mythico-symbolism a little further.
-
-[The cleansing of the temple] Why did the solar God Joshua-Jesus
-scourge the money-changers out of the temple? Answer: Because it is
-told of Apollonius of Tyana, "that he expelled from the cities of the
-left bank of the Hellespont some sorcerers who were extorting money
-for a great propitiatory sacrifice to prevent earthquakes."
-
-The connection is beautifully obvious like the rest of our author's
-rapprochements; but we must accept it, or we shall lay ourselves open
-to the reproach of "psychological resistance to evidence." Nor must we
-ask how the memoirs of Damis, that lay in a corner till Philostratus
-got hold of them in the year 215, enjoyed so much vogue among the
-"Christists" of Jerusalem long years before they can conceivably have
-been written.
-
-Why on the occasion in question did Jesus make a scourge of cords
-with which to drive the sheep and oxen out of the Temple? Answer:
-"Because in the Assyrian and Egyptian systems a scourge-bearing god is
-a very common figure on the monuments ... it is specially associated
-with Osiris, the Saviour, Judge, and Avenger. A figure of Osiris,
-reverenced as 'Chrestos' the benign God, would suffice to set up among
-Christists as erewhile among pagans the demand for an explanation."
-
-Here we get a precious insight into the why and wherefore of the
-Gospels. They were intended by the "Christists" to explain the
-meaning of Osiris statues. Why could they not have asked one of the
-priests of Osiris, who as a rule might be found in the neighbourhood
-of his statues, what the emblem meant? And, after all, were statues
-of Osiris so plentiful in Jerusalem, where the sight even of a Roman
-eagle aroused a riot?
-
-[Janus-Peter the bifrons] Who was Peter? Answer: An understudy of
-Mithras, who in the monuments bears two keys; or of Janus, who bears
-the keys and the rod, and as opener of the year (hence the name
-January) stands at the head of the twelve months.
-
-Why did Peter deny Jesus? Answer: Because Janus was called bifrons. The
-epithet puzzled the "Christists" or "Jesuists" of Jerusalem, who,
-instead of asking the first Roman soldier they met what it meant,
-proceeded to render the word bifrons in the sense of "double-faced,"
-quite a proper epithet they thought for Peter, who thenceforth
-had to be held guilty of an act of double-dealing. For we must not
-forget that it was the epithet which suggested to the Christists the
-invention of the story, and not the story that of the epithet. But even
-Mr. Robertson is not quite sure of this; and it does not matter, where
-there is such a wealth of alternatives. For Peter is also an understudy
-of "the fickle Proteus." Janus's double head was anyhow common on
-coins, and with that highly relevant observation he essays to protect
-his theories of Janus-Peter from any possible criticisms. Indeed,
-we are forbidden to call in question the above conclusions. They are
-quite certain, because the "Christists" were intellectually "about
-the business of forming myths in explanation of old ritual and old
-statuary" (p. 350). Wonderful people these early "Christists,"
-who, although they were, as Mr. Robertson informs us (p. 348),
-"apostles of a Judaic cult preaching circumcision," and therefore
-by instinct inimical to all plastic art, nevertheless rivalled the
-modern archæologist in their desire to explain old statuary. They
-seem to have been the prototypes of the Jews of Wardour Street. No
-less wonderful were they as philologists, in that, being Hebrews and
-presumably speaking Aramaic, they took such a healthy interest in
-the meaning of Latin words, and discovered in bifrons a sense which
-it never bore in any Latin author who ever used it!
-
-[The keys of Peter] It appears to have escaped the notice of Professor
-Franz Cumont that Mithras carries in his monuments two keys. The two
-keys were an attribute of the Mithraic Kronos, in old Persian Zervan,
-whom relatively late the Latins confused with Janus, who also had
-two heads and carried keys. That late Christian images of Peter were
-imitated from statues of these gods no one need doubt, and Fr. Cumont
-(Monuments de Mithras, i, 85) does not reject such an idea. It is
-quite another thing to assume dogmatically that the text Matthew xvi,
-19 was suggested by a statue of Janus or of Zervan. To explain it you
-need not leave Jewish ground, but merely glance at Isaiah xxii, 22,
-where the Lord is made to say of Eliakim: "And the key of the house
-of David will I lay upon his shoulder; and he shall open and none
-shall shut; and he shall shut and none shall open." The same imagery
-meets us in Revelation iii, 7 (copied from Isaiah), Luke xi, 52, and
-elsewhere. A. Sulzbach (in Ztschr. f.d. Neutest. Wissenschaft, 1903,
-p. 190) points out that every Jew, up to A.D. 70, would understand
-such imagery, for he saw every evening the temple keys ceremoniously
-taken from a hole under the temple floor, where they were kept under a
-slab of stone. The Levite watcher locked up the temple and replaced the
-keys under the slab, upon which he then laid his bed for the night. In
-connection with the magic power of binding and loosing the keys had,
-of course, a further and magical significance, not in Judæa alone, but
-all over the world, and the Evangelists did not need to examine statues
-of Janus or Zervan in order to come by this bit of everyday symbolism.
-
-N.B.--No connection of Janus-Peter of the Gospels with Peter of the
-Pauline Epistles! The one was a mythical companion of the Sun-god,
-the other a man of flesh and blood, according to Mr. Robertson.
-
-[Joseph and his ass] Who was Joseph? Answer: Forasmuch as "the
-Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred suggestions drawn
-from pagan art and ritual usage" (p. 305), and "Christism was only
-neo-Paganism grafted on Judaism" (p. 338), Joseph must be regarded as
-"a partial revival of the ancient adoration of the God Joseph as well
-as of that of the God Daoud" (p. 303). He was also, seeing that he
-took Mary and her child on an ass into Egypt, a reminiscence; or,
-shall we not say, an explanation of "the feeble old man leading an
-ass in the sacred procession of Isis, as described by Apuleius in
-his Metamorphoses."
-
-There is no mention of Joseph's ass in the Gospels, but that does not
-matter. Dr. Drews is better informed, and would have us recognize
-in Joseph an understudy of Kinyras, the father of Adonis, who "is
-said to have been some kind of artisan, a smith, or carpenter. That
-is to say, he is supposed to have invented the hammer," etc. Might
-I suggest the addition of the god Thor to the collection of gospel
-aliases? The gods Joseph and Daoud are purely modern fictions; no
-ancient Jew ever heard of either.
-
-Why was Jesus crucified?
-
-[The Crucifixion] "The story of the Crucifixion may rest on the remote
-datum of an actual crucifixion of Jesus Ben Pandira, the possible
-Jesus of Paul, dead long before, and represented by no preserved
-biography or teachings whatever."
-
-The Christists were clearly pastmasters in the art of explaining
-ignotum per ignotius. For on the next page we learn that it is not
-known whether this worthy "ever lived or was crucified." In Pagan
-Christs he is acknowledged to be a "mere name." However this be,
-"it was the mythic significance of crucifixion that made the early
-fortune of the cult, with the aid of the mythic significance of the
-name Jeschu = Joshua, the ancient Sun-god."
-
-The meaning of this oracular pronouncement is too profound for me
-to attempt to fathom it. Let us pass on to another point in the new
-elucidation of the Gospels.
-
-[W. B. Smith on exorcisms of devils] What were the exorcisms of evil
-spirits ascribed to the ancient Sun-god Joshua, under his alias of
-Jesus of Nazareth?
-
-In his Pagan Christs, as in his Christianity and Mythology,
-Mr. Robertson unkindly leaves us in the lurch about this matter,
-although we would dearly like to know what were the particular
-archæological researches of the "Christists" and "Jesuists" that led
-them to coin these myths of exorcisms performed, and of devils cast
-out of the mad or sick by their solar myth. Nor does Dr. Drews help us
-much. Never mind. Professor W. B. Smith nobly stands in the breach, so
-we will let him take up the parable; the more so because, in handling
-this problem, he may be said to have excelled himself. On p. 57, then,
-of Ecce Deus, he premises, in approaching this delicate topic, that
-"in the activity of the Jesus and the apostles, as delineated in the
-Gospels, the one all-important moment is the casting-out of demons."
-
-With this all will agree; but what follows is barely consonant with
-the thesis of his friends. He cites in effect Mark iii, 14, 15, and
-the parallel passages in which Jesus is related to have sent forth
-the twelve disciples to preach and to have authority to cast out the
-demons. Now, according to the mythico-symbolical theory, the career
-of Jesus and his disciples lay not on earth, but in that happy region
-where mythological personages live and move and have their being. As
-Dr. Drews says (The Christ Myth, p. 117): "In reality the whole of
-the family and home life of the Messiah, Jesus, took place in heaven
-among the gods."
-
-Accordingly, Dr. W. B. Smith finds it "amazing that anyone should
-hesitate an instant over the sense" of the demonological episodes
-in the Gospels, and he continues: "When we recall the fact that the
-early Christians uniformly understood the heathen gods to be demons,
-and uniformly represented the mission of Jesus to be the overthrow
-of these demon gods, it seems as clear as the sun at noon that this
-fall of Satan from heaven [16] can be nothing less (and how could it
-possibly be anything more?) than the headlong ruin of polytheism--the
-complete triumph of the One Eternal God. It seems superfluous to
-insist on anything so palpable.... Can any rational man for a moment
-believe that the Saviour sent forth his apostles and disciples with
-such awful solemnity to heal the few lunatics that languished in
-Galilee? Is that the way the sublimist of teachers would found the
-new and true religion?"
-
-In the last sentence our author nods and lapses into the historical
-mood; for how can one talk of a mythical Joshua being a teacher
-and founding a new religion--of his sending forth the apostles and
-disciples? These things are done on earth, and not up in heaven "among
-the gods," as Drews says. It is, perhaps, impertinent, for the rest, to
-criticize so exalted an argument as Professor Smith's; yet the question
-suggests itself, why, if the real object of the mystic sectaries who
-worshipped in secret the "Proto-Christian God, the Jesus," was to
-acquaint the faithful with the triumph of the heavenly Jesus over
-the demon-gods of paganism--why, in that case, did they wrap it up
-in purely demonological language? All around them exorcists, Jewish
-and pagan, were driving out demons of madness and disease at every
-street corner--dumb devils, rheumatic devils, blind devils, devils
-of every sort and kind. Was it entirely appropriate for these mystic
-devotees to encourage the use of demonological terminology, when they
-meant something quite else? "These early propagandists," he tells us,
-p. 143, "were great men, were very great men; they conceived noble
-and beautiful and attractive ideas, which they defended with curious
-learning and logic, and recommended with captivating rhetoric and
-persuasive oratory and consuming zeal."
-
-Surely it was within the competence of such egregious teachers to say
-without disguise what they really meant, instead of beating about the
-bush and penning stories which so nearly reproduced the grovelling
-superstitions of the common herd around them? They might at least have
-issued a Delphin edition of their gospels, with a paraphrase in the
-margin to explain the text and to save the faithful from taking these
-stories literally--for so they took them as far back as we can trace
-the documents; and, what is more, in all those derivative churches all
-over the world which continued the inner life of Professor Smith's
-mystic sectaries, we hear from the earliest age of the appointing
-of vulgar exorcists, whose duty was to expel from the faithful the
-demons of madness and of all forms of sickness.
-
-But worse than this. We know from Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews that
-the same Proto-Christian Joshua-God, who was waging war in heaven
-on the pagan gods and goddesses, was himself a composite myth made
-up of memories of Krishna, Æsculapius, Osiris, Apollo, Dionysus,
-Apollonius, and a hundred other fiends. Mr. Robertson attests this,
-p. 305, in these words: "As we have seen and shall see throughout
-this investigation, the Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred
-suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual usage."
-
-Is it quite appropriate that the pre-Christian Jesus or Joshua
-should turn and rend his pagan congeners in the manner described by
-Professor W. B. Smith? His mythical antecedents, as ascertained by
-Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews, are grotesquely incompatible with the
-rôle of monotheistic founder assigned him by Professor W. B. Smith. Are
-we to suppose that the learned and eloquent propagandists of his cult
-were aware of this incompatibility, and for that reason chose to veil
-their monotheistic propaganda in the decent obscurity of everyday
-demonological language?
-
-[Mary and her homonyms] Who was Mary, the mother of Jesus?
-
-Let Dr. Drews speak first:--
-
-
- Now if Joseph, as we have already seen, was originally a god,
- Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a goddess. Under the name of Maya,
- she is the mother of Agni--i.e., the principle of motherhood
- and creation simply, as which she is in the Rigveda at one time
- represented by the fire-producing wood, the soft pith, in which
- the fire-stick was whirled; at another as the earth, with which
- the sky has mated. She appears under the same name as the mother of
- Buddha as well as of the Greek Hermes. She is identical with Maira
- (Maera) as, according to Pausanias, viii, 12, 48, the pleiad Maia,
- wife of Hephaistos was called. She appears among the Persians as
- the "virgin" mother of Mithras. As Myrrha she is the mother of
- the Syrian Adonis; as Semiramis, mother of the Babylonian Ninus
- (Marduk). In the Arabic legend she appears under the name of
- Mirzam as mother of the mythical saviour Joshua; while the Old
- Testament gives this name to the virgin sister of that Joshua
- who was so closely related to Moses; and, according to Eusebius,
- Merris was the name of the Egyptian princess who found Moses in
- a basket and became his foster mother.
-
-
-The above purpureus pannus is borrowed by Dr. Drews in the second
-edition of his work from Mr. Robertson's book, p. 297. Here is the
-original:--
-
-
- It is not possible from the existing data to connect historically
- such a cult with its congeners; but the mere analogy of names and
- epithets goes far. The mother of Adonis, the slain "Lord" of the
- great Syrian cult, is Myrrha; and Myrrha in one of her myths is the
- weeping tree from which the babe Adonis is born. Again, Hermes,
- the Greek Logos, has for mother Maia, whose name has further
- connections with Mary. In one myth Maia is the daughter of Atlas,
- thus doubling with Maira, who has the same father, and who, having
- "died a virgin," was seen by Odysseus in Hades. Mythologically,
- Maira is identified with the Dog-Star, which is the star of
- Isis. Yet again, the name appears in the East as Maya, the
- virgin-mother of Buddha; and it is remarkable that, according to
- a Jewish legend, the name of the Egyptian princess who found the
- babe Moses was Merris. The plot is still further thickened by the
- fact that, as we learn from the monuments, one of the daughters
- of Ramses II was named Meri. And as Meri meant "beloved," and the
- name was at times given to men, besides being used in the phrase
- "beloved of the gods," the field of mythic speculation is wide.
-
-
-And we feel that it is, indeed, wide, when, on p. 301, the three
-Marias mentioned by Mark are equated with the three Moirai or Fates!
-
-In another passage we meet afresh with one of these equations,
-p. 306. It runs thus: "On the hypothesis that the mythical Joshua,
-son of Miriam, was an early Hebrew deity, it may be that one form
-of the Tammuz cult in pre-Christian times was a worship of a mother
-and child--Mary and Adonis; that, in short, Maria = Myrrha, and that
-Jesus was a name of Adonis."
-
-[Pre-philological arguments] From such deliverances we gather that
-in Mr. Robertson and his disciples we have survivals of a stage of
-culture which may be called prephilological. A hundred years ago or
-more the most superficial resemblance of sound was held to be enough
-of a ground for connecting words and names together, and Oxford
-divines were busy deriving all other tongues from the Hebrew spoken
-in the Garden of Eden by Adam and Eve. Mr. Robertson sets himself
-(p. 139) to ridicule these old-fashioned writers, and regales us
-with not a few examples of that over-facile identification of cult
-names that have no real mutual affinity which was then in vogue. Thus
-Krishna was held to be a corruption of Christ by certain oriental
-missionaries, just as, inversely, within my memory, certain English
-Rationalists argued the name Christ to be a disguise of Krishna. So
-Brahma was identified with Abraham, and Napoleon with the Apollyon of
-Revelation. One had hoped that this phase of culture was past and done
-with; but Messrs. Robertson and Drews revive it in their books, and
-seem anxious to perpetuate it. As with names, so with myths. On their
-every page we encounter--to use the apt phrase of M. Émile Durkheim
-[17]--ces rapprochements tumultueux et sommaires qui ont discredité
-la méthode comparative auprès d'un certain nombre de bons esprits.
-
-[Right use of comparative method] The one condition of advancing
-knowledge and clearing men's minds of superstition and cant by
-application of the comparative method in religion, is that we should
-apply it, as did Robertson Smith and his great predecessor, Dr. John
-Spencer, [18] cautiously, and in a spirit of scientific scholarship. It
-does not do to argue from superficial resemblances of sound that
-Maria is the same name as the Greek Moira, or that the name Maia has
-"connections with Mary"; or, again, that "the name (Maria) appears
-in the East as Maya." The least acquaintance with Hebrew would have
-satisfied Mr. Robertson that the original form of the name he thus
-conjures with is not Maria, but Miriam, which does not lend itself to
-his hardy equations. I suspect he is carried away by the parti pris
-which leaks out in the following passage of his henchman and imitator,
-Dr. Drews [19]: "The romantic cult of Jesus must be combated at all
-costs.... This cannot be done more effectually than by taking its
-basis in the theory of the historical Jesus from beneath its feet."
-
-If "at all costs" means at the cost of common sense and scholarship,
-I cannot agree. I am not disposed, at the invitation of any
-self-constituted high priest of Rationalism, to derive old Hebrew names
-from Egyptian, Greek, and Buddhist appellations that happen to show
-an initial and one or two other letters in common. I will not believe
-that a "Christist" of Alexandria or Jerusalem, in the streets of which
-the Latin language was seldom or never heard, took the epithet bifrons
-in a wrong sense, and straightway invented the story of a Peter who
-had denied Jesus. I cannot admit that the cults of Osiris, Dionysus,
-Apollo, or any other ancient Sun-god, are echoed in a single incident
-narrated in the primitive evangelical tradition that lies before us
-in Mark and the non-Marcan document used by the authors of the first
-and third Gospels; I do not believe that any really educated man or
-woman would for a moment entertain any of the equations propounded
-by Mr. Robertson, and of which I have given a few select examples.
-
-[Marett on method] Mr. Marett, in his essay entitled The Birth
-of Humility, by way of criticizing certain modern abuses of the
-comparative method in the field of the investigation of the origin
-of moral ideas and religious beliefs, has justly remarked that
-"No isolated fragment of custom or belief can be worth much for the
-purposes of comparative science. In order to be understood, it must
-first be viewed in the light of the whole culture, the whole corporate
-soul-life, of the particular ethnic group concerned. Hence the new way
-is to emphasize concrete differences, whereas the old way was to amass
-resemblances heedlessly abstracted from their social context. Which
-way is the better is a question that well-nigh answers itself."
-
-Apply the above rule to nascent Christianity. In the Synoptic Gospels
-Jesus ever speaks as a Jew to Jews. Jewish monotheism is presupposed
-by the authors of them to have been no less the heritage of Jesus
-than of his audiences. The rare exceptions are carefully noticed
-by them. This consideration has so impressed Professor W. B. Smith
-that he urges the thesis that the Christian religion originated as a
-monotheist propaganda. That is no doubt an exaggeration, for it was
-at first a Messianic movement or impulse among Jews, and therefore
-did not need to set the claims of monotheism in the foreground, and,
-accordingly, in the Synoptic Gospels they are nowhere urged. In spite
-of this exaggeration, however, Mr. Smith's book occupies a higher
-plane than the works of Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson, insofar as he
-shows some slight insight into the original nature of the religion,
-whereas they show none at all. They merely, in Mr. Marett's phrase,
-"amass resemblances [would they were even such!] heedlessly abstracted
-from their context," and resolve a cult which, as it appears on the
-stage of history, is Jewish to its core, of which the Holy Scripture
-was no other than the Law and the Prophets, and of which the earliest
-documents, as Mr. Selwyn has shown, are saturated with the Jewish
-Septuagint--they try to resolve this cult into a tagrag and bobtail
-of Greek and Roman paganism, of Buddhism, of Brahmanism, of Mithraism
-(hardly yet born), of Egyptian, African, Assyrian, old Persian, [20]
-and any other religions with which these writers have a second-hand and
-superficial acquaintance. Never once do they pause and ask themselves
-the simple questions: firstly, how the early Christians came to be
-imbued with so intimate a knowledge of idolatrous cults far and near,
-new and old; secondly, why they set so much store by them as the
-mythico-symbolic hypothesis presupposes that they did; and, thirdly,
-why, if they valued them so much, they were at pains to translate them
-into the utterly different and antagonistic form which they wear in
-the Gospels. In a word, why should such connoisseurs of paganism have
-disguised themselves as monotheistic and messianic Jews? Mr. Robertson
-tries to save his hypothesis by injecting a little dose of Judaism
-into his "Christists" and "Jesuists"; but anyone who has read Philo
-or Josephus or the Bible, not to mention the Apostolic Fathers and
-Justin Martyr, will see at a glance that there is no room in history
-for such a hybrid.
-
-[Methods of Robertson and Lorinser] That Mr. Robertson should put his
-name to such works as Dr. Drews imitates and singles out for special
-praise is the more remarkable, because, in urging the independence
-of certain Hindoo cults against Christian missionaries who want
-to see in them mere reflections of Christianity, he shows himself
-both critical and wide-minded. These characteristics he displays
-in his refutation of the opinion of a certain Dr. Lorinser that
-the dialogue between Krishna and the warrior Arjuna, known as the
-Bhagavat Gîtâ and embodied in the old Hindoo Epic of the Mahâbhârata,
-"is a patchwork of Christian teaching." Dr. Lorinser had adduced a
-chain of passages from this document which to his mind are echoes of
-the New Testament. Though many of these exhibit a striking conformity
-with aphorisms of the Gospels, we are nevertheless constrained to
-agree with Mr. Robertson's criticism, which is as follows (p. 262):--
-
-
- The first comment that must occur to every instructed reader on
- perusing these and the other "parallels" advanced by Dr. Lorinser
- is, that on the one hand the parallels are very frequently such
- as could be made by the dozen between bodies of literature which
- have unquestionably never been brought in contact, so strained
- and far-fetched are they; and that, on the other hand, they are
- discounted by quite as striking parallels between New Testament
- texts and pre-Christian pagan writings.
-
-
-Mr. Robertson then adduces a number of striking parallelisms between
-the New Testament and old Greek and Roman writers, and continues thus:
-"Such parallels as these, I repeat, could be multiplied to any extent
-from the Greek and Latin classics alone.... But is it worth while to
-heap up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly idle?"
-
-[Dionysus and Jesus] It occurs to ask whether it was not worth
-the while of Mr. Robertson to inquire whether the Evangelist could
-"unquestionably have been brought in contact" with the Dionysiac
-group of myths before he assumed so dogmatically, against students
-of such weight as Professor Percy Gardner and Dr. Estlin Carpenter,
-that the myth of Bacchus meeting with a couple of asses on his way
-to Dodona was the "Christist's" model for the story of Jesus riding
-into Jerusalem on an ass? Might he not have reflected that then,
-as now, there was no other way of entering Jerusalem unless you
-went on foot? And what has Jerusalem to do with Dodona? What has
-Bacchus's choice of one ass to ride on in common with Matthew's
-literary deformation, according to which Jesus rode on two asses at
-once? Lastly, what had Bacchus to do with Jesus? Has the Latin wine-god
-a single trait in common with the Christian founder? Is it not rather
-the case that any conscious or even unconscious assimilation of Bacchus
-myths conflicts with what Mr. Marett would call "the whole culture,
-the whole corporate soul-life" of the early Christian community,
-as the surviving documents picture it, and other evidence we have
-not? Yet Mr. Robertson deduces from such paltry "parallels" as the
-above the conclusion that Jesus, on whose real personality a score of
-early and independent literary sources converge, never existed at all,
-and that he was a "composite myth." There is no other example of an
-eclectic myth arbitrarily composed by connoisseurs out of a religious
-art and story not their own; still less of such a myth being humanized
-and accepted by the next generation as a Jewish Messiah.
-
-In the same context (p. 264) Mr. Robertson remarks sensibly enough
-that "No great research or reflection is needed to make it clear
-that certain commonplaces of ethics as well as of theology are
-equally inevitable conclusions in all religious systems that rise
-above savagery. Four hundred years before Jesus, Plato declared that
-it was very difficult for the rich to be good; does anyone believe
-that any thoughtful Jew needed Plato's help to reach the same notion?"
-
-I would ask, does anyone believe that a thoughtful Jew needed the
-stimulus of a statuette of Osiris in order that he should record,
-or, maybe, invent, the story of Jesus clearing the money-changers out
-of the temple with a scourge? Even admitting--what I am as little as
-anyone inclined to admit--that the Peter of the early Gospels is, as
-regards his personality and his actions, a fable, a mere invention of
-a Jewish storyteller, need we suppose that the storyteller in question
-depended for his inspiration on Janus? You might as well suppose that
-the authors of the Arabian Nights founded their stories on the myths of
-Greek and Roman gods. Again, the Jews were traditionally distributed
-into twelve tribes or clans. Let us grant only for argument's sake
-that the life of Jesus the Messiah as narrated in the first three
-Gospels is a romance, we yet must ask, Which is more probable, that
-the author of the romance assigned twelve apostles to Jesus because
-there were twelve tribes to whom the message of the impending Kingdom
-of God had to be carried, or because there are twelve signs in the
-Zodiac? He agrees (p. 347) that Luke's story of the choice of the
-seventy disciples "visibly connects with the Jewish idea that there
-were seventy nations in the world." Why, then, reject the view that
-Jesus chose twelve apostles because there were twelve tribes? Not
-at all. Having decided that Jesus was the Sun-God-Saviour Joshua,
-a pure figment of his brain, Mr. Robertson is ready to violate the
-canons of evidence he appeals to on p. 347, and will have it that in
-the Gospels the apostles are Zodiacal signs, and that their leader
-is Janus, the opener of the year. "The Zodiacal sign gives the clue"
-(p. 339), in his opinion, to this as to much else.
-
-[Dr. Lorinser] Let us return to the case of Dr. Lorinser. "We are asked
-to believe that Brahmans expounding a highly-developed Pantheism went
-assiduously to the (unattainable) New Testament for the wording of a
-number of their propositions, pantheistic and other, while assimilating
-absolutely nothing of distinctively Christian doctrine.... Such a
-position is possible only to a mesmerized believer." Surely one may
-exclaim of Mr. Robertson, De te fabula narratur, and rewrite the
-above as follows: "We are asked to believe that 'Christists,' who
-were so far Jewish as to practise circumcision, to use the Hebrew
-Scriptures, to live in Jerusalem under the presidency and patronage
-of the Jewish High-priest, to foster and propagate Jewish monotheism,
-went assiduously to the (unattainable) rites, statuary, art, and
-beliefs of pagan India, Egypt, Ancient Babylon, Persia, etc., for all
-'the narrative myths' (p. 263) of the story in which they narrated
-the history of their putative founder Jesus, the Jewish Messiah,
-while assimilating absolutely nothing of distinctively pagan doctrine."
-
-Dr. Lorinser, for urging a thesis infinitely less absurd, is denounced
-as "a mesmerized believer"; and on the next page Dr. Weber, who
-agrees with him, is rebuked for his "judicial blindness." Yet in the
-same context we are told that "a crude and naïf system, like the
-Christism of the second gospel and the earlier form of the first,
-borrows inevitably from the more highly evolved systems with which
-it comes socially in contact, absorbing myth and mystery and dogma
-till it becomes as sophisticated as they."
-
-It is quite true, as Gibbon observed, that the naïf figure of Jesus,
-as presented in the Synoptic Gospels, was soon overlaid with that
-of the logos, and all sorts of Christological cobwebs were within
-a few generations spun around his head to the effacement both of
-the teacher and of what he taught. But in the earliest body of the
-evangelical tradition, as we can construct it from the first three
-Gospels, there is little or nothing that is not essentially Jewish and
-racy of the soil of Judæa. The borrowings of Christianity from pagan
-neighbours began with the flocking into the new Messianic society of
-Gentile converts. The earlier borrowings with which Messrs. Robertson
-and Drews fill their volumes are one and all "resemblances heedlessly
-abstracted from their context," and are as far-fetched and as fanciful
-as the dreams of the adherents of the Banner of Israel, or as the
-cypher of the Bacon-Shakesperians, over which Mr. Robertson is prone
-to make merry. "Is it," to use his own words, "worth while to heap
-up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly idle?"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS
-
-
-[Is Mark's Gospel a religious romance?] I can imagine some people
-arguing that Mark's Gospel might be a religious novel, of which the
-scene is laid in Jerusalem and Galilee among Jews; that it was by a
-literary artifice impregnated with Jewish ideas; that the references
-to Sadducees and Pharisees were introduced as appropriate to the age
-and clime; that the old Jewish Scriptures are for the same reason
-acknowledged by all the actors and interlocutors as holy writ;
-that demonological beliefs were thrown in as being characteristic
-of Palestinian society of the time the writer purported to write
-about; that it is of the nature of a literary trick that the peculiar
-Messianic and Apocalyptic beliefs and aspirations rife among Jews of
-the period B.C. 50-A.D. 160 and later, are made to colour the narrative
-from beginning to end. All these elements of verisimilitude, I say,
-taken singly or together, do not of necessity exclude the hypothesis
-that it may be one of the most skilfully constructed historical novels
-ever written. Have we not, it may be urged, in the Recognitions or
-Itinerary of Saint Clement, in the Acts of Thomas, in the story of
-Paul and Thecla, similar compositions?
-
-[Certainly not in the way assumed by Drews and Robertson,] In view
-of what we know of the dates and diffusion of the Gospels, of their
-literary connections with one another, and of the reappearance of
-their chief personæ dramatis in the Pauline letters, such a hypothesis
-is of course wildly improbable, yet not utterly absurd. We have to
-assume in the writer a knowledge of the Messianic movement among the
-Jews, a familiarity with their demonological beliefs and practices,
-with their sects, and so forth; and it is all readily assumable. In
-the Greek novel of Chariton we have an example of such an historical
-romance, the scene being laid in Syracuse and Asia Minor shortly
-after the close of the Peloponnesian war. But such romances are not
-cult documents of a parabolic or allegorical kind, as the Gospels
-are supposed by these writers to be. They do not bring a divine
-being down from Olympus, and pretend all through that he was a man
-who was born, lived, and died on the cross in a particular place and
-at a particular date. We have no other example of documents whose
-authors, by way of honouring a God up in heaven who never made any
-epiphany on earth nor ever underwent incarnation, made a man of him,
-and concocted an elaborate earthly record of him. Why did they do
-it? What was the object of the "Jesuists" and "Christists" in hoaxing
-their own and all subsequent generations and in building up a lasting
-cult and Church on what they knew were fables?
-
-[whose hypothesis is self-destructive,] In the Homeric hymns and other
-religious documents not only of the Greeks, but of the Hindoos, we have
-no doubt histories of the gods written by their votaries; but in these
-hymns they put down what they believed, they did not of set design
-falsify the legend of the god, and describe his birth and parentage,
-when they knew he never had any; his ministrations and teaching career,
-when he never ministered or taught; his persecution by enemies and
-his death, when he was never persecuted and never died. Or are we
-to suppose that all these things were related in the Sun-god Joshua
-legend? No, reply Messrs. Drews and Robertson. For the stories told
-in the Gospels are all modelled on pagan or astral myths; the persons
-who move in their pages are the gods and demigods of Egyptian, Greek,
-Latin, Hindoo legends. Clearly the Saviour-God Joshua had no legend
-or story of his own, or it would not be necessary to pad him out
-with the furniture and appurtenances of Osiris, Dionysus, Serapis,
-Æsculapius, and who knows what other gods besides. And--strangest
-feature of all--it is Jews, men circumcised, propagandists of Jewish
-monotheism, who, in the interests of "a Judaic cult" (p. 348), go
-rummaging in all the dustbins of paganism, in order to construct a
-legend or allegory of their god. Why could they not rest content with
-him as they found him in their ancient tradition?
-
-[and irreconcilable with ascertained history of Judaism] The Gospels,
-like any other ancient document, have to be accounted for. They did
-not engender themselves, like a mushroom, nor drop out of heaven ready
-written. I have admitted as possible, though wild and extravagant,
-the hypothesis of their being a Messianic romance, which subsequently
-came to be mistaken for sober history; and there are of course plenty
-of legendary incidents in their pages. But such a hypothesis need
-not be discussed. It is not that of these three authors, and would
-not suit them. They insist on seeing in them so many manifestoes of
-the secret sect of Jews who worshipped a god Joshua. For Dr. Drews
-and Mr. Robertson the Gospels describe a "Jesuine" mystery play
-evolved "from a Palestinian rite of human sacrifice in which the
-annual victim was 'Jesus the Son of the Father.'" There is no trace
-in Jewish antiquity of any such rite in epochs which even remotely
-preceded Christianity, nor is the survival of such a rite of human
-sacrifice even thinkable in Jerusalem, where the "Christists" laid
-their plot. And why should they eke out their plot with a thousand
-scraps of pagan mythology?
-
-[Prof. Smith's hypothesis of a mythical Jesus mythically humanized in
-a monotheistic propaganda,] I was taught in my childhood to venerate
-the Gospels; but I never knew before what really wonderful documents
-they are. Let us, however, turn to Professor W. B. Smith, who does not
-pile on paganism so profusely as his friends, nor exactly insist on
-a pagan basis for the Gospels. His hypothesis in brief is identical
-with theirs, for he insists that Jesus the man never existed at
-all. Jesus is, in Professor Smith's phrase, "a humanized God"; in the
-diction of Messrs. Drews and Robertson, a myth. Professor Smith allows
-(Ecce Deus, p. 78) that the mere "fact that a myth, or several myths,
-may be found associated with the name of an individual by no means
-relegates that individual into the class of the unhistorical." That is
-good sense, and so is the admission which follows, that "we may often
-explain the legends from the presence of the historical personality,
-independently known to be historic." But in regard to Jesus alone
-among the figures of the past he, like his friends, rules out both
-considerations. The common starting-point of all three writers is that
-the earliest Gospel narratives do not "describe any human character
-at all; on the contrary, the individuality in question is distinctly
-divine and not human, in the earliest portrayal. As time goes on it
-is true that certain human elements do creep in, particularly in Luke
-and John.... In Mark there is really no man at all; the Jesus is God,
-or at least essentially divine, throughout. He wears only a transparent
-garment of flesh. Mark historizes only."
-
-[lacks all confirmation, defies the texts,] How is it, we ask, that
-humanity has pored over the Synoptic Gospels for nearly two thousand
-years, and discerned in them the portraiture at least of a man of flesh
-and blood, who can be imaged as such in statuary and painting? Even
-if it were conceded, as I said above, that the Gospel representation
-of Jesus is an imaginary portrait, like that of William Tell or
-John Inglesant, still, who, that is not mad, will deny that there
-exist in it multiple human traits, fictions may be of a novelist,
-yet indisputably there? Mr. Smith's hardy denial of them can only
-lead his readers to suspect him of paradox. Moreover, the champions
-of traditional orthodoxy have had in the past every reason to side
-with Professor Smith in his attempted elimination of all human traits
-and characteristics. Yet in recent years they have been constrained
-to admit that in Luke and John the human elements, far from creeping
-in, show signs of creeping out. "The received notion," adds Professor
-Smith, "that in the early Marcan narratives the Jesus is distinctly
-human, and that the process of deification is fulfilled in John, is
-precisely the reverse of the truth." Once more we rub our eyes. In Mark
-Jesus is little more than that most familiar of old Jewish figures,
-an earthly herald of the imminent kingdom of heaven; late and little
-by little he is recognized by his followers as himself the Messiah
-whose advent he formerly heralded. As yet he is neither divine nor the
-incarnation of a pre-existent quasi-divine Logos or angel. In John,
-on the other hand, Jesus has emerged from the purely Jewish phase of
-being Messiah, or servant of God (which is all that Lord or Son of God
-[21] implies in Mark's opening verses). He has become the eternal Logos
-or Reason, essentially divine and from the beginning with God. [and
-rests on an obsolete and absurd allegorization of them] Here obviously
-we are well on our way to a deification of Jesus and an elimination
-of human traits; and the writer is so conscious of this that he goes
-out of his way to call our attention to the fact that Jesus was after
-all a man of flesh and blood, with human parents and real brethren who
-disbelieved in him. He was evidently conscious that the superimposition
-on the man Jesus of the Logos scheme, and the reflection back into the
-human life of Jesus of the heavenly rôle which Paul ascribed to him
-qua raised by the Spirit from the dead, was already influencing certain
-believers (called Docetes) to believe that his human life and actions
-were illusions, seen and heard indeed, as we see and hear a man speak
-and act in a dream, but not objective and real. To guard against this
-John proclaims that he was made flesh. Nevertheless, he goes half way
-with the Docetes in that he rewrites all the conversations of Jesus,
-abolishes the homely parable, and substitutes his own theosophic
-lucubrations. He also emphasizes the miraculous aspect of Jesus,
-inventing new miracles more grandiose than any in previous gospels,
-but of a kind, as he imagines, to symbolize his conceptions of sin
-and death. He is careful to eliminate the demonological stories. They
-were as much of a stumbling-block to John as we have seen them to be
-to Mr. W. B. Smith. We must, therefore, perforce accuse the latter of
-putting a hypothesis that from the outset is a paradox. The documents
-contradict him on every page.
-
-[Why should the robber chief Joshua have been selected as prototype of
-Jesus?] A thesis that begins by flying in the face of the documents
-demands paradoxical arguments for its support; and the pages of all
-three writers teem with them. Of a Jesus that is God from the first
-it is perhaps natural to ask--anyhow our authors have asked it of
-themselves--which God was he? And the accident of his bearing the
-name Jesus--he might just as well have been called Jacob or Sadoc or
-Manasseh, or what not--suggests Joshua to them, for Joshua is the
-Hebrew name which in the LXX was Grecized as Iesoue, and later as
-Iesous. That in the Old Testament Joshua is depicted as a cut-throat
-and leader of brigands, very remote in his principles and practice from
-the Jesus of the Gospels, counts for nothing. The late Dr. Winckler,
-who saw sun and moon myths rising like exhalations all around
-him wherever he looked in ancient history and mythology, [22] has
-suggested that Joseph was originally a solar hero. Ergo, Joshua was one
-too. Ergo, there was a Hebrew secret society in Jerusalem in the period
-B.C. 150-A.D. 50 who worshipped the Sun-God-Saviour Joshua. Ergo,
-the Gospels are a sustained parable of this Sun-god. Thus are empty,
-wild, and unsubstantiated hypotheses piled one on top of the other,
-like Pelion on Ossa. Not a scintilla of evidence is adduced for any
-one of them. First one is advanced, and its truth assumed. The next
-is propped on it, et sic ad infinitum.
-
-[Why make him the central figure of a monotheistic cult?] What,
-asks Professor Smith (Ecce Deus, p. 67), was the active principle of
-Christianity? What its germ? "The monotheistic impulse," he answers,
-"the instinct for unity that lies at the heart of all grand philosophy
-and all noble religion." Again, p. 45: "What was the essence of this
-originally secret Jesus cult, that was expressed in such guarded
-parabolic terms as made it unintelligible to the multitude?... It
-was a protest against idolatry; it was a Crusade for monotheism."
-
-[The earliest Christianity was no monotheistic propaganda] This is,
-no doubt, true of Christianity when we pass outside the Gospels. It is
-only not true of them, because on their every page Jewish monotheism
-is presupposed. Why are no warnings against polytheism put into the
-mouth of Jesus? Why is not a single precept of the Sermon on the
-Mount directed against idolatry? Surely because we are moving in a
-Jewish atmosphere in which such warnings were unnecessary. The horizon
-is purely Jewish, either of Jerusalem as we know it in the pages of
-Josephus or of certain Galilean circles in which even a knowledge of
-Greek seems not to have existed before the third century. The very
-proximity of Greek cities there seems to have confirmed the Jewish
-peasant of that region in his preference of Aramaic idiom, just as
-the native of Bohemia to-day turns his back on you if you address
-him in the detested German tongue.
-
-[Robertson and Drews allow the Jesuists to have been mainly Jewish in
-cult and feeling] Messrs. Robertson and Drews concede that the original
-stock of Christianity was Jewish. Thus we read in Christianity and
-Mythology (p. 415) that the Lord's Prayer derives "from pre-Christian
-Jewish lore, and, like parts of the Sermon (on the Mount), from an
-actually current Jewish document." The same writer admits (p. 338)
-the existence of "Judaic sections of the early Church." When he talks
-(p. 337) of the tale of the anointing of Jesus in Matthew xxvi, 6-13,
-and parallel passages, being "in all probability a late addendum" to
-the "primitive gospel" of Bernhard Weiss's theory, "made after the
-movement had become pronouncedly Gentile," he presupposes that, to
-start with anyhow, the movement was mainly Jewish. He admits that in
-the first six paragraphs of the early Christian document entitled the
-Didaché we have a purely Jewish teaching document, "which the Jesuist
-sect adopted in the first or second century." He cannot furthermore
-contest the fact that the Jesuists "took over the Jewish Scriptures
-as their sacred book; that they inherited the Jewish passover and
-the Paschal lamb, which is still slain in Eastern churches; that the
-leaders of the secret sect in Jerusalem upheld the Jewish rite of
-circumcision against Paul." [23] All this is inconceivable if the
-society was not in the main and originally one of Hebrews. When he
-goes on to argue that the Gospels are the manifesto of a cult of an
-old Sun-god Joshua, son of a mythic Miriam, he at least admits that
-the early "Christists" selected from ancient Jewish superstition,
-and not from pagan myth, the central figure of their cult, and that
-they chose for their deity a successor and satellite of Moses with a
-Hebrew lady for his mother. We may take it for granted, then, that the
-parent society out of which the Christian Church arose was profoundly
-and radically Jewish; and Mr. Robertson frankly admits as much when he
-affirms that "it was a Judaic cult that preached circumcision," and
-that "its apostles with whom Paul was in contact were of a Judaizing
-description." Here is common ground between myself and him.
-
-[If so, how could they devote themselves to pagan mystery plays?] What
-I want to know is how it came about that a society of which Jerusalem
-was the focus, and of which the nucleus and propagandists were Jews
-and Judaizers, could have been given over to the cult of a solar god,
-and how they could celebrate mystery plays and dramas in honour of that
-god; how they can have manufactured that god into "a composite myth"
-(p. 336), and constructed in his honour a religious system that was
-"a patchwork of a hundred suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual
-usage." For such, we are told (p. 305), was "the Christian system."
-
-[Robertson admits that Jews could never borrow from pagan rituals
-in that age] We are far better acquainted with Jewish belief and
-ritual during the period B.C. 400-A.D. 100 than we are with that of
-the pagans. The content of the Greek mysteries is an enigma to our
-best Hellenists; we know next to nothing of the inside of Mithraism;
-for the oriental cults of the late Roman republic and early empire
-we are lamentably deficient in writings that might exhibit to us the
-arcana of their worship and the texture of their beliefs. Not so with
-Judaism. Here we have the prophets, old and late; for the two centuries
-B.C. we have the apocrypha, including the Maccabean books; we have the
-so-called Books of Enoch, of Jubilees, of the Twelve Patriarchs, the
-Fourth Ezra, Baruch, Sirach, and many others. We have the voluminous
-works of Philo and Josephus for the first century of our era; we have
-the Babylonian and other Talmuds preserving to us a wealth of Jewish
-tradition and teaching of the first and second centuries. Here let
-Mr. Robertson speak. As regards the Lord's Prayer and the Sermon
-on the Mount, he insists (p. 415 foll.) that they were inspired by
-parallel passages in the Talmud and the Apocrypha, and he argues with
-perfect good sense for the priority of the Talmud in these words:
-"It is hardly necessary to remark here that the Talmudic parallels
-to any part of the Sermon on the Mount cannot conceivably have been
-borrowed from the Christian gospels; they would as soon have borrowed
-from the rituals of the pagans."
-
-[Yet affirms that Christists, indistinguishable from Jews, did
-so borrow wholesale] And yet he asks us to believe that a nucleus
-of Jews, hidden in Jerusalem, the heart of Judaism, a sect whose
-apostles were Judaizers and vehement defenders of circumcision--all
-this he admits--were, as late as the last half of the first century,
-maintaining among themselves in secret a highly eclectic pagan cult;
-that they evolved "a gospel myth from scenes in pagan art" (p. 327);
-that they took a sort of modern archæological interest in pagan art
-and sculpture, and derived thence most of their literary motifs;
-that the figure of Jesus is an alloy of Dionysus, Osiris, Adonis,
-Krishna, Æsculapius, and fifty other ancient gods and demigods,
-with the all-important "Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, son of Miriam";
-that the story of Peter rests on "a pagan basis of myth" (p. 340);
-that Maria is the true and original form of the Hebrew Miriam, and
-is the same name as Myrrha and Moira (moira), etc., etc.
-
-[The central idea of a God Joshua a figment of Robertson's fancy]
-Such are the mutually destructive arguments on the strength of which
-we are to adopt his thesis of the unhistoricity of Jesus. His books,
-like those of Dr. Drews, are a welter of contradictory statements,
-unreconciled and irreconcilable. Nevertheless, they reiterate them in
-volume after volume, like orthodox Christians reiterating articles of
-faith and dogmas too sacred to be discussed. Who ever heard before them
-of a Jewish cult of a Sun-God-Saviour Joshua? Such a cult must have
-been long extinct when the book of Joshua was written. Who ever heard
-of this Sun-god having for his mother a Miriam, until Mr. Robertson
-discovered a late Persian gloss to the effect that Joshua, son of Nun,
-had a mother of the name? Even if this tradition were not so utterly
-worthless as it is, it would prove nothing about the Sun-god. On the
-basis of such gratuitous fancies we are asked to dismiss Jesus as a
-myth. [It does not even explain the birth legends of the Christians] It
-does not even help us to understand how the myths of the Virgin Birth
-arose. Since when, I would like to know, did we need such evidence
-against that legend? If I thought that the rebuttal of it depended
-on such evidence, I should be inclined to become a good Papist and
-embrace it. It is enough for me to have ascertained, by a comparison
-of texts and by a study of early Christian documents, that it is a
-late accretion on the traditions of Jesus of Nazareth. That is the
-real evidence, if any be wanted, against it. Mr. Robertson admits that
-the first two chapters of Luke which are supposed--perhaps wrongly--to
-embody this legend are "a late fabulous introduction." Again he writes
-(p. 189): "Only the late Third Gospel tells the story (of Luke i and
-ii); the narrative (of the Birth) in Matthew, added late as it was
-to the original composition, which obviously began at what is now
-the third chapter, has no hint of the taxing."
-
-[Evidence of the Protevangelion] This is good sense, and I am indebted
-to him for pointing out that so loosely was the myth compacted that
-in the Protevangelion (c. 17) the statement is that it was decreed
-"that all should be enrolled who were in Bethlehem of Judæa," not
-all Jews over the entire world.
-
-[Robertson assumes the antiquity of the legend merely to suit his
-theory] Surely all this implies that the legend of the miraculous birth
-was no part of the earliest tradition about Jesus. Nevertheless, it
-is so important for Mr. Robertson's thesis (that Jesus was a mythical
-personage) that he should from the first have had a mythical mother,
-that he insists on treating the whole of Christian tradition, early
-or late, as a solid block, and argues steadily that the Virgin Birth
-legend was an integral part of it from the beginning. Jesus was a
-myth; as such he must have had a myth for a mother. Now a virgin
-mother is half-way to being a mythical one. Therefore Mary was a
-virgin, and must from the beginning have been regarded as such by the
-"Christists." Such are the steps of his reasoning.
-
-[The "Christists" at once extravagantly pagan and extravagantly
-monotheist and Jewish] I have adduced in the preceding pages a
-selection of the mythological equations of Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews
-in order that my readers may realize how faint a resemblance between
-stories justifies, in their minds, a derivation or borrowing of
-one from the other. Nor do they ever ask themselves how Jewish
-"Christists" were likely to come in contact with out-of-the-way
-legends of Bacchus or Dionysus, of Hermes, of old Pelasgic deities,
-of Cybele and Attis and Isis, Osiris and Horus, of Helena Dendrites,
-of Krishna, of Janus, of sundry ancient vegetation-gods (for they
-are up to the newest lights), of Apollonius of Tyana, of Æsculapius,
-of Herakles and Oceanus, of Saoshyant and other old Persian gods
-and heroes, of Buddha and his kith and kin, of the Eleusinian and
-other ancient mysteries. Prick them with a pin, and out gushes
-this lore in a copious flood; and every item of it is supposed
-to have filled the heads of the polymath authors of the Christian
-Gospels. Every syllable of these Gospels, every character in them,
-is symbolic of one or another of these gods and heroes. Hear,
-O Israel: "Christians borrowed myths of all kinds from Paganism"
-(Christianity and Mythology, p. xii). And we are pompously assured
-(p. xxii, op. cit.) that this new "mythic" system is, "in general,
-more 'positive,' more inductive, less à priori, more obedient to
-scientific canons, than that of the previous critics known to me
-[i.e., to Mr. Robertson] who have reached similar anti-traditional
-results. It substitutes an anthropological basis, in terms of
-the concrete phenomena of mythology, for a pseudo-philosophical
-presupposition." Heaven help the new science of anthropology!
-
-[A receipt for the concoction of a gospel] And what end, we may ask,
-had the "Jesuists" and "Christists" (to use Mr. Robertson's jargon)
-in view, when they dressed up all this tagrag and bobtail of pagan
-myth, art, and ritual, and disguised it under the form of a tale of
-Messianic Judaism? For that and nothing else is, on this theory, the
-basis and essence of the Gospels. Was it their aim to honour paganism
-or to honour Jewish monotheism, when they concocted a "Christ cult"
-which is "a synthesis of the two most popular pagan myth-motives,
-[24] with some Judaic elements as nucleus and some explicit ethical
-teaching superadded" (p. 34). We must perforce suppose that the
-Gospels were a covert tribute to the worth and value of Pagan
-mythology and religious dramas, to pagan art and statuary. If we
-adopt the mythico-symbolical method, they can have been nothing
-else. Its sponsors might surely condescend to explain the alchemy
-by which the ascertained rites and beliefs of early Christians were
-distilled from these antecedents. The effect and the cause are so
-entirely disparate, so devoid of any organic connection, that we would
-fain see the evolution worked out a little more clearly. At one end
-of it we have a hurly-burly of pagan myths, at the other an army of
-Christian apologists inveighing against everything pagan and martyred
-for doing so, all within a space of sixty or seventy years. I only hope
-the orthodox will be gratified to learn that their Scriptures are a
-thousandfold more wonderful and unique than they appeared to be when
-they were merely inspired by the Holy Spirit. For verbal inspiration
-is not, as regards its miraculous quality, in the same field with
-mythico-symbolism. Verily we have discovered a new literary genus,
-unexampled in the history of mankind. You rake together a thousand
-irrelevant thrums of mythology, picked up at random from every age,
-race, and clime; you get a "Christist" to throw them into a sack
-and shake them up; you open it, and out come the Gospels. In all the
-annals of the Bacon-Shakesperians we have seen nothing like it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE
-
-
-[Multiplicity of documents converging on and involving an historical
-Jesus] I have remarked above that if the Gospel of Mark were an
-isolated writing, if we knew nothing of its fortunes, nothing of any
-society that accepted it as history; if, above all, we were without any
-independent documents that fitted in with it and mentioned the persons
-and events that crowd its pages, then it would be a possible hypothesis
-that it was like the Recognitions of Clement, a skilfully contrived
-romance. Such a hypothesis, I said, would indeed be improbable, yet
-not unthinkable or self-destructive. But as a matter of fact we have
-an extensive series of documents, independent of Mark, yet attesting
-by their undesigned coincidences its historicity--not, of course,
-in the sense that we must accept everything in it, but anyhow in
-the sense that it is largely founded on fact and is a record of real
-incident. Were it a mere romance of events that never happened, and
-of people who never lived, would it not be a first-class miracle that
-in another romance, concocted apart from it and in ignorance of its
-contents, the same outline of events met our gaze, the same personages,
-the same atmosphere, moral, intellectual, and religious, the same
-interests? If in a third and fourth writing the same phenomenon
-recurred, the marvel would be multiplied. Would any sane person doubt
-that there was a substratum of fact and real history underlying them
-all? It would be as if several tables in the gambling saloon of Monte
-Carlo threw up the same series of numbers--say, 8, 3, 11, 7, 33,
-21--simultaneously and independently of one another. A few of the
-habitués--for Monte Carlo is a great centre of superstition--might
-take refuge in the opinion that the tables were bewitched; but most
-men would infer that there was human collusion and conspiracy to
-produce such a result, and that the croupiers of the several tables
-were in the plot.
-
-[Mark and Q the two earliest documents] Now Mark's Gospel does not
-stand alone. As I have pointed out in Myth, Magic, and Morals, Luke
-and Matthew hold in solution as it were a second document, called Q
-(Quelle), or the non-Marcan, which yields us a few incidents and a
-great many sayings and parables of Jesus. Now this second document,
-so utterly separate from and independent of Mark that it does not
-even allude to the crucifixion and death episodes, nevertheless has
-Jesus all through for its central figure. No doubt it ultimately came
-out of the same general medium as Mark; but that consideration does
-not much diminish the weight of its testimony. If I met two people
-a hundred yards apart both coming from St. Paul's Cathedral, and if
-they both assured me that they had just been listening to a sermon
-of Dr. Inge's, I should not credit them the less because they had
-been together in church.
-
-That both these documents--I mean Mark and the non-Marcan--were in
-circulation at a fairly early date is certain on many grounds. So great
-a scholar as Wellhausen, a scholar untrammelled by ties of orthodoxy,
-shows in his commentary that Mark, as it lies before us, must have
-been redacted before the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70; so vague are
-its forecasts of disasters that were to befall the holy city. In Luke,
-on the other hand, these forecasts are accommodated to the facts,
-as we should expect to be the case in an author who wrote after the
-blow had fallen.
-
-[The first and third Gospels constitute two more such documents]
-And another consideration arises here. Matthew and Luke wrote quite
-independently of one another--for they practically never join hands
-across Mark--and yet they both assume in their compilations that these
-two basal documents, Mark and the non-Marcan, are genuine narratives of
-real events. They allow themselves, indeed, according to the literary
-fashion of the age, to re-arrange, modify, and omit episodes in them;
-but their manner of handling and combining the two documents is in
-general inexplicable on the hypothesis that they considered them to
-be mere romances. They are too plainly in earnest, too eager to find
-in them material for the life of a master whom they revered. Luke in
-particular prefixes a personal letter to one Theophilus, explaining
-the purpose of his compilation. In it we find not a word about the
-transcribing of Osiris dramas. On the contrary, it will set in order
-for Theophilus a story in which he had already been instructed. It
-is clear that Theophilus had already been made acquainted with "the
-facts about Jesus," perhaps insufficiently, perhaps along lines which
-Luke deprecated. [Luke's prologue argues an indefinite number more
-of such documents] However this be, Luke desires to improve upon the
-information which Theophilus had so far acquired about Jesus. It is
-clear that written and unwritten traditions of Jesus were already
-disseminated among believers. The prologue is inexplicable otherwise,
-and it implies a whole series of witnesses to the historicity of Jesus
-prior to Luke himself, of whom, as I have said, we still have Mark
-and can reconstruct Q. Both Matthew (whoever he was) and Luke, then,
-are convinced of the historicity of Jesus, and regarded Mark and Q as
-historical sources. They exploit them, and they also try to fill up
-lacunas left in these basal documents, and in particular to supply
-their readers with some account of his birth and upbringing. Both
-supplements, of course, are largely fictitious, that of Matthew
-in particular; but they both testify to a fixed consciousness and
-belief among early Christians that the Messiah was a real historical
-person. Such an interest in the birth and upbringing of Jesus as
-Matthew and Luke reveal could never have been felt by sectaries who
-were well aware that he was not a real person, but a solar myth and
-first cousin of Osiris. Had he been known, even by a few believers and
-no more, to have been not a man but a composite myth, people would
-not have craved for details, even miraculous, about his birth and
-parentage and upbringing. Was it necessary to concoct human pedigrees
-for a solar myth, and to pretend that Jacob begat Joseph, and Joseph
-begat Jesus? The very idea is absurd. They wanted such details, and
-got them, just as did the worshippers of Plato, Alexander, Augustus,
-Apollonius, and other famous men. In connection with Osiris and
-Dionysus such details were never asked for and never supplied.
-
-[Implications of Luke's exordium] In the covering letter which forms
-a sort of exordium to his Gospel the following are the words in which
-Luke assures us that others before himself had planned histories of
-the life of Jesus:--
-
-
- Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to draw up a narrative
- concerning those matters which have been fully established (or
- fulfilled) among us, even as they delivered them unto us which
- from the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word,
- it seemed good to me also, having traced out the course of all
- things accurately from the first, to write them unto thee in order,
- most excellent Theophilus; that thou mightest know the certainty
- concerning the things wherein thou wast instructed.
-
-
-This is not the tone of a man who trades in sun-myths. The passage
-has a thoroughly bona fide ring, and declares (1) that Theophilus had
-already been instructed in the Gospel narrative, but not so accurately
-as the writer could wish; (2) that several accounts of Jesus's life
-and teaching were in circulation; (3) that these accounts were based
-on the traditions of those who had seen Jesus and assisted in the
-diffusion of his Messianic and other teachings.
-
-The passage cannot be later than A.D. 100, and is probably as early
-as A.D. 80; many scholars put it earlier. In any case, it reveals a
-consciousness, stretching far back among believers, that Jesus had
-really lived and died. Moreover, it is from the pen of one who either
-had himself visited, with Paul, James the brother (or, according to
-the orthodox, the half-brother) of Jesus at Jerusalem (Acts xxi, 17),
-or--if not that--anyhow had in his possession and made copious use
-of a travel document written by the companion of Paul.
-
-[Luke probably used a document independent of Mark and Q] A study
-of Luke also suggests that he had a third narrative document of his
-own. Thus, without going outside the Synoptic Gospels, we have two,
-if not three, wholly independent accounts of the doings and sayings
-of Jesus, and an inferential certainty that they were not the only
-ones which then existed. In the earliest Christian writers, moreover,
-citations occur that cannot well be referred to the canonical Gospels,
-but which may very well have been taken from the other narratives which
-Luke assures us were in the possession of the earliest Church. These
-narratives, like all other wholly or partly independent documents,
-must have differed widely from one another in detail; for their authors
-probably handled the tradition as freely as Matthew and Luke handle
-Mark. [Messianic and apocalyptic character of these early documents]
-But the inspiring motive of them all was the belief that a human
-Messiah had founded, or rather begun, the community of believers in
-Palestine. That any of them were contemporary is improbable, for the
-simple reason that the eyes of believers were turned, not backward on
-the life of the herald, but forward to the Kingdom of God or kingdom
-of heaven on earth which he heralded. They all felt themselves to be
-living in the last days, and that the Kingdom was to surprise many
-of them during their lifetime. Nor among the earliest believers
-was this expectation confined to Jews alone; it extended equally
-to Gentile converts. Thus Paul, in his epistles to the Corinthians,
-labours to answer the pathetic query his converts had addressed to
-him--namely, why the kingdom to come so long delayed; why many of them
-had fallen sick and some had died, while yet it tarried. Men and women
-who breathed such an atmosphere of tense expectation, as a passage
-like this and as the Gospel parables reveal, could not be solicitous
-for annals of the past. Still less is the attitude revealed that of
-people nurtured on ritual dramas of an annually slain and annually
-resuscitated god; for in that case they only needed to wait for the
-manifestation they yearned for, until the following spring, when the
-god would rise afresh to secure salvation for his votaries. The tone
-of this passage of Paul, as of all the earliest Christian documents,
-shows that the mind's eye of the common believer, as had been the
-founder's, was dazzled with the apocalyptic splendours soon to
-be revealed, with the beatitudes shortly to be fulfilled in the
-faithful. They were as wayfarers walking in a dark night towards
-a light which is far off, yet, because of its brightness and of the
-lack of an interposed landscape to fix the perspective, seems close at
-hand. Many a Socialist workman, especially on the continent, cherishes
-a similar dream of a good time coming ere long for himself and his
-fellows. He has no sense of the difficulties which for many a weary
-year--perhaps for ever--will hinder the realization of his passionately
-desired ideal. It is better so, for we live by our enthusiasms, and
-are the better for having indulged in them; if the labourer had none,
-he would be a chilly, useless being. Happily the Socialist seldom
-reflects how commonplace he would probably find his ideal if it were
-suddenly realized around him. Such were the eschatological hopes and
-dreams rife in the circles among which the Synoptic Gospels and their
-constituent documents first saw the light; they are revealed on their
-every page, and, needless to say, are inexplicable on Mr. Robertson's
-hypothesis. Devoid of sympathy with his subject, incapable of seeing
-it against its true background, without tact or perspective, he has
-never felt or understood the difficulties which beset his central
-hypothesis. He therefore attempts no explanation of them.
-
-[Character of the Fourth Gospel] Of the Fourth Gospel I have already
-said whatever is strictly necessary in this connection. It hangs
-together with the Johannine epistles; and its writer certainly had
-the Gospel of Mark before him, for he derives many incidents from it,
-and often covertly controverts it. It seems to belong to the end of
-the first century, and was in the hands of Gnostic sects fairly early
-in the second--say about 128. When it was written, the Gnosis of the
-Hellenized Jews, and in especial of Philo, was invading the primitive
-community. The Messianic and human traits of Jesus, still so salient
-in Mark and Matthew, though less so in Luke, are receding into the
-background before the opinion that he had been the representation
-in flesh of the eternal Logos. All his conversations are re-written
-to suit the newer standpoint; the homely scenes and surroundings of
-Galilee are forgotten as much as can be, and Samaria and Jerusalem--a
-more resounding theatre--are substituted. The teaching in parables
-is dropped, and we hear no more of the exorcisms of devils. Such
-things were unedifying, and unworthy of so sublime a figure, as
-much in the mind of this evangelist as of the fastidious Professor
-W. B. Smith. Hence it may be said that the Fourth Gospel has made
-the fortune of the Catholic Church; without it Athanasius could never
-have triumphed, nor the Nicene Creed have been penned, nor Professor
-Smith's diatribes have attracted readers. [It is half-docetic] For
-in it Jesus is becoming unreal, a divine pedant masquerading in a
-vesture of flesh. When it was written, the Docetes, as they were
-called, were already beginning to dot the "i's" and cross the "t's"
-of the teachers who sublimated Jesus into the Philonian Logos; and,
-as I said above, it is against them, no doubt, that the caveat--so
-necessary in the context--is entered that in Jesus the Word was
-made flesh. Similarly, in the Johannine epistles certain teachers
-are denounced who declared that Jesus Christ had not come in the
-flesh, and taught that his flesh was only a blind. [Ignatius's
-account of Docetism] We have a fairly full account of these docetic
-teachers in the Epistles of Ignatius, which cannot be much later than
-A.D. 120. From these we gather that they adopted the ordinary tradition
-about Jesus, and believed that he had been born, and eaten and drunk,
-had walked about with his disciples, had delivered his teaching by
-word of mouth, had been crucified by Pontius Pilate, had died, and
-been buried. But all these operations had been unreal and subjective
-in the minds of those who were present at them, as are things we see
-in a dream. They had taken place to the eye and ear of bystanders,
-but not in reality. The partizans, therefore, of the view that Jesus
-never lived deceive themselves when they appeal to the Docetes as
-witnesses on their side. The Docetes lend no colour to their thesis
-of the non-historicity of Jesus, but just the opposite. Drews writes
-(p. 57) that
-
-
- [Drews misunderstands Gnosticism] the Gnostics of the second
- century really questioned the historical existence of Jesus by
- their docetic conception; in other words, they believed only in a
- metaphysical and ideal, not an historical and real, Christ. The
- whole polemic of the Christians against the Gnostics was based
- essentially on the fact that the Gnostics denied the historicity
- of Jesus, or at least put it in a subordinate position.
-
-
-This is nonsense. The Docetes admitted to the full that the Messiah
-had appeared on earth; but, partly to meet the Jewish objections to
-a crucified Messiah, and partly inspired by that contempt for matter
-which was and is common in the East, and has been the inspiring
-motive of much vain asceticism, they shrank from believing that he
-shared with ordinary men their flesh and blood, their secretions and
-evacuations. Matter was too evil for a Messiah, much more for the
-heavenly Logos, to have been encased in it, and so subjected to its
-dominion; to ascribe real flesh to him was to humble him before the
-evil Demiurge, who created matter. [Docetes accepted current Christian
-tradition] The Docetes accordingly took refuge in the idea that his
-body was a phantom, and that in phantom form he had undergone all
-that was related of him in Christian tradition; to which their views
-bear testimony, instead of contradicting it, as Dr. Drews and his
-friends pretend. "If these things," writes Ignatius, "were done by
-our Lord in Semblance, then am I also a prisoner in semblance." This
-means that--mutatis mutandis--the arguments of the Docetes would turn
-Ignatius too, chains and all, into a phantom. Again and again this
-writer affirms that the Docetes believed quite correctly that Jesus
-was born of a virgin and baptized by John, was nailed up for our
-sakes under Pontius Pilate and Herod the Tetrarch, that he suffered,
-died, and raised himself up out of the grave. They only would not
-believe that he underwent and performed all this truly--that is,
-objectively. They insisted that the Saviour had only been among men as
-a phantom, in the same manner as Helen had gone through the siege of
-Troy as a mere phantom. She was not really there, though Greeks and
-Trojans saw and met her daily. She was all the time enjoying herself
-amid the asphodel meadows of the Nile. Even so the disciples, according
-to the Docetes, had heard and seen Jesus all through his ministry;
-yet the body they saw was phantasmal only. The Docetes also argued--so
-we can infer from Ignatius's Epistle to the Church of Smyrna--that, as
-Jesus ate and drank after the resurrection in phantom guise, so he had
-eaten and drunk before his death in no other than phantom guise. The
-answer of Ignatius to this is: "I know and believe that he was in the
-flesh even after the resurrection"; and he forthwith relates how the
-risen Jesus approached Peter and his company, who thought they were
-in the presence of a phantom or ghost, and said to them: "Lay hold and
-handle me, and see that I am not a demon without a body." Everything,
-then, that we read about the Docetes shows that on all points, in
-respect of the miraculous incidents of Jesus's life no less than
-of the natural, they blindly accepted the record of evangelical
-tradition. Their heresy was not to deny what the tradition related,
-but to interpret it wrongly. [Docetism in Philo,] Philo had long before
-set the example of such an interpretation, when in his commentaries,
-which were widely read by Christians in the second century, he asserted
-that the angels who appeared to Abraham at the oak of Mambre, and
-ate and drank with him, only ate and drank in semblance, and not in
-reality. They laid a spell on the eyes of Abraham, and of the other
-guests at the banquet. [and in Tobit] So in the Book of Tobit xii,
-19, the angel says: "All these days did I appear unto you; and I did
-neither eat nor drink, but it was a vision ye yourselves saw."
-
-In the same way, Jesus laid a spell on the eyes of his followers, in
-the belief of this very early sect of Christian believers. [Professor
-Smith and Hippolytus] Professor W. B. Smith, like his two companions,
-writes as if Docetism were an asset in favour of his thesis
-that Christianity began as the cult of a slain God, and that "the
-humanization of this divinity proceeds apace as we descend the stream
-of tradition." Yet the Docetic doctrine, as given in the report of
-Hippolytus, and adduced by Mr. Smith himself (p. 88), exactly bears
-out the estimate of its import with which one rises from a study of
-the Ignatian Epistles. It is from Hippolytus's Refutation of Heresies,
-viii, 10, and runs thus:--
-
-
- Having come from above, he (Jesus) put on the begotten (body),
- and did all things just as has been written in the Gospels;
- he washed himself in Jordan, etc.
-
-
-Hippolytus was in contact with Docetes, and familiar with their
-writings and arguments. What better proof could we have than this
-citation of the fact that they servilely adopted the traditions of
-Jesus recorded in the Gospels? They were not supplying an answer to
-imaginary Jews who had objected to Christianity on the score that
-Jesus had never lived. Their speciality was to interpret the Gospel
-record, which they did not dream of disputing, along phantasmagoric
-lines. There was still left in the Church enough common sense
-and historic insight to brush their interpretation on one side as
-nonsensical.
-
-[Drews misunderstands Justin Martyr] Drews once more has conjured up
-out of Justin Martyr a Jew of the second century who denied the human
-existence of Jesus. The relevant passage is at p. 16 of his Witnesses
-to the Historicity of Jesus, and runs as follows:--
-
-
- It is not true, however, as has recently been stated, that no Jew
- ever questioned the historical reality of Jesus, so that we may
- see in this some evidence for his existence. The Jew Trypho, whom
- Justin introduces in his Dialogue with Trypho, expresses himself
- very sceptically about it. "Ye follow an empty rumour," he says,
- "and make a Christ for yourselves." "If he was born and lived
- somewhere, he is entirely unknown" (viii, 3). This work appeared
- in the second half of the second century; it is therefore the
- first indication of a denial of the human existence of Jesus,
- and shows that such opinions were current at the time.
-
-
-Professor Drews has, I regret to say, failed to read his text
-intelligently. So I will transcribe the passage of Justin in full,
-premising that it was more probably written in the first than in the
-second half of the second century. The dialogue is between a Jew and
-an ex-Platonist who has turned Christian, and the Jew says with an
-ironical smile to the Christian:--
-
-
- The rest of your arguments I admit, and I admire your religious
- enthusiasm. Nevertheless, you would have done better to stick to
- Plato's or any other sage's philosophy, practising the virtues of
- endurance and continence and temperance, rather than let yourself
- be ensnared by false arguments and follow utterly worthless
- men. For if you had remained loyal to that form of philosophy and
- lived a blameless life, there was left a hope of your rising to
- something better. But as it is you have abandoned God and put your
- trust in man, so what further hope is left to you of salvation? If,
- then, you are willing to take advice from myself--for I already
- have come to regard you as a friend--begin first by circumcising
- yourself, and next keep in the legal fashion the sabbath and the
- festivals and the new moons of God, and in a word fulfil all the
- commandments written in the Law, and then perhaps you will attain
- unto God's mercy. But Messiah (or Christ), even supposing he has
- come into being and exists somewhere or other, is unrecognized,
- and can neither know himself as such nor possess any might,
- until Elias having come shall anoint him and make him manifest
- unto all. But you (Christians), having lent ear to a vain report,
- feign a sort of Messiah unto yourselves, and for his sake are
- now rashly going to perdition.
-
-
-There is a parallel passage in the Dialogue, c. cx, where the
-Christian interlocutor, after reciting the prophecy of Micah, iv,
-1-7, adds these words:--
-
-
- I am quite aware, gentlemen, that your rabbis admit all the words
- of the above passage to have been uttered about, and to refer to
- the Messiah; and I also know that they deny him so far to have
- come, or, if they say he has come, then that it is not yet known
- who he is. However, when he is manifested and in glory, then,
- they say, it will be known who he is. And then, so they say,
- the things foreshadowed in the above passage will come to pass.
-
-
-[The Jews in Justin testify to Jesus's historicity] The sense, then,
-of the passage adduced by Drews is perfectly clear, and exactly the
-opposite of that which he puts upon it. The Christ or Messiah referred
-to by the Jew is not that man of Nazareth in whom the Christians
-had falsely recognized the signs of Messiahship. No, he is, on the
-contrary, the Messiah expected by the Jews; but the latter has not so
-far come; or, if he has come, still lurks in some corner unrecognized
-until such time as Elias, to whom the rôle appertains, shall appear
-again and proclaim him. There is not a word of Jesus of Nazareth not
-having come, or of his being still unrecognized. The gravamen of the
-Jew is that the ex-Platonist had been chicaned by Christians into
-believing that the Messiah had already come in the person of Jesus,
-and had been recognized in him. The passage, therefore, has exactly
-the opposite bearing to what Drews imagines.
-
-[Second century Jews did not detest mere shadows] There is, too,
-another very significant point to be made in this connection. It is
-this, that the Jews of that age would not have borne the bitter grudge
-they did against the Christians if the latter had merely devoted
-themselves to the cult of a mythical personage, a Sun-God-Saviour,
-who never existed at all. They were quite well capable of ridiculing
-myths of such a kind, as the story of Bel and the Dragon shows. Jesus,
-however, was a real memory to them, and one which they detested. Their
-hatred for him was that which you bear for a man who has upset your
-religion and trampled on your prejudices--the sort of hatred that
-Catholics have for the memory of Luther and Calvin; it was not in any
-way akin to their mockery of idols, their disgust for the demons that
-inhabited them, their abhorrence of their votaries. It was hatred
-of a religious antagonist, odium theologicum of the purest kind,
-and hatred like that with which the Ebionites for generations hated
-the memory of Paul. Jesus had violated and set at naught the law of
-Moses. A solar myth could not do that.
-
-To this hatred of the Jews for the memory of Jesus, and to the early
-date at which it showed itself, Dr. Drews himself bears witness when,
-on p. 12 of the work cited, he writes as follows:--
-
-
- There is no room for doubt that after the destruction of Jerusalem,
- and especially during the first quarter of the second century,
- the hostility of the Jews and Christians increased; indeed, by the
- year 130 the hatred of the Jews for the Christians became so fierce
- that a rabbi whose niece had been bitten by a serpent preferred
- to let her die rather than see her healed "in the name of Jesus."
-
-
-[Chwolson on early Rabbis] Chwolson argues from this and similar
-episodes that the Rabbis of the second half of the first century,
-or the beginning of the second, were well acquainted with the person
-of Christ. "Here," says Drews, "he clearly deceives himself and
-his readers if the impression is given that they had any personal
-knowledge of him." The self-deception is surely on the part of
-Dr. Drews. Chwolson does not imply that any Rabbis of the years 50-100
-had a personal knowledge of Jesus, in the sense of having seen him
-or conversed with him; for he is not given to writing nonsense. He
-does, however, imply that they knew of him as a real man who had
-lived and done them a power of evil. If they had only known him as
-a solar myth, their hostility to his followers, admitted by Drews,
-would be inexplicable; equally inexplicable if, as Dr. W. B. Smith
-contends, he had been a merely heavenly power, a divine Logos or God,
-incidentally the object of a monotheist cult. In that case the Jews
-would rather have been inclined to fall on the neck of the Christians
-and welcome them; and their cult would have been no more offensive
-to them than the theosophy of Philo the Jew, from which it would
-have been hardly distinguishable. Justin Martyr furthermore makes
-statements on this point which perfectly agree with the story of the
-hostile Rabbi adduced by Drews. [In the Jewish synagogues Jesus was
-regularly execrated] Not in one, but in half-a-dozen, passages he
-testifies that in his day the Jews in all their synagogues, at the
-conclusion of their prayers, cursed the memory of Jesus, execrated
-his name and personality (for name meaned personality in that age),
-and poured ridicule on the soi-disant Messiah that had been crucified
-by the Romans. "Even to this day," Justin exclaims (ch. xciii), "you
-persevere in your wickedness, imprecating curses on us because we can
-prove that he whom you crucified is Messiah." He records (ch. cviii)
-"that the Jews chose and appointed emissaries whom they sent forth
-all over the world to proclaim that a godless heresy and unlawful had
-been vamped up by a certain Jesus, a charlatan of Galilee. They were
-to warn their compatriots that the disciples had stolen him out of the
-tomb in which, after being unnailed from the cross, he had been laid,
-and then pretended that he had been raised from the dead and ascended
-into heaven."
-
-[Eusebius's evidence on this point] At first sight the above is a
-mere réchauffé of Matt. xxviii, 13; but Eusebius, who had in his
-hands much first- and second-century literature of the Christians
-and Hellenized Jews that we have not, attests a similar tradition,
-and declares that he found it in the publications of the ancients. [25]
-
-
- The priests and elders of the Jewish race who lived in Jerusalem
- wrote epistles and sent them broadcast to the Jews everywhere among
- the Gentiles, calumniating the teaching of Christ as a brand-new
- heresy and alien to God; and they warned them by letters not to
- receive it. And their apostles took their epistles, written on
- papyrus ... and ran up and down the earth, maligning our account
- of the Saviour.... It is still the custom of the Jews to give
- the name of Apostles to those who carry encyclical letters from
- their rulers.
-
-
-Note that Eusebius does not weave in the story of the disciples
-stealing their Master's body from out of the tomb. From his omission of
-it, and from the dissimilarity of his language, we can infer that the
-"publications of the ancients" from which he derived his information
-were not the works of Justin, but an independent source, which may also
-have been in Justin's hands. In any case, the Jews were not given to
-tilting at windmills; their secular and bitter hatred of the very name
-of Jesus, the relentless war waged with pen and sword from the first
-between the Christians and themselves--all this is attested by the
-earliest writings of the Church. It already colours Luke's Gospel, and
-is a leading inspiration of the Johannine. It alone is all-sufficient
-to dissipate the hypotheses of these twentieth-century fabulists.
-
-[Evidence of Acts] Let us turn to the Acts of the Apostles, the only
-book of the New Testament which contains a history of the Apostolic
-age. In the last half of this book is embedded, as even Van Manen
-admitted, a travel document or narrative of voyage undertaken by
-its author in common with Paul. Whether or no the fellow-traveller
-was the compiler of the Third Gospel and of Acts is not certain; but
-he was assuredly a man named Luke. It does not matter. "It is not,"
-writes Dr. Drews (Christ Myth, p. 19),
-
-
- the imagined historical Jesus, but, if anyone, Paul, who is
- that "great personality" that called Christianity into life as
- a new religion; and the depth of his moral experience gave it
- the strength for its journey, the strength which bestowed upon it
- victory over the other competing religions. Without Jesus the rise
- of Christianity can be quite well understood; without Paul, not so.
-
-
-[Van Manen on Acts and Paul] We infer from the above that, on the
-whole, Drews accepts the narrative of Paul's sayings and doings as
-given in Acts, and does not consider it a mere record of the feats a
-solar hero performed, not on earth, but in heaven. We gather also that
-Mr. Robertson takes the same indulgent view of Acts, for he frequently
-impugns the age of the Pauline epistles and the evidence they contain
-on the strength of "Van Manen's thesis of the non-genuineness" of
-them. "In point of fact," he writes (p. 453), "Van Manen's whole case
-is an argument; Dr. Carpenter's is a simple declaration."
-
-But Van Manen never for a moment questioned the historical reality
-of Jesus. What he insisted upon is [26] that
-
-
- there is no word, nor any trace, of any essential difference as
- regards faith and life between Paul and other disciples.... He
- is a "disciple" among the "disciples." What he preaches is
- substantially nothing else than what their mind and heart are
- full of--the things concerning Jesus.
-
-
-Van Manen, however, allows
-
-
- that Paul's journeyings, his protracted sojourn outside of
- Palestine, his intercourse in foreign parts with converted Jews
- and former heathen, may have emancipated him (as it did so many
- other Jews of the Dispersion) without his knowing it, more or
- less--perhaps in essence completely--from circumcision and other
- Jewish religious duties, customs, and rites.
-
-
-Concerning Paul the same writer says (op. cit., art, "Paul") that
-Acts gives us
-
-
- a variety of narratives concerning him, differing in their dates,
- and also in respect of the influences under which they were
- written.... With regard to Paul's journeys, we can in strictness
- speak with reasonable certainty and with some detail only of
- one great journey, which he undertook towards the end of his
- life. (Acts xvi, 10-17; xx, 5-15; xxi, 1-18; xxvii, 1-xxviii, 16.)
-
-
-[Evidence of the we sections of Acts] It is upon Acts, then, that Van
-Manen bases his estimate, which we just now cited, of Paul's relations
-with the other disciples. He refuses, and rightly, "to assume that
-Acts must take a subordinate place in comparison with the principal
-epistles of Paul." In effect, his assault on the Pauline Epistles
-rests on the assumption that the record of Paul's activity presented
-in Acts is the more trustworthy wherever it appears to conflict with
-the Pauline Epistles, and in particular with Galatians. In accepting
-Van Manen's conclusion, Mr. Robertson implicitly accepts his premises,
-one of which is the superior reliability of Acts in general, and in
-particular of the four sections enumerated above, and characterized by
-the use of the word "we." For the moment, therefore, let us confine
-ourselves to the ninety-seven verses of these "we" sections, which
-are obviously from the pen of a fellow-traveller of Paul. We find it
-recorded in them that Paul was moved by a vision to go and preach the
-Gospel [27] in Macedonia; that at Philippi a certain woman named Lydia,
-who already worshipped God--i.e., was a heathen converted to Jewish
-monotheism--had opened her heart in consequence to give heed to the
-things spoken by Paul. We infer that Paul's Gospel supplemented in
-some way her monotheism. She and her household became something more
-than mere worshippers of God, and were baptized. We learn that Paul
-and his companion reckoned time by the Jewish feasts and fasts--e.g.,
-by the days of unleavened bread--but at the same time were in the habit
-of meeting together with the rest of the faithful on the first day of
-the week, in order to break bread and discourse about the faith. At
-Tyre, as at Troas, they found "disciples" who, like Paul, arranged
-future events, or were warned of them through the Spirit. At Cæsarea,
-of Palestine, they stayed with Philip the evangelist, who was one
-of the seven, and had four daughters--virgins who did prophesy. They
-also met there a certain prophet Agabus, who was a mouthpiece of the
-Holy Ghost, and as such foretold that the Jews at Jerusalem, of whose
-plots against Paul we elsewhere hear in these sections, would deliver
-him into the hands of the Gentiles. Paul, in his turn, declares his
-readiness to be bound and die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord
-Jesus. they stay with an early disciple from Cyprus, Mnason, and,
-on reaching Jerusalem, the brethren received them gladly. And the
-day following Paul went in with us unto James; and all the elders
-(of the Church) were present. Paul relates to them the facts of his
-ministry among the Gentiles. In the course of the final voyage to
-Rome, when all the crew have despaired of their lives, because of
-the violence of the storm and of the ship leaking, Paul comes to the
-rescue, and informs them that the angel of the God whom he served,
-and whose he was, had stood by him in the night, saying: "Fear not,
-Paul; thou must stand before Cæsar." He therefore could not perish by
-shipwreck, nor they either. In Melita the trivial circumstance that
-the bite of a viper, promptly shaken off by him into the fire, did
-not cause Paul to swell up (i.e., his hand to be inflamed), or die,
-caused the barbarians to acclaim him as a god; and in the sequel the
-sick in the island flock to him, and are healed. At Puteoli Paul and
-his companion find brethren, as they had found them at Jerusalem and
-elsewhere; and presently they enter Rome.
-
-In these sections, then, we have glimpses of a brotherhood disseminated
-all about the Mediterranean whose members were Monotheists of the
-Jewish type, but something besides, in so far as they accepted a
-gospel which Paul also preached, about a Lord Jesus Christ; these
-brethren solemnly broke bread on the first day of the week. In these
-sections we breathe the same atmosphere of personal visions, of angels,
-of prophecy, of direct inspiration of individuals by the Holy Ghost,
-of the cult of virginity, which we breathe in the rest of Acts and
-throughout the Pauline Epistles. [Philip one of the seven] We meet
-also with a Philip, an evangelist, and one of the seven. Who were the
-seven? We turn to an earlier chapter of Acts, [28] and read that in
-the earliest days of the religion at Jerusalem, in order to satisfy
-the claims of the widows of Greek Jews who were neglected in the daily
-ministration, the twelve apostles had called together the multitude
-of the faithful, and chosen seven men of good report, full of the
-Spirit and of wisdom to serve the tables, because they, the Twelve,
-were too busy preaching the word to attend to the catering of the new
-Messianic society. The first on the list of these seven deacons was
-Stephen, the second Philip. When, therefore, in the later passage
-the fellow-traveller of Paul refers to Philip as one of the seven,
-he assumes that we know who the seven were; and he can only expect
-us to know it because we have read the earlier chapter which narrates
-their appointment. The fellow-traveller of Paul, therefore, was aware
-of the appointment of the seven deacons, and testifies thereto. Here
-we have irrefragable evidence of the historicity of verses 1-6 of
-chapter vi of Acts, and at the same time a strong presumption that the
-fellow-traveller of Paul was himself the redactor, if not the author,
-of the earlier chapters (i-xv) of Acts, as he is obviously of the
-last half (ch. xvi to end); for that last half coheres inseparably
-with the contiguous we sections.
-
-[Literary unity of Acts] Have we, then, any way of testing this
-presumption that the fellow-traveller who penned these we sections
-also penned the rest of Acts? We have, though it is one which can
-only appeal to trained philologists, and I doubt if Messrs. Drews and
-Robertson are likely to give to such an argument its due weight. The
-linguistic evidence of the we sections has been sifted and tested by
-Sir John Hawkins in his Horæ Synopticæ. The statistic of words and
-phrases cannot lie. It proves that the writer of Acts, and consequently
-of the Third Gospel, "was from time to time a companion of Paul in
-his travels, and that he simply and naturally wrote in the first
-person when narrating events at which he had been present."
-
-This is the best hypothesis which a study of the language of Acts
-and of the Third Gospel permits us to accept. I do not say it is
-the only possible one, and I expect Mr. Robertson and his pupil,
-Dr. Drews, to reject it with scorn, for their philology is of the
-sort which recognizes in Maria the same name as Moira and Myrrha. The
-only other explanations of the presence of we in these sections are,
-either that a compiler who used the diary of the fellow-traveller
-left it standing in the document when he embodied it in his narrative,
-through carelessness and by accident, or else that he left it of set
-design, and because he wished his readers to identify him with the
-older reporter, and so to pass for a companion of Paul. The first
-of these explanations is very improbable; the second not only much
-too subtle, but out of keeping with the babbling, but credulous,
-honesty which everywhere shows itself in Acts.
-
-[Van Manen's system of dating Luke and Acts would postpone all
-ancient literature to the Middle Ages] It is true that Van Manen
-assumes a priori, and without a shadow of proof, that Luke and Acts
-were written as late as the period 125-150. His only argument is
-that Marcion already had the former in his hands as early as 140;
-and he is prone to make the childish assumption that the date of
-composition of any book in the New Testament is exactly that of
-its earliest ascertainable use by a later author. Such a mode of
-reasoning is utterly false and uncritical, and would, if applied in
-other fields, prove that the great mass of ancient literature was
-not ancient at all, but composed in the tenth or later centuries
-to which our earliest MSS. belong; for we have no citations either
-in contemporary or in nearly contemporary writers of nine-tenths of
-the whole volume of the old Greek and Latin literatures. Most of it,
-if we applied Van Manen's canons of evidence (which, of course, are
-accepted and improved upon by the three writers I am criticizing),
-would turn out to have been written as late as the renaissance of
-European learning. It is a fallacious test, and Van Manen would
-have shrunk from the paradox of enforcing it in regard to any other
-literature than the New Testament. It would appear as if the orthodox
-traditionalists, by insisting that the Bible must not be judged and
-criticized like other books, have prejudiced not merely their own
-cause--that would not matter--but the cause of sober history. They
-have invested it with such an atmosphere of mystery and falsetto, with
-what I may call a Sunday-school atmosphere, that a certain class of
-inquirers rush to an opposite extreme, and insist on canons of evidence
-and authenticity which would, if consistently used, eliminate all
-ancient literature and history. One form of error provokes the other.
-
-[Ephrem's commentary on Acts] We have examined for their evidence
-as regards the Early Church those sections which directly evidence
-the hand of a companion of Paul, who was probably Luke the physician,
-seeing that tradition was unanimous in ascribing the Third Gospel and
-Acts to him. Some scholars have observed that the old Syriac version
-cited by Ephrem the Syrian in his commentary [29] on Acts read in Acts
-xx, 13, as follows: "But I, Lucas, and those with me, going before
-to the ship, set sail for Assos," where the conventional text reads:
-"But we, going before." The pronoun we in this passage cannot include,
-as it usually does, Paul, who had taken another route and had left
-directions that they should call for him; this may have led Ephrem
-to substitute the paraphrase I, Lucas, and those with me. Anyhow,
-without further evidence, we can hardly use Ephrem's citation as a
-proof of the Lucan authorship of Acts. [Evidence of those parts of
-Acts which cohere with the we sections] But we must anyhow consider
-the evidence as to Paul's beliefs which is to be gathered from the
-sections of Acts which immediately cohere with the travel document,
-and which clearly depended for their information on a source closely
-allied to them and of the same age and provenance. Firstly, then,
-it is noticeable that all this last part of Acts is relatively free
-from the fabulous details which mar the earlier part descriptive of
-the exploits of Peter. Next we note that Paul, on entering a city,
-goes straight to the Jewish Synagogue, and that the gospel with which
-he undertakes to supplement their monotheism consisted not of tidings
-about an ancient Palestinian Sun-god named Joshua, or Dionysus or
-Krishna, or Osiris, or Æsculapius, or Mithras, nor about a vegetation
-or harvest demon of any kind, nor about any of the other members
-of the Christian pandemonium invented by Mr. Robertson and adopted
-by Dr. Drews. No; on the contrary, at Thessalonica Paul spent three
-sabbaths trying to convince the Jews in their synagogue that Jesus
-must have been the Jewish Messiah promised in the Jewish scriptures,
-because in accordance with prophecy he had suffered and risen from
-the dead. That he taught them, further, that Jesus, qua Christ or
-Messiah, was also the Jewish king whose advent they looked for, is
-obvious from the fact that he was accused on this occasion, as on
-others, of teaching, "contrary to the decrees of Cæsar, that there
-was another king, one Jesus." At Corinth Paul found he was wasting
-time in trying to persuade the Jews that Jesus was the Messiah whose
-advent they expected; and he declared to them that thenceforth he would
-devote himself to spreading his good news among the Gentiles. None
-the less he persisted, wherever he afterwards went, in going first
-to the synagogue, so as to give his compatriots a prior chance of
-accepting his spiritual wares, according to the principle enunciated
-in his epistles, that the promises were for the Jews first and only
-after them for the Gentiles. In Acts xxv, 19, Festus lays before King
-Agrippa the case against Paul as he had learned it from the Jewish
-priests and elders at Jerusalem. It amounted to this, that Paul
-affirmed that "one Jesus, who was dead, was really alive." We learn
-in an earlier passage that Paul was a Jew of Tarsus, an adherent
-of the Pharisaic sect which believed in a general resurrection of
-good Jews, that nevertheless he had persecuted the adherents of
-Jesus of Nazareth and connived at the murder of Stephen. He has some
-difficulty in convincing the Roman governor of Judæa that he is not
-a leader of the Jewish sicarii, or sect of assassins, who were ever
-anxious to range themselves on the side of any Messiah ready to show
-fight against the Roman Legions. The impression made on Festus, the
-Roman Governor, by Paul's prophetic arguments about a Messiah who
-had suffered and then risen from the dead was (Acts xxvi, 24) that
-"much learning had made him mad." We can discern all through this
-last half of Acts that attitude of Paul to Jesus which confronts us
-in his epistles. Nothing interests him except his death on the cross
-and his resurrection. Of the rest of his career we learn nothing. In
-one passage, ch. xiii, 26 foll., we have a slightly more detailed
-account of the staple of Paul's teaching, as delivered to the Jews
-when he encountered them in their synagogues. He informed them of how
-"they that dwell in Jerusalem and their rulers" had condemned Jesus;
-"though they found no cause of death in him, yet asked they of Pilate
-that he should be slain." They afterwards "took him down from the
-tree and laid him in a tomb. But God raised him from the dead: and
-he was seen for many days of them that came up with him from Galilee
-to Jerusalem, who are now his witnesses unto the people."
-
-There is not much of a vegetation-god story about the above concise
-narrative, which, however, is strikingly independent of the Gospel
-legends concerning the burial and resurrection of Jesus; for,
-according to them, it was the friends and adherents of Jesus, and
-not the rulers, who condemned him, that were careful to bury him;
-and his post-resurrectional appearances are here confined to his
-Galilean followers, who, by virtue of their longer association and
-intimacy with him, would be more likely than others to see him after
-death in dreams and visions.
-
-[Six independent and early documents involve a real Jesus] I have
-now reviewed the historical books of the New Testament. We have in
-them at least six monuments--to wit, Mark, the non-Marcan document,
-the parts of the First and Third Gospels peculiar to their authors,
-the Fourth Gospel, and the history of Paul and his mission given in
-chapters xiii to xxviii of Acts. Perhaps I ought to add the first
-twelve chapters of Acts, of which the information, according to
-Van Manen, was derived from an early and lost document, the Acts
-of Peter. That would make seven monuments. Unless all philological
-analysis is false, the Third Gospel and Acts are from the pen of a
-companion of Paul, and cannot be set later than about 90 A.D. Mark,
-which he used, must be indefinitely earlier, and I have pointed out
-that there are good reasons for setting its date before the year
-70. The non-Marcan document, which critics have agreed to call Q
-(Quelle), cannot be later than Mark, and is probably much earlier,
-judging from the fact that it as yet reported no miracles of Jesus,
-nor hints of his death and resurrection. Now all these documents
-are independent of one another in style and contents, yet they
-all have a common interest--namely, the memory of a historical man
-Jesus; and such data as they isolatedly afford about Jesus agree
-on the whole as closely as any profane documents ever agreed which,
-being written independently and from very different standpoints, yet
-refer to one and the same person. If we see a number of convergent
-rays of light streaming down under clouds across a widely extended
-landscape, we infer a central sun behind the clouds by which they are
-all emitted. Similarly, we have here several traditions and documents
-which converge on a single man, and are all and severally meaningless,
-and their genesis impossible of explanation unless we assume that he
-lived. It is sufficiently incredible that one tradition should (to take
-the hypothesis of non-historicity in its most rational form--that,
-namely, of Professor W. B. Smith) allegorize the myth of a Saviour
-God as the career of a man, and that man a Galilean teacher, in whose
-humanity the Church believed from the first. That six or seven parallel
-traditions should all have hit on the same form of deception and
-allegory is, as I said before, as incredible as that several roulette
-tables at Monte Carlo should independently and at one and the same
-time throw up an identical series of numbers. Credat Judæus Apella,
-These writers who develop the thesis of the non-historicity of Jesus
-because miracles came to be attributed to him--how could they not in
-that age and social medium?--ask us to believe in a miracle which far
-outweighs any which any religionists ever reported of their founder;
-they themselves have fallen into fathomless depths of credulity.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE EPISTLES OF PAUL
-
-
-[Mr. Robertson's vital interpolations] Now let us turn to the Epistles
-of Paul, a person whom these writers, as we have seen above, admit
-to have lived, and to have played no small part in the establishment
-of Christianity.
-
-In using these Epistles, they all three make a reservation to the
-effect that any evidence which they may supply in favour of the
-historicity of Jesus, and which cannot be explained away, shall be
-regarded as an interpolation; and as it is something that slays his
-hypothesis, Mr. Robertson has taught us to call such evidence "vital
-interpolation." It must die in order that his hypothesis may live. They
-also claim, ab initio, to deny Pauline authorship to any epistles that
-may turn out to be a stumbling-block in the way of their theories,
-and lean to the view of Van Manen and others, who held that the
-entire mass of the Pauline letters are the "work of a whole school
-of second-century theologians"--in other words, forgeries of the
-period 130-140. [Defying textual evidence he relegates the Paulines
-to second century] They would, of course, set them later than that,
-only it is overwhelmingly certain that Marcion made about that time
-a collection of ten of them, which he expurgated to suit his views,
-and arranged in order, with Galatians first; this collection he
-called the Apostolicon. It runs somewhat counter to this view that,
-twenty years earlier, we already have a reference to these Epistles in
-Ignatius, who, with an exaggeration hardly excused by the fact that
-he is addressing members of the Ephesian Church, informs us that the
-Ephesians are mentioned "in every letter" by Paul. Those who desire
-ample proof that Ignatius was well acquainted with Paul's Epistles
-cannot do better than refer to a work, drawn up and published in 1905
-by members of the Oxford Society of Historical Theology, entitled
-The New Testament in the Apostolic Fathers. In this the New Testament
-originals and the citations are arranged in parallel columns in the
-order of their convincingness.
-
-[Professor Smith's kindred thesis offends the facts] At a still
-earlier date--say A.D. 95--Clement of Rome cites the Paulines. As
-Professor W. B. Smith makes Herculean efforts to show that he did
-not, I venture to set before my readers a passage--chap. xxxv, 5,
-6 of his Epistle face to face with Romans i, 29-32--so that they may
-judge for themselves. I print identical words in leaded type:--
-
-
- 1 Clement. Romans.
-
-aporripsantes aph' heautôn pasan peplêrômenous pasê adikia, ponêria,
-adikian kai anomian, pleonexian, pleonexia, kakia, mestous, phthonou,
-ereis, kakoêtheias te kai dolous phonou, eridos, dolou, kakoêtheias,
-psithyrismous te kai katalalias, psithyristas, katalalous,
-theostygian, hyperêphanian te theostygeis, hybristas,
-kai alazoneian, kenedoxian te hyperêphanous, alazonas, epheuretas
-kai aphiloxenian. kakôn, goneusin apeitheis,
- asynetous, asynthetous, astorgous,
-tauta gar hoi prassontes aneleêmonas, hoitines to dikaiôma
-stygêtoi tô theô hyparchousin; tou theou epignontes, hoti ta
-ou monon de hoi prassontes auta, toiauta prassontes axioi thanatou
-alla kai hoi syneudokountes eisin, ou monon auta poiousin, alla
-autois. kai syneudokousi tois prassousi.
-
-
-The dependence of Clement's Epistle on that of Paul's Letter to
-the Romans is equally visible if the English renderings of them be
-compared, as follows:--
-
-
- [Translation.]
-
- Clement xxxv, 5, 6. Romans i, 29-32.
-
-Casting away from ourselves all Being filled with all
-unrighteousness and unrighteousness, wickedness,
-lawlessness, covetousness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of
-strife, malignity, and deceit; envy, murder, strife, deceit,
-whisperings and backbitings, malignity; whisperers, backbiters,
-hatred of God, haughtiness and hateful to God, insolent, haughty,
-boastfulness, vainglory and boastful, inventors of evil things,
-inhospitableness. disobedient to parents, without
- understanding, covenant-breakers,
-For they that practise these without natural affection,
-things are hateful to God. And unmerciful: who, knowing the
-not only they which practise ordinance of God, that they which
-them, but also they who consent practise such things are worthy of
-with them. death, not only do the same, but also
- consent with them that practise them.
-
-
-Some of the sources of Paul approximate in text still more to
-Clement--e.g., the reading ponêria "wickedness" is not certain. In
-some, "malignity" precedes "deceit." In some, "and" is added before
-the words "not only."
-
-In the above parallel passages the agreement both in kind and sequence
-of the lists of vices is too close to be accidental; and this is
-clinched by the identity of sense and form of the clauses which follow
-the two lists. Nor is this the only example of the influence of the
-Paulines on Clement. We give one more, giving the English only:--
-
-
- Paul (1 Cor. i, 11-13). Clement xlvii, 1.
-
-For it hath been signified unto me Take ye up the epistle of the
-concerning you, my brethren, by blessed Paul, the Apostle, what
-those of Chloe, that there are did he write first to you in the
-contentions among you. Now this I beginning of the good tidings. In
-mean, that each one of you saith, I verity he spiritually indited you
-am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I a letter about himself and Cephas
-of Cephas; and I of Christ. and Apollos.
-
-
-Here Clement only alludes to Paul's letter, not citing it, and he
-betrays a knowledge of the order and times in which Paul wrote his
-Epistles; for he declares that 1 Corinthians was written by Paul in
-the beginning of the good tidings--i.e., of his preaching to them of
-the Gospel. The Corinthians had been first evangelized by him three
-years before. The same phrase meets us in the same sense in Paul
-(Philippians iv, 15):--
-
-
- And ye yourselves also know, ye Philippians, that in the beginning
- of the Gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, etc.
-
-
-Altogether there are thirty passages in Clement's Epistle to the
-Corinthians which indicate more or less clearly a knowledge of the
-Pauline Epistles, including that to Hebrews. If we were tracing
-the relation of two profane authors, no scholar would hesitate to
-acknowledge a direct influence of one on the other. Merely because one
-of them happens to belong to the New Testament, such writers as Van
-Manen, W. B. Smith, et hoc genus omne, feel themselves in duty bound
-to run their heads against a brick wall. The responsibility, it must
-be admitted, lies at the door of orthodox theologians. For centuries
-independent scholars have been warned off the domain of so-called
-sacred literature. The Bible might not be treated as any other book. I
-once heard the late Canon Liddon forecast the most awful fate for
-Oxford if it ever should be. The nemesis of orthodox superstition is
-that such writers as those we are criticizing cannot bring themselves
-to treat the book fairly, as they would other literature; nor is any
-hypothesis too crazy for them when they approach Church history. The
-laity, in turn, who too often do not know their right hand from their
-left, are so justly suspicious of the evasions and arrière-pensée
-of orthodox apologists that they are ready to accept any wild and
-unscholarly theory that labels itself Rationalist.
-
-[Presuppositions of the argument from silence] The Epistles of Paul,
-then, must obviously have been widely known before Marcion issued an
-expurgated edition of them in the year 140. We have shown that many
-of them were familiar to Clement of Rome in the last decade of the
-first century. But even if we had no traces of the Pauline Epistles
-before the year 140, as Van Manen and these writers in the teeth of
-the evidence maintain, it would not follow that they were as late
-as the first irrefragable use of them by a later author. Professor
-W. B. Smith's argument is based on the supposed silence of earlier
-authors, and he entitles his chapter on this subject "Silentium
-Saeculi." A magnificent petitio principii! He has never thought
-over the aptitudes of the "argument from silence." This argument,
-as MM. Langlois and Seignobos remark in their Introduction to the
-Study of History (translation by Berry; London, Duckworth, 1898),
-
-
- is based on the absence of indications with regard to a fact. From
- the circumstance of the fact [e.g., of Paul's writing certain
- epistles] not being mentioned in any document it is inferred
- that there was no such fact.... It rests on a feeling which in
- ordinary life is expressed by saying: "If it were true, we should
- have heard of it." ... In order that such reasoning should be
- justified it would be necessary that every fact should have been
- observed and recorded in writing, and that all the records should
- have been preserved. Now the greater part of the documents which
- have been written have been lost, and the greater part of the
- events which happen are not recorded in writing. In the majority
- of cases the argument would be invalid. It must, therefore, be
- restricted to the cases where the conditions implied in it have
- been fulfilled. It is necessary not only that there should be
- now no documents in existence which mention the fact in question,
- but that there should never have been any.
-
-
-Now it is notorious that in the case of the earliest Christian
-literature there was a special cause at work of a kind to lead to
-its disappearance; this was the perpetual alteration of standards of
-belief, and the anxiety of rival schools of thought to destroy one
-another's books. The philosophic authors above cited further point
-out that "every manuscript is at the mercy of the least accident;
-its preservation or destruction is a matter of pure chance." In the
-case of Christian books malice prepense and odium theologicum were
-added to accident and mere chance.
-
-How, then, can Mr. W. B. Smith be sure that there were not fifty
-writings before the year 140 which by citation or otherwise attested
-the earlier existence of all or some of the Pauline Epistles? We
-have the merest debris of the earliest Christian literature. What
-right has he to argue as if he had the whole of it in the hollow of
-his hand? In such a context the argument from silence is absolute
-rubbish, and he ought to know it. But, alas, the orthodox apologist
-has trained him in this sphere to be content with "demonstrations"
-which in any other would be at once extinguished by ridicule.
-
-[Date of Paulines to be determined by contents] Obviously the
-genuineness and date of the Pauline Epistles can only be determined by
-their contents, and not by a supposed deficiency of allusions to them
-in a literature that is well-nigh completely lost to us. Judged by
-these considerations, and by the hundreds of undesigned coincidences
-with the Book of Acts, we must conclude in regard to most of them
-that they are from the hand of the Paul who is so familiar a figure
-in that book. The author of the Paulines has just the same supreme
-and exclusive interest in the crucifixion, death, and resurrection
-of Jesus the Messiah as the Paul of Acts; he manifests everywhere
-the same aloofness from the earthly life and teaching of Jesus. They
-yield the same story as does Acts of his birth and upbringing, of his
-persecution of the Messianist followers of Jesus and of his conversion;
-much the same record of his missionary travels can be reconstructed
-from the Letters as we have in Acts. Yet there is no sign of borrowing
-on either side. By way of casting doubt on the Pauline Letters the
-deniers of the historicity insist on the fact that in Acts there
-is no hint of Paul ever having written Epistles to the Churches
-he created or visited. Why should there be? [Undesigned agreement
-between Acts and Paulines] To a companion Paul must have been much
-more than a mere writer of letters. To Luke the letter writing must
-have seemed the least important part of Paul's activity, although
-for us the accident of their survival makes the Epistles seem of
-prime importance. In the Epistles, on the other hand, it is objected
-that there is no indication of any use of Acts. How could there be,
-seeing that the book was not penned (except on Van Manen's hypothesis)
-until long after the Epistles had been written and sent? I admit that
-Paul's account in Galatians of his personal history is difficult to
-reconcile with Acts, and has provided a regular crux for critics
-of every school. [30] The numerous coincidences, however, of the
-two writings are all the more worthy of attention. If we found them
-agreeing pat with each other we should reasonably suspect some form
-of common authorship, if not of collusion. As it is they attest one
-another very much in the way in which the letters of Cicero attest
-and are attested by Sallust, Julius Cæsar, and other contemporary
-or later writers of Roman history. There is neither that complete
-accord nor complete discord between Acts and Paulines, which would
-lead a competent historian to distrust either as fairly contemporary
-and trustworthy witnesses to the same epoch and province of history.
-
-[Paul witnesses a real Jesus] The testimony of Paul to a real and
-historical Jesus is to be gathered from those passages in which he
-directly refers to him or in which he refers to his brethren and
-disciples, for obviously a solar myth cannot have had brethren nor
-have personally commissioned disciples and apostles. I have pointed
-out in the first chapter of Myth, Magic, and Morals that the interest
-of Paul in the historical Jesus was slender, and have explained why
-it was so. But that is no excuse for ignoring it, or pretending it
-is not there.
-
-[Summary of Pauline evidence] What does it amount to? This, that
-Jesus the Messiah "was born of the seed of David according to the
-flesh" (Rom. i, 2); that "he was born of a woman, born under the
-law"--that is to say, he was born like any other man, and not, as a
-later generation believed, of a virgin mother. It means also that he
-was born into Jewish circles, and that he was brought up as a Jew,
-obedient to the Mosaic law (Gal. iv, 4). His gospel was intended "for
-the Jews in the first instance, but also for the Greeks" (Rom. i, 16,
-ii, 11). He was "made a minister of the circumcision" (Rom. xv, 8);
-in other words, he had no quarrel with circumcision, even if he did
-not go out of his way to insist on it as part of the Law which, in
-the first Gospel it is recorded, he came not to destroy but to fulfil.
-
-[Evidence of Epistles to Timothy] According to Tim. ii, 8, Jesus
-was "of the seed of David according to my gospel." This implies that
-others than Paul did not admit the Davidic ancestry of Jesus, and it is
-implicitly rejected by Jesus himself in Mark xii, 35, as I point out in
-Myth, Magic, and Morals, ch. xii. That is good proof that the Epistle
-preserves a tradition that was quite independent on the later Gospels;
-and that proves that even if the Epistles to Timothy be not Paul's,
-they are anyhow very early documents, and constitute another witness
-to the historicity of Jesus. In the first of them, ch. vi, 13, we learn
-that Christ Jesus witnessed the good confession before Pontius Pilate.
-
-[Pauline evidence as to death of Jesus,] The passages in which Paul
-insists that Jesus was crucified, died, and rose again are so numerous
-that they almost defy collection. In 1 Cor. xv, 3, Paul relates the
-story of the resurrection at length. He says he had "received" it from
-those who believed before himself. From them he had learned that Christ
-had "died for our sins," had been "buried," and "raised on the third
-day," after which he appeared first "to Cephas" or Peter, next "to the
-Twelve"--i.e., the Twelve Apostles of whom we read in the Gospels that
-Jesus chose them and sent them forth to herald to the Jews the speedy
-approach of the Kingdom of God. Next "he appeared to 500 brethren at
-once" of whom most were still alive when Paul wrote; then "to James,"
-then "to all the apostles," and "last of all" to Paul himself.
-
-[and as to his Hebrew disciples] On the strength of this last vision
-of the Lord, Paul claimed to be as good an apostle as any of those who
-were apostles before him (Gal. i, 17). Accordingly, in 1 Cor. ix, 1,
-he writes in answer to those who pooh-poohed his mission: "Am I not
-an apostle? Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" And again, 2 Cor. xi, 22,
-in the same vein: "Are they Hebrews? So am I. Are they Israelites? So
-am I. Are they the seed of Abraham? So am I. Are they ministers of
-Christ? I speak as one beside myself. I am more; in labours more
-abundantly, in prisons," etc.
-
-So 2 Cor. xii, 11: "In nothing came I behind the very chiefest
-apostles."
-
-From such passages we can realize what a purely Hebrew business the
-Church was to begin with. To be an apostle you had to be at least
-a Hebrew, and it is clear that the earlier apostles challenged the
-right of Paul to call himself an apostle on the ground that he had
-not, as they, been a personal follower of Jesus. Their challenge led
-him to preface his Epistles with an assertion of his apostleship:
-"Paul, an apostle of Messiah Jesus."
-
-We learn further (1 Cor. xi, 23 foll.) how on a certain night "the
-Lord Jesus was betrayed" or handed over to his enemies (N.B.--The
-occasion is referred to as one well known); how he then took bread,
-and when he had given thanks, brake it, etc. All this ill agrees with
-the view that Paul believed the Jesus of the Gospels to be an ancient
-Palestinian Sun-God-Saviour Joshua. We read also (1 Cor. ix, 5) that
-"the brethren of the Lord," like "the rest of the apostles and Cephas,"
-led about wives (probably spiritual ones), and Paul claims the same
-right for himself. In Galatians, ch. ii, he recounts how he went
-up to Jerusalem to visit Cephas, and tarried with him fifteen days,
-on which occasion he associated with James, the brother of the solar
-myth. On another occasion this brother of the Sun-god sent emissaries
-to Antioch to warn Peter or Cephas against eating with Gentiles, as
-Paul had taught him to do. Peter had been "intrusted with the gospel
-of the circumcision," as Paul with that of the uncircumcision. On
-this occasion there was a stand-up quarrel between Paul and the older
-apostle of the sun-myth, and Paul's Epistles ring from beginning to
-end with echoes of his quarrel over circumcision with the sun-myth's
-earlier followers.
-
-How do Mr. Robertson and his friends get round all this evidence? Their
-way out of it is beautifully simple. It consists in ruling out every
-passage as an interpolation that stands in their way. So I have seen
-an ill-tempered chess-player, when he lost his queen, kick over the
-chess-table and begin to swear. That is one device. The other is
-to pretend that the apostles with whom Paul was in personal touch
-were not apostles of the solar god, but of the Jewish high priest,
-who was also president of that secret society in whose bosom were
-acted the ritual and dramas or mystery-plays [31] of annually slain
-Joshuas, of vegetation-gods, of Osiris, Krishna, and the whole pack
-of mythical beings out of whom the Jewish Messiah Jesus was compacted.
-
-[The "myth" of the Twelve] Let us take first the "myth," as
-Mr. Robertson styles it, of the Twelve Apostles. Needless to say,
-Mr. Robertson and his friends regard the Gospel story of their choice
-and mission as a fable. But they have the bad grace to turn up afresh
-in Paul's Epistles. Away with them, therefore, exclaims Mr. Robertson;
-and his friends echo his cry.
-
-"In the documents from which all scientific study of Christian origins
-must proceed--the Epistles of Paul--there is no evidence of such a
-body" (Christianity and Mythology, p. 341).
-
-In the passage in which the Twelve are mentioned (1 Cor. xv,
-3 foll.) we are further instructed "there is one interpolation on
-another." It does not in the least matter that the passage stands in
-every manuscript, and in every ancient version and commentator. It
-offends Mr. Robertson and his friends; so we must cut it out. Bos
-locutus est; and he complacently sums up his argument (p. 342) in
-the words: "Paul, then, knew nothing of a 'twelve.'"
-
-[Difficulties about Judas] And yet he notes (p. 354) that in the
-fragments of the Peter Gospel recently recovered from the sands of
-Egypt, Jesus is still credited with twelve disciples immediately
-after the crucifixion, and it is therein related that they "wept and
-grieved" at the loss of their master. No hint, Mr. Robertson justly
-remarks, is here given of the defection of Judas from the group. No
-more is any hint given of it in Paul's Epistle. These two sources,
-therefore, support each other in a most unexpected manner in ignoring
-the Judas story. At the same time twelve disciples or apostles (in the
-context they are the same thing) are incredible as an interpolation;
-for an interpolator would have adjusted his interpolation to the early
-diffused story of Judas's treason, and have written not "the Twelve,"
-but "the Eleven."
-
-Mr. Robertson admits that "at the stage of the composition of this (the
-Peter) Gospel, the Judas myth was not current," and that therefore the
-"Judas myth" is later than that of the Twelve. It must, by parity
-of reasoning, be later than the text of Paul, which, therefore,
-if interpolated, must have been interpolated before the legend,
-if such it be, of Judas the traitor got abroad. Now we already meet
-with this legend in Mark, and it is taken over from him by the other
-evangelists, Matthew embellishing it with the tale of Judas hanging
-himself, and Luke in Acts with that of his bursting asunder. Papias,
-before A.D. 140, knew of further details of Judas's story of a most
-macabre kind; the story stood also in the lost form of gospel used by
-Celsus, about 160-180, against whom Origen wrote. The tale of Judas,
-then, was of wide and early diffusion; yet Mr. Robertson, as we have
-seen, admits that at the time when the Peter Gospel emerged the Judas
-myth was not yet abroad. Neither, then, can it have been current at the
-stage of the interpolating of Paul's Epistle, and this interpolation,
-therefore, is prior to all the Gospels, to Acts, and to the sources
-used by Papias and by the authors of the Peter Gospel and of Celsus's
-Gospel. Nevertheless, on p. 357, Mr. Robertson, as a last method of
-avoiding Paul's testimony on another point, is inclined to "decide
-with Van Manen that all the Pauline Epistles are pseudepigraphic," and
-merely express the views of "second-century Christian champions." He
-therefore commits himself to the supposition that Epistles forged
-not earlier than A.D. 130, were yet interpolated in the interests
-of a tradition in which "the Twelve are treated as holding together
-after the resurrection (p. 354)," which tradition, however, must have
-long before that date been abrogated by the growing popularity of the
-Judas myth. Could texts be treated with greater levity? I may also
-note that the inconsistency of Paul's statement that Jesus "was seen"
-by the Twelve with the Judas story was so patent to scribes of the
-third and fourth centuries that they had already begun to alter it
-in the Greek texts and versions to the statement that "he was seen by
-the Eleven." Now is it likely that Paul's text at any time would have
-been interpolated in such a way as to make it contradict so early
-and popular a Christian belief as that in the treason and hurried
-suicide of Judas? The hypothesis is absurd, and not the less absurd
-because it is framed merely to save the other hypothesis that the
-twelve apostles of the Gospels were for the authors of the Gospels
-and for their readers an allegory of the twelve signs of the Zodiac
-revolving round the solar myth Joshua. Such are the lengths to which
-the exigencies of his "mythic" system drive Mr. Robertson.
-
-[Paul testifies that the older apostles conversed with Jesus] Some
-texts which imply that Paul, if he did not actually see Jesus walking
-about on this earth, yet imply that he might have done so, he seems
-to despair of, and passes them over in silence. Such is the text,
-2 Cor. v, 16: "Wherefore we henceforth know no man after the flesh:
-even though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now we know
-him so no more."
-
-The older apostles, as is implied in verse 12 of the same chapter,
-prided themselves on their personal intercourse with Jesus, and
-twitted Paul with never having enjoyed it. Paul's answer is that
-henceforth--i.e., now that he is converted--he has no interest in any
-man, not even in Jesus, as a being of flesh and blood, but only as a
-vessel filled with the spirit of election, and so a new creature in
-Christ, the first member of the heavenly kingdom on earth. He seems
-to aver that he had actually seen his Redeemer in the flesh, but
-before he was converted. But such knowledge with him counts nothing
-in his own favour; nor will he allow it to count in favour of the
-older apostles. Their association with Jesus in the flesh failed to
-render them apostles in any other sense than his vision of the risen
-Jesus rendered him one also.
-
-But there are other texts in Paul most inconvenient to the zodiacal
-theory of the apostles. Such are the texts I have cited from
-Galatians. How does Mr. Robertson get rid of their evidence?
-
-[Epistle to Galatians attests reality of Peter, John, and James]
-He begins (p. 342) with the usual caveat that the Epistle to the
-Galatians is probably not genuine, and, even if it be, is nevertheless
-"frequently interpolated." And yet any reader, with eyes in his head
-and an intelligence behind them, must recognize in this Epistle a
-writing which, above all other ancient writings, rings true, and
-is instinct with the personality of a missionary, who in it bares
-his inmost heart to his converts. Against this impression, which
-it must leave upon anyone but a pedant, and against the fact that
-in the external tradition there is nothing to suggest either that
-it is not genuine or that it is a mass of interpolations, what has
-Mr. Robertson to offer us in support of his thesis? Nothing, except
-his ipse dixit. We are to accept on a purely philological question the
-verdict of one whose mythological equations are on a par with those
-of the editors of the Banner of Israel. However, he does condescend to
-explain away the apostles with whom, at Jerusalem, Paul held personal
-converse; and, taking from Professor W. B. Smith a cue, which is also
-caught at by Professor Drews, he assures us that the Peter (or Cephas),
-James, and John, whom Paul knew personally, were not men who had been
-"in direct intercourse with Jesus," but were merely "leaders of an
-existing sect"--i.e., of the secret sect of Jews who, after celebrating
-endless ritual dramas of annually slain Joshuas and vegetation-gods,
-had, by dint of prolonged archæological study of pagan mythology, art,
-and statuary, elaborated the four Gospels, adopted the Old Testament
-as their holy scripture, and Messianic Judaism as their distinctive
-creed; for such in essence the Christianity of the last half of the
-first century was, as even Mr. Robertson will hardly deny.
-
-But Paul (Gal. i, 18, 19) expressly ranks Peter, or Cephas, together
-with James, among the apostles, using that word in a wide sense of
-persons commissioned by Jesus; and he describes James and Cephas and
-John (ii, 9) as men "who were reputed to be pillars," or leading men
-of the Church. He declares that in the end they made friends with him,
-and arranged that he should preach the Kingdom to the uncircumcised
-Gentiles as they were doing to the circumcised Jews.
-
-[The "Twelve" were apostles of the Jewish High Priest!] Now who had
-commissioned these three apostles, if not Jesus? Who had taught them
-about the Kingdom and sent them forth to proclaim it? Mr. Robertson,
-oddly enough, scents a difficulty in the idea of a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, albeit son of Miriam a virgin, sending forth apostles; so
-he decides that "apostles" in Galatians means "the twelve apostles
-of the Patriarch, of whom he must have had knowledge" (p. 342). Of
-what Patriarch? Why, of course, "of the Patriarch or High Priest,"
-whose "twelve apostles" formed "an institution which preceded and
-survived the beginning of the Christian era" (p. 344). And, to use
-Mr. Robertson's own phrase in such connections, "the plot thickens"
-when we find (ibid.) that
-
-
- the twelve Jewish Apostles aforesaid, who were commissioned by the
- High Priest--and later by the Patriarch at Tiberias--to collect
- tribute from the scattered faithful,
-
-
-were no others than the Twelve Apostles who wrote the [And they wrote
-the Didaché!] "teaching of the Twelve Apostles," recovered in 1873
-by Bryennios! These "Judaizing apostles preached circumcision,"
-[32] and "were among the leaders of the Jesuist community in its
-pre-Pauline days."
-
-This discovery of Mr. Robertson's is of stupendous interest. It
-amounts to nothing less than this: that the pre-Pauline secret sect of
-"Jesuists" which kept up in Jerusalem the cult of the Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, with his late Persian appendage of a virgin mother Miriam;
-and, not content with doing that, padded it out with ritual dramas
-of vegetation-gods, cults of Osiris, of Dionysus, Proteus, Hermes,
-Janus, and fifty other gods and heroes (whose legends Mr. Robertson
-has studied in Smith's Dictionary of Mythology)--this sect, I say,
-had for its president the Jewish High Priest, and for its "pillars"
-the apostles, or messengers, whom the said High Priest was in the
-habit of sending out to the Jews of the Dispersion for the collection
-of the Temple tribute!
-
-This High Priest, we further learn on p. 342, was the "man" who sent
-out the apostles in the first verse of Galatians, from which apostles
-Paul expressly dissociates himself when he writes: "Paul, an apostle,
-not from men, neither through a man, but through Jesus Christ." Here
-we are to understand that Paul is pitting his Sun-God-Saviour Joshua
-against the Jewish High Priest. The Sun-god has sent him forth, though
-not the other apostles. That must be Mr. Robertson's interpretation,
-and we must give up the older and more obvious one which saw in
-the words "not from men, neither through man," no reference to a
-Jewish high priest or priests, but a mere enhancement of the claim,
-ever reiterated by Paul, that he owed his apostleship direct to the
-risen Jesus Christ and God the Father; so that he held a divine and
-spiritual, not an earthly and carnal, commission.
-
-My readers must by now feel very much like poor little Alice when
-the Black Queen was dragging her across Wonderland. If they find the
-sensation delightful, they can, I daresay, enjoy plenty more of it by
-a closer study of Mr. Robertson's books on the subject. If they do
-not like it, then they must not blame me for taking him seriously;
-for is he not acclaimed by Dr. Drews as our greatest exegete of the
-New Testament, Dr. Frazer alone excepted? Is he not the spiritual
-guide of learned German orientalists like Winckler and Jensen? Has
-not Professor W. B. Smith assured us of how much he feels he can
-learn from such a scholar and thinker, though "he has preferred not
-to poach on his preserves." [33] It is, therefore, incumbent on me
-to probe his work a little further. Let us return to the passage, 1
-Cor. xv, 5, where we are told that Jesus appeared first to Cephas. We
-have already seen that the Peter of the Gospels is in this new system
-alternately a sign of the Zodiac, a Mithraic myth, an alias of Janus,
-of Proteus, a member of any other Pantheon you like. Obviously he has
-nothing to do with Paul's acquaintance. The latter in turn is "not one
-of the pupils and companions of the crucified Jesus" (p. 348). How,
-indeed, could he be, seeing that Jesus is a Sun-god crucified upon
-the Milky Way? No, he is something much humbler--to wit, "simply one
-of the apostles of a Judaic cult that preaches circumcision," and,
-more definitely, as we have seen, one of the twelve apostles of the
-Jewish High Priest. James and John must equally have belonged to this
-interesting band of apostles.
-
-[Jesus of Nazareth was Jesus Ben Pandira,] This being so, it is
-pertinent to ask why Paul so persistently indicates that these apostles
-and pillars of the Church had seen Jesus and conversed with him in
-the flesh. To this question Mr. Robertson attempts no answer. For
-he believes that the crucified Jesus, to whom Paul refers on every
-page of his Epistles, was not the Jesus of Christian tradition,
-but "Jesus Ben Pandira, dead long before, and represented by no
-preserved biography or teachings whatever" (p. 378). This Jesus had
-"really been only hanged on a tree" (ibid.); but "the factors of
-a crucifixion myth," among which we must not forget its "phallic
-significance," for that "should connect with all its other aspects"
-(p. 375),--these factors, says Mr. Robertson, "were conceivably strong
-enough to turn the hanging into a crucifixion."
-
-[who had died one hundred years before] It follows that Paul was quite
-mistaken in indicating the apostles whom he conversed with at Jerusalem
-to be apostles of the crucified one; in order to be so, they must all
-have been over-ripe centenarians, since Pandira had died at least a
-hundred years before. It matters nothing that on the next page (379)
-Mr. Robertson entertains doubts as to whether this worthy ever lived
-at all. Who else, he asks (p. 364), could "the Pauline Jesus, who has
-taught nothing and done nothing," be, save "a doctrinal evolution from
-the Jesus of a hundred years before?" We must, he adds with delightful
-ignoratio elenchi, "perforce assume such a long evolution." Otherwise
-it would not be "intelligible that, even if he had been only hanged
-after stoning, he should by that time have come to figure mythically as
-crucified." He admits that Paul's "references to a crucified Jesus are
-constant, and offer no sign of interpolation." And he is quite ready
-to admit also that, "if the Jesus of Paul were really a personage
-put to death under Pontius Pilate, the Epistles (of Paul) would give
-us the strongest ground for accepting an actual crucifixion." But,
-alas, the Jesus put to death under Pontius Pilate, the Javelin-man,
-is no more than an allegory of Joshua the ancient Palestinian Sun-god,
-rolled up with a vegetation-god and other mythical beings, and slain
-afresh once a year. There is thus no alternative left but to identify
-Paul's crucified Jesus with Jesus Ben Pandira; and Mr. Robertson,
-with a sigh of relief, embraces the alternative, for he feels that
-Paul's evidence is menacing his whole structure.
-
-It was nasty of Paul not to indicate more clearly to us that by
-his crucified Jesus he intended Jesus Ben Pandira; and, in view of
-the circumstance that we have left to us no "biography or teachings
-whatever" of this Jesus, Paul might surely have communicated to us
-some details of his career. It would have saved Mr. Robertson the
-trouble of inventing them.
-
-[James, brother of Jesus, only in a Pickwickian sense] At first
-sight, too, it was extremely inconsiderate of Paul to "thicken the
-plot" by bringing on his stage a brother of Jesus Ben Pandira or
-of the solar myth Joshua. I am not sure which. But Mr. Robertson,
-like Alice, is out for strange adventures, and prepared to face any
-emergency. "Brother," therefore, is here to be taken in a Pickwickian
-sense only. And here we will let Dr. W. B. Smith take up the parable,
-for it is he who has, with the help of St. Jerome, found his friends
-a way out of their difficulty. Moreover, he is more in need of a way
-out than even Mr. Robertson; for he declines to admit behind Jesus of
-Nazareth even--what Mr. Robertson styles, p. 364--"a Talmudic trace of
-a Jesus (Ben Pandira), who was put to death on the eve of the Passover
-about a century before the time of Pontius Pilate." Professor Smith
-cannot hesitate, therefore, to be of opinion that, when Paul calls
-James a brother of the Lord, he does not "imply any family kinship,"
-but one of a "class of earnest Messianists, zealots of obedience"
-to the Mosaic Law. He appeals in confirmation of his conjecture to
-the apostrophe of Jesus when his mother and brethren came to arrest
-him as an ecstatic (Mark iii, 31-35):--
-
-
- Who is my mother and my brethren? ... whosoever shall do the will
- of God, the same is my brother and sister and mother.
-
-
-He also appeals to 1 Cor. ix, 5, where Paul alludes to "the brethren
-of the Lord" as claiming a right to lead about a wife that is a
-sister. And he argues that those who in Corinth, to the imperilling
-of Christian unity, said, some, "I am of Cephas"; others, "I am of
-Christ"; others, "I am of Apollos," were known as brethren of Christ,
-of Cephas, etc. Now it is true that Paul and other early Christian
-writers regarded the members of the Church as brethren or as sisters,
-just as the members of monastic society have ever styled themselves
-brothers and sisters of one another. But there is no example of a
-believer being called a brother of the Lord or of Jesus. [34] The
-passage in Mark and its parallels are, according to Professor Smith,
-purely legendary and allegorical, since he denies that Jesus ever
-lived; and he has no right, therefore, to appeal to them in order to
-decide what Paul intended by the phrase when he used it, as before,
-not of a mythical, but of a concrete, case. However, if Professor
-Smith is intent on appealing to the Gospels, then he must allow equal
-weight to such a text as Matthew xiii, 55: "Is not this the carpenter's
-son? Is not his mother called Mary? and his brethren, James and Joseph
-and Simon and Judas? And his sisters, are they not all with us?"
-
-Did all these people, we may ask, including his mother, stand in a
-merely spiritual relationship to Jesus? Impossible. If they were not
-flesh and blood relations, then the passage is meaningless even as
-allegorical romance. Again, in the very passage to which Professor
-Smith appeals (Mark iii, 31-35), we read that his mother and brethren
-came and stood without, and it was their interference with him that
-provoked the famous apostrophe. Were they, too, only spiritually
-related to him? Were they, too, "earnest Messianists, zealots of
-obedience"? In John's Gospel we hear afresh that his brethren believed
-not in him. Were they, too, mere "earnest Messianists, zealots of
-obedience"? When Josephus, again, alludes to "James the Just who was
-brother of Jesus," is he, an enemy of the Christian faith, adopting
-Christian slang? Does he, too, mean merely to "denote religious
-relation without the remotest hint of blood kinship"? In 1 Cor. ix,
-5, the most natural interpretation is that the brothers of the Lord
-are his real brothers, whose names are supplied in the Gospels.
-
-[Both in Paul and in the Gospels the "myth" has parents and brothers
-and sisters] Here, then, are four wholly independent groups of ancient
-documents, of which one gives us the names of four of the brothers of
-Jesus, clearly indicating that they were real brothers, and sons of
-Mary and the Carpenter; while the other group (the Paulines) speak
-as ever of his "brothers," but give us the name of one only, James;
-the third--viz., the works of Josephus--allude to one only--viz.,
-James, but without indicating that there were not several. Lastly,
-the we document (Acts xxi, 18) testifies that "Paul went in with us
-unto James." Is not this enough? Surely, if we were here treating of
-profane history, no sane student would for a moment hesitate to accept
-such data, furnished by wholly independent and coincident documents,
-as historical. Professor Smith's other guess, that in 1 Cor. ix,
-5, brethren means spiritual brethren, just begs the question, and,
-like his spiritual interpretation of James's relationship, offends
-Greek idiom, as I said above. Paul, like the author of Acts xxi, 17,
-speaks of "the brother" or of "the brethren"--e.g., in 1 Cor. viii,
-11: "the brother for whose sake Christ died"; but when the person
-whose brother it is is named, a blood relationship is always conveyed
-in the Paulines as in the rest of the New Testament. If "brethren
-of the Lord" in 1 Cor. ix, 5, does not mean real brethren, why are
-they distinguished from all the apostles, who on Professor Smith's
-assumption, above all others, merited to be called "brethren of the
-Lord"? The appeal, moreover, to 1 Cor. i, 12 foll., is absurd; for
-Paul is alluding there to factions among the believers of Corinth;
-how is it possible to interpret these factions as brotherhoods? There
-was only one brotherhood of the faithful, according to Paul's ideal;
-and the relationship involved in such phrases as "I of Cephas," "I of
-Paul," is that of a convert to his teacher and evangelist, not that of
-spiritual brethren to each other. As used by his Corinthian converts,
-such phrases were a direct menace to spiritual brotherhood and unity,
-and not an expression of it; and that is why Paul wished to hear no
-more of them. When he makes appeal to them Professor Smith damages
-rather than benefits his argument.
-
-[Jerome's opinion about Jesus's brothers] There remains the appeal
-to Jerome (Ecce Deus, p. 237):--
-
-
- No less an authority than Jerome has expressed the correct idea
- on this point. In commenting on Gal. i, 19, he says (in sum):
- "James was called the Lord's brother on account of his high
- character, his incomparable faith, and his extraordinary wisdom;
- the other apostles are also called brothers" (John xx, 17).
-
-
-Here Professor Smith withholds from his readers the fact that Jerome
-regarded James the brother of Jesus as his first cousin. It is just as
-difficult for a mythical personage to have a first cousin as to have
-a brother. Moreover, the reasons which actuated Jerome to deny that
-Jesus had real brethren was--as the Encyclopædia Biblica (art. James)
-points out--"a prepossession in favour of the perpetual virginity
-of Mary the mother of Jesus." It is, indeed, a hollow theory that,
-in order to its justification, must take refuge in the Encratite
-rubbish of Jerome.
-
-[Mutual independence of Pauline and Gospel stories of the risen Christ]
-If the crucified Jesus of Paul was Jesus Ben Pandira, stoned to death
-and hanged on a tree between the years B.C. 106-79, then how can Paul
-have written (1 Cor. xv, 6) that the greater part of the 500 brethren
-to whom Jesus appeared were still alive? I neither assert nor deny
-the possibility of so many at once having fallen under the spell of a
-common illusion, though I believe the annals of religious ecstasy might
-afford parallels. But this I do maintain, that the passage records a
-conviction in Paul's mind that Jesus, after his death by crucifixion,
-had appeared to many at once, and that not a hundred years before,
-but at a comparatively recent time. That is also Mr. Robertson's view;
-for, rather than face the passage, he whips out his knife and cuts it
-out of the text. Yet there is not a single reason for doing so, except
-that it upsets his hypothesis; for the circumstance that the incident
-cannot be reconciled with the Gospel stories of the apparitions of
-the risen Christ clearly shows that Paul's text is independent on
-them. Mr. Robertson argues that, if it were not a late interpolation,
-the evangelists would have found it in Paul and incorporated it in
-their Gospels. I ask in turn, why did the interpolator thrust into
-the Pauline letter not only this passage, but at least two other
-incidents (the apparitions to Peter and James) which figure in no
-canonical Gospel? Why, if the Evangelists were bound to consult the
-Paulines in giving an account of these posthumous appearances, was
-not the hypothetical interpolator of the Paulines equally bound to
-consult them? The most natural hypothesis is that the Gospels on one
-side and the Pauline Epistles on the other led independent lives,
-till their respective traditions were so firmly fixed that no one
-could tamper with either of them. The conflict, therefore, such as
-it is, between this Pauline passage and the Gospels is the strongest
-possible proof of its genuineness.
-
-[The Pauline account of the Eucharist] Mr. Robertson's treatment of the
-Pauline description of the origin of the Lord's Supper as described in
-1 Cor. xi, 23-27, is another example of his determination simply to
-rule out all evidence which he cannot explain away. "It is evident,"
-he writes (p. 347), that this whole passage, "or at least the first
-part of it, is an interpolation." We would expect him to produce
-support for this view from some MS. or ancient version for what is so
-evident. Not at all; for he takes no interest in, and has no turn for,
-the scientific criticism of texts a posteriori, but deals with them by
-a priori intuitions of his own. "The passage in question (verses 23,
-24, 25) has every appearance of being an interpolation." He is the
-first to discover such an appearance. It is well known that the words
-"took bread" as far as "in my blood" recur in Luke xxii, 19, 20; and
-this is how Mr. Robertson deals with the problem of their recurrence:
-"No one pretends that the Third Gospel was in existence in Paul's
-time; and the only question is whether Luke copied the Epistle or a
-late copyist supplemented the Epistle from Luke."
-
-Surely there is another alternative--viz., that a copyist of Luke
-supplemented the Gospel from Paul. This is as conceivable as that
-a copyist of Paul supplemented the Epistle from Luke. It is also an
-hypothesis that has textual evidence in favour of it; for the Bezan
-Codex and several old Latin MSS., as well as the old Syriac version,
-omit the words, which is given on your behalf, as far as on your behalf
-is shed--that is to say, the end of verse 19 and the whole of verse
-20. But, since the Bezan omission does not cover the whole of the
-matter taken from Corinthians, we may suppose that Luke borrowed the
-words from the Epistle in question. Here we have a palmary example of
-the mingled temerity and ignorance with which Mr. Robertson applies
-his principle of "vital interpolations" to remove anything from
-the New Testament texts which stands in the way of his far-fetched
-hypotheses and artificial combinations.
-
-[Jesus Ben Pandira in Talmud is Jesus of Nazareth] But it is
-time to inquire whence Mr. Robertson derived his certainty
-that Jesus Ben Pandira died in the reign of Alexander Jannaeus,
-B.C. 106-79. Dr. Samuel Kraus, in his exhaustive study of Talmudic
-notices of Jesus of Nazareth (Das Leben Jesu nach jüdischen Quellen,
-Berlin, 1902, p. 242) assumes as a fact beyond dispute that the
-Jeschu or Joshua Ben Pandira (or Ben Stada or Ben Satda) mentioned
-in the Toldoth Jeschu is Jesus of Nazareth. In the Toldoth he is set
-in the reign of Tiberius. This Toldoth is not earlier than A.D. 400,
-and took its information from the pseudo-Hegesippus. The Spanish
-historian Abraham b. Daûd (about A.D. 1100) already noticed that
-the Talmudic tradition alluded to by Mr. Robertson set the birth of
-Jesus of Nazareth a hundred years too early; but the same tradition
-corrects itself in that it assigns Salome Alexandra to Alexander
-Jannai as his wife, and then, confusing her with Queen Helena the
-proselyte, brings the incident down to the right date. "The truth is,"
-says Dr. Kraus (p. 183), "we have got to do here with a chronological
-error." Lightfoot, to whose Horæ Hebraicæ Mr. Robertson refers in his
-footnote (p. 363), also assumed that by Jesus Ben Pandira, or son of
-Panthera, the Talmudists intended Jesus of Nazareth. Celsus (about
-A.D. 170) attested a Jewish tradition that Jesus Christ was Mary's
-son by a Roman soldier named Panthera, and later on even Christian
-writers worked Panthera into Mary's pedigree. Such is the origin of the
-Talmudic tradition exploited by Mr. Robertson. It is almost worthless;
-but, so far as it goes, it overthrows Mr. Robertson's hypothesis.
-
-[The disputed Epistles of Paul so many fresh witnesses] The Epistles
-to Colossians, Thessalonians, and the so-called Pastorals, if they are
-not genuine works of Paul, form so many fresh witnesses against the
-hypothesis of Mr. Robertson and his friends. Such a verse as Col. ii,
-14, where in highly metaphorical language Jesus is said to have
-nailed the bond of all our trespasses to the cross, is an unmistakable
-allusion to the historical crucifixion; as also is the phrase "blood of
-his cross" in the same epistle, i, 20. In 1 Thess. iv, 14, is attested
-the belief that Jesus died and rose again; and again in v, 10. I have
-already indicated the express reference to the crucifixion under
-Pontius Pilate in 1 Tim. v, 13, and the statement in 2 Tim. ii, 8,
-that Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, was of the seed of David. These
-epistles may not be from Paul's hand, but they are unmistakably early;
-and their forgers, if they be forged, undoubtedly held that Jesus had
-really lived. So also did the author, whoever he was, of Hebrews,
-who speaks, ch. ii, 9, of Jesus suffering death, in ii, 18, of his
-"having suffered, being tempted." In vii, 14, we read this: "For it
-is evident that our Lord hath sprung out of Judah." If Jesus was only
-a myth, how could this writer have written, probably before A.D. 70,
-that he was of the tribe of Judah? In ch. xii, 2, we are told that
-Jesus "endured the cross." That this epistle was penned before the
-destruction of Jerusalem by Titus is made probable by the statement
-in ix, 8, that "the first tabernacle is yet standing." Indeed, most
-of the epistle is turned into nonsense by any other hypothesis.
-
-[Catholic Epistles] The first Epistle of Peter is very likely
-pseudepigraphic, but it cannot be later than the year 100. It
-testifies, iv, 1, that Christ "suffered in the flesh."
-
-The Johannine Epistles are probably from the same hand as the Fourth
-Gospel, and belong to the period 90-110 A.D. Their author insists
-(1 John iv, 2), as against the Docetes, that "Jesus Christ is come
-in the flesh."
-
-The Epistle of Jude, about the same date, exhorts those to whom it
-was addressed to "remember the words which have been spoken before
-by the Apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ."
-
-[Book of Revelation] Lastly, the Revelation of John can be definitely
-dated about A.D. 93. It testifies to the existence of several churches
-in Asia Minor in that age, and, in spite of the fanciful and oriental
-character of its imagery, it is from beginning to end irreconcilable
-with the supposition that its author did not believe in a Jesus who
-had lived, died, and was coming again to establish the new Jerusalem
-on earth. In ch. xxii, 16, Jesus is made to testify that he is the
-root and offspring of David. That does not look as if its author
-regarded Jesus as a solar or any other sort of myth.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-EXTERNAL EVIDENCE
-
-
-[Evidence of Josephus] It remains to examine how this school
-of writers handle the evidence with regard to the earliest
-church supplied by Jewish or Pagan writers. I have said enough
-incidentally of the evidence of the Talmud and Toldoth Jeschu, but
-there remains that of Josephus. In the work on the Antiquities of
-the Jews, Bk. xviii, 5, 2 (116 foll.), there is an account of John
-the Baptist, and it is narrated that Herod, fearing an insurrection
-of John's followers, threw him in bonds into the castle of Machaerus,
-and there murdered him. Afterwards, when Herod's army was destroyed,
-the Jewish population attributed the disaster to the wrath of God,
-and saw in it a retribution for slaying so just a man. [35] On the
-whole, Josephus's account accords with the picture we have of John
-in the Synoptic Gospels, except that in the Gospels the place and
-circumstances of his murder are differently given. This difference is
-good evidence that Josephus's account is independent of the Christian
-sources. Nevertheless, Dr. Drews airily pretends that there is a
-strong suspicion of its being a forgery by some Christian hand. As
-for John the Baptist as we meet him in the Gospels, he is, says Drews,
-no historical personage. One expects some reason to be given for this
-negative conclusion, but gets none whatever except a magnificent hint
-that "a complete understanding of the baptism in the Jordan can only
-be attained, if here, too, we take into consideration the translation
-of the baptism into astrological terms" (Christ Myth, p. 121).
-
-[The astral John Baptist] And he proceeds to dilate on the thesis that
-the baptism of Jesus in the Jordan was "the reflection upon earth of
-what originally took place among the stars." This discovery rests
-on an equation--pre-philological, of course, like that of "Maria"
-with "Myrrha"--of the name "John" or "Jehohanan" with "Oannes" or
-"Ea," the Babylonian Water-god. However, this writer is here not a
-little incoherent, for only on the page before he has assured us,
-as of something unquestionable, that John was closely related to the
-Essenes, and baptized the penitents in the Jordan in the open air. Was
-Jordan, too, up in heaven? Were the Essenes there also? Mr. Robertson,
-of course, pursues the same simple method of disposing of adverse
-evidence, and asserts (p. 396) that Josephus's account of John "is
-plainly open to that suspicion of interpolation which, in the case
-of the allusion to Jesus in the same book (Antiq., xviii, 3, 3),
-has become for most critics a certainty." He does not condescend
-to inform his readers that the latter passage [36] is absent from
-important MSS., was unknown to Origen, and is therefore rightly
-bracketed by editors; whereas the account of John is in all MSS.,
-and was known to Origen. But as we have seen before, Mr. Robertson is
-one of those gifted people who can discern by peculiar intuitions of
-their own that everything is interpolated in an author which offends
-their prejudices. He has a lofty contempt for the careful sifting of
-the textual tradition, the examination of MSS. and ancient versions
-to which a scholar resorts, before he condemns a passage of an ancient
-author as an interpolation. Moreover, a scholar feels himself bound to
-show why a passage was interpolated, in whose interests. For, regarded
-as an interpolation, a passage is as much a problem to him as it was
-before. Its genesis has still to be explained. But Messrs. Robertson
-and Drews and Smith do not condescend to explain anything or give
-any reasons. A passage slays their theories; therefore it is a "vital
-interpolation." It is the work of an ancient enemy sowing tares amid
-their wheat.
-
-[Josephus's reference to James, brother of Jesus] John the Baptist
-having been removed in this cavalier fashion from the pages of
-Josephus, we can hardly expect James the brother of Jesus to be left,
-and he is accordingly kicked out without ceremony. It does not matter
-a scrap that the passage (Antiquities xx, 9, 1, 200) stands in the
-Greek MSS. and in the Latin Version. As Professor W. B. Smith's
-argument on the point is representative of this class of critics,
-we must let him speak first (p. 235):--
-
-
- Origen thrice quotes as from Josephus the statement that the
- Jewish sufferings at the hands of Titus were a divine retribution
- for the slaying of James.
-
-
-He then proceeds to quote the text of Origen, Against Celsus, i, 47,
-giving the reference, but mangling in the most extraordinary manner
-a text that is clear and consecutive. For Origen begins (ch. xlvii)
-by saying that Celsus "somehow accepted John as a Baptist who baptized
-Jesus," and then adds the following:--
-
-
- In the Eighteenth Book of his Antiquities of the Jews Josephus
- bears witness to John as having been a Baptist, and as promising
- purification to those who underwent the rite. Now this writer,
- although not believing in Jesus as the Christ, in seeking after the
- cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple,
- whereas he ought to have said that the conspiracy against Jesus was
- the cause of these calamities befalling the people since they put
- to death Christ, who was a prophet, says, nevertheless--although
- against his will, not far from the truth--that these disasters
- happened to the Jews as a punishment for the death of James the
- Just, who was a brother of Jesus called Christ, the Jews having
- put him to death, although he was a man most distinguished for
- his righteousness (i.e., strict observance of the law).
-
-
-In a later passage of the same treatise (ii, 13), which Mr. Smith cites
-correctly, Origen refers again to the same passage of the Antiquities
-(xx, 200) thus: "Titus demolished Jerusalem, as Josephus writes,
-on account of James the Just, the brother of Jesus, the so-called
-Christ." Also in Origen's commentary on Matthew xiii, 55, we have a
-like statement that the sufferings of the Jews were a punishment for
-the murder of James the Just.
-
-Origen therefore cites Josephus thrice about James, and in each
-case he has in mind the same passage--viz., xx, 200. But Mr. Smith,
-after citing the shorter passage, Contra Celsum, ii, 13, goes on
-as follows:--
-
-
- The passage is still found in some Josephus manuscripts; but,
- as it is wanting in others, it is, and must be, regarded as a
- Christian interpolation older than Origen.
-
-
-Will Mr. Smith kindly tell us which are the MSS. in which are found
-any passage or passages referring the fall of Jerusalem to the death of
-James, and so far contradicting Josephus's interpretation of Ananus's
-death in the History of the Jewish War, iv, 5, 2. Niese, the latest
-editor, knows of none, nor did any previous editor know of any.
-
-Mr. Smith then proceeds thus:--
-
-
- Now, since this phrase is certainly interpolated in the one place,
- the only reasonable conclusion is that it is interpolated in
- the other.
-
-
-But "this phrase" never stood in Josephus at all, even as an
-interpolation, and on examination it turns out that Professor Smith's
-prejudice against the passage in which Josephus mentions James, is
-merely based on the muddle committed by Origen. Such are the arguments
-by which he seeks to prove that Josephus's text was interpolated by
-a Christian, as if a Christian interpolator, supposing there had
-been one (and he has left no trace of himself), would not, as the
-protest of Origen sufficiently indicates, have represented the fall of
-Jerusalem as a divine punishment, not for the slaying of James, but
-for the slaying of Jesus. Having demolished the evidence of Josephus
-in such a manner, Mr. Smith heads ten of his pages with the words,
-"The Silence of Josephus," as if he had settled all doubts for ever
-by mere force of his erroneous ipse dixit.
-
-[The testimony of Tacitus] The next section of Professor Smith's work
-(Ecce Deus) is headed with the same effrontery of calm assertion:
-"The Silence of Tacitus." This historian relates (Annals, xv, 44)
-that Nero accused the Christians of having burned down Rome. Nero
-
-
- subjected to most exquisite tortures those whom, hated for
- their crimes, the populace called Chrestians. The author of this
- name, Christus, had been executed in the reign of Tiberius by
- the Procurator Pontius Pilate; and, though repressed for the
- moment, the pernicious superstition was breaking forth again,
- not only throughout Judæa, the fountain-head of this mischief,
- but also throughout the capital, where all things from anywhere
- that are horrible or disgraceful pour in together and are made
- a religion of.
-
-
-In the sequel Tacitus describes how an immense multitude, less for the
-crime of incendiarism than in punishment of their hatred of humanity,
-were convicted; how some were clothed in skins of wild beasts and
-thrown to dogs, while others were crucified or burned alive. Nero's
-savagery was such that it awoke the pity even of a Roman crowd for
-his victims.
-
-Such a passage as the above, written by Tacitus soon after A.D. 100, is
-somewhat disconcerting to our authors. Professor Smith, proceeding on
-his usual innocent assumption that the whole of the ancient literature,
-Christian and profane, of this epoch lies before him, instead of a
-scanty débris of it, votes it to be a forgery. Why? Because Melito,
-Bishop of Sardis about 170 A.D., is the first writer who alludes to
-it in a fragment of an apology addressed to a Roman Emperor. As if
-there were not five hundred striking episodes narrated by Tacitus,
-yet never mentioned by any subsequent writer at all. Would Mr. Smith
-on that account dispute their authenticity? It is only because this
-episode concerns Christianity and gets in the way of his theories,
-that he finds it necessary to cut it out of the text. You can prove
-anything if you cook your evidence, and the wanton mutilation of
-texts which no critical historian has ever called in question is a
-flagrant form of such cookery. In the hands of these writers facts
-are made to fit theory, not theory to fit facts.
-
-[Testimony of Clement agrees with Tacitus] I hardly need add that
-the narrative of Tacitus is frank, straightforward, and in keeping
-with all we know or can infer in regard to Christianity in that
-epoch. Mr. E. G. Hardy, in his valuable book Christianity and the Roman
-Government (London, 1894, p. 70), has pointed out that "the mode of
-punishment was that prescribed for those convicted of magic," and that
-Suetonius uses the term malefica of the new religion--a term which has
-this special sense. Magicians, moreover, in the code of Justinian,
-which here as often reflects a much earlier age, are declared to be
-"enemies of the human race." Nor is it true that Nero's persecution
-as recorded in Tacitus is mentioned by no writer before Melito. It
-is practically certain that Clement, writing about A.D. 95, refers to
-it. He records that a poly plêthos, or vast multitude of Christians,
-the ingens multitudo of Tacitus, perished in connection with the
-martyrdom of Peter and Paul. He speaks of the manifold insults and
-torments of men, the terrible and unholy outrages upon women, in
-terms that answer exactly to the two phrases of Tacitus: pereuntibus
-addita ludibria and quaesitissimae poenae. Women, he implies, were,
-"like Dirce, fastened on the horns of bulls, or, after figuring as
-Danaides in the arena, were exposed to the attacks of wild beasts"
-(Hardy, op. cit., p. 72). [Drews on Poggio's interpolations of Tacitus]
-However, Drews is not content with merely ousting the passage from
-Tacitus, but undertakes to explain to his readers how it got there. It
-was, he conjectures, made up out of a similar passage read in the
-Chronicle of Sulpicius Severus (written about 407) by some clever
-forger, probably Poggio, who smuggled it into the text of Tacitus, "a
-writer whose text is full of interpolations." It is hardly necessary
-to inform an educated reader, firstly, that the text of Tacitus is
-recognized by all competent Latin scholars to be remarkably free from
-interpolations; secondly, that Severus merely abridged his account
-of Nero's persecution from the narrative he found in Tacitus, an
-author whom he frequently copied and imitated; thirdly, that Poggio,
-the supposed interpolator, lived in the fifteenth century, whereas
-our oldest MS. of this part of Tacitus is of the eleventh century;
-it is now in the Laurentian Library. I should advise Dr. Drews to
-stick to his javelin-man story, and not to venture on incursions into
-the field of classical philology.
-
-[Pliny's letter to Trajan] Having dispatched Josephus and Tacitus,
-and printed over their pages in capitals the titles The Silence of
-Josephus and The Silence of Tacitus, these authors, needless to say,
-have no difficulty with Pliny and Suetonius. The former, in his
-letter (No. 96) to Trajan, gives some particulars of the Christians
-of Bithynia, probably obtained from renegades. They asserted that
-the gist of their offence or error was that they were accustomed on a
-regularly recurring day to meet before dawn, and repeat in alternating
-chant among themselves a hymn to Christ as to a God; they also bound
-themselves by a holy oath not to commit any crime, neither theft,
-nor brigandage, nor adultery, and not to betray their word or deny a
-deposit when it was demanded. After this rite was over they had had
-the custom to break up their meeting, and to come together afresh
-later in the day to partake of a meal, which, however, was of an
-ordinary and innocent kind.
-
-In this repast we recognize the early eucharist at which Christians
-were commonly accused of devouring human flesh, as the Jews are accused
-by besotted fanatics of doing in Russia to-day, and by Mr. Robertson in
-ancient Jerusalem. Hence Pliny's proviso that the food they partook of
-was ordinary and innocent. The passage also shows that this eucharistic
-meal was not the earliest rite of the day, like the fasting communion
-of the modern Ritualist, but was held later in the day. Lastly, the
-qualification that they sang hymns to Christ as to a God, though to
-Pliny it conveyed no more than the phrase "as if to Apollo," or "as
-if to Aesculapius," clearly signifies that the person so honoured was
-or had been a human being. Had he been a Sun-god Saviour, the phrase
-would be hopelessly inept. This letter and Trajan's answer to it were
-penned about 110 A.D.
-
-Of this letter Professor W. B. Smith writes (p. 252) that in it
-"there is no implication, not even the slightest, touching the purely
-human reality of the Christ or Jesus." Let us suppose the letter had
-referred to the cult of Augustus Cæsar, and that we read in it of
-people who, by way of honouring his memory, met on certain days and
-sang a hymn to Augustus quasi deo, "as to a God." We know that the
-members of a college of Augustals did so meet in most cities of the
-Roman Empire. Well, would Mr. Smith contend in such a case that the
-letter carried no implication, not even the slightest, touching the
-purely human reality of the Augustus or Cæsar? Of course he would
-not. If this letter were the sole record in existence of early
-Christianity, we might perhaps hesitate about its implications;
-but it is in the characteristic Latin which no one, so far as we
-know, ever wrote, except the younger Pliny, and is accompanied by
-Trajan's answer, couched in an equally characteristic style. It is,
-moreover, but one link in a long chain, which as a whole attests and
-presupposes the reality of Jesus. Mr. Smith, however, does not seem
-quite sure of his ground, for in the next sentence he hints that
-after all Pliny's letter is not genuine. These writers are not the
-first to whom this letter has proved a pons asinorum. Semler began
-the attack on its genuineness in 1784; and others, who desired to
-eliminate all references to Christianity in early heathen writers,
-have, as J. B. Lightfoot has remarked (Apostolic Fathers, Pt. II,
-vol. i, p. 55), followed in his wake. Their objections do not merit
-serious refutation.
-
-[Evidence of Suetonius] There remains Suetonius, who in ch. xxv of his
-life of Claudius speaks of Messianic disturbances at Rome impulsore
-Chresto. Claudius reigned from 41-54, and the passage may possibly
-be an echo of the conflict, clearly delineated in Acts and Paulines
-between the Jews and the followers of the new Messiah. [37] Itacism
-or interchange of "e" and "i" being the commonest of corruptions in
-Greek and Latin MSS., we may fairly conjecture Christo in the source
-used by Suetonius, who wrote about the year 120. Christo, which means
-Messiah, is intelligible in relation to Jews, but not Chresto; and the
-two words were identical in pronunciation. Drews of course upholds
-Chresto, and in Tacitus would substitute for Christiani Chrestiani;
-for this there is indeed manuscript support, but it is gratuitous
-to argue as he does that the allusion is to Serapis or Osiris,
-who were called Chrestos "the good" by their votaries. He does not
-condescend to adduce any evidence to show that in that age or any
-other Chrestos, used absolutely, signified Osiris or Serapis; and
-there is no reason to suppose it ever had such a significance. He is
-on still more precarious ground when he surmises that Nero's victims
-at Rome were not followers of Christ, but of Serapis, and were called
-Chrestiani by the mob ironically, because of their vices. Here we
-begin to suspect that he is joking. Why should worshippers of Serapis
-have been regarded as specially vicious by the Roman mob? Jews and
-Christians were no doubt detested, because they could not join in
-any popular festivities or thanksgivings. But there was nothing to
-prevent votaries of Serapis or Osiris from doing so, nor is there
-any record of their being unpopular as a class.
-
-In his life of Nero, Suetonius, amid a number of brief notices,
-apparently taken from some annalistic work, includes the following:
-"The Christians were visited with condign punishments--a race of men
-professing a new and malefic superstition." On this passage I have
-commented above (p. 161).
-
-[Origin of the name "Christian"] Characteristically enough, Dr. Drews
-assumes, without a shadow of argument, that the famous text in Acts
-which says that the followers of Jesus were first called Christians
-in Antioch is an interpolation. It stands in the way of his new thesis
-that the Roman people called the followers of Serapis--who was Chrestos
-or "good"--Chrestiani, because they were precisely the contrary. [38]
-Tacitus does not say that Nero's victims were so called because of
-their vices. That is a gloss put on the text by Drews. We only learn
-(a) that they were hated by the mob for their vices, and (b) that
-the mob at that time called them Chrestiani. His use of the imperfect
-tense appellabat indicates that in his own day the same sect had come
-to be known under their proper appellation as Christiani. In A.D. 64,
-he implies, a Roman mob knew no better.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE ART OF CRITICISM
-
-
-[Repudiation by the partisans of non-historicity of Jesus of regular
-historical method] Let us pause here and try to frame some ideas of
-the methods of this new school which denies that Jesus ever lived:--
-
-Firstly, they are all agreed that the method they would apply to all
-other figures in ancient history--for example, to Apollonius--shall
-not be used in connection with Jesus. They carelessly deride "the
-attempt of historical theologians to reach the historical nucleus of
-the Gospels by purely philological means" (The Witnesses, p. 129). "The
-process," writes Mr. Robertson, "of testing the Synoptic Gospels down
-to an apparent nucleus of primitive narrative" ... "this new position
-is one of retreat, and is not permanently tenable" (Christianity and
-Mythology, p. 284).
-
-If this be so, we had better abolish our chairs of history at the
-universities, and give up teaching it in the schools; for, in the
-absence of the camera and gramophone, this method is the only one we
-can use. When a Mommsen sets Polybius's, Livy's, and Plutarch's lives
-of Hannibal side by side and "tests them down to an apparent nucleus
-of primitive narrative," does Mr. Robertson take him as a text for a
-disquisition on "the psychological Resistance to Evidence"? If not,
-why does he forbid us to take the score or so of independent memories
-and records of the career of Jesus which we have in ancient literature
-between the years A.D. 50 and 120, and to try to sift them down? Why,
-without any evidence, should we rush to the conclusion that the
-figure on whom they jointly converge was a Sun-god, solar myth,
-or vegetation sprite?
-
-[New Testament literature taken en bloc] Secondly, we may note how
-this disinclination to sift sources and test documents prompts them
-to take en bloc sources and documents which arose separately and
-in succession. Yet it is not simple laziness which dictates to them
-this short and easy method of dealing with ancient documents. Rather
-they have inherited it from the old-fashioned orthodox teachers of
-a hundred years ago, who, convinced of the verbal inspiration of the
-Bible, forbade us to estimate one passage as evidence more highly than
-another. All the verses of the Bible were on a level, as also all the
-incidents, and to argue that one event might have happened, but not
-another, was rank blasphemy. All were equally certain, for inspiration
-is not given by measure. Their mantle has fallen on Mr. Robertson
-and his friends. All or none is their method; but, whereas all was
-equally certain, now all is equally myth. "A document," says (p. 159)
-the excellent work by MM. Langlois and Seignobos which I cited above,
-
-
- (still more a literary work) is not all of a piece; it is composed
- of a great number of independent statements, any one of which
- may be intentionally or unintentionally false, while the others
- are bonâ fide and accurate.... It is not, therefore, enough to
- examine a document as a whole; each of the statements in it must
- be examined separately; criticism is impossible without analysis.
-
-
-We have beautiful examples of such mixed criticism and analysis in
-the commentaries on the Synoptics of Wellhausen and Loisy, both of
-them Freethinkers in the best sense of the word.
-
-[Incapacity of this school to understand evolution of Christian ideas,]
-I have given several minor examples of the obstinacy with which
-the three writers I am criticizing shut their eyes to the gradual
-evolution of Christian ideas; they exhibit the same perversity in
-respect of the great development of Christological thought already
-traceable in the New Testament.
-
-Paul conceived of Jesus as a Jewish teacher elevated through his
-death and resurrection to the position of Messiah and Son of God. On
-earth he is still a merely human being, born naturally, and subject
-to the law--a weak man of flesh. Raised from the dead by the energy
-of the Spirit, he becomes future judge of mankind, and his gospel
-transcends all distinctions of Jew and Gentile, bondsman or free. In
-Mark he is still merely human; he is the son of Joseph and Mary,
-born and bred like their other sons and daughters. As a man he
-comes to John the Baptist, like others, to confess and repent of
-his sins, and wash them away in Jordan's holy stream. Not till then
-does the descent of the Spirit on him, as he goes up from the Jordan,
-confer a Messiahship on him, which his followers only recognize later
-on. Astounding miracles and prodigies, however, are already credited
-to him in this our earliest Gospel. In the non-Marcan document, or Q,
-so far as we can reconstruct it, he has become Messiah through baptism
-(supposing this section to have belonged to Q, and not to some other
-document used by Luke and Matthew); but few or no miracles [39]
-are as yet credited to him, and the document contained little except
-his teaching. His death has none of the importance assigned to it by
-Paul, and is not mentioned; his resurrection does not seem to have
-been heard of by the author of this document. In Matthew and Luke
-the figure before us is much the same as in Mark; but human traits,
-such as his mother's distrust of his mission, are effaced. We hear
-no more of his inability to heal those who did not believe in him,
-and we get in their early chapters hints of his miraculous birth. In
-John there is, indeed, no hint of such birth; but, on the other hand,
-the entire Gospel is here rewritten to suit a new conception of him as
-the divine, eternal Logos. Demonology tales are ruled out. His rôle
-as a Jewish Messiah, faithful to the law, has finally retired into
-the background, together with that tense expectation of the end of
-the world, of the final judgment and installation in Palestine of a
-renovated kingdom of David, which inspires the teaching and parables
-of the Synoptic Gospels, just as it inspired Philo, and the Apocalypse
-of the Fourth Esdras and other contemporary Jewish apocrypha.
-
-[especially in connection with the legend of Virgin Birth,] Now,
-in Mr. W. B. Smith's works this development of doctrine about
-Jesus, this succession of phases, is not only reversed, but, with
-singular perversity, turned upside down. Similarly, Mr. Robertson
-and Dr. Drews, in order to secure a favourable reception for their
-hypothesis that Jesus was a Sun-god, insist in the teeth of the
-evidence that the belief in the Virgin Birth was part and parcel of
-the earliest tradition. As a matter of fact, it was comparatively
-late, as the heortology or history of the feasts of the Church
-shows. Of specially Christian feasts, the first was the Sunday,
-which commemorated every week the Resurrection, and the hope of the
-Parousia, or Second Coming. The next was the Epiphany, on January 6,
-commemorative of the baptism when the Holy Spirit descended on Jesus
-and conferred Messiahship.
-
-This feast we cannot trace before the year 125 or 150, and then only
-among Basilidians; among Catholics hardly before 300. Just as the story
-of the Virgin Birth was the latest addition to evangelical tradition,
-so it was the latest of the dominical feasts; and not till 354 did it
-obtain separate recognition in Rome on December 25. Of the feast of the
-Annunciation and of the other feasts of the Virgin we first hear in the
-sixth and succeeding centuries. From this outline we can realize at
-how late a period the legend of the Virgin Birth influenced the mind
-of the Church at large; yet Mr. Robertson, to smooth the way for his
-"mythic" theory, pretends that it was the earliest of all Christian
-beliefs, and without a tittle of evidence invents a pre-Christian
-Saviour-Sun-god Joshua, born of a virgin, Miriam. The whole monstrous
-conception is a preposterous coinage of his brain, a figment unknown to
-anyone before himself and bristling with impossibilities. Witness the
-following passage (p. 284 of Christianity and Mythology), containing
-nearly as many baseless fancies as it contains words:--
-
-
- The one tenable historic hypothesis left to us at this stage
- is that of a preliminary Jesus "B.C.," a vague cult-founder
- such as the Jesus ben Pandira of the Talmud, put to death for
- (perhaps anti-Judaic) teachings now lost; round whose movement
- there might have gradually clustered the survivals of an ancient
- solar or other worship of a Babe Joshua son of Miriam.
-
-
-Such is the gist of the speculations of Messrs. Drews and Robertson,
-as far removed from truth and reality as the Athanasian Creed and
-from sane criticism as the truculent buffooneries of the Futurists
-from genuine art.
-
-We have more than once criticized this tendency of Mr. Robertson to
-insist on the primitiveness of the Virgin Birth legend. He urges it
-throughout his volume, although here and there he seems to see the
-truth, as, e.g., on p. 189, where he remarks that "only the late
-Third Gospel tells the story" of Mary and Joseph going to Bethlehem
-to be taxed, and "that the narrative in Matthew" was "added late to
-the original composition, which obviously began at what is now the
-third chapter." If the legend was part of the earliest tradition,
-why does it figure for the first time in the late Third Gospel and in
-a late addition to the first? In another passage he assures us that
-chapters i and ii of Luke are "a late fabulous introduction." Clearly,
-his view is that, just in proportion as any part of the Gospels is
-late, the tradition it contains must be early; and he it is who talks
-about "the methodless subjectivism" of Dr. Pfleiderer, who, he says,
-"like Matthew Arnold, accepts what he likes" (p. 450).
-
-[and in connection with Schmiedel's "Pillars"] The same inability to
-distinguish what is early from what is late is shown by Mr. Robertson
-in his criticism of Dr. Schmiedel's "pillars"--i.e., the nine Gospel
-texts (seven of them in Mark)--"which cannot have been invented by
-believers in the godhood of Jesus, since they implicitly negate that
-godhood." Of these, one is Mark x, 17 ff., where Jesus uses--to one
-who had thrown himself at his feet with the words: "Good teacher,
-what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" (i.e., life in the kingdom
-to come)--the answer: "Why callest thou me good? No one is good,
-save one--to wit, God." Here many ancient sources intensify Jesus's
-refusal of a predicate which is God's alone; for they run: "Call thou
-me not good." This apart, the Second and Third Gospels may be said
-to agree in reading, "Good master," and, "Why callest thou me good?"
-
-In Matthew, however (xix, 16), we read as follows: "Behold, one came
-to him and said: Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have
-eternal life? And he said unto him, Why askest thou me concerning
-that which is good? One there is who is good," etc.
-
-Now, it is a result of criticism universally accepted to-day that
-Matthew and Luke compiled their Gospels with Mark before them, and
-that any reading in which either of them agrees with Mark must be
-more original than the discrepant reading of a third. Here Matthew
-is the discrepant witness, and he has remodelled the text of Mark to
-suit the teaching which had established itself in the Church about
-A.D. 100 that Jesus was without sin. He accordingly makes Jesus
-reply as a Greek sophist might reply, and not as a Jewish rabbi; and,
-by omitting the predicate "good" before teacher, he turns the words,
-"One there is who is good," into nonsense. By adding it before "thing"
-he creates additional nonsense; for how could any but a good action
-merit eternal life? The epithet is here superfluous. Even then, if
-we were not sure on other grounds that the Marcan story is the only
-source of the Matthæan deformed text, we could be sure that it was,
-because in Mark we have simplicity and good sense, whereas in Matthew
-we have neither. Mr. Robertson, on an earlier page, has, indeed,
-done lip-service to the truth that Mark presents us with the earliest
-form of evangelical tradition; but here he betrays the fact that he
-has not really understood the position, nor grasped the grounds (set
-forth by me in Myth, Magic, and Morals) on which it rests. For he is
-ready to sacrifice it the moment it makes havoc of his "mythological"
-argument, and writes (p. 443): "On the score of simple likelihood,
-which has the stronger claim? Surely the original text in Matthew."
-
-Even if Matthew, Mark, and Luke were rival and independent texts,
-instead of the first and third being, as they demonstrably are,
-copies and paraphrases of Mark, the best--if not the only--criterion
-of originality would be such an agreement of two of them as Mark
-and Luke here present against Matthew. Mr. Robertson, with entire
-ignoratio elenchi, urges in favour of the originality of Matthew's
-variant the circumstance that the oldest MS. sources of that Gospel
-reproduce it. How could they fail to do so, supposing it to be due to
-the redactor or editor of Mark, who was traditionally, but falsely,
-identified with the apostle Matthew? If the reading of Mark be not
-original, how came Luke to copy it from him? The most obvious critical
-considerations are wasted on Mr. Robertson and his friends.
-
-[Schmiedel on the disbelief of Mary in her son] Dr. Schmiedel again
-draws attention to the narrative of how Jesus, at the beginning of his
-ministry, was declared by his own household to be out of his senses,
-and of how, in consequence, his mother and brethren followed him
-in order to put him under restraint. The story offended the first
-and third evangelists, and they partly omit it, partly obscure its
-drift. The fourth evangelist limits the disbelief to the brethren
-of Jesus. The whole narrative is in flagrant antagonism to the Birth
-stories in the early chapters of Matthew and Luke, and to the whole
-subsequent drift of Church tradition. Being gifted with common sense,
-Schmiedel argues that it must be true, because it could never have
-been invented. It, anyhow, makes for the historicity of Jesus. What
-has Mr. Robertson to say about it? He writes (p. 443): "Why should
-such a conception be more alien to Christian consciousness than, say,
-the story of the trial, scourging, and crucifixion?" Here he ignores
-the point at issue. In Christian tradition, whether early or late,
-it was not the mother and brethren of Jesus who tried and scourged and
-crucified him, but inimical Jews and pagans. The latter are at no time
-related to have received an announcement of his birth from an angel,
-as his mother was presently believed to have done. We have, therefore,
-every reason for averring that the conception or idea of his being
-flouted by his own mother and brethren was a thousand times more alien
-to Christian consciousness--at least, any time after A.D. 100--than
-that of his being flouted by a Sadducean priesthood and by Roman
-governors. Once the legend of the Virgin Birth had grown up, such a
-story could not have been either thought of or committed to writing
-in a Gospel. It is read in Mark, and must be what we call a bed-rock
-tradition. If Mr. Robertson cannot see that, he is hopeless. Did he
-not admit (p. 443) that it is "certainly an odd text," so revealing
-his inmost misgivings about it, we should think him so.
-
-[Jesus is not deified in the earliest documents, nor do they reveal
-a "cult" of him] The same vice of mixing up different phases of the
-Christian religion shows itself in the insistence of this school of
-critic that it was from the first a cult of a deified Jesus. Thus
-Mr. Smith writes (Ecce Deus) as follows (p. 6):--
-
-
- We affirm that the worship of the one God under the name,
- aspect, or person of the Jesus, the Saviour, was the primitive
- and indefectible essence of the primitive teaching and propaganda.
-
-
-On the contrary, in the two basal documents, Mark and Q, no such
-worship is discernible. Jesus first comes on the scene as the humble
-son of Joseph and Mary to repent of his sins and purge them away
-in Baptism; he next takes up the preaching of the imprisoned John,
-which was merely that Jews should repent of their sins because the
-kingdom of God, involving a dissolution of the existing social and
-political order, was at hand. This was no divine rôle, and he is
-represented not as God, but only as the servant of God; for such
-in the Aramaic dialect of that age was the connotation of the title
-"Son of God." In Mark there is no sign of his deification, not even in
-the transfiguration scene; for in that he is merely the human Messiah
-attended by Elias and Moses. From a hundred early indicia we know that
-in the Semitic-speaking churches of the East he remained a human figure
-for centuries; and the Syrian Father Aphraat, as late as 336 in Persia,
-is careful to explain in his homilies that Jesus was only divine as
-Moses was, or as human kings are. It was not till the religion was
-diffused in a pagan medium in which gods had children by mortal women
-that the gross deification of Jesus emerged. The purport of these
-basal documents, moreover, is not to deify Jesus, but to establish as
-against the Jews that he was their promised Messiah and the central
-figure of the Messianic kingdom he preached. That figure, however,
-was never identified with Jehovah, but was only Jehovah's servant,
-anointed king and judge of Israel, restorer of Israel's damaged
-fortunes, fulfiller of her political ideals and hopes. Mr. Smith
-argues that Jesus was deified from the first because his name was
-so often invoked in exorcisms. He even makes the suggestion (p. 17)
-that the initial letter J of Jesus "must have powerfully suggested
-Jehovah to the Jewish consciousness." There is no evidence, and
-less likelihood, of any such thing. The name of Jesus was during
-his lifetime invoked against demons by exorcists who rejected his
-message; just as they used the names of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
-so they were ready to exploit his powerful name; but neither Jews nor
-Christians ever confounded with Jehovah the names or personalities
-they thus invoked; any Jew in virtue of his birth and breeding would
-have regarded such a confusion of a man with his God as flat blasphemy.
-
-[Worship of a slain God no part of the earliest Christianity]
-Messrs. Robertson and Drews similarly insist that Jesus was from the
-first worshipped as a slain God. In the Gospel documents there is
-no sign of anything of the sort. It was Paul who first diffused the
-idea that the crucified Jesus was a victim slain for the redemption
-of human sins. We already have Philo proclaiming that the just man
-is the ransom of the many, so that there is no need to go to pagan
-circles, no need to go outside the pale of Greek Jews, of whom Paul
-was one, for the origin of the idea. He probably found it even in the
-teaching of Gamaliel, in which he was brought up. Mark asks no more
-of his readers than to attribute the Messiahship--a thoroughly human
-rôle--to his hero, Jesus of Nazareth. Nor does Matthew, who seeks
-at every turn to prove that the actions of Jesus reported by Mark
-were those which, according to the old prophets, a Messiah might be
-expected to perform. How can writers who end their record of Jesus by
-telling us how in the moment of death he cried, "My God, my God, why
-hast thou forsaken me?" realizing no doubt that all his expectations
-of the advent of God's kingdom were frustrated and set at naught; how,
-I say, can such writers have believed that Jesus was Jehovah? The
-idea is monstrous. The truth is these writers transport back into
-the first age of Christianity the ideas and beliefs of developed
-Catholicism, and are resolved that the first shall be last and the last
-first. They have no perspective, and no capacity for understanding
-the successive phases through which a primitive Messianism, at first
-thoroughly monotheistic and exclusively Jewish in outlook and ideals,
-gradually evolved itself, with the help of the Logos teaching, into
-the Athanasian cult of an eternal and consubstantial Son of God.
-
-[Abuse of the comparative method by this school of writers] Thirdly,
-these writers abuse the comparative method. Applied discreetly and
-rationally, this method helps us to trace myths and beliefs back
-to their homes and earlier forms. Thus M. Emmanuel Cosquin (in
-Romania; Paris, 1912) takes the story of the cat and the candle,
-and traces out its ramifications in the mediæval literature and
-modern folklore of Europe, and outside Europe, in the legends of
-the Pendjab, of Cashmir, Bengal, Ceylon, Tibet, Tunisia, Annam,
-and elsewhere. But the theme is always sufficiently like itself to
-be really recognizable in the various folklore frames in which it
-is found encased. The old philologists saw in the most superficial
-resemblance of sound a reason for connecting words in different
-languages. They never asked themselves how a word got out of Hebrew,
-say, into Greek, or out of Greek into Mexican. Volumes were filled
-with these haphazard etymologies, and the idea of the classification
-of languages into great connected families only slowly made its way
-among us in the last century. I have pointed out that in regard to
-names Messrs. Drews and Robertson are still in this prephilological
-stage of inquiry; as regards myths or stories of incident, they are
-wholly immersed in it. [They fit anything on to anything no matter how
-ineptly,] They never trouble themselves to make sure that the stories
-they connect bear any real resemblance to one another. For example,
-what have the Zodiacal signs and the Apostles of Jesus in common
-except the number twelve? As if number was not the most superficial
-of attributes, the least characteristic and essential. The scene of
-the Gospel is laid in Judæa, where from remote antiquity the Jews
-had classed themselves in twelve tribes. Is it not more likely that
-this suggested the twelve missionaries sent out by Jesus to announce
-the coming kingdom than the twelve signs of the Zodiac? Even if the
-story of the Twelve be legendary, need we go outside Judaism for our
-explanation of its origin?
-
-What, again, have the three Maries in common with the Greek Moirai
-except the number three and a delusive community of sound? Yet
-Mr. Robertson insists that the three Maries at the tomb of Jesus
-were suggested by the Moirai, because these, "as goddesses of birth
-and death, naturally figured in many artistic presentations of
-religious death scenes." As a matter of fact, the representation of
-the Parcae or Fates in connection with death is rare except on Roman
-sarcophagi, mostly of later date than the Gospel story. And when
-they are so found, they represent, not women bringing spices for
-the corpse or mourning for the dead, but the forces, often thought
-of as blind and therefore represented as veiled, which govern the
-events of the world, including birth, life and death. [and forget
-the innate hostility of Jews to Paganism] There was, therefore,
-nothing in the Moirai to suggest the three Maries at the tomb; nor
-is it credible that the Hebrew Christists, given as they must have
-been to monotheism and detesting all statuary, pagan or other, would
-have chosen their literary motives from such a source. Where could
-they see such statuary in or about Jerusalem? It is notorious that
-the very presence of a symbolic eagle used as a military standard
-was enough to create an émeute in Jerusalem. The scheme of the
-emperor Caligula or Caius to set up his statue in Jerusalem in 39-40
-A.D. provoked a movement of revolt throughout Palestine, with which
-the Jews of Egypt and elsewhere were in full sympathy. A deputation
-headed by Philo of Alexandria went to Rome to supplicate the emperor
-not to goad the entire race to frenzy. In the magnificent statues
-which surrounded him on the Parthenon hill, Paul could see nothing
-but idols, monuments of an age of superstition and ignorance which
-God had mercifully overlooked. [40] The hostility of the Jews to all
-pagan art and sculpture was as great as that of Mohammedans to-day. Yet
-Mr. Robertson asks us to believe (p. 327) that the Gospel myths, as
-he assumes them to be, are "evolved from scenes in pagan art." On the
-top of that we afterwards learn from him that it was the Jewish high
-priest with legalistic leanings that presided over the Christists or
-Jesuists. Imagine such a high priest's feelings when he beheld his
-"secret society" evolving their system under such an inspiration as
-Mr. Robertson outlines in the following canons of criticism:--
-
-
- As we have seen and shall see throughout this investigation,
- the Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred suggestions
- drawn from pagan art and ritual usage (p. 305).
-
- Christism borrowed myths of all kinds from paganism (p. xii).
-
- ... the whole Christian legend, in its present terminology,
- is demonstrably an adaptation of a mass of pre-Christian myths
- (p. 136).
-
-
-What a budget of mutually destructive paradoxes; and to crown them
-all Mr. Robertson claims in his introduction (p. xxii) that the method
-of his treatise is
-
-
- in general more "positive," less a priori, more obedient to
- scientific canons than that of the previous critics ... who have
- reached similar anti-traditionalist results. It substitutes an
- anthropological basis, in terms of the concrete phenomena of
- mythology, for a pseudo-philosophical presupposition.
-
-
-[Credulity attends hypercriticism] Fourthly, it is essential to
-note the childish, all-embracing, and overwhelming credulity of
-these writers. To them applies in its full force the paragraph in
-which MM. Langlois and Seignobos describe the perils which beset
-hypercriticism (p. 131, op. cit.):--
-
-
- The excess of criticism, just as much as the crudest ignorance,
- leads to error. It consists in the application of critical canons
- to cases outside their jurisdiction. It is related to criticism as
- logic-chopping is to logic. There are persons who scent enigmas
- everywhere, even where there are none. They take perfectly clear
- texts and subtilize on them till they make them doubtful, under
- the pretext of freeing them from imaginary corruptions. They
- discover traces of forgery in authentic documents. A strange
- state of mind! By constantly guarding against the instinct of
- credulity they come to suspect everything.
-
-
-For these writers, in their anxiety to be original and new, see fit to
-discard every position that earlier historians, like Mommsen, Gibbon,
-Bury, Montefiore--not to mention Christian scholars--have accepted
-as beyond doubt. Their temper is that of the Bacon-Shakesperians;
-and the plainest, simplest, most straightforward texts figure in
-their imaginations as a laborious series of charades, rebuses,
-and cryptograms. That Jesus never existed is not really the final
-conclusion of their researches, but an initial unproved assumption. In
-order to get rid of him, they feign, without any evidence of it, a
-Jewish secret society under the patronage of the Jewish High Priest,
-that existed in Jerusalem well down into the Christian era. This
-society kept up the worship of an old Palestinian and Ephraimitic
-Sun-god and Saviour, named Joshua, son of a virgin, Miriam. Where is
-the proof that such a god was ever heard of in ancient Palestine,
-either early or late, or that such a cult ever existed? There is
-none. It is the emptiest and wildest of hypotheses; yet we are asked
-to accept it in place of the historicity of Jesus. What, again, do
-we know of secret societies in Jerusalem? Josephus and Philo knew of
-none. For the Therapeutæ, far from affecting secrecy, were anxious
-to diffuse their discipline and lore even among the Hellenes, while
-the Essenes had nothing secret save the names of the angels they
-invoked in spells. They were a well-known sect, and so numerous that
-a gate of Jerusalem was called the Essene Gate, because they so often
-came in and went forth by it. Were the Pharisees and Sadducees, the
-Scribes, or the Sicarii or zealots, secret sects? We know they were
-not. But is it likely that a sect composed in the main of Jews, and
-patronized, as Mr. Robertson argues, by the High Priest, would have
-kept up in the very heart of monotheistic Judaism a cult of Sun-gods
-and Vegetation-spirits? Could they there have given themselves up to
-the study of pagan statuary, art, and ritual dramas? What possible
-connection is there between the naïve picture of Hebrew Messianism
-we have in the Synoptic Gospels and the hurly-burly, the tagrag and
-bobtail of pagan mythologies which Mr. Robertson and his henchman
-Drews rake together pell-mell in their pretentious volumes? How did
-all this paganism abut in a Messianic society which reverenced the
-Old Testament for its sacred scriptures, which for long frequented the
-Jewish Temple, took over the feasts and fasts of Judaism, modelled its
-prayers on those of the Synagogue, cherished in its eastern branches
-the practice of circumcision?
-
-[Mr. Robertson accepts the historicity of Jesus after all] After
-hundreds of pages devoted to the task of evaporating Jesus into
-a Solar or Vegetation-god, and all the personages we meet in the
-Gospels into zodiacal signs or pagan demigods, Mr. Robertson, as we
-have noticed above, finds himself, after all, confronted with the
-same personages in Paul's Epistles. There they are too real even for
-Mr. Robertson to dissipate them into cloud-forms, and too numerous
-to be cut out wholesale. He feels that, if all Paul's allusions to
-the crucified Jesus are to be got rid of as interpolations, then
-no Pauline Epistles will remain. He cuts out, indeed, all he can,
-but there is a residuum of reality. To identify Paul's Jesus with
-the Jesus of the Gospels is too humdrum and obvious a course for
-him. So common-sense and commonplace a scheme does not suit his
-subtle intelligence; moreover, such an identification would upset
-the hundreds of pages in which he has proved that Jesus of Nazareth
-and all his accessories are literary symbols employed by the Jewish
-"Jesuists" to disguise their pagan art and myths. Accordingly, he
-asks us to believe that Paul's Jesus is a certain Jesus Ben Pandira,
-stoned to death a hundred years earlier. This Jesus is a vague
-figure fished up out of the Talmud; but, on examination, we found
-Mr. Robertson's choice of him as an alias for Paul's Jesus to be most
-unfortunate, for competent Talmudic scholars are agreed that Jesus
-Ben Pandira in the Talmud was no other than Jesus of Nazareth in the
-Gospels. Jesus most unkindly insists on being in at his own death,
-[41] in spite of all Mr. Robertson can say or do; and his house
-of cards is crowned with the discovery that the apostles whom Paul
-knew--not being identical with the signs of the Zodiac, like those
-of the Gospels--were no other than the twelve apostles of the Jewish
-High Priest, and that they were the authors of the lately-discovered
-"Teaching of the Apostles." He is very contemptuous for other early
-Christian books which affect apostolic authorship in their titles,
-but falls a ready victim to the relatively late and anonymous editor
-of this "teaching," who to give it vogue entitled it "The Teaching of
-the Lord by the Twelve Apostles to the Gentiles." "The Jesuist sect,"
-he writes (p. 345), "founded on it (the Didaché) the Christian myth
-of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus." Everywhere else in his books he
-has argued that the "myth" in question was founded on the signs of
-the Zodiac. Why give up at the eleventh hour the astral explanation
-for an utterly different one? I may add that in the body of the
-Didaché the Twelve are nowhere alluded to; that it must be a much
-later document than the Gospels and Paulines, since it quotes them in
-scores of passages; and that the interpolation of the title, with a
-reference to the Twelve Apostles, was a literary trick scarcely older
-than the fourth century, long before which age the Pauline account of
-the resurrection was cited by a score of Christian writers. Lastly,
-we are fain to inquire of Mr. Robertson with whom he identifies "the
-Lord" of the above title--with the Jewish High Priest, or with Jesus
-Ben Pandira, or with the Sun-God-Saviour Joshua.
-
-[Theory of interpolations] I have given many examples of the tendency
-of all these authors to condemn as an interpolation any text which
-contradicts their hypotheses. There is only one error worse than that
-of treating seriously documents which are no documents at all. It is
-that of the man who cannot recognize documents when he has got them. It
-is well, of course, to weigh sources, and the critical investigation
-of authorship lies at the basis of all true history. But, as the
-authors above cited justly remark (p. 99):--
-
-
- We must not abuse it. The extreme of distrust in these matters is
- almost as mischievous as the extreme of credulity. Père Hardouin,
- who attributed the works of Virgil and Horace to medieval monks,
- was every whit as ridiculous as the victim of Vrain-Lucas. It
- is an abuse of the methods of this species of criticism to apply
- them, as has been done, indiscriminately, for the mere pleasure
- of it. The bunglers who have used this species of criticism
- to brand as spurious perfectly genuine documents, such as the
- writings of Hroswitha, the Ligurinus, and the bull unam sanctam,
- or to establish imaginary filiations between certain annals, on
- the strength of superficial indications, would have discredited
- criticism before now, if that had been possible.
-
-
-It is unhappily easier to discredit criticism in the realm of
-ecclesiastical than of secular history; and this school of writers
-are doing their best to harm the cause of true Rationalism. They
-only afford amusement to the obscurantists of orthodoxy, and render
-doubly difficult the task of those who seek to win people over to a
-common-sense and historical envisagement, unencumbered by tradition
-and superstition, of the problems of early Christianity.
-
-[Professor Smith's monotheistic cult] Lastly, it is a fact deserving of
-notice that the genesis of Christianity as these authors present it is
-much more mysterious and obscure than before. Their explanation needs
-explaining. What, we must ask, was the motive and end in view of the
-adherents of the pre-Christian Jesus or Joshua in writing the Gospels
-and bringing down their God to earth, so humanizing in a story their
-divine myth? Let Professor W. B. Smith speak: "What was the essence,
-the central idea and active principle, of the cult itself?" Here he
-means the cult of the pre-Christian Christ that invented the Gospels
-and diffused them on the market place. "To this latter," he continues,
-"we answer directly and immediately: It was a Protest against idolatry;
-it was a Crusade for monotheism."
-
-And yet he cannot adduce a single text from the Gospels--not even from
-the Fourth--which betrays on the part of Jesus, their central figure,
-any such crusading spirit. Jesus everywhere assumes his hearers
-to be monotheists like himself--he speaks as a Jew to Jews--and
-perpetually reminds them of their Father in heaven. Thus Matt. vi,
-8: "Your Father knoweth what things ye have need of"; Matt. v, 48:
-"Ye therefore shall be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect."
-
-The monotheism of those who stood around the teacher is ever taken
-for granted by the evangelists, and in all the precepts of Jesus
-not one can be adduced that is aimed at the sins of polytheism
-and idolatry. His message lies in a far different region. It is the
-immediate advent of the Messianic kingdom, and the need of repentance
-ere it come. Only when Paul undertakes to bear this message to pagans
-outside the pale of Judaism do we get teaching directed against
-idolatry; and in his Epistles such precepts have a second place,
-the first being reserved to the preaching of the coming kingdom
-and of the redemption of the world by the merits of the crucified
-and risen Messiah, the man Jesus. Most of Paul's letters read as if
-those for whom he wrote them were already proselytes familiar with
-the Jewish scriptures.
-
-[His great Oriental cryptogram] Such is Mr. Smith's fundamental
-assumption, and it is baseless. On it he bases his next great
-hypothesis of "the primitive secrecy of the Jesus cult," which "was
-maintained in some measure for many years--for generations even"
-(p. 45). "Why," he asks, "was this Jesus cult originally secret, and
-expressed in such guarded parabolic terms as made it unintelligible
-to the multitude?" The reason lay in the fact that "it was exactly to
-save the pagan multitude from idolatry that Jesus came into the world"
-(p. 38).
-
-Here the phrase "Jesus came into the world," like all else he did or
-suffered, is, of course, to be understood in a Pickwickian sense,
-for he never came into the world at all. The Gospels are not only
-a romance concocted by "such students of religion as the first
-Christians were" (p. 65), and inspired by their study of Plato, [42]
-and of the best elements in ancient mythology; they are a romance
-throughout--an allegory of a secret pre-Christian Nazarene society
-and of its secret cult (p. 34). Of this society, he tells us, we
-know nothing; esoterism and cult secrecy were its chief interests;
-the "silence of the Christians about it was intentional," [43]
-and, except for the special revelation vouchsafed the other day
-to Professor W. B. Smith, it would have remained for ever unknown,
-and Christianity for ever enigmatic.
-
-In accordance with this postulate of esoterism and cult secrecy among
-the pre-Christian Nazarenes, who subsequently revealed themselves to
-the world as the Christian Church, though even then they "maintained
-for generations the secrecy [44] of their Jesus cult," the Gospels,
-as I said, are an allegory or a charade. Their prima facie meaning is
-never the true one, never more than symbolic of a moral and spiritual
-undersense such as old allegorists like Philo and Origen loved to
-discover in the Bible. Thus, as we saw above, when Jesus is reported to
-have cast out of the Jews who thronged around him devils of blindness,
-deafness, lameness, leprosy, death, what is really intended is that
-he argued pagans out of their polytheism. "It was spiritual maladies,
-and only spiritual, that he was healing" (p. 38). We ask of Mr. Smith,
-why was so much mystification necessary? We are only told that
-"it was in the main a prudential measure, well enough justified,
-but intended to be only temporary" (p. 39). What exact risks they
-were to shun which the sect kept itself secret, and only spake in
-far-fetched allegory, Mr. Smith does not inform us. Is he, too,
-afraid of being regarded as a "tell-tale" (p. 48)?
-
-[Professor Smith resolves all the New Testament as symbolic and
-allegorical] As with the exorcisms, so with all else told of
-Jesus. None of it really happened. As he never lived, so he never
-died. His human life and death are an allegory of the spiritual cult
-and mysteries which the pre-Christian Nazarenes and their descendants,
-the Christians, so jealously and for so long guarded in silence. If he
-never lived, then he never taught, not even in parables. By consequence
-the entire record of his parables, still more of his having chosen
-the parable as his medium of instruction in order to veil his real
-meaning from his audience, is all moonshine. Here, as elsewhere, the
-Gospel text does not mean what it says, but is itself only a Nazarene
-parable conveying, or rather concealing, a Nazarene secret--what sort
-of secret no one, save Professor Smith, the self-appointed revealer
-of their mysterious lore, can tell, and he is silent on the point. On
-Mr. Smith's premisses, then, we cannot rely on the Gospels to inform
-us of anything historical, and, so far as we can follow him, we must,
-if we would discern through them the mind of their Nazarene authors,
-take them upside down. We must discern a pagan medium and homilies
-against polytheism in discourses addressed to monotheistic Jews who
-needed no warnings against idolatry; we must also read the stories
-of Jesus healing paralytics and demoniacs as secret and disguised
-polemics against idolatry.
-
-[Yet claims, where it suits him, to treat it as historical narrative]
-But here mark Professor Smith's inconsistency. Why is he sure that
-the Nazarenes, and after them the earliest Christians, were a secret
-society with a secret cult? They must have been so, he argues, because
-Jesus taught in parables. "The primitive esoterism," he tells us,
-"is admittedly present in Mark iv, 11, 12, 33, 34." These verses
-begin thus: "And he said unto them, unto you is given the mystery
-of the kingdom of heaven: but unto them that are without, all things
-are done in parables."
-
-Now, Mr. Smith's postulate is that he--i.e., Jesus of Nazareth--never
-lived, and so never said anything to anyone. How, then, can he
-appeal to what he said to prove that there was a pre-Christian
-Jesus or Joshua sect, itself secret with a cult and ritual which
-its members were ever on their guard not to reveal? Surely he drops
-here into two assumptions which he has discarded ab initio: first,
-that there is a core of real history in the Gospels; and, second,
-that the Gospel can mean what it says, and that its Nazarene author
-is here not allegorizing, as he usually did.
-
-[His theory contradicts itself] But even if we allow Mr. Smith to break
-with his premisses wherever he needs to do so in order to substantiate
-them, do these verses of Mark support his hypothesis of a sect which
-kept itself, its rites, and its teaching secret? I admit that it was
-pretty successful when it veiled its anti-idolatrous teaching under
-the outward form of demonological anecdotes, and wrote Jews when it
-meant Pagans and Polytheists. But in Mark iv, 34, we are told that
-"to his own disciples Jesus privately expounded all things" after he
-had with many parables spoken the word to such as "were able to hear
-it." It appears, then, that for all their love of secrecy, and in spite
-of all their precautions against "tell-tale" writing, the Nazarenes
-on occasions went out of their way, in their allegorical romance of
-their God Joshua, to inform all who may read it what their parables
-and allegories meant; for in it Jesus sits down and expounds to the
-reader over some twenty-four verses (verses 10-34) the inner meaning
-of the parables which he had just addressed to the multitude. What
-on earth were the Nazarenes doing to publish a Gospel like this,
-and so let the cat out of the bag? Instead of keeping their secret
-they were proclaiming it on the housetops. Again, if the Gospels
-are to such an extent merely allegorical, that we must not assume
-their authors to have believed that Jesus ever lived, how can we
-possibly rely on them for information about such an obscure matter
-as a secret and esoteric pre-Christian Nazarene sect? We can only be
-sure that the evangelists never under any circumstances meant what
-they said; yet Mr. Smith, in defiance of all his postulates, writes,
-p. 40, as follows: "On the basis, then, of this passage alone [i.e.,
-Mark iv, 10-34] we may confidently affirm the primitive secrecy of
-the Jesus cult." Even if the passage rightly yielded the sense he
-tries to extort from it, how can we be sure that that sense is not,
-like the rest of the Gospel, an allegory of something else?
-
-The other passage of the Gospels, Matthew x, 26, 27, to which,
-with like inconsistency, Mr. Smith appeals by way of showing that
-the Nazarenes of set purpose hid their light under a bushel, does
-not bear the interpretation he puts on it. It runs thus: "Fear them
-not therefore: for naught is covered that shall not be revealed,
-and hidden that shall not be known. What I tell you in the darkness,
-speak ye on the housetops; and what ye hear in the ear, proclaim upon
-the housetops."
-
-[Absence of esoterism about Jesus's teaching] The reasonable
-interpretation of the above is that Jesus, being in possession, as he
-thought, of a special understanding, perhaps revelation, of the true
-nature of the Messianic kingdom, and convinced of its near approach,
-instructed his immediate disciples in privacy concerning it in order
-that they might carry the message up and down the land to the children
-of Israel. He therefore exhorts them not to be silent from fear of
-the Jews, who accused him of being possessed of a devil, somewhat as
-his own mother and brethren accused him of being an exalté and beside
-himself. No, they were to cast aside all apprehensions; they must go,
-not to the supercilious Pharisees or to the comfortable priests who
-battened on the people, still less to Gentiles and Samaritans, who
-had no part in the promises made to Israel, but to the lost sheep
-of the house of Israel, and they must preach as they went, saying,
-The kingdom of heaven is at hand. They were to heal the sick, raise
-the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out devils, and in general give
-freely the good tidings which freely they had received from their
-Master, and he from John the Baptist. If they so acted, discarding
-all timidity, then no human repression, no human time-serving, could
-prevent the spread of the good news. What was now hidden from the
-poor and ignorant among his compatriots would henceforth, thanks to
-the courage and devotedness of his emissaries, be made known to them;
-what was now covered, be revealed.
-
-Such is the context of "this remarkable deliverance," as Mr. Smith
-terms it; and nothing in all the New Testament savours less than it
-does of a secret cult of mysterious sectaries, waiting for Mr. Smith to
-manifest their arcana to us twenty centuries later. Here, as everywhere
-else in the New Testament, he has discovered a monstrous mare's nest;
-has banished the only possible and obvious interpretation, in order
-to substitute a chimera of his own.
-
-[It was not a protest against paganism] Mr. Smith credits his
-hypothetical pre-Christian Nazarenes with an ambition and anxiety
-to purge away the errors of mankind. The "essence, the central idea,
-and active principle of the cult itself," he tells us (p. 45), "was
-a protest against Idolatry, a crusade for monotheism." "The fact of
-the primitive worship of Jesus and the fact of the primitive mission
-to all the Gentiles are the two cardinal facts of Proto-Christianity"
-(p. xvii). Why on earth, then, in concocting that pronunciamento of
-their cult which we call the Gospels, did these Nazarenes represent
-the Jesus or Joshua God, even in allegory, as warning his disciples
-on no account to disseminate his cult among Gentiles and Samaritans,
-but only among Jews, who were notoriously monotheists and bitterly
-hostile to every form of idolatry? Why carry coals to Newcastle on
-so huge a scale?
-
-[Why turn God Jeshua into a man at all] And granted that the Nazarenes,
-in their anxiety to be parabolical and misunderstood of their readers,
-wrote Jews when they meant Pagans, was it necessary in the interests
-of their monotheistic crusade to nickname their One God Jesus, to
-represent him as a man and a carpenter, with brothers and sisters,
-and a mother that did not believe in him; as a man who was a Jew with
-the prejudices of a Jew, a man circumcised and insisting that he came
-not to destroy the law of Moses, but to fulfil it; as a man who was
-born like other men of a human father and mother; was crucified, dead
-and buried; whose disciples and Galilean companions, when in the first
-flush of their grief they heard from Mary Magdalene the strange story
-of his first appearing to her after death, still "disbelieved"? [45]
-
-[The comfort of the initial "J"] These Nazarenes were, in their
-quality of "students of religion" (p. 65), intent on converting the
-world from polytheism. Why, then, did they call their sublime deity
-by the name of Jesus? "The word Jesus itself," writes Mr. Smith,
-
-
- also made special appeal to the Jewish consciousness, for it
- was practically identical with their own Jeshua, now understood
- by most to mean strictly Jah-help, but easily confounded with a
- similar J'shu'ah, meaning Deliverance, Saviour, Witness, Matthew
- i, 21. Moreover, the initial letter J, so often representing Jah
- in Hebrew words, must have powerfully suggested Jehovah to the
- Jewish consciousness.
-
-
-But what Jew of the first century, however fond of the tales about
-Joshua which he read in his scriptures, was ever minded to substitute
-his name for that of Jehovah merely because it began with a J and has
-been explained by twentieth-century Hebraists as meaning Jah-help? The
-idea is exquisitely humorous. While they were about it why did the
-Nazarenes not adopt the name Immanuel, which in that allegorical
-romance (which from Mr. Smith we know to be the character of Matthew's
-Gospel) they fished up out of the Hebrew prophet Isaiah? If Jehovah
-was not good enough for them, Immanuel was surely better than the
-name Jeshua, with its associations of pillage and murder. But apart
-from these considerations, as the name Jeshua is Hebrew, it follows
-that the secret sectaries who had this cult must have been of a Jewish
-cast. But, if so, what Jew, we ask, ever heard of a God called Jeshua
-or Joshua? As I have already pointed out, the very memory of such a
-God, if there ever was one, perished long before the Book of Joshua
-could have been written. Like the gods Daoud and Joseph, with whom
-writers of this class seek to conjure our wits out of our heads,
-a god Joshua is a mere preposterous superfetation of a disordered
-imagination. "There were abundant reasons," writes Mr. Smith (p. 16),
-
-
- why the name Jesus should be the Aaron's rod to swallow up all
- other designations. Its meaning, which was felt to be Saviour,
- was grand, comforting, uplifting. The notion of the world-Saviour
- thrust its roots into the loam of the remotest antiquity.
-
-
-[Supposed confusion of Jesus with iesomai] One regrets to have to
-criticize such dithyrambic outpourings of Mr. Smith's heart. But,
-granted there was a widespread expectation, such as Suetonius records,
-of Messiahs who were to issue from Judæa and conquer all the world,
-who ever heard of the name Joshua being assigned in advance to one of
-them? Who ever in that age felt the name Jesus to be grand, comforting,
-uplifting? Is not Mr. Smith attributing his own feelings, as he sat
-in a Sunday school, to Jews and Gentiles of the first century? I
-add Gentiles, for he pretends that the name Jesus appealed to the
-Greek consciousness also as a derivative of the Ionic future Iêsomai
-iesomai = I will heal. Now what Christian writer ever made this
-rapprochement? Not a single one. Surely, if we are minded to argue
-the man Jesus out of existence, we ought to have a vera causa to put
-in his place, a belief, or, if we like it better, a myth which was
-really believed, and is known to have entered deeply into the lives
-and consciences of men? It is true that the idea of a Messiah did so
-enter, but not in the form in which Mr. Smith loves to conceive it. The
-Messiah was such a human figure as Suetonius had heard of; he was a man
-who should, as we read in Acts, restore the kingdom of David. "Lord,
-dost Thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?" is the question
-the apostles are said (Acts i, 7) to have put to Jesus as soon as his
-apparitions before them had revived the Messianic hopes which his
-death had so woefully dashed. The incident is probably apocryphal,
-yet its presence in the narrative illustrates what a Messiah was then
-expected by Christians to achieve. Judas Maccabæus, Cyrus, Bar Cochba,
-Judas of Galilee--these and other heroes of Israel had the quality
-of Messiahs. They were all men, and not myths. The suggestion, then,
-that the name Jesus was one to conjure with is idle and baseless; and
-if his name had been Obadiah or Nathaniel, Professor Smith would have
-been equally ready to prove that these were attractive names, bound to
-triumph and "swallow up all other designations." He only pitches on
-the name of Jesus for his pre-Christian Saviour-god because he finds
-it in the Gospels; but inasmuch as he sees in them mere allegorical
-romances, entirely unhistorical and having no root in facts, there
-is no reason for adopting from them one name more than another. How
-does he know that the appellation Jesus is not as much of a Nazarene
-fiction as he holds every other name and person and incident to be
-which the Gospels contain? Is it not more probable that this highly
-secretive sect, with their horror of "tell-tale," would keep secret
-the name of their Saviour-god, as the Essenes kept secret the names
-of their patron angels? The truth is, even Mr. Smith cannot quite
-divest himself of the idea that there is some historical basis for
-the Gospels; otherwise he would not have turned to them for the name
-of his Saviour-god.
-
-[Mr. Smith denies all historicity to Acts and Epistles] More
-consistently, however, than Mr. Robertson, Professor Smith denies
-that there are any allusions to the real Jesus in the rest of
-the New Testament. The Acts and Epistles do not, he says (p. 23),
-"recognize at all the life of Jesus as a man," though "their general
-tenour gives great value to the death of Jesus as a God." This is a
-new reading of the documents in question, for the Pauline conviction
-was that Jesus had been crucified and died as a man, and, being
-raised up from death by the Spirit, had been promoted to be, what he
-was antenatally, a super-human or angelic figure [46]--a Christ or
-Messiah, who was to come again on earth and judge mankind. Of his mere
-humanity while on this earth, and as long as he was associating with
-human disciples, Paul entertained no doubts. How could he, inasmuch
-as he had stayed with them at Jerusalem? Mr. Robertson, as we saw,
-although he dissipates Jesus in the Gospels into a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, nevertheless is so impressed by the Pauline "references to a
-crucified Jesus" (p. 364) that he resuscitates Jesus Ben Pandira out of
-the limbo of the Talmud. Perhaps he strains at a gnat after swallowing
-a camel. Anyhow, I will leave Mr. Smith to settle accounts with him,
-and turn to a fresh point, which has not occurred to either of them.
-
-[Contrast of Christian belief in Jesus with cult of Adonis or Osiris]
-It is this. Adonis and Osiris were never regarded by their votaries
-as having been human beings that had recently lived and died on the
-face of this earth. The Christians, in strong contrast with them
-and with all other pagans ever heard of, did so regard Jesus from
-first to last. Why so, when they knew that from the first he was a
-God and up in heaven? Why has the fact of his unreality, as these
-writers argue it, left no trace of itself in Christian tradition and
-literature? According to this new school of critics, the Nazarenes,
-when they wrote down the Gospels, knew perfectly well that Jesus was
-a figment, and had never lived at all. And yet we never get a hint
-that he was only a myth, and that the New Testament is a gigantic
-fumisterie. Why so? Why from the very first did the followers of
-Jesus entertain what Mr. Smith denounces as "an a priori concept of
-the Jesus" (p. 35)? Why, in other words, were they convinced from the
-beginning that he was a man of flesh and blood, who had lived on earth
-among them? The "early secrecy," the "esoterism of the primitive cult"
-(p. 39), says Mr. Smith, "was intended to be only temporary." If
-so, why could not the Nazarenes, primarily interested as they were,
-not in lies and bogus, but in disseminating their lofty monotheism,
-have thrown off the disguise some time or other, and explained to
-their spiritual children that the intensely concrete life of Jesus
-which they had published in our Gospel of Mark meant nothing; that
-it was all an allegory, and no more, of a Saviour-god, who had never
-existed as a human being, nor even as the docetic phantasmagoria of the
-Gnostic? "Something sealed the lips of that (Nazarene) evangelist,"
-and the Nazarenes have kept their secret so well through the ages
-that it has been reserved for Mr. Smith first to pierce the veil
-and unlock their mystery. He it is who has at last discovered that
-"in proto-Mark we behold the manifest God" (p. 24).
-
-Now what possessed the Nazarenes so firmly to impose on the world
-through the Gospels an erroneous view of their God, that for 2,000
-years not only their spiritual offspring, the Christians, but Jews
-and pagans as well, have believed him to have lived on earth, a man
-of flesh and blood and of like passions with themselves? Was the
-deception necessary? The votaries of Osiris and Adonis were never so
-tricked. The adherents of the Augustalian cult, the pious Greeks and
-Syrians who thronged to be healed of their diseases at the shrines
-of Apollonius, believed, of course, that their patron saints and
-gods had lived, prior to their apotheosis, upon earth; and so they
-had. But a follower of Osiris or Æsculapius would have opened his
-eyes wide with astonishment if you asked him to believe that his
-Saviour had died only the other day in Judæa. Not so a Christian;
-for the Nazarene monotheists had so thoroughly fooled him with their
-Gospels that he was ready to supply you with dates and pedigrees and
-all sorts of other details about his Saviour's personal history. And
-yet all the time, had he only known it, his religion laboured under the
-same initial disadvantage as the cult of Osiris or Æsculapius--that,
-namely, of its founder never having lived at all. What, then, did
-"such students of religion, as the first Christians were" (Ecce Deus,
-p. 65), imagine was to be gained by hood-winking their descendants
-for the long centuries which have intervened between them and the
-advent of Professor W. B. Smith?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-DR. JENSEN
-
-
-[Babylonian influence on Greek religion slight;] The three writers
-whose views I have so far considered agree in denying that Jesus was
-a real historical personage; but their agreement extends no further,
-for the Jesus legend is the precipitate, according to Professor
-W. B. Smith, of a monotheistic propaganda; according to Mr. Robertson,
-of a movement mainly idolatrous, polytheistic, and pagan. There exists
-in Germany, however, a third school of denial, which sees in the Jesus
-story a duplicate of the ancient Babylonian Gilgamesch legend. The
-more extreme writers of this school have endeavoured to show that not
-only the Hebrews, but the Greeks as well, derived their religious
-myths and rites from ancient Babylon; and their general hypothesis
-has on that account been nicknamed Pan-Babylonismus. This is not
-the place to criticize the use made of old Babylonian mythology in
-explanation of old Greek religion, though I do well to point out that
-the best students of the latter--for example, Dr. Farnell--confine
-the indebtedness of the Greeks to very narrow limits.
-
-[on Hebrew religion more important;] The case of the Hebrew scriptures
-and religion stands on different ground; for the Jews were Semites,
-and their myths of creation and of the origin and early history
-of man are, by the admission even of orthodox divines of to-day,
-largely borrowed from the more ancient civilization of Babylon. Thus
-Heinrich Zimmern (art. "Deluge," in Encyclopædia Biblica) writes: "Of
-all the parallel traditions of a deluge, the Babylonian is undeniably
-the most important, because the points of contact between it and
-the Hebrew story are so striking that the view of the dependence of
-one of the two on the other is directly suggested even to the most
-cautious of students."
-
-[yet a Jew may have possessed some imagination of his own] This
-undoubted occurrence of Babylonian myths in the Book of Genesis has
-provided some less critical and cautious cuneiform scholars with
-a clue, as they imagine, to the entire contents of the Bible from
-beginning to end. It is as if the Jews, all through their literary
-history of a thousand years, could not possibly have invented any
-myths of their own, still less have picked a few up elsewhere than in
-Babylon. Accordingly, in a volume of 1,030 enormous pages, P. Jensen
-has undertaken to show [47] that the New Testament, no less than
-the Old, was derived from this single well-spring. Moses and Aaron,
-Joshua, Jeroboam, Rehoboam, Hadad, Jacob and Esau, Saul, David and
-Jonathan, Joseph and his brethren, Potiphar, Rachel and Leah, Laban,
-Zipporah, Miriam sister of Moses, Dinah, Simeon and Levi, Jethro and
-the Gibeonites and Sichemites, Sarah and Hagar, [Gilgamesch, Eabani,
-and the holy harlot, protagonists of the entire Old Testament] Abraham
-and Isaac, Samson, Uriah and Nathan, Naboth, Elijah and Elisha, Naaman,
-Benhadad and Hazael, Gideon, Jerubbaal, Abimelech, Jephthah, Tobit,
-Jehu, and pretty well any other personage in the Old Testament,
-are duplicates, according to him, of Gilgamesch or his companion
-the shepherd Eabani (son of Ea), or of the Hierodule or sacred
-prostitute, and of a few more leading figures in the Babylonian
-epic. There is hardly a story in the whole of Jewish literature
-which is not, according to Jensen, an echo of the Gilgamesch legend;
-and every personage, every incident, is freely manipulated to make
-them fit this Procrustean bed. No combinations of elements separated
-in the Biblical texts, no separations of elements united therein,
-no recasting of the fabric of a narrative, no modifications of
-any kind, are so violent as to deter Dr. Jensen. At the top of
-every page is an abstract of its argument, usually of this type:
-"Der Hirte Eabani, die Hierodule und Gilgamesch. Der Hirte Moses,
-sein Weib und Aaron." In other words, as Moses was one shepherd and
-Eabani another, Moses is no other than Eabani. As there is a sacred
-prostitute in the Gilgamesch story, and a wife in the legend of Moses,
-therefore wife and prostitute are one and the same. As Gilgamesch was
-companion of Eabani, and Aaron of Moses, therefore Aaron was an alias
-of Gilgamesch. Dr. Jensen is quite content with points of contact
-between the stories so few and slight as the above, and pursues this
-sort of loose argument over a thousand pages. Here is another such
-rubric: "Simson-Gilgamesch's Leiche und Saul-Gilgamesch's Gebeine
-wieder ausgegraben, Elisa-Gilgamesch's Grab geöffnet." In other words,
-Simson, or Samson, left a corpse behind him (who does not?); Saul's
-bones were piously looked after by the Jabeshites; Elisha's bones
-raised a dead Moabite by mere contact to fresh life. These three
-figures are, therefore, ultimately one, and that one is Gilgamesch;
-and their three stories, which have no discernible features in common,
-are so many disguises of the Gilgamesch epos.
-
-[as also of the entire New Testament] But Dr. Jensen transcends himself
-in the New Testament. "The Jesus-saga," he informs us (p. 933), "as
-it meets us in the Synoptic Gospels, and equally as it meets us in
-John's Gospel, stands out among all the other Gilgamesch Sagas which
-we have so far (i.e., in the Old Testament) expounded, in that it not
-merely follows up the main body of the Saga with sundry fragments of
-it, like so many stragglers, but sets before us a long series of bits
-of it arranged in the original order almost undisturbed." [48]
-
-And he waxes eloquent about the delusions and ignorance of Christians,
-who for 2,000 years have been erecting churches and cathedrals in
-honour of a Jesus of Nazareth, who all the time was a mere alias
-of Gilgamesch.
-
-[John--Eabani] Let us, then, test some of the arguments by which this
-remarkable conclusion is reached. Let us begin with John the Baptist
-(p. 811). John was a prophet, who appeared east of the Jordan. So was
-Elias or Elijah. Elijah was a hairy man, and John wore a raiment of
-camel's-hair; both of them wore leather girdles.
-
-Now, in the Gilgamesch story, Eabani is covered with hair all over
-his body (p. 579--"am ganzen Leibe mit Haaren bedeckt ist"). Eabani
-(p. 818) is a hairy man, and presumably was clad in skins ("ist
-ein haariger Mann und vermutlich mit Fellen bekleidet"). Dr. Jensen
-concludes from this that John and Elijah are both of them, equally
-and independently, duplicates or understudies of Eabani. It never
-occurs to him that in the desert camel's-hair was a handy material
-out of which to make a coat, as also leather to make girdles of,
-and that desert prophets in any story whatever would inevitably
-be represented as clad in such a manner. He has, indeed, heard of
-Jo. Weiss's suggestion that Luke had read the LXX, and modelled his
-picture of John the Baptist on Elijah; but he rejects the suggestion,
-for he feels--and rightly--that to make any such admissions must
-compromise his main theory, which is that the old Babylonian epic was
-the only source of the evangelists. No (he writes), John's girdle,
-like Elijah's, came straight out of the Saga ("wohl durch die Sage
-bedingt ist"). Nor (he adds) can Luke's story of Sarah and Zechariah
-be modelled on Old Testament examples, as critics have argued. On the
-contrary, it is a fresh reflex of Gilgamesch ("ein neuer Reflex"),
-an independent sidelight cast by the central Babylonian orb ("ein
-neues Seitenstück"), and is copied direct. We must not give in to the
-suggestion thrown out by modern critics that it is a later addition
-to the original evangelical tradition. Far from that being so, it must
-be regarded as an integral and original constituent in the Jesus-saga
-("So wird man zugestehen müssen, dass sie keine Zugabe, sondern ein
-integrierender Urbestandteil der Jesus-sage ist").
-
-[Jesus--Gilgamesch] From this and many similar passages we realize that
-the view that Jesus never lived, but was a mere reflex of Gilgamesch,
-is not, in Jensen's mind, a conclusion to be proved, but a dogma
-assumed as the basis of all argument, a dogma to which we must adjust
-all our methods of inquiry. To admit any other sources of the Gospel
-story, let alone historical facts, would be to infringe the exclusive
-apriority, as a source, of the Babylonian epic; and that is why we are
-not allowed to argue up to the latter, but only down from it. If for
-a moment he is ready to admit that Old Testament narrative coloured
-Luke's birth-story, and that (for example) the angel's visit in the
-first chapter of Luke was suggested by the thirteenth chapter of
-Judges, he speedily takes back the admission. Such an assumption is
-not necessary ("allein nötig ist ein solche Annahme nicht").
-
-"So much," he writes (p. 818),
-
-
- of John's person alone. Let us now pursue the Jesus Saga further.
-
- In the Gilgamesch Epic it is related how the Hunter marched
- out to Eabani with the holy prostitute, how Eabani enjoyed her,
- and afterwards proceeded with her to Erech, where, directly or in
- his honour, a festival was held; how he there attached himself to
- Gilgamesch, and how kingly honours were by the latter awarded to
- him. We must by now in a general way assume on the part of our
- readers a knowledge of how these events meet us over again in
- the Sagas of the Old Testament. In the numerous Gilgamesch Sagas,
- then [of the Old Testament], we found again this rencounter with
- the holy prostitute. And yet we seek it in vain in the three
- first Gospels in the exact context where we should find it on
- the supposition that they must embody a Gilgamesch Saga--that
- is to say, immediately subsequent to John's emergence in the
- desert. Equally little do we find in this context any reflex of
- Eabani's entry into the city of Erech, all agog at the moment
- with a festival. On the other hand, we definitely find in its
- original position an echo of Gilgamesch's meeting with Eabani. [49]
-
-
-[Evangelists borrowed their saga from Gilgamesch epos alone] Let us
-pause a moment and take stock of the above. In the epic two heroes
-meet each other in a desert. John and Jesus also meet in a desert;
-therefore, so argues Jensen, John and Jesus are reproductions of the
-heroes in question, and neither of them ever lived. It matters nothing
-that neither John nor Jesus was a Nimrod. This encounter of Gilgamesch
-and Eabani was, as Jensen reminds us, the model of every Old Testament
-story in which two males happen to meet in a desert; therefore it must
-have been the model of the evangelists also when they concocted their
-story of John and Jesus meeting in the wilderness. But how about the
-prostitute; and how about the entry into Erech? How are these lacunæ
-of the Gospel story to be filled in? Jensen's solution is remarkable;
-he finds the encounter with the prostitute to have been the model on
-which the fourth evangelist contrived his story of Jesus's visit to
-Martha and Mary. For that evangelist, like the synoptical ones, had
-the Gilgamesch Saga stored all ready in his escritoire, and finding
-that his predecessors had omitted the prostitute he hastened to fill
-up the lacuna, and doubled her into Martha and Mary. In this and many
-other respects, so we are assured by Jensen, the fourth evangelist
-reproduces the Gilgamesch epic more fully and systematically than
-the other evangelists, and on that account we must assign to John's
-setting of the life of Christ a certain preference and priority. He
-is truer to the only source there was for any of it. The other lacuna
-of the Synoptic Gospels is the feasting in Erech and Eabani's entry
-amid general feasting into that city. The corresponding episode in
-the Gospels, we are assured, is the triumphant entry of Jesus into
-Jerusalem, which the Fourth Gospel, again hitting the right nail on
-the head, sets at the beginning of Jesus's ministry, and not at its
-end. But what, we still ask, is the Gospel counterpart to the honours
-heaped by Gilgamesch on Eabani? How dull we are! "The baptism of
-Jesus by John must, apart from other considerations, have arisen out
-of the fact that Eabani, after his arrival at Gilgamesch's palace,
-is by him allotted kingly honours." [50]
-
-So then Eabani, who as a hairy man was John the Baptist, is now, by a
-turn of Jensen's kaleidoscope, metamorphosed into Jesus, for it is John
-who did Jesus the honour of baptizing him. Conversely, Gilgamesch,
-who began as Jesus, is now suddenly turned into John. In fact,
-Jesus-Gilgamesch and John-Eabani have suddenly changed places with one
-another, in accordance, I suppose, with the rule of interpretation,
-somewhere laid down by Hugo Winckler, that in astral myths one hero
-is apt to swop with another, not only his stage properties, but his
-personality. But fresh surprises are in store for Jensen's readers.
-
-Over scores of pages he has argued that John the Baptist is no other
-than Eabani, because he so faithfully fulfils over again the rôle of
-the Eabanis we meet with in the Old Testament. For example, according
-to Luke (i, 15, and vii, 33) John drinks no wine, and is, therefore,
-a Nazirean, who eschews wine and forbears to cut his hair. Therein
-he resembles Joseph-Eabani, and Simson-Eabani, and Samuel-Eabani,
-and also Absolom, who, as an Eabani, had at least an upper growth
-of hair. And as the Eabani of the Epic, with the long head-hair of a
-woman, drinks water along with the wild beasts in the desert, and as
-Eabani, in company with these beasts, feeds on grass and herbs alone,
-so, at any rate according to Luke, John ate no bread. [51]
-
-Imagine the reader's consternation when, after these convincing
-demonstrations of John's identity with Eabani, and of his consequent
-non-historicity, he finds him a hundred pages later on altogether
-eliminated, as from the Gilgamesch Epic, so from the Gospel. For
-the difficulty suddenly arises before Dr. Jensen's mind that John
-the Baptist, being mentioned by Josephus, must after all have really
-lived; but if he lived, then he cannot have been a mere reflex of
-Eabani. Had he only consulted Dr. Drews's work on the Witnesses to
-the Historicity of Jesus (English translation, p. 190), he would have
-known that "the John of the Gospels" is no other than "the Babylonian
-Oannes, Joannes, or Hanni, the curiously-shaped creature, half fish
-and half man, who, according to Berosus, was the first law-giver and
-inventor of letters and founder of civilization, and who rose every
-morning from the waves of the Red Sea in order to instruct men as to
-his real spiritual nature."
-
-Why could not Dr. Jensen consult Dr. Drews "as to the real spiritual
-nature" of John the Baptist? Why not consult Mr. Robertson, who
-overwhelms Josephus's inconvenient testimony to the reality of John
-the Baptist (in 18 Antiq., v, § 2) with the customary "suspicion
-of interpolation." Poor Dr. Jensen lacks their resourcefulness, and
-is able to discover no other way out of his impasse than to suppose
-that it was originally Lazarus and not John that had a place in his
-Gilgamesch Epic, and that some ill-natured editor of the Gospels,
-for reasons he alone can divine, everywhere struck out the name
-of Lazarus, and inserted in place of it that of John the Baptist,
-which he found in the works of Josephus. Such are the possibilities
-of Gospel redaction as Jensen understands them.
-
-One more example of Dr. Jensen's system. In the Gospel, Jesus,
-finding himself on one occasion surrounded by a larger throng of
-people than was desirable, took a boat in order to get away from them,
-and passed across the lake on the shore of which he had been preaching
-and ministering to the sick. The incident is a commonplace one enough,
-but nothing is too slight and unimportant for Dr. Jensen to detect in
-it a Gilgamesch parallel, and accordingly he writes thus of it: "As
-for Xisuthros, so for Jesus, a boat is lying ready, and like Xisuthros
-and Jonas, Jesus 'flees' in a boat." [52] Xisuthros, I may remind the
-reader, is the name of the flood-hero in Berosus. Hardly a single one
-of the parallels which crowd the thousand pages of Dr. Jensen is less
-flimsy than the above. Without doing more violence to texts and to
-probabilities, one could prove that Achilles and Patroclus and Helen,
-Æneas and Achates and Dido, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza and Dulcinea,
-were all of them so many understudies of Gilgamesch, Eabani and his
-temple slave; and we almost expect to find such a demonstration in
-his promised second volume.
-
-I cannot but think that my readers will resent any further specimens
-of Dr. Jensen's system. He has not troubled himself to acquire
-the merest a b c of modern textual criticism. He has no sense of
-the differences of idea and style which divide the Fourth from the
-earlier Gospels, and he lacks all insight into the development of the
-Gospel tradition. He takes Christian documents out of their historical
-context, and ignores their dependence on the Judaism of the period
-B.C. 100 to A.D. 100. He has no understanding of the prophetic,
-Messianic and Apocalyptic aspects of early Christianity, no sense
-of its intimate relations with the beliefs and opinions which lie
-before us in apocryphs like the Book of Enoch, the Fourth Esdras,
-the Ascent of Isaiah, the Testaments of the Patriarchs. He has never
-learned that in the four Gospels he has before him successive stages
-or layers of stratification of Christian tradition, and he accordingly
-treats them as a single literary block, of which every part is of the
-same age and evidential value. Like his Gilgamesch Epic the Gospels,
-for all he knows about them, might have been dug up only yesterday
-among the sands of Mesopotamia, instead of being the work of a sect
-with which, as early as the end of the first century, we are fairly
-well acquainted. Never once does he ask himself how the authors of
-the New Testament came to have the Gilgamesch Epic at the tips of
-their tongues, exactly in the form in which he translates it from
-Babylonian tablets incised 2,000 years before Christ? By what channels
-did it reach them? Why were they at such pains to transform it into
-the story of a Galilean Messiah crucified by the Roman Governor of
-Judæa? And as Paul and Peter, like everyone else named in the book,
-are duplicates of Gilgamesch and Eabani, where are we to draw the
-line of intersection between heaven and earth; where fix the year in
-which the early Christians ceased to be myths and became mere men and
-women? This is a point it equally behoves Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson
-and Professor W. B. Smith to clear up our doubts about.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-EPILOGUE
-
-
-Of the books passed in review in the preceding pages, as of several
-others couched in the same vein and recently published in England
-and Germany, perhaps the best that can be said is this, that, at any
-rate, they are untrammelled by orthodox prejudice, and fearlessly
-written. That they belong, so to speak, to the extreme left,
-explains the favour with which they are received by that section
-of the middle-class reading public which has conceived a desire
-to learn something of the origins of Christianity. Unschooled in
-the criticism of documents, such readers have learned in the school
-Bible-lesson and in the long hours of instruction in what is called
-Divinity, to regard the Bible as they regard no other collection
-of ancient writings. It is, as a rule, the only ancient book they
-ever opened. They have discovered that orthodoxy depends for its
-life on treating it as a book apart, not to be submitted to ordinary
-tests, not to be sifted and examined, as we have learned from Hume
-and Niebuhr, Gibbon and Grote, to sift ancient documents in general,
-rejecting ab initio the supernatural myths that are never absent from
-them. The acuter minds among the clergy themselves begin nowadays to
-realize that the battle of Freethought and Rationalism is won as far
-as the miracles of the Old Testament are concerned; but as regards
-those of the New they are for ever trying to close up their ranks and
-rally their hosts afresh. Nevertheless, the man in the street has
-a shrewd suspicion that apologetics are so much special pleading,
-and that miracles cannot be eliminated from the Old and yet remain
-in the New Testament. He has never received any training in methods
-of historical research himself, and it is no easy thing to obtain;
-but he is clever enough to detect the evasions of apologists, and,
-with instinctive revulsion, turns away to writers who "go the whole
-hog" and argue for the most extreme positions, even to the length of
-asserting that the story of Jesus is a myth from beginning to end. Any
-narratives, he thinks, that have the germs of truth in them would not
-need the apologetic prefaces and commentaries, the humming and hawing,
-the specious arguments and wire-drawn distinctions of divines, any
-more than do Froissart or Clarendon or Herodotus. If the New Testament
-needs them, then it must be a mass of fable from end to end. Such is
-the impression which our modern apologists leave on the mind of the
-ordinary man.
-
-I can imagine some of my readers objecting here that, whereas I have so
-rudely assailed the method of interpretation of New Testament documents
-adopted by the Nihilistic school--I only use this name as a convenient
-label for those who deny the historical reality of Jesus Christ--I
-nevertheless propound no rival method of my own. The truth is there
-is no abstract method of using documents relating to the past, and you
-cannot in advance lay down rules for doing so. You can only learn how
-to deal with them by practice, and it is one of the chief functions
-of any university or place of higher education to imbue students with
-historical method by setting before them the original documents, and
-inspiring them to extract from them whatever solid results they can. A
-hundred years ago the better men in the college of Christchurch at
-Oxford were so trained by the dean, Cyril Jackson, who would set them
-the task of "preparing for examination the whole of Livy and Polybius,
-thoroughly read and studied in all their comparative bearings." [53]
-No better curriculum, indeed, could be devised for strengthening
-and developing the faculty of historical judgment; and the schools
-of Literae Humaniores and Modern History, which were subsequently
-established at Oxford, carried on the tradition of this enlightened
-educationalist. In them the student is brought face to face in the
-original dialects with the records of the past, and stimulated to
-"read and study them in their comparative bearings." One single branch
-of learning, however, has been treated apart in the universities of
-Oxford and Cambridge, and pursued along the lines of tradition and
-authority--I mean the study of Christian antiquities. The result has
-been deplorable. Intellectually-minded Englishmen have turned away from
-this field of history as from something tainted, and barely one of our
-great historians in a century deems it worthy of his notice. It has
-been left to parsons, to men who have never learned to swim, because
-they have never had enough courage to venture into deep water. As we
-sow, so we reap. The English Church is probably the most enlightened
-of the many sects that make up Christendom. Yet what is the treatment
-which it accords to any member of itself who has the courage to
-dissociate himself from the "orthodoxy" of the fourth century, of
-those Greek Fathers (so-called) in whom the human intelligence sank
-to the nadir of fanaticism and futility? An example was recently seen
-in the case of the Rev. Mr. W. H. Thompson, a young theological tutor
-of Magdalen College in Oxford, who, animated by nothing but loyalty
-for the Church, recently liberated his soul about the miracles of
-the Gospels in a thoroughly scholarly book entitled Miracles in the
-New Testament. The attitude of the clergy in general towards a work
-of genuine research, which sets truth above traditional orthodoxy,
-was revealed in a conference of the clergy of the southern province,
-held soon after its publication on May 19, 1911. The following account
-of that meeting is taken from the Guardian of May 26, 1911:--
-
-
- The Rev. R. F. Bevan, in the Canterbury Diocesan Conference on
- May 19, 1911, proposed "that this Conference is of opinion that
- the clergy should make use of the light thrown on the Bible by
- modern criticism for the purposes of religious teaching." The
- Bishop of Croydon moved the following rider: "But desires to
- record its distrust of critics who, while holding office in the
- Church of Christ, propound views inconsistent with the doctrines
- laid down in the creeds of the Church."
-
- He said it was needful to define what was meant by modern
- criticism. He referred to a book which had been published quite
- lately by the Dean of Divinity of Magdalen College, Oxford, a
- review of which would be found in the Guardian of May 12. He must
- honestly confess he had not read the book for himself.... He then
- premised from the review that the work in question rejects the
- evidence both for the Virgin Birth of Christ and for his bodily
- Resurrection from the tomb ..., and added that the toleration by
- Churchmen of such doctrines and such views being taught within the
- bosom of the Church was to him most sad and inexplicable. If such
- was the instruction which young Divinity students were receiving
- at the universities, no wonder that the supply of candidates for
- ordination was falling off.
-
- The Rev. J. O. Bevan said it was not in the power of any man or
- any body of men to ignore the Higher Criticism or to suppress
- it. It had "come to stay," and its influence for good or evil
- must be recognized.
-
- The President (Archbishop of Canterbury) said that "Bible teaching
- ought to be given with a background of knowledge on the part of the
- teacher. He should deprecate as strongly as anybody that men who
- felt that they could not honestly continue to hold the Christian
- creeds should hold office in the Church of England. But he saw
- no connection between the sort of teaching which the Conference
- had now been considering and the giving up of the Christian
- creed. The Old Testament was a literature which had come down to
- them from ancient days. Modern investigation enabled them now to
- set the earlier stages of that literature in somewhat different
- surroundings from those in which they were set by their fathers and
- grandfathers." With regard to the book which had been referred to,
- the Archbishop said that, if the rider proposed was intended to
- imply a censure upon a particular writer, nothing would induce him
- to vote for it, inasmuch as he had not read the book, and knew
- nothing, at first hand, about it. He thought members ought to
- pause before they lightly gave votes which could be so interpreted.
-
- The motion, on being put to the meeting, was carried with one
- dissentient. The rider was also carried by a majority.
-
-
-It amounts, then, to this, that a rule of limited liability is to
-be observed in the investigation of early Christianity. You may be
-critical, but not up to the point of calling in question the Virgin
-Birth or physical resurrection of Christ. The Bishop of Croydon opines
-that the free discussion of such questions in University circles
-intimidates young men from taking orders. If he lived in Oxford,
-he would know that it is the other way about. [54] If Mr. Thompson
-had been allowed to say what he thought, unmolested; if the Bishops
-of Winchester and of Oxford had not at once taken steps to silence
-and drive him out of the Church, students would have been better
-encouraged to enter the Anglican ministry, and the more intellectual
-of our young men would not avoid it as a profession hard to reconcile
-with truth and honesty and self-respect.
-
-In the next number of the same journal (June 2, 1911) is recorded
-another example of how little our bishops are inclined to face a
-plain issue. It is contained in a paragraph headed thus:--
-
-
- SYMBOLISM OF THE ASCENSION.
-
- The Bishop of Birmingham on the Second Coming.
-
- Preaching to a large congregation in Birmingham Cathedral ... the
- Bishop of Birmingham said that people had found difficulty in
- modern times about the Ascension, because, they said, "God's
- heaven is no more above our heads than under our feet." That
- was perfectly true. But there were certain ways of expressing
- moral ideas rooted in human thought, and we did not the less
- speak continually of the above and the below as expressing what
- was morally high and morally low, and we should go on doing so
- to the end. The ascension of Jesus Christ and his concealment
- in the clouds was a symbolical act, like all the acts after his
- Resurrection; it was to impress their minds with the truth of
- his mounting to the glory of God. Symbols were the best means
- of expressing the truth about things which lay outside their
- experience; and the Ascension symbolized Christ's mounting to the
- supreme state of power and glory, to the perfect vision of God,
- to the throne of all the world.... The Kingdom was coming--had to
- come at last--"on earth as it is in heaven"; and one day, just
- as his disciples saw him passing away out of their experience
- and sight, would they see him coming back into their experience
- and their sight, and into his perfected Kingdom of Humanity.
-
-
-Now, I am sure that what people in modern times chiefly want to know
-about the Ascension is whether it really happened. Did Jesus in his
-physical body go up like a balloon before the eyes of the faithful,
-and disappear behind a cloud, or did he not? That is the plain issue,
-and Dr. Gore seems to avoid it. If he believes in such a miracle,
-why expatiate on the symbolism of all the acts of Jesus subsequent to
-his resurrection? Such a miracle was surely sufficient unto itself,
-and never needed our attention to be drawn to its symbolical aspects
-and import. Does he mean that the legend is no more than "a certain way
-of expressing moral ideas rooted in human thought"? May we welcome his
-insistence on its moral symbolism as a prelude to his abandonment of
-the literal truth of the tale? I hope so, for in not a few apologetic
-books published by divines during the last twenty-five years I have
-encountered a tendency to expatiate on the moral significance of
-extinct Biblical legends. It is, as the Rev. Mr. Figgis expresses
-it, a way of "letting down the laity into the new positions of the
-Higher Criticism." Would it not be simpler, in the end, to tell
-people frankly that a legend is only a legend? They are not children
-in arms. Why is it accounted so terrible for a clergyman or minister
-of religion to express openly in the pulpit opinions he can hear in
-many academical lecture-rooms, and often entertains in the privacy of
-his study? When the Archbishop of Canterbury tells his brother-doctors
-that "modern investigation enables them now to set the earlier stages
-of Old Testament literature in somewhat different surroundings from
-those in which they were set by their fathers and grandfathers,"
-he means that modern scholarship has emptied the Old Testament of
-its miraculous and supernatural legends. But the Anglican clergyman
-at ordination declares that he believes unfeignedly the whole of
-the Old and New Testaments. How can an Archbishop not dispense his
-clergy from belief in the New, when he is so ready to leave it to
-their individual consciences whether they will or will not believe
-in the Old? The entire position is hollow and illogical, and most
-of the bishops know it; but, instead of frankly recognizing facts,
-they descant upon the symbolical meaning of tales which they know
-they must openly abandon to-morrow. One is inclined to ask Dr. Gore
-why Christ could not have imparted in words to his followers the
-secret of his mounting to the supreme state of power and glory? Did
-they at the time, or afterwards, set any such interpretation on
-the story of his rising up from the ground like an airship or an
-exhalation? Of course they did not. They thought the earth was a
-fixed, flat surface, and that, if you ascended through the several
-lower heavens, you would find yourself before a great white throne,
-on which sat, in Oriental state, among his winged cherubim, the Most
-High. They thought that Jesus consummated the hackneyed miracle of
-his ascension by sitting down on the right hand of this Heavenly
-Potentate. If Dr. Gore doubts this, let him consult the voluminous
-works of the early Fathers on the subject. The entire legend coheres
-with ancient, and not with modern, cosmogony. How can it possibly be
-defended to-day on grounds of symbolism, or on any other? The same
-criticism applies to the legend of the Virgin Birth. The Bishop of
-London is reduced to defending this thrum of ancient paganism by an
-appeal to the biological fact of parthenogenesis among insects. Imagine
-the mentality of a modern bishop who dreams that he is advancing the
-cause of true religion and sound learning by assimilating the birth
-of his Saviour to that of a rotifer or a flea!
-
-The books of Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson and others of their school
-are, no doubt, blundering extravaganzas, all the more inopportune
-because they provoke the gibes of Dr. Moulton; but they are at least
-works of Freethought. Their authors do not write with one eye on the
-truth and the other on the Pope in the Vatican, or on the obsolete
-dogmas of Byzantine speculation. It is possible, therefore, to discuss
-with them, as it is not with apologists, who take good care never to
-lay all their cards on the table, and of whom you cannot but feel,
-as the great historian Mommsen remarked, that they are chattering in
-chains (ex vinculis sermocinantes). In the investigation of truth
-there can be no mental reserves, and argument is useless where the
-final appeal lies to a Pope or a creed. You cannot set your hand to
-the plough and then look back.
-
-It was not, then, within the scope of this essay to try to determine
-how much and what particular incidents traditionally narrated of Jesus
-are credible. Such a task would require at least a thousand pages for
-its discharge; I have merely desired to show how difficult it is to
-prove a negative, and how much simpler it is to admit that Jesus really
-lived than to argue that he was a solar or other myth. The latter
-hypothesis, as expounded in these works, offends every principle
-of philology, of comparative mythology, and of textual criticism;
-it bristles with difficulties; and, if no better demonstration of it
-can be offered, it deserves to be summarily dismissed.
-
-On the other hand, no absolute rules can be laid down a priori for
-the discerning in early Christian or in any other ancient documents
-of historical fact. But students embarking on a study of Christian
-origins will do well to lay to heart the aphorism of Renan (Les
-Apôtres, Introd. xxix), that "one can only ascertain the origin of
-any particular religion from the narratives or reports of those who
-believed therein; for it is only the sceptic who writes history ad
-narrandum." It is in the very nature of things human that we could
-not hope to obtain documents more evidential than the Gospels and
-Acts. It is a lucky chance that time has spared to us the Epistles of
-Paul as well, and the sparse notices of first-century congregations
-and personalities preserved in Josephus and in pagan writers. For
-during the first two or three generations of its existence the Church
-interested few except itself. In the view of a Josephus, the Jewish
-converts could only figure as Jews gone astray after a false Messiah,
-just as the Gentile recruits were mere Judaizers, objects--as he
-remarks, B. J., II, 18, 2--of equal suspicion to Syrian pagans and Jews
-alike, an ambiguous, neutral class, spared by the knife of the pagans,
-yet dreaded by the Jews as at heart aliens to their cause. [55] There
-were no folklorists or comparative religionists in those days watching
-for new cults to appear; and there could be little or no inclination to
-sit down and write history among enthusiasts who dreamed that the end
-of the world was close at hand, and believed themselves to be already
-living in the last days. For this is the conviction that colours the
-whole of the New Testament; and that it does so is a signal proof of
-the antiquity of much that the book contains. If a Christian of the
-first century ever took up his pen and wrote, it was not to hand down
-an objective narrative of events to a posterity whose existence he
-barely contemplated, but, as against unbelieving Jews, to establish
-from ancient prophecy his belief in Jesus as the promised Messiah,
-or perhaps as the Word of God made flesh. All Christians were aware
-that Jews, both in Judæa and of the Dispersion, roundly denied their
-Christ to have been anything better than an impostor and violator
-of the Law. They heard the pagans round them echoing the scoffs of
-their Messiah's own countrymen. Accordingly, the earliest literature
-of the Church, so far as it is not merely homiletic and hortative,
-is controversial, and aims at proving that the Jewish people were
-mistaken in rejecting Jesus as the Messiah. The Jews neither then
-nor now have fought with mere shadows; and just in proportion as they
-bore witness against his Messiahship, they bore witness in favour of
-his historical reality. It is a pity that the extreme negative school
-ignore this aspect of his rejection by the Jews.
-
-Let me cite one more wise rule laid down by Renan in the same
-Introduction: "An ancient writing can help us to throw light, firstly,
-on the age in which it was composed, and, secondly, on the age which
-preceded its composition."
-
-This indicates in a general fashion the use which historians should
-make of the New Testament. We have at every turn to ask ourselves
-what the circumstances its contents reveal presuppose in the immediate
-past in the way both of ideas or aspirations and of fact or incidents.
-
-In conclusion, I cannot do better than quote the words in which Renan
-defines in general terms the sort of historical results we may hope to
-attain in the field of Christian origins. It is from the Introduction
-already cited, pp. vi and vii:--
-
-
- In histories like this, where the general outline (ensemble)
- alone is certain, and where nearly all the details lend themselves
- more or less to doubt by reason of the legendary character of
- the documents, hypothesis is indispensable. About ages of which
- we know nothing we cannot frame any hypothesis at all. To try
- to reconstitute a particular group of ancient statuary, which
- certainly once existed, but of which we have not even the debris,
- and about which we possess no written information, is to attempt an
- entirely arbitrary task. But to endeavour to recompose the friezes
- of the Parthenon from what remains to us, using as subsidiary to
- our work ancient texts, drawings made in the seventeenth century,
- and availing ourselves of all sources of information; in a word,
- inspiring ourselves by the style of these inimitable fragments,
- and endeavouring to seize their soul and life--what more legitimate
- task than this? We cannot, indeed, after all, say that we have
- rediscovered the work of the ancient sculptor; nevertheless, we
- shall have done all that was possible in order to approximate
- thereto. Such a method is all the more legitimate in history,
- because language permits the use of dubitative moods of which
- marble admits not. There is nothing to prevent our setting before
- the reader a choice of different suppositions, and the author's
- conscience may be at rest as soon as he has set forth as certain
- what is certain, as probable what is probable, as possible what
- is possible. In those parts of the field where our footstep slides
- and slips between history and legend it is only the general effect
- that we must seek after.... Accomplished facts speak more plainly
- than any amount of biographic detail. We know very little of the
- peerless artists who created the chefs d'oeuvre of Greek art. Yet
- these chefs d'oeuvre tell us more of the personality of their
- authors and of the public which appreciated them than ever could do
- the most circumstantial narratives and the most authentic of texts.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-
-[1] Page 20 of The Christ Myth, from a note added in the third edition.
-
-[2] Op. cit. p. 214.
-
-[3] The Christ Myth, p. 9. (Zu Robertson hat sie meines Wissens noch
-keiner Weise ernsthaft Stellung genommen, p. vii of German edition.)
-
-[4] Christ Myth, p. 57. In the German text (first ed. 1909, p. 21)
-Mr. Robertson is the authority for this statement (so hat Robertson
-es sehr wahrscheinlich gemacht).
-
-[5] Cp. Emile Durkheim, La Vie Religieuse, Paris, 1912, p. 121,
-to whom I owe much in the text.
-
-[6] Such reduplications are common in Semitic languages, and in John
-xix, 23, 24, we have an exact analogy with this passage of Matthew. In
-Psalm xxii, 18, we read: "They parted my garments among them, and
-upon my vesture did they cast lots." Here one and the same incident
-is contemplated in both halves of the verse, and it is but a single
-garment that is divided. Now see what John makes out of this verse,
-regarded as a prophecy of Jesus. He pretends that the soldiers took
-Jesus's garments, and made four parts, to every soldier a part,
-so fulfilling the words: "They parted my garments among them." Next
-they took the coat without seam, and said to one another: "Let us not
-rend it, but cast lots for it, whose it shall be." The parallel with
-Matthew is exact. In each case what is mere rhetorical reduplication
-is interpreted of two distinct objects, and on this misinterpretation
-is based a fulfilment of prophecy, and out of it generated a new form
-of a story or a fresh story altogether. In defiance of the opinion of
-competent Hebraists, Mr. Robertson writes (p. 338) that "there is no
-other instance of such a peculiar tautology in the Old Testament." On
-the contrary, the Old Testament teems with them.
-
-[7] Christianity and Mythology, p. 286.
-
-[8] Dr. Carpenter had objected that "It has first to be proved
-that Dionysos rode on two asses, as well as that Jesus is the
-Sun-God." Mr. Robertson complacently answers (p. 453): "My references
-perfectly prove the currency of the myth in question"!
-
-[9] The Witnesses, p. 55 (p. 75 of German edition).
-
-[10] Why necessarily from Josephus? Were not other sources of recent
-Roman history available for Tacitus? Here peeps out Dr. Drews's
-conviction that the whole of ancient literature lies before him,
-and that even Tacitus could have no other sources of information than
-Dr. Drews.
-
-[11] On p. 299, Mary, mother of Joshua, does duty for Mary Magdalen. We
-there read as follows: "The friendship (of Jesus) with a 'Mary' points
-towards some old myth in which a Palestinian God, perhaps named Yeschu
-or Joshua, figures in the changing relations of lover and son towards a
-mythic Mary, a natural fluctuation in early theosophy." Very "natural"
-indeed among the Jews, who punished even adultery with death!
-
-[12] Needless to say, Dr. Frazer, as any scholar must, rejects the
-thesis of the unhistoricity of Jesus with derision. Mr. Robertson,
-in turn, imputes his rejection of it to timidity. "He (Frazer) has
-had some experience in arousing conservative resistance," he writes
-in Christianity and Mythology, p. 111. He cannot realize that any
-learned man should differ from himself, except to curry favour with
-the orthodox, or from fear of them.
-
-[13] I could have given Professor Smith a better tip. Philo composed a
-glossary of Biblical and other names with their meanings, which, though
-lost in Greek, survives in an old Armenian version. In this Essene is
-equated with "silence." What a magnificent aid to Professor Smith's
-faith! For if Essene meant "a silent one," then the pre-Christian
-Nazarenes must surely have been an esoteric and secret sect.
-
-[14] Of course, it is possible that Jesus, before he comes on the
-scene, at about the age of thirty, as a follower of John the Baptist,
-had been a member of the Essene sect, as the learned writer of the
-article on Jesus in the Jewish Encyclopædia supposes. If such a
-sect of Nazoræi, as Epiphanius describes, ever really existed--and
-Epiphanius is an unreliable author--then Jesus may have been a
-member of it. But it is a long way from a may to a must. Even if it
-could be proved that Matthew had such a tradition when he wrote,
-the proof would not diminish one whit the absurdity of Professor
-Smith's contention that he was a myth and a mere symbol of a God
-Joshua worshipped by pre-Christian Nazoræi. The Nazoræi of Epiphanius
-were a Christian sect, akin to, if not identical with, the Ebionites;
-and the hypothesis that they kept up among themselves a secret cult
-of a God Joshua is as senseless as it is baseless, and opposed to all
-we know of them. In what sense Matthew, that is to say the anonymous
-compiler of the first Gospel, understood nazoræus is clear to anyone
-who will take the trouble to read Matthew ii, 23. He understood by it
-"a man who lived in the village called Nazareth," and that is the
-sense which Nazarene (used interchangeably with it) also bears in
-the Gospel. Mr. Smith scents enigmas everywhere.
-
-[15] How treacherous the argumentum a silentio may be I can
-exemplify. My name and address were recently omitted for two years
-running from the Oxford directory, yet my house is not one of the
-smallest in the city. If any future publicist should pry into my life
-with the aid of this publication, he will certainly infer that I was
-not living in Oxford during those two years. And yet the Argument
-from Silence is only valid where we have a directory or gazetteer or
-carefully compiled list of names and addresses.
-
-[16] See Luke x, 17-20.
-
-[17] La Vie Religieuse, p. 134.
-
-[18] In his De legibus Hebraeorum ritualibus et earum rationibus
-libri tres, printed at the Hague in 1686, but largely written twenty
-years earlier.
-
-[19] The Christ Myth, 2nd ed., p. 18.
-
-[20] It is possible, of course, that Jewish Messianic and apocalyptic
-lore in the first century B.C. had been more or less evolved through
-contact with the religion of Zoroaster; but this lore, as we meet
-with it in the Gospels, derives exclusively from Jewish sources,
-and was part of the common stock of popular Jewish aspirations.
-
-[21] In Mark xv, 39, the utterance of the heathen centurion, "truly
-this man was a Son of God," can obviously not have been inspired
-by messianic conceptions; it can have meant no more than that he
-was more than human, as Damis realized his master Apollonius to be
-on more than one occasion. Nor can Mark have intended to attribute
-Jewish conceptions to a pagan soldier.
-
-[22] For example, he gravely asserts (Die Weltanschauung des alten
-Orients, Leipzig, 1904, p. 41) that Saul's melancholy is explicable
-as a myth of the monthly eclipsing of the moon's light! Perhaps
-Hamlet's melancholy was of the same mythic origin. A map of the stars
-is Winckler's, no less than Jensen's, guide to all mythologies. But,
-to do him justice, Winckler never fell into the last absurdity of
-supposing that Jews at the beginning of our era were engaged in a
-secret cult of a Sun-god named Joshua; on the contrary, he declares
-(op. cit., p. 96), that, just in proportion as we descend the course
-of time, we approach an age in which the heroes of earlier myth are
-brought down to the level of earth. This humanization of the Joshua
-myth was, he held, complete when the book of Joshua was compiled.
-
-[23] Cp. p. 342: "In all his allusions to the movement of his
-day he (Paul) is dealing with Judaizing apostles who preached
-circumcision." And p. 348: "Paul's Cephas is simply one of the apostles
-of a Judaic cult that preaches circumcision."
-
-[24] To wit, of a Sun-god, who is also Mithras and Osiris, and of
-a Vegetation-god annually slain on the sacred tree. We are gravely
-informed that "not till Dr. Frazer had done his work was the psychology
-of the process ascertained." Dr. Frazer must be blushing at this
-tribute to his psychological insight.
-
-[25] Euseb., in Esai, xviii, 1 foll., p. 424, foll. The words might
-mean Justin; but when he quotes Justin he always gives his name. The
-Gospels cannot be intended.
-
-[26] Encycl. Bibl., art, "Paul."
-
-[27] Words italicized in the sequel are citations of the text of Acts.
-
-[28] I expect Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson, in their next editions,
-to broach the view that the earlier chapter was forged to explain
-the later one, and that in the later one "The Seven" are a cryptic
-reference to the Pleiades.
-
-[29] The relevant part of this commentary is preserved in an old
-Armenian version of which we have ancient MSS.
-
-[30] The difficulties largely vanish on the assumption that Galatians
-is the earliest of the Epistles, and that in Gal. ii, 1, dia d "after
-four" was misread in an early copy as dia id "after fourteen." This
-is Professor Lake's conjecture. Such misreadings of the Greek numerals
-are common in ancient MSS.
-
-[31] Christianity and Mythology, p. 354.
-
-[32] Why did they not do so in their "teaching," if it was
-intended (see p. 344) for the Jews of the Dispersion, instead of
-confining themselves to precepts "simply ethical, non-priestly,
-and non-Rabbinical"?
-
-[33] Ecce Deus, p. 8.
-
-[34] Note in Matthew the phrase (xxiii, 8): "But be ye not called
-Rabbi: for one is your teacher, and all ye are brethren."
-
-[35] The passage in which Josephus mentions John the Baptist runs as
-follows: "To some of the Jews it seemed that Herod had had his army
-destroyed by God, and that it was a just retribution on him for his
-severity towards John called the Baptist. For it was indeed Herod who
-slew him, though a good man, and one who bade the Jews in the practise
-of virtue and in the use of justice one to another and of piety towards
-God to walk together in baptism. For this was the condition under which
-baptism would present itself to God as acceptable, if they availed
-themselves of it, not by way of winning pardon for certain sins,
-but after attaining personal holiness, on account of the soul having
-been cleansed beforehand by righteousness. Because men flocked to him,
-for they took the greatest pleasure in listening to his words, Herod
-took fright and apprehended that his vast influence over people would
-lead to some outbreak of rebellion. For it looked as if they would
-follow his advice in all they did, and he came to the conclusion that
-far the best course was, before any revolution was started by him, to
-anticipate it by destroying him: otherwise the upheaval would come, and
-plunge him into trouble and remorse. So John fell a victim to Herod's
-suspicions, was bound and sent to the fortress of Machaerus, of which
-I have above spoken, and there murdered. But the Jews were convinced
-that the loss of his army was by way of retribution for the treatment
-of John, and that it was God who willed the undoing of Herod."
-
-[36] The suspect passage in which Josephus refers to Jesus runs thus,
-Ant. xviii, 3, 3: "Now about this time came Jesus, a wise man, if
-indeed one may call him a man, for he was a doer of wonderful works,
-a teacher of such men as receive what is true with pleasure, and he
-attracted many Jews and many of the Greeks. This was the 'Christ.' And
-when on the accusation of the principal men amongst us Pilate had
-condemned him to the cross, they did not desist who had formerly
-loved him, for he appeared to them on the third day alive again;
-the divine Prophets having foretold both this and a myriad other
-wonderful things about him; and even now the race of those called
-Christians after him has not died out."
-
-I have italicized such clauses as have a chance to be authentic,
-and as may have led Origen to say of Josephus that he did not
-believe Jesus to be the Christ. For the clause "This was the Christ"
-must have run, "This was the so-called Christ." We have the same
-expression in Matt. i, 16, and in the passage, undoubtedly genuine,
-in which Josephus refers to James, Ant., xx, 9, 1. Here Josephus
-relates that the Sadducee High-priest Ananus (son of Annas of the
-New Testament), in the interval of anarchy between the departure of
-one Roman Governor, Festus, and the arrival of another, Albinus,
-set up a court of his own, "and bringing before it the brother of
-Jesus who was called Christ--James was his name--and some others,
-he accused them of being breakers of the Law, and had them stoned."
-
-In the History of the Jewish War, iv, 5, 2, Josephus records his
-belief that the Destruction of Jerusalem was a divine nemesis for
-the murder of this Ananus by the Idumeans.
-
-There is not now, nor ever was, any passage in Josephus where the
-fall of Jerusalem was explained as an act of divine nemesis for the
-murder of James by Ananus. Origen, as Professor Burkitt has remarked,
-"had mixed up in his commonplace book the account of Ananus's murder
-of James and the remarks of Josephus on Ananus's own murder."
-
-[37] So in Acts xviii, 12, we read of faction fights in Corinth
-between the Jews and the followers of Jesus the Messiah; Gallio,
-the proconsul of Achaia, who cared for none of the matters at issue
-between them, is a well-known personage, and an inscription has lately
-been discovered dating his tenure of Achaia in A.D. 52.
-
-[38] Tacitus very likely wrote Chrestiani. He says the mob called
-them such, but adds that the author of the name was Christ, so
-implying that Christianus was the true form, and Chrestianus a popular
-malformation thereof. The Roman mob would be likely to deform a name
-they did not understand, just as a jack-tar turns Bellerophon into
-Billy Ruffian. Chrestos was a common name among oriental slaves,
-and a Roman mob would naturally assume that Christos, which they
-could not understand, was a form of it.
-
-[39] Mr. Robertson recognizes (p. 124), though without realizing
-how much it damages his theory, that the miracles of the Gospels are
-"visibly unknown to the Paulinists"--presumably the early churches
-addressed by Paul in his Epistle. Do we not here get a glimpse of
-an early stage of the story of Jesus before it was overlaid with
-miracles? Yet Mr. Robertson, in defiance of logic, argues that the
-absence of miraculous tales of Jesus in the Paulines confirms what
-he calls "the mythological argument."
-
-[40] It is true that this is from a speech put into Paul's mouth by
-the author of Acts; but Paul himself is no less emphatic in Romans
-i, 23, where of the Greeks he writes that, "though they knew God,
-they glorified him not as God.... Professing themselves wise, they
-were turned into fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible
-God for the likeness of an image of a corruptible man." Such were the
-feelings excited in Paul by a statue of Pheidias; how different from
-those it roused in his contemporary Dion, who wrote as follows of it:
-"Whoever among mortal men is most utterly toilworn in spirit, having
-drunk the cup of many sorrows and calamities, when he stands before
-this image must utterly forget all the terrors and woes of this mortal
-life." So strong was the prejudice of the Church (due exclusively to
-its Jewish origin) against plastic or pictorial art that Eusebius and
-Epiphanius condemned pictures of Christ as late as the fourth century,
-while the Eastern churches, even to-day, forbid statues of Jesus and
-of the Saints. Of the great gulf which separated Jew from Gentile on
-such points Mr. Robertson seems not to have the faintest notion.
-
-[41] I trust my readers will forgive my use of a fox-hunting phrase
-in so serious a context, but I cannot think of any other so apt.
-
-[42] P. 48. After citing the rather problematic allusion to Plato
-(Rep. ii, 361 D) in the apology of Apollonius (c. 172), the just man
-shall be tortured, he shall be spat on, and, last of all, he shall
-be crucified. Harnack has said that there is no other reference to
-this passage of Plato in old-Christian literature. "Why?" asks
-Mr. Smith. "Because Christians were not familiar with
-it? Impossible. The silence of the Christians was intentional, and
-the reason is obvious. The passage was tell-tale. Similarly we are to
-understand their silence about the pre-Christian Nazarenes and many
-other lions that were safest when asleep." This is in the true vein
-of a Bacon-Shakesperians armed with his cypher.
-
-[43] See note (1).
-
-[44] Elsewhere Mr. Smith qualifies this position, p. 35: "Of course,
-the cult was not intended to remain, and did not in fact remain,
-secret; it was at length brought into the open." But perhaps Mr. Smith
-is here alluding to his own revelation.
-
-[45] Mark xvi, 9. The circumstance that Mark xvi, 9-20, was added to
-the Gospel by another hand in no way diminishes the significance of
-the passage here adduced.
-
-[46] In the same manner, as we know from Origen (Com. in
-Evang. Ioannis, tom. xiii, 27), the Samaritans had a Messiah named
-Dositheos, who rose from the dead, and professed himself to be the
-Messiah of prophecy. His sect survived in the third century, as also
-his books, which, as Origen says, were full of "myth" about him to the
-effect that he had not tasted of death, but was somewhere or other
-still alive. By all the rules of criticism as used by Mr. Robertson
-and his friends, we must deny that Dositheos ever lived. The idea
-of a human hero being an angel or divine power made flesh was common
-among Jews, and in their apocryph, "The Prayer of Jacob" (see Origen,
-op. cit., tom. ii, 25), that worthy represented himself as such in
-the very language of Paul and of the Fourth Gospel: "I who spoke to
-you, I, Jacob and Israel, am an angel of God and a primeval spirit,
-as Abraham and Isaak were created in advance of all creatures. But
-I, Jacob, ... called Israel by God, a man seeing God, because I am
-first-born of all living beings made alive by God." We also learn
-that Uriel was sent forth by God to herald Jacob's descent upon
-earth, where he "tabernacled among men." Jacob declares himself
-to be "archangel of the power of God, and arch-captain among the
-sons of God, Israel the foremost minister of the Presence." Paul,
-we observe, did not need to go outside Judaism for his conceptions
-of Jesus, nor Justin Martyr either, who regularly speaks of Jesus
-as an archangel. So also among the pagans. In Augustus Cæsar his
-contemporaries loved to detect one of the great gods of Olympus just
-descended to earth in the semblance of a man. He was the god Mercury
-or some other god incarnate. His birth was a god's descent to earth
-in order to expiate the sins of the Romans. Thus Horace, Odes, I,
-2, v. 29: Cui dabit partes scelus expiandi Juppiter, and cp. v. 45:
-Serus in coelum redeas--"Mayest thou be late in returning to heaven."
-
-[47] Das Gilgamesch Epos in der Weltliteratur, 1906.
-
-[48] P. 933: "Die Jesus-sage nach den Synoptikern--wie auch die
-nach Johannes--unterscheidet sich nun aber von allen anderen bisher
-erörterten Gilgamesch-sagen dadurch, dass sie hinter dem Gros der
-Sage nicht nur einzelne Bruchstücke von ihr als Nachzügler bringt,
-sondern eine lange Reihe von Stücken der Sage in fast ungestörter
-ursprünglicher Reihenfolge," etc.
-
-[49] P. 818. So weit von Johannis Person allein. Verfolgen wir nun
-die Jesus-Sage weiter.
-
-Im Gilgamesch Epos wird erzählt, wie zu Eabani in der Wüste der Jäger
-mit der Hierodule hinauszieht, wie Eabani ihrer habe geniesst, und
-dann mit ihr nach Erech kommt, wo grade oder ihm zu Ehre ein Fest
-gefeiert wird, wie er sich dort an Gilgamesch anschliesst und ihn
-durch Diesen königliche Ehren zuteil werden. Welche Metamorphosen
-diese Geschehnisse in den Sagen des alten Testaments erlebt haben,
-darf jetzt in der Hauptsache als bekannt vorausgesetzt werden. In
-zahlreichen Gilgamesch-Sagen fanden wir nun die Begegnung mit
-der Hierodule wieder. Aber vergeblich suchen wir sie dort in den
-drei ersten Evangelien, wo ihr Platz wäre, falls diese etwa eine
-Gilgamesch-Sage enthalten sollten, nämlich unmittelbar hinter Johannis
-Auftreten in der Wüste. Ebenso wenig finden wir an dieser Stelle etwa
-einen Reflex von Eabani's Einzug in das festlich erregte Erech. Wohl
-dagegen treffen wir an ursprünglicher Stelle ein Wiederhall von
-Gilgamesch's Begegnung mit Eabani.
-
-[50] P. 820. Jesu Taufe durch Johannes wäre sonst auch daraus geworden,
-dass Eabani, nach dem er an Gilgamesch's Hof gelangt ist, durch Diesen
-Königlicher Ehren teilhaft wird.
-
-[51] Nach Lukas (i, 15 and vii, 33) trinkt Johannes keinen Wein,
-ist also ein Nasiräer, der keinen Wein trinkt und dessen Haar nicht
-kekürzt wird, ebenso wie Joseph-Eabani, wie Simson als ein Eabani,
-wie Samuel-Eabani, wie Absolom als Eabani wenigstens einen üppigen
-Haarwuchs besitzt, und wie der Eabani des Epos, mit dem langen
-Haupthaar eines Weibes, in der Wüste mit den Tieren zusammen Wasser
-trinkt, und wie Eabani mit diesen Tieren zusammen nur Gras und Krauter
-frisst, so isst Johannes, nach Lukas wenigstens, kein Brot.
-
-[52] P. 838: Wie für Xisuthros, liegt für Jesus ein Schiff bereit,
-und, wie Xisuthros und Jonas, "flieht" Jesus in ein Schiff.
-
-[53] I cite an unfinished memoir of my grandfather, W. D. Conybeare,
-himself a pioneer of geology and no mean palæontologist, who owed much
-of his discernment in these fields to such a training in historical
-method as he describes.
-
-[54] Within the last two months the theological faculties of Oxford and
-Cambridge, and the examining chaplains (of various bishops) resident
-in those universities, have addressed a petition to the Archbishop
-of Canterbury praying him to absolve candidates for Ordination of the
-necessity of avowing that "they believe unfeignedly in the whole of the
-Old and New Testaments," because so many competent and well-qualified
-students are thereby deterred from taking holy orders. The Archbishop
-would, it seems, make the individual clergyman's conscience the sole
-judge (to the exclusion of the Bishop of Croydon) of the propriety
-of his retaining his orders in spite of his rejection of this and
-that tradition or dogma. That is at least a sign that opinion is on
-the move.
-
-[55] Such is Renan's interpretation of this passage in L'Ante-Christ,
-ed. 1873, p. 259, and he is undoubtedly right in detecting in it a
-reference to the Christians scattered abroad in the half-Syrian and
-pagan, half-Jewish and monotheist, cities of Syria.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Historical Christ;, by Fred. C. Conybeare
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Historical Christ;, by Fred. C. Conybeare
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Historical Christ;
- Or, An investigation of the views of Mr. J. M. Robertson,
- Dr. A. Drews, and Prof. W. B. Smith
-
-Author: Fred. C. Conybeare
-
-Release Date: September 18, 2017 [EBook #55575]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORICAL CHRIST; ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
-Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
-made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="front">
-<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure cover-imagewidth"><img src="images/new-cover.jpg"
-alt="Newly Designed Front Cover." width="480" height="720"></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 frenchtitle"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd25e129">THE HISTORICAL CHRIST</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure titlepage-imagewidth"><img src=
-"images/titlepage.png" alt="Original Title Page." width="442" height=
-"720"></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="titlePage">
-<div class="docTitle">
-<div class="mainTitle">THE HISTORICAL CHRIST;</div>
-<div class="subTitle">OR,</div>
-<div class="subTitle">AN INVESTIGATION OF THE VIEWS OF <span class=
-"sc">Mr. J. M. ROBERTSON, Dr. A. DREWS, and Prof. W. B.
-SMITH</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="byline">BY<br>
-<span class="docAuthor">FRED. C. CONYBEARE, M.A., F.B.A.,</span><br>
-HONORARY FELLOW OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, OXFORD; HON. LL.D. OF THE
-UNIVERSITY OF ST. ANDREWS; HON. DOCTOR OF THEOLOGY OF GIESSEN</div>
-<div class="docImprint">[ISSUED FOR THE RATIONALIST PRESS ASSOCIATION,
-LIMITED]<br>
-LONDON:<br>
-WATTS &amp; CO.,<br>
-17 JOHNSON&rsquo;S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.<br>
-<span class="docDate">1914</span></div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e169" href="#xd25e169" name=
-"xd25e169">v</a>]</span></p>
-<div id="toc" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">CONTENTS</h2>
-<table class="tocList">
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#preface" id="xd25e180"
-name="xd25e180">PREFACE</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">vii</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">CHAP.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">I.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch1" id="xd25e194" name=
-"xd25e194">HISTORICAL METHOD</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">II.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch2" id="xd25e204" name=
-"xd25e204">PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">81</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">III.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch3" id="xd25e214" name=
-"xd25e214">THE ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">96</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">IV.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch4" id="xd25e224" name=
-"xd25e224">THE EPISTLES OF PAUL</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">125</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">V.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch5" id="xd25e234" name=
-"xd25e234">EXTERNAL EVIDENCE</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">154</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">VI.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch6" id="xd25e244" name=
-"xd25e244">THE ART OF CRITICISM</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">167</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">VII.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ch7" id="xd25e254" name=
-"xd25e254">DR. JENSEN</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">202</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#epilogue" id="xd25e261"
-name="xd25e261">EPILOGUE</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">214</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#ix" id="xd25e269" name=
-"xd25e269">INDEX</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">227</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e275" href="#xd25e275" name=
-"xd25e275">vii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="preface" class="div1 preface"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e180">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This little volume was written in the spring of the
-year 1913, and is intended as a plea for moderation and good sense in
-dealing with the writings of early Christianity; just as my earlier
-volumes entitled <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i> and <i>A History of New
-Testament Criticism</i> were pleas for the free use, in regard to the
-origins of that religion, of those methods of historical research to
-which we have learned to subject all records of the past. It provides a
-middle way between traditionalism on the one hand and absurdity on the
-other, and as doing so will certainly be resented by the partisans of
-each form of excess.</p>
-<p>The comparative method achieved its first great triumph in the field
-of Indo-European philology; its second in that of mythology and
-folk-lore. It is desirable to allow to it its full rights in the matter
-of Christian origins. But we must be doubly careful in this new and
-almost unworked region to use it with the same scrupulous care for
-evidence, with the same absence of prejudice and economy of hypothesis,
-to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e289" href="#xd25e289" name=
-"xd25e289">viii</a>]</span>which it owes its conquests in other fields.
-The untrained explorers whom I here criticize discover on almost every
-page connections in their subject-matter where there are and can be
-none, and as regularly miss connections where they exist. Parallelisms
-and analogies of rite, conduct, and belief between religious systems
-and cults are often due to other causes than actual contact,
-inter-communication, and borrowing. They may be no more than sporadic
-and independent manifestations of a common humanity. It is not enough,
-therefore, for one agent or institution or belief merely to remind us
-of another. Before we assert literary or traditional connection between
-similar elements in story and myth, we must satisfy ourselves that such
-communication was possible. The tale of Sancho Panza and his visions of
-a happy isle, over which he shall hold sway when his romantic lord and
-master, Don Quixote, has overcome with his good sword the world and all
-its evil, reminds us of the na&iuml;f demand of the sons of Zebedee
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2010:37&amp;version=NRSV">Mark
-x, 37</a>) to be allowed to sit on the right hand and the left of their
-Lord, so soon as he is glorified. With equal simplicity (<a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2019:28&amp;version=NRSV">Matthew
-xix, 28</a>) Jesus promises that in the day of the regeneration of
-Israel, when the Son of Man takes his seat on his throne of glory,
-Peter and his companions shall also take their seats on twelve thrones
-to judge the twelve tribes of Israel. The projected <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="xd25e297" href="#xd25e297" name=
-"xd25e297">ix</a>]</span><i lang="fr">mise en sc&egrave;ne</i> is
-exactly that of a Persian great king with his magnates on their several
-&ldquo;cushions&rdquo; of state around him. There is, again, a close
-analogy psychologically between Dante&rsquo;s devout adoration of
-Beatrice in heaven and Paul&rsquo;s of the risen Jesus. These two
-parallels are closer than most that Mr. Robertson discovers between
-Christian story and Pagan myth, yet no one in his senses would ever
-suggest that Cervantes drew his inspiration from the Gospels or Dante
-from the Pauline Epistles. In criticizing the Gospels it is all the
-more necessary to proceed cautiously, because the obscurantists are
-incessantly on the watch for solecisms&mdash;or &ldquo;howlers,&rdquo;
-as a schoolboy would call them; and only too anxious to point to them
-as of the essence of all free criticism of Christian literature and
-history.</p>
-<p>Re-reading these pages after the lapse of many months since they
-were written, I have found little to alter, though Prof. A. C. Clark,
-who has been so good as to peruse them, has made a few suggestions
-which, where the sheets were not already printed, I have embodied. I
-append a list of <i>errata</i> calling for correction.</p>
-<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Fred. C. Conybeare.</span></p>
-<p class="dateline"><i>March 1, 1914.</i> <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"xd25e314" href="#xd25e314" name="xd25e314">xi</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 errata"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">ERRATA</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">P. 87, first line of footnote: <i>for</i>
-&ldquo;<span lang="de">des as Alten</span>&rdquo; <i>read</i>
-&ldquo;<span lang="de">des alten</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>P. 110, line 28: <i>for</i> &ldquo;passages&rdquo; <i>read</i>
-&ldquo;episodes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>P. 116, line 6: <i>for</i> &ldquo;At Cyprus they stay with an early
-disciple&rdquo; <i>read</i> &ldquo;They stay with an early disciple
-from Cyprus.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>P. 147, line 5: <i>omit</i> the word &ldquo;twice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>P. 151, line 9: <i>after</i> &ldquo;verse 20&rdquo; <i>add</i>:
-&ldquo;But, since the Bezan omission does not cover the whole of the
-matter taken from Corinthians, we may suppose that Luke borrowed the
-words from the Epistle in question.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>P. 167, in marginal lemma: <i>for</i> &ldquo;of Jesus&rdquo;
-<i>read</i> &ldquo;of Jesus of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>P. 185, lines 11, 12, <i>read thus</i>: &ldquo;on it (the
-<i>Didach&eacute;</i>) the,&rdquo; etc. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb1" href="#pb1" name="pb1">1</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="body">
-<div id="ch1" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e194">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main"><span class="sc">Chapter I</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">HISTORICAL METHOD</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Orthodox obscurantism the
-parent of Sciolism</span> In <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i> (Chapter
-IX) I have remarked that the Church, by refusing to apply in the field
-of so-called sacred history the canons by which in other fields truth
-is discerned from falsehood, by beatifying credulous ignorance and
-anathematizing scholarship and common sense, has surrounded the figure
-of Jesus with such a nimbus of improbability that it seems not absurd
-to some critics of to-day to deny that he ever lived. The circumstance
-that both in England and in Germany the books of certain of these
-critics&mdash;in particular, Dr. Arthur Drews, Professor W. Benjamin
-Smith, and Mr. J. M. Robertson&mdash;are widely read, and welcomed by
-many as works of learning and authority, requires that I should
-criticize them rather more in detail than I deemed it necessary to do
-in that publication.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">B. Croce on nature of History</span>
-Benedetto Croce well remarks in his <i lang="la">Logica</i> (p. 195)
-that history in no way differs from the physical sciences, insofar as
-it cannot be constructed by pure reasoning, but rests upon sight or
-vision of the fact that has happened, the fact so perceived being the
-only source of history. In a methodical historical treatise the sources
-are usually divided into monuments and narratives; by the former being
-understood whatever is left to us as a trace of the accomplished
-fact&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, a contract, a letter, or a triumphal arch;
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb2" href="#pb2" name=
-"pb2">2</a>]</span>while narratives consist of such accounts of it as
-have been transmitted to us by those who were more or less
-eye-witnesses thereof, or by those who have repeated the notices or
-traditions furnished by eye-witnesses.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Relative paucity of evangelic
-tradition</span> Now it may be granted that we have not in the New
-Testament the same full and direct information about Jesus as we can
-derive from ancient Latin literature about Julius C&aelig;sar or
-Cicero. We have no <i>monuments</i> of him, such as are the
-commentaries of the one or the letters and speeches of the other. It is
-barely credible that a single one of the New Testament writers, except
-perhaps St. Paul, ever set eyes on him or heard his voice. It is more
-than doubtful whether a single one of his utterances, as recorded in
-the Gospels, retains either its original form or the idiom in which it
-was clothed. A mass of teaching, a number of aphorisms and precepts,
-are attributed to him; but we know little of how they were transmitted
-to those who repeat them to us, and it is unlikely that we possess any
-one of them as it left his lips.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">and presence of miracles in it,</span> And
-that is not all. In the four Gospels all sorts of incredible stories
-are told about him, such as that he was born of a virgin mother,
-unassisted by a human father; that he walked on the surface of the
-water; that he could foresee the future; that he stilled a storm by
-upbraiding it; that he raised the dead; that he himself rose in the
-flesh from the dead and left his tomb empty; that his apostles beheld
-him so risen; and that finally he disappeared behind a cloud up into
-the heavens.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">explains and excuses the extreme negative
-school</span> It is natural, therefore&mdash;and there is much excuse
-for him&mdash;that an uneducated man or a child, bidden <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb3" href="#pb3" name=
-"pb3">3</a>]</span>unceremoniously in the name of religion to accept
-these tales, should revolt, and hastily make up his mind that the
-figure of Jesus is through and through fictitious, and that he never
-lived at all. One thing only is certain&mdash;namely, that insofar as
-the orthodox blindly accept these tales&mdash;nay, maintain with St.
-Athanasius that the man Jesus was God incarnate, a pre-existent
-&aelig;on, Word of God, Creator of all things, masked in human flesh,
-but retaining, so far as he chose, all his exalted prerogatives and
-cosmic attributes in this disguise&mdash;they put themselves out of
-court, and deprive themselves of any faculty of reply to the extreme
-negative school of critics. The latter may be very absurd, and may
-betray an excess of credulity in the solutions they offer of the
-problem of Christian origins; but they can hardly go further along the
-path of absurdity and credulity than the adherents of the creeds. If
-their arguments are to be met, if any satisfactory proof is to be
-advanced of the historicity of Jesus, it must come, not from those who,
-as Mommsen remarked, &ldquo;reason in chains,&rdquo; but from free
-thinkers.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Yet Jesus is better attested than most
-ancients</span> Those, however, who have much acquaintance with
-antiquity must perceive at the outset that, if the thesis that Jesus
-never existed is to be admitted, then quite a number of other
-celebrities, less well evidenced than he, must disappear from the page
-of history, and be ranged with Jesus in the realm of myth.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Age of the earliest Christian
-literature</span> Many characteristically Christian documents, such as
-the Epistle of Barnabas, the Shepherd of Hermas, and the Teaching of
-the Apostles, are admitted by Drews to have been written before
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e436src"
-href="#xd25e436" name="xd25e436src">1</a> Not <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb4" href="#pb4" name="pb4">4</a>]</span>only the
-canonical Gospels, he tells us,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e444src"
-href="#xd25e444" name="xd25e444src">2</a> were still current in the
-first half of the second century, but several never accepted by the
-Church&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, spurious gospels ascribed to Matthew, Thomas,
-Bartholomew, Peter, the Twelve Apostles. These have not reached us,
-though we have recovered a large fragment of the so-called Peter
-Gospel, and find that it at least pre-supposes canonical Mark. The
-phrase, &ldquo;Still current in the first half of the second
-century,&rdquo; indicates that, in Dr. Drews&rsquo;s opinion, these
-derivative gospels were at least as old as year 100; in that case our
-canonical Gospels would fall well within the first. I will not press
-this point; but, anyhow, we note the admission that within about
-seventy years of the supposed date of Jesus&rsquo;s death Christians
-were reading that mass of written tradition about him which we call the
-Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. They were also reading a mass
-of less accredited biographies&mdash;less trustworthy, no doubt, but,
-nevertheless, the work of authors who entertained no doubt that Jesus
-had really lived, and who wished to embellish his story.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">If Jesus never lived, neither did
-Solon,</span> If, then, armed with such early records, we are yet so
-exacting of evidence as to deny that Jesus, their central figure, ever
-lived, what shall we say of other ancient worthies&mdash;of Solon, for
-example, the ancient Athenian legislator? For his life our chief
-sources, as Grote remarks (<i>History of Greece</i>, Pt. II, ch. 11),
-are Plutarch and Diogenes, writers who lived seven and eight hundred
-years after him. Moreover, the stories of Plutarch about him are, as
-Grote says, &ldquo;contradictory as well as apocryphal.&rdquo; It is
-true <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb5" href="#pb5" name=
-"pb5">5</a>]</span>that Herodotus repeats to us the story of
-Solon&rsquo;s travels, and of the conversations he held with
-Cr&oelig;sus, King of Lydia; but these conversations are obviously mere
-romance. Herodotus, too, lived not seventy, but nearly one hundred and
-fifty years later than Solon, so that contemporary evidence of him we
-have none. Plutarch preserves, no doubt, various laws and metrical
-aphorisms which were in his day attributed to Solon, just as the
-Christians attributed an extensive body of teaching to Jesus. If we
-deny all authenticity to Jesus&rsquo;s teaching, what of Solon&rsquo;s
-traditional lore? Obviously Jesus has a far larger chance to have
-really existed than Solon.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">or Epimenides,</span> And the same is true
-of Epimenides of Crete, who was said to be the son of the nymph Balte;
-to have been mysteriously fed by the nymphs, since he was never seen to
-eat, and so forth. He was known as the Purifier, and in that
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i> healed the Athenians of plagues physical and
-spiritual. A poet and prophet he lived, according to some, for one
-hundred and fifty-four years; according to his own countrymen, for
-three hundred. If he lived to the latter age, then Plato, who is the
-first to mention him in his <i>Laws</i>, was his contemporary, not
-otherwise.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">or Pythagoras,</span> Pythagoras, again,
-can obviously never have lived at all, if we adopt the purist canons of
-Drews. For he was reputed, as Grote (Pt. II, ch. 37) reminds us, to
-have been inspired by the gods to reveal to men a new way of life, and
-found an order or brotherhood. He is barely mentioned by any writer
-before Plato, who flourished one hundred and fifty years later than he.
-In the matter of miracles, prophecy, pre-existence, mystic observances,
-and asceticism, Pythagoras equalled, if he did not excel, Jesus.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb6" href="#pb6" name=
-"pb6">6</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">or Apollonius of Tyana</span> Apollonius of
-Tyana is another example. We have practically no record of him till one
-hundred and twenty years after his death, when the Sophist Philostratus
-took in hand to write his life, by his own account, with the aid of
-memorials left by Damis, a disciple of the sage. Apollonius, like Jesus
-and Pythagoras, was an incarnation of an earlier being; he, too, worked
-miracles, and appeared after death to an incredulous follower, and
-ascended into heaven bodily. The stories of his miracles of healing, of
-his expulsions of demons, and raising of the dead, read exactly like
-chapters out of the Gospels. He, like Jesus and Pythagoras, had a god
-Proteus for his father, and was born of a virgin. His birth was marked
-in the heavens by meteoric portents. His history bristles with tales
-closely akin to those which were soon told of Jesus; yet all sound
-scholars are agreed that his biographer did not imitate the Gospels,
-but wrote independently of them. If, then, Jesus never lived, much less
-can Apollonius have done so. Except for a passing reference in Lucian,
-Philostratus is our earliest authority for his reality; the life
-written of him by Moeragenes is lost, and we do not know when it was
-written. On the whole, the historicity of Jesus is much better attested
-and documented than that of Apollonius, whose story is equally full of
-miracles with Christ&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Miracles do not wholly invalidate a
-document</span> The above examples suffice. But, with the aid of a good
-dictionary of antiquity, hundreds of others could be adduced of
-individuals for whose reality we have not a tithe of the evidence which
-we have for that of Jesus; yet no one in his senses disputes their ever
-having lived. We take it for certain that hundreds&mdash;nay,
-thousands&mdash;of people who figure on the pages <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb7" href="#pb7" name="pb7">7</a>]</span>of ancient
-and medieval history were real, and that, roughly speaking, they
-performed the actions attributed to them&mdash;this although the
-earliest notices of them are only met with in Plutarch, or Suidas, or
-William of Tyre, or other writers who wrote one hundred, two hundred,
-perhaps six hundred years after them. Nor are we deterred from
-believing that they really existed by the fact that, along with some
-things credible, other things wholly incredible are related of them.
-Throughout ancient history we must learn to pick and choose. The
-thesis, therefore, that Jesus never lived, but was from first to last a
-myth, presents itself at the outset as a paradox. Still, as it is
-seriously advanced, it must be seriously considered and that I now
-proceed to do.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Proof of the unhistoricity of Jesus, how
-attainable</span> It can obviously not pass muster, unless its authors
-furnish us with a satisfactory explanation of every single notice,
-direct or indirect, simple or constructive, which ancient writers have
-transmitted to us. Each notice must be separately examined, and if an
-evidential document be composite, every part of it. Each statement in
-its <i lang="la">prim&acirc; facie</i> sense must be shown to be
-irreconcilable with what we know of the age and circumstances to which
-it pretends to relate. And in every case the new interpretation must be
-more cogent and more probable than the old one. Jesus, the real man,
-must be driven line by line, verse by verse, out of the whole of the
-New Testament, and after that out of other early sources which directly
-or by implication attest his historicity. There is no other way of
-proving so sweeping a negative as that of the three authors I have
-named.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">How to approach ancient documents</span>
-For every statement of fact in an ancient author is a problem, and has
-to be accounted for. If it accords <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb8"
-href="#pb8" name="pb8">8</a>]</span>with the context, and the entire
-body of statement agrees with the best scheme we can form in our
-mind&rsquo;s eye of the epoch, we accept it, just as we would the
-statement of a witness standing before us in a law court. If, on the
-other hand, the statement does not agree with our scheme, we ask why
-the author made it. If he obviously believed it, then how did his error
-arise? If he should seem to have made it without himself believing it,
-then we ask, Why did he wish to deceive his reader? Sometimes the only
-solution we can give of the matter is, that our author himself never
-penned the statement, but that someone covertly inserted it in his
-text, so that it might appear to have contained it. In such cases we
-must explain why and in whose interest the text was interpolated. In
-all history, of course, we never get a direct observation, or
-intuition, or hearing of what took place, for the photographic camera
-and phonograph did not exist in antiquity. We must rest content with
-the convictions and feelings of authors, as they put them down in
-books. To one circumstance, however, amid so much dubiety, we shall
-attach supreme importance; and that is to an affirmation of the same
-fact by two or more independent witnesses. One man may well be in
-error, and report to us what never occurred; but it is in the last
-degree improbable that two or more <span class="marginnote">Value of
-several independent witnesses in case of Jesus</span>independent
-witnesses will join forces in testifying to what never was. Let us,
-then, apply this principle to the problem before us. Jesus, our authors
-affirm, was not a real man, but an astral myth. Now we can conceive of
-one ancient writer mistaking such a myth for a real man; but what if
-another and another witness, what if half a dozen or more come along,
-and, meeting us quite <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb9" href="#pb9"
-name="pb9">9</a>]</span>apart from one another and by different routes,
-often by pure accident, conspire in error. If we found ourselves in
-such case, would we not think we were bewitched, and take to our
-heels?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The oldest sources about Jesus</span> Well,
-I do not intend to take to my heels. I mean to stand up to the chimeras
-of Messrs. Drews, Robertson, and Benjamin Smith. And the best courage
-is to take one by one the ancient sources which bear witness to the man
-Jesus, examine and compare them, and weigh their evidence. If they are
-independent, if they agree, not too much&mdash;that would excite a
-legitimate suspicion&mdash;but only more or less and in a general way,
-then, I believe, any rational inquirer would allow them weight, even if
-none were strictly contemporaries of his and eye-witnesses of his life.
-In the Gospel of Mark we have the earliest narrative document of the
-New Testament. This is evident from the circumstance that the three
-other evangelists used it in the composition of their Gospels. Drews,
-indeed, admits it to be one of the &ldquo;safest&rdquo; results of
-modern discussion of the life of Jesus that this Gospel is the oldest
-of the surviving four. He is aware, of course, that this conclusion has
-been questioned; but no one will doubt it who has confronted
-<span class="marginnote">The Gospel of Mark used in Matthew and
-Luke</span>Mark in parallel columns with Luke and Matthew, and noted
-how these other evangelists not only derive from it the order of the
-events of the life of Jesus, but copy it out verse after verse, each
-with occasional modifications of his own. Drews, however, while aware
-of this phenomenon, has yet not grasped the fact that it and nothing
-else has moved scholars to regard Mark as the most ancient of the three
-Synoptics; quite erroneously, as if he had never read any work of
-modern textual <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb10" href="#pb10" name=
-"pb10">10</a>]</span>criticism, he imagines that they are led to their
-conclusion, firstly by the superior freshness and vividness of Mark, by
-a picturesqueness which argues him to have been an eye-witness; and,
-secondly, by the evidence of Papias, who, it is said, declared Mark to
-have been the interpreter of the Apostle Peter. In point of fact, the
-modern critical theologians, for whom Drews has so much contempt,
-attach no decisive weight in this connection either to the tradition
-preserved by Papias or to the graphic qualities of Mark&rsquo;s
-narratives. They rest their case mainly on the internal evidence of the
-texts before them.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Contents of Mark</span> What, then, do we
-find in Mark&rsquo;s narrative?</p>
-<p>Inasmuch as my readers can buy the book for a penny and study it for
-themselves, I may content myself with a very brief
-<i>r&eacute;sum&eacute;</i> of its contents.</p>
-<p>It begins with an account of one John who preached round about
-Jud&aelig;a, but especially on the Jordan, that the Jews must repent of
-their sins in order to their remission; in token whereof he directed
-them to take a ritual bath in the sacred waters of the Jordan, just as
-a modern Hindoo washes away his sins by means of a ritual bath in the
-River Jumna. An old document generally called Q. (<span lang=
-"de">Quelle</span>), because Luke and Matthew used it in common to
-supplement Mark&rsquo;s rather meagre story, adds the reason why the
-Jews were to repent; and it was this, that the Kingdom of Heaven was at
-hand. <span class="marginnote">Drews&rsquo;s account of
-Messianism</span>Drews, in his first chapter of <i>The Christ Myth</i>,
-traces out the idea of this Kingdom of God, which he finds so prominent
-in the Jewish Apocalyptics of the last century before and the first
-century after Christ, and attributes it to Persian and Mithraic
-influence. Mithras, he says, was to descend upon the earth, and in a
-last fierce struggle overwhelm <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb11"
-href="#pb11" name="pb11">11</a>]</span>Angromainyu or Ahriman and his
-hosts, and cast them down into the nether world. He would then raise
-the dead in bodily shape, and after a general judgment of the whole
-world, in which the wicked should be condemned to the punishments of
-hell and the good raised to heavenly glory, establish the
-&ldquo;millennial kingdom.&rdquo; These ideas, he continues, penetrated
-Jewish thought, and brought about a complete transformation of the
-former belief in a messiah, a Hebrew term meaning the anointed&mdash;in
-Greek <i>Christos</i>. For, to begin with, the Christ was merely the
-Jewish king who represented Jahwe before the people, and the people
-before Jahwe. He was &ldquo;Son of Jahwe,&rdquo; or &ldquo;Son of
-God&rdquo; <i>par excellence</i>; later on the name came to symbolize
-the ideal king to come&mdash;this when the Israelites lost their
-independence, and were humiliated by falling under a foreign yoke. This
-ideal longed-for king was to win Jahwe&rsquo;s favour; and by his
-heroic deeds, transcending those of Moses and Joshua of old, to
-re-establish the glory of Israel, renovate the face of the earth, and
-even make Israel Lord over all nations. But so far the Messiah was only
-a human being, a new David or descendant of David, a theocratic king, a
-divinely favoured prince of peace, a just ruler over the people he
-liberated; and in this sense Cyrus, who delivered the Jews from the
-Babylonian captivity, the rescuer and overlord of Israel, had been
-acclaimed Messiah.</p>
-<p>At last and gradually&mdash;still under Persian influence, according
-to Drews&mdash;this figure assumed divine attributes, yet without
-forfeiting human ones. Secret and supernatural as was his nature, so
-should the birth of the Messiah be; though a divine child, he was to be
-born in lowly state. Nay, the personality of the <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb12" href="#pb12" name="pb12">12</a>]</span>Messiah
-eventually mingled with that of Jahwe himself, whose son he was. Such,
-according to Drews, were the alternations of the Messiah between a
-human and a divine nature in Jewish apocalypses of the period
-<span class="sc">B.C.</span> 100 to <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100.
-They obviously do not preclude the possibility of the Jews in that
-epoch acclaiming a man as their Messiah&mdash;indeed, there is no
-reason why they should not have attached the dignity to several; and
-from sources which Drews does not dispute we learn that they actually
-did so.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">John and Jesus began as messengers of the
-divine kingdom on earth</span> Let us return to Mark&rsquo;s narrative.
-Among the Jews who came to John to confess and repent of their sins,
-and wash them away in the Jordan, was one named Jesus, from Nazareth of
-Galilee; and he, as soon as John was imprisoned and murdered by Herod,
-caught up the lamp, if I may use a metaphor, which had fallen from the
-hands of the stricken saint, and hurried on with it to the same goal.
-We read that he went to Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, and
-saying: &ldquo;The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at
-hand; repent ye, and believe in the gospel or good tidings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The rest of Mark is a narrative of what happened to Jesus on this
-self-appointed errand. We learn that he soon made many recruits, from
-among whom he chose a dozen as his particular missionaries or apostles.
-These, after no long time, he despatched on peculiar beats of their
-own. <span class="marginnote">Jesus&rsquo;s anticipations of its speedy
-advent</span>He was certain that the kingdom was not to be long
-delayed, and on occasions assured his audience that it would come in
-their time. When he was sending out his missionary disciples, he even
-expressed to them his doubts as to whether it would not come even
-before they had <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb13" href="#pb13" name=
-"pb13">13</a>]</span>had time to go round the cities of Israel.
-<span class="marginnote">He confined the promises to Jews</span>It was
-not, however, this consideration, but the instinct of exclusiveness,
-which he shared with most of his race, that led him to warn them
-against carrying the good tidings of the impending salvation of Israel
-to Samaritans or Gentiles; the promises were not for schismatics and
-heathens, but only for the lost sheep of the house of Israel. Some of
-these details are derived not from Mark, but from the document out of
-which, as I remarked above, the first and second evangelists
-supplemented Mark.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Was rejected by his own kindred</span> Like
-Luther, Loyola, Dunstan, St. Anthony, and many other famous saints and
-sinners, Jesus, on the threshold of his career, encountered Satan, and
-overthrew him. A characteristically oriental fast of forty days in the
-wilderness equipped him for this feat. Thenceforth he displayed, like
-Apollonius of Tyana and not a few contemporary rabbis, considerable
-familiarity with the demons of disease and madness. The sick flocked to
-him to be healed, and it was only in districts where people disbelieved
-in him and his message that his therapeutic energy met with a check.
-Among those who particularly flouted his pretensions were his mother
-and brethren, who on one occasion at least followed him in order to
-arrest him and put him under restraint as being beside himself or
-<i lang="fr">exalt&eacute;</i>. <span class="marginnote">His Parables
-all turn on the coming Kingdom</span>A good many parables are
-attributed to him in this Gospel, and yet more in Matthew and Luke, of
-which the burden usually is the near approach of the dissolution of
-this world and of the last Judgment, which are to usher in the Kingdom
-of God on earth. We learn that the parable was his favourite mode of
-instruction, as it always has been and still is the chosen vehicle of
-Semitic moral teaching. <span class="marginnote">No hint in the
-earliest sources of the miraculous birth of Jesus</span>Of the
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb14" href="#pb14" name=
-"pb14">14</a>]</span>later legend of his supernatural birth, and of the
-visits before his birth of angels to Mary, his mother, and to Joseph,
-his putative father, of the portents subsequently related in connection
-with his birth at Bethlehem, there is not a word either in Mark or in
-the other early document out of which Matthew and Luke supplemented
-Mark. In these earliest documents Jesus is presented quite naturally as
-the son of Joseph and his wife Mary, and we learn quite incidentally
-the names of his brothers and sisters.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Late recognition of Jesus as himself the
-Messiah</span>Towards the middle of his career Jesus seems to have been
-recognized by Peter as the Son of God or Messiah. Whether he put
-himself forward for that <i>r&ocirc;le</i> we cannot be sure; but so
-certain were his Apostles of the matter that two of them are
-represented as having asked him in the naivest way to grant them seats
-of honour on his left and right hand, when he should come in glory to
-judge the world. The Twelve expected to sit on thrones and judge the
-twelve tribes of Israel, and this idea meets us afresh in the
-Apocalypse, a document which in the form we have it belongs to the
-years 92&ndash;93.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">His hopes shattered at approach of
-death</span>But the simple faith of the Apostles in their teacher and
-leader was to receive a rude shock. They accompany him for the Passover
-to Jerusalem. An insignificant triumphal demonstration is organized for
-him as he enters the sacred city on an ass; he beards the priests in
-the temple, and scatters the money-changers who sat there to change
-strange coins for pilgrims. The priests, who, like many others of their
-kind, were much too comfortable to sigh for the end of the world, and
-regarded enthusiasts as nuisances, took offence, denounced him to
-Pilate as a rebel and a danger to the Roman government of <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb15" href="#pb15" name=
-"pb15">15</a>]</span>Jud&aelig;a. He is arrested, condemned to be
-crucified, and as he hangs on the cross in a last moment of
-disillusionment utters that most pathetic of cries: &ldquo;My God, my
-God, why hast thou forsaken me?&rdquo; He had expected to witness the
-descent of the kingdom on earth, but instead thereof he is himself
-handed over helpless into the hands of the Gentiles.</p>
-<p>Such in outline is the story Mark has to tell. The rival and
-supplementary document of which I have spoken, and which admits of some
-reconstruction from the text of Matthew and Luke, consisted mainly of
-parables and precepts which Jesus was supposed to have delivered. It
-need not engage our attention here.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The mythical theory of Jesus</span>Now the
-three writers I have named&mdash;Messrs. Drews, Robertson, and W. B.
-Smith&mdash;enjoy the singular good fortune to be the first to have
-discovered what the above narratives really mean, and of how they
-originated; and they are urgent that we should sell all we have, and
-purchase their pearl of wisdom. They assure us that in the Gospels we
-have not got any &ldquo;tradition of a personality.&rdquo; Jesus, the
-central figure, never existed at all, but was a purely mythical
-personage. The mythical character of the Gospels, so Drews assures us,
-has, in the hands of Mr. J. M. Robertson, led the way, and made a
-considerable advance in England; he regrets that so far official
-learning in Germany has not taken up a serious position regarding the
-mythic symbolical interpretation of the latter.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e602src" href="#xd25e602" name="xd25e602src">3</a> Let us then
-ask, What <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb16" href="#pb16" name=
-"pb16">16</a>]</span>is the gist of the new system of interpretation.
-It is as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jesus = Joshua, a Sun-god, object of a
-secret cult</span>Jesus, or Joshua, was the name under which the
-expected Messiah was honoured in a certain Jewish secret society which
-had its headquarters in Jerusalem about the beginning of our era. In
-view of its secret character Drews warns us not to be too curious, nor
-to question either his information or that of Messrs. Smith and
-Robertson. This recalls to me an incident in my own experience. I was
-once, together with a little girl, being taken for a sail by an old
-sailor who had many yarns. One of the most circumstantial of them was
-about a ship which went down in mid ocean with all hands aboard; and it
-wound up with the remark: &ldquo;And nobody never knew nothing about
-it.&rdquo; Little girl: &ldquo;Then how did you come to hear all about
-it?&rdquo; Like our brave old sailor, Dr. Drews warns us (p. 22) not to
-be too inquisitive. We must not &ldquo;forget that we are dealing with
-a secret cult, the existence of which we can decide upon only by
-indirect means.&rdquo; His hypothesis, he tells us, &ldquo;can only be
-rejected without more ado by such as seek the traces of the
-pre-Christian cult of Jesus in well-worn places, and will only allow
-that to be &lsquo;proved&rsquo; which they have established by direct
-original documentary evidence before their eyes.&rdquo; In other words,
-we are to set aside our copious and almost (in Paul&rsquo;s case)
-contemporary evidence that Jesus was a real person in favour of a
-hypothesis which from the first and as such lacks all direct and
-documentary evidence, and is not amenable to any of the methods of
-proof recognized by sober historians. We must take Dr. Drews&rsquo;s
-word for it, and forego all evidence.</p>
-<p>But let our authors continue with their new revelation. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb17" href="#pb17" name="pb17">17</a>]</span>By
-Joshua, or Jesus, we are not to understand the personage concerning
-whose exploits the Book of Joshua was composed, but a Sun-god. The
-Gospels are a veiled account of the sufferings and exploits of this
-Sun-god. &ldquo;Joshua is apparently [why this qualification?] an
-ancient Ephraimitic god of the Sun and Fruitfulness, who stood in close
-relation to the Feast of the Pasch and to the custom of
-circumcision.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e620src" href=
-"#xd25e620" name="xd25e620src">4</a></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Emptiness of the Sun-god Joshua
-hypothesis</span>Now no one nowadays accepts the Book of Joshua offhand
-as sound history. It is a compilation of older sources, which have
-already been sifted a good deal, and will undergo yet more sifting in
-the future. The question before us does not concern its historicity,
-but is this: Does the Book of Joshua, whether history or not, support
-the hypothesis that Joshua was ever regarded as God of the Sun and of
-Fruitfulness? Was ever such a god known of or worshipped in the tribe
-of Ephraim or in Israel at large? In this old Hebrew epic or saga
-Joshua is a man of flesh and blood. How did these gentlemen get it into
-their heads that he was a Sun-god? For this statement there is not a
-shadow of evidence. They have invented it. As he took the Israelites
-dryshod over the Jordan, why have they not made a River-god of him? And
-as, according to Drews, he was so interested in fruitfulness and
-foreskins, why not suppose he was a Priapic god? They are much too
-modest. We should at least expect &ldquo;the composite myth&rdquo; to
-include this element, inasmuch as his mystic votaries at Jerusalem
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb18" href="#pb18" name=
-"pb18">18</a>]</span>were far from seeing eye to eye with Paul in the
-matter of circumcision.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Sun-myth stage of comparative
-mythology</span>There was years ago a stage in the Comparative History
-of Religions when the Sun-myth hypothesis was invoked to explain almost
-everything. The shirt of Nessus, for example, in which Heracles
-perished, was a parable of the sun setting amidst a wrack of scattered
-clouds. The Sun-myth was the key which fitted every lock, and was
-employed unsparingly by pioneers of comparative mythology like F. Max
-M&uuml;ller and Sir George Cox. It was taken for granted that early man
-must have begun by deifying the great cosmic powers, by venerating Sun
-and Moon, the Heavens, the Mountains, the Sea, as holy and divine
-beings, because they, rather than humble and homelier objects, impress
-us moderns by their sublimity and overwhelming force. Man was supposed
-from the first to have felt his transitoriness, his frailty and
-weakness, and to have contrasted therewith the infinities of space and
-time, the majesty of the starry hosts of heaven, the majestic and
-uniform march of sun and moon, the mighty rumble of the thunder. Max
-M&uuml;ller thought that religion began when the cowering savage was
-crushed by awe of nature and of her stupendous forces, by the infinite
-lapses of time, by the yawning abysses of space. As a matter of fact,
-savages do not entertain these sentiments of the dignity and majesty of
-nature. On the contrary, a primitive man thinks that he can impose his
-paltry will on the elements; that he knows how to unchain the wind, to
-oblige the rain to fall; that he can, like the ancient witches of
-Thessaly, control sun and moon and stars by all sorts of petty magical
-rites, incantations, and gestures, as Joshua <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb19" href="#pb19" name="pb19">19</a>]</span>made the
-sun stand still till his band of brigands had won the battle. It is to
-the imagination of us moderns alone that the grandeur of the universe
-appeals, and it was relatively late in the history of religion&mdash;so
-far as it can be reconstructed from the scanty data in our
-possession&mdash;that the higher nature cults were developed. The gods
-and sacred beings of an Australian or North American native are the
-humble vegetables and animals which surround him, objects with which he
-is on a footing of equality. His totems are a duck, a hare, a kangaroo,
-an emu, a lizard, a grub, or a frog. In the same way, the sacred being
-of an early Semite&rsquo;s devotion was just as likely to be a pig or a
-hare as the sun in heaven; the cult of an early Egyptian was centred
-upon a crocodile, or a cat, or a dog.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e640src" href="#xd25e640" name="xd25e640src">5</a> In view of
-these considerations, our suspicion is aroused at the outset by finding
-Messrs. Drews and Robertson to be in this discarded and obsolete
-Sun-myth stage of speculation. They are a back number. Let us, however,
-examine their mythic symbolic theory a little further, and see what
-sort of arguments they invoke in favour of it, and what their
-&ldquo;indirect&rdquo; proofs amount to.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Examples of the Sun-god theory of Jesus.
-The Rock-Tomb</span>Why was Jesus buried in a rock-tomb? asks Mr.
-Robertson. Answer: Because he was Mithras, the rock-born Sun-god. We
-would like to know what other sort of burial was possible round
-Jerusalem, where soil was so scarce that everyone was buried in a
-rock-tomb. Scores of such tombs remain. Are they all Mithraic? Surely a
-score of other considerations would equally well explain the choice of
-a rock-tomb for him in Christian tradition. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb20" href="#pb20" name="pb20">20</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The date of birthday</span>Why was Jesus
-born at the winter-solstice? Answer: Because he was a Sun-god.</p>
-<p>Our author forgets that the choice of December 25 for the feast of
-the physical birth of Jesus was made by the Church as late as 354
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> What could the cryptic Messianists of the
-first half of the first century know about a festival which was never
-heard of in Rome until the year 354, nor accepted in Jerusalem before
-the year 440? Time is evidently no element in the calculations of these
-authors; and they commit themselves to the most amazing anachronisms
-with the utmost insouciance, or, shall we not rather say, ignorance;
-unless, indeed, they imagine that the mystic worshippers of the God
-Joshua knew all about the date, but kept it dark in order to mystify
-all succeeding generations.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The twelve disciples</span> Why did Jesus
-surround himself with twelve disciples? Answer: Because they were the
-twelve signs of the Zodiac and he a Sun-god. We naturally ask, Were the
-twelve tribes of Israel equally representative of the Zodiac? In any
-case, may not Christian story have fixed the number of Apostles at
-twelve in view of the tribes being twelve? It is superfluous to go as
-far as the Zodiac for an explanation.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Sermon on the Mount</span> Why did
-Jesus preach his sermon on the Mount? Answer: Because as Sun-god he had
-to take his stand on the &ldquo;pillar of the world.&rdquo; In the same
-way, Moses, another Sun-god, gave his law from the Mount.</p>
-<p>I always have heard that Moses got his tables of the law up top of a
-mountain, and brought them down to a people that were forbidden to
-approach it. He did not stand up top, and shout out his laws to them,
-as Mr. Robertson suggests. In any case, we merely read in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%205&amp;version=NRSV">Matthew
-v</a> that Jesus went up into a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb21"
-href="#pb21" name="pb21">21</a>]</span>mountain or upland region, and
-when he had sat down his disciples came to him, and he then opened his
-mouth and taught them. In a country like Galilee, where you can barely
-walk a mile in any direction without climbing a hill, what could be
-more natural than for a narrator to frame such a setting for the
-teacher&rsquo;s discourse? It is the first rule of criticism to
-practise some economy of hypothesis, and not go roaming after fanciful
-and extravagant interpretations of quite commonplace and every-day
-occurrences.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The last Judgment</span> Why was it
-believed that Jesus was to judge men after death? Answer: Because he
-was a Sun-god, and <i lang="la">pro tanto</i> identical with
-Osiris.</p>
-<p>Surely the more natural interpretation is that, so soon as Jesus was
-identified in the minds of his followers with the Messiah or Christ,
-the task of judging Israel was passed on to him as part of the
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i>. Thus in the Psalms of Solomon, a Jewish apocryph of
-about <span class="sc">B.C.</span> 50, we read that the Messiah will
-&ldquo;in the assemblies judge the peoples, the tribes of the
-sanctified&rdquo; (xvii, 48). Such references could be multiplied; are
-they all Osirian? If Mr. Robertson had paid a little more attention to
-the later apocrypha of Judaism, and made himself a little better
-acquainted with the social and religious medium which gave birth to
-Christianity, he would have realized how unnecessary are these
-Sun-mythic hypotheses, and we should have been spared his books.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Lamb and Fish symbolism</span> Why is
-Jesus represented in art and lore by the Lamb and the Fishes? Answer:
-As a Sun-god passing through the Zodiac.</p>
-<p>This is amazing. We know the reason why Jesus was figured as a Lamb
-by the early Christians. It <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb22" href=
-"#pb22" name="pb22">22</a>]</span>was because they regarded the paschal
-lamb as a type of him. Does Mr. Robertson claim to know the reasons of
-their symbolism better than they did themselves?</p>
-<p>And where did he discover that Jesus was represented as
-<i>Fishes</i> in Art and Lore? He was symbolized as one fish, not as
-several; and Tertullian has told us why. It was because, according to
-the popular zoology of the day, fishes were supposed to be born and to
-originate in the water, without carnal connection between their
-parents. For this reason the fish was taken as a symbol of Jesus, who
-was born again in the waters of the Jordan. A later generation
-explained the appellation of <span class="trans" title=
-"ichthys"><span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&#7984;&chi;&theta;&upsilon;&sigmaf;</span></span>
-(<i>ichthus</i>), or Fish, as an acrostic. The letters of the Greek
-word are the initials of the words: <i lang="grc-latn">Iesous Christos
-Theou uios soter</i>&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, Jesus Christ of God Son,
-Saviour; but this later explanation came into vogue in an age when it
-was already heretical to say that Jesus was reborn in baptism; nor does
-it explain why the multitude of the baptized were symbolized as little
-fishes in contrast with the Big Fish, Christ.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The two asses</span> Why did Jesus ride
-into Jerusalem before his death on two asses? Answer: Because Dionysus
-also rides on an ass and a foal in one of the Greek signs of Cancer
-(the turning point in the sun&rsquo;s course). &ldquo;Bacchus (p. 287)
-crossed a marsh on two asses.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Robertson does not attempt to prove that the earliest
-Christians, who were Jews, must have been familiar with the rare legend
-of Bacchus crossing a marsh on two asses; still less with the rare
-representation of the zodiacal sign Cancer as an ass and its foal. It
-is next to impossible; and, even if they were, what induced them to
-transform the myth into <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb23" href=
-"#pb23" name="pb23">23</a>]</span>the legend of Jesus riding into
-Jerusalem on two donkeys at once? If they had so excellent a legend of
-Bacchus on his asses crossing a marsh, why not be content with it? And
-the same question may be asked in regard to all the other
-transformations by which these &ldquo;mystic sectaries,&rdquo; who
-formed the early Church, changed myths culled from all times and all
-religions and races into a connected story of Jesus, as it lies before
-us in the Synoptic Gospels.</p>
-<p>Mr. Robertson disdains any critical and comparative study of the
-Gospels, and insists on regarding them as coeval and independent
-documents. Everything inside the covers of the New Testament is for
-him, as for the Sunday-school teacher, on one dead level of importance.
-All textual criticism has passed over his head. He has never learned to
-look in Mark for the original form of a statement which Luke or Matthew
-copied out, and in transferring them to their Gospels scrupled not to
-alter or modify. Accordingly, to suit the exigencies of his theory that
-the Gospels are an allegory of a Sun-god&rsquo;s exploits, he here
-claims to find the original text not in Mark, but in Matthew; as if a
-transcript and paraphrase could possibly be prior to, and more
-authoritative than, the text transcribed and <i>brod&eacute;</i>.
-Accordingly, he writes (p. 339) as follows: &ldquo;In <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2011&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark xi</a> and <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%2019:30&amp;version=NRSV">
-Luke xix, 30</a>, the two asses <i>become</i> one&#8202;&hellip;. In
-the Fourth Gospel, again, we have simply the colt.&rdquo; And yet by
-all rules of textual criticism and of common sense the underlying and
-original text is <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2011:1-7&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark xi, 1&ndash;7</a>. In it the disciples merely bring a colt which
-they had found tied at a door. The author of the Gospel called of
-Matthew, eager to discern in every incident, no matter how commonplace,
-which <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb24" href="#pb24" name=
-"pb24">24</a>]</span>he found in Mark, a fulfilment of some prophecy,
-or another, drags in a tag of Zechariah: &ldquo;Behold, the King cometh
-to thee, meek, and riding on an ass and upon a colt, the foal of an
-ass.&rdquo; Then, to make the story told of Jesus run on all fours with
-the prophecy, he writes that the disciples &ldquo;brought the ass and
-the colt, and put on them their garments, and he (Jesus) sat on
-them.&rdquo; He was unacquainted with Hebrew idiom, and so not aware
-that the words, &ldquo;a colt the foal of an ass,&rdquo; are no more
-than a rhetorical reduplication<a class="noteref" id="xd25e750src"
-href="#xd25e750" name="xd25e750src">6</a> of <i>an ass</i>. There was,
-then, but one animal in the original form of the story, and, as the
-French say, it <i lang="fr">saute aux yeux</i> that the importation of
-two is due to the influence of the prophecy on the mind of the
-transcriber. Why, therefore, go out of the way to attribute the tale to
-the influence of a legend of Bacchus, so multiplying empty hypotheses?
-Mr. Robertson, with hopeless perversity, takes Dr. Percy Gardner to
-task for repeating what he calls &ldquo;the fallacious explanation,
-that &lsquo;an ass and the foal of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb25"
-href="#pb25" name="pb25">25</a>]</span>an ass&rsquo; represents a Greek
-misconception of the Hebrew way of saying &lsquo;an ass,&rsquo; as if
-Hebrews in every-day life lay under a special spell of verbal
-absurdity.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e769src" href="#xd25e769"
-name="xd25e769src">7</a> <span class="marginnote">Jewish abhorrence of
-Pagan myths</span>But did Hebrews in every-day life mould their ideas
-of the promised Messiah on out-of-the-way legends of Bacchus? Were they
-likely to fashion a tale of a Messianic triumph out of Gentile myths?
-Do we not know from a hundred sources that the Jews of that age, and
-the Christians who were in this matter their pupils, abhorred
-everything that savoured of Paganism. They were the last people in the
-world to construct a life of the Messiah out of the myths of Bacchus,
-and Hermes, and Osiris, and Heracles, and the fifty other heathen gods
-and heroes whom Mr. Robertson rolls up into what he calls the
-&ldquo;composite myth&rdquo; of the Gospels. But let us return to his
-criticism of Dr. Gardner. Why, it may be asked, was it <i>&agrave;
-priori</i> more absurd of Matthew to turn one ass into two in deference
-to Hebrew prophecy, than for Hebrews to set their Messiah riding into
-the holy city on two asses in deference to a myth of Bacchus crossing a
-marsh on two of them? Is it not Mr. Robertson, rather than <span class=
-"marginnote">Robertson on Drs. Gardner and Carpenter</span>Dr. Gardner,
-who here lies under a special spell of absurdity? &ldquo;A glance at
-the story of Bacchus,&rdquo; writes Mr. Robertson, &ldquo;crossing a
-marsh on two asses &hellip; would have shown him that he was dealing
-with a zodiacal myth.&rdquo; The boot is on the other foot. Had Mr.
-Robertson chosen to glance at the <i lang="la">Poeticon
-Astronomicon</i> of Hyginus, a late and somewhat worthless Latin
-author, who is the authority for this particular tale of Bacchus, he
-would have read <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb26" href="#pb26" name=
-"pb26">26</a>]</span>(ii, 23) how Liber (<i>i.e.</i>, Dionysus) was on
-his way to get an oracle at Dodona which might restore his lost sanity:
-<i lang="la">Sed cum venisset ad quandam paludem magnam, quam transire
-non posset, de quibusdam duobus asellis obviis factis dicitur unum
-deprehendisse eorum, et ita esse transvectus, ut omnino aquam non
-tetigerit.</i></p>
-<p>In English: &ldquo;But when he came to a certain spacious marsh,
-which he thought he could not get across, he is said to have met on the
-way two young asses, of which he caught one, and he was carried across
-on it so nicely that he never touched the water at all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Here there is no hint of Bacchus riding on two asses, and Mr.
-Robertson&rsquo;s entire hypothesis falls to the ground like a house of
-cards. The astounding thing is that, although he insists on pages 287
-and 453<a class="noteref" id="xd25e800src" href="#xd25e800" name=
-"xd25e800src">8</a> that Bacchus rode on two asses, and that here is
-the true Babylonian explanation of Jesus also riding on two, he gets
-the Greek, or rather Latin, myth right on p. 339, and recognizes that
-Dionysus was only mounted on one of the asses when he passed the morass
-or river on his way to Dodona. Thus, by Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s own
-admission, Bacchus never rode on two asses at all.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Pilate myth</span> Why was Jesus
-crucified by Pilate? For an answer to this let us for a little quit
-&ldquo;the very stimulating and informing works,&rdquo; as Dr. Drews
-calls them, of Mr. Robertson, and turn to Dr. Drews&rsquo;s own work on
-<i>The Witnesses to the Historicity of Jesus</i>.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e810src" href="#xd25e810" name="xd25e810src">9</a> For there we
-find the true &ldquo;astral myth interpretation&rdquo; in all
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb27" href="#pb27" name=
-"pb27">27</a>]</span>its glory. The Pilate of Christian legend was, so
-we learn, not originally an historical person at all; the whole story
-of Christ is to be taken in an astral sense; and Pilate in particular
-represents the story of Orion, the javelin-man (Pilatus), with the
-Arrow or Lance constellation (Sagitta), which is supposed to be very
-long in the Greek myth, and reappears in the Christian legend under the
-name of Longinus&#8202;&hellip;. In the astral myth the Christ hanging
-on the cross or world-tree (<i>i.e.</i>, the Milky Way) is killed by
-the lance of Pilatus&#8202;&hellip;. The Christian population of Rome
-told the legend of a javelin-man, a <i>Pilatus</i>, who was supposed to
-have been responsible for the death of the Saviour. Tacitus heard the
-myth repeated, and, like the fool he was, took it that Pilate the
-javelin-man was no other than Pilate the Roman procurator of
-Jud&aelig;a under Tiberius, who must have been known to him from the
-books of Josephus.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e824src" href="#xd25e824"
-name="xd25e824src">10</a> Accordingly, Tacitus sat down and penned his
-account of the wholesale massacre and burning of Christians by Nero in
-the fifteenth book of his <i>Annals</i>.</p>
-<p>We shall turn to the evidence of Tacitus later on. Meanwhile it is
-pertinent to ask where the myth of Pilatus, of which Drews here makes
-use, came from. The English text of Drews is somewhat confused; but
-presumedly Orion, with his girdle sword and lion&rsquo;s skin, is no
-other than Pilatus; and his long lance, with which he kills Christ,
-further entitles him to the name of Longinus. Or is it Pilatus who
-stabs <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb28" href="#pb28" name=
-"pb28">28</a>]</span>Orion? It does not matter. Let us test this
-hypothesis in its essential parts.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Longinus myth</span> Firstly, then,
-Longinus was the name coined by Christian legend-mongers of the third
-or fourth century for the centurion who stabbed Jesus with a lance as
-he hung on the cross. How could so late a myth influence or form part
-of a tradition three centuries older than itself? The incident of the
-lance being plunged into the side of Jesus is related only in the
-Fourth Gospel, and is not found in the earlier ones. The author of that
-Gospel invented it in order to prove to his generation that Jesus had
-real blood in his body, and was not, as the Docetes maintained, a
-phantasm mimicking reality to the ears and eyes alone of those who saw
-and conversed with him. This Gospel, even according to the Christian
-tradition of its date, is barely earlier than <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 100, and the name <i>Longinus</i> was not heard of
-before <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 250 at the earliest. Yet Drews is
-ready to believe that it was on the lips of Christians in the reign of
-Nero, say in <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 64.</p>
-<p>Secondly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean the
-&ldquo;javelin-man&rdquo; for the earliest generations of Roman
-Christians? The language current among them was Greek, not Latin, as
-the earliest Christian inscriptions in the catacombs of Rome testify.
-The language of Roman rites and popes remained Greek for three
-centuries. Why, then, should they have had their central myth of the
-crucifixion in a Latin form?</p>
-<p>Thirdly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean a
-javelin-man even to a Latin? Many lexicographers interpret it in Virgil
-in the sense of <i>packed together</i> or <i>dense</i>, and in most
-authors it bears the sense of bald or despoiled. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb29" href="#pb29" name="pb29">29</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Inadequacy of the mythic theory</span> But,
-letting that pass, we ask what evidence is there that Orion ever had
-the epithet Pilatus in this sense? What evidence that such a myth ever
-existed at all? There is none, absolutely none. It is not enough for
-these authors to ransack Lempri&egrave;re and other dictionaries of
-mythology in behalf of their paradoxes; but when these collections fail
-them, they proceed to coin myths of their own, and pretend that they
-are ancient, that the early Christians believed in them, and that
-Tacitus fell into the trap; as if these Christians, whom they
-acknowledge to have been either Jews or the converts of Jews, had not
-been constitutionally opposed to all pagan myths and cults alike; as if
-a good half of the earliest Christian literature did not consist of
-polemics against the pagan myths, which were regarded with the
-bitterest scorn and abhorrence; as if it were not notorious that it was
-their repugnance to and ridicule of pagan gods and heroes and religious
-myths that earned for the Christians, as for the Jews, their teachers,
-the hatred and loathing of the pagan populations in whose midst they
-lived. And yet we are asked to believe that the Christian Church,
-almost before it was separated from the Jewish matrix, fashioned for
-itself in the form of the Gospels an allegory of a Sun-god Joshua, who,
-though unknown to serious Semitic scholars, is yet so well known to Mr.
-Robertson and his friends that he identifies him with Adonis, and
-Osiris, and Dionysus, and Mithras, and Krishna, and Asclepius, and with
-any other god or demi-god that comes to hand in
-Lempri&egrave;re&rsquo;s dictionary. After hundreds of pages of such
-fanciful writing, Drews warns us in solemn language against the
-attempts &ldquo;of historical theologians to reach the <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb30" href="#pb30" name="pb30">30</a>]</span>nucleus
-of the Gospels by purely philological means.&rdquo; The attempt, he
-declares, is &ldquo;<i>hopeless</i>, and must remain hopeless, because
-the Gospel tradition <i>floats in the air</i>.&rdquo; One would like to
-know in what medium his own hypotheses float. <span class=
-"marginnote">Joshua the Sun-god a pure invention of the mythic
-school</span> Like Dr. Drews, Mr. Robertson adopts the Joshua myth as
-if it were beyond question. His faith in &ldquo;the ancient Palestinian
-Saviour-Sun-God&rdquo; is absolute. This otherwise unknown deity was
-the core of what is gracefully styled &ldquo;the Jesuist myth.&rdquo;
-On examination, however, the Joshua Sun-god turns out to be the most
-rickety of hypotheses. Because the chieftain who, in old tradition, led
-the Jews across the Jordan into the land of promise was named Joshua,
-certain critics, who are still in the sun-myth phase of comparative
-mythology&mdash;in particular, Stade and Winckler&mdash;have
-conjectured that the name Joshua conceals a solar hero worshipped
-locally by the tribe of Ephraim. Even if there ever existed such a
-cult, it had long vanished when the book of Joshua was compiled; for in
-this he is no longer represented as a solar hero, but has become in the
-popular tradition a human figure, a hero judge, and leader of the
-armies of Israel. Of a Joshua cult the book does not preserve any trace
-or memory; that it ever existed is an improbable and unverifiable
-hypothesis. We might just as well conjecture that Romulus, and Remus,
-and other half or wholly legendary figures of ancient history, were
-sun-gods and divine saviours. But it is particularly in Jewish history
-that this school is apt to revel. Moses, and Joseph, and David were all
-mythical beings brought down to earth; and the god David and the god
-Joshua, the god Moses, the god Joseph, form in the imagination of these
-gentlemen <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb31" href="#pb31" name=
-"pb31">31</a>]</span>a regular Hebrew prehistoric Pantheon. I say in
-their imagination, for it is certain that when the Pentateuch was
-compiled&mdash;at the latest in the fifth century <span class=
-"sc">B.C.</span>&mdash;the Jews no longer revered David, and Joshua,
-and Joseph as sun-gods; while of what they worshipped even locally
-before that date we have little knowledge, and can form only
-conjectures. In any case, that they continued to worship a sun-god
-under the name of Joshua as late as the first century of our era must
-strike anyone who has the least knowledge of Hebrew religious
-development, who has ever read Philo or Josephus, or studied Jewish
-sapiential and apocalyptic literature of the period <span class=
-"sc">B.C.</span> 200&ndash;<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100, as a
-wildly improbable supposition. <span class="marginnote">Supposed
-secrecy of early Christian cult a literary trick</span> Sensible that
-their hypothesis conflicts with all we know about the Jews of these
-three centuries, these three authors&mdash;Messrs. Drews, Robertson,
-and W. B. Smith&mdash;insist on the esoterism and secrecy of the
-cryptic society which in Jerusalem harboured the cult. This commonest
-of literary tricks enables them to evade any awkward questions, and
-whenever they are challenged to produce some evidence of the existence
-of such a cult they can answer that, being secret and esoteric, it
-could leave little or no evidence of itself, and that we must take
-their <i lang="la">ipse dixit</i> and renounce all hope of direct and
-documentary evidence. They ask of us a greater credulity than any Pope
-of Rome ever demanded.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Joshua ben Jehozadak also a Sun-god</span>
-The divine stage of Joshua, then, if it ever existed, was past and
-forgotten as early as 500 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> It has left no
-traces. Of the other Joshuas, who meet us in the pages of the Jewish
-scriptures, the most important one is Jeshua or Joshua ben Jehozadak, a
-high priest who, together with Zerubbabel, is often mentioned
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb32" href="#pb32" name=
-"pb32">32</a>]</span>(according to the <i lang="la">Encyclop&aelig;dia
-Biblica</i>) in <i>contemporary</i> writings. Not only, then, have we
-contemporary evidence of this Joshua as of a mere man and a priest, but
-we know from it that he stooped to such mundane occupations as the
-rebuilding of the Temple. He also had human descendants, who are traced
-in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Neh%2012:10&amp;version=NRSV">
-Nehemiah xii, 10</a> fol. down to Jaddua. Of this epoch of Jewish
-history, in which the Temple was being rebuilt, we have among the
-Jewish and Aramaic papyri lately recovered at Elephantine documents
-that are autographs of personages with whom this Joshua may well have
-been in contact. His contemporaries are mentioned and even addressed in
-these documents, so that he and his circle are virtually as well
-evidenced for us as Frederick the Great and Voltaire. Is it credible in
-the face of such facts that the authors we are criticizing should turn
-this Joshua, too, into a solar god? Yet Drews turns with zest to the
-notice of this Joshua, the high priest in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Zec%203&amp;version=NRSV">
-Zechariah iii</a>, as &ldquo;one of the many signs&rdquo; which attest
-that &ldquo;Joshua or Jesus was the name under which the expected
-Messiah was honoured in certain Jewish sects.&rdquo; Unless he regards
-this later Joshua also as a divine figure, and no mere man of flesh and
-blood, why does he thus drag him into his argument?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The suspicion that the compilers of the Old
-Testament burked evidence favourable to the Sun-myth hypothesis</span>
-But, after all, Messrs. Drews and Robertson are uneasy about the book
-of Joshua, and not altogether capable of the breezy optimism of their
-instructor, Mr. W. B. Smith, who, in <i lang="la">Ecce Deus</i> (p.
-74), commits himself to the naive declaration that, &ldquo;even if we
-had no evidence whatever of a pre-Christian Jesus cult, we should be
-compelled to affirm its existence with undiminished decision.&rdquo;
-Accordingly, they both go out of their way to hint that the ancient
-Jews <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb33" href="#pb33" name=
-"pb33">33</a>]</span>suppressed the facts of the Joshua or Jesus
-Sun-God-Saviour cult. Thus Mr. Robertson (<i>Christianity and
-Mythology</i>, p. 99, note 1), after urging us to accept a late and
-worthless tradition about Joshua, the Son of Nave, remarks that
-&ldquo;the Jewish books would naturally drop the subject.&rdquo; How
-ill-natured, to be sure, of the authors of the old Hebrew scriptures to
-suppress evidence that would have come in so handy for Mr.
-Robertson&rsquo;s speculations. Dr. Drews takes another line, and in a
-note draws our attention to the fact that the Samaritans possessed an
-apocryphal book of the same name as the canonical book of Joshua. This
-book, he informs us, is based upon an old work composed in the third
-century <span class="sc">B.C.</span>, containing stories which in part
-do not appear in our Book of Joshua.</p>
-<p>He here suggests that something was omitted in canonical Joshua by
-its authors which would have helped out his hypothesis of a Joshua
-Sun-god cult. He will not, however, find the Samaritan book
-encouraging, for it gives no hint of such a cult; of that anyone who
-does not mind being bored by a perusal of it can satisfy himself.
-Drews&rsquo;s statement that it is based on an old work composed in the
-third century <span class="sc">B.C.</span> is founded on pure
-ignorance, and the <i lang="la">Encyclop&aelig;dia Biblica</i> declares
-it to be a medieval production of no value to anyone except the student
-of the Samaritan sect under Moslem rule.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The evidence of El Tabari about
-Joshua</span> Mr. Robertson thinks he has got on a better trail in the
-shape of a tradition as to Joshua which he is quite sure the old Jewish
-scripture writers suppressed. Let us examine it, for it affords a
-capital example of his ideas of what constitutes historical evidence.
-&ldquo;Eastern tradition,&rdquo; he writes, &ldquo;preserves a variety
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb34" href="#pb34" name=
-"pb34">34</a>]</span>of myths that the Bible-makers <i>for obvious
-reasons</i> suppressed or transformed.&rdquo; In one of those
-traditions &ldquo;Joshua is the son of the mythical Miriam; that is to
-say, there was probably an ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God, Jesus,
-the son of Mary.&rdquo; So on p. 285 we learn that the cult of Jesus of
-Nazareth was &ldquo;the Survival of an ancient solar or other worship
-of a Babe Joshua, son of Miriam.&rdquo; And he continually alludes to
-this ancient form of devotion, not as a mere hypothesis, but as a
-well-ascertained and demonstrable fact.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e950src" href="#xd25e950" name="xd25e950src">11</a></p>
-<p>Let us then explore this remarkable tradition by which &ldquo;we are
-led to surmise that the elucidation of the Christ myth is not yet
-complete.&rdquo; For such is the grandiose language in which he heralds
-his discovery. And what does it amount to? An Arab, El Tabari, who died
-in Bagdad about the year 925, compiled a Chronicle, of which some
-centuries later an unknown native of Persia made an abridgement in his
-own tongue, and inserted in it as a gloss &ldquo;the remarkable Arab
-tradition,&rdquo; as it is called in the <i>Pagan Christs</i> (p. 157)
-of Mr. Robertson, albeit he acknowledges in a footnote that it is
-&ldquo;not in the Arabic original.&rdquo; He asks us accordingly, on
-the faith of an unknown Persian glossator of the late Middle Ages, to
-believe that the canonical Book of Joshua originally contained this
-absurd tradition, and why? Because it would help out his hypothesis
-that <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb35" href="#pb35" name=
-"pb35">35</a>]</span>Jesus was an ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God,
-worshipped by a cryptic society of Hebrews in Jerusalem, both before
-and after the beginning of the Christian era; and this is the man who
-writes about &ldquo;the psychological resistance to evidence&rdquo; of
-learned men, and sets it down to &ldquo;malice and impercipience&rdquo;
-that anyone should challenge his conclusions. As usual, Dr. Drews, who
-sets Mr. Robertson on a level with the author of the <i>Golden
-Bough</i><a class="noteref" id="xd25e962src" href="#xd25e962" name=
-"xd25e962src">12</a> as a &ldquo;leading exponent of his new
-mythico-symbolical method,&rdquo; plunges into the pit which Mr.
-Robertson has dug for him, and writes that, &ldquo;according to an
-ancient <i>Arabian</i> tradition, the mother of Joshua was called
-Mirzam (Mariam, Maria, as the mother of Jesus was).&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">W. B. Smith&rsquo;s hypothesis of a God
-Joshua</span> The source from which Messrs. Drews and Robertson have
-drawn this particular inspiration is Dr. W. B. Smith&rsquo;s work,
-<i>The Pre-Christian Jesus</i> (<i lang="de">Der Vorchristliche
-Jesus</i>). This book, we are told, &ldquo;first systematically set
-forth the case for the thesis of its title.&rdquo; Let us, therefore,
-consider its main argument. We have the following passages in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2018:24-28&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xviii, 24</a>:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Now a certain Jew named Apollos, an Alexandrian by
-race, a learned man, came to Ephesus; and he was mighty in the
-Scriptures. This man had been instructed in the way of the Lord; and,
-being fervent in spirit, he spake and taught carefully the things
-concerning Jesus, knowing only the baptism of John: and he began to
-speak boldly in the synagogue. But <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb36"
-href="#pb36" name="pb36">36</a>]</span>when Priscilla and Aquila heard
-him, they took him unto them, and expounded unto him the way of God
-more carefully. And when he was minded to pass over into Achaia, the
-brethren encouraged him, and wrote to the disciples to receive him: and
-when he was come, he helped them much which had believed through grace:
-for he powerfully confuted the Jews, publicly, showing by the
-Scriptures that Jesus was the Christ.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Availing ourselves of the canons of interpretation laid down by
-Drews and Robertson, we may paraphrase the above somewhat as follows by
-way of getting at its true meaning:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A certain sun-myth hero, as his name Apollos signifies, came
-to Ephesus, which, being the centre of Astarte or Aphrodite worship,
-was obviously the right place for such a hero to pilgrimage unto. He
-was mighty in the Jewish Scriptures, and had been instructed in the way
-of the Lord Joshua, the Sun-God-Saviour of ancient Ephraim. He spake
-and taught carefully the things concerning this Joshua (or Adonis, or
-Osiris, or Dionysus, or Vegetation-god, or Horus&mdash;for you can take
-your choice among these and many more). But he knew only of the
-prehistoric ritual of baptism of Cadmus or of Oannes-Ea, the ancient
-culture-god of the Babylonians, who appeared in the form of a Fish-man,
-teaching men by day and at night going down into the sea&mdash;in his
-capacity of Sun-god.&rdquo; This Cadmus or Oannes was worshipped at
-Jerusalem in the cryptic sect of the <i>Christists</i> or
-<i>Jesuists</i> under the name of John. His friend Apollos, the solar
-demi-god, began to speak boldly in the synagogue. Priscilla (presumably
-Cybele, mother of the gods), and Aquila, the Eagle-God, or Jupiter,
-heard him; she took him forthwith and <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb37" href="#pb37" name="pb37">37</a>]</span>expounded to him the way
-of Jahve, who also was identical with Joshua, the Sun-god, with Osiris,
-etc.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">His forced and far-fetched interpretations
-of common phrases</span> Professor W. B. Smith is a little more modest
-and less thorough-going in his application of mythico-symbolic methods.
-He only asks us to believe that the trite and hackneyed phrase,
-&ldquo;the things concerning Jesus,&rdquo; refers not, as the context
-requires, to the history and passion of Jesus of Galilee, but to the
-mysteries of a prehistoric Saviour-God of the same name. We advisedly
-say <i>prehistoric</i>, for he was never mentioned by anyone before
-Professor Smith discovered him. The name Jesus, according to him, means
-what the word Essene also meant, a <i>Healer</i>.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1012src" href="#xd25e1012" name="xd25e1012src">13</a> Note, in
-passing, that this etymology is wholly false, and rests on the
-authority of a writer so late, ignorant, and superstitious as
-Epiphanius. Now, why cannot the words, &ldquo;the things about
-Jesus,&rdquo; in this context mean the tradition of the ministry of
-Jesus as it had shaped itself at that time, beginning with the Baptism
-and ending with the Ascension, as we read in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%201:22&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts i, 22</a>? <span class="marginnote">Apollos and the Baptism of
-John</span>It cannot, argues Professor Smith, because Apollos only knew
-the baptism of John. The reference to John&rsquo;s baptism may be
-obscure, as much in early Christianity is bound to be obscure, except
-to Professor Smith and his imitators. Yet this much is clear, that it
-here means, what it means in the sequel, the baptism of mere repentance
-as opposed to the baptism of the Spirit, which was by laying on of
-hands, and conferred <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb38" href="#pb38"
-name="pb38">38</a>]</span>the charismatic gifts of the Holy Ghost. The
-Marcionites, and after them the Manichean and Cathar sects, retained
-the latter rite, and termed it Spiritual or Pneumatic Baptism; while
-they dropped as superfluous the Johannine baptism with water. It would
-appear, then, that Apollos was perfectly acquainted with the personal
-history of Jesus, and understood the purport of the baptism of
-repentance as a sacrament preparing followers of Jesus for the kingdom
-of Heaven, soon to be inaugurated on earth. Perhaps we get a glimpse in
-this passage of an age when the mission of Jesus in his primitive
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i> as herald of the Messianic kingdom and a mere
-continuer of John&rsquo;s mission was familiar to many who yet did not
-recognize him as the Messiah. For, after instruction by Priscilla and
-Aquila, Apollos set himself to confute the Jews who denied Jesus to
-have been Messiah, which, as a mere herald of the approaching kingdom
-of God, he was not. We know that Paul regarded him as having attained
-that dignity only through, and by, the fact of the Spirit having raised
-him from the dead; and did not regard him as having received it through
-the descent of the Spirit on him in the Jordan, as the oriental
-Christians presently believed. Still less did Paul know of the later
-teaching of the orthodox churches&mdash;viz., that the Annunciation was
-the critical moment in which Christ became Jesus. In any case, we must
-not interpret the words, &ldquo;the things about Jesus,&rdquo; in this
-passage in a forced and unnatural sense wholly alien to the writer of
-Acts. This writer again and again recapitulates the leading facts of
-the life and ministry of Jesus, and the phrase, &ldquo;the things
-concerning Jesus,&rdquo; cannot in any work of his bear any
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb39" href="#pb39" name=
-"pb39">39</a>]</span>other sense. Moreover, the same author uses the
-very same phrase elsewhere (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%2024:19&amp;version=NRSV">Luke
-xxiv, 19</a>) in the same sense. Here Cleopas asks Jesus (whom he had
-failed to recognize), and says:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Dost thou alone sojourn in Jerusalem, and not know the
-things which are come to pass there in these days? And he said unto
-him, What things? And they said unto him, <i>the things concerning
-Jesus</i> of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word
-before God and all the people: and how the chief priests and our rulers
-delivered him up to be condemned to death, and crucified him.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Such, then, were &ldquo;the things about Jesus,&rdquo; and to find
-in them, as Professor W. B. Smith does, an allusion to a pre-Christian
-myth of a God Joshua is to find a gigantic mare&rsquo;s-nest, and fly
-in the face of all the evidence. He verges on actual absurdity when he
-sees the same allusion in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%205:26&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark v, 26</a>, where a sick woman, having heard &ldquo;the things
-concerning Jesus,&rdquo; went behind him, touched his garment, and was
-healed. Her disease was of a hysterical description, and in the annals
-of faith-healing such cures are common. What she had heard of was
-obviously not his fame as a Sun-god, but his power to heal sick persons
-like herself. <span class="marginnote">Magical papyrus of
-Wessely</span> Professor Smith tries to find support for his hardy
-conjecture in a chance phrase in a magical papyrus of Paris, No. 3,009,
-edited first by Wessely, and later by Dieterich in his <i>Abraxas</i>,
-p. 138. It is a form of exorcism to be inscribed on a tin plate and
-hung round the neck of a person possessed by a devil, or repeated over
-him by an exorcist. In this rigmarole the giants, of course, are
-dragged in, and the Tower of Babel and King Solomon; and the name of
-Jesus, the God of the Hebrews, is also invoked in the following terms:
-&ldquo;I <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb40" href="#pb40" name=
-"pb40">40</a>]</span>adjure thee by Jesus the God of the Hebrews,
-<span lang="he-latn">Iabaiae Abraoth aia thoth ele,
-el&ocirc;</span>,&rdquo; etc. The age of this papyrus is unknown; but
-Wessely puts it in the third century after Christ, while Dieterich
-shows that it can in no case be older than the second century
-<span class="sc">B.C.</span> It is clearly the composition of some
-exorcist who clung on to the skirts of late Judaism, for he is at pains
-to inform us in its last line that it is a Hebrew composition and
-preserved among pure men. In that age, as in after ones, not a few
-exorcists, trading on the fears and sufferings of superstitious people,
-affected to be pure and holy; and the mention of Jesus indicates some
-such charlatan, who was more or less cognisant of Christianity and of
-the practice of Christian exorcists. He was also aware of the Jewish
-antecedents of Christianity, and did not distinguish clearly between
-the mother religion and its daughter. That is why he describes Jesus as
-a Hebrew God. We know from other sources that even in the earliest
-Christian age Gentiles used the name of Jesus in exorcisms. The author
-of the document styles Jesus God, just as Pliny informs us that the
-Christians sang hymns &ldquo;to Christ as to God&rdquo;&mdash;<i lang=
-"la">Christo quasi deo</i>. How Professor Smith can imagine that this
-papyrus lends any colour to his thesis of a pre-Christian Jesus it is
-difficult to imagine.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jesus a Nazor&aelig;an in what sense</span>
-Still less does his thesis really profit by the text of <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%202:23&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew ii, 23</a>, in which a prophecy is adduced to the effect that
-the Messiah should be called a Nazor&aelig;an, and this prophecy is
-declared to have been fulfilled in so far as Jesus was taken by his
-parents to live at Nazareth in Galilee.</p>
-<p>What prophecy the evangelist had in mind is not <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb41" href="#pb41" name="pb41">41</a>]</span>known.
-But Professor W. B. Smith jumps to the conclusion that the Christians
-were identical with the sect of Nazor&aelig;i mentioned in Epiphanius
-as going back to an age before Christ; and he appeals in confirmation
-of this quite gratuitous hypothesis<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1073src"
-href="#xd25e1073" name="xd25e1073src">14</a> to <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2024:5&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xxiv, 5</a>, where the following of Jesus is described as that of
-the Nazor&aelig;i. It in no way helps the thesis of the non-historicity
-of Jesus, even if he and his followers were members of this obscure
-sect; it would rather prove the opposite. Drews, following W. B. Smith,
-pretends in the teeth of the texts that the name is applied to Jesus
-only as Guardian of the World, Protector and Deliverer of men from the
-power of sins and d&aelig;mons, and that it has no reference to an
-obscure and entirely unknown village named Nazareth. He also opines
-that Jesus was called a Nazarene, because he was the promised Netzer or
-Zemah who makes all things new, and so forth. Such talk is all in the
-air. Why these writers boggle so much at the name <i>Nazor&aelig;an</i>
-is not <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb42" href="#pb42" name=
-"pb42">42</a>]</span>easy to divine; still less to understand what
-Professor Smith is driving at when he writes of those whom he calls
-&ldquo;historicists,&rdquo; that &ldquo;They have rightly felt that the
-fall of Nazareth is the fall of historicism itself.&rdquo; Professor
-Burkitt has suggested that Nazareth is Chorazin spelt backwards.
-Wellhausen explains <i>Nazor&aelig;an</i> from <i>Nesar</i> in the name
-Gennessaret. In any case, as we have no first-century gazetteer or
-ordnance survey of Galilee, it is rash to suppose that there could have
-been no town there of the name. True the Talmuds and the Old Testament
-do not name it; but they do not profess to give a catalogue of all the
-places in Galilee, so their silence counts for little.<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e1110src" href="#xd25e1110" name=
-"xd25e1110src">15</a> All we know for certain is that for the
-evangelist Nazor&aelig;an meant a dweller in Nazareth, and that he gave
-the word that sense when he met with it in an anonymous prophecy.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Mr. Robertson on myths</span> I feel that I
-ought almost to apologize to my readers for investigating at such
-length the hypothesis of a pre-Christian Jesus, son of a mythical Mary,
-and for exhibiting over so many pages its fantastic, baseless, and
-absurd character. But Mr. Robertson himself warns us of the necessity
-of showing no mercy to myths when they assume the garb of fact. For he
-adduces (p. 126) the William Tell myth by way of illustrating once for
-all &ldquo;the fashion in which a fiction can even in a historical
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb43" href="#pb43" name=
-"pb43">43</a>]</span>period find general acceptance.&rdquo; Even so it
-is with his own fictions. We see them making their way with such
-startling rapidity over England and Germany as almost to make one
-despair of this age of popular enlightenment. It is not his fault, and
-I exonerate him from blame. <span class="marginnote">His methods those
-of old-fashioned orthodoxy</span>For centuries orthodox theologians
-have been trying to get out of the Gospels supernaturalist conclusions
-which were never in them, nor could with any colour be derived from
-them except by deliberately ignoring the canons of evidence and the
-historical methods freely employed in the study of all other ancient
-monuments and narratives. They have set the example of treating the
-early writings of Christianity as no other ancient books would be
-treated. Mr. Robertson is humbly following in their steps, but <i lang=
-"fr">&agrave; rebours</i>, or in an inverse sense. They insist on
-getting more out of the New Testament than any historical testimony
-could ever furnish; he on getting less. In other respects also he
-imitates their methods. Thus they insist on regarding the New
-Testament, and in particular the four Gospels, as a homogeneous block,
-and will not hear of the criticism which discerns in them literary
-development, which detects earlier and later <i>couches</i> of
-tradition and narrative. This is what I call the Sunday-school
-attitude, and it lacks all perspective and orientation. Mr. Robertson
-imbibed it in childhood, and has never been able to throw it off. For
-him there is no before and after in the formation of these books, no
-earlier and later in the emergence of beliefs about Jesus, no
-stratification of documents or of ideas. If he sometimes admits it, he
-withdraws the admission on the next page, as militating against his
-cardinal hypothesis. He seems never to have submitted himself
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb44" href="#pb44" name=
-"pb44">44</a>]</span>to systematic training in the methods of
-historical research&mdash;never, as we say, to have gone through the
-mill; and accordingly in the handling of documents he shows himself a
-mere wilful child.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Thus he insists on the priority in
-Christian tradition of the Virgin Birth legend</span> His treatment of
-the legend of the Virgin Birth is an example of this mental attitude,
-which might be described as orthodoxy turned upside down and inside
-out. The Gospel of Mark is demonstrably older than those of the other
-two synoptists who merely copied it out with such variations,
-additions, omissions, and modifications as a growing reverence for
-Jesus the Messiah imposed. It contains, no more than the Pauline
-Epistles and the Johannine Gospel, any hint of the supernatural birth
-of Jesus. It regards him quite simply and naturally as the son of
-Joseph and Mary. In it the neighbours of Jesus enumerate by way of
-contumely the names of his brothers and sisters. I have shown also in
-my <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i> that this naturalist tradition of his
-birth dominates no less the whole of the Gospels of Matthew and Luke
-apart from the first two chapters of each, and that even in the first
-chapter of Matthew the pedigree in early texts ended with the words
-&ldquo;Joseph begat Jesus.&rdquo; I have shown furthermore that the
-belief in the paternity of Joseph was the characteristic belief of the
-Palestinian Christians for over two centuries, that it prevailed in
-Syria to the extent of regarding Jesus and Thomas as twin brothers. I
-have pointed out that the Jewish interlocutor Trypho in Justin
-Martyr&rsquo;s dialogue (c. 150) maintains that Jesus was born a man of
-men and rejects the Virgin Birth legend as a novelty unworthy of
-monotheists, and that he extorts from his Christian antagonist the
-admission that the great majority <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb45"
-href="#pb45" name="pb45">45</a>]</span>of Christians still believed in
-the paternity of Joseph.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">His exceptional treatment of Christian
-tradition</span> Now Mr. Robertson evidently reads a good deal, and
-must at one time or another have come across all these facts. Why,
-then, does he go out of his way to ignore them, and, in common with
-Professors Drews and W. B. Smith, insist that the miraculous tradition
-of Jesus&rsquo;s birth was coeval with the earliest Christianity and
-prior to the tradition of a natural birth? Yet the texts stare him in
-the face and confute him. Why does he shut his eyes to them, and gibe
-perpetually at the critical students who attach weight to them? The
-works of all the three writers are tirades against the critical method
-which tries to disengage in the traditions of Jesus the true from the
-false, fact from myth, and to show how, in the pagan society which, as
-it were, lifted Jesus up out of his Jewish cradle, these myths
-inevitably gathered round his figure, as mists at midday thicken around
-a mountain crest.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">In secular history he uses other canons and
-methods,</span> Their insistence that in the case of Christian origins
-the miraculous and the non-miraculous form a solid block of
-impenetrable myth is all the more remarkable, because in secular
-history they are prepared, nay anxious, for the separation of truth
-from falsehood, of history from myth, and continually urge not only its
-possibility, but its necessity. Mr. Robertson in particular prides
-himself on meting out to Apollonius of Tyana a measure which he refuses
-to Jesus the Messiah. <span class="marginnote"><i>e.g.</i>, in
-criticizing the story of Apollonius</span>&ldquo;The simple
-purport,&rdquo; he writes in the <i>Literary Guide</i>, May 1, 1913,
-&ldquo;of my chapter on Apollonius was to acknowledge his historicity,
-despite the accretions of myth and more or less palpable fiction to his
-biography.&rdquo; And yet <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb46" href=
-"#pb46" name="pb46">46</a>]</span>there are ten testimonies to the
-historicity of Jesus where there is one to that of Apollonius; yet
-Apollonius was reputed to have been born miraculously, and his birth
-accompanied by the portent of a meteor from heaven, as that of Jesus by
-a star from the east. Like Jesus, he controlled the devils of madness
-and disease, and by the power of his exorcisms dismissed them to be
-tortured in hell. Like Peter, he miraculously freed himself from his
-bonds; like Jesus, he revealed himself after death to a sceptical
-disciple and <i lang="la">viva voce</i> convinced him of his ascent to
-heaven; like him, he ascended in his body up to heaven amid the hymns
-of maiden worshippers. In life he spent seven days in the bowels of the
-earth, and gathered a band of disciples around him who acclaimed him as
-a divine being; long after his death temples were raised to him as to a
-demigod, miracles wrought by his relics, and prayer and sacrifice
-offered to his genius. So considerable was the parallelism between his
-story and that of Jesus that the pagan enemies of the Christians began
-about the year 300 to run his cult against theirs, and it was only
-yesterday that the orthodox began to give up the old view that the Life
-of Apollonius was a blasphemous <i lang=
-"fr">r&eacute;chauff&eacute;</i> of the Gospels. &ldquo;There is no
-great reason to doubt that India was visited by Apollonius of
-Tyana,&rdquo; writes Mr. Robertson (<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>,
-p. 273); and yet his visit in the only relation we have of it is a
-tissue of marvels and prodigies, his Indian itinerary is impossible,
-and full of contradictions not only of what we know of Indian geography
-to-day, but of what was already known in that day. Yet about his
-pilgrimage thither, declares Mr. Robertson, there is no more
-uncertainty than about the embassies <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb47" href="#pb47" name="pb47">47</a>]</span>sent by Porus to
-Augustus, and by the king of &ldquo;Taprobane&rdquo; to Claudius.
-&ldquo;There is much myth,&rdquo; he writes again, p. 280, &ldquo;in
-the life of Apollonius of Tyana, who appears to be at the bottom a real
-historical personage.&rdquo; In the Gospels we have the story of
-Jairus&rsquo;s daughter being raised to life from apparent death.
-&ldquo;A closely similar story is found in Philostratus&rsquo;s Life of
-Apollonius of Tyana, the girl in each case being spoken of in such a
-way as to leave open the question of her having been dead or a
-cataleptic.&rdquo; So writes Mr. Robertson, p. 334, who thinks that
-&ldquo;the simple form preserved in Matthew suggests the derivation
-from the story in Philostratus,&rdquo; overlooking here, as elsewhere,
-the chronological difficulties. We can forgive him for that; but why,
-we must ask, does the presence of such stories in the Gospel
-irrevocably condemn Jesus to non-historicity, while their presence in
-the Life of Apollonius leaves his historical reality intact and
-unchallenged? Is it not that the application of his canons of
-interpretation to Apollonius would have deprived him of one of the
-sources from which the mythicity of Jesus by his anachronistic methods
-could be deduced?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The early passion play of the Sun-god
-Joshua</span> Mr. Robertson endeavours in a halting manner to justify
-his partiality for Apollonius. &ldquo;We have,&rdquo; he writes
-(<i>Pagan Christs</i>, p. 283, &sect; 16), &ldquo;no reason for
-doubting that there was an Apollonius of Tyana&#8202;&hellip;. The
-reasons for not doubting are (1) that there was no cause to be served
-by a sheer fabrication; and (2) that it was a much easier matter to
-take a known name as a nucleus for a mass of marvels and theosophic
-teachings than to build it up, as the phrase goes about the canon,
-&lsquo;round a hole.&rsquo; The <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb48"
-href="#pb48" name="pb48">48</a>]</span>difference between such a case
-and those of Jesuism and Buddhism is obvious. In those cases there was
-a cultus and an organization to be accounted for, and a biography of
-the founder had to be forthcoming. In the case of Apollonius, despite
-the string of marvels attached to his name, there was no
-cultus.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Let us examine the above argument. In the case of
-&ldquo;Jesuism&rdquo; (Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s <i>argot</i> for early
-Christianity) there had to be fabricated a biography of Jesus, because
-there existed an organized sect that worshipped Jesus.</p>
-<p>The organized sect consisted, according to Mr. Robertson, of
-&ldquo;Christists&rdquo; or &ldquo;Jesuists,&rdquo; and the chief
-incident for which they were organized was an annual play in which the
-God Jesus was betrayed, arrested, condemned, was crucified, died, was
-buried, and rose again. Ober Ammergau has supplied him with his main
-conception, and his annually recurring &ldquo;Gospel mystery
-play,&rdquo; as he imagines it to have been acted by the
-&ldquo;Jesuists,&rdquo; who were immediate ancestors of the Christians,
-is a faithful copy of the modern Passion Play. He supposes it to have
-been acted annually because the hypothetical Sun-God-Saviour Joshua,
-whose mythical sufferings and death it commemorated, was an analogue of
-Osiris, whose sufferings and death were similarly represented in Egypt
-each recurring spring; also of Adonis, of Dionysus, of Mithras, and of
-sundry vegetation gods, annually slain to revive vegetation and secure
-the life of the initiate in the next world. Be it remarked also that
-the annually slain God of the Jesuists was not only an analogue of
-these other gods, but a &ldquo;composite myth&rdquo; made up of their
-myths. As we have seen, Mr. Robertson is ready to exhibit to us in
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb49" href="#pb49" name=
-"pb49">49</a>]</span>one or another of their mythologies the original
-of every single incident and actor in the Jesuist play.</p>
-<p>Such was the cultus and organization which, according to Mr.
-Robertson and his imitator Dr. Drews, lies behind the Christian
-religion. The latter began to be when the &ldquo;Jesuist&rdquo; cult,
-having broken away from Judaism, was also concerned to break away from
-the paganism in contact with which the play would first arise.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Gospels a transcript of this
-play</span> A biography of the Founder of the cult was now called for,
-by the Founder oddly enough being meant the God himself, and not the
-hierophant who instituted the play. The Christian Gospels are the
-biography in question. They are a transcript of the annually performed
-ritual drama, just as Lamb&rsquo;s <i>Tales from Shakespeare</i> are
-transcripts of Shakespeare&rsquo;s plays.</p>
-<p>The first performances of the play, we learn, probably took place in
-Egypt. It ceased to be acted when &ldquo;it was reduced to writing as
-part of the gospel.&rdquo; How far away from Jerusalem it was that the
-momentous decision was taken by the sect to give up play acting and be
-content with the transcript Mr. Robertson &ldquo;can hardly
-divine.&rdquo; He hints, however, that some of the latest
-representations took place in the temples built by Herod at Damascus
-and Jericho and in the theatres of the Greek town of Gadara. &ldquo;The
-reduction of the play to narrative form put all the Churches on a
-level, and would remove a stumbling block from the way of the ascetic
-Christists who objected to all dramatic shows as such.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But where did the play come from? What inspired it? Mr. Robertson
-makes a tour round the Mediterranean, <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb50" href="#pb50" name="pb50">50</a>]</span>and collects in Part II,
-Ch. I, of his <i>Pagan Christs</i> a lot of scrappy information about
-mock sacrifices and mystery dramas, all of them &ldquo;cases and modes
-of modification&rdquo; of actual human sacrifices that were &ldquo;once
-normal in the Semitic world.&rdquo; He assumes without a tittle of
-proof, and against all probability, that the annual sacrifice of a king
-or of a king&rsquo;s son, whether in real or mimic, held its ground
-among Jews as a religious ceremony right down into our era, and was
-&ldquo;reduced among them to ritual form, like the leading worships of
-the surrounding Gentile world.&rdquo; He fashions a new hypothesis in
-accordance with these earlier ones as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Joshua or Jesus slain once a year</span>
-&ldquo;If in any Jewish community, or in the Jewish quarter of any
-Eastern city, the central figure in this rite (<i>i.e.</i>, of a mock
-sacrifice annually recurring of a man got up to represent a god) were
-customarily called Jesus Barabbas, &lsquo;Jesus the Son of the
-Father&rsquo;&mdash;whether or not in virtue of an old cultus of a God
-Jesus who had died annually like Attis and Tammuz&mdash;we should have
-a basis for the tradition so long preserved in many MSS. of the first
-gospel, and at the same time a basis for the whole gospel myth of the
-crucifixion.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Here we have a whole string of hypotheses piled one on the other.
-Let us see which have any ground in fact, or cohere with what we know
-of the past, which are improbable and unproven.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Hypothesis of human sacrifice among
-Jews</span> That human sacrifice was once in vogue among the Jews is
-probable enough, and the story of the frustrated sacrifice of Isaac was
-no doubt both a memory and a condemnation of the old rite of
-sacrificing first-born children with which we are familiar in ancient
-Ph&oelig;nicia and her colony of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb51"
-href="#pb51" name="pb51">51</a>]</span>Carthage. That such rites in
-Jud&aelig;a and in Israel did not survive the Assyrian conquest of
-Jerusalem is certain. The latest allusion to them is in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is%2030:27-33&amp;version=NRSV">
-Isaiah xxx, 27&ndash;33</a>. This passage is post-exilic indeed; but,
-as Dr. Cheyne remarks (<i lang="la">Encycl. Biblica</i>, art. Molech,
-col. 3,187): &ldquo;The tone of the allusion is rather that of a writer
-remote from these atrocities than of a prophet in the midst of the
-struggle against them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We may then assume (1) that the custom of human sacrifice
-disappeared among Jews centuries before our era; (2) that in the epoch
-100 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> to 100 <span class="sc">A.D.</span>
-every Jew, no matter where he lived, would view such rites and
-reminiscences with horror. As a matter of fact, Philo dwells in
-eloquent language on the horror and abomination of them as they were
-still in his day sporadically celebrated, not among Jews, but among
-pagans.</p>
-<p>This being so, is it likely that any Jewish community would keep up
-even the <i>simulacrum</i> of such rites? In Josephus and Philo, who
-are our most important witnesses to the Judaism that just preceded or
-was contemporary with early Christianity, there is no hint of such
-rites as might constitute a memory and mimicry of human victims,
-whether identified with a god or not. No serious pagan writer of that
-age ever accused the Jews of keeping up such rites openly or in secret
-among themselves. <span class="marginnote">Evidence of Apion accepted
-by Mr. Robertson</span>Apion alone had a cock-and-bull story of how
-Antiochus Epiphanes, when he took Jerusalem (c. 170 <span class=
-"sc">B.C.</span>), found a Greek being fattened up by the Jews in the
-<i>adytum</i> of the temple about to be slain and eaten in honour of
-their god. Of course Mr. Robertson catches at this, and writes
-(<i>Pagan Christs</i>, p. 161) that, &ldquo;in view of all the clues,
-we cannot pronounce that story incredible.&rdquo; <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb52" href="#pb52" name="pb52">52</a>]</span>What
-clues has he? The undoubted survival of ritual murder among the pagans
-of Ph&oelig;nicia in that age is no clue, though it explains the
-genesis of Apion&rsquo;s tale. And Mr. Robertson has one other treasure
-trove&mdash;to wit, the obscure reading &ldquo;Jesus Barabbas&rdquo; in
-certain MSS. of <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2027:17&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew xxvii, 17</a>: &ldquo;Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that
-I release unto you? (Jesus) Barabbas, or Jesus which is called
-Christ?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The sacrificing of the mock king</span> It
-has been plausibly suggested that the addition Jesus is due to a
-scribe&rsquo;s reduplication, such as is common in Greek manuscripts,
-of the last syllable of the word <i>humin</i> = unto you. The <i>in</i>
-in uncials is a regular compendium for <i>Iesun</i> Jesus. In this way
-the name Jesus may have crept in before Barabbas. The entire story of
-Barabbas being released has an apocryphal air, for Pilate would not
-have let off a rebel against the Roman rule to please the Jewish mob;
-and the episode presupposes that it was the Sanhedrin which had
-condemned Jesus to death, which is equally improbable. What is
-probable, however, is that the Syrian soldiery to whom Pilate committed
-Jesus for crucifixion were accustomed to the Sac&aelig;a festival of
-Babylonian origin, and perhaps to the analogous Roman feast of the
-Saturnalia. In such celebrations a mock king was chosen, and vested
-with the costume, pomp, and privileges of kingship perhaps for as long
-as three days. Then the mimicry of slaying him was gone through, and
-sometimes the mock king was really put to death. Among Syrians the name
-Barabbas may&mdash;it is a mere hypothesis&mdash;have been the
-conventional appellation of the victim slain actually or in mock show
-on such occasions; and the soldiers of Pilate may have treated
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb53" href="#pb53" name=
-"pb53">53</a>]</span>him en Barabbas. Loisy suggests in his
-<i>Commentary on the Synoptics</i> that this was the genesis of the
-Barabbas story. That a pagan soldiery treated Jesus as a mock king,
-when they dressed him in purple and set a crown of thorns on his head,
-and, kneeling before him, cried &ldquo;Hail King of the Jews,&rdquo; is
-quite possible; and serious scholars like Paul Wendland (<i>Hermes</i>,
-Vol. XXXIII (1898), <span class="corr" id="xd25e1284" title=
-"Source: foll.">fol.</span> 175) and Mr. W. R. Paton long ago discerned
-the probability.</p>
-<p>But it was one thing for Syrians and pagans to envisage the
-crucifixion of Jesus under the aspect of a sacrifice to Molech, quite
-another thing for Jews&mdash;whether as his enemies or as his
-partisans&mdash;to do so; nor does the Gospel narrative suggest that
-any Jews took part in the ceremony. Perhaps it was out of respect for
-Jewish susceptibilities&mdash;and they were not likely to favour any
-mockery of their Messianic aspirations&mdash;that Pilate caused Jesus
-to be divested of the purple insignia of royalty and clad in his usual
-garb before he was led out of the guardroom and through the streets of
-Jerusalem on his way to Golgotha.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of Philo</span> We read in Philo
-(<i>In Flaccum</i>, vi) of a very similar scene enacted in the streets
-of Alexandria within ten years of the crucifixion. The young Agrippa,
-elevated by Caligula to the throne of Jud&aelig;a, had landed in that
-city, where feeling ran high between Jews and pagans. The latter, by
-way of ridiculing the pretensions of the Jews to have a king of their
-own, seized on a poor lunatic named Carabas who loitered night and day
-naked about the streets, ran him as far as the Gymnasium, and there
-stood him on a stool, so that all could see him, having first set a
-mock diadem of byblus on his head and thrown <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb54" href="#pb54" name="pb54">54</a>]</span>a rug
-over his shoulders as a cloak of honour. In his hand they set a papyrus
-stem by way of sceptre. Having thus arrayed him, as in a mime of the
-theatre, with the insignia of mock royalty, the young men shouldering
-sticks, as if they were a bodyguard, encircled him, while others
-advanced, saluted his mock majesty, and pretended that he was their
-judge and king sitting on his throne to direct the commonwealth.
-Meanwhile a shout went up from the crowd around of <i>Marin</i>, which
-in the Syrian language signified <i>Lord</i>.</p>
-<p>This passage of Philo goes far to prove that the mockery of Jesus in
-the Gospels was no more than a public ridiculing of the Jewish
-expectations of a national leader or Messiah who should revive the
-splendours of the old Davidic kingdom. In any case, the mockery is
-conducted at Jerusalem by Pilate&rsquo;s soldiers (who were not Jews,
-but a pagan garrison put there to overawe the Jews), at Alexandria by
-such Greeks as Apion penned his calumnies to gratify. Mr.
-Robertson&rsquo;s suggestion that the mock ceremony of the crucifixion
-was performed by Jews or Christians is thus as absurd as it is
-gratuitous. It was held in bitter despite of Jews and Christians, it
-was a mockery and reviling of their most cherished hopes and ideals;
-and yet he does not scruple to argue that it is &ldquo;a basis for the
-whole gospel myth of the crucifixion.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of the Khonds</span> Thus he is
-left with the single calumny of Apion, which deserves about as much
-credence as the similar tales circulated to-day against the Jews of
-Bessarabia. That is the single item of evidence he has to prove what is
-the very hinge of his theory&mdash;the supposition, namely, that the
-Jews of Alexandria first, and afterwards <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb55" href="#pb55" name="pb55">55</a>]</span>the Jews of Jerusalem,
-celebrated in secret once a year ritual dramas representing the
-ceremonial slaying of a Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, Son of the Father and
-of the Virgin Miriam. It is a far cry to the horrible rites of the
-Khonds of modern India; but Mr. Robertson, for whom wide differences of
-age and place matter nothing when he is explaining Christian origins,
-has discovered in them a key to the narrative of the crucifixion of
-Jesus. He runs all round the world and collects rites of ritual murder
-and cannibal sacraments of all ages, mixes them up, lumps them down
-before us, and exclaims triumphantly, There is my &ldquo;psychological
-clue&rdquo; to Christianity. The most superficial resemblances satisfy
-him that an incident in Jerusalem early in our era is an essential
-reproduction of a Khond ritual murder in honour of the goddess Tari.
-Was there ever an author so hopelessly uncritical in his methods?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Origin of the Gospels</span> The Gospels,
-then, are a transcript of a mock murder of the Sun-god Joshua annually
-performed in secret by the Jews of Jerusalem, for it had got there
-before it was written down and discontinued. One asks oneself why, if
-the Jews had tolerated so long a pagan survival among themselves, they
-could not keep it up a little longer; and why the
-&ldquo;Christists&rdquo; should be so anxious &ldquo;to break away from
-paganism&rdquo; at exactly the same hour. Moreover, their breach with
-paganism did not amount to much, since they kept the transcript of a
-ritual drama framed on pagan lines and inspired throughout by pagan
-ideas and myths; not only kept it, but elevated it into Holy Scripture.
-At the same time they retained the Old Testament, which as Jews they
-had immemorially <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb56" href="#pb56" name=
-"pb56">56</a>]</span>venerated as Holy Scripture; and for generations
-they went on worshipping in the Jewish temple, kept the Jewish feasts
-and fasts, and were zealous for circumcision. What a hotchpotch of a
-sect!</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">How could a Sun-god slain annually be slain
-by Pontius Pilate?</span> It occurs to me to ask Mr. Robertson a few
-questions about this transcript. It was the annual mystery play reduced
-to writing. The central event of the play was the annual death and
-resurrection of a solar or vegetation god, whose attributes and career
-were borrowed from the cults of Osiris, Adonis, Dionysus, and Co. All
-these gods died once a year; and, I suppose, had you asked one of the
-votaries when his god died, he would have answered, Every spring. Now
-all the Gospels (in common with all Christian tradition) are unanimous
-that Jesus only died once, about the time of the Passover, when Pilate
-was Roman Governor of Jud&aelig;a, when Annas and Caiaphas were
-high-priests and King Herod about. This surely is an extraordinary
-record for a Sun-god who died once a year. And it was not in the
-transcript only that all these fixities of date crept in, for Mr.
-Robertson insists most vehemently that Pilate was an actor in the play.
-&ldquo;Even the episode,&rdquo; he writes (<i>Pagan Christs</i>, p.
-193), &ldquo;of the appeal of the priests and Pharisees to Pilate to
-keep a guard on the tomb, though it might be a later interpolation,
-could quite well have been a dramatic scene.&rdquo; In Mark and
-Matthew, as containing &ldquo;the earlier version&rdquo; of the drama,
-he detects everywhere a &ldquo;concrete theatricality.&rdquo; Thus he
-commits himself to the astonishing paralogism that Pilate and Herod,
-Annas and Caiaphas, and all the other personages of the closing
-chapters of the Gospels, were features in an annually recurring passion
-play of the Sun-god Joshua; and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb57"
-href="#pb57" name="pb57">57</a>]</span>this play was not a novelty
-introduced after the crucifixion, for there never was a real
-crucifixion. On the contrary, it was a secret survival among paganized
-Jews, a bit of Jewish pagan mummery that had been going on long ages
-before the actors represented in it ever lived or were heard of. Such
-is the <i>reductio ad absurdum</i> of the thesis which peeps out
-everywhere in Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s pages. And now we have found what
-we were in search of&mdash;namely, the cultus and organization to
-account for which a biography of Jesus had to be fabricated. The Life
-of Apollonius, argues Mr. Robertson, cannot have been built up round a
-hole, and as there was no organized cult of him (this is utterly
-false), there must have been a real figure to fit the biography. In the
-other case the organized and pre-existing cult was the nucleus around
-which the Gospels grew up like fairy rings around a primal fungus. It
-is not obvious why a cult should exclude a real founder, or, rather, a
-real person, in honour of whom the cult was kept up. In the worship of
-the Augustus or of the ancient Pharaoh, who impersonated and was
-Osiris, we have both. Why not have both in the case of Jesus, to whose
-real life and subsequent deification the Augusti and the Pharaohs offer
-a remarkable parallel? But there never was any pre-Christian cult and
-organization in Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s sense. It is a monstrous
-outgrowth of his own imagination.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Historicity of Plato falls by the canons of
-the mythicists</span> And as in the case of Apollonius, so in the case
-of other ancients, he is careful not to apply those methods of
-interpretation which he yet cannot pardon scholars for not applying to
-Jesus. Let us take another example. Of the life of Plato we know next
-to nothing. In the dialogues attributed to him his <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb58" href="#pb58" name="pb58">58</a>]</span>name is
-only mentioned twice; and in both cases its mention could, if we adopt
-Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s canons of interpretation, be with the utmost ease
-explained away as an interpolation. The only life we have of him was
-penned by Diogenes Laertius 600 years after he lived. The details of
-his life supplied by Aristoxenus, a pupil of Aristotle, are obviously
-false. The only notices preserved of him that can be claimed to be
-contemporary are the few derived from his nephew Speusippus. Now what
-had Speusippus to tell? Why, a story of the birth of Plato which, as
-Mr. Robertson (p. 293) writes, scarcely differs from the story of
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%201:18-25&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew i, 18&ndash;25</a>:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the special machinery of the Joseph and Mary
-myth&mdash;the warning in a dream and the abstention of the
-husband&mdash;we have a simple duplication of the relations of the
-father and mother of Plato, the former being warned in a dream by
-Apollo, so that the child was virgin-born.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again, just as the Christians chose a &ldquo;solar date&rdquo; for
-the birthday of Jesus, so the Platonists, according to Mr. Robertson,
-p. 308, &ldquo;placed the master&rsquo;s birthday on that of
-Apollo&mdash;that is, either at Christmas or at the vernal
-equinox.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Now in the case of Jesus such legends and events as the above
-suffice to convince Mr. Robertson that the history of Jesus as told in
-the Gospels is a mere survival of &ldquo;ancient solar or other worship
-of a babe Joshua, son of Miriam,&rdquo; of which ancient worship
-nothing is known except that it looms large in the imagination of
-himself, of Dr. Drews, and of Professor W. B. Smith. On the other hand,
-we do know that a cult of Apollo existed, and that it is no fiction of
-these modern writers. Surely, then, it is time we <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb59" href="#pb59" name="pb59">59</a>]</span>changed
-our opinion about the historicity of Plato. Is it not as clear as
-daylight that he was the survival of a pre-Platonic Apollo myth? We
-know the <i>r&ocirc;le</i> assigned to Apollo of revealer of
-philosophic truth. Well, here were the dialogues and letters of Plato,
-calling for an explanation of their origin; a sect of Platonists who
-cherished these writings and kept the feast of their master on a solar
-date. On all the principles of the new mythico-symbolic system Plato,
-as a man, had no right to exist. &ldquo;Without Jesus,&rdquo; writes
-Drews, &ldquo;the rise of Christianity can be quite well
-understood.&rdquo; Yes, and, by the same logic, no less the rise of
-Platonism without Plato, or of the cult of Apollonius without
-Apollonius. What is sauce for the goose is surely sauce for the gander.
-With a mere change of names we could write of Plato what on p. 282 Mr.
-Robertson writes of Jesus. Let us do it: &ldquo;The gospel Jesus
-(<i>read</i> dialogist Plato) is as enigmatic from a humanist as from a
-supernaturalist point of view. Miraculously born, to the knowledge of
-many (<i>read</i> of his nephew Speusippus, of Clearchus whose
-testimony &lsquo;belongs to Plato&rsquo;s generation,&rsquo; of
-Anaxilides the historian and others), he reappears as a natural man
-even in the opinion of his parents (<i>read</i> of nephew Speusippus
-and the rest); the myth will not cohere. Rationally considered, he
-(Plato) is an unintelligible portent; a Galilean (<i>read</i> Athenian)
-of the common people, critically untraceable till his full manhood,
-when he suddenly appears as a cult-founder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Virgin Birth no part of the earliest
-Gospel tradition</span> Why does Mr. Robertson so incessantly labour
-the point that the belief in the supernatural birth of Jesus came first
-in time, and was anterior to the belief that he was born a man of men?
-This he <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb60" href="#pb60" name=
-"pb60">60</a>]</span>implies in the words just cited:
-&ldquo;Miraculously born, to the knowledge of many, he reappears as a
-natural man.&rdquo; A story almost identical with that of the Massacre
-of the Innocents by Herod was, Mr. Robertson tells us (p. 184), told of
-the Emperor Augustus <i>in his lifetime</i>, and appears in Suetonius
-&ldquo;as accepted history.&rdquo; And elsewhere (p. 395) he writes:
-&ldquo;It was after these precedents (<i>i.e.</i>, of Antiochus and
-Ptolemy) that Augustus, besides having himself given out, like
-Alexander, as begotten of a God, caused himself to be proclaimed in the
-East &hellip; as being born under Providence a Saviour and a God and
-the beginning of an Evangel of peace to mankind.&rdquo; Like
-Plato&rsquo;s story, then, so the official and contemporary legends of
-Augustus closely resembled the later ones of Jesus. Yet Mr. Robertson
-complacently accepts the historicity of Plato and Augustus, merely
-brushing aside the miraculous stories and supernatural
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i>. Nowhere in his works does he manifest the faintest
-desire to apply in the domain of profane history the canons which he so
-rigidly enforces in ecclesiastical.</p>
-<p>Yet there are passages in Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s works where he
-seems, to use his own phrase, to &ldquo;glimpse&rdquo; the truth. Thus,
-on p. 124 of <i>Christianity and Mythology</i> he writes: &ldquo;Jesus
-is said to be born of a Virgin; but not in the original version of the
-first gospel; and not in the second; and not in the fourth; and not in
-any writing or by any mouth known to or credited by the writers of the
-Pauline Epistles. Here we see how a myth may be superimposed on a
-cult.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Does not this mean that a <i>cult</i> of Jesus already existed
-before this myth was added, and that the myth is absent in the earliest
-documents of the cult? Again, on p. 274, he writes that &ldquo;the
-Christian <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb61" href="#pb61" name=
-"pb61">61</a>]</span>Virgin-myth and Virgin-and-child worship are
-certainly of pre-Christian origin, and <i>of comparatively late
-Christian acceptance</i>.&rdquo; Yet, when I drew attention in the
-<i>Literary Guide</i> of December 1, 1912, to the inconsistency with
-this passage of the later one above cited, which asserts that,
-&ldquo;Miraculously born, to the knowledge of many, he reappears as a
-natural man,&rdquo; he replied (January 1, 1913) that &ldquo;a reader
-of ordinary candour would understand that &lsquo;acceptance&rsquo;
-applied to the official action of the Church.&rdquo; It appears,
-therefore, that in the cryptic secret society of the Joshua
-Sun-God-Saviour, which held its s&eacute;ances at Jerusalem at the
-beginning of our era, there was an official circle which lagged behind
-the unofficial multitude. The latter knew from the first that their
-solar myth was miraculously born; but the official and controlling
-inner circle ignored the miracle until late in the development of the
-cult, and then at last issued a number of documents from which it was
-excluded. One wonders why. Why trouble to utter these documents in
-which Jesus &ldquo;reappears as a natural man,&rdquo; long after the
-sect as a whole were committed to the miraculous birth? What is the
-meaning of these wheels within wheels, that hardly hunt together? We
-await an explanation. Meanwhile let us probe the new mythico-symbolism
-a little further.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The cleansing of the temple</span> Why did
-the solar God Joshua-Jesus scourge the money-changers out of the
-temple? Answer: Because it is told of Apollonius of Tyana, &ldquo;that
-he expelled from the cities of the left bank of the Hellespont some
-sorcerers who were extorting money for a great propitiatory sacrifice
-to prevent earthquakes.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb62"
-href="#pb62" name="pb62">62</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The connection is beautifully obvious like the rest of our
-author&rsquo;s <i>rapprochements</i>; but we must accept it, or we
-shall lay ourselves open to the reproach of &ldquo;psychological
-resistance to evidence.&rdquo; Nor must we ask how the memoirs of
-Damis, that lay in a corner till Philostratus got hold of them in the
-year 215, enjoyed so much vogue among the &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; of
-Jerusalem long years before they can conceivably have been written.</p>
-<p>Why on the occasion in question did Jesus make a scourge of cords
-with which to drive the sheep and oxen out of the Temple? Answer:
-&ldquo;Because in the Assyrian and Egyptian systems a scourge-bearing
-god is a very common figure on the monuments &hellip; it is specially
-associated with Osiris, the Saviour, Judge, and Avenger. A figure of
-Osiris, reverenced as &lsquo;Chrestos&rsquo; the benign God, would
-suffice to set up among Christists as erewhile among pagans the demand
-for an explanation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Here we get a precious insight into the why and wherefore of the
-Gospels. They were intended by the &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; to explain
-the meaning of Osiris statues. Why could they not have asked one of the
-priests of Osiris, who as a rule might be found in the neighbourhood of
-his statues, what the emblem meant? And, after all, were statues of
-Osiris so plentiful in Jerusalem, where the sight even of a Roman eagle
-aroused a riot?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Janus-Peter the <i>bifrons</i></span> Who
-was Peter? Answer: An understudy of Mithras, who in the monuments bears
-two keys; or of Janus, who bears the keys and the rod, and as opener of
-the year (hence the name January) stands at the head of the twelve
-months.</p>
-<p>Why did Peter deny Jesus? Answer: Because <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb63" href="#pb63" name="pb63">63</a>]</span>Janus
-was called <i>bifrons</i>. The epithet puzzled the
-&ldquo;Christists&rdquo; or &ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo; of Jerusalem, who,
-instead of asking the first Roman soldier they met what it meant,
-proceeded to render the word <i>bifrons</i> in the sense of
-&ldquo;double-faced,&rdquo; quite a proper epithet they thought for
-Peter, who thenceforth had to be held guilty of an act of
-double-dealing. For we must not forget that it was the epithet which
-suggested to the Christists the invention of the story, and not the
-story that of the epithet. But even Mr. Robertson is not quite sure of
-this; and it does not matter, where there is such a wealth of
-alternatives. For Peter is also an understudy of &ldquo;the fickle
-Proteus.&rdquo; Janus&rsquo;s double head was anyhow common on coins,
-and with that highly relevant observation he essays to protect his
-theories of Janus-Peter from any possible criticisms. Indeed, we are
-forbidden to call in question the above conclusions. They are quite
-certain, because the &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; were intellectually
-&ldquo;about the business of forming myths in explanation of old ritual
-and old statuary&rdquo; (p. 350). Wonderful people these early
-&ldquo;Christists,&rdquo; who, although they were, as Mr. Robertson
-informs us (p. 348), &ldquo;apostles of a Judaic cult preaching
-circumcision,&rdquo; and therefore by instinct inimical to all plastic
-art, nevertheless rivalled the modern arch&aelig;ologist in their
-desire to explain <i>old statuary</i>. They seem to have been the
-prototypes of the Jews of Wardour Street. No less wonderful were they
-as philologists, in that, being Hebrews and presumably speaking
-Aramaic, they took such a healthy interest in the meaning of Latin
-words, and discovered in <i>bifrons</i> a sense which it never bore in
-any Latin author who ever used it! <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb64"
-href="#pb64" name="pb64">64</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The keys of Peter</span> It appears to have
-escaped the notice of Professor Franz Cumont that Mithras carries in
-his monuments two keys. The two keys were an attribute of the Mithraic
-Kronos, in old Persian Zervan, whom relatively late the Latins confused
-with Janus, who also had two heads and carried keys. That late
-Christian images of Peter were imitated from statues of these gods no
-one need doubt, and Fr. Cumont (<i lang="fr">Monuments de Mithras</i>,
-i, 85) does not reject such an idea. It is quite another thing to
-assume dogmatically that the text <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2016:19&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew xvi, 19</a> was suggested by a statue of Janus or of Zervan. To
-explain it you need not leave Jewish ground, but merely glance at
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is%2022:22&amp;version=NRSV">
-Isaiah xxii, 22</a>, where the Lord is made to say of Eliakim:
-&ldquo;And the key of the house of David will I lay upon his shoulder;
-and he shall open and none shall shut; and he shall shut and none shall
-open.&rdquo; The same imagery meets us in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rev%203:7&amp;version=NRSV">
-Revelation iii, 7</a> (copied from Isaiah), <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%2011:52&amp;version=NRSV">
-Luke xi, 52</a>, and elsewhere. A. Sulzbach (in <i lang=
-"de"><abbr title=
-"Zeitschrift f&uuml;r die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft">Ztschr. f.d.
-Neutest. Wissenschaft</abbr></i>, 1903, p. 190) points out that every
-Jew, up to <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 70, would understand such
-imagery, for he saw every evening the temple keys ceremoniously taken
-from a hole under the temple floor, where they were kept under a slab
-of stone. The Levite watcher locked up the temple and replaced the keys
-under the slab, upon which he then laid his bed for the night. In
-connection with the magic power of binding and loosing the keys had, of
-course, a further and magical significance, not in Jud&aelig;a alone,
-but all over the world, and the Evangelists did not need to examine
-statues of Janus or Zervan in order to come by this bit of everyday
-symbolism.</p>
-<p>N.B.&mdash;No connection of Janus-Peter of the Gospels <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb65" href="#pb65" name="pb65">65</a>]</span>with
-Peter of the Pauline Epistles! The one was a mythical companion of the
-Sun-god, the other a man of flesh and blood, according to Mr.
-Robertson.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Joseph and his ass</span> Who was Joseph?
-Answer: Forasmuch as &ldquo;the Christian system is a patchwork of a
-hundred suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual usage&rdquo; (p.
-305), and &ldquo;Christism was only neo-Paganism grafted on
-Judaism&rdquo; (p. 338), Joseph must be regarded as &ldquo;a partial
-revival of the ancient adoration of the God Joseph as well as of that
-of the God Daoud&rdquo; (p. 303). He was also, seeing that he took Mary
-and her child on an ass into Egypt, a reminiscence; or, shall we not
-say, an explanation of &ldquo;the feeble old man leading an ass in the
-sacred procession of Isis, as described by Apuleius in his
-<i>Metamorphoses</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There is no mention of Joseph&rsquo;s ass in the Gospels, but that
-does not matter. Dr. Drews is better informed, and would have us
-recognize in Joseph an understudy of Kinyras, the father of Adonis, who
-&ldquo;is said to have been some kind of artisan, a smith, or
-carpenter. That is to say, he is supposed to have invented the
-hammer,&rdquo; etc. Might I suggest the addition of the god Thor to the
-collection of gospel aliases? The gods Joseph and Daoud are purely
-modern fictions; no ancient Jew ever heard of either.</p>
-<p>Why was Jesus crucified?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Crucifixion</span> &ldquo;The story of
-the Crucifixion <i>may</i> rest on the remote datum of an actual
-crucifixion of Jesus Ben Pandira, the possible Jesus of Paul, dead long
-before, and represented by no preserved biography or teachings
-whatever.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Christists were clearly pastmasters in the art of explaining
-<i lang="la">ignotum per ignotius</i>. For on the next page we learn
-that it is not known whether this <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb66"
-href="#pb66" name="pb66">66</a>]</span>worthy &ldquo;ever lived or was
-crucified.&rdquo; In <i>Pagan Christs</i> he is acknowledged to be a
-&ldquo;mere name.&rdquo; However this be, &ldquo;it was the mythic
-significance of crucifixion that made the early fortune of the cult,
-with the aid of the mythic significance of the name Jeschu = Joshua,
-the ancient Sun-god.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The meaning of this oracular pronouncement is too profound for me to
-attempt to fathom it. Let us pass on to another point in the new
-elucidation of the Gospels.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">W. B. Smith on exorcisms of devils</span>
-What were the exorcisms of evil spirits ascribed to the ancient Sun-god
-Joshua, under his <i>alias</i> of Jesus of Nazareth?</p>
-<p>In his <i>Pagan Christs</i>, as in his <i>Christianity and
-Mythology</i>, Mr. Robertson unkindly leaves us in the lurch about this
-matter, although we would dearly like to know what were the particular
-arch&aelig;ological researches of the &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo; that led them to coin these myths of exorcisms
-performed, and of devils cast out of the mad or sick by their solar
-myth. Nor does Dr. Drews help us much. Never mind. Professor W. B.
-Smith nobly stands in the breach, so we will let him take up the
-parable; the more so because, in handling this problem, he may be said
-to have excelled himself. On p. 57, then, of <i lang="la">Ecce
-Deus</i>, he premises, in approaching this delicate topic, that
-&ldquo;in the activity of the Jesus and the apostles, as delineated in
-the Gospels, the one all-important moment is the <i>casting-out of
-demons</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With this all will agree; but what follows is barely consonant with
-the thesis of his friends. He cites in effect <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%203:14-15&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark iii, 14, 15</a>, and the parallel passages in which Jesus is
-related to have sent forth the twelve disciples to preach and to have
-authority to cast <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb67" href="#pb67"
-name="pb67">67</a>]</span>out the demons. Now, according to the
-mythico-symbolical theory, the career of Jesus and his disciples lay
-not on earth, but in that happy region where mythological personages
-live and move and have their being. As Dr. Drews says (<i>The Christ
-Myth</i>, p. 117): &ldquo;In reality the whole of the family and home
-life of the Messiah, Jesus, took place in heaven among the
-gods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Accordingly, Dr. W. B. Smith finds it &ldquo;amazing that anyone
-should hesitate an instant over the sense&rdquo; of the demonological
-episodes in the Gospels, and he continues: &ldquo;When we recall the
-fact that the early Christians uniformly understood the heathen gods to
-be demons, and uniformly represented the mission of Jesus to be the
-overthrow of these demon gods, it seems as clear as the sun at noon
-that this fall of Satan from heaven<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1531src"
-href="#xd25e1531" name="xd25e1531src">16</a> can be nothing less (and
-how could it possibly be anything more?) than the headlong ruin of
-polytheism&mdash;the complete triumph of the One Eternal God. It seems
-superfluous to insist on anything so palpable&#8202;&hellip;. Can any
-rational man for a moment believe that the Saviour sent forth his
-apostles and disciples with such awful solemnity to heal the few
-lunatics that languished in Galilee? Is that the way the sublimist of
-teachers would found the new and true religion?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the last sentence our author nods and lapses into the historical
-mood; for how can one talk of a mythical Joshua being a teacher and
-founding a new religion&mdash;of his sending forth the apostles and
-disciples? These things are done on earth, and not up in heaven
-&ldquo;among the gods,&rdquo; as Drews says. It <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb68" href="#pb68" name="pb68">68</a>]</span>is,
-perhaps, impertinent, for the rest, to criticize so exalted an argument
-as Professor Smith&rsquo;s; yet the question suggests itself, why, if
-the real object of the mystic sectaries who worshipped in secret the
-&ldquo;Proto-Christian God, the Jesus,&rdquo; was to acquaint the
-faithful with the triumph of the heavenly Jesus over the demon-gods of
-paganism&mdash;why, in that case, did they wrap it up in purely
-demonological language? All around them exorcists, Jewish and pagan,
-were driving out demons of madness and disease at every street
-corner&mdash;dumb devils, rheumatic devils, blind devils, devils of
-every sort and kind. Was it entirely appropriate for these mystic
-devotees to encourage the use of demonological terminology, when they
-meant something quite else? &ldquo;These early propagandists,&rdquo; he
-tells us, p. 143, &ldquo;were great men, were very great men; they
-conceived noble and beautiful and attractive ideas, which they defended
-with curious learning and logic, and recommended with captivating
-rhetoric and persuasive oratory and consuming zeal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Surely it was within the competence of such egregious teachers to
-say without disguise what they really meant, instead of beating about
-the bush and penning stories which so nearly reproduced the grovelling
-superstitions of the common herd around them? They might at least have
-issued a Delphin edition of their gospels, with a paraphrase in the
-margin to explain the text and to save the faithful from taking these
-stories literally&mdash;for so they took them as far back as we can
-trace the documents; and, what is more, in all those derivative
-churches all over the world which continued the inner life of Professor
-Smith&rsquo;s mystic sectaries, we hear from the earliest age of the
-appointing of vulgar exorcists, whose duty <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb69" href="#pb69" name="pb69">69</a>]</span>was to
-expel from the faithful the demons of madness and of all forms of
-sickness.</p>
-<p>But worse than this. We know from Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews that
-the same Proto-Christian Joshua-God, who was waging war in heaven on
-the pagan gods and goddesses, was himself a composite myth made up of
-memories of Krishna, &AElig;sculapius, Osiris, Apollo, Dionysus,
-Apollonius, and a hundred other fiends. Mr. Robertson attests this, p.
-305, in these words: &ldquo;As we have seen and shall see throughout
-this investigation, the Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred
-suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual usage.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Is it quite appropriate that the pre-Christian Jesus or Joshua
-should turn and rend his pagan congeners in the manner described by
-Professor W. B. Smith? His mythical antecedents, as ascertained by Mr.
-Robertson and Dr. Drews, are grotesquely incompatible with the
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i> of monotheistic founder assigned him by Professor W.
-B. Smith. Are we to suppose that the learned and eloquent propagandists
-of his cult were aware of this incompatibility, and for that reason
-chose to veil their monotheistic propaganda in the decent obscurity of
-everyday demonological language?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Mary and her homonyms</span> Who was Mary,
-the mother of Jesus?</p>
-<p>Let Dr. Drews speak first:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Now if Joseph, as we have already seen, was originally
-a god, Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a goddess. Under the name of
-Maya, she is the mother of Agni&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the principle of
-motherhood and creation simply, as which she is in the Rigveda at one
-time represented by the fire-producing wood, the soft pith, in which
-the fire-stick was whirled; at another as the earth, with which the sky
-has mated. She appears under the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb70"
-href="#pb70" name="pb70">70</a>]</span>same name as the mother of
-Buddha as well as of the Greek Hermes. She is identical with Maira
-(Maera) as, according to Pausanias, viii, 12, 48, the pleiad Maia, wife
-of Hephaistos was called. She appears among the Persians as the
-&ldquo;virgin&rdquo; mother of Mithras. As Myrrha she is the mother of
-the Syrian Adonis; as Semiramis, mother of the Babylonian Ninus
-(Marduk). In the Arabic legend she appears under the name of Mirzam as
-mother of the mythical saviour Joshua; while the Old Testament gives
-this name to the virgin sister of that Joshua who was so closely
-related to Moses; and, according to Eusebius, Merris was the name of
-the Egyptian princess who found Moses in a basket and became his foster
-mother.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The above <i lang="la">purpureus pannus</i> is borrowed by Dr. Drews
-in the second edition of his work from Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s book, p.
-297. Here is the original:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">It is not possible from the existing data to connect
-historically such a cult with its congeners; but the mere analogy of
-names and epithets goes far. The mother of Adonis, the slain
-&ldquo;Lord&rdquo; of the great Syrian cult, is Myrrha; and Myrrha in
-one of her myths is the weeping tree from which the babe Adonis is
-born. Again, Hermes, the Greek <i>Logos</i>, has for mother Maia, whose
-name has further connections with Mary. In one myth Maia is the
-daughter of Atlas, thus doubling with Maira, who has the same father,
-and who, having &ldquo;died a virgin,&rdquo; was seen by Odysseus in
-Hades. Mythologically, Maira is identified with the Dog-Star, which is
-the star of Isis. Yet again, the name appears in the East as Maya, the
-virgin-mother of Buddha; and it is remarkable that, according to a
-Jewish legend, the name of the Egyptian princess who found the babe
-Moses was Merris. The plot is still further thickened by the fact that,
-as we learn from the monuments, one of the daughters of Ramses II was
-named Meri. And as Meri meant &ldquo;beloved,&rdquo; and the name was
-at times given to men, besides being used in the phrase &ldquo;beloved
-of the gods,&rdquo; the field of mythic speculation is wide.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb71" href="#pb71" name=
-"pb71">71</a>]</span></p>
-<p>And we feel that it is, indeed, wide, when, on p. 301, the three
-Marias mentioned by Mark are equated with the three <i>Moirai</i> or
-Fates!</p>
-<p>In another passage we meet afresh with one of these equations, p.
-306. It runs thus: &ldquo;On the hypothesis that the mythical Joshua,
-son of Miriam, was an early Hebrew deity, it may be that one form of
-the Tammuz cult in pre-Christian times was a worship of a mother and
-child&mdash;Mary and Adonis; that, in short, Maria = Myrrha, and that
-Jesus was a name of Adonis.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Pre-philological arguments</span> From such
-deliverances we gather that in Mr. Robertson and his disciples we have
-survivals of a stage of culture which may be called prephilological. A
-hundred years ago or more the most superficial resemblance of sound was
-held to be enough of a ground for connecting words and names together,
-and Oxford divines were busy deriving all other tongues from the Hebrew
-spoken in the Garden of Eden by Adam and Eve. Mr. Robertson sets
-himself (p. 139) to ridicule these old-fashioned writers, and regales
-us with not a few examples of that over-facile identification of cult
-names that have no real mutual affinity which was then in vogue. Thus
-<i>Krishna</i> was held to be a corruption of <i>Christ</i> by certain
-oriental missionaries, just as, inversely, within my memory, certain
-English Rationalists argued the name <i>Christ</i> to be a disguise of
-<i>Krishna</i>. So <i>Brahma</i> was identified with <i>Abraham</i>,
-and Napoleon with the <i>Apollyon</i> of Revelation. One had hoped that
-this phase of culture was past and done with; but Messrs. Robertson and
-Drews revive it in their books, and seem anxious to perpetuate it. As
-with names, so with myths. On their every page we encounter&mdash;to
-use the apt phrase <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb72" href="#pb72"
-name="pb72">72</a>]</span>of M. &Eacute;mile Durkheim<a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e1616src" href="#xd25e1616" name=
-"xd25e1616src">17</a>&mdash;<i lang="fr">ces rapprochements tumultueux
-et sommaires qui ont discredit&eacute; la m&eacute;thode comparative
-aupr&egrave;s d&rsquo;un certain nombre de bons esprits</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Right use of comparative method</span> The
-one condition of advancing knowledge and clearing men&rsquo;s minds of
-superstition and cant by application of the comparative method in
-religion, is that we should apply it, as did Robertson Smith and his
-great predecessor, Dr. John Spencer,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1628src" href="#xd25e1628" name="xd25e1628src">18</a> cautiously,
-and in a spirit of scientific scholarship. It does not do to argue from
-superficial resemblances of sound that Maria is the same name as the
-Greek <i>Moira</i>, or that the name Maia has &ldquo;connections with
-Mary&rdquo;; or, again, that &ldquo;the name (<i>Maria</i>) appears in
-the East as Maya.&rdquo; The least acquaintance with Hebrew would have
-satisfied Mr. Robertson that the original form of the name he thus
-conjures with is not Maria, but <i>Miriam</i>, which does not lend
-itself to his hardy equations. I suspect he is carried away by the
-<i lang="la">parti pris</i> which leaks out in the following passage of
-his henchman and imitator, Dr. Drews<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1647src" href="#xd25e1647" name="xd25e1647src">19</a>: &ldquo;The
-romantic cult of Jesus must be combated at all costs&#8202;&hellip;.
-This cannot be done more effectually than by taking its basis in the
-theory of the historical Jesus from beneath its feet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>If &ldquo;at all costs&rdquo; means at the cost of common sense and
-scholarship, I cannot agree. I am not disposed, at the invitation of
-any self-constituted high priest of Rationalism, to derive old Hebrew
-names from Egyptian, Greek, and Buddhist appellations that <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb73" href="#pb73" name="pb73">73</a>]</span>happen
-to show an initial and one or two other letters in common. I will not
-believe that a &ldquo;Christist&rdquo; of Alexandria or Jerusalem, in
-the streets of which the Latin language was seldom or never heard, took
-the epithet <i>bifrons</i> in a wrong sense, and straightway invented
-the story of a Peter who had denied Jesus. I cannot admit that the
-cults of Osiris, Dionysus, Apollo, or any other ancient Sun-god, are
-echoed in a single incident narrated in the primitive evangelical
-tradition that lies before us in Mark and the non-Marcan document used
-by the authors of the first and third Gospels; I do not believe that
-any really educated man or woman would for a moment entertain any of
-the equations propounded by Mr. Robertson, and of which I have given a
-few select examples.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Marett on method</span> Mr. Marett, in his
-essay entitled <i>The Birth of Humility</i>, by way of criticizing
-certain modern abuses of the comparative method in the field of the
-investigation of the origin of moral ideas and religious beliefs, has
-justly remarked that &ldquo;No isolated fragment of custom or belief
-can be worth much for the purposes of comparative science. In order to
-be understood, it must first be viewed in the light of the whole
-culture, the whole corporate soul-life, of the particular ethnic group
-concerned. Hence the new way is to emphasize concrete differences,
-whereas the old way was to amass resemblances heedlessly abstracted
-from their social context. Which way is the better is a question that
-well-nigh answers itself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Apply the above rule to nascent Christianity. In the Synoptic
-Gospels Jesus ever speaks as a Jew to Jews. Jewish monotheism is
-presupposed by the authors of them to have been no less the heritage of
-Jesus than of his audiences. The rare exceptions are <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb74" href="#pb74" name=
-"pb74">74</a>]</span>carefully noticed by them. This consideration has
-so impressed Professor W. B. Smith that he urges the thesis that the
-Christian religion originated as a monotheist propaganda. That is no
-doubt an exaggeration, for it was at first a Messianic movement or
-impulse among Jews, and therefore did not need to set the claims of
-monotheism in the foreground, and, accordingly, in the Synoptic Gospels
-they are nowhere urged. In spite of this exaggeration, however, Mr.
-Smith&rsquo;s book occupies a higher plane than the works of Dr. Drews
-and Mr. Robertson, insofar as he shows some slight insight into the
-original nature of the religion, whereas they show none at all. They
-merely, in Mr. Marett&rsquo;s phrase, &ldquo;amass resemblances [would
-they were even such!] heedlessly abstracted from their context,&rdquo;
-and resolve a cult which, as it appears on the stage of history, is
-Jewish to its core, of which the Holy Scripture was no other than the
-Law and the Prophets, and of which the earliest documents, as Mr.
-Selwyn has shown, are saturated with the Jewish Septuagint&mdash;they
-try to resolve this cult into a tagrag and bobtail of Greek and Roman
-paganism, of Buddhism, of Brahmanism, of Mithraism (hardly yet born),
-of Egyptian, African, Assyrian, old Persian,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1670src" href="#xd25e1670" name="xd25e1670src">20</a> and any
-other religions with which these writers have a second-hand and
-superficial acquaintance. Never once do they pause and ask themselves
-the simple questions: firstly, how the early Christians came to be
-imbued with so intimate <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb75" href=
-"#pb75" name="pb75">75</a>]</span>a knowledge of idolatrous cults far
-and near, new and old; secondly, why they set so much store by them as
-the mythico-symbolic hypothesis presupposes that they did; and,
-thirdly, why, if they valued them so much, they were at pains to
-translate them into the utterly different and antagonistic form which
-they wear in the Gospels. In a word, why should such connoisseurs of
-paganism have disguised themselves as monotheistic and messianic Jews?
-Mr. Robertson tries to save his hypothesis by injecting a little dose
-of Judaism into his &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo;; but anyone who has read Philo or Josephus or
-the Bible, not to mention the Apostolic Fathers and Justin Martyr, will
-see at a glance that there is no room in history for such a hybrid.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Methods of Robertson and Lorinser</span>
-That Mr. Robertson should put his name to such works as Dr. Drews
-imitates and singles out for special praise is the more remarkable,
-because, in urging the independence of certain Hindoo cults against
-Christian missionaries who want to see in them mere reflections of
-Christianity, he shows himself both critical and wide-minded. These
-characteristics he displays in his refutation of the opinion of a
-certain Dr. Lorinser that the dialogue between Krishna and the warrior
-Arjuna, known as the Bhagavat G&icirc;t&acirc; and embodied in the old
-Hindoo Epic of the Mah&acirc;bh&acirc;rata, &ldquo;is a patchwork of
-Christian teaching.&rdquo; Dr. Lorinser had adduced a chain of passages
-from this document which to his mind are echoes of the New Testament.
-Though many of these exhibit a striking conformity with aphorisms of
-the Gospels, we are nevertheless constrained to agree with Mr.
-Robertson&rsquo;s criticism, which is as follows (p. 262):&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb76" href="#pb76" name=
-"pb76">76</a>]</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The first comment that must occur to every instructed
-reader on perusing these and the other &ldquo;parallels&rdquo; advanced
-by Dr. Lorinser is, that on the one hand the parallels are very
-frequently such as could be made by the dozen between bodies of
-literature which have unquestionably never been brought in contact, so
-strained and far-fetched are they; and that, on the other hand, they
-are discounted by quite as striking parallels between New Testament
-texts and pre-Christian pagan writings.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Mr. Robertson then adduces a number of striking parallelisms between
-the New Testament and old Greek and Roman writers, and continues thus:
-&ldquo;Such parallels as these, I repeat, could be multiplied to any
-extent from the Greek and Latin classics alone&#8202;&hellip;. But is
-it worth while to heap up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly
-idle?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Dionysus and Jesus</span> It occurs to ask
-whether it was not worth the while of Mr. Robertson to inquire whether
-the Evangelist could &ldquo;unquestionably have been brought in
-contact&rdquo; with the Dionysiac group of myths before he assumed so
-dogmatically, against students of such weight as Professor Percy
-Gardner and Dr. Estlin Carpenter, that the myth of Bacchus meeting with
-a couple of asses on his way to Dodona was the
-&ldquo;Christist&rsquo;s&rdquo; model for the story of Jesus riding
-into Jerusalem on an ass? Might he not have reflected that then, as
-now, there was no other way of entering Jerusalem unless you went on
-foot? And what has Jerusalem to do with Dodona? What has
-Bacchus&rsquo;s choice of one ass to ride on in common with
-Matthew&rsquo;s literary deformation, according to which Jesus rode on
-two asses at once? Lastly, what had Bacchus to do with Jesus? Has the
-Latin wine-god a single trait in common with the Christian founder? Is
-it not <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb77" href="#pb77" name=
-"pb77">77</a>]</span>rather the case that any conscious or even
-unconscious assimilation of Bacchus myths conflicts with what Mr.
-Marett would call &ldquo;the whole culture, the whole corporate
-soul-life&rdquo; of the early Christian community, as the surviving
-documents picture it, and other evidence we have not? Yet Mr. Robertson
-deduces from such paltry &ldquo;parallels&rdquo; as the above the
-conclusion that Jesus, on whose real personality a score of early and
-independent literary sources converge, never existed at all, and that
-he was a &ldquo;composite myth.&rdquo; There is no other example of an
-eclectic myth arbitrarily composed by connoisseurs out of a religious
-art and story not their own; still less of such a myth being humanized
-and accepted by the next generation as a Jewish Messiah.</p>
-<p>In the same context (p. 264) Mr. Robertson remarks sensibly enough
-that &ldquo;No great research or reflection is needed to make it clear
-that certain commonplaces of ethics as well as of theology are equally
-inevitable conclusions in all religious systems that rise above
-savagery. Four hundred years before Jesus, Plato declared that it was
-very difficult for the rich to be good; does anyone believe that any
-thoughtful Jew needed Plato&rsquo;s help to reach the same
-notion?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I would ask, does anyone believe that a thoughtful Jew needed the
-stimulus of a statuette of Osiris in order that he should record, or,
-maybe, invent, the story of Jesus clearing the money-changers out of
-the temple with a scourge? Even admitting&mdash;what I am as little as
-anyone inclined to admit&mdash;that the Peter of the early Gospels is,
-as regards his personality and his actions, a fable, a mere invention
-of a Jewish storyteller, need we suppose that the storyteller in
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb78" href="#pb78" name=
-"pb78">78</a>]</span>question depended for his inspiration on Janus?
-You might as well suppose that the authors of the <i>Arabian Nights</i>
-founded their stories on the myths of Greek and Roman gods. Again, the
-Jews were traditionally distributed into twelve tribes or clans. Let us
-grant only for argument&rsquo;s sake that the life of Jesus the Messiah
-as narrated in the first three Gospels is a romance, we yet must ask,
-Which is more probable, that the author of the romance assigned twelve
-apostles to Jesus because there were twelve tribes to whom the message
-of the impending Kingdom of God had to be carried, or because there are
-twelve signs in the Zodiac? He agrees (p. 347) that Luke&rsquo;s story
-of the choice of the seventy disciples &ldquo;visibly connects with the
-Jewish idea that there were seventy nations in the world.&rdquo; Why,
-then, reject the view that Jesus chose twelve apostles because there
-were twelve tribes? Not at all. Having decided that Jesus was the
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, a pure figment of his brain, Mr. Robertson is
-ready to violate the canons of evidence he appeals to on p. 347, and
-will have it that in the Gospels the apostles are Zodiacal signs, and
-that their leader is Janus, the opener of the year. &ldquo;The Zodiacal
-sign gives the clue&rdquo; (p. 339), in his opinion, to this as to much
-else.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Dr. Lorinser</span> Let us return to the
-case of Dr. Lorinser. &ldquo;We are asked to believe that Brahmans
-expounding a highly-developed Pantheism went assiduously to the
-(unattainable) New Testament for the wording of a number of their
-propositions, pantheistic and other, while assimilating absolutely
-nothing of distinctively Christian doctrine&#8202;&hellip;. Such a
-position is possible only to a mesmerized believer.&rdquo; Surely one
-may exclaim of Mr. Robertson, <i lang="la">De te fabula narratur</i>,
-and rewrite <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb79" href="#pb79" name=
-"pb79">79</a>]</span>the above as follows: &ldquo;We are asked to
-believe that &lsquo;Christists,&rsquo; who were so far Jewish as to
-practise circumcision, to use the Hebrew Scriptures, to live in
-Jerusalem under the presidency and patronage of the Jewish High-priest,
-to foster and propagate Jewish monotheism, went assiduously to the
-(unattainable) rites, statuary, art, and beliefs of pagan India, Egypt,
-Ancient Babylon, Persia, etc., for all &lsquo;the narrative
-myths&rsquo; (p. 263) of the story in which they narrated the history
-of their putative founder Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, while assimilating
-absolutely nothing of distinctively pagan doctrine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Dr. Lorinser, for urging a thesis infinitely less absurd, is
-denounced as &ldquo;a mesmerized believer&rdquo;; and on the next page
-Dr. Weber, who agrees with him, is rebuked for his &ldquo;judicial
-blindness.&rdquo; Yet in the same context we are told that &ldquo;a
-crude and <i>na&iuml;f</i> system, like the Christism of the second
-gospel and the earlier form of the first, borrows inevitably from the
-more highly evolved systems with which it comes socially in contact,
-absorbing myth and mystery and dogma till it becomes as sophisticated
-as they.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is quite true, as Gibbon observed, that the <i>na&iuml;f</i>
-figure of Jesus, as presented in the Synoptic Gospels, was soon
-overlaid with that of the <i>logos</i>, and all sorts of Christological
-cobwebs were within a few generations spun around his head to the
-effacement both of the teacher and of what he taught. But in the
-earliest body of the evangelical tradition, as we can construct it from
-the first three Gospels, there is little or nothing that is not
-essentially Jewish and racy of the soil of Jud&aelig;a. The borrowings
-of Christianity from pagan neighbours began with the flocking into the
-new Messianic society of Gentile converts. The <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb80" href="#pb80" name="pb80">80</a>]</span>earlier
-borrowings with which Messrs. Robertson and Drews fill their volumes
-are one and all &ldquo;resemblances heedlessly abstracted from their
-context,&rdquo; and are as far-fetched and as fanciful as the dreams of
-the adherents of the Banner of Israel, or as the cypher of the
-<span class="corr" id="xd25e1729" title=
-"Source: Bacon-Shaksperians">Bacon-Shakesperians</span>, over which Mr.
-Robertson is prone to make merry. &ldquo;Is it,&rdquo; to use his own
-words, &ldquo;worth while to heap up the disproof of a thesis so
-manifestly idle?&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb81" href=
-"#pb81" name="pb81">81</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e436" href="#xd25e436src" name="xd25e436">1</a></span> Page 20 of
-<i>The Christ Myth</i>, from a note added in the third
-edition.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e436src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e444" href="#xd25e444src" name="xd25e444">2</a></span> Op. cit. p.
-214.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e444src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e602" href="#xd25e602src" name="xd25e602">3</a></span> <i>The
-Christ Myth</i>, p. 9. (<span lang="de">Zu Robertson hat sie meines
-Wissens noch keiner Weise ernsthaft Stellung genommen</span>, p. vii of
-German edition.)&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e602src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e620" href="#xd25e620src" name="xd25e620">4</a></span> <i>Christ
-Myth</i>, p. 57. In the German text (first ed. 1909, p. 21) Mr.
-Robertson is the authority for this statement (<span lang="de">so hat
-Robertson es sehr wahrscheinlich gemacht</span>).&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e620src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e640" href="#xd25e640src" name="xd25e640">5</a></span> Cp. Emile
-Durkheim, <i lang="fr">La Vie Religieuse</i>, Paris, 1912, p. 121, to
-whom I owe much in the text.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e640src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e750" href="#xd25e750src" name="xd25e750">6</a></span> Such
-reduplications are common in Semitic languages, and in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jn%2019:23-24&amp;version=NRSV">
-John xix, 23, 24</a>, we have an exact analogy with this passage of
-Matthew. In <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ps%2022:18&amp;version=NRSV">
-Psalm xxii, <span class="corr" id="xd25e757" title=
-"Source: 19">18</span></a>, we read: &ldquo;They parted my garments
-among them, and upon my vesture did they cast lots.&rdquo; Here one and
-the same incident is contemplated in both halves of the verse, and it
-is but a single garment that is divided. Now see what John makes out of
-this verse, regarded as a prophecy of Jesus. He pretends that the
-soldiers took Jesus&rsquo;s garments, and made four parts, to every
-soldier a part, so fulfilling the words: &ldquo;They parted my garments
-among them.&rdquo; Next they took the coat without seam, and said to
-one another: &ldquo;Let us not rend it, but cast lots for it, whose it
-shall be.&rdquo; The parallel with Matthew is exact. In each case what
-is mere rhetorical reduplication is interpreted of two distinct
-objects, and on this misinterpretation is based a fulfilment of
-prophecy, and out of it generated a new form of a story or a fresh
-story altogether. In defiance of the opinion of competent Hebraists,
-Mr. Robertson writes (p. 338) that &ldquo;there is no other instance of
-such a peculiar tautology in the Old Testament.&rdquo; On the contrary,
-the Old Testament teems with them.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e750src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e769" href="#xd25e769src" name="xd25e769">7</a></span>
-<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>, p. 286.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e769src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e800" href="#xd25e800src" name="xd25e800">8</a></span> Dr.
-Carpenter had objected that &ldquo;It has first to be proved that
-Dionysos rode on two asses, as well as that Jesus is the
-Sun-God.&rdquo; Mr. Robertson complacently answers (p. 453): &ldquo;My
-references perfectly prove the currency of the myth in
-question&rdquo;!&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e800src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e810" href="#xd25e810src" name="xd25e810">9</a></span> <i>The
-Witnesses</i>, p. 55 (p. 75 of German edition).&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e810src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e824" href="#xd25e824src" name="xd25e824">10</a></span> Why
-necessarily from Josephus? Were not other sources of recent Roman
-history available for Tacitus? Here peeps out Dr. Drews&rsquo;s
-conviction that the whole of ancient literature lies before him, and
-that even Tacitus could have no other sources of information than Dr.
-Drews.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e824src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e950" href="#xd25e950src" name="xd25e950">11</a></span> On p. 299,
-Mary, mother of Joshua, does duty for Mary Magdalen. We there read as
-follows: &ldquo;The friendship (of Jesus) with a &lsquo;Mary&rsquo;
-points towards some old myth in which a Palestinian God, perhaps named
-Yeschu or Joshua, figures in the changing relations of lover and son
-towards a mythic Mary, a natural fluctuation in early theosophy.&rdquo;
-Very &ldquo;natural&rdquo; indeed among the Jews, who punished even
-adultery with death!&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e950src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e962" href="#xd25e962src" name="xd25e962">12</a></span> Needless
-to say, Dr. Frazer, as any scholar must, rejects the thesis of the
-unhistoricity of Jesus with derision. Mr. Robertson, in turn, imputes
-his rejection of it to timidity. &ldquo;He (Frazer) has had some
-experience in arousing conservative resistance,&rdquo; he writes in
-<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>, p. 111. He cannot realize that any
-learned man should differ from himself, except to curry favour with the
-orthodox, or from fear of them.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e962src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1012" href="#xd25e1012src" name="xd25e1012">13</a></span> I could
-have given Professor Smith a better tip. Philo composed a glossary of
-Biblical and other names with their meanings, which, though lost in
-Greek, survives in an old Armenian version. In this Essene is equated
-with &ldquo;silence.&rdquo; What a magnificent aid to Professor
-Smith&rsquo;s faith! For if Essene meant &ldquo;a silent one,&rdquo;
-then the pre-Christian Nazarenes must surely have been an esoteric and
-secret sect.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1012src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1073" href="#xd25e1073src" name="xd25e1073">14</a></span> Of
-course, it is possible that Jesus, before he comes on the scene, at
-about the age of thirty, as a follower of John the Baptist, had been a
-member of the Essene sect, as the learned writer of the article on
-Jesus in the <i>Jewish Encyclop&aelig;dia</i> supposes. If such a sect
-of Nazor&aelig;i, as Epiphanius describes, ever really
-existed&mdash;and Epiphanius is an unreliable author&mdash;then Jesus
-<i>may</i> have been a member of it. But it is a long way from a
-<i>may</i> to a <i>must</i>. Even if it could be proved that Matthew
-had such a tradition when he wrote, the proof would not diminish one
-whit the absurdity of Professor Smith&rsquo;s contention that he was a
-myth and a mere symbol of a God Joshua worshipped by pre-Christian
-Nazor&aelig;i. The Nazor&aelig;i of Epiphanius were a Christian sect,
-akin to, if not identical with, the Ebionites; and the hypothesis that
-they kept up among themselves a secret cult of a God Joshua is as
-senseless as it is baseless, and opposed to all we know of them. In
-what sense Matthew, that is to say the anonymous compiler of the first
-Gospel, understood <i>nazor&aelig;us</i> is clear to anyone who will
-take the trouble to read <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%202:23&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew ii, 23</a>. He understood by it &ldquo;a man who lived in the
-village called Nazareth,&rdquo; and that is the sense which Nazarene
-(used interchangeably with it) also bears in the Gospel. Mr. Smith
-scents enigmas everywhere.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1073src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1110" href="#xd25e1110src" name="xd25e1110">15</a></span> How
-treacherous the <i lang="la">argumentum a silentio</i> may be I can
-exemplify. My name and address were recently omitted for two years
-running from the Oxford directory, yet my house is not one of the
-smallest in the city. If any future publicist should pry into my life
-with the aid of this publication, he will certainly infer that I was
-not living in Oxford during those two years. And yet the Argument from
-Silence is only valid where we have a directory or gazetteer or
-carefully compiled list of names and addresses.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e1110src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1531" href="#xd25e1531src" name="xd25e1531">16</a></span> See
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%2010:17-20&amp;version=NRSV">
-Luke x, 17&ndash;20</a>.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1531src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1616" href="#xd25e1616src" name="xd25e1616">17</a></span>
-<i lang="fr">La Vie Religieuse</i>, p. 134.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e1616src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1628" href="#xd25e1628src" name="xd25e1628">18</a></span> In his
-<i lang="la">De legibus Hebraeorum ritualibus et earum rationibus libri
-tres</i>, printed at the Hague in 1686, but largely written twenty
-years earlier.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1628src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1647" href="#xd25e1647src" name="xd25e1647">19</a></span> <i>The
-Christ Myth</i>, 2nd ed., p. 18.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1647src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1670" href="#xd25e1670src" name="xd25e1670">20</a></span> It is
-possible, of course, that Jewish Messianic and apocalyptic lore in the
-first century <span class="sc">B.C.</span> had been more or less
-evolved through contact with the religion of Zoroaster; but this lore,
-as we meet with it in the Gospels, derives exclusively from Jewish
-sources, and was part of the common stock of popular Jewish
-aspirations.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1670src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch2" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e204">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter II</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Is Mark&rsquo;s Gospel a
-religious romance?</span> I can imagine some people arguing that
-Mark&rsquo;s Gospel might be a religious novel, of which the scene is
-laid in Jerusalem and Galilee among Jews; that it was by a literary
-artifice impregnated with Jewish ideas; that the references to
-Sadducees and Pharisees were introduced as appropriate to the age and
-clime; that the old Jewish Scriptures are for the same reason
-acknowledged by all the actors and interlocutors as holy writ; that
-demonological beliefs were thrown in as being characteristic of
-Palestinian society of the time the writer purported to write about;
-that it is of the nature of a literary trick that the peculiar
-Messianic and Apocalyptic beliefs and aspirations rife among Jews of
-the period <span class="sc">B.C.</span> 50&ndash;<span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 160 and later, are made to colour the narrative from
-beginning to end. All these elements of verisimilitude, I say, taken
-singly or together, do not of necessity exclude the hypothesis that it
-may be one of the most skilfully constructed historical novels ever
-written. Have we not, it may be urged, in the <i>Recognitions</i> or
-Itinerary of Saint Clement, in the Acts of Thomas, in the story of Paul
-and Thecla, similar compositions?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Certainly not in the way assumed by Drews
-and Robertson,</span> In view of what we know of the dates and
-diffusion of the Gospels, of their literary connections with one
-another, and of the reappearance of their chief <i lang=
-"la">person&aelig; dramatis</i> in the Pauline letters, such a
-hypothesis <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb82" href="#pb82" name=
-"pb82">82</a>]</span>is of course wildly improbable, yet not utterly
-absurd. We have to assume in the writer a knowledge of the Messianic
-movement among the Jews, a familiarity with their demonological beliefs
-and practices, with their sects, and so forth; and it is all readily
-assumable. In the Greek novel of Chariton we have an example of such an
-historical romance, the scene being laid in Syracuse and Asia Minor
-shortly after the close of the Peloponnesian war. But such romances are
-not cult documents of a parabolic or allegorical kind, as the Gospels
-are supposed by these writers to be. They do not bring a divine being
-down from Olympus, and pretend all through that he was a man who was
-born, lived, and died on the cross in a particular place and at a
-particular date. We have no other example of documents whose authors,
-by way of honouring a God up in heaven who never made any epiphany on
-earth nor ever underwent incarnation, made a man of him, and concocted
-an elaborate earthly record of him. Why did they do it? What was the
-object of the &ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo; and &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; in
-hoaxing their own and all subsequent generations and in building up a
-lasting cult and Church on what they knew were fables?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">whose hypothesis is
-self-destructive,</span> In the Homeric hymns and other religious
-documents not only of the Greeks, but of the Hindoos, we have no doubt
-histories of the gods written by their votaries; but in these hymns
-they put down what they believed, they did not of set design falsify
-the legend of the god, and describe his birth and parentage, when they
-knew he never had any; his ministrations and teaching career, when he
-never ministered or taught; his persecution by enemies and his death,
-when he was never persecuted and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb83"
-href="#pb83" name="pb83">83</a>]</span>never died. Or are we to suppose
-that all these things were related in the Sun-god Joshua legend? No,
-reply Messrs. Drews and Robertson. For the stories told in the Gospels
-are all modelled on pagan or astral myths; the persons who move in
-their pages are the gods and demigods of Egyptian, Greek, Latin, Hindoo
-legends. Clearly the Saviour-God Joshua had no legend or story of his
-own, or it would not be necessary to pad him out with the furniture and
-appurtenances of Osiris, Dionysus, Serapis, &AElig;sculapius, and who
-knows what other gods besides. And&mdash;strangest feature of
-all&mdash;it is Jews, men circumcised, propagandists of Jewish
-monotheism, who, in the interests of &ldquo;a Judaic cult&rdquo; (p.
-348), go rummaging in all the dustbins of paganism, in order to
-construct a legend or allegory of their god. Why could they not rest
-content with him as they found him in their ancient tradition?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">and irreconcilable with ascertained history
-of Judaism</span> The Gospels, like any other ancient document, have to
-be accounted for. They did not engender themselves, like a mushroom,
-nor drop out of heaven ready written. I have admitted as possible,
-though wild and extravagant, the hypothesis of their being a Messianic
-romance, which subsequently came to be mistaken for sober history; and
-there are of course plenty of legendary incidents in their pages. But
-such a hypothesis need not be discussed. It is not that of these three
-authors, and would not suit them. They insist on seeing in them so many
-manifestoes of the secret sect of Jews who worshipped a god Joshua. For
-Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson the Gospels describe a
-&ldquo;Jesuine&rdquo; mystery play evolved &ldquo;from a Palestinian
-rite of human sacrifice in which the annual victim was &lsquo;Jesus the
-Son of the Father.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo; There is <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb84" href="#pb84" name="pb84">84</a>]</span>no trace
-in Jewish antiquity of any such rite in epochs which even remotely
-preceded Christianity, nor is the survival of such a rite of human
-sacrifice even thinkable in Jerusalem, where the
-&ldquo;Christists&rdquo; laid their plot. And why should they eke out
-their plot with a thousand scraps of pagan mythology?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Prof. Smith&rsquo;s hypothesis of a
-mythical Jesus mythically humanized in a monotheistic
-propaganda,</span> I was taught in my childhood to venerate the
-Gospels; but I never knew before what really wonderful documents they
-are. Let us, however, turn to Professor W. B. Smith, who does not pile
-on paganism so profusely as his friends, nor exactly insist on a pagan
-basis for the Gospels. His hypothesis in brief is identical with
-theirs, for he insists that Jesus the man never existed at all. Jesus
-is, in Professor Smith&rsquo;s phrase, &ldquo;a humanized God&rdquo;;
-in the diction of Messrs. Drews and Robertson, a myth. Professor Smith
-allows (<i lang="la">Ecce Deus</i>, p. 78) that the mere &ldquo;fact
-that a myth, or several myths, may be found associated with the name of
-an individual by no means relegates that individual into the class of
-the unhistorical.&rdquo; That is good sense, and so is the admission
-which follows, that &ldquo;we may often explain the legends from the
-presence of the historical personality, <i>independently known to be
-historic</i>.&rdquo; But in regard to Jesus alone among the figures of
-the past he, like his friends, rules out both considerations. The
-common starting-point of all three writers is that the earliest Gospel
-narratives do not &ldquo;describe <i>any human character at all</i>; on
-the contrary, the individuality in question is <i>distinctly divine and
-not human</i>, in the earliest portrayal. As time goes on it is true
-that certain human elements do creep in, particularly in Luke and
-John&#8202;&hellip;. In Mark there is really no man at all; the Jesus
-is God, or at least essentially divine, <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb85" href="#pb85" name="pb85">85</a>]</span>throughout. He wears only
-a transparent garment of flesh. Mark historizes only.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">lacks all confirmation, defies the
-texts,</span> How is it, we ask, that humanity has pored over the
-Synoptic Gospels for nearly two thousand years, and discerned in them
-the portraiture at least of a man of flesh and blood, who can be imaged
-as such in statuary and painting? Even if it were conceded, as I said
-above, that the Gospel representation of Jesus is an imaginary
-portrait, like that of William Tell or John Inglesant, still, who, that
-is not mad, will deny that there exist in it multiple human traits,
-fictions may be of a novelist, yet indisputably there? Mr.
-Smith&rsquo;s hardy denial of them can only lead his readers to suspect
-him of paradox. Moreover, the champions of traditional orthodoxy have
-had in the past every reason to side with Professor Smith in his
-attempted elimination of all human traits and characteristics. Yet in
-recent years they have been constrained to admit that in Luke and John
-the human elements, far from creeping in, show signs of creeping out.
-&ldquo;The received notion,&rdquo; adds Professor Smith, &ldquo;that in
-the early Marcan narratives the Jesus is distinctly human, and that the
-process of deification is fulfilled in John, is precisely the reverse
-of the truth.&rdquo; Once more we rub our eyes. In Mark Jesus is little
-more than that most familiar of old Jewish figures, an earthly herald
-of the imminent kingdom of heaven; late and little by little he is
-recognized by his followers as himself the Messiah whose advent he
-formerly heralded. As yet he is neither divine nor the incarnation of a
-pre-existent quasi-divine Logos or angel. In John, on the other hand,
-Jesus has emerged from the purely Jewish phase of being Messiah, or
-servant of God (which is <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb86" href=
-"#pb86" name="pb86">86</a>]</span>all that Lord or <i>Son of
-God</i><a class="noteref" id="xd25e1800src" href="#xd25e1800" name=
-"xd25e1800src">1</a> implies in Mark&rsquo;s opening verses). He has
-become the eternal Logos or Reason, essentially divine and from the
-beginning with God. <span class="marginnote">and rests on an obsolete
-and absurd allegorization of them</span>Here obviously we are well on
-our way to a deification of Jesus and an elimination of human traits;
-and the writer is so conscious of this that he goes out of his way to
-call our attention to the fact that Jesus was after all a man of flesh
-and blood, with human parents and real brethren who disbelieved in him.
-He was evidently conscious that the superimposition on the man Jesus of
-the Logos scheme, and the reflection back into the human life of Jesus
-of the heavenly <i>r&ocirc;le</i> which Paul ascribed to him <i>qua</i>
-raised by the Spirit from the dead, was already influencing certain
-believers (called Docetes) to believe that his human life and actions
-were illusions, seen and heard indeed, as we see and hear a man speak
-and act in a dream, but not objective and real. To guard against this
-John proclaims that he was made flesh. Nevertheless, he goes half way
-with the Docetes in that he rewrites all the conversations of Jesus,
-abolishes the homely parable, and substitutes his own theosophic
-lucubrations. He also emphasizes the miraculous aspect of Jesus,
-inventing new miracles more grandiose than any in previous gospels, but
-of a kind, as he imagines, to symbolize his conceptions of sin and
-death. He is careful to eliminate the demonological stories. They were
-as much of a stumbling-block to John as we have seen them to be
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb87" href="#pb87" name=
-"pb87">87</a>]</span>to Mr. W. B. Smith. We must, therefore, perforce
-accuse the latter of putting a hypothesis that from the outset is a
-paradox. The documents contradict him on every page.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Why should the robber chief Joshua have
-been selected as prototype of Jesus?</span> A thesis that begins by
-flying in the face of the documents demands paradoxical arguments for
-its support; and the pages of all three writers teem with them. Of a
-Jesus that is God from the first it is perhaps natural to
-ask&mdash;anyhow our authors have asked it of themselves&mdash;which
-God was he? And the accident of his bearing the name Jesus&mdash;he
-might just as well have been called Jacob or Sadoc or Manasseh, or what
-not&mdash;suggests Joshua to them, for Joshua is the Hebrew name which
-in the LXX was Grecized as <i>Iesou&#275;</i>, and later as
-<i>Iesous</i>. That in the Old Testament Joshua is depicted as a
-cut-throat and leader of brigands, very remote in his principles and
-practice from the Jesus of the Gospels, counts for nothing. The late
-Dr. Winckler, who saw sun and moon myths rising like exhalations all
-around him wherever he looked in ancient history and
-mythology,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1828src" href="#xd25e1828" name=
-"xd25e1828src">2</a> has suggested that Joseph was originally a solar
-hero. <i>Ergo</i>, Joshua was one too. <i>Ergo</i>, there was a Hebrew
-secret society in Jerusalem in the period <span class="sc">B.C.</span>
-150&ndash;<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 50 <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb88" href="#pb88" name="pb88">88</a>]</span>who worshipped the
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua. <i>Ergo</i>, the Gospels are a sustained
-parable of this Sun-god. Thus are empty, wild, and unsubstantiated
-hypotheses piled one on top of the other, like Pelion on Ossa. Not a
-scintilla of evidence is adduced for any one of them. First one is
-advanced, and its truth assumed. The next is propped on it, <i>et sic
-ad infinitum</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Why make him the central figure of a
-monotheistic cult?</span> What, asks Professor Smith (<i lang="la">Ecce
-Deus</i>, p. 67), was the active principle of Christianity? What its
-germ? &ldquo;The monotheistic impulse,&rdquo; he answers, &ldquo;the
-instinct for unity that lies at the heart of all grand philosophy and
-all noble religion.&rdquo; Again, p. 45: &ldquo;What was the essence of
-this originally secret Jesus cult, that was expressed in such guarded
-parabolic terms as made it unintelligible to the multitude?&hellip; It
-was a <i>protest against idolatry</i>; it was a <i>Crusade for
-monotheism</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The earliest Christianity was no
-monotheistic propaganda</span> This is, no doubt, true of Christianity
-when we pass outside the Gospels. It is only not true of them, because
-on their every page Jewish monotheism is presupposed. Why are no
-warnings against polytheism put into the mouth of Jesus? Why is not a
-single precept of the Sermon on the Mount directed against idolatry?
-Surely because we are moving in a Jewish atmosphere in which such
-warnings were unnecessary. The horizon is purely Jewish, either of
-Jerusalem as we know it in the pages of Josephus or of certain Galilean
-circles in which even a knowledge of Greek seems not to have existed
-before the third century. The very proximity of Greek cities there
-seems to have confirmed the Jewish peasant of that region in his
-preference of Aramaic idiom, just as the native of Bohemia to-day turns
-his back on <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb89" href="#pb89" name=
-"pb89">89</a>]</span>you if you address him in the detested German
-tongue.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Robertson and Drews allow the Jesuists to
-have been mainly Jewish in cult and feeling</span> Messrs. Robertson
-and Drews concede that the original stock of Christianity was Jewish.
-Thus we read in <i>Christianity and Mythology</i> (p. 415) that the
-Lord&rsquo;s Prayer derives &ldquo;from pre-Christian Jewish lore, and,
-like parts of the Sermon (on the Mount), from an actually current
-Jewish document.&rdquo; The same writer admits (p. 338) the existence
-of &ldquo;Judaic sections of the early Church.&rdquo; When he talks (p.
-337) of the tale of the anointing of Jesus in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2026:6-13&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew xxvi, 6&ndash;13</a>, and parallel passages, being &ldquo;in
-all probability a late addendum&rdquo; to the &ldquo;primitive
-gospel&rdquo; of Bernhard Weiss&rsquo;s theory, &ldquo;made after the
-movement had become pronouncedly Gentile,&rdquo; he presupposes that,
-to start with anyhow, the movement was mainly Jewish. He admits that in
-the first six paragraphs of the early Christian document entitled the
-<i><span class="corr" id="xd25e1892" title=
-"Source: Didache">Didach&eacute;</span></i> we have a purely Jewish
-teaching document, &ldquo;which the Jesuist sect adopted in the first
-or second century.&rdquo; He cannot furthermore contest the fact that
-the Jesuists &ldquo;took over the Jewish Scriptures as their sacred
-book; that they inherited the Jewish passover and the Paschal lamb,
-which is still slain in Eastern churches; that the leaders of the
-secret sect in Jerusalem upheld the Jewish rite of circumcision against
-Paul.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1895src" href="#xd25e1895"
-name="xd25e1895src">3</a> All this is inconceivable if the society was
-not in the main and originally one of Hebrews. When he goes on to argue
-that the Gospels are the manifesto of a cult of an old Sun-god
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb90" href="#pb90" name=
-"pb90">90</a>]</span>Joshua, son of a mythic Miriam, he at least admits
-that the early &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; selected from ancient Jewish
-superstition, and not from pagan myth, the central figure of their
-cult, and that they chose for their deity a successor and satellite of
-Moses with a Hebrew lady for his mother. We may take it for granted,
-then, that the parent society out of which the Christian Church arose
-was profoundly and radically Jewish; and Mr. Robertson frankly admits
-as much when he affirms that &ldquo;it was a <i>Judaic cult that
-preached circumcision</i>,&rdquo; and that &ldquo;its apostles with
-whom Paul was in contact were of a <i>Judaizing</i> description.&rdquo;
-Here is common ground between myself and him.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">If so, how could they devote themselves to
-pagan mystery plays?</span> What I want to know is how it came about
-that a society of which Jerusalem was the focus, and of which the
-nucleus and propagandists were Jews and Judaizers, could have been
-given over to the cult of a solar god, and how they could celebrate
-mystery plays and dramas in honour of that god; how they can have
-manufactured that god into &ldquo;a composite myth&rdquo; (p. 336), and
-constructed in his honour a religious system that was &ldquo;a
-patchwork of a hundred suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual
-usage.&rdquo; For such, we are told (p. 305), was &ldquo;the Christian
-system.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Robertson admits that Jews could never
-borrow from pagan rituals in that age</span> We are far better
-acquainted with Jewish belief and ritual during the period <span class=
-"sc">B.C.</span> 400&ndash;<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100 than we are
-with that of the pagans. The content of the Greek mysteries is an
-enigma to our best Hellenists; we know next to nothing of the inside of
-Mithraism; for the oriental cults of the late Roman republic and early
-empire we are lamentably deficient in writings that might exhibit to us
-the <i>arcana</i> of their worship and the texture of their beliefs.
-Not so with Judaism. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb91" href="#pb91"
-name="pb91">91</a>]</span>Here we have the prophets, old and late; for
-the two centuries <span class="sc">B.C.</span> we have the apocrypha,
-including the Maccabean books; we have the so-called Books of Enoch, of
-Jubilees, of the Twelve Patriarchs, the Fourth Ezra, Baruch, Sirach,
-and many others. We have the voluminous works of Philo and Josephus for
-the first century of our era; we have the Babylonian and other Talmuds
-preserving to us a wealth of Jewish tradition and teaching of the first
-and second centuries. Here let Mr. Robertson speak. As regards the
-Lord&rsquo;s Prayer and the Sermon on the Mount, he insists (p. 415
-foll.) that they were inspired by parallel passages in the Talmud and
-the Apocrypha, and he argues with perfect good sense for the priority
-of the Talmud in these words: &ldquo;It is hardly necessary to remark
-here that the Talmudic parallels to any part of the Sermon on the Mount
-cannot conceivably have been borrowed from the Christian gospels;
-<i>they would as soon have borrowed from the rituals of the
-pagans</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Yet affirms that Christists,
-indistinguishable from Jews, did so borrow wholesale</span> And yet he
-asks us to believe that a nucleus of Jews, hidden in Jerusalem, the
-heart of Judaism, a sect whose apostles were Judaizers and vehement
-defenders of circumcision&mdash;all this he admits&mdash;were, as late
-as the last half of the first century, maintaining among themselves in
-secret a highly eclectic pagan cult; that they evolved &ldquo;a gospel
-myth from scenes in pagan art&rdquo; (p. 327); that they took a sort of
-modern arch&aelig;ological interest in pagan art and sculpture, and
-derived thence most of their literary <i>motifs</i>; that the figure of
-Jesus is an alloy of Dionysus, Osiris, Adonis, Krishna,
-&AElig;sculapius, and fifty other ancient gods and demigods, with the
-all-important &ldquo;Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, son of Miriam&rdquo;; that
-the story of Peter rests on &ldquo;a pagan basis of myth&rdquo; (p.
-340); <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb92" href="#pb92" name=
-"pb92">92</a>]</span>that Maria is the true and original form of the
-Hebrew Miriam, and is the same name as Myrrha and Moira (<span class=
-"trans" title="moira"><span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&mu;&omicron;&#8150;&rho;&alpha;</span></span>), etc., etc.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The central idea of a God Joshua a figment
-of Robertson&rsquo;s fancy</span> Such are the mutually destructive
-arguments on the strength of which we are to adopt his thesis of the
-unhistoricity of Jesus. His books, like those of Dr. Drews, are a
-welter of contradictory statements, unreconciled and irreconcilable.
-Nevertheless, they reiterate them in volume after volume, like orthodox
-Christians reiterating articles of faith and dogmas too sacred to be
-discussed. Who ever heard before them of a Jewish cult of a
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua? Such a cult must have been long extinct when
-the book of Joshua was written. Who ever heard of this Sun-god having
-for his mother a Miriam, until Mr. Robertson discovered a late Persian
-gloss to the effect that Joshua, son of Nun, had a mother of the name?
-Even if this tradition were not so utterly worthless as it is, it would
-prove nothing about the Sun-god. On the basis of such gratuitous
-fancies we are asked to dismiss Jesus as a myth. <span class=
-"marginnote">It does not even explain the birth legends of the
-Christians</span>It does not even help us to understand how the myths
-of the Virgin Birth arose. Since when, I would like to know, did we
-need such evidence against that legend? If I thought that the rebuttal
-of it depended on such evidence, I should be inclined to become a good
-Papist and embrace it. It is enough for me to have ascertained, by a
-comparison of texts and by a study of early Christian documents, that
-it is a late accretion on the traditions of Jesus of Nazareth. That is
-the real evidence, if any be wanted, against it. Mr. Robertson admits
-that the first two chapters of Luke which are supposed&mdash;perhaps
-wrongly&mdash;to embody this legend are &ldquo;a late fabulous
-introduction.&rdquo; Again he writes (p. 189): <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb93" href="#pb93" name=
-"pb93">93</a>]</span>&ldquo;Only the late Third Gospel tells the story
-(of <a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%201&amp;version=NRSV">Luke
-i</a> and <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%202&amp;version=NRSV">ii</a>);
-the narrative (of the Birth) in Matthew, added late as it was to the
-original composition, which obviously began at what is now the third
-chapter, has no hint of the taxing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of the Protevangelion</span> This
-is good sense, and I am indebted to him for pointing out that so
-loosely was the myth compacted that in the Protevangelion (c. 17) the
-statement is that it was decreed &ldquo;that all should be enrolled who
-were in Bethlehem of Jud&aelig;a,&rdquo; not all Jews over the entire
-world.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Robertson assumes the antiquity of the
-legend merely to suit his theory</span> Surely all this implies that
-the legend of the miraculous birth was no part of the earliest
-tradition about Jesus. Nevertheless, it is so important for Mr.
-Robertson&rsquo;s thesis (that Jesus was a mythical personage) that he
-should from the first have had a mythical mother, that he insists on
-treating the whole of Christian tradition, early or late, as a solid
-block, and argues steadily that the Virgin Birth legend was an integral
-part of it from the beginning. Jesus was a myth; as such he must have
-had a myth for a mother. Now a virgin mother is half-way to being a
-mythical one. Therefore Mary was a virgin, and must from the beginning
-have been regarded as such by the &ldquo;Christists.&rdquo; Such are
-the steps of his reasoning.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; at once
-extravagantly pagan and extravagantly monotheist and Jewish</span> I
-have adduced in the preceding pages a selection of the mythological
-equations of Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews in order that my readers may
-realize how faint a resemblance between stories justifies, in their
-minds, a derivation or borrowing of one from the other. Nor do they
-ever ask themselves how Jewish &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; were likely to
-come in contact with out-of-the-way legends of Bacchus or Dionysus, of
-Hermes, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb94" href="#pb94" name=
-"pb94">94</a>]</span>of old Pelasgic deities, of Cybele and Attis and
-Isis, Osiris and Horus, of Helena Dendrites, of Krishna, of Janus, of
-sundry ancient vegetation-gods (for they are up to the newest lights),
-of Apollonius of Tyana, of &AElig;sculapius, of Herakles and Oceanus,
-of Saoshyant and other old Persian gods and heroes, of Buddha and his
-kith and kin, of the Eleusinian and other ancient mysteries. Prick them
-with a pin, and out gushes this lore in a copious flood; and every item
-of it is supposed to have filled the heads of the polymath authors of
-the Christian Gospels. Every syllable of these Gospels, every character
-in them, is symbolic of one or another of these gods and heroes. Hear,
-O Israel: &ldquo;Christians borrowed myths of all kinds from
-Paganism&rdquo; (<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>, p. xii). And we are
-pompously assured (p. xxii, <i>op. cit.</i>) that this new
-&ldquo;mythic&rdquo; system is, &ldquo;in general, more
-&lsquo;positive,&rsquo; more inductive, less <i>&agrave; priori</i>,
-more obedient to scientific canons, than that of the previous critics
-known to me [<i>i.e.</i>, to Mr. Robertson] who have reached similar
-anti-traditional results. It substitutes an anthropological basis, in
-terms of the concrete phenomena of mythology, for a
-pseudo-philosophical presupposition.&rdquo; Heaven help the new science
-of anthropology!</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">A receipt for the concoction of a
-gospel</span> And what end, we may ask, had the &ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo;
-and &ldquo;Christists&rdquo; (to use Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s jargon) in
-view, when they dressed up all this tagrag and bobtail of pagan myth,
-art, and ritual, and disguised it under the form of a tale of Messianic
-Judaism? For that and nothing else is, on this theory, the basis and
-essence of the Gospels. Was it their aim to honour paganism or to
-honour Jewish monotheism, when they concocted a &ldquo;Christ
-cult&rdquo; which is &ldquo;a synthesis of the two most <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb95" href="#pb95" name="pb95">95</a>]</span>popular
-pagan myth-motives,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1997src" href=
-"#xd25e1997" name="xd25e1997src">4</a> with some Judaic elements as
-nucleus and some explicit ethical teaching superadded&rdquo; (p. 34).
-We must perforce suppose that the Gospels were a covert tribute to the
-worth and value of Pagan mythology and religious dramas, to pagan art
-and statuary. If we adopt the mythico-symbolical method, they can have
-been nothing else. Its sponsors might surely condescend to explain the
-alchemy by which the ascertained rites and beliefs of early Christians
-were distilled from these antecedents. The effect and the cause are so
-entirely disparate, so devoid of any organic connection, that we would
-fain see the evolution worked out a little more clearly. At one end of
-it we have a hurly-burly of pagan myths, at the other an army of
-Christian apologists inveighing against everything pagan and martyred
-for doing so, all within a space of sixty or seventy years. I only hope
-the orthodox will be gratified to learn that their Scriptures are a
-thousandfold more wonderful and unique than they appeared to be when
-they were merely inspired by the Holy Spirit. For verbal inspiration is
-not, as regards its miraculous quality, in the same field with
-mythico-symbolism. Verily we have discovered a new literary genus,
-unexampled in the history of mankind. You rake together a thousand
-irrelevant thrums of mythology, picked up at random from every age,
-race, and clime; you get a &ldquo;Christist&rdquo; to throw them into a
-sack and shake them up; you open it, and out come the Gospels. In all
-the annals of the <span class="corr" id="xd25e2000" title=
-"Source: Bacon-Shakespeareans">Bacon-Shakesperians</span> we have seen
-nothing like it. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb96" href="#pb96" name=
-"pb96">96</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1800" href="#xd25e1800src" name="xd25e1800">1</a></span> In
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2015:39&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark xv, 39</a>, the utterance of the heathen centurion, &ldquo;truly
-this man was a Son of God,&rdquo; can obviously not have been inspired
-by messianic conceptions; it can have meant no more than that he was
-more than human, as Damis realized his master Apollonius to be on more
-than one occasion. Nor can Mark have intended to attribute Jewish
-conceptions to a pagan soldier.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1800src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1828" href="#xd25e1828src" name="xd25e1828">2</a></span> For
-example, he gravely asserts (<i lang="de">Die Weltanschauung des
-<span class="corr" id="xd25e1832" title=
-"Corrected by author from: as Alten">alten</span> Orients</i>, Leipzig,
-1904, p. 41) that Saul&rsquo;s melancholy is explicable as a myth of
-the monthly eclipsing of the moon&rsquo;s light! Perhaps Hamlet&rsquo;s
-melancholy was of the same mythic origin. A map of the stars is
-Winckler&rsquo;s, no less than Jensen&rsquo;s, guide to all
-mythologies. But, to do him justice, Winckler never fell into the last
-absurdity of supposing that Jews at the beginning of our era were
-engaged in a secret cult of a Sun-god named Joshua; on the contrary, he
-declares (<i>op. cit.</i>, p. 96), that, just in proportion as we
-descend the course of time, we approach an age in which the heroes of
-earlier myth are brought down to the level of earth. This humanization
-of the Joshua myth was, he held, complete when the book of Joshua was
-compiled.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e1828src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1895" href="#xd25e1895src" name="xd25e1895">3</a></span> Cp. p.
-342: &ldquo;In all his allusions to the movement of his day he (Paul)
-is dealing with Judaizing apostles who preached circumcision.&rdquo;
-And p. 348: &ldquo;Paul&rsquo;s Cephas is simply one of the apostles of
-a Judaic cult that preaches circumcision.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e1895src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1997" href="#xd25e1997src" name="xd25e1997">4</a></span> To wit,
-of a Sun-god, who is also Mithras and Osiris, and of a Vegetation-god
-annually slain on the sacred tree. We are gravely informed that
-&ldquo;not till Dr. Frazer had done his work was the psychology of the
-process ascertained.&rdquo; Dr. Frazer must be blushing at this tribute
-to his psychological insight.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1997src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch3" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e214">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter III</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Multiplicity of documents
-converging on and involving an historical Jesus</span> I have remarked
-above that if the Gospel of Mark were an isolated writing, if we knew
-nothing of its fortunes, nothing of any society that accepted it as
-history; if, above all, we were without any independent documents that
-fitted in with it and mentioned the persons and events that crowd its
-pages, then it would be a possible hypothesis that it was like the
-<i>Recognitions</i> of Clement, a skilfully contrived romance. Such a
-hypothesis, I said, would indeed be improbable, yet not unthinkable or
-self-destructive. But as a matter of fact we have an extensive series
-of documents, independent of Mark, yet attesting by their undesigned
-coincidences its historicity&mdash;not, of course, in the sense that we
-must accept everything in it, but anyhow in the sense that it is
-largely founded on fact and is a record of real incident. Were it a
-mere romance of events that never happened, and of people who never
-lived, would it not be a first-class miracle that in another romance,
-concocted apart from it and in ignorance of its contents, the same
-outline of events met our gaze, the same personages, the same
-atmosphere, moral, intellectual, and religious, the same interests? If
-in a third and fourth writing the same phenomenon recurred, the marvel
-would be multiplied. Would any sane person doubt that there was a
-substratum of fact and real history underlying them all? <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb97" href="#pb97" name="pb97">97</a>]</span>It would
-be as if several tables in the gambling saloon of Monte Carlo threw up
-the same series of numbers&mdash;say, 8, 3, 11, 7, 33,
-21&mdash;simultaneously and independently of one another. A few of the
-<i lang="fr">habitu&eacute;s</i>&mdash;for Monte Carlo is a great
-centre of superstition&mdash;might take refuge in the opinion that the
-tables were bewitched; but most men would infer that there was human
-collusion and conspiracy to produce such a result, and that the
-croupiers of the several tables were in the plot.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Mark and Q the two earliest
-documents</span> Now Mark&rsquo;s Gospel does not stand alone. As I
-have pointed out in <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i>, Luke and Matthew
-hold in solution as it were a second document, called Q (<span lang=
-"de">Quelle</span>), or the non-Marcan, which yields us a few incidents
-and a great many sayings and parables of Jesus. Now this second
-document, so utterly separate from and independent of Mark that it does
-not even allude to the crucifixion and death episodes, nevertheless has
-Jesus all through for its central figure. No doubt it ultimately came
-out of the same general medium as Mark; but that consideration does not
-much diminish the weight of its testimony. If I met two people a
-hundred yards apart both coming from St. Paul&rsquo;s Cathedral, and if
-they both assured me that they had just been listening to a sermon of
-Dr. Inge&rsquo;s, I should not credit them the less because they had
-been together in church.</p>
-<p>That both these documents&mdash;I mean Mark and the
-non-Marcan&mdash;were in circulation at a fairly early date is certain
-on many grounds. So great a scholar as Wellhausen, a scholar
-untrammelled by ties of orthodoxy, shows in his commentary that Mark,
-as it lies before us, must have been redacted before the <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb98" href="#pb98" name="pb98">98</a>]</span>fall of
-Jerusalem in <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 70; so vague are its
-forecasts of disasters that were to befall the holy city. In Luke, on
-the other hand, these forecasts are accommodated to the facts, as we
-should expect to be the case in an author who wrote after the blow had
-fallen.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The first and third Gospels constitute two
-more such documents</span> And another consideration arises here.
-Matthew and Luke wrote quite independently of one another&mdash;for
-they practically never join hands across Mark&mdash;and yet they both
-assume in their compilations that these two basal documents, Mark and
-the non-Marcan, are genuine narratives of real events. They allow
-themselves, indeed, according to the literary fashion of the age, to
-re-arrange, modify, and omit episodes in them; but their manner of
-handling and combining the two documents is in general inexplicable on
-the hypothesis that they considered them to be mere romances. They are
-too plainly in earnest, too eager to find in them material for the life
-of a master whom they revered. Luke in particular prefixes a personal
-letter to one Theophilus, explaining the purpose of his compilation. In
-it we find not a word about the transcribing of Osiris dramas. On the
-contrary, it will set in order for Theophilus a story in which he had
-already been instructed. It is clear that Theophilus had already been
-made acquainted with &ldquo;the facts about Jesus,&rdquo; perhaps
-insufficiently, perhaps along lines which Luke deprecated. <span class=
-"marginnote">Luke&rsquo;s prologue argues an indefinite number more of
-such documents</span>However this be, Luke desires to improve upon the
-information which Theophilus had so far acquired about Jesus. It is
-clear that written and unwritten traditions of Jesus were already
-disseminated among believers. The prologue is inexplicable otherwise,
-and it implies a whole series of witnesses <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb99" href="#pb99" name="pb99">99</a>]</span>to the
-historicity of Jesus prior to Luke himself, of whom, as I have said, we
-still have Mark and can reconstruct Q. Both Matthew (whoever he was)
-and Luke, then, are convinced of the historicity of Jesus, and regarded
-Mark and Q as historical sources. They exploit them, and they also try
-to fill up lacunas left in these basal documents, and in particular to
-supply their readers with some account of his birth and upbringing.
-Both supplements, of course, are largely fictitious, that of Matthew in
-particular; but they both testify to a fixed consciousness and belief
-among early Christians that the Messiah was a real historical person.
-Such an interest in the birth and upbringing of Jesus as Matthew and
-Luke reveal could never have been felt by sectaries who were well aware
-that he was not a real person, but a solar myth and first cousin of
-Osiris. Had he been known, even by a few believers and no more, to have
-been not a man but a composite myth, people would not have craved for
-details, even miraculous, about his birth and parentage and upbringing.
-Was it necessary to concoct human pedigrees for a solar myth, and to
-pretend that Jacob begat Joseph, and Joseph begat Jesus? The very idea
-is absurd. They wanted such details, and got them, just as did the
-worshippers of Plato, Alexander, Augustus, Apollonius, and other famous
-men. In connection with Osiris and Dionysus such details were never
-asked for and never supplied.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Implications of Luke&rsquo;s
-exordium</span> In the covering letter which forms a sort of exordium
-to his Gospel the following are the words in which Luke assures us that
-others before himself had planned histories of the life of
-Jesus:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to draw up a
-narrative concerning those matters which have <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb100" href="#pb100" name="pb100">100</a>]</span>been
-fully established (<i>or</i> fulfilled) among us, even as they
-delivered them unto us which from the beginning were eye-witnesses and
-ministers of the word, it seemed good to me also, having traced out the
-course of all things accurately from the first, to write them unto thee
-in order, most excellent Theophilus; that thou mightest know the
-certainty concerning the things wherein thou wast instructed.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>This is not the tone of a man who trades in sun-myths. The passage
-has a thoroughly <i>bona fide</i> ring, and declares (1) that
-Theophilus had already been instructed in the Gospel narrative, but not
-so accurately as the writer could wish; (2) that several accounts of
-Jesus&rsquo;s life and teaching were in circulation; (3) that these
-accounts were based on the traditions of those who had seen Jesus and
-assisted in the diffusion of his Messianic and other teachings.</p>
-<p>The passage cannot be later than <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100,
-and is probably as early as <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 80; many
-scholars put it earlier. In any case, it reveals a consciousness,
-stretching far back among believers, that Jesus had really lived and
-died. Moreover, it is from the pen of one who either had himself
-visited, with Paul, James the brother (or, according to the orthodox,
-the half-brother) of Jesus at Jerusalem (<a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2021:17&amp;version=NRSV">Acts
-xxi, 17</a>), or&mdash;if not that&mdash;anyhow had in his possession
-and made copious use of a travel document written by the companion of
-Paul.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Luke probably used a document independent
-of Mark and Q</span> A study of Luke also suggests that he had a third
-narrative document of his own. Thus, without going outside the Synoptic
-Gospels, we have two, if not three, wholly independent accounts of the
-doings and sayings of Jesus, and an inferential certainty that they
-were not the only ones which then existed. In the earliest Christian
-writers, moreover, citations <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb101" href=
-"#pb101" name="pb101">101</a>]</span>occur that cannot well be referred
-to the canonical Gospels, but which may very well have been taken from
-the other narratives which Luke assures us were in the possession of
-the earliest Church. These narratives, like all other wholly or partly
-independent documents, must have differed widely from one another in
-detail; for their authors probably handled the tradition as freely as
-Matthew and Luke handle Mark. <span class="marginnote">Messianic and
-apocalyptic character of these early documents</span>But the inspiring
-motive of them all was the belief that a human Messiah had founded, or
-rather begun, the community of believers in Palestine. That any of them
-were contemporary is improbable, for the simple reason that the eyes of
-believers were turned, not backward on the life of the herald, but
-forward to the Kingdom of God or kingdom of heaven on earth which he
-heralded. They all felt themselves to be living in the last days, and
-that the Kingdom was to surprise many of them during their lifetime.
-Nor among the earliest believers was this expectation confined to Jews
-alone; it extended equally to Gentile converts. Thus Paul, in his
-epistles to the Corinthians, labours to answer the pathetic query his
-converts had addressed to him&mdash;namely, why the kingdom to come so
-long delayed; why many of them had fallen sick and some had died, while
-yet it tarried. Men and women who breathed such an atmosphere of tense
-expectation, as a passage like this and as the Gospel parables reveal,
-could not be solicitous for annals of the past. Still less is the
-attitude revealed that of people nurtured on ritual dramas of an
-annually slain and annually resuscitated god; for in that case they
-only needed to wait for the manifestation they yearned for, until the
-following spring, when the god would rise afresh to secure <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb102" href="#pb102" name=
-"pb102">102</a>]</span>salvation for his votaries. The tone of this
-passage of Paul, as of all the earliest Christian documents, shows that
-the mind&rsquo;s eye of the common believer, as had been the
-founder&rsquo;s, was dazzled with the apocalyptic splendours soon to be
-revealed, with the beatitudes shortly to be fulfilled in the faithful.
-They were as wayfarers walking in a dark night towards a light which is
-far off, yet, because of its brightness and of the lack of an
-interposed landscape to fix the perspective, seems close at hand. Many
-a Socialist workman, especially on the continent, cherishes a similar
-dream of a good time coming ere long for himself and his fellows. He
-has no sense of the difficulties which for many a weary
-year&mdash;perhaps for ever&mdash;will hinder the realization of his
-passionately desired ideal. It is better so, for we live by our
-enthusiasms, and are the better for having indulged in them; if the
-labourer had none, he would be a chilly, useless being. Happily the
-Socialist seldom reflects how commonplace he would probably find his
-ideal if it were suddenly realized around him. Such were the
-eschatological hopes and dreams rife in the circles among which the
-Synoptic Gospels and their constituent documents first saw the light;
-they are revealed on their every page, and, needless to say, are
-inexplicable on Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s hypothesis. Devoid of sympathy
-with his subject, incapable of seeing it against its true background,
-without tact or perspective, he has never felt or understood the
-difficulties which beset his central hypothesis. He therefore attempts
-no explanation of them.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Character of the Fourth Gospel</span> Of
-the Fourth Gospel I have already said whatever is strictly necessary in
-this connection. It hangs together with the Johannine epistles; and its
-writer <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb103" href="#pb103" name=
-"pb103">103</a>]</span>certainly had the Gospel of Mark before him, for
-he derives many incidents from it, and often covertly controverts it.
-It seems to belong to the end of the first century, and was in the
-hands of Gnostic sects fairly early in the second&mdash;say about 128.
-When it was written, the <i>Gnosis</i> of the Hellenized Jews, and in
-especial of Philo, was invading the primitive community. The Messianic
-and human traits of Jesus, still so salient in Mark and Matthew, though
-less so in Luke, are receding into the background before the opinion
-that he had been the representation in flesh of the eternal Logos. All
-his conversations are re-written to suit the newer standpoint; the
-homely scenes and surroundings of Galilee are forgotten as much as can
-be, and Samaria and Jerusalem&mdash;a more resounding theatre&mdash;are
-substituted. The teaching in parables is dropped, and we hear no more
-of the exorcisms of devils. Such things were unedifying, and unworthy
-of so sublime a figure, as much in the mind of this evangelist as of
-the fastidious Professor W. B. Smith. Hence it may be said that the
-Fourth Gospel has made the fortune of the Catholic Church; without it
-Athanasius could never have triumphed, nor the Nicene Creed have been
-penned, nor Professor Smith&rsquo;s diatribes have attracted readers.
-<span class="marginnote">It is half-docetic</span>For in it Jesus is
-becoming unreal, a divine pedant masquerading in a vesture of flesh.
-When it was written, the Docetes, as they were called, were already
-beginning to dot the &ldquo;i&rsquo;s&rdquo; and cross the
-&ldquo;t&rsquo;s&rdquo; of the teachers who sublimated Jesus into the
-Philonian Logos; and, as I said above, it is against them, no doubt,
-that the <i>caveat</i>&mdash;so necessary in the context&mdash;is
-entered that in Jesus <i>the Word was made flesh</i>. Similarly, in the
-Johannine epistles certain <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb104" href=
-"#pb104" name="pb104">104</a>]</span>teachers are denounced who
-declared that Jesus Christ had not come <i>in the flesh</i>, and taught
-that his flesh was only a blind. <span class=
-"marginnote">Ignatius&rsquo;s account of Docetism</span>We have a
-fairly full account of these docetic teachers in the Epistles of
-Ignatius, which cannot be much later than <span class="sc">A.D.</span>
-120. From these we gather that they adopted the ordinary tradition
-about Jesus, and believed that he had been born, and eaten and drunk,
-had walked about with his disciples, had delivered his teaching by word
-of mouth, had been crucified by Pontius Pilate, had died, and been
-buried. But all these operations had been unreal and subjective in the
-minds of those who were present at them, as are things we see in a
-dream. They had taken place to the eye and ear of bystanders, but not
-in reality. The partizans, therefore, of the view that Jesus never
-lived deceive themselves when they appeal to the Docetes as witnesses
-on their side. The Docetes lend no colour to their thesis of the
-non-historicity of Jesus, but just the opposite. Drews writes (p. 57)
-that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Drews misunderstands
-Gnosticism</span>the Gnostics of the second century really questioned
-the historical existence of Jesus by their docetic conception; in other
-words, they believed only in a metaphysical and ideal, not an
-historical and real, Christ. The whole polemic of the Christians
-against the Gnostics was based essentially on the fact that the
-Gnostics denied the historicity of Jesus, or at least put it in a
-subordinate position.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>This is nonsense. The Docetes admitted to the full that the Messiah
-had appeared on earth; but, partly to meet the Jewish objections to a
-crucified Messiah, and partly inspired by that contempt for matter
-which was and is common in the East, and has been the inspiring motive
-of much vain asceticism, they shrank from believing that he shared with
-ordinary men <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb105" href="#pb105" name=
-"pb105">105</a>]</span>their flesh and blood, their secretions and
-evacuations. Matter was too evil for a Messiah, much more for the
-heavenly <i>Logos</i>, to have been encased in it, and so subjected to
-its dominion; to ascribe real flesh to him was to humble him before the
-evil Demiurge, who created matter. <span class="marginnote">Docetes
-accepted current Christian tradition</span>The Docetes accordingly took
-refuge in the idea that his body was a phantom, and that in phantom
-form he had undergone all that was related of him in Christian
-tradition; to which their views bear testimony, instead of
-contradicting it, as Dr. Drews and his friends pretend. &ldquo;If these
-things,&rdquo; writes Ignatius, &ldquo;were done by our Lord in
-Semblance, then am I also a prisoner in semblance.&rdquo; This means
-that&mdash;<i lang="la">mutatis mutandis</i>&mdash;the arguments of the
-Docetes would turn Ignatius too, chains and all, into a phantom. Again
-and again this writer affirms that the Docetes believed quite correctly
-that Jesus was born of a virgin and baptized by John, was nailed up for
-our sakes under Pontius Pilate and Herod the Tetrarch, that he
-suffered, died, and raised himself up out of the grave. They only would
-not believe that he underwent and performed all this
-<i>truly</i>&mdash;that is, objectively. They insisted that the Saviour
-had only been among men as a phantom, in the same manner as Helen had
-gone through the siege of Troy as a mere phantom. She was not really
-there, though Greeks and Trojans saw and met her daily. She was all the
-time enjoying herself amid the asphodel meadows of the Nile. Even so
-the disciples, according to the Docetes, had heard and seen Jesus all
-through his ministry; yet the body they saw was phantasmal only. The
-Docetes also argued&mdash;so we can infer from Ignatius&rsquo;s Epistle
-to the Church of Smyrna&mdash;that, as Jesus ate and drank <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb106" href="#pb106" name=
-"pb106">106</a>]</span>after the resurrection in phantom guise, so he
-had eaten and drunk before his death in no other than phantom guise.
-The answer of Ignatius to this is: &ldquo;I know and believe that he
-was in the flesh even after the resurrection&rdquo;; and he forthwith
-relates how the risen Jesus approached Peter and his company, who
-thought they were in the presence of a phantom or ghost, and said to
-them: &ldquo;<i>Lay hold and handle me, and see that I am not a demon
-without a body</i>.&rdquo; Everything, then, that we read about the
-Docetes shows that on all points, in respect of the miraculous
-incidents of Jesus&rsquo;s life no less than of the natural, they
-blindly accepted the record of evangelical tradition. Their heresy was
-not to deny what the tradition related, but to interpret it wrongly.
-<span class="marginnote">Docetism in Philo,</span> Philo had long
-before set the example of such an interpretation, when in his
-commentaries, which were widely read by Christians in the second
-century, he asserted that the angels who appeared to Abraham at the oak
-of Mambre, and ate and drank with him, only ate and drank in semblance,
-and not in reality. They laid a spell on the eyes of Abraham, and of
-the other guests at the banquet. <span class="marginnote">and in
-Tobit</span>So in the Book of <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Tb%2012:19&amp;version=NRSV">
-Tobit xii, <span class="corr" id="xd25e2156" title=
-"Source: 20, 21">19</span></a>, the angel says: &ldquo;All these days
-did I appear unto you; and I did neither eat nor drink, but it was a
-vision ye yourselves saw.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the same way, Jesus laid a spell on the eyes of his followers, in
-the belief of this very early sect of Christian believers. <span class=
-"marginnote">Professor Smith and Hippolytus</span> Professor W. B.
-Smith, like his two companions, writes as if Docetism were an asset in
-favour of his thesis that Christianity began as the cult of a slain
-God, and that &ldquo;the humanization of this divinity proceeds apace
-as we descend the stream of tradition.&rdquo; Yet the Docetic doctrine,
-as given in the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb107" href="#pb107"
-name="pb107">107</a>]</span>report of Hippolytus, and adduced by Mr.
-Smith himself (p. 88), exactly bears out the estimate of its import
-with which one rises from a study of the Ignatian Epistles. It is from
-Hippolytus&rsquo;s <i>Refutation of Heresies</i>, viii, 10, and runs
-thus:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Having come from above, he (Jesus) put on the begotten
-(body), and <i>did all things just as has been written in the
-Gospels</i>; he washed himself in Jordan, etc.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Hippolytus was in contact with Docetes, and familiar with their
-writings and arguments. What better proof could we have than this
-citation of the fact that they servilely adopted the traditions of
-Jesus recorded in the Gospels? They were not supplying an answer to
-imaginary Jews who had objected to Christianity on the score that Jesus
-had never lived. Their speciality was to interpret the Gospel record,
-which they did not dream of disputing, along phantasmagoric lines.
-There was still left in the Church enough common sense and historic
-insight to brush their interpretation on one side as nonsensical.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Drews misunderstands Justin Martyr</span>
-Drews once more has conjured up out of Justin Martyr a Jew of the
-second century who denied the human existence of Jesus. The relevant
-passage is at p. 16 of his <i>Witnesses to the Historicity of
-Jesus</i>, and runs as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">It is not true, however, as has recently been stated,
-that no Jew ever questioned the historical reality of Jesus, so that we
-may see in this some evidence for his existence. The Jew Trypho, whom
-Justin introduces in his <i>Dialogue with Trypho</i>, expresses himself
-very sceptically about it. &ldquo;Ye follow an empty rumour,&rdquo; he
-says, &ldquo;and make a Christ for yourselves.&rdquo; &ldquo;If he was
-born and lived somewhere, he is entirely unknown&rdquo; (viii, 3). This
-work appeared in the second half of the second century; it is therefore
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb108" href="#pb108" name=
-"pb108">108</a>]</span>the first indication of a denial of the human
-existence of Jesus, and shows that such opinions were current at the
-time.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Professor Drews has, I regret to say, failed to read his text
-intelligently. So I will transcribe the passage of Justin in full,
-premising that it was more probably written in the first than in the
-second half of the second century. The dialogue is between a Jew and an
-ex-Platonist who has turned Christian, and the Jew says with an
-ironical smile to the Christian:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The rest of your arguments I admit, and I admire your
-religious enthusiasm. Nevertheless, you would have done better to stick
-to Plato&rsquo;s or any other sage&rsquo;s philosophy, practising the
-virtues of endurance and continence and temperance, rather than let
-yourself be ensnared by false arguments and follow utterly worthless
-men. For if you had remained loyal to that form of philosophy and lived
-a blameless life, there was left a hope of your rising to something
-better. But as it is you have abandoned God and put your trust in man,
-so what further hope is left to you of salvation? If, then, you are
-willing to take advice from myself&mdash;for I already have come to
-regard you as a friend&mdash;begin first by circumcising yourself, and
-next keep in the legal fashion the sabbath and the festivals and the
-new moons of God, and in a word fulfil all the commandments written in
-the Law, and then perhaps you will attain unto God&rsquo;s mercy. But
-Messiah (<i>or</i> Christ), even supposing he has come into being and
-exists somewhere or other, <i>is unrecognized, and can neither know
-himself as such nor possess any might, until</i> Elias having come
-shall anoint him and make him manifest unto all. But you (Christians),
-having lent ear to a vain report, feign a sort of Messiah unto
-yourselves, and for his sake are now rashly going to perdition.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>There is a parallel passage in the Dialogue, c. cx, <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb109" href="#pb109" name=
-"pb109">109</a>]</span>where the Christian interlocutor, after reciting
-the prophecy of <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mi%204:1-7&amp;version=NRSV">
-Micah, iv, 1&ndash;7</a>, adds these words:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">I am quite aware, gentlemen, that your rabbis admit
-all the words of the above passage to have been uttered about, and to
-refer to the Messiah; and I also know that they deny him so far to have
-come, or, if they say he has come, then that it is not yet known who he
-is. However, when he is manifested and in glory, then, they say, it
-will be known who he is. And then, so they say, the things foreshadowed
-in the above passage will come to pass.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Jews in Justin testify to Jesus&rsquo;s
-historicity</span> The sense, then, of the passage adduced by Drews is
-perfectly clear, and exactly the opposite of that which he puts upon
-it. The Christ or Messiah referred to by the Jew is not that man of
-Nazareth in whom the Christians had falsely recognized the signs of
-Messiahship. No, he is, on the contrary, the Messiah expected by the
-Jews; but the latter has not so far come; or, if he has come, still
-lurks in some corner unrecognized until such time as Elias, to whom the
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i> appertains, shall appear again and proclaim him.
-There is not a word of Jesus of Nazareth not having come, or of his
-being still unrecognized. The gravamen of the Jew is that the
-ex-Platonist had been chicaned by Christians into believing that the
-Messiah <i>had already come</i> in the person of Jesus, and had been
-recognized in him. The passage, therefore, has exactly the opposite
-bearing to what Drews imagines.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Second century Jews did not detest mere
-shadows</span> There is, too, another very significant point to be made
-in this connection. It is this, that the Jews of that age would not
-have borne the bitter grudge they did against the Christians if the
-latter had merely devoted themselves to the cult of a mythical
-personage, a Sun-God-Saviour, who never existed at all. They
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb110" href="#pb110" name=
-"pb110">110</a>]</span>were quite well capable of ridiculing myths of
-such a kind, as the story of Bel and the Dragon shows. Jesus, however,
-was a real memory to them, and one which they detested. Their hatred
-for him was that which you bear for a man who has upset your religion
-and trampled on your prejudices&mdash;the sort of hatred that Catholics
-have for the memory of Luther and Calvin; it was not in any way akin to
-their mockery of idols, their disgust for the demons that inhabited
-them, their abhorrence of their votaries. It was hatred of a religious
-antagonist, <i lang="la">odium theologicum</i> of the purest kind, and
-hatred like that with which the Ebionites for generations hated the
-memory of Paul. Jesus had violated and set at naught the law of Moses.
-A solar myth could not do that.</p>
-<p>To this hatred of the Jews for the memory of Jesus, and to the early
-date at which it showed itself, Dr. Drews himself bears witness when,
-on p. 12 of the work cited, he writes as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">There is no room for doubt that after the destruction
-of Jerusalem, and especially <i>during the first quarter of the second
-century, the hostility of the Jews and Christians increased</i>;
-indeed, by the year 130 the hatred of the Jews for the Christians
-became so fierce that a rabbi whose niece had been bitten by a serpent
-preferred to let her die rather than see her healed &ldquo;in the name
-of Jesus.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Chwolson on early Rabbis</span> Chwolson
-argues from this and similar <span class="corr" id="xd25e2249" title=
-"Corrected by author from: passages">episodes</span> that the Rabbis of
-the second half of the first century, or the beginning of the second,
-were well acquainted with the <i>person</i> of Christ.
-&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; says Drews, &ldquo;he clearly deceives himself and
-his readers if the impression is given that they had any personal
-knowledge of him.&rdquo; The self-deception is surely on the part of
-Dr. Drews. Chwolson does not imply that any <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb111" href="#pb111" name=
-"pb111">111</a>]</span>Rabbis of the years 50&ndash;100 had a personal
-knowledge of Jesus, in the sense of having seen him or conversed with
-him; for he is not given to writing nonsense. He does, however, imply
-that they knew of him as a real man who had lived and done them a power
-of evil. If they had only known him as a solar myth, their hostility to
-his followers, admitted by Drews, would be inexplicable; equally
-inexplicable if, as Dr. W. B. Smith contends, he had been a merely
-heavenly power, a divine Logos or God, incidentally the object of a
-monotheist cult. In that case the Jews would rather have been inclined
-to fall on the neck of the Christians and welcome them; and their cult
-would have been no more offensive to them than the theosophy of Philo
-the Jew, from which it would have been hardly distinguishable. Justin
-Martyr furthermore makes statements on this point which perfectly agree
-with the story of the hostile Rabbi adduced by Drews. <span class=
-"marginnote">In the Jewish synagogues Jesus was regularly
-execrated</span>Not in one, but in half-a-dozen, passages he testifies
-that in his day the Jews in all their synagogues, at the conclusion of
-their prayers, cursed the memory of Jesus, execrated his name and
-personality (for <i>name</i> meaned <i>personality</i> in that age),
-and poured ridicule on the <i lang="fr">soi-disant</i> Messiah that had
-been crucified by the Romans. &ldquo;Even to this day,&rdquo; Justin
-exclaims (ch. xciii), &ldquo;you persevere in your wickedness,
-imprecating curses on us because we can prove that he whom you
-crucified is Messiah.&rdquo; He records (ch. cviii) &ldquo;that the
-Jews chose and appointed emissaries whom they sent forth all over the
-world to proclaim that a godless heresy and unlawful had been vamped up
-by a certain Jesus, a charlatan of Galilee. They were to warn their
-compatriots that the disciples had stolen him <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb112" href="#pb112" name="pb112">112</a>]</span>out
-of the tomb in which, after being unnailed from the cross, he had been
-laid, and then pretended that he had been raised from the dead and
-ascended into heaven.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Eusebius&rsquo;s evidence on this
-point</span> At first sight the above is a mere <i lang=
-"fr">r&eacute;chauff&eacute;</i> of <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2028:13&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matt. xxviii, 13</a>; but Eusebius, who had in his hands much first-
-and second-century literature of the Christians and Hellenized Jews
-that we have not, attests a similar tradition, and declares that he
-found it in the publications of the ancients.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2282src" href="#xd25e2282" name="xd25e2282src">1</a></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The priests and elders of the Jewish race who lived in
-Jerusalem wrote epistles and sent them broadcast to the Jews everywhere
-among the Gentiles, calumniating the teaching of Christ as a brand-new
-heresy and alien to God; and they warned them by letters not to receive
-it. And their apostles took their epistles, written on papyrus &hellip;
-and ran up and down the earth, maligning our account of the
-Saviour&#8202;&hellip;. It is still the custom of the Jews to give the
-name of Apostles to those who carry encyclical letters from their
-rulers.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Note that Eusebius does not weave in the story of the disciples
-stealing their Master&rsquo;s body from out of the tomb. From his
-omission of it, and from the dissimilarity of his language, we can
-infer that the &ldquo;publications of the ancients&rdquo; from which he
-derived his information were not the works of Justin, but an
-independent source, which may also have been in Justin&rsquo;s hands.
-In any case, the Jews were not given to tilting at windmills; their
-secular and bitter hatred of the very name of Jesus, the relentless war
-waged with pen and sword from the first between the Christians
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb113" href="#pb113" name=
-"pb113">113</a>]</span>and themselves&mdash;all this is attested by the
-earliest writings of the Church. It already colours Luke&rsquo;s
-Gospel, and is a leading inspiration of the Johannine. It alone is
-all-sufficient to dissipate the hypotheses of these twentieth-century
-fabulists.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of Acts</span> Let us turn to the
-Acts of the Apostles, the only book of the New Testament which contains
-a history of the Apostolic age. In the last half of this book is
-embedded, as even Van Manen admitted, a travel document or narrative of
-voyage undertaken by its author in common with Paul. Whether or no the
-fellow-traveller was the compiler of the Third Gospel and of Acts is
-not certain; but he was assuredly a man named Luke. It does not matter.
-&ldquo;It is not,&rdquo; writes Dr. Drews (<i>Christ Myth</i>, p.
-19),</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">the imagined historical Jesus, but, if anyone, Paul,
-who is that &ldquo;great personality&rdquo; that called Christianity
-into life as a new religion; and the depth of his moral experience gave
-it the strength for its journey, the strength which bestowed upon it
-victory over the other competing religions. Without Jesus the rise of
-Christianity can be quite well understood; without Paul, not so.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Van Manen on Acts and Paul</span> We infer
-from the above that, on the whole, Drews accepts the narrative of
-Paul&rsquo;s sayings and doings as given in Acts, and does not consider
-it a mere record of the feats a solar hero performed, not on earth, but
-in heaven. We gather also that Mr. Robertson takes the same indulgent
-view of Acts, for he frequently impugns the age of the Pauline epistles
-and the evidence they contain on the strength of &ldquo;Van
-Manen&rsquo;s thesis of the non-genuineness&rdquo; of them. &ldquo;In
-point of fact,&rdquo; he writes (p. 453), &ldquo;Van Manen&rsquo;s
-whole case is an argument; Dr. Carpenter&rsquo;s is a simple
-declaration.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb114" href="#pb114"
-name="pb114">114</a>]</span></p>
-<p>But Van Manen never for a moment questioned the historical reality
-of Jesus. What he insisted upon is<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2315src"
-href="#xd25e2315" name="xd25e2315src">2</a> that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">there is no word, nor any trace, of any essential
-difference as regards faith and life between Paul and other
-disciples&#8202;&hellip;. He is a &ldquo;disciple&rdquo; among the
-&ldquo;disciples.&rdquo; What he preaches is substantially nothing else
-than what their mind and heart are full of&mdash;the things concerning
-Jesus.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Van Manen, however, allows</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">that Paul&rsquo;s journeyings, his protracted sojourn
-outside of Palestine, his intercourse in foreign parts with converted
-Jews and former heathen, may have emancipated him (as it did so many
-other Jews of the Dispersion) without his knowing it, more or
-less&mdash;perhaps in essence completely&mdash;from circumcision and
-other Jewish religious duties, customs, and rites.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Concerning Paul the same writer says (<i>op. cit.</i>, art,
-&ldquo;Paul&rdquo;) that Acts gives us</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">a variety of narratives concerning him, differing in
-their dates, and also in respect of the influences under which they
-were written&#8202;&hellip;. With regard to Paul&rsquo;s journeys, we
-can in strictness speak with reasonable certainty and with some detail
-only of one great journey, which he undertook towards the end of his
-life. (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2016:10-17&amp;version=NRSV">Acts
-xvi, 10&ndash;17</a>; <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2020:5-15&amp;version=NRSV">
-xx, 5&ndash;15</a>; <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2021:1-18&amp;version=NRSV">
-xxi, 1&ndash;18</a>; <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2027:1-44&amp;version=NRSV">
-xxvii, 1</a>&ndash;<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2028:1-16&amp;version=NRSV">xxviii,
-16</a>.)</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of the <i>we</i> sections of
-Acts</span> It is upon Acts, then, that Van Manen bases his estimate,
-which we just now cited, of Paul&rsquo;s relations with the other
-disciples. He refuses, and rightly, &ldquo;to assume that Acts must
-take a subordinate place in comparison with the principal epistles of
-Paul.&rdquo; In effect, his assault on the Pauline Epistles rests on
-the assumption that the record of Paul&rsquo;s activity presented in
-Acts is the more trustworthy wherever <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb115" href="#pb115" name="pb115">115</a>]</span>it appears to
-conflict with the Pauline Epistles, and in particular with Galatians.
-In accepting Van Manen&rsquo;s conclusion, Mr. Robertson implicitly
-accepts his premises, one of which is the superior reliability of Acts
-in general, and in particular of the four sections enumerated above,
-and characterized by the use of the word &ldquo;we.&rdquo; For the
-moment, therefore, let us confine ourselves to the ninety-seven verses
-of these &ldquo;we&rdquo; sections, which are obviously from the pen of
-a fellow-traveller of Paul. We find it recorded in them that Paul was
-moved by a <i>vision</i> to go and <i>preach the Gospel</i><a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e2368src" href="#xd25e2368" name="xd25e2368src">3</a>
-in Macedonia; that at Philippi a certain woman named Lydia, who already
-<i>worshipped God</i>&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, was a heathen converted to
-Jewish monotheism&mdash;had opened her heart in consequence to give
-heed to the things spoken by Paul. We infer that Paul&rsquo;s Gospel
-supplemented in some way her monotheism. She and her household became
-something more than mere worshippers of God, and were <i>baptized</i>.
-We learn that Paul and his companion reckoned time by the Jewish feasts
-and fasts&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, by the days of unleavened bread&mdash;but
-at the same time were in the habit of meeting together with the rest of
-the faithful on the first day of the week, in order to break bread and
-discourse about the faith. At Tyre, as at Troas, they found
-&ldquo;disciples&rdquo; who, like Paul, arranged future events, or were
-warned of them <i>through the Spirit</i>. At C&aelig;sarea, of
-Palestine, they stayed with <i>Philip the evangelist</i>, who was one
-of <i>the seven</i>, and had four daughters&mdash;<i>virgins who did
-prophesy</i>. They also met there a certain <i>prophet Agabus</i>, who
-was a mouthpiece of the Holy Ghost, <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb116" href="#pb116" name="pb116">116</a>]</span>and as such foretold
-that the Jews at Jerusalem, of whose plots against Paul we elsewhere
-hear in these sections, would <i>deliver him into the hands of the
-Gentiles</i>. Paul, in his turn, declares his readiness to be bound and
-die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus. <span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e2405" title=
-"Corrected by author from: At Cyprus they stay with an early disciple">they
-stay with <i>an early disciple</i> from Cyprus</span>, Mnason, and, on
-reaching Jerusalem, <i>the brethren received them</i> gladly. And the
-day following <i>Paul went in with us unto James; and all the
-elders</i> (of the Church) <i>were present</i>. Paul relates to them
-the facts of his <i>ministry among the Gentiles</i>. In the course of
-the final voyage to Rome, when all the crew have despaired of their
-lives, because of the violence of the storm and of the ship leaking,
-Paul comes to the rescue, and informs them that the angel of the God
-whom he served, and whose he was, had stood by him in the night,
-saying: &ldquo;<i>Fear not, Paul; thou must stand before
-C&aelig;sar</i>.&rdquo; He therefore could not perish by shipwreck, nor
-they either. In Melita the trivial circumstance that the bite of a
-viper, promptly shaken off by him into the fire, did not cause Paul to
-swell up (<i>i.e.</i>, his hand to be inflamed), or die, caused the
-barbarians to acclaim him as a god; and in the sequel the sick in the
-island flock to him, and are healed. At Puteoli Paul and his companion
-find <i>brethren</i>, as they had found them at Jerusalem and
-elsewhere; and presently they enter Rome.</p>
-<p>In these sections, then, we have glimpses of a brotherhood
-disseminated all about the Mediterranean whose members were Monotheists
-of the Jewish type, but something besides, in so far as they accepted a
-<i>gospel</i> which Paul also preached, about a Lord Jesus Christ;
-these brethren solemnly broke bread on the first day of the week. In
-these sections we breathe <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb117" href=
-"#pb117" name="pb117">117</a>]</span>the same atmosphere of personal
-visions, of angels, of prophecy, of direct inspiration of individuals
-by the Holy Ghost, of the cult of virginity, which we breathe in the
-rest of Acts and throughout the Pauline Epistles. <span class=
-"marginnote">Philip one of the seven</span>We meet also with a Philip,
-an <i>evangelist</i>, and <i>one of the seven</i>. Who were the seven?
-We turn to an earlier chapter of Acts,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2455src" href="#xd25e2455" name="xd25e2455src">4</a> and read
-that in the earliest days of the religion at Jerusalem, in order to
-satisfy the claims of the widows of Greek Jews who were neglected in
-the daily ministration, the <i>twelve apostles</i> had called together
-the multitude of the faithful, and chosen <i>seven men</i> of good
-report, <i>full of the Spirit</i> and of wisdom to <i>serve the
-tables</i>, because they, the Twelve, were too busy preaching the word
-to attend to the catering of the new Messianic society. The first on
-the list of these seven deacons was <i>Stephen</i>, the second
-<i>Philip</i>. When, therefore, in the later passage the
-fellow-traveller of Paul refers to Philip as one of <i>the seven</i>,
-he assumes that we know who <i>the seven</i> were; and he can only
-expect us to know it because we have read the earlier chapter which
-narrates their appointment. The fellow-traveller of Paul, therefore,
-was aware of the appointment of the seven deacons, and testifies
-thereto. Here we have irrefragable evidence of the historicity of
-verses 1&ndash;6 of chapter vi of Acts, and at the same time a strong
-presumption that the fellow-traveller of Paul was himself the redactor,
-if not the author, of the earlier chapters (i&ndash;xv) of Acts, as he
-is obviously of the last half (ch. xvi to end); for that <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb118" href="#pb118" name="pb118">118</a>]</span>last
-half coheres inseparably with the contiguous <i>we</i> sections.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Literary unity of Acts</span> Have we,
-then, any way of testing this presumption that the fellow-traveller who
-penned these <i>we</i> sections also penned the rest of Acts? We have,
-though it is one which can only appeal to trained philologists, and I
-doubt if Messrs. Drews and Robertson are likely to give to such an
-argument its due weight. The linguistic evidence of the <i>we</i>
-sections has been sifted and tested by Sir John Hawkins in his <i lang=
-"la">Hor&aelig; Synoptic&aelig;</i>. The statistic of words and phrases
-cannot lie. It proves that the writer of Acts, and consequently of the
-Third Gospel, &ldquo;was from time to time a companion of Paul in his
-travels, and that he simply and naturally wrote in the first person
-when narrating events at which he had been present.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This is the best hypothesis which a study of the language of Acts
-and of the Third Gospel permits us to accept. I do not say it is the
-only possible one, and I expect Mr. Robertson and his pupil, Dr. Drews,
-to reject it with scorn, for their philology is of the sort which
-recognizes in Maria the same name as <i>Moira</i> and Myrrha. The only
-other explanations of the presence of <i>we</i> in these sections are,
-either that a compiler who used the diary of the fellow-traveller left
-it standing in the document when he embodied it in his narrative,
-through carelessness and by accident, or else that he left it of set
-design, and because he wished his readers to identify him with the
-older reporter, and so to pass for a companion of Paul. The first of
-these explanations is very improbable; the second not only much too
-subtle, but out of keeping with the babbling, but credulous, honesty
-which everywhere shows itself in Acts. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb119" href="#pb119" name="pb119">119</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Van Manen&rsquo;s system of dating Luke and
-Acts would postpone all ancient literature to the Middle Ages</span> It
-is true that Van Manen assumes <i>a priori</i>, and without a shadow of
-proof, that Luke and Acts were written as late as the period
-125&ndash;150. His only argument is that Marcion already had the former
-in his hands as early as 140; and he is prone to make the childish
-assumption that the date of composition of any book in the New
-Testament is exactly that of its earliest ascertainable use by a later
-author. Such a mode of reasoning is utterly false and uncritical, and
-would, if applied in other fields, prove that the great mass of ancient
-literature was not ancient at all, but composed in the tenth or later
-centuries to which our earliest MSS. belong; for we have no citations
-either in contemporary or in nearly contemporary writers of nine-tenths
-of the whole volume of the old Greek and Latin literatures. Most of it,
-if we applied Van Manen&rsquo;s canons of evidence (which, of course,
-are accepted and improved upon by the three writers I am criticizing),
-would turn out to have been written as late as the renaissance of
-European learning. It is a fallacious test, and Van Manen would have
-shrunk from the paradox of enforcing it in regard to any other
-literature than the New Testament. It would appear as if the orthodox
-traditionalists, by insisting that the Bible must not be judged and
-criticized like other books, have prejudiced not merely their own
-cause&mdash;that would not matter&mdash;but the cause of sober history.
-They have invested it with such an atmosphere of mystery and falsetto,
-with what I may call a Sunday-school atmosphere, that a certain class
-of inquirers rush to an opposite extreme, and insist on canons of
-evidence and authenticity which would, if consistently used, eliminate
-all ancient literature and history. One form of error provokes the
-other. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb120" href="#pb120" name=
-"pb120">120</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Ephrem&rsquo;s commentary on Acts</span> We
-have examined for their evidence as regards the Early Church those
-sections which directly evidence the hand of a companion of Paul, who
-was probably Luke the physician, seeing that tradition was unanimous in
-ascribing the Third Gospel and Acts to him. Some scholars have observed
-that the old Syriac version cited by Ephrem the Syrian in his
-commentary<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2524src" href="#xd25e2524" name=
-"xd25e2524src">5</a> on Acts read in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2020:13&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xx, 13</a>, as follows: &ldquo;But <i>I, Lucas, and those with
-me</i>, going before to the ship, set sail for Assos,&rdquo; where the
-conventional text reads: &ldquo;But <i>we</i>, going before.&rdquo; The
-pronoun <i>we</i> in this passage cannot include, as it usually does,
-Paul, who had taken another route and had left directions that they
-should call for him; this may have led Ephrem to substitute the
-paraphrase <i>I, Lucas, and those with me</i>. Anyhow, without further
-evidence, we can hardly use Ephrem&rsquo;s citation as a proof of the
-Lucan authorship of Acts. <span class="marginnote">Evidence of those
-parts of Acts which cohere with the <i>we</i> sections</span>But we
-must anyhow consider the evidence as to Paul&rsquo;s beliefs which is
-to be gathered from the sections of Acts which immediately cohere with
-the travel document, and which clearly depended for their information
-on a source closely allied to them and of the same age and provenance.
-Firstly, then, it is noticeable that all this last part of Acts is
-relatively free from the fabulous details which mar the earlier part
-descriptive of the exploits of Peter. Next we note that Paul, on
-entering a city, goes straight to the Jewish Synagogue, and that the
-gospel with which he undertakes to supplement their monotheism
-consisted not of tidings about an ancient Palestinian Sun-god named
-Joshua, or Dionysus or Krishna, or Osiris, or &AElig;sculapius, or
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb121" href="#pb121" name=
-"pb121">121</a>]</span>Mithras, nor about a vegetation or harvest demon
-of any kind, nor about any of the other members of the Christian
-pandemonium invented by Mr. Robertson and adopted by Dr. Drews. No; on
-the contrary, at Thessalonica Paul spent three sabbaths trying to
-convince the Jews in their synagogue that Jesus must have been the
-Jewish Messiah promised in the Jewish scriptures, because in accordance
-with prophecy he had suffered and risen from the dead. That he taught
-them, further, that Jesus, <i>qua</i> Christ or Messiah, was also the
-Jewish king whose advent they looked for, is obvious from the fact that
-he was accused on this occasion, as on others, of teaching,
-&ldquo;contrary to the decrees of C&aelig;sar, that there was another
-king, one Jesus.&rdquo; At Corinth Paul found he was wasting time in
-trying to persuade the Jews that Jesus was the Messiah whose advent
-they expected; and he declared to them that thenceforth he would devote
-himself to spreading his good news among the Gentiles. None the less he
-persisted, wherever he afterwards went, in going first to the
-synagogue, so as to give his compatriots a prior chance of accepting
-his spiritual wares, according to the principle enunciated in his
-epistles, that the promises were for the Jews first and only after them
-for the Gentiles. In <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2025:19&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xxv, 19</a>, Festus lays before King Agrippa the case against Paul
-as he had learned it from the Jewish priests and elders at Jerusalem.
-It amounted to this, that Paul affirmed that &ldquo;one Jesus, who was
-dead, was really alive.&rdquo; We learn in an earlier passage that Paul
-was a Jew of Tarsus, an adherent of the Pharisaic sect which believed
-in a general resurrection of good Jews, that nevertheless he had
-persecuted the adherents of Jesus of Nazareth and <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb122" href="#pb122" name=
-"pb122">122</a>]</span>connived at the murder of Stephen. He has some
-difficulty in convincing the Roman governor of Jud&aelig;a that he is
-not a leader of the Jewish <i lang="la">sicarii</i>, or sect of
-assassins, who were ever anxious to range themselves on the side of any
-Messiah ready to show fight against the Roman Legions. The impression
-made on Festus, the Roman Governor, by Paul&rsquo;s prophetic arguments
-about a Messiah who had suffered and then risen from the dead was
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2026:24&amp;version=NRSV">Acts
-xxvi, 24</a>) that &ldquo;much learning had made him mad.&rdquo; We can
-discern all through this last half of Acts that attitude of Paul to
-Jesus which confronts us in his epistles. Nothing interests him except
-his death on the cross and his resurrection. Of the rest of his career
-we learn nothing. In one passage, ch. xiii, 26 foll., we have a
-slightly more detailed account of the staple of Paul&rsquo;s teaching,
-as delivered to the Jews when he encountered them in their synagogues.
-He informed them of how &ldquo;they that dwell in Jerusalem and their
-rulers&rdquo; had condemned Jesus; &ldquo;though they found no cause of
-death in him, yet asked they of Pilate that he should be slain.&rdquo;
-They afterwards &ldquo;took him down from the tree and laid him in a
-tomb. But God raised him from the dead: and he was seen for many days
-of them that came up with him from Galilee to Jerusalem, who are now
-his witnesses unto the people.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There is not much of a vegetation-god story about the above concise
-narrative, which, however, is strikingly independent of the Gospel
-legends concerning the burial and resurrection of Jesus; for, according
-to them, it was the friends and adherents of Jesus, and not the rulers,
-who condemned him, that were careful to bury him; and his
-post-resurrectional <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb123" href="#pb123"
-name="pb123">123</a>]</span>appearances are here confined to his
-Galilean followers, who, by virtue of their longer association and
-intimacy with him, would be more likely than others to see him after
-death in dreams and visions.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Six independent and early documents involve
-a real Jesus</span> I have now reviewed the historical books of the New
-Testament. We have in them at least six monuments&mdash;to wit, Mark,
-the non-Marcan document, the parts of the First and Third Gospels
-peculiar to their authors, the Fourth Gospel, and the history of Paul
-and his mission given in chapters xiii to xxviii of Acts. Perhaps I
-ought to add the first twelve chapters of Acts, of which the
-information, according to Van Manen, was derived from an early and lost
-document, the Acts of Peter. That would make seven monuments. Unless
-all philological analysis is false, the Third Gospel and Acts are from
-the pen of a companion of Paul, and cannot be set later than about 90
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> Mark, which he used, must be indefinitely
-earlier, and I have pointed out that there are good reasons for setting
-its date before the year 70. The non-Marcan document, which critics
-have agreed to call Q (<span lang="de">Quelle</span>), cannot be later
-than Mark, and is probably much earlier, judging from the fact that it
-as yet reported no miracles of Jesus, nor hints of his death and
-resurrection. Now all these documents are independent of one another in
-style and contents, yet they all have a common interest&mdash;namely,
-the memory of a historical man Jesus; and such data as they isolatedly
-afford about Jesus agree on the whole as closely as any profane
-documents ever agreed which, being written independently and from very
-different standpoints, yet refer to one and the same person. If we see
-a number of convergent rays of light streaming down under clouds across
-a widely <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb124" href="#pb124" name=
-"pb124">124</a>]</span>extended landscape, we infer a central sun
-behind the clouds by which they are all emitted. Similarly, we have
-here several traditions and documents which converge on a single man,
-and are all and severally meaningless, and their genesis impossible of
-explanation unless we assume that he lived. It is sufficiently
-incredible that one tradition should (to take the hypothesis of
-non-historicity in its most rational form&mdash;that, namely, of
-Professor W. B. Smith) allegorize the myth of a Saviour God as the
-career of a man, and that man a Galilean teacher, in whose humanity the
-Church believed from the first. That six or seven parallel traditions
-should all have hit on the same form of deception and allegory is, as I
-said before, as incredible as that several roulette tables at Monte
-Carlo should independently and at one and the same time throw up an
-identical series of numbers. <i lang="la">Credat Jud&aelig;us
-Apella</i>, These writers who develop the thesis of the non-historicity
-of Jesus because miracles came to be attributed to him&mdash;how could
-they not in that age and social medium?&mdash;ask us to believe in a
-miracle which far outweighs any which any religionists ever reported of
-their founder; they themselves have fallen into fathomless depths of
-credulity. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb125" href="#pb125" name=
-"pb125">125</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2282" href="#xd25e2282src" name="xd25e2282">1</a></span> Euseb.,
-in <i>Esai</i>, xviii, 1 foll., p. 424, foll. The words might mean
-Justin; but when he quotes Justin he always gives his name. The Gospels
-cannot be intended.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2282src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2315" href="#xd25e2315src" name="xd25e2315">2</a></span>
-<i>Encycl. Bibl.</i>, art, &ldquo;Paul.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e2315src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2368" href="#xd25e2368src" name="xd25e2368">3</a></span> Words
-italicized in the sequel are citations of the text of
-Acts.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e2368src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2455" href="#xd25e2455src" name="xd25e2455">4</a></span> I expect
-Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson, in their next editions, to broach the view
-that the earlier chapter was forged to explain the later one, and that
-in the later one &ldquo;The Seven&rdquo; are a cryptic reference to the
-Pleiades.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e2455src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2524" href="#xd25e2524src" name="xd25e2524">5</a></span> The
-relevant part of this commentary is preserved in an old Armenian
-version of which we have ancient MSS.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2524src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch4" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e224">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter IV</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE EPISTLES OF PAUL</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s vital
-interpolations</span> Now let us turn to the Epistles of Paul, a person
-whom these writers, as we have seen above, admit to have lived, and to
-have played no small part in the establishment of Christianity.</p>
-<p>In using these Epistles, they all three make a reservation to the
-effect that any evidence which they may supply in favour of the
-historicity of Jesus, and which cannot be explained away, shall be
-regarded as an interpolation; and as it is something that slays his
-hypothesis, Mr. Robertson has taught us to call such evidence
-&ldquo;vital interpolation.&rdquo; It must die in order that his
-hypothesis may live. They also claim, <i lang="la">ab initio</i>, to
-deny Pauline authorship to any epistles that may turn out to be a
-stumbling-block in the way of their theories, and lean to the view of
-Van Manen and others, who held that the entire mass of the Pauline
-letters are the &ldquo;work of a whole school of second-century
-theologians&rdquo;&mdash;in other words, forgeries of the period
-130&ndash;140. <span class="marginnote">Defying textual evidence he
-relegates the Paulines to second century</span>They would, of course,
-set them later than that, only it is overwhelmingly certain that
-Marcion made about that time a collection of ten of them, which he
-expurgated to suit his views, and arranged in order, with Galatians
-first; this collection he called the <i>Apostolicon</i>. It runs
-somewhat counter to this view that, twenty years earlier, we already
-have a reference to these Epistles in <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb126" href="#pb126" name="pb126">126</a>]</span>Ignatius, who, with
-an exaggeration hardly excused by the fact that he is addressing
-members of the Ephesian Church, informs us that the Ephesians are
-mentioned &ldquo;in every letter&rdquo; by Paul. Those who desire ample
-proof that Ignatius was well acquainted with Paul&rsquo;s Epistles
-cannot do better than refer to a work, drawn up and published in 1905
-by members of the Oxford Society of Historical Theology, entitled
-<i>The New Testament in the Apostolic Fathers</i>. In this the New
-Testament originals and the citations are arranged in parallel columns
-in the order of their convincingness.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Professor Smith&rsquo;s kindred thesis
-offends the facts</span> At a still earlier date&mdash;say <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 95&mdash;Clement of Rome cites the Paulines. As
-Professor W. B. Smith makes Herculean efforts to show that he did not,
-I venture to set before my readers a passage&mdash;chap. xxxv, 5, 6 of
-his <i>Epistle</i> face to face with <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%201:29-32&amp;version=NRSV">
-Romans i, 29&ndash;32</a>&mdash;so that they may judge for themselves.
-I print identical words in leaded type:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table class="xd25e2626">
-<tr>
-<td class="xd25e2627 cellLeft cellTop cellBottom">
-<p class="first xd25e129"><i>1 Clement.</i></p>
-<p><span class="trans" title=
-"aporripsantes aph&rsquo; heaut&#333;n pasan adikian kai anomian, pleonexian, ereis, kako&#275;theias te kai dolous psithyrismous te kai katalalias, theostygian, hyper&#275;phanian te kai alazoneian, kenedoxian te kai aphiloxenian.">
-<span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&#7936;&pi;&omicron;&rho;&rho;&#8055;&psi;&alpha;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&sigmaf;
-&#7936;&phi;&rsquo; &#7953;&alpha;&upsilon;&tau;&#8182;&nu;
-<span class="ex">&pi;&#8118;&sigma;&alpha;&nu;
-&#7936;&delta;&iota;&kappa;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;</span>
-&kappa;&alpha;&#8054; &#7936;&nu;&omicron;&mu;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;,
-<span class=
-"ex">&pi;&lambda;&epsilon;&omicron;&nu;&epsilon;&xi;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;,
-&#7956;&rho;&epsilon;&iota;&sigmaf;,
-&kappa;&alpha;&kappa;&omicron;&eta;&theta;&epsilon;&#8055;&alpha;&sigmaf;</span>
-&tau;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&#8054; <span class=
-"ex">&delta;&#8057;&lambda;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;
-&psi;&iota;&theta;&upsilon;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&mu;&omicron;&#8059;&sigmaf;</span>
-&tau;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&#8054; <span class=
-"ex">&kappa;&alpha;&tau;&alpha;&lambda;&alpha;&lambda;&#8055;&alpha;&sigmaf;,
-&theta;&epsilon;&omicron;&sigma;&tau;&upsilon;&gamma;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;,
-&#8017;&pi;&epsilon;&rho;&eta;&phi;&alpha;&nu;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;</span>
-&tau;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&#8054; <span class=
-"ex">&#7936;&lambda;&alpha;&zeta;&omicron;&nu;&epsilon;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;</span>,
-&kappa;&epsilon;&nu;&epsilon;&delta;&omicron;&xi;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;
-&tau;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&#8054;
-&#7936;&phi;&iota;&lambda;&omicron;&xi;&epsilon;&nu;&#8055;&alpha;&nu;.</span></span></p>
-<p><span class="trans" title=
-"tauta gar hoi prassontes styg&#275;toi t&#333; the&#333; hyparchousin; ou monon de hoi prassontes auta, alla kai hoi syneudokountes autois.">
-<span class="Greek" lang="grc"><span class=
-"ex">&tau;&alpha;&#8166;&tau;&alpha;</span> &gamma;&#8048;&rho;
-&omicron;&#7985; <span class=
-"ex">&pi;&rho;&#8049;&sigma;&sigma;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&sigmaf;</span>
-&sigma;&tau;&upsilon;&gamma;&eta;&tau;&omicron;&#8054; &tau;&#8183;
-&theta;&epsilon;&#8183;
-&#8017;&pi;&#8049;&rho;&chi;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigma;&iota;&nu;&#903;
-<span class="ex">&omicron;&#8016; &mu;&#8057;&nu;&omicron;&nu;</span>
-&delta;&#8050; &omicron;&#7985; <span class=
-"ex">&pi;&rho;&#8049;&sigma;&sigma;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&sigmaf;
-&alpha;&#8016;&tau;&#8049;, &#7936;&lambda;&lambda;&#8048;
-&kappa;&alpha;&#8054; &omicron;&#7985;
-&sigma;&upsilon;&nu;&epsilon;&upsilon;&delta;&omicron;&kappa;&omicron;&#8166;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&sigmaf;</span>
-&alpha;&#8016;&tau;&omicron;&#8150;&sigmaf;.</span></span></p>
-</td>
-<td class="xd25e2627 cellRight cellTop cellBottom">
-<p class="first xd25e129"><i>Romans.</i></p>
-<p><span class="trans" title=
-"pepl&#275;r&#333;menous pas&#275; adikia, pon&#275;ria, pleonexia, kakia, mestous, phthonou, phonou, eridos, dolou, kako&#275;theias, psithyristas, katalalous, theostygeis, hybristas, hyper&#275;phanous, alazonas, epheuretas kak&#333;n, goneusin apeitheis, asynetous, asynthetous, astorgous, anele&#275;monas, hoitines to dikai&#333;ma tou theou epignontes, hoti ta toiauta prassontes axioi thanatou eisin, ou monon auta poiousin, alla kai syneudokousi tois prassousi.">
-<span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&pi;&epsilon;&pi;&lambda;&eta;&rho;&omega;&mu;&#8051;&nu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;
-<span class="ex">&pi;&#8049;&sigma;&#8131;
-&#7936;&delta;&iota;&kappa;&#8055;&#8115;,
-&pi;&omicron;&nu;&eta;&rho;&#8055;&#8115;</span>,
-&pi;&lambda;&epsilon;&omicron;&nu;&epsilon;&xi;&#8055;&#8115;,
-&kappa;&alpha;&kappa;&#8055;&#8115;,
-&mu;&epsilon;&sigma;&tau;&omicron;&#8058;&sigmaf;,
-&phi;&theta;&#8057;&nu;&omicron;&upsilon;,
-&phi;&#8057;&nu;&omicron;&upsilon;, <span class=
-"ex">&#7956;&rho;&iota;&delta;&omicron;&sigmaf;,
-&delta;&#8057;&lambda;&omicron;&upsilon;,
-&kappa;&alpha;&kappa;&omicron;&eta;&theta;&epsilon;&#8055;&alpha;&sigmaf;,
-&psi;&iota;&theta;&upsilon;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&#8049;&sigmaf;,
-&kappa;&alpha;&tau;&alpha;&lambda;&#8049;&lambda;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,
-&theta;&epsilon;&omicron;&sigma;&tau;&upsilon;&gamma;&epsilon;&#8150;&sigmaf;</span>,
-&#8017;&beta;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&#8049;&sigmaf;, <span class=
-"ex">&#8017;&pi;&epsilon;&rho;&eta;&phi;&#8049;&nu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,
-&#7936;&lambda;&alpha;&zeta;&#8057;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf;</span>,
-&#7952;&phi;&epsilon;&upsilon;&rho;&epsilon;&tau;&#8048;&sigmaf;
-&kappa;&alpha;&kappa;&#8182;&nu;,
-&gamma;&omicron;&nu;&epsilon;&#8166;&sigma;&iota;&nu;
-&#7936;&pi;&epsilon;&iota;&theta;&epsilon;&#8150;&sigmaf;,
-&#7936;&sigma;&upsilon;&nu;&#8051;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,
-&#7936;&sigma;&upsilon;&nu;&theta;&#8051;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,
-&#7936;&sigma;&tau;&#8057;&rho;&gamma;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,
-&#7936;&nu;&epsilon;&lambda;&epsilon;&eta;&mu;&#8057;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf;,
-&omicron;&#7989;&tau;&iota;&nu;&epsilon;&sigmaf; &tau;&#8056;
-&delta;&iota;&kappa;&alpha;&#8055;&omega;&mu;&alpha;
-&tau;&omicron;&#8166; &theta;&epsilon;&omicron;&upsilon;
-&#7952;&pi;&iota;&gamma;&nu;&#8057;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&sigmaf;,
-&#8005;&tau;&iota; &tau;&#8048; <span class=
-"ex">&tau;&omicron;&iota;&alpha;&#8166;&tau;&alpha;
-&pi;&rho;&#8049;&sigma;&sigma;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&sigmaf;</span>
-&#7940;&xi;&iota;&omicron;&iota;
-&theta;&alpha;&nu;&#8049;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon;
-&epsilon;&#7984;&sigma;&#8055;&nu;, <span class="ex">&omicron;&#8016;
-&mu;&#8057;&nu;&omicron;&nu; &alpha;&#8016;&tau;&#8048;</span>
-&pi;&omicron;&iota;&omicron;&#8166;&sigma;&iota;&nu;, <span class=
-"ex">&#7936;&lambda;&lambda;&#8048; &kappa;&alpha;&#8054;
-&sigma;&upsilon;&nu;&epsilon;&upsilon;&delta;&omicron;&kappa;&omicron;&#8166;&sigma;&iota;
-&tau;&omicron;&#8150;&sigmaf;
-&pi;&rho;&#8049;&sigma;&sigma;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigma;&iota;</span>.</span></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-<p>The dependence of Clement&rsquo;s <i>Epistle</i> on that of
-Paul&rsquo;s Letter to the Romans is equally visible if the English
-renderings of them be compared, as follows:&mdash; <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb127" href="#pb127" name="pb127">127</a>]</span></p>
-<p class="xd25e129">[<span class="sc">Translation.</span>]</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table class="xd25e2626">
-<tr>
-<td class="xd25e2627 cellLeft cellTop cellBottom">
-<p class="first xd25e129"><i>Clement xxxv, 5, 6.</i></p>
-<p>Casting away from ourselves <span class="ex">all
-unrighteousness</span> and lawlessness, <span class="ex">covetousness,
-strife, malignity, and deceit; whisperings</span> and <span class=
-"ex">backbitings, hatred of God, haughtiness</span> and <span class=
-"ex">boastfulness</span>, vainglory and inhospitableness.</p>
-<p>For they that <span class="ex">practise these things</span> are
-hateful to <span class="ex">God</span>. And <span class="ex">not only
-they which practise them, but also they who consent with
-them</span>.</p>
-</td>
-<td class="xd25e2627 cellRight cellTop cellBottom">
-<p class="first xd25e129"><i><a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%201:29-32&amp;version=NRSV">
-Romans i, 29&ndash;32</a>.</i></p>
-<p>Being filled with <span class="ex">all unrighteousness</span>,
-wickedness, <span class="ex">covetousness</span>, maliciousness; full
-of envy, murder, <span class="ex">strife, deceit, malignity;
-whisperers, backbiters, hateful to God</span>, insolent, <span class=
-"ex">haughty, boastful</span>, inventors of evil things, disobedient to
-parents, without understanding, covenant-breakers, without natural
-affection, unmerciful: who, knowing the ordinance of <span class=
-"ex">God</span>, that <span class="ex">they which practise such
-things</span> are worthy of death, <span class="ex">not only do the
-same, but also consent with them</span> that practise them.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-<p>Some of the sources of Paul approximate in text still more to
-Clement&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, the reading <span class="trans" title=
-"pon&#275;ria"><span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&pi;&omicron;&nu;&eta;&rho;&#8055;&#8115;</span></span>
-&ldquo;wickedness&rdquo; is not certain. In some,
-&ldquo;malignity&rdquo; precedes &ldquo;deceit.&rdquo; In some,
-&ldquo;and&rdquo; is added before the words &ldquo;not only.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the above parallel passages the agreement both in kind and
-sequence of the lists of vices is too close to be accidental; and this
-is clinched by the identity of sense and form of the clauses which
-follow the two lists. Nor is this the only example of the influence of
-the Paulines on Clement. We give one more, giving the English
-only:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table class="xd25e2626">
-<tr>
-<td class="xd25e2627 cellLeft cellTop cellBottom">
-<p class="first xd25e129"><i>Paul</i> (<i><a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%201:11-13&amp;version=NRSV">1
-Cor. i, 11&ndash;13</a></i>).</p>
-<p>For it hath been signified unto me concerning you, my brethren, by
-those of Chloe, that there are contentions among you. Now this I mean,
-that each one of you saith, I am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I of
-Cephas; and I of Christ.</p>
-</td>
-<td class="xd25e2627 cellRight cellTop cellBottom">
-<p class="first xd25e129"><i>Clement xlvii, 1.</i></p>
-<p>Take ye up the epistle of the blessed Paul, the Apostle, what did he
-write first to you in the beginning of the good tidings. In verity he
-spiritually indited you a letter about himself and Cephas and
-Apollos.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb128" href="#pb128" name=
-"pb128">128</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Here Clement only alludes to Paul&rsquo;s letter, not citing it, and
-he betrays a knowledge of the order and times in which Paul wrote his
-Epistles; for he declares that 1 Corinthians was written by Paul in the
-beginning of the good tidings&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, of his preaching to
-them of the Gospel. The Corinthians had been first evangelized by him
-three years before. The same phrase meets us in the same sense in Paul
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Phil%204:15&amp;version=NRSV">Philippians
-iv, 15</a>):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">And ye yourselves also know, ye Philippians, that
-<i>in the beginning of the Gospel</i>, when I departed from Macedonia,
-etc.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Altogether there are thirty passages in Clement&rsquo;s <i>Epistle
-to the Corinthians</i> which indicate more or less clearly a knowledge
-of the Pauline Epistles, including that to Hebrews. If we were tracing
-the relation of two profane authors, no scholar would hesitate to
-acknowledge a direct influence of one on the other. Merely because one
-of them happens to belong to the New Testament, such writers as Van
-Manen, W. B. Smith, <i lang="la">et hoc genus omne</i>, feel themselves
-in duty bound to run their heads against a brick wall. The
-responsibility, it must be admitted, lies at the door of orthodox
-theologians. For centuries independent scholars have been warned off
-the domain of so-called sacred literature. The Bible might not be
-treated as any other book. I once heard the late Canon Liddon forecast
-the most awful fate for Oxford if it ever should be. The nemesis of
-orthodox superstition is that such writers as those we are criticizing
-cannot bring themselves to treat the book fairly, as they would other
-literature; nor is any hypothesis too crazy for them when they approach
-Church history. The laity, in turn, who too often do not know their
-right hand <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb129" href="#pb129" name=
-"pb129">129</a>]</span>from their left, are so justly suspicious of the
-evasions and <i lang="fr">arri&egrave;re-pens&eacute;e</i> of orthodox
-apologists that they are ready to accept any wild and unscholarly
-theory that labels itself Rationalist.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Presuppositions of the argument from
-silence</span> The Epistles of Paul, then, must obviously have been
-widely known before Marcion issued an expurgated edition of them in the
-year 140. We have shown that many of them were familiar to Clement of
-Rome in the last decade of the first century. But even if we had no
-traces of the Pauline Epistles before the year 140, as Van Manen and
-these writers in the teeth of the evidence maintain, it would not
-follow that they were as late as the first irrefragable use of them by
-a later author. Professor W. B. Smith&rsquo;s argument is based on the
-supposed silence of earlier authors, and he entitles his chapter on
-this subject &ldquo;<i lang="la">Silentium Saeculi</i>.&rdquo; A
-magnificent <i lang="la">petitio principii</i>! He has never thought
-over the aptitudes of the &ldquo;argument from silence.&rdquo; This
-argument, as MM. Langlois and Seignobos remark in their <i>Introduction
-to the Study of History</i> (translation by Berry; London, Duckworth,
-1898),</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">is based on the absence of indications with regard to
-a fact. From the circumstance of the fact [<i>e.g.</i>, of Paul&rsquo;s
-writing certain epistles] not being mentioned in any document it is
-inferred that there was no such fact&#8202;&hellip;. It rests on a
-feeling which in ordinary life is expressed by saying: &ldquo;If it
-were true, we should have heard of it.&rdquo; &hellip; In order that
-such reasoning should be justified it would be necessary that every
-fact should have been observed and recorded in writing, and that all
-the records should have been preserved. Now the greater part of the
-documents which have been written have been lost, and the greater part
-of the events which happen are not recorded in writing. In the majority
-of cases the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb130" href="#pb130" name=
-"pb130">130</a>]</span>argument would be invalid. It must, therefore,
-be restricted to the cases where the conditions implied in it have been
-fulfilled. It is necessary not only that there should be now no
-documents in existence which mention the fact in question, but that
-there should never have been any.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Now it is notorious that in the case of the earliest Christian
-literature there was a special cause at work of a kind to lead to its
-disappearance; this was the perpetual alteration of standards of
-belief, and the anxiety of rival schools of thought to destroy one
-another&rsquo;s books. The philosophic authors above cited further
-point out that &ldquo;every manuscript is at the mercy of the least
-accident; its preservation or destruction is a matter of pure
-chance.&rdquo; In the case of Christian books malice prepense and
-<i lang="la">odium theologicum</i> were added to accident and mere
-chance.</p>
-<p>How, then, can Mr. W. B. Smith be sure that there were not fifty
-writings before the year 140 which by citation or otherwise attested
-the earlier existence of all or some of the Pauline Epistles? We have
-the merest debris of the earliest Christian literature. What right has
-he to argue as if he had the whole of it in the hollow of his hand? In
-such a context the argument from silence is absolute rubbish, and he
-ought to know it. But, alas, the orthodox apologist has trained him in
-this sphere to be content with &ldquo;demonstrations&rdquo; which in
-any other would be at once extinguished by ridicule.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Date of Paulines to be determined by
-contents</span> Obviously the genuineness and date of the Pauline
-Epistles can only be determined by their contents, and not by a
-supposed deficiency of allusions to them in a literature that is
-well-nigh completely lost to us. Judged by these considerations, and by
-the hundreds of undesigned coincidences with the Book of Acts, we
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb131" href="#pb131" name=
-"pb131">131</a>]</span>must conclude in regard to most of them that
-they are from the hand of the Paul who is so familiar a figure in that
-book. The author of the Paulines has just the same supreme and
-exclusive interest in the crucifixion, death, and resurrection of Jesus
-the Messiah as the Paul of Acts; he manifests everywhere the same
-aloofness from the earthly life and teaching of Jesus. They yield the
-same story as does Acts of his birth and upbringing, of his persecution
-of the Messianist followers of Jesus and of his conversion; much the
-same record of his missionary travels can be reconstructed from the
-Letters as we have in Acts. Yet there is no sign of borrowing on either
-side. By way of casting doubt on the Pauline Letters the deniers of the
-historicity insist on the fact that in Acts there is no hint of Paul
-ever having written Epistles to the Churches he created or visited. Why
-should there be? <span class="marginnote">Undesigned agreement between
-Acts and Paulines</span>To a companion Paul must have been much more
-than a mere writer of letters. To Luke the letter writing must have
-seemed the least important part of Paul&rsquo;s activity, although for
-us the accident of their survival makes the Epistles seem of prime
-importance. In the Epistles, on the other hand, it is objected that
-there is no indication of any use of Acts. How could there be, seeing
-that the book was not penned (except on Van Manen&rsquo;s hypothesis)
-until long after the Epistles had been written and sent? I admit that
-Paul&rsquo;s account in Galatians of his personal history is difficult
-to reconcile with Acts, and has provided a regular crux for critics of
-every school.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2941src" href="#xd25e2941"
-name="xd25e2941src">1</a> The numerous coincidences, <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb132" href="#pb132" name=
-"pb132">132</a>]</span>however, of the two writings are all the more
-worthy of attention. If we found them agreeing pat with each other we
-should reasonably suspect some form of common authorship, if not of
-collusion. As it is they attest one another very much in the way in
-which the letters of Cicero attest and are attested by Sallust, Julius
-C&aelig;sar, and other contemporary or later writers of Roman history.
-There is neither that complete accord nor complete discord between Acts
-and Paulines, which would lead a competent historian to distrust either
-as fairly contemporary and trustworthy witnesses to the same epoch and
-province of history.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Paul witnesses a real Jesus</span> The
-testimony of Paul to a real and historical Jesus is to be gathered from
-those passages in which he directly refers to him or in which he refers
-to his brethren and disciples, for obviously a solar myth cannot have
-had brethren nor have personally commissioned disciples and apostles. I
-have pointed out in the first chapter of <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i>
-that the interest of Paul in the historical Jesus was slender, and have
-explained why it was so. But that is no excuse for ignoring it, or
-pretending it is not there.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Summary of Pauline evidence</span> What
-does it amount to? This, that Jesus the Messiah &ldquo;was born of the
-seed of David according to the flesh&rdquo; (<a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%201:2&amp;version=NRSV">Rom.
-i, 2</a>); that &ldquo;he was born of a woman, born under the
-law&rdquo;&mdash;that is to say, he was born like any other man, and
-not, as a later generation believed, of a virgin mother. It means also
-that he was born into Jewish circles, and that he was brought up as a
-Jew, obedient to the Mosaic law <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb133"
-href="#pb133" name="pb133">133</a>]</span>(<a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Gal%204:4&amp;version=NRSV">Gal.
-iv, 4</a>). His gospel was intended &ldquo;for the Jews in the first
-instance, but also for the Greeks&rdquo; (<a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%201:16&amp;version=NRSV">Rom.
-i, 16</a>, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%202:11&amp;version=NRSV">
-ii, 11</a>). He was &ldquo;made a minister of the circumcision&rdquo;
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%2015:8&amp;version=NRSV">Rom.
-xv, 8</a>); in other words, he had no quarrel with circumcision, even
-if he did not go out of his way to insist on it as part of the Law
-which, in the first Gospel it is recorded, he came not to destroy but
-to fulfil.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of Epistles to Timothy</span>
-According to <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Tim%202:8&amp;version=NRSV">
-Tim. ii, 8</a>, Jesus was &ldquo;of the seed of David according to my
-gospel.&rdquo; This implies that others than Paul did not admit the
-Davidic ancestry of Jesus, and it is implicitly rejected by Jesus
-himself in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2012:35&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark xii, 35</a>, as I point out in <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i>, ch.
-xii. That is good proof that the Epistle preserves a tradition that was
-quite independent on the later Gospels; and that proves that even if
-the Epistles to Timothy be not Paul&rsquo;s, they are anyhow very early
-documents, and constitute another witness to the historicity of Jesus.
-In the first of them, ch. vi, 13, we learn that Christ Jesus witnessed
-the good confession before Pontius Pilate.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Pauline evidence as to death of
-Jesus,</span> The passages in which Paul insists that Jesus was
-crucified, died, and rose again are so numerous that they almost defy
-collection. In <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%2015:3&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. xv, 3</a>, Paul relates the story of the resurrection at length.
-He says he had &ldquo;received&rdquo; it from those who believed before
-himself. From them he had learned that Christ had &ldquo;died for our
-sins,&rdquo; had been &ldquo;buried,&rdquo; and &ldquo;raised on the
-third day,&rdquo; after which he appeared first &ldquo;to Cephas&rdquo;
-or Peter, next &ldquo;to the Twelve&rdquo;&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the
-Twelve Apostles of whom we read in the Gospels that Jesus chose them
-and sent them forth to herald to the Jews the speedy approach of the
-Kingdom of God. Next &ldquo;he appeared to 500 brethren <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb134" href="#pb134" name="pb134">134</a>]</span>at
-once&rdquo; of whom most were still alive when Paul wrote; then
-&ldquo;to James,&rdquo; then &ldquo;to all the apostles,&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;last of all&rdquo; to Paul himself.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">and as to his Hebrew disciples</span> On
-the strength of this last vision of the Lord, Paul claimed to be as
-good an apostle as any of those who were apostles before him (<a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Gal%201:17&amp;version=NRSV">Gal.
-i, 17</a>). Accordingly, in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%209:1&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. ix, 1</a>, he writes in answer to those who pooh-poohed his
-mission: &ldquo;Am I not an apostle? Have I not seen Jesus our
-Lord?&rdquo; And again, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Cor%2011:22&amp;version=NRSV">
-2 Cor. xi, 22</a>, in the same vein: &ldquo;Are they Hebrews? So am I.
-Are they Israelites? So am I. Are they the seed of Abraham? So am I.
-Are they ministers of Christ? I speak as one beside myself. I am more;
-in labours more abundantly, in prisons,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-<p>So <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Cor%2012:11&amp;version=NRSV">
-2 Cor. xii, 11</a>: &ldquo;In nothing came I behind the very chiefest
-apostles.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From such passages we can realize what a purely Hebrew business the
-Church was to begin with. To be an apostle you had to be at least a
-Hebrew, and it is clear that the earlier apostles challenged the right
-of Paul to call himself an apostle on the ground that he had not, as
-they, been a personal follower of Jesus. Their challenge led him to
-preface his Epistles with an assertion of his apostleship: &ldquo;Paul,
-an apostle of Messiah Jesus.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We learn further (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%2011:23&amp;version=NRSV">1
-Cor. xi, 23</a> foll.) how on a certain night &ldquo;the Lord Jesus was
-betrayed&rdquo; or handed over to his enemies (N.B.&mdash;The occasion
-is referred to as one well known); how he then took bread, and when he
-had given thanks, brake it, etc. All this ill agrees with the view that
-Paul believed the Jesus of the Gospels to be an ancient Palestinian
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua. We read also (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%209:5&amp;version=NRSV">1
-Cor. ix, 5</a>) that &ldquo;the brethren of the Lord,&rdquo; like
-&ldquo;the rest of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb135" href="#pb135"
-name="pb135">135</a>]</span>the apostles and Cephas,&rdquo; led about
-wives (probably spiritual ones), and Paul claims the same right for
-himself. In Galatians, ch. ii, he recounts how he went up to Jerusalem
-to visit Cephas, and tarried with him fifteen days, on which occasion
-he associated with James, the brother of the solar myth. On another
-occasion this brother of the Sun-god sent emissaries to Antioch to warn
-Peter or Cephas against eating with Gentiles, as Paul had taught him to
-do. Peter had been &ldquo;intrusted with the gospel of the
-circumcision,&rdquo; as Paul with that of the uncircumcision. On this
-occasion there was a stand-up quarrel between Paul and the older
-apostle of the sun-myth, and Paul&rsquo;s Epistles ring from beginning
-to end with echoes of his quarrel over circumcision with the
-sun-myth&rsquo;s earlier followers.</p>
-<p>How do Mr. Robertson and his friends get round all this evidence?
-Their way out of it is beautifully simple. It consists in ruling out
-every passage as an interpolation that stands in their way. So I have
-seen an ill-tempered chess-player, when he lost his queen, kick over
-the chess-table and begin to swear. That is one device. The other is to
-pretend that the apostles with whom Paul was in personal touch were not
-apostles of the solar god, but of the Jewish high priest, who was also
-president of that secret society in whose bosom were acted the ritual
-and dramas or mystery-plays<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3044src" href=
-"#xd25e3044" name="xd25e3044src">2</a> of annually slain Joshuas, of
-vegetation-gods, of Osiris, Krishna, and the whole pack of mythical
-beings out of whom the Jewish Messiah Jesus was compacted.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The &ldquo;myth&rdquo; of the Twelve</span>
-Let us take first the &ldquo;myth,&rdquo; as Mr. Robertson styles it,
-of the Twelve Apostles. Needless to say, Mr. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb136" href="#pb136" name=
-"pb136">136</a>]</span>Robertson and his friends regard the Gospel
-story of their choice and mission as a fable. But they have the bad
-grace to turn up afresh in Paul&rsquo;s Epistles. Away with them,
-therefore, exclaims Mr. Robertson; and his friends echo his cry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the documents from which all scientific study of Christian
-origins must proceed&mdash;the Epistles of Paul&mdash;there is no
-evidence of such a body&rdquo; (<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>, p.
-341).</p>
-<p>In the passage in which the Twelve are mentioned (<a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%2015:3&amp;version=NRSV">1
-Cor. xv, 3</a> foll.) we are further instructed &ldquo;there is one
-interpolation on another.&rdquo; It does not in the least matter that
-the passage stands in every manuscript, and in every ancient version
-and commentator. It offends Mr. Robertson and his friends; so we must
-cut it out. <i lang="la">Bos locutus est</i>; and he complacently sums
-up his argument (p. 342) in the words: &ldquo;Paul, then, knew nothing
-of a &lsquo;twelve.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Difficulties about Judas</span> And yet he
-notes (p. 354) that in the fragments of the Peter Gospel recently
-recovered from the sands of Egypt, Jesus is still credited with twelve
-disciples immediately after the crucifixion, and it is therein related
-that they &ldquo;wept and grieved&rdquo; at the loss of their master.
-No hint, Mr. Robertson justly remarks, is here given of the defection
-of Judas from the group. No more is any hint given of it in
-Paul&rsquo;s Epistle. These two sources, therefore, support each other
-in a most unexpected manner in ignoring the Judas story. At the same
-time <i>twelve</i> disciples or apostles (in the context they are the
-same thing) are incredible as an interpolation; for an interpolator
-would have adjusted his interpolation to the early diffused story of
-Judas&rsquo;s treason, and have written not &ldquo;the Twelve,&rdquo;
-but &ldquo;the Eleven.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb137"
-href="#pb137" name="pb137">137</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Mr. Robertson admits that &ldquo;at the stage of the composition of
-this (the Peter) Gospel, the Judas myth was not current,&rdquo; and
-that therefore the &ldquo;Judas myth&rdquo; is later than that of the
-Twelve. It must, by parity of reasoning, be later than the text of
-Paul, which, therefore, if interpolated, must have been interpolated
-before the legend, if such it be, of Judas the traitor got abroad. Now
-we already meet with this legend in Mark, and it is taken over from him
-by the other evangelists, Matthew embellishing it with the tale of
-Judas hanging himself, and Luke in Acts with that of his bursting
-asunder. Papias, before <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 140, knew of
-further details of Judas&rsquo;s story of a most <i>macabre</i> kind;
-the story stood also in the lost form of gospel used by Celsus, about
-160&ndash;180, against whom Origen wrote. The tale of Judas, then, was
-of wide and early diffusion; yet Mr. Robertson, as we have seen, admits
-that at the time when the Peter Gospel emerged the Judas myth was not
-yet abroad. Neither, then, can it have been current at the stage of the
-interpolating of Paul&rsquo;s Epistle, and this interpolation,
-therefore, is prior to all the Gospels, to Acts, and to the sources
-used by Papias and by the authors of the Peter Gospel and of
-Celsus&rsquo;s Gospel. Nevertheless, on p. 357, Mr. Robertson, as a
-last method of avoiding Paul&rsquo;s testimony on another point, is
-inclined to &ldquo;decide with Van Manen that all the Pauline Epistles
-are pseudepigraphic,&rdquo; and merely express the views of
-&ldquo;second-century Christian champions.&rdquo; He therefore commits
-himself to the supposition that Epistles forged not earlier than
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 130, were yet interpolated in the
-interests of a tradition in which &ldquo;the Twelve are treated as
-holding together after the resurrection (p. 354),&rdquo; which
-tradition, however, must <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb138" href=
-"#pb138" name="pb138">138</a>]</span>have long before that date been
-abrogated by the growing popularity of the Judas myth. Could texts be
-treated with greater levity? I may also note that the inconsistency of
-Paul&rsquo;s statement that Jesus &ldquo;was seen&rdquo; by the Twelve
-with the Judas story was so patent to scribes of the third and fourth
-centuries that they had already begun to alter it in the Greek texts
-and versions to the statement that &ldquo;he was seen by the
-Eleven.&rdquo; Now is it likely that Paul&rsquo;s text at any time
-would have been interpolated in such a way as to make it contradict so
-early and popular a Christian belief as that in the treason and hurried
-suicide of Judas? The hypothesis is absurd, and not the less absurd
-because it is framed merely to save the other hypothesis that the
-twelve apostles of the Gospels were for the authors of the Gospels and
-for their readers an allegory of the twelve signs of the Zodiac
-revolving round the solar myth Joshua. Such are the lengths to which
-the exigencies of his &ldquo;mythic&rdquo; system drive Mr.
-Robertson.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Paul testifies that the older apostles
-conversed with Jesus</span> Some texts which imply that Paul, if he did
-not actually see Jesus walking about on this earth, yet imply that he
-might have done so, he seems to despair of, and passes them over in
-silence. Such is the text, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Cor%205:16&amp;version=NRSV">
-2 Cor. v, 16</a>: &ldquo;Wherefore we henceforth know no man after the
-flesh: <i>even though we have known Christ</i> after the flesh, yet now
-we know him so no more.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The older apostles, as is implied in verse 12 of the same chapter,
-prided themselves on their personal intercourse with Jesus, and twitted
-Paul with never having enjoyed it. Paul&rsquo;s answer is that
-<i>henceforth</i>&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, now that he is converted&mdash;he
-has no interest in any man, not even in Jesus, as a being of flesh and
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb139" href="#pb139" name=
-"pb139">139</a>]</span>blood, but only as a vessel filled with the
-spirit of election, and so a new creature in Christ, the first member
-of the heavenly kingdom on earth. He seems to aver that he had actually
-seen his Redeemer in the flesh, but before he was converted. But such
-knowledge with him counts nothing in his own favour; nor will he allow
-it to count in favour of the older apostles. Their association with
-Jesus in the flesh failed to render them apostles in any other sense
-than his vision of the risen Jesus rendered him one also.</p>
-<p>But there are other texts in Paul most inconvenient to the zodiacal
-theory of the apostles. Such are the texts I have cited from Galatians.
-How does Mr. Robertson get rid of their evidence?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Epistle to Galatians attests reality of
-Peter, John, and James</span> He begins (p. 342) with the usual
-<i>caveat</i> that the Epistle to the Galatians is probably not
-genuine, and, even if it be, is nevertheless &ldquo;frequently
-interpolated.&rdquo; And yet any reader, with eyes in his head and an
-intelligence behind them, must recognize in this Epistle a writing
-which, above all other ancient writings, rings true, and is instinct
-with the personality of a missionary, who in it bares his inmost heart
-to his converts. Against this impression, which it must leave upon
-anyone but a pedant, and against the fact that in the external
-tradition there is nothing to suggest either that it is not genuine or
-that it is a mass of interpolations, what has Mr. Robertson to offer us
-in support of his thesis? Nothing, except his <i lang="la">ipse
-dixit</i>. We are to accept on a purely philological question the
-verdict of one whose mythological equations are on a par with those of
-the editors of the <i>Banner of Israel</i>. However, he does condescend
-to explain away the apostles with whom, at Jerusalem, <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb140" href="#pb140" name="pb140">140</a>]</span>Paul
-held personal converse; and, taking from Professor W. B. Smith a cue,
-which is also caught at by Professor Drews, he assures us that the
-Peter (<i>or</i> Cephas), James, and John, whom Paul knew personally,
-were not men who had been &ldquo;in direct intercourse with
-Jesus,&rdquo; but were merely &ldquo;leaders of an existing
-sect&rdquo;&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, of the secret sect of Jews who, after
-celebrating endless ritual dramas of annually slain Joshuas and
-vegetation-gods, had, by dint of prolonged arch&aelig;ological study of
-pagan mythology, art, and statuary, elaborated the four Gospels,
-adopted the Old Testament as their holy scripture, and Messianic
-Judaism as their distinctive creed; for such in essence the
-Christianity of the last half of the first century was, as even Mr.
-Robertson will hardly deny.</p>
-<p>But Paul (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Gal%201:18-19&amp;version=NRSV">Gal.
-i, 18, 19</a>) expressly ranks Peter, or Cephas, together with James,
-among the apostles, using that word in a wide sense of persons
-commissioned by Jesus; and he describes James and Cephas and John
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Gal%202:9&amp;version=NRSV">ii,
-9</a>) as men &ldquo;who were reputed to be pillars,&rdquo; or leading
-men of the Church. He declares that in the end they made friends with
-him, and arranged that he should preach the Kingdom to the
-uncircumcised Gentiles as they were doing to the circumcised Jews.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The &ldquo;Twelve&rdquo; were apostles of
-the Jewish High Priest!</span> Now who had commissioned these three
-apostles, if not Jesus? Who had taught them about the Kingdom and sent
-them forth to proclaim it? Mr. Robertson, oddly enough, scents a
-difficulty in the idea of a Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, albeit son of
-Miriam a virgin, sending forth apostles; so he decides that
-&ldquo;apostles&rdquo; in Galatians means &ldquo;the twelve apostles of
-the Patriarch, of whom he must have had knowledge&rdquo; <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb141" href="#pb141" name="pb141">141</a>]</span>(p.
-342). Of what Patriarch? Why, of course, &ldquo;of the Patriarch or
-High Priest,&rdquo; whose &ldquo;twelve apostles&rdquo; formed
-&ldquo;an institution which preceded and survived the beginning of the
-Christian era&rdquo; (p. 344). And, to use Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s own
-phrase in such connections, &ldquo;the plot thickens&rdquo; when we
-find (<i>ibid.</i>) that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">the twelve Jewish Apostles aforesaid, who were
-commissioned by the High Priest&mdash;and later by the Patriarch at
-Tiberias&mdash;to collect tribute from the scattered faithful,</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>were no others than the Twelve Apostles who wrote the <span class=
-"marginnote">And they wrote the
-<i>Didach&eacute;</i>!</span>&ldquo;teaching of the Twelve
-Apostles,&rdquo; recovered in 1873 by Bryennios! These &ldquo;Judaizing
-apostles preached circumcision,&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3163src" href="#xd25e3163" name="xd25e3163src">3</a> and
-&ldquo;were among the leaders of the Jesuist community in its
-pre-Pauline days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This discovery of Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s is of stupendous interest.
-It amounts to nothing less than this: that the pre-Pauline secret sect
-of &ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo; which kept up in Jerusalem the cult of the
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, with his late Persian appendage of a virgin
-mother Miriam; and, not content with doing that, padded it out with
-ritual dramas of vegetation-gods, cults of Osiris, of Dionysus,
-Proteus, Hermes, Janus, and fifty other gods and heroes (whose legends
-Mr. Robertson has studied in Smith&rsquo;s <i>Dictionary of
-Mythology</i>)&mdash;this sect, I say, had for its president the Jewish
-High Priest, and for its &ldquo;pillars&rdquo; the apostles, or
-messengers, whom the said High Priest was in the habit of sending out
-to the Jews of the Dispersion for the collection of the Temple tribute!
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb142" href="#pb142" name=
-"pb142">142</a>]</span></p>
-<p>This High Priest, we further learn on p. 342, was the
-&ldquo;<i>man</i>&rdquo; who sent out the apostles in the first verse
-of Galatians, from which apostles Paul expressly dissociates himself
-when he writes: &ldquo;Paul, an apostle, not from men, neither through
-a man, but through Jesus Christ.&rdquo; Here we are to understand that
-Paul is pitting his Sun-God-Saviour Joshua against the Jewish High
-Priest. The Sun-god has sent him forth, though not the other apostles.
-That must be Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s interpretation, and we must give up
-the older and more obvious one which saw in the words &ldquo;not from
-men, neither through man,&rdquo; no reference to a Jewish high priest
-or priests, but a mere enhancement of the claim, ever reiterated by
-Paul, that he owed his apostleship direct to the risen Jesus Christ and
-God the Father; so that he held a divine and spiritual, not an earthly
-and carnal, commission.</p>
-<p>My readers must by now feel very much like poor little Alice when
-the Black Queen was dragging her across Wonderland. If they find the
-sensation delightful, they can, I daresay, enjoy plenty more of it by a
-closer study of Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s books on the subject. If they do
-not like it, then they must not blame me for taking him seriously; for
-is he not acclaimed by Dr. Drews as our greatest exegete of the New
-Testament, Dr. Frazer alone excepted? Is he not the spiritual guide of
-learned German orientalists like Winckler and Jensen? Has not Professor
-W. B. Smith assured us of how much he feels he can learn from such a
-scholar and thinker, though &ldquo;he has preferred not to poach on his
-preserves.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3179src" href="#xd25e3179"
-name="xd25e3179src">4</a> It is, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb143"
-href="#pb143" name="pb143">143</a>]</span>therefore, incumbent on me to
-probe his work a little further. Let us return to the passage,
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%2015:5&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. xv, 5</a>, where we are told that Jesus appeared first to
-Cephas. We have already seen that the Peter of the Gospels is in this
-new system alternately a sign of the Zodiac, a Mithraic myth, an alias
-of Janus, of Proteus, a member of any other Pantheon you like.
-Obviously he has nothing to do with Paul&rsquo;s acquaintance. The
-latter in turn is &ldquo;not one of the pupils and companions of the
-crucified Jesus&rdquo; (p. 348). How, indeed, could he be, seeing that
-Jesus is a Sun-god crucified upon the Milky Way? No, he is something
-much humbler&mdash;to wit, &ldquo;simply one of the apostles of a
-Judaic cult that preaches circumcision,&rdquo; and, more definitely, as
-we have seen, one of the twelve apostles of the Jewish High Priest.
-James and John must equally have belonged to this interesting band of
-apostles.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jesus of Nazareth was Jesus Ben
-Pandira,</span> This being so, it is pertinent to ask why Paul so
-persistently indicates that these apostles and pillars of the Church
-had seen Jesus and conversed with him in the flesh. To this question
-Mr. Robertson attempts no answer. For he believes that the crucified
-Jesus, to whom Paul refers on every page of his Epistles, was not the
-Jesus of Christian tradition, but &ldquo;Jesus Ben Pandira, dead long
-before, and represented by no preserved biography or teachings
-whatever&rdquo; (p. 378). This Jesus had &ldquo;really been only hanged
-on a tree&rdquo; (<i>ibid.</i>); but &ldquo;the factors of a
-crucifixion myth,&rdquo; among which we must not forget its
-&ldquo;phallic significance,&rdquo; for that &ldquo;should connect with
-all its other aspects&rdquo; (p. 375),&mdash;these factors, says Mr.
-Robertson, &ldquo;were conceivably strong enough to turn the hanging
-into a crucifixion.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb144" href=
-"#pb144" name="pb144">144</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">who had died one hundred years
-before</span> It follows that Paul was quite mistaken in indicating the
-apostles whom he conversed with at Jerusalem to be apostles of the
-crucified one; in order to be so, they must all have been over-ripe
-centenarians, since Pandira had died at least a hundred years before.
-It matters nothing that on the next page (379) Mr. Robertson entertains
-doubts as to whether this worthy ever lived at all. Who else, he asks
-(p. 364), could &ldquo;the Pauline Jesus, who has taught nothing and
-done nothing,&rdquo; be, save &ldquo;a doctrinal evolution from the
-Jesus of a hundred years before?&rdquo; We must, he adds with
-delightful <i lang="la">ignoratio elenchi</i>, &ldquo;perforce assume
-such a long evolution.&rdquo; Otherwise it would not be
-&ldquo;intelligible that, even if he had been only hanged after
-stoning, he should by that time have come to figure mythically as
-crucified.&rdquo; He admits that Paul&rsquo;s &ldquo;references to a
-crucified Jesus are constant, and offer no sign of
-interpolation.&rdquo; And he is quite ready to admit also that,
-&ldquo;if the Jesus of Paul were really a personage put to death under
-Pontius Pilate, the Epistles (of Paul) would give us the strongest
-ground for accepting an actual crucifixion.&rdquo; But, alas, the Jesus
-put to death under Pontius Pilate, the Javelin-man, is no more than an
-allegory of Joshua the ancient Palestinian Sun-god, rolled up with a
-vegetation-god and other mythical beings, and slain afresh once a year.
-There is thus no alternative left but to identify Paul&rsquo;s
-crucified Jesus with Jesus Ben Pandira; and Mr. Robertson, with a sigh
-of relief, embraces the alternative, for he feels that Paul&rsquo;s
-evidence is menacing his whole structure.</p>
-<p>It was nasty of Paul not to indicate more clearly to us that by his
-crucified Jesus he intended Jesus Ben Pandira; and, in view of the
-circumstance that we <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb145" href="#pb145"
-name="pb145">145</a>]</span>have left to us no &ldquo;biography or
-teachings whatever&rdquo; of this Jesus, Paul might surely have
-communicated to us some details of his career. It would have saved Mr.
-Robertson the trouble of inventing them.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">James, brother of Jesus, only in a
-Pickwickian sense</span> At first sight, too, it was extremely
-inconsiderate of Paul to &ldquo;thicken the plot&rdquo; by bringing on
-his stage a brother of Jesus Ben Pandira or of the solar myth Joshua. I
-am not sure which. But Mr. Robertson, like Alice, is out for strange
-adventures, and prepared to face any emergency. &ldquo;Brother,&rdquo;
-therefore, is here to be taken in a Pickwickian sense only. And here we
-will let Dr. W. B. Smith take up the parable, for it is he who has,
-with the help of St. Jerome, found his friends a way out of their
-difficulty. Moreover, he is more in need of a way out than even Mr.
-Robertson; for he declines to admit behind Jesus of Nazareth
-even&mdash;what Mr. Robertson styles, p. 364&mdash;&ldquo;a Talmudic
-trace of <i>a</i> Jesus (Ben Pandira), who was put to death on the eve
-of the Passover about a century before the time of Pontius
-Pilate.&rdquo; Professor Smith cannot hesitate, therefore, to be of
-opinion that, when Paul calls James a brother of the Lord, he does not
-&ldquo;imply any family kinship,&rdquo; but one of a &ldquo;class of
-earnest Messianists, zealots of obedience&rdquo; to the Mosaic Law. He
-appeals in confirmation of his conjecture to the apostrophe of Jesus
-when his mother and brethren came to arrest him as an ecstatic
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%203:31-35&amp;version=NRSV">Mark
-iii, 31&ndash;35</a>):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Who is my mother and my brethren? &hellip; whosoever
-shall do the will of God, the same is my brother and sister and
-mother.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>He also appeals to <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%209:5&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. ix, 5</a>, where Paul alludes to &ldquo;the brethren of the
-Lord&rdquo; as claiming a right to lead about a wife that is a sister.
-And he argues that those who in Corinth, to the imperilling of
-Christian <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb146" href="#pb146" name=
-"pb146">146</a>]</span>unity, said, some, &ldquo;I am of Cephas&rdquo;;
-others, &ldquo;I am of Christ&rdquo;; others, &ldquo;I am of
-Apollos,&rdquo; were known as brethren of Christ, of Cephas, etc. Now
-it is true that Paul and other early Christian writers regarded the
-members of the Church as <i>brethren</i> or as <i>sisters</i>, just as
-the members of monastic society have ever styled themselves
-<i>brothers</i> and <i>sisters</i> of one another. But there is no
-example of a believer being called a brother <i>of the Lord</i> or
-<i>of Jesus</i>.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3248src" href="#xd25e3248"
-name="xd25e3248src">5</a> The passage in Mark and its parallels are,
-according to Professor Smith, purely legendary and allegorical, since
-he denies that Jesus ever lived; and he has no right, therefore, to
-appeal to them in order to decide what Paul intended by the phrase when
-he used it, as before, not of a mythical, but of a concrete, case.
-However, if Professor Smith is intent on appealing to the Gospels, then
-he must allow equal weight to such a text as <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2013:55&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew xiii, 55</a>: &ldquo;Is not this the carpenter&rsquo;s son? Is
-not his mother called Mary? and his brethren, James and Joseph and
-Simon and Judas? And his sisters, are they not all with us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Did all these people, we may ask, including his mother, stand in a
-merely spiritual relationship to Jesus? Impossible. If they were not
-flesh and blood relations, then the passage is meaningless even as
-allegorical romance. Again, in the very passage to which Professor
-Smith appeals (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%203:31-35&amp;version=NRSV">Mark
-iii, 31&ndash;35</a>), we read that his <i>mother and brethren</i> came
-and stood without, and it was their interference with him that provoked
-the famous apostrophe. Were they, too, only spiritually related to him?
-Were they, too, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb147" href="#pb147"
-name="pb147">147</a>]</span>&ldquo;earnest Messianists, zealots of
-obedience&rdquo;? In John&rsquo;s Gospel we hear afresh that his
-brethren believed not in him. Were they, too, mere &ldquo;earnest
-Messianists, zealots of obedience&rdquo;? When Josephus, again, <a id=
-"xd25e3268" name="xd25e3268"></a>alludes to &ldquo;James the Just who
-was brother of Jesus,&rdquo; is he, an enemy of the Christian faith,
-adopting Christian slang? Does he, too, mean merely to &ldquo;denote
-religious relation without the remotest hint of blood kinship&rdquo;?
-In <a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%209:5&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. ix, 5</a>, the most natural interpretation is that the brothers
-of the Lord are his real brothers, whose names are supplied in the
-Gospels.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Both in Paul and in the Gospels the
-&ldquo;myth&rdquo; has parents and brothers and sisters</span> Here,
-then, are four wholly independent groups of ancient documents, of which
-one gives us the names of four of the brothers of Jesus, clearly
-indicating that they were real brothers, and sons of Mary and the
-Carpenter; while the other group (the Paulines) speak as ever of his
-&ldquo;brothers,&rdquo; but give us the name of one only, James; the
-third&mdash;viz., the works of Josephus&mdash;allude to one
-only&mdash;viz., James, but without indicating that there were not
-several. Lastly, the <i>we</i> document (<a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2021:18&amp;version=NRSV">Acts
-xxi, 18</a>) testifies that &ldquo;Paul went in with us unto
-James.&rdquo; Is not this enough? Surely, if we were here treating of
-profane history, no sane student would for a moment hesitate to accept
-such data, furnished by wholly independent and coincident documents, as
-historical. Professor Smith&rsquo;s other guess, that in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%209:5&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. ix, 5</a>, <i>brethren</i> means <i>spiritual brethren</i>, just
-begs the question, and, like his spiritual interpretation of
-James&rsquo;s relationship, offends Greek idiom, as I said above. Paul,
-like the author of <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2021:17&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xxi, 17</a>, speaks of &ldquo;the brother&rdquo; or of &ldquo;the
-brethren&rdquo;&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%208:11&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. viii, 11</a>: &ldquo;<i>the brother</i> for whose sake Christ
-died&rdquo;; but when <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb148" href=
-"#pb148" name="pb148">148</a>]</span>the person whose brother it is is
-named, a blood relationship is always conveyed in the Paulines as in
-the rest of the New Testament. If &ldquo;brethren of the Lord&rdquo; in
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%209:5&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. ix, 5</a>, does not mean real brethren, why are they
-distinguished from all the apostles, who on Professor Smith&rsquo;s
-assumption, above all others, merited to be called &ldquo;brethren of
-the Lord&rdquo;? The appeal, moreover, to <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%201:12&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. i, 12</a> foll., is absurd; for Paul is alluding there to
-factions among the believers of Corinth; how is it possible to
-interpret these factions as brotherhoods? There was only one
-brotherhood of the faithful, according to Paul&rsquo;s ideal; and the
-relationship involved in such phrases as &ldquo;I of Cephas,&rdquo;
-&ldquo;I of Paul,&rdquo; is that of a convert to his teacher and
-evangelist, not that of spiritual brethren to each other. As used by
-his Corinthian converts, such phrases were a direct menace to spiritual
-brotherhood and unity, and not an expression of it; and that is why
-Paul wished to hear no more of them. When he makes appeal to them
-Professor Smith damages rather than benefits his argument.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jerome&rsquo;s opinion about Jesus&rsquo;s
-brothers</span> There remains the appeal to Jerome (<i lang="la">Ecce
-Deus</i>, p. 237):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">No less an authority than Jerome has expressed the
-correct idea on this point. In commenting on <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Gal%201:19&amp;version=NRSV">
-Gal. i, 19</a>, he says (in sum): &ldquo;James was called the
-Lord&rsquo;s brother on account of his high character, his incomparable
-faith, and his extraordinary wisdom; the other apostles are also called
-brothers&rdquo; (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jn%2020:17&amp;version=NRSV">John
-xx, 17</a>).</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Here Professor Smith withholds from his readers the fact that Jerome
-regarded James the brother of Jesus as his first cousin. It is just as
-difficult for a mythical personage to have a first cousin as to have a
-brother. Moreover, the reasons which actuated <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb149" href="#pb149" name=
-"pb149">149</a>]</span>Jerome to deny that Jesus had real brethren
-was&mdash;as the <i lang="la">Encyclop&aelig;dia Biblica</i> (art.
-James) points out&mdash;&ldquo;a prepossession in favour of the
-perpetual virginity of Mary the mother of Jesus.&rdquo; It is, indeed,
-a hollow theory that, in order to its justification, must take refuge
-in the Encratite rubbish of Jerome.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Mutual independence of Pauline and Gospel
-stories of the risen Christ</span> If the crucified Jesus of Paul was
-Jesus Ben Pandira, stoned to death and hanged on a tree between the
-years <span class="sc">B.C.</span> 106&ndash;79, then how can Paul have
-written (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%2015:6&amp;version=NRSV">1
-Cor. xv, 6</a>) that the greater part of the 500 brethren to whom Jesus
-appeared were still alive? I neither assert nor deny the possibility of
-so many at once having fallen under the spell of a common illusion,
-though I believe the annals of religious ecstasy might afford
-parallels. But this I do maintain, that the passage records a
-conviction in Paul&rsquo;s mind that Jesus, after his death by
-crucifixion, had appeared to many at once, and that not a hundred years
-before, but at a comparatively recent time. That is also Mr.
-Robertson&rsquo;s view; for, rather than face the passage, he whips out
-his knife and cuts it out of the text. Yet there is not a single reason
-for doing so, except that it upsets his hypothesis; for the
-circumstance that the incident cannot be reconciled with the Gospel
-stories of the apparitions of the risen Christ clearly shows that
-Paul&rsquo;s text is independent on them. Mr. Robertson argues that, if
-it were not a late interpolation, the evangelists would have found it
-in Paul and incorporated it in their Gospels. I ask in turn,
-<span class="corr" id="xd25e3348" title="Source: Why">why</span> did
-the interpolator thrust into the Pauline letter not only this passage,
-but at least two other incidents (the apparitions to Peter and James)
-which figure in no canonical Gospel? Why, if the Evangelists were bound
-to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb150" href="#pb150" name=
-"pb150">150</a>]</span>consult the Paulines in giving an account of
-these posthumous appearances, was not the hypothetical interpolator of
-the Paulines equally bound to consult them? The most natural hypothesis
-is that the Gospels on one side and the Pauline Epistles on the other
-led independent lives, till their respective traditions were so firmly
-fixed that no one could tamper with either of them. The conflict,
-therefore, such as it is, between this Pauline passage and the Gospels
-is the strongest possible proof of its genuineness.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The Pauline account of the Eucharist</span>
-Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s treatment of the Pauline description of the
-origin of the Lord&rsquo;s Supper as described in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Cor%2011:23-27&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Cor. xi, 23&ndash;27</a>, is another example of his determination
-simply to rule out all evidence which he cannot explain away.
-&ldquo;<i>It is evident</i>,&rdquo; he writes (p. 347), that this whole
-passage, &ldquo;or at least the first part of it, is an
-interpolation.&rdquo; We would expect him to produce support for this
-view from some MS. or ancient version for what is so <i>evident</i>.
-Not at all; for he takes no interest in, and has no turn for, the
-scientific criticism of texts <i>a posteriori</i>, but deals with them
-by <i>a priori</i> intuitions of his own. &ldquo;The passage in
-question (verses 23, 24, 25) has every appearance of being an
-interpolation.&rdquo; He is the first to discover such an appearance.
-It is well known that the words &ldquo;took bread&rdquo; as far as
-&ldquo;in my blood&rdquo; recur in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk%2022:19-20&amp;version=NRSV">
-Luke xxii, 19, 20</a>; and this is how Mr. Robertson deals with the
-problem of their recurrence: &ldquo;No one pretends that the Third
-Gospel was in existence in Paul&rsquo;s time; and the only question is
-whether Luke copied the Epistle or a late copyist supplemented the
-Epistle from Luke.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Surely there is another alternative&mdash;viz., that a <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb151" href="#pb151" name=
-"pb151">151</a>]</span>copyist of Luke supplemented the Gospel from
-Paul. This is as conceivable as that a copyist of Paul supplemented the
-Epistle from Luke. It is also an hypothesis that has textual evidence
-in favour of it; for the Bezan Codex and several old Latin MSS., as
-well as the old Syriac version, omit the words, <i>which is given on
-your behalf</i>, as far as <i>on your behalf is shed</i>&mdash;that is
-to say, the end of verse 19 and the whole of verse 20. <span class=
-"corr" id="xd25e3386" title="Added by author">But, since the Bezan
-omission does not cover the whole of the matter taken from Corinthians,
-we may suppose that Luke borrowed the words from the Epistle in
-question.</span> Here we have a palmary example of the mingled temerity
-and ignorance with which Mr. Robertson applies his principle of
-&ldquo;vital interpolations&rdquo; to remove anything from the New
-Testament texts which stands in the way of his far-fetched hypotheses
-and artificial combinations.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jesus Ben Pandira in Talmud <i>is</i> Jesus
-of Nazareth</span> But it is time to inquire whence Mr. Robertson
-derived his certainty that Jesus Ben Pandira died in the reign of
-Alexander Jannaeus, <span class="sc">B.C.</span> 106&ndash;79. Dr.
-Samuel Kraus, in his exhaustive study of Talmudic notices of Jesus of
-Nazareth (<i lang="de">Das Leben Jesu nach j&uuml;dischen Quellen</i>,
-Berlin, 1902, p. 242) assumes as a fact beyond dispute that the Jeschu
-or Joshua Ben Pandira (or Ben Stada or Ben Satda) mentioned in the
-<i>Toldoth Jeschu</i> is Jesus of Nazareth. In the Toldoth he is set in
-the reign of Tiberius. This Toldoth is not earlier than <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 400, and took its information from the
-pseudo-Hegesippus. The Spanish historian Abraham b. Da&ucirc;d (about
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 1100) already noticed that the Talmudic
-tradition alluded to by Mr. Robertson set the birth of Jesus of
-Nazareth a hundred years too early; but the same tradition corrects
-itself in that it assigns Salome Alexandra to Alexander Jannai as his
-wife, and then, confusing her with Queen Helena the proselyte, brings
-the incident down to the right date. &ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo; says
-Dr. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb152" href="#pb152" name=
-"pb152">152</a>]</span>Kraus (p. 183), &ldquo;we have got to do here
-with a chronological error.&rdquo; Lightfoot, to whose <i lang=
-"la"><span class="corr" id="xd25e3415" title=
-"Source: Horae Hebraicae">Hor&aelig; Hebraic&aelig;</span></i> Mr.
-Robertson refers in his footnote (p. 363), also assumed that by Jesus
-Ben Pandira, or son of Panthera, the Talmudists intended Jesus of
-Nazareth. Celsus (about <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 170) attested a
-Jewish tradition that Jesus Christ was Mary&rsquo;s son by a Roman
-soldier named Panthera, and later on even Christian writers worked
-Panthera into Mary&rsquo;s pedigree. Such is the origin of the Talmudic
-tradition exploited by Mr. Robertson. It is almost worthless; but, so
-far as it goes, it overthrows Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s hypothesis.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The disputed Epistles of Paul so many fresh
-witnesses</span> The Epistles to Colossians, Thessalonians, and the
-so-called Pastorals, if they are not genuine works of Paul, form so
-many fresh witnesses against the hypothesis of Mr. Robertson and his
-friends. Such a verse as <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Col%202:14&amp;version=NRSV">
-Col. ii, 14</a>, where in highly metaphorical language Jesus is said to
-have nailed the bond of all our trespasses to the cross, is an
-unmistakable allusion to the historical crucifixion; as also is the
-phrase &ldquo;blood of his cross&rdquo; in the same epistle, <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Col%201:20&amp;version=NRSV">
-i, 20</a>. In <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Thes%204:14&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Thess. iv, 14</a>, is attested the belief that Jesus died and rose
-again; and again in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Thes%205:10&amp;version=NRSV">
-v, 10</a>. I have already indicated the express reference to the
-crucifixion <i>under Pontius Pilate</i> in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Tm%205:13&amp;version=NRSV">
-1 Tim. v, 13</a>, and the statement in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Tm%202:8&amp;version=NRSV">
-2 Tim. ii, 8</a>, that Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, was of the
-seed of David. These epistles may not be from Paul&rsquo;s hand, but
-they are unmistakably early; and their forgers, if they be forged,
-undoubtedly held that Jesus had really lived. So also did the author,
-whoever he was, of Hebrews, who speaks, ch. <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Heb%202:9&amp;version=NRSV">
-ii, 9</a>, of Jesus suffering death, in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Heb%202:18&amp;version=NRSV">
-ii, 18</a>, of his &ldquo;having suffered, being tempted.&rdquo; In
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Heb%207:14&amp;version=NRSV">
-vii, 14</a>, we read this: &ldquo;For it is evident that our
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb153" href="#pb153" name=
-"pb153">153</a>]</span>Lord hath sprung out of Judah.&rdquo; If Jesus
-was only a myth, how could this writer have written, probably before
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 70, that he was of the tribe of Judah? In
-ch. <a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Heb%2012:2&amp;version=NRSV">
-xii, 2</a>, we are told that Jesus &ldquo;endured the cross.&rdquo;
-That this epistle was penned before the destruction of Jerusalem by
-Titus is made probable by the statement in <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Heb%209:8&amp;version=NRSV">
-ix, 8</a>, that &ldquo;the first tabernacle is yet standing.&rdquo;
-Indeed, most of the epistle is turned into nonsense by any other
-hypothesis.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Catholic Epistles</span> The first Epistle
-of Peter is very likely pseudepigraphic, but it cannot be later than
-the year 100. It testifies, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Pet%204:1&amp;version=NRSV">
-iv, 1</a>, that Christ &ldquo;suffered in the flesh.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Johannine Epistles are probably from the same hand as the Fourth
-Gospel, and belong to the period 90&ndash;110 <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> Their author insists (<a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Jn%204:2&amp;version=NRSV">1
-John iv, 2</a>), as against the Docetes, that &ldquo;Jesus Christ is
-come in the flesh.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Epistle of Jude, about the same date, exhorts those to whom it
-was addressed to &ldquo;remember the words which have been spoken
-before by the Apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Book of Revelation</span> Lastly, the
-Revelation of John can be definitely dated about <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 93. It testifies to the existence of several churches
-in Asia Minor in that age, and, in spite of the fanciful and oriental
-character of its imagery, it is from beginning to end irreconcilable
-with the supposition that its author did not believe in a Jesus who had
-lived, died, and was coming again to establish the new Jerusalem on
-earth. In ch. xxii, 16, Jesus is made to testify that he is the root
-and offspring of David. That does not look as if its author regarded
-Jesus as a solar or any other sort of myth. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb154" href="#pb154" name="pb154">154</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2941" href="#xd25e2941src" name="xd25e2941">1</a></span> The
-difficulties largely vanish on the assumption that Galatians is the
-earliest of the Epistles, and that in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Gal%202:1&amp;version=NRSV">
-Gal. ii, 1</a>, <i>dia d</i> &ldquo;after four&rdquo; was misread in an
-early copy as <i>dia id</i> &ldquo;after fourteen.&rdquo; This is
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb132n" href="#pb132n" name=
-"pb132n">132</a>]</span>Professor Lake&rsquo;s conjecture. Such
-misreadings of the Greek numerals are common in ancient
-MSS.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e2941src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3044" href="#xd25e3044src" name="xd25e3044">2</a></span>
-<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>, p. 354.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e3044src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3163" href="#xd25e3163src" name="xd25e3163">3</a></span> Why did
-they not do so in their &ldquo;teaching,&rdquo; if it was intended (see
-p. 344) for the Jews of the Dispersion, instead of confining themselves
-to precepts &ldquo;simply ethical, non-priestly, and
-non-Rabbinical&rdquo;?&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3163src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3179" href="#xd25e3179src" name="xd25e3179">4</a></span> <i lang=
-"la">Ecce Deus</i>, p. 8.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3179src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3248" href="#xd25e3248src" name="xd25e3248">5</a></span> Note in
-Matthew the phrase (<a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2023:8&amp;version=NRSV">xxiii,
-8</a>): &ldquo;But be ye not called Rabbi: for one is your teacher, and
-all ye are brethren.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3248src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch5" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e234">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter V</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">EXTERNAL EVIDENCE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Evidence of Josephus</span>
-It remains to examine how this school of writers handle the evidence
-with regard to the earliest church supplied by Jewish or Pagan writers.
-I have said enough incidentally of the evidence of the Talmud and
-Toldoth Jeschu, but there remains that of Josephus. In the work on the
-<i>Antiquities of the Jews</i>, Bk. xviii, 5, 2 (116 foll.), there is
-an account of John the Baptist, and it is narrated that Herod, fearing
-an insurrection of John&rsquo;s followers, threw him in bonds into the
-castle of Machaerus, and there murdered him. Afterwards, when
-Herod&rsquo;s army was destroyed, the Jewish population attributed the
-disaster to the wrath of God, and saw in it a retribution for slaying
-so just a man.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3508src" href="#xd25e3508"
-name="xd25e3508src">1</a> On the whole, Josephus&rsquo;s account
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb155" href="#pb155" name=
-"pb155">155</a>]</span>accords with the picture we have of John in the
-Synoptic Gospels, except that in the Gospels the place and
-circumstances of his murder are differently given. This difference is
-good evidence that Josephus&rsquo;s account is independent of the
-Christian sources. Nevertheless, Dr. Drews airily pretends that there
-is a strong suspicion of its being a forgery by some Christian hand. As
-for John the Baptist as we meet him in the Gospels, he is, says Drews,
-no historical personage. One expects some reason to be given for this
-negative conclusion, but gets none whatever except a magnificent hint
-that &ldquo;a complete understanding of the baptism in the Jordan can
-only be attained, if here, too, we take into consideration the
-translation of the baptism into astrological terms&rdquo; (<i>Christ
-Myth</i>, p. 121).</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The astral John Baptist</span> And he
-proceeds to dilate on the thesis that the baptism of Jesus in the
-Jordan was &ldquo;the reflection upon earth of what originally took
-place among the stars.&rdquo; This discovery rests on an
-equation&mdash;pre-philological, of course, like that of
-&ldquo;Maria&rdquo; with &ldquo;Myrrha&rdquo;&mdash;of the name
-&ldquo;John&rdquo; or &ldquo;Jehohanan&rdquo; with &ldquo;Oannes&rdquo;
-or &ldquo;Ea,&rdquo; the Babylonian Water-god. However, this writer is
-here not a little incoherent, for only on the page before he has
-assured us, as of something unquestionable, that John was closely
-related to the Essenes, and baptized the penitents in the Jordan in the
-open air. Was Jordan, too, up in <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb156"
-href="#pb156" name="pb156">156</a>]</span>heaven? Were the Essenes
-there also? Mr. Robertson, of course, pursues the same simple method of
-disposing of adverse evidence, and asserts (p. 396) that
-Josephus&rsquo;s account of John &ldquo;is plainly open to that
-suspicion of interpolation which, in the case of the allusion to Jesus
-in the same book (<i>Antiq.</i>, xviii, 3, 3), has become for most
-critics a certainty.&rdquo; He does not condescend to inform his
-readers that the latter passage<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3527src"
-href="#xd25e3527" name="xd25e3527src">2</a> is absent from important
-MSS., was unknown to Origen, and is therefore rightly bracketed by
-editors; whereas the account of John is in all MSS., and was known to
-Origen. But as we have <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb157" href=
-"#pb157" name="pb157">157</a>]</span>seen before, Mr. Robertson is one
-of those gifted people who can discern by peculiar intuitions of their
-own that everything is interpolated in an author which offends their
-prejudices. He has a lofty contempt for the careful sifting of the
-textual tradition, the examination of MSS. and ancient versions to
-which a scholar resorts, before he condemns a passage of an ancient
-author as an interpolation. Moreover, a scholar feels himself bound to
-show why a passage was interpolated, in whose interests. For, regarded
-as an interpolation, a passage is as much a problem to him as it was
-before. Its genesis has still to be explained. But Messrs. Robertson
-and Drews and Smith do not condescend to explain anything or give any
-reasons. A passage slays their theories; therefore it is a &ldquo;vital
-interpolation.&rdquo; It is the work of an ancient enemy sowing tares
-amid their wheat.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Josephus&rsquo;s reference to James,
-brother of Jesus</span> John the Baptist having been removed in this
-cavalier fashion from the pages of Josephus, we can hardly expect James
-the brother of Jesus to be left, and he is accordingly kicked out
-without ceremony. It does not matter a scrap that the passage
-(<i>Antiquities</i> xx, 9, 1, 200) stands in the Greek MSS. and in the
-Latin Version. As Professor W. B. Smith&rsquo;s argument on the point
-is representative of this class of critics, we must let him speak first
-(p. 235):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Origen <i>thrice</i> quotes as from Josephus the
-statement that the Jewish sufferings at the hands of Titus were a
-divine retribution for the slaying of James.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>He then proceeds to quote the text of Origen, <i>Against Celsus</i>,
-i, 47, giving the reference, but mangling in the most extraordinary
-manner a text that is clear and consecutive. For Origen begins
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb158" href="#pb158" name=
-"pb158">158</a>]</span>(ch. xlvii) by saying that Celsus &ldquo;somehow
-accepted John as a Baptist who baptized Jesus,&rdquo; and then adds the
-following:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">In the Eighteenth Book of his <i>Antiquities of the
-Jews</i> Josephus bears witness to John as having been a Baptist, and
-as promising purification to those who underwent the rite. Now this
-writer, although not believing in Jesus as the Christ, in seeking after
-the cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple,
-whereas he ought to have said that the conspiracy against Jesus was the
-cause of these calamities befalling the people since they put to death
-Christ, who was a prophet, says, nevertheless&mdash;although against
-his will, not far from the truth&mdash;that these disasters happened to
-the Jews as a punishment for the death of James the Just, who was a
-brother of Jesus called Christ, the Jews having put him to death,
-although he was a man most distinguished for his righteousness
-(<i>i.e.</i>, strict observance of the law).</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In a later passage of the same treatise (ii, 13), which Mr. Smith
-cites correctly, Origen refers again to the same passage of the
-<i>Antiquities</i> (xx, 200) thus: &ldquo;Titus demolished Jerusalem,
-as Josephus writes, on account of James the Just, the brother of Jesus,
-the so-called Christ.&rdquo; Also in Origen&rsquo;s commentary on
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2013:55&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew xiii, 55</a>, we have a like statement that the sufferings of
-the Jews were a punishment for the murder of James the Just.</p>
-<p>Origen therefore cites Josephus thrice about James, and in each case
-he has in mind the same passage&mdash;viz., xx, 200. But Mr. Smith,
-after citing the shorter passage, <i lang="la">Contra Celsum</i>, ii,
-13, goes on as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The passage is still found in some Josephus
-manuscripts; but, as it is wanting in others, it is, and must be,
-regarded as a Christian interpolation older than Origen.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb159" href="#pb159" name=
-"pb159">159</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Will Mr. Smith kindly tell us which are the MSS. in which are found
-any passage or passages referring the fall of Jerusalem to the death of
-James, and so far contradicting Josephus&rsquo;s interpretation of
-Ananus&rsquo;s death in the <i>History of the Jewish War</i>, iv, 5, 2.
-Niese, the latest editor, knows of none, nor did any previous editor
-know of any.</p>
-<p>Mr. Smith then proceeds thus:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Now, since this phrase is certainly interpolated in
-the one place, the only reasonable conclusion is that it is
-interpolated in the other.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>But &ldquo;this phrase&rdquo; never stood in Josephus at all, even
-as an interpolation, and on examination it turns out that Professor
-Smith&rsquo;s prejudice against the passage in which Josephus mentions
-James, is merely based on the muddle committed by Origen. Such are the
-arguments by which he seeks to prove that Josephus&rsquo;s text was
-interpolated by a Christian, as if a Christian interpolator, supposing
-there had been one (and he has left no trace of himself), would not, as
-the protest of Origen sufficiently indicates, have represented the fall
-of Jerusalem as a divine punishment, not for the slaying of James, but
-for the slaying of Jesus. Having demolished the evidence of Josephus in
-such a manner, Mr. Smith heads ten of his pages with the words,
-&ldquo;<i>The Silence of Josephus</i>,&rdquo; as if he had settled all
-doubts for ever by mere force of his erroneous <i lang="la">ipse
-dixit</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The testimony of Tacitus</span> The next
-section of Professor Smith&rsquo;s work (<i lang="la">Ecce Deus</i>) is
-headed with the same effrontery of calm assertion: &ldquo;<i>The
-Silence of Tacitus</i>.&rdquo; This historian relates (<i>Annals</i>,
-xv, 44) that Nero accused the Christians of having burned down Rome.
-Nero <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb160" href="#pb160" name=
-"pb160">160</a>]</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">subjected to most exquisite tortures those whom, hated
-for their crimes, the populace called Chrestians. The author of this
-name, Christus, had been executed in the reign of Tiberius by the
-Procurator Pontius Pilate; and, though repressed for the moment, the
-pernicious superstition was breaking forth again, not only throughout
-Jud&aelig;a, the fountain-head of this mischief, but also throughout
-the capital, where all things from anywhere that are horrible or
-disgraceful pour in together and are made a religion of.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In the sequel Tacitus describes how an immense multitude, less for
-the crime of incendiarism than in punishment of their hatred of
-humanity, were convicted; how some were clothed in skins of wild beasts
-and thrown to dogs, while others were crucified or burned alive.
-Nero&rsquo;s savagery was such that it awoke the pity even of a Roman
-crowd for his victims.</p>
-<p>Such a passage as the above, written by Tacitus soon after
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100, is somewhat disconcerting to our
-authors. Professor Smith, proceeding on his usual innocent assumption
-that the whole of the ancient literature, Christian and profane, of
-this epoch lies before him, instead of a scanty d&eacute;bris of it,
-votes it to be a forgery. Why? Because Melito, Bishop of Sardis about
-170 <span class="sc">A.D.</span>, is the first writer who alludes to it
-in a fragment of an apology addressed to a Roman Emperor. As if there
-were not five hundred striking episodes narrated by Tacitus, yet never
-mentioned by any subsequent writer at all. Would Mr. Smith on that
-account dispute their authenticity? It is only because this episode
-concerns Christianity and gets in the way of his theories, that he
-finds it necessary to cut it out of the text. You can prove anything if
-you cook your evidence, and the wanton <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb161" href="#pb161" name="pb161">161</a>]</span>mutilation of texts
-which no critical historian has ever called in question is a flagrant
-form of such cookery. In the hands of these writers facts are made to
-fit theory, not theory to fit facts.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Testimony of Clement agrees with
-Tacitus</span> I hardly need add that the narrative of Tacitus is
-frank, straightforward, and in keeping with all we know or can infer in
-regard to Christianity in that epoch. Mr. E. G. Hardy, in his valuable
-book <i>Christianity and the Roman Government</i> (London, 1894, p.
-70), has pointed out that &ldquo;the mode of punishment was that
-prescribed for those convicted of magic,&rdquo; and that Suetonius uses
-the term <i>malefica</i> of the new religion&mdash;a term which has
-this special sense. Magicians, moreover, in the code of Justinian,
-which here as often reflects a much earlier age, are declared to be
-&ldquo;enemies of the human race.&rdquo; Nor is it true that
-Nero&rsquo;s persecution as recorded in Tacitus is mentioned by no
-writer before Melito. It is practically certain that Clement, writing
-about <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 95, refers to it. He records that a
-<span class="trans" title="poly pl&#275;thos"><span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&pi;&omicron;&lambda;&#8058;
-&pi;&lambda;&#8134;&theta;&omicron;&sigmaf;</span></span>, or vast
-multitude of Christians, the <i lang="la">ingens multitudo</i> of
-Tacitus, perished in connection with the martyrdom of Peter and Paul.
-He speaks of the manifold insults and torments of men, the terrible and
-unholy outrages upon women, in terms that answer exactly to the two
-phrases of Tacitus: <i lang="la">pereuntibus addita ludibria</i> and
-<i lang="la">quaesitissimae poenae</i>. Women, he implies, were,
-&ldquo;like Dirce, fastened on the horns of bulls, or, after figuring
-as Danaides in the arena, were exposed to the attacks of wild
-beasts&rdquo; (Hardy, <i>op. cit.</i>, p. 72). <span class=
-"marginnote">Drews on Poggio&rsquo;s interpolations of
-Tacitus</span>However, Drews is not content with merely ousting the
-passage from Tacitus, but undertakes to explain to his readers how it
-got there. It was, he conjectures, made up out of a similar passage
-read in the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb162" href="#pb162" name=
-"pb162">162</a>]</span>Chronicle of Sulpicius Severus (written about
-407) by some clever forger, probably Poggio, who smuggled it into the
-text of Tacitus, &ldquo;a writer whose text is full of
-interpolations.&rdquo; It is hardly necessary to inform an educated
-reader, firstly, that the text of Tacitus is recognized by all
-competent Latin scholars to be remarkably free from interpolations;
-secondly, that Severus merely abridged his account of Nero&rsquo;s
-persecution from the narrative he found in Tacitus, an author whom he
-frequently copied and imitated; thirdly, that Poggio, the supposed
-interpolator, lived in the fifteenth century, whereas our oldest MS. of
-this part of Tacitus is of the eleventh century; it is now in the
-Laurentian Library. I should advise Dr. Drews to stick to his
-javelin-man story, and not to venture on incursions into the field of
-classical philology.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Pliny&rsquo;s letter to Trajan</span>
-Having dispatched Josephus and Tacitus, and printed over their pages in
-capitals the titles <i>The Silence of Josephus</i> and <i>The Silence
-of Tacitus</i>, these authors, needless to say, have no difficulty with
-Pliny and Suetonius. The former, in his letter (No. 96) to Trajan,
-gives some particulars of the Christians of Bithynia, probably obtained
-from renegades. They asserted that the gist of their offence or error
-was that they were accustomed on a regularly recurring day to meet
-before dawn, and repeat in alternating chant among themselves a hymn to
-Christ as to a God; they also bound themselves by a holy oath not to
-commit any crime, neither theft, nor brigandage, nor adultery, and not
-to betray their word or deny a deposit when it was demanded. After this
-rite was over they had had the custom to break up their meeting, and to
-come together afresh later in the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb163"
-href="#pb163" name="pb163">163</a>]</span>day to partake of a meal,
-which, however, was of an ordinary and innocent kind.</p>
-<p>In this repast we recognize the early eucharist at which Christians
-were commonly accused of devouring human flesh, as the Jews are accused
-by besotted fanatics of doing in Russia to-day, and by Mr. Robertson in
-ancient Jerusalem. Hence Pliny&rsquo;s proviso that the food they
-partook of was ordinary and innocent. The passage also shows that this
-eucharistic meal was not the earliest rite of the day, like the fasting
-communion of the modern Ritualist, but was held later in the day.
-Lastly, the qualification that they sang hymns to Christ <i>as to a
-God</i>, though to Pliny it conveyed no more than the phrase &ldquo;as
-if to Apollo,&rdquo; or &ldquo;as if to Aesculapius,&rdquo; clearly
-signifies that the person so honoured was or had been a human being.
-Had he been a Sun-god Saviour, the phrase would be hopelessly inept.
-This letter and Trajan&rsquo;s answer to it were penned about 110
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span></p>
-<p>Of this letter Professor W. B. Smith writes (p. 252) that in it
-&ldquo;there is no implication, not even the slightest, touching the
-purely human reality of the Christ or Jesus.&rdquo; Let us suppose the
-letter had referred to the cult of Augustus C&aelig;sar, and that we
-read in it of people who, by way of honouring his memory, met on
-certain days and sang a hymn to Augustus <i>quasi deo</i>, &ldquo;as to
-a God.&rdquo; We know that the members of a <i>college of Augustals</i>
-did so meet in most cities of the Roman Empire. Well, would Mr. Smith
-contend in such a case that the letter carried no implication, not even
-the slightest, touching the purely human reality of the Augustus or
-C&aelig;sar? Of course he would not. If this letter were the sole
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb164" href="#pb164" name=
-"pb164">164</a>]</span>record in existence of early Christianity, we
-might perhaps hesitate about its implications; but it is in the
-characteristic Latin which no one, so far as we know, ever wrote,
-except the younger Pliny, and is accompanied by Trajan&rsquo;s answer,
-couched in an equally characteristic style. It is, moreover, but one
-link in a long chain, which as a whole attests and presupposes the
-reality of Jesus. Mr. Smith, however, does not seem quite sure of his
-ground, for in the next sentence he hints that after all Pliny&rsquo;s
-letter is not genuine. These writers are not the first to whom this
-letter has proved a <i lang="la">pons asinorum</i>. Semler began the
-attack on its genuineness in 1784; and others, who desired to eliminate
-all references to Christianity in early heathen writers, have, as J. B.
-Lightfoot has remarked (<i>Apostolic Fathers</i>, Pt. II, vol. i, p.
-55), followed in his wake. Their objections do not merit serious
-refutation.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evidence of Suetonius</span> There remains
-Suetonius, who in ch. xxv of his life of Claudius speaks of Messianic
-disturbances at Rome <i lang="la">impulsore Chresto</i>. Claudius
-reigned from 41&ndash;54, and the passage may possibly be an echo of
-the conflict, clearly delineated in Acts and Paulines between the Jews
-and the followers of the new Messiah.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3741src" href="#xd25e3741" name="xd25e3741src">3</a> Itacism or
-interchange of &ldquo;<i>e</i>&rdquo; and &ldquo;<i>i</i>&rdquo; being
-the commonest of corruptions in Greek and Latin MSS., we may fairly
-conjecture <i>Christo</i> in the source used by Suetonius, who wrote
-about the year 120. <i>Christo</i>, which means Messiah, is
-intelligible in relation to Jews, but not <i>Chresto</i>; and the two
-words were <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb165" href="#pb165" name=
-"pb165">165</a>]</span>identical in pronunciation. Drews of course
-upholds <i>Chresto</i>, and in Tacitus would substitute for Christiani
-<i>Chrestiani</i>; for this there is indeed manuscript support, but it
-is gratuitous to argue as he does that the allusion is to Serapis or
-Osiris, who were called Chrestos &ldquo;the good&rdquo; by their
-votaries. He does not condescend to adduce any evidence to show that in
-that age or any other <i>Chrestos</i>, used absolutely, signified
-<i>Osiris or Serapis</i>; and there is no reason to suppose it ever had
-such a significance. He is on still more precarious ground when he
-surmises that Nero&rsquo;s victims at Rome were not followers of
-Christ, but of Serapis, and were called <i>Chrestiani</i> by the mob
-ironically, because of their vices. Here we begin to suspect that he is
-joking. Why should worshippers of Serapis have been regarded as
-specially vicious by the Roman mob? Jews and Christians were no doubt
-detested, because they could not join in any popular festivities or
-thanksgivings. But there was nothing to prevent votaries of Serapis or
-Osiris from doing so, nor is there any record of their being unpopular
-as a class.</p>
-<p>In his life of Nero, Suetonius, amid a number of brief notices,
-apparently taken from some annalistic work, includes the following:
-&ldquo;The Christians were visited with condign punishments&mdash;a
-race of men professing a new and <i>malefic</i> superstition.&rdquo; On
-this passage I have commented above (p. 161).</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Origin of the name
-&ldquo;Christian&rdquo;</span> Characteristically enough, Dr. Drews
-assumes, without a shadow of argument, that the famous text in Acts
-which says that the followers of Jesus were first called Christians in
-Antioch is an interpolation. It stands in the way of his new thesis
-that the Roman people called the followers of Serapis&mdash;who was
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb166" href="#pb166" name=
-"pb166">166</a>]</span><i>Chrestos</i> or
-&ldquo;good&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Chrestiani</i>, because they were precisely
-the contrary.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3800src" href="#xd25e3800"
-name="xd25e3800src">4</a> Tacitus does not say that Nero&rsquo;s
-victims were so called <i>because</i> of their vices. That is a gloss
-put on the text by Drews. We only learn (<i>a</i>) that they were hated
-by the mob for their vices, and (<i>b</i>) that the mob at that time
-called them Chrestiani. His use of the imperfect tense <i lang=
-"la">appellabat</i> indicates that in his own day the same sect had
-come to be known under their proper appellation as Christiani. In
-<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 64, he implies, a Roman mob knew no
-better. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb167" href="#pb167" name=
-"pb167">167</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3508" href="#xd25e3508src" name="xd25e3508">1</a></span> The
-passage in which Josephus mentions John the Baptist runs as follows:
-&ldquo;To some of the Jews it seemed that Herod had had his army
-destroyed by God, and that it was a just retribution on him for his
-severity towards John called the Baptist. For it was indeed Herod who
-slew him, though a good man, and one who bade the Jews in the practise
-of virtue and in the use of justice one to another and of piety towards
-God to walk together in baptism. For this was the condition under which
-baptism would present itself to God as acceptable, if they availed
-themselves of it, not by way of winning pardon for certain sins, but
-after attaining personal holiness, on account of the soul having been
-cleansed beforehand by righteousness. Because men flocked to him, for
-they took the greatest pleasure in listening to his words, Herod took
-fright and apprehended that his vast influence over people would lead
-to some outbreak of rebellion. For it looked as if they would follow
-his advice in all they did, and he came to the conclusion that far the
-best course was, before any revolution was <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb155n" href="#pb155n" name=
-"pb155n">155</a>]</span>started by him, to anticipate it by destroying
-him: otherwise the upheaval would come, and plunge him into trouble and
-remorse. So John fell a victim to Herod&rsquo;s suspicions, was bound
-and sent to the fortress of Machaerus, of which I have above spoken,
-and there murdered. But the Jews were convinced that the loss of his
-army was by way of retribution for the treatment of John, and that it
-was God who willed the undoing of Herod.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e3508src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3527" href="#xd25e3527src" name="xd25e3527">2</a></span> The
-suspect passage in which Josephus refers to Jesus runs thus,
-<i>Ant.</i> xviii, 3, 3: &ldquo;<i>Now about this time came Jesus</i>,
-a wise man, if indeed one may call him a man, for he was a doer of
-wonderful works, a teacher of such men as receive what is true with
-pleasure, and he attracted many Jews and many of the Greeks. <i>This
-was the &lsquo;Christ.&rsquo; And when on the accusation of the
-principal men amongst us Pilate had condemned him to the cross, they
-did not desist who had formerly loved him</i>, for he appeared to them
-on the third day alive again; the divine Prophets having foretold both
-this and a myriad other wonderful things about him; <i>and even now the
-race of those called Christians after him has not died
-out</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">I have italicized such clauses as have a
-chance to be authentic, and as may have led Origen to say of Josephus
-that he did not believe Jesus to be the Christ. For the clause
-&ldquo;This was the Christ&rdquo; must have run, &ldquo;This was the
-so-called Christ.&rdquo; We have the same expression in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%201:16&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matt. i, 16</a>, and in the passage, undoubtedly genuine, in which
-Josephus refers to James, <i>Ant.</i>, xx, 9, 1. Here Josephus relates
-that the Sadducee High-priest Ananus (son of Annas of the New
-Testament), in the interval of anarchy between the departure of one
-Roman Governor, Festus, and the arrival of another, Albinus, set up a
-court of his own, &ldquo;and bringing before it the brother of Jesus
-who was called Christ&mdash;James was his name&mdash;and some others,
-he accused them of being breakers of the Law, and had them
-stoned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">In the <i>History of the Jewish War</i>, iv,
-5, 2, Josephus records his belief that the Destruction of Jerusalem was
-a divine nemesis for the murder of this Ananus by the Idumeans.</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">There is not now, nor ever was, any passage in
-Josephus where the fall of Jerusalem was explained as an act of divine
-nemesis for the murder of James by Ananus. Origen, as Professor Burkitt
-has remarked, &ldquo;had mixed up in his commonplace book the account
-of Ananus&rsquo;s murder of James and the remarks of Josephus on
-Ananus&rsquo;s own murder.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3527src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3741" href="#xd25e3741src" name="xd25e3741">3</a></span> So in
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2018:12&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xviii, 12</a>, we read of faction fights in Corinth between the
-Jews and the followers of Jesus the Messiah; Gallio, the proconsul of
-Achaia, who cared for none of the matters at issue between them, is a
-well-known personage, and an inscription has lately been discovered
-dating his tenure of Achaia in <span class="sc">A.D.</span>
-52.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e3741src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3800" href="#xd25e3800src" name="xd25e3800">4</a></span> Tacitus
-very likely wrote <i>Chrestiani</i>. He says the mob called them such,
-but adds that the author of the name was <i>Christ</i>, so implying
-that <i>Christianus</i> was the true form, and <i>Chrestianus</i> a
-popular malformation thereof. The Roman mob would be likely to deform a
-name they did not understand, just as a jack-tar turns Bellerophon into
-Billy Ruffian. Chrestos was a common name among oriental slaves, and a
-Roman mob would naturally assume that <i>Christos</i>, which they could
-not understand, was a form of it.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3800src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch6" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e244">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter VI</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE ART OF CRITICISM</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Repudiation by the partisans
-of non-historicity of Jesus <span class="corr" id="xd25e3845" title=
-"Added by author">of</span> regular historical method</span> Let us
-pause here and try to frame some ideas of the methods of this new
-school which denies that Jesus ever lived:&mdash;</p>
-<p>Firstly, they are all agreed that the method they would apply to all
-other figures in ancient history&mdash;for example, to
-Apollonius&mdash;shall not be used in connection with Jesus. They
-carelessly deride &ldquo;the attempt of historical theologians to reach
-the historical nucleus of the Gospels by purely philological
-means&rdquo; (<i>The Witnesses</i>, p. 129). &ldquo;The process,&rdquo;
-writes Mr. Robertson, &ldquo;of testing the Synoptic Gospels down to an
-apparent nucleus of primitive narrative&rdquo; &hellip; &ldquo;this new
-position is one of retreat, and is not permanently tenable&rdquo;
-(<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>, p. 284).</p>
-<p>If this be so, we had better abolish our chairs of history at the
-universities, and give up teaching it in the schools; for, in the
-absence of the camera and gramophone, this method is the only one we
-can use. When a Mommsen sets Polybius&rsquo;s, Livy&rsquo;s, and
-Plutarch&rsquo;s lives of Hannibal side by side and &ldquo;tests them
-down to an apparent nucleus of primitive narrative,&rdquo; does Mr.
-Robertson take him as a text for a disquisition on &ldquo;the
-psychological Resistance to Evidence&rdquo;? If not, why does he forbid
-us to take the score or so of independent memories and records of the
-career of Jesus which we have in ancient literature <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb168" href="#pb168" name=
-"pb168">168</a>]</span>between the years <span class="sc">A.D.</span>
-50 and 120, and to try to sift them down? Why, without any evidence,
-should we rush to the conclusion that the figure on whom they jointly
-converge was a Sun-god, solar myth, or vegetation sprite?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">New Testament literature taken <i>en
-bloc</i></span> Secondly, we may note how this disinclination to sift
-sources and test documents prompts them to take <i>en bloc</i> sources
-and documents which arose separately and in succession. Yet it is not
-simple laziness which dictates to them this short and easy method of
-dealing with ancient documents. Rather they have inherited it from the
-old-fashioned orthodox teachers of a hundred years ago, who, convinced
-of the verbal inspiration of the Bible, forbade us to estimate one
-passage as evidence more highly than another. All the verses of the
-Bible were on a level, as also all the incidents, and to argue that one
-event might have happened, but not another, was rank blasphemy. All
-were equally certain, for inspiration is not given by measure. Their
-mantle has fallen on Mr. Robertson and his friends. All or none is
-their method; but, whereas all was equally certain, now all is equally
-myth. &ldquo;A document,&rdquo; says (p. 159) the excellent work by MM.
-Langlois and Seignobos which I cited above,</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">(still more a literary work) is not all of a piece; it
-is composed of a great number of independent statements, any one of
-which may be intentionally or unintentionally false, while the others
-are <i>bon&acirc; fide</i> and accurate&#8202;&hellip;. It is not,
-therefore, enough to examine a document as a whole; each of the
-statements in it must be examined separately; <i>criticism</i> is
-impossible without <i>analysis</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>We have beautiful examples of such mixed criticism and analysis in
-the commentaries on the Synoptics of <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb169" href="#pb169" name="pb169">169</a>]</span>Wellhausen and Loisy,
-both of them Freethinkers in the best sense of the word.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Incapacity of this school to understand
-evolution of Christian ideas,</span> I have given several minor
-examples of the obstinacy with which the three writers I am criticizing
-shut their eyes to the gradual evolution of Christian ideas; they
-exhibit the same perversity in respect of the great development of
-Christological thought already traceable in the New Testament.</p>
-<p>Paul conceived of Jesus as a Jewish teacher elevated through his
-death and resurrection to the position of Messiah and Son of God. On
-earth he is still a merely human being, born naturally, and subject to
-the law&mdash;a weak man of flesh. Raised from the dead by the energy
-of the Spirit, he becomes future judge of mankind, and his gospel
-transcends all distinctions of Jew and Gentile, bondsman or free. In
-Mark he is still merely human; he is the son of Joseph and Mary, born
-and bred like their other sons and daughters. As a man he comes to John
-the Baptist, like others, to confess and repent of his sins, and wash
-them away in Jordan&rsquo;s holy stream. Not till then does the descent
-of the Spirit on him, as he goes up from the Jordan, confer a
-Messiahship on him, which his followers only recognize later on.
-Astounding miracles and prodigies, however, are already credited to him
-in this our earliest Gospel. In the non-Marcan document, or Q, so far
-as we can reconstruct it, he has become Messiah through baptism
-(supposing this section to have belonged to Q, and not to some other
-document used by Luke and Matthew); but few or no miracles<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e3896src" href="#xd25e3896" name="xd25e3896src">1</a>
-are as yet credited <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb170" href="#pb170"
-name="pb170">170</a>]</span>to him, and the document contained little
-except his teaching. His death has none of the importance assigned to
-it by Paul, and is not mentioned; his resurrection does not seem to
-have been heard of by the author of this document. In Matthew and Luke
-the figure before us is much the same as in Mark; but human traits,
-such as his mother&rsquo;s distrust of his mission, are effaced. We
-hear no more of his inability to heal those who did not believe in him,
-and we get in their early chapters hints of his miraculous birth. In
-John there is, indeed, no hint of such birth; but, on the other hand,
-the entire Gospel is here rewritten to suit a new conception of him as
-the divine, eternal <i>Logos</i>. Demonology tales are ruled out. His
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i> as a Jewish Messiah, faithful to the law, has finally
-retired into the background, together with that tense expectation of
-the end of the world, of the final judgment and installation in
-Palestine of a renovated kingdom of David, which inspires the teaching
-and parables of the Synoptic Gospels, just as it inspired Philo, and
-the Apocalypse of the Fourth Esdras and other contemporary Jewish
-apocrypha.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">especially in connection with the legend of
-Virgin Birth,</span> Now, in Mr. W. B. Smith&rsquo;s works this
-development of doctrine about Jesus, this succession of phases, is not
-only reversed, but, with singular perversity, turned upside down.
-Similarly, Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews, in order to secure a favourable
-reception for their hypothesis that Jesus was a Sun-god, insist in the
-teeth of the evidence that the belief in the Virgin Birth was part and
-parcel of the earliest tradition. As a matter <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb171" href="#pb171" name="pb171">171</a>]</span>of
-fact, it was comparatively late, as the heortology or history of the
-feasts of the Church shows. Of specially Christian feasts, the first
-was the Sunday, which commemorated every week the Resurrection, and the
-hope of the Parousia, or Second Coming. The next was the Epiphany, on
-January 6, commemorative of the baptism when the Holy Spirit descended
-on Jesus and conferred Messiahship.</p>
-<p>This feast we cannot trace before the year 125 or 150, and then only
-among Basilidians; among Catholics hardly before 300. Just as the story
-of the Virgin Birth was the latest addition to evangelical tradition,
-so it was the latest of the dominical feasts; and not till 354 did it
-obtain separate recognition in Rome on December 25. Of the feast of the
-Annunciation and of the other feasts of the Virgin we first hear in the
-sixth and succeeding centuries. From this outline we can realize at how
-late a period the legend of the Virgin Birth influenced the mind of the
-Church at large; yet Mr. Robertson, to smooth the way for his
-&ldquo;mythic&rdquo; theory, pretends that it was the earliest of all
-Christian beliefs, and without a tittle of evidence invents a
-pre-Christian Saviour-Sun-god Joshua, born of a virgin, Miriam. The
-whole monstrous conception is a preposterous coinage of his brain, a
-figment unknown to anyone before himself and bristling with
-impossibilities. Witness the following passage (p. 284 of
-<i>Christianity and Mythology</i>), containing nearly as many baseless
-fancies as it contains words:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The one tenable historic hypothesis left to us at this
-stage is that of a preliminary Jesus &ldquo;<span class=
-"sc">B.C.</span>,&rdquo; a vague cult-founder such as the Jesus ben
-Pandira of the Talmud, put to death for (perhaps anti-Judaic) teachings
-now lost; round whose movement there <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb172" href="#pb172" name="pb172">172</a>]</span>might have gradually
-clustered the survivals of an ancient solar or other worship of a Babe
-Joshua son of Miriam.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Such is the gist of the speculations of Messrs. Drews and Robertson,
-as far removed from truth and reality as the Athanasian Creed and from
-sane criticism as the truculent buffooneries of the Futurists from
-genuine art.</p>
-<p>We have more than once criticized this tendency of Mr. Robertson to
-insist on the primitiveness of the Virgin Birth legend. He urges it
-throughout his volume, although here and there he seems to see the
-truth, as, <i>e.g.</i>, on p. 189, where he remarks that &ldquo;only
-the late Third Gospel tells the story&rdquo; of Mary and Joseph going
-to Bethlehem to be taxed, and &ldquo;that the narrative in
-Matthew&rdquo; was &ldquo;added late to the original composition, which
-obviously began at what is now the third chapter.&rdquo; If the legend
-was part of the earliest tradition, why does it figure for the first
-time in the late Third Gospel and in a late addition to the first? In
-another passage he assures us that chapters i and ii of Luke are
-&ldquo;a late fabulous introduction.&rdquo; Clearly, his view is that,
-just in proportion as any part of the Gospels is late, the tradition it
-contains must be early; and he it is who talks about &ldquo;the
-methodless subjectivism&rdquo; of Dr. Pfleiderer, who, he says,
-&ldquo;like Matthew Arnold, accepts what he likes&rdquo; (p. 450).</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">and in connection with Schmiedel&rsquo;s
-&ldquo;Pillars&rdquo;</span> The same inability to distinguish what is
-early from what is late is shown by Mr. Robertson in his criticism of
-Dr. Schmiedel&rsquo;s &ldquo;pillars&rdquo;&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the nine
-Gospel texts (seven of them in Mark)&mdash;&ldquo;which cannot have
-been invented by believers in the godhood of Jesus, since they
-implicitly negate that godhood.&rdquo; Of these, one is <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2010:17&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark x, 17</a> <i>ff.</i>, where Jesus uses&mdash;to one who
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb173" href="#pb173" name=
-"pb173">173</a>]</span>had thrown himself at his feet with the words:
-&ldquo;Good teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?&rdquo;
-(<i>i.e.</i>, life in the kingdom to come)&mdash;the answer: &ldquo;Why
-callest thou me good? No one is good, save one&mdash;to wit,
-God.&rdquo; Here many ancient sources intensify Jesus&rsquo;s refusal
-of a predicate which is God&rsquo;s alone; for they run: &ldquo;Call
-thou me not good.&rdquo; This apart, the Second and Third Gospels may
-be said to agree in reading, &ldquo;Good master,&rdquo; and, &ldquo;Why
-callest thou me good?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In Matthew, however (xix, 16), we read as follows: &ldquo;Behold,
-one came to him and said: Master, what good thing shall I do, that I
-may have eternal life? And he said unto him, Why askest thou me
-concerning that which is good? One there is who is good,&rdquo;
-etc.</p>
-<p>Now, it is a result of criticism universally accepted to-day that
-Matthew and Luke compiled their Gospels with Mark before them, and that
-any reading in which either of them agrees with Mark must be more
-original than the discrepant reading of a third. Here Matthew is the
-discrepant witness, and he has remodelled the text of Mark to suit the
-teaching which had established itself in the Church about <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 100 that Jesus was without sin. He accordingly makes
-Jesus reply as a Greek sophist might reply, and not as a Jewish rabbi;
-and, by omitting the predicate &ldquo;good&rdquo; before
-<i>teacher</i>, he turns the words, &ldquo;One there is who is
-good,&rdquo; into nonsense. By adding it before &ldquo;thing&rdquo; he
-creates additional nonsense; for how could any but a <i>good</i> action
-merit eternal life? The epithet is here superfluous. Even then, if we
-were not sure on other grounds that the Marcan story is the only source
-of the Matth&aelig;an deformed text, we could be sure that it
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb174" href="#pb174" name=
-"pb174">174</a>]</span>was, because in Mark we have simplicity and good
-sense, whereas in Matthew we have neither. Mr. Robertson, on an earlier
-page, has, indeed, done lip-service to the truth that Mark presents us
-with the earliest form of evangelical tradition; but here he betrays
-the fact that he has not really understood the position, nor grasped
-the grounds (set forth by me in <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i>) on
-which it rests. For he is ready to sacrifice it the moment it makes
-havoc of his &ldquo;mythological&rdquo; argument, and writes (p. 443):
-&ldquo;On the score of simple likelihood, which has the stronger claim?
-Surely the original text in Matthew.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Even if Matthew, Mark, and Luke were rival and independent texts,
-instead of the first and third being, as they demonstrably are, copies
-and paraphrases of Mark, the best&mdash;if not the only&mdash;criterion
-of originality would be such an agreement of two of them as Mark and
-Luke here present against Matthew. Mr. Robertson, with entire <i lang=
-"la">ignoratio elenchi</i>, urges in favour of the originality of
-Matthew&rsquo;s variant the circumstance that the oldest MS. sources of
-that Gospel reproduce it. How could they fail to do so, supposing it to
-be due to the redactor or editor of Mark, who was traditionally, but
-falsely, identified with the apostle Matthew? If the reading of Mark be
-not original, how came Luke to copy it from him? The most obvious
-critical considerations are wasted on Mr. Robertson and his
-friends.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Schmiedel on the disbelief of Mary in her
-son</span> Dr. Schmiedel again draws attention to the narrative of how
-Jesus, at the beginning of his ministry, was declared by his own
-household to be out of his senses, and of how, in consequence, his
-mother and brethren followed him in order to put him under restraint.
-The story offended the first and third <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb175" href="#pb175" name="pb175">175</a>]</span>evangelists, and they
-partly omit it, partly obscure its drift. The fourth evangelist limits
-the disbelief to the brethren of Jesus. The whole narrative is in
-flagrant antagonism to the Birth stories in the early chapters of
-Matthew and Luke, and to the whole subsequent drift of Church
-tradition. Being gifted with common sense, Schmiedel argues that it
-must be true, because it could never have been invented. It, anyhow,
-makes for the historicity of Jesus. What has Mr. Robertson to say about
-it? He writes (p. 443): &ldquo;Why should such a conception be more
-alien to Christian consciousness than, say, the story of the trial,
-scourging, and crucifixion?&rdquo; Here he ignores the point at issue.
-In Christian tradition, whether early or late, it was not the mother
-and brethren of Jesus who tried and scourged and crucified him, but
-inimical Jews and pagans. The latter are at no time related to have
-received an announcement of his birth from an angel, as his mother was
-presently believed to have done. We have, therefore, every reason for
-averring that the conception or idea of his being flouted by his own
-mother and brethren was a thousand times more alien to Christian
-consciousness&mdash;at least, any time after <span class=
-"sc">A.D.</span> 100&mdash;than that of his being flouted by a
-Sadducean priesthood and by Roman governors. Once the legend of the
-Virgin Birth had grown up, such a story could not have been either
-thought of or committed to writing in a Gospel. It is read in Mark, and
-must be what we call a bed-rock tradition. If Mr. Robertson cannot see
-that, he is hopeless. Did he not admit (p. 443) that it is
-&ldquo;certainly an odd text,&rdquo; so revealing his inmost misgivings
-about it, we should think him so. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb176"
-href="#pb176" name="pb176">176</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jesus is not deified in the earliest
-documents, nor do they reveal a &ldquo;cult&rdquo; of him</span> The
-same vice of mixing up different phases of the Christian religion shows
-itself in the insistence of this school of critic that it was from the
-first a <i>cult</i> of a deified Jesus. Thus Mr. Smith writes (<i lang=
-"la">Ecce Deus</i>) as follows (p. 6):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We affirm that the worship of the one God under the
-name, aspect, or <i>person</i> of the Jesus, the Saviour, was the
-primitive and indefectible essence of the primitive teaching and
-propaganda.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>On the contrary, in the two basal documents, Mark and Q, no such
-worship is discernible. Jesus first comes on the scene as the humble
-son of Joseph and Mary to repent of his sins and purge them away in
-Baptism; he next takes up the preaching of the imprisoned John, which
-was merely that Jews should repent of their sins because the kingdom of
-God, involving a dissolution of the existing social and political
-order, was at hand. This was no divine <i>r&ocirc;le</i>, and he is
-represented not as God, but only as the servant of God; for such in the
-Aramaic dialect of that age was the connotation of the title &ldquo;Son
-of God.&rdquo; In Mark there is no sign of his deification, not even in
-the transfiguration scene; for in that he is merely the human Messiah
-attended by Elias and Moses. From a hundred early <i>indicia</i> we
-know that in the Semitic-speaking churches of the East he remained a
-human figure for centuries; and the Syrian Father Aphraat, as late as
-336 in Persia, is careful to explain in his homilies that Jesus was
-only divine as Moses was, or as human kings are. It was not till the
-religion was diffused in a pagan medium in which gods had children by
-mortal women that the gross deification of Jesus emerged. The purport
-of these basal documents, moreover, is not to deify <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb177" href="#pb177" name=
-"pb177">177</a>]</span>Jesus, but to establish as against the Jews that
-he was their promised Messiah and the central figure of the Messianic
-kingdom he preached. That figure, however, was never identified with
-Jehovah, but was only Jehovah&rsquo;s servant, anointed king and judge
-of Israel, restorer of Israel&rsquo;s damaged fortunes, fulfiller of
-her political ideals and hopes. Mr. Smith argues that Jesus was deified
-from the first because his name was so often invoked in exorcisms. He
-even makes the suggestion (p. 17) that the initial letter <i>J</i> of
-Jesus &ldquo;must have powerfully suggested Jehovah to the Jewish
-consciousness.&rdquo; There is no evidence, and less likelihood, of any
-such thing. The name of Jesus was during his lifetime invoked against
-demons by exorcists who rejected his message; just as they used the
-names of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, so they were ready to exploit his
-powerful name; but neither Jews nor Christians ever confounded with
-Jehovah the names or personalities they thus invoked; any Jew in virtue
-of his birth and breeding would have regarded such a confusion of a man
-with his God as flat blasphemy.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Worship of a slain God no part of the
-earliest Christianity</span> Messrs. Robertson and Drews similarly
-insist that Jesus was from the first worshipped as a slain God. In the
-Gospel documents there is no sign of anything of the sort. It was Paul
-who first diffused the idea that the crucified Jesus was a victim slain
-for the redemption of human sins. We already have Philo proclaiming
-that the just man is the ransom of the many, so that there is no need
-to go to pagan circles, no need to go outside the pale of Greek Jews,
-of whom Paul was one, for the origin of the idea. He probably found it
-even in the teaching of Gamaliel, in which he was brought up. Mark asks
-no more of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb178" href="#pb178" name=
-"pb178">178</a>]</span>his readers than to attribute the
-Messiahship&mdash;a thoroughly human <i>r&ocirc;le</i>&mdash;to his
-hero, Jesus of Nazareth. Nor does Matthew, who seeks at every turn to
-prove that the actions of Jesus reported by Mark were those which,
-according to the old prophets, a Messiah might be expected to perform.
-How can writers who end their record of Jesus by telling us how in the
-moment of death he cried, &ldquo;My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken
-me?&rdquo; realizing no doubt that all his expectations of the advent
-of God&rsquo;s kingdom were frustrated and set at naught; how, I say,
-can such writers have believed that Jesus was Jehovah? The idea is
-monstrous. The truth is these writers transport back into the first age
-of Christianity the ideas and beliefs of developed Catholicism, and are
-resolved that the first shall be last and the last first. They have no
-perspective, and no capacity for understanding the successive phases
-through which a primitive Messianism, at first thoroughly monotheistic
-and exclusively Jewish in outlook and ideals, gradually evolved itself,
-with the help of the Logos teaching, into the Athanasian cult of an
-eternal and consubstantial Son of God.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Abuse of the comparative method by this
-school of writers</span> Thirdly, these writers abuse the comparative
-method. Applied discreetly and rationally, this method helps us to
-trace myths and beliefs back to their homes and earlier forms. Thus M.
-Emmanuel Cosquin (in <i>Romania</i>; Paris, 1912) takes the story of
-the cat and the candle, and traces out its ramifications in the
-medi&aelig;val literature and modern folklore of Europe, and outside
-Europe, in the legends of the Pendjab, of Cashmir, Bengal, Ceylon,
-Tibet, Tunisia, Annam, and elsewhere. But the theme is always
-sufficiently like itself to be really recognizable in the <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb179" href="#pb179" name=
-"pb179">179</a>]</span>various folklore frames in which it is found
-encased. The old philologists saw in the most superficial resemblance
-of sound a reason for connecting words in different languages. They
-never asked themselves how a word got out of Hebrew, say, into Greek,
-or out of Greek into Mexican. Volumes were filled with these haphazard
-etymologies, and the idea of the classification of languages into great
-connected families only slowly made its way among us in the last
-century. I have pointed out that in regard to names Messrs. Drews and
-Robertson are still in this prephilological stage of inquiry; as
-regards myths or stories of incident, they are wholly immersed in it.
-<span class="marginnote">They fit anything on to anything no matter how
-ineptly,</span>They never trouble themselves to make sure that the
-stories they connect bear any real resemblance to one another. For
-example, what have the Zodiacal signs and the Apostles of Jesus in
-common except the number twelve? As if number was not the most
-superficial of attributes, the least characteristic and essential. The
-scene of the Gospel is laid in Jud&aelig;a, where from remote antiquity
-the Jews had classed themselves in twelve tribes. Is it not more likely
-that this suggested the twelve missionaries sent out by Jesus to
-announce the coming kingdom than the twelve signs of the Zodiac? Even
-if the story of the Twelve be legendary, need we go outside Judaism for
-our explanation of its origin?</p>
-<p>What, again, have the three Maries in common with the Greek
-<i>Moirai</i> except the number three and a delusive community of
-sound? Yet Mr. Robertson insists that the three Maries at the tomb of
-Jesus were suggested by the <i>Moirai</i>, because these, &ldquo;as
-goddesses of birth and death, naturally figured in many artistic
-presentations of religious death scenes.&rdquo; As a matter
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb180" href="#pb180" name=
-"pb180">180</a>]</span>of fact, the representation of the <i>Parcae</i>
-or Fates in connection with death is rare except on Roman sarcophagi,
-mostly of later date than the Gospel story. And when they are so found,
-they represent, not women bringing spices for the corpse or mourning
-for the dead, but the forces, often thought of as blind and therefore
-represented as veiled, which govern the events of the world, including
-birth, life and death. <span class="marginnote">and forget the innate
-hostility of Jews to Paganism</span>There was, therefore, nothing in
-the <i>Moirai</i> to suggest the three Maries at the tomb; nor is it
-credible that the Hebrew <i>Christists</i>, given as they must have
-been to monotheism and detesting all statuary, pagan or other, would
-have chosen their literary motives from such a source. Where could they
-see such statuary in or about Jerusalem? It is notorious that the very
-presence of a symbolic eagle used as a military standard was enough to
-create an <i lang="fr">&eacute;meute</i> in Jerusalem. The scheme of
-the emperor Caligula or Caius to set up his statue in Jerusalem in
-39&ndash;40 <span class="sc">A.D.</span> provoked a movement of revolt
-throughout Palestine, with which the Jews of Egypt and elsewhere were
-in full sympathy. A deputation headed by Philo of Alexandria went to
-Rome to supplicate the emperor not to goad the entire race to frenzy.
-In the magnificent statues which surrounded him on the Parthenon hill,
-Paul could see nothing but idols, monuments of an age of superstition
-and ignorance which God had mercifully overlooked.<a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e4069src" href="#xd25e4069" name="xd25e4069src">2</a> The
-hostility of the Jews to all pagan art <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb181" href="#pb181" name="pb181">181</a>]</span>and sculpture was as
-great as that of Mohammedans to-day. Yet Mr. Robertson asks us to
-believe (p. 327) that the Gospel myths, as he assumes them to be, are
-&ldquo;evolved from scenes in pagan art.&rdquo; On the top of that we
-afterwards learn from him that it was the Jewish high priest with
-legalistic leanings that presided over the <i>Christists</i> or
-<i>Jesuists</i>. Imagine such a high priest&rsquo;s feelings when he
-beheld his &ldquo;secret society&rdquo; evolving their system under
-such an inspiration as Mr. Robertson outlines in the following canons
-of criticism:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">As we have seen and shall see throughout this
-investigation, the Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred
-suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual usage (p. 305).</p>
-<p>Christism borrowed myths of all kinds from paganism (p. xii).</p>
-<p>&hellip; the whole Christian legend, in its present terminology, is
-demonstrably an adaptation of a mass of pre-Christian myths (p.
-136).</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>What a budget of mutually destructive paradoxes; and to crown them
-all Mr. Robertson claims in his introduction (p. xxii) that the method
-of his treatise is</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">in general more &ldquo;positive,&rdquo; less a priori,
-more obedient to scientific canons than that of the previous critics
-&hellip; who have reached similar anti-traditionalist results. It
-substitutes an anthropological basis, in terms of the concrete
-phenomena of mythology, for a pseudo-philosophical presupposition.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb182" href="#pb182" name=
-"pb182">182</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Credulity attends hypercriticism</span>
-Fourthly, it is essential to note the childish, all-embracing, and
-overwhelming credulity of these writers. To them applies in its full
-force the paragraph in which MM. Langlois and Seignobos describe the
-perils which beset hypercriticism (p. 131, <i>op. cit.</i>):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The excess of criticism, just as much as the crudest
-ignorance, leads to error. It consists in the application of critical
-canons to cases outside their jurisdiction. It is related to criticism
-as logic-chopping is to logic. There are persons who scent enigmas
-everywhere, even where there are none. They take perfectly clear texts
-and subtilize on them till they make them doubtful, under the pretext
-of freeing them from imaginary corruptions. They discover traces of
-forgery in authentic documents. A strange state of mind! By constantly
-guarding against the instinct of credulity they come to suspect
-everything.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>For these writers, in their anxiety to be original and new, see fit
-to discard every position that earlier historians, like Mommsen,
-Gibbon, Bury, Montefiore&mdash;not to mention Christian
-scholars&mdash;have accepted as beyond doubt. Their temper is that of
-the Bacon-Shakesperians; and the plainest, simplest, most
-straightforward texts figure in their imaginations as a laborious
-series of charades, rebuses, and cryptograms. That Jesus never existed
-is not really the final conclusion of their researches, but an initial
-unproved assumption. In order to get rid of him, they feign, without
-any evidence of it, a Jewish secret society under the patronage of the
-Jewish High Priest, that existed in Jerusalem well down into the
-Christian era. This society kept up the worship of an old Palestinian
-and Ephraimitic Sun-god and Saviour, named Joshua, son of a virgin,
-Miriam. Where is the proof that such a god was ever heard of
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb183" href="#pb183" name=
-"pb183">183</a>]</span>in ancient Palestine, either early or late, or
-that such a cult ever existed? There is none. It is the emptiest and
-wildest of hypotheses; yet we are asked to accept it in place of the
-historicity of Jesus. What, again, do we know of secret societies in
-Jerusalem? Josephus and Philo knew of none. For the Therapeut&aelig;,
-far from affecting secrecy, were anxious to diffuse their discipline
-and lore even among the Hellenes, while the Essenes had nothing secret
-save the names of the angels they invoked in spells. They were a
-well-known sect, and so numerous that a gate of Jerusalem was called
-the Essene Gate, because they so often came in and went forth by it.
-Were the Pharisees and Sadducees, the Scribes, or the <i lang=
-"la">Sicarii</i> or zealots, secret sects? We know they were not. But
-is it likely that a sect composed in the main of Jews, and patronized,
-as Mr. Robertson argues, by the High Priest, would have kept up in the
-very heart of monotheistic Judaism a cult of Sun-gods and
-Vegetation-spirits? Could they there have given themselves up to the
-study of pagan statuary, art, and ritual dramas? What possible
-connection is there between the na&iuml;ve picture of Hebrew Messianism
-we have in the Synoptic Gospels and the hurly-burly, the tagrag and
-bobtail of pagan mythologies which Mr. Robertson and his henchman Drews
-rake together pell-mell in their pretentious volumes? How did all this
-paganism abut in a Messianic society which reverenced the Old Testament
-for its sacred scriptures, which for long frequented the Jewish Temple,
-took over the feasts and fasts of Judaism, modelled its prayers on
-those of the Synagogue, cherished in its eastern branches the practice
-of circumcision?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Mr. Robertson accepts the historicity of
-Jesus after all</span>After hundreds of pages devoted to the task of
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb184" href="#pb184" name=
-"pb184">184</a>]</span>evaporating Jesus into a Solar or
-Vegetation-god, and all the personages we meet in the Gospels into
-zodiacal signs or pagan demigods, Mr. Robertson, as we have noticed
-above, finds himself, after all, confronted with the same personages in
-Paul&rsquo;s Epistles. There they are too real even for Mr. Robertson
-to dissipate them into cloud-forms, and too numerous to be cut out
-wholesale. He feels that, if all Paul&rsquo;s allusions to the
-crucified Jesus are to be got rid of as interpolations, then no Pauline
-Epistles will remain. He cuts out, indeed, all he can, but there is a
-residuum of reality. To identify Paul&rsquo;s Jesus with the Jesus of
-the Gospels is too humdrum and obvious a course for him. So
-common-sense and commonplace a scheme does not suit his subtle
-intelligence; moreover, such an identification would upset the hundreds
-of pages in which he has proved that Jesus of Nazareth and all his
-accessories are literary symbols employed by the Jewish
-&ldquo;Jesuists&rdquo; to disguise their pagan art and myths.
-Accordingly, he asks us to believe that Paul&rsquo;s Jesus is a certain
-Jesus Ben Pandira, stoned to death a hundred years earlier. This Jesus
-is a vague figure fished up out of the Talmud; but, on examination, we
-found Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s choice of him as an alias for Paul&rsquo;s
-Jesus to be most unfortunate, for competent Talmudic scholars are
-agreed that Jesus Ben Pandira in the Talmud was no other than Jesus of
-Nazareth in the Gospels. Jesus most unkindly insists on being in at his
-own death,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4125src" href="#xd25e4125" name=
-"xd25e4125src">3</a> in spite of all Mr. Robertson can say or do; and
-his house of cards is crowned with the discovery that the apostles whom
-Paul knew&mdash;not <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb185" href="#pb185"
-name="pb185">185</a>]</span>being identical with the signs of the
-Zodiac, like those of the Gospels&mdash;were no other than the twelve
-apostles of the Jewish High Priest, and that they were the authors of
-the lately-discovered &ldquo;Teaching of the Apostles.&rdquo; He is
-very contemptuous for other early Christian books which affect
-apostolic authorship in their titles, but falls a ready victim to the
-relatively late and anonymous editor of this &ldquo;teaching,&rdquo;
-who to give it vogue entitled it &ldquo;The Teaching of the Lord by the
-Twelve Apostles to the Gentiles.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Jesuist sect,&rdquo;
-he writes (p. 345), &ldquo;founded on it <span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e4130" title="Added by author">(</span>the
-<i>Didach&eacute;</i><span class="corr" id="xd25e4136" title=
-"Corrected by author from: ,">)</span> the Christian myth of the Twelve
-Apostles of Jesus.&rdquo; Everywhere else in his books he has argued
-that the &ldquo;myth&rdquo; in question was founded on the signs of the
-Zodiac. Why give up at the eleventh hour the astral explanation for an
-utterly different one? I may add that in the body of the
-<i>Didach&eacute;</i> the Twelve are nowhere alluded to; that it must
-be a much later document than the Gospels and Paulines, since it quotes
-them in scores of passages; and that the interpolation of the title,
-with a reference to the Twelve Apostles, was a literary trick scarcely
-older than the fourth century, long before which age the Pauline
-account of the resurrection was cited by a score of Christian writers.
-Lastly, we are fain to inquire of Mr. Robertson with whom he identifies
-&ldquo;the Lord&rdquo; of the above title&mdash;with the Jewish High
-Priest, or with Jesus Ben Pandira, or with the Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Theory of interpolations</span> I have
-given many examples of the tendency of all these authors to condemn as
-an interpolation any text which contradicts their hypotheses. There is
-only one error worse than that of treating seriously documents which
-are no documents at all. It is that of <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb186" href="#pb186" name="pb186">186</a>]</span>the man who cannot
-recognize documents when he has got them. It is well, of course, to
-weigh sources, and the critical investigation of authorship lies at the
-basis of all true history. But, as the authors above cited justly
-remark (p. 99):&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We must not abuse it. The extreme of distrust in these
-matters is almost as mischievous as the extreme of credulity.
-P&egrave;re Hardouin, who attributed the works of Virgil and Horace to
-medieval monks, was every whit as ridiculous as the victim of
-Vrain-Lucas. It is an abuse of the methods of this species of criticism
-to apply them, as has been done, indiscriminately, for the mere
-pleasure of it. The bunglers who have used this species of criticism to
-brand as spurious perfectly genuine documents, such as the writings of
-Hroswitha, the <i>Ligurinus</i>, and the bull <i lang="la">unam
-sanctam</i>, or to establish imaginary filiations between certain
-annals, on the strength of superficial indications, would have
-discredited criticism before now, if that had been possible.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It is unhappily easier to discredit criticism in the realm of
-ecclesiastical than of secular history; and this school of writers are
-doing their best to harm the cause of true Rationalism. They only
-afford amusement to the obscurantists of orthodoxy, and render doubly
-difficult the task of those who seek to win people over to a
-common-sense and historical envisagement, unencumbered by tradition and
-superstition, of the problems of early Christianity.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Professor Smith&rsquo;s monotheistic
-cult</span> Lastly, it is a fact deserving of notice that the genesis
-of Christianity as these authors present it is much more mysterious and
-obscure than before. Their explanation needs explaining. What, we must
-ask, was the motive and end in view of the adherents of the
-pre-Christian Jesus or Joshua in writing the Gospels and bringing down
-their God to earth, so humanizing in a story their divine myth? Let
-Professor <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb187" href="#pb187" name=
-"pb187">187</a>]</span>W. B. Smith speak: &ldquo;What was the essence,
-the central idea and active principle, of the cult itself?&rdquo; Here
-he means the cult of the pre-Christian Christ that invented the Gospels
-and diffused them on the market place. &ldquo;To this latter,&rdquo; he
-continues, &ldquo;we answer directly and immediately: It was a
-<i>Protest against idolatry</i>; it was a <i>Crusade for
-monotheism</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And yet he cannot adduce a single text from the Gospels&mdash;not
-even from the Fourth&mdash;which betrays on the part of Jesus, their
-central figure, any such crusading spirit. Jesus everywhere assumes his
-hearers to be monotheists like himself&mdash;he speaks as a Jew to
-Jews&mdash;and perpetually reminds them of their Father in heaven. Thus
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%206:8&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matt. vi, 8</a>: &ldquo;Your Father knoweth what things ye have need
-of&rdquo;; <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%205:48&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matt. v, 48</a>: &ldquo;Ye therefore shall be perfect, as your heavenly
-Father is perfect.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The monotheism of those who stood around the teacher is ever taken
-for granted by the evangelists, and in all the precepts of Jesus not
-one can be adduced that is aimed at the sins of polytheism and
-idolatry. His message lies in a far different region. It is the
-immediate advent of the Messianic kingdom, and the need of repentance
-ere it come. Only when Paul undertakes to bear this message to pagans
-outside the pale of Judaism do we get teaching directed against
-idolatry; and in his Epistles such precepts have a second place, the
-first being reserved to the preaching of the coming kingdom and of the
-redemption of the world by the merits of the crucified and risen
-Messiah, the man Jesus. Most of Paul&rsquo;s letters read as if those
-for whom he wrote them were already proselytes familiar with the Jewish
-scriptures. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb188" href="#pb188" name=
-"pb188">188</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">His great Oriental cryptogram</span> Such
-is Mr. Smith&rsquo;s fundamental assumption, and it is baseless. On it
-he bases his next great hypothesis of &ldquo;the primitive secrecy of
-the Jesus cult,&rdquo; which &ldquo;was maintained in some measure for
-many years&mdash;for generations even&rdquo; (p. 45).
-&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he asks, &ldquo;was this Jesus cult originally
-secret, and expressed in such guarded parabolic terms as made it
-unintelligible to the multitude?&rdquo; The reason lay in the fact that
-&ldquo;it was exactly to save the pagan multitude from idolatry that
-Jesus came into the world&rdquo; (p. 38).</p>
-<p>Here the phrase &ldquo;Jesus came into the world,&rdquo; like all
-else he did or suffered, is, of course, to be understood in a
-Pickwickian sense, for he never came into the world at all. The Gospels
-are not only a romance concocted by &ldquo;such students of religion as
-the first Christians were&rdquo; (p. 65), and inspired by their study
-of Plato,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4190src" href="#xd25e4190" name=
-"xd25e4190src">4</a> and of the best elements in ancient mythology;
-they are a romance throughout&mdash;an allegory of a secret
-pre-Christian Nazarene society and of its secret cult (p. 34). Of this
-society, he tells us, we know nothing; esoterism and cult secrecy were
-its chief interests; the &ldquo;silence of the Christians about it was
-intentional,&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4199src" href=
-"#xd25e4199" name="xd25e4199src">5</a> and, except for the special
-revelation vouchsafed the other day to Professor W. B. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb189" href="#pb189" name=
-"pb189">189</a>]</span>Smith, it would have remained for ever unknown,
-and Christianity for ever enigmatic.</p>
-<p>In accordance with this postulate of esoterism and cult secrecy
-among the pre-Christian Nazarenes, who subsequently revealed themselves
-to the world as the Christian Church, though even then they
-&ldquo;maintained for generations the secrecy<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4206src" href="#xd25e4206" name="xd25e4206src">6</a> of their
-Jesus cult,&rdquo; the Gospels, as I said, are an allegory or a
-charade. Their <i lang="la">prima facie</i> meaning is never the true
-one, never more than symbolic of a moral and spiritual undersense such
-as old allegorists like Philo and Origen loved to discover in the
-Bible. Thus, as we saw above, when Jesus is reported to have cast out
-of the Jews who thronged around him devils of blindness, deafness,
-lameness, leprosy, death, what is really intended is that he argued
-pagans out of their polytheism. &ldquo;It was spiritual maladies, and
-only spiritual, that he was healing&rdquo; (p. 38). We ask of Mr.
-Smith, why was so much mystification necessary? We are only told that
-&ldquo;it was in the main a prudential measure, well enough justified,
-but intended to be only temporary&rdquo; (p. 39). What exact risks they
-were to shun which the sect kept itself secret, and only spake in
-far-fetched allegory, Mr. Smith does not inform us. Is he, too, afraid
-of being regarded as a &ldquo;tell-tale&rdquo; (p. 48)?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Professor Smith resolves all the New
-Testament as symbolic and allegorical</span> As with the exorcisms, so
-with all else told of Jesus. None of it really happened. As he never
-lived, so he never died. His human life and death are an allegory of
-the spiritual cult and mysteries which the pre-Christian Nazarenes and
-their <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb190" href="#pb190" name=
-"pb190">190</a>]</span>descendants, the Christians, so jealously and
-for so long guarded in silence. If he never lived, then he never
-taught, not even in parables. By consequence the entire record of his
-parables, still more of his having chosen the parable as his medium of
-instruction in order to veil his real meaning from his audience, is all
-moonshine. Here, as elsewhere, the Gospel text does not mean what it
-says, but is itself only a Nazarene parable conveying, or rather
-concealing, a Nazarene secret&mdash;what sort of secret no one, save
-Professor Smith, the self-appointed revealer of their mysterious lore,
-can tell, and he is silent on the point. On Mr. Smith&rsquo;s
-premisses, then, we cannot rely on the Gospels to inform us of anything
-historical, and, so far as we can follow him, we must, if we would
-discern through them the mind of their Nazarene authors, take them
-upside down. We must discern a pagan medium and homilies against
-polytheism in discourses addressed to monotheistic Jews who needed no
-warnings against idolatry; we must also read the stories of Jesus
-healing paralytics and demoniacs as secret and disguised polemics
-against idolatry.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Yet claims, where it suits him, to treat it
-as historical narrative</span> But here mark Professor Smith&rsquo;s
-inconsistency. Why is he sure that the Nazarenes, and after them the
-earliest Christians, were a secret society with a secret cult? They
-must have been so, he argues, because Jesus taught in parables.
-&ldquo;The primitive esoterism,&rdquo; he tells us, &ldquo;is
-admittedly present in <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%204:11-12&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark iv, 11, 12</a>, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%204:33-44&amp;version=NRSV">
-33, 34</a>.&rdquo; These verses begin thus: &ldquo;And <i>he</i> said
-unto them, unto you is given the mystery of the kingdom of heaven: but
-unto them that are without, all things are done in parables.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Now, Mr. Smith&rsquo;s postulate is that
-<i>he</i>&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, Jesus of Nazareth&mdash;never lived, and
-so never said anything <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb191" href=
-"#pb191" name="pb191">191</a>]</span>to anyone. How, then, can he
-appeal to what <i>he</i> said to prove that there was a pre-Christian
-Jesus or Joshua sect, itself secret with a cult and ritual which its
-members were ever on their guard not to reveal? Surely he drops here
-into two assumptions which he has discarded <i lang="la">ab initio</i>:
-first, that there is a core of real history in the Gospels; and,
-second, that the Gospel can mean what it says, and that its Nazarene
-author is here not allegorizing, as he usually did.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">His theory contradicts itself</span> But
-even if we allow Mr. Smith to break with his premisses wherever he
-needs to do so in order to substantiate them, do these verses of Mark
-support his hypothesis of a sect which kept itself, its rites, and its
-teaching secret? I admit that it was pretty successful when it veiled
-its anti-idolatrous teaching under the outward form of demonological
-anecdotes, and wrote Jews when it meant Pagans and Polytheists. But in
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%204:34&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark iv, 34</a>, we are told that &ldquo;to his own disciples Jesus
-privately expounded all things&rdquo; after he had with many parables
-spoken the word to such as &ldquo;were able to hear it.&rdquo; It
-appears, then, that for all their love of secrecy, and in spite of all
-their precautions against &ldquo;tell-tale&rdquo; writing, the
-Nazarenes on occasions went out of their way, in their allegorical
-romance of their God Joshua, to inform all who may read it what their
-parables and allegories meant; for in it Jesus sits down and expounds
-to the reader over some twenty-four verses (verses 10&ndash;34) the
-inner meaning of the parables which he had just addressed to the
-multitude. What on earth were the Nazarenes doing to publish a Gospel
-like this, and so let the cat out of the bag? Instead of keeping their
-secret they were proclaiming it on the housetops. Again, if the Gospels
-are to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb192" href="#pb192" name=
-"pb192">192</a>]</span>such an extent merely allegorical, that we must
-not assume their authors to have believed that Jesus ever lived, how
-can we possibly rely on them for information about such an obscure
-matter as a secret and esoteric pre-Christian Nazarene sect? We can
-only be sure that the evangelists never under any circumstances meant
-what they said; yet Mr. Smith, in defiance of all his postulates,
-writes, p. 40, as follows: &ldquo;On the basis, then, of this passage
-alone [<i>i.e.</i>, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%204:10-34&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark iv, 10&ndash;34</a>] we may confidently affirm the primitive
-secrecy of the Jesus cult.&rdquo; Even if the passage rightly yielded
-the sense he tries to extort from it, how can we be sure that that
-sense is not, like the rest of the Gospel, an allegory of something
-else?</p>
-<p>The other passage of the Gospels, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%2010:26-27&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew x, 26, 27</a>, to which, with like inconsistency, Mr. Smith
-appeals by way of showing that the Nazarenes of set purpose hid their
-light under a bushel, does not bear the interpretation he puts on it.
-It runs thus: &ldquo;Fear them not therefore: for naught is covered
-that shall not be revealed, and hidden that shall not be known. What I
-tell you in the darkness, speak ye on the housetops; and what ye hear
-in the ear, proclaim upon the housetops.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Absence of esoterism about Jesus&rsquo;s
-teaching</span> The reasonable interpretation of the above is that
-Jesus, being in possession, as he thought, of a special understanding,
-perhaps revelation, of the true nature of the Messianic kingdom, and
-convinced of its near approach, instructed his immediate disciples in
-privacy concerning it in order that they might carry the message up and
-down the land to the children of Israel. He therefore exhorts them not
-to be silent from fear of the Jews, who accused him of being
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb193" href="#pb193" name=
-"pb193">193</a>]</span>possessed of a devil, somewhat as his own mother
-and brethren accused him of being an <i lang="fr">exalt&eacute;</i> and
-beside himself. No, they were to cast aside all apprehensions; they
-must go, not to the supercilious Pharisees or to the comfortable
-priests who battened on the people, still less to Gentiles and
-Samaritans, who had no part in the promises made to Israel, but to the
-lost sheep of the house of Israel, and they must preach as they went,
-saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand. They were to heal the sick,
-raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out devils, and in general
-give freely the good tidings which freely they had received from their
-Master, and he from John the Baptist. If they so acted, discarding all
-timidity, then no human repression, no human time-serving, could
-prevent the spread of the good news. What was now hidden from the poor
-and ignorant among his compatriots would henceforth, thanks to the
-courage and devotedness of his emissaries, be made known to them; what
-was now covered, be revealed.</p>
-<p>Such is the context of &ldquo;this remarkable deliverance,&rdquo; as
-Mr. Smith terms it; and nothing in all the New Testament savours less
-than it does of a secret cult of mysterious sectaries, waiting for Mr.
-Smith to manifest their <i>arcana</i> to us twenty centuries later.
-Here, as everywhere else in the New Testament, he has discovered a
-monstrous mare&rsquo;s nest; has banished the only possible and obvious
-interpretation, in order to substitute a chimera of his own.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">It was not a protest against
-paganism</span> Mr. Smith credits his hypothetical pre-Christian
-Nazarenes with an ambition and anxiety to purge away the errors of
-mankind. The &ldquo;essence, the central idea, and active principle of
-the cult itself,&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb194" href=
-"#pb194" name="pb194">194</a>]</span>he tells us (p. 45), &ldquo;was a
-<i>protest against Idolatry, a crusade for monotheism</i>.&rdquo;
-&ldquo;The fact of the primitive worship of Jesus and the fact of the
-primitive mission to all the Gentiles are the two cardinal facts of
-Proto-Christianity&rdquo; (p. xvii). Why on earth, then, in concocting
-that pronunciamento of their cult which we call the Gospels, did these
-Nazarenes represent <i>the</i> Jesus or Joshua God, even in allegory,
-as warning his disciples on no account to disseminate his cult among
-Gentiles and Samaritans, but only among Jews, who were notoriously
-monotheists and bitterly hostile to every form of idolatry? Why carry
-coals to Newcastle on so huge a scale?</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Why turn God Jeshua into a man at
-all</span> And granted that the Nazarenes, in their anxiety to be
-parabolical and misunderstood of their readers, wrote Jews when they
-meant Pagans, was it necessary in the interests of their monotheistic
-crusade to nickname their One God Jesus, to represent him as a man and
-a carpenter, with brothers and sisters, and a mother that did not
-believe in him; as a man who was a Jew with the prejudices of a Jew, a
-man circumcised and insisting that he came not to destroy the law of
-Moses, but to fulfil it; as a man who was born like other men of a
-human father and mother; was crucified, dead and buried; whose
-disciples and Galilean companions, when in the first flush of their
-grief they heard from Mary Magdalene the strange story of his first
-appearing to her after death, still &ldquo;disbelieved&rdquo;?<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e4297src" href="#xd25e4297" name=
-"xd25e4297src">7</a></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">The comfort of the initial
-&ldquo;J&rdquo;</span> These Nazarenes were, in their quality of
-&ldquo;students of religion&rdquo; (p. 65), intent on converting the
-world <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb195" href="#pb195" name=
-"pb195">195</a>]</span>from polytheism. Why, then, did they call their
-sublime deity by the name of Jesus? &ldquo;The word <i>Jesus</i>
-itself,&rdquo; writes Mr. Smith,</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">also made special appeal to the Jewish consciousness,
-for it was practically identical with their own Jeshua, now understood
-by most to mean strictly Jah-help, but easily confounded with a similar
-J&rsquo;shu&rsquo;ah, meaning <i>Deliverance</i>, <i>Saviour</i>,
-<i>Witness</i>, <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt%201:21&amp;version=NRSV">
-Matthew i, 21</a>. Moreover, the initial letter J, so often
-representing Jah in Hebrew words, must have powerfully suggested
-Jehovah to the Jewish consciousness.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>But what Jew of the first century, however fond of the tales about
-Joshua which he read in his scriptures, was ever minded to substitute
-his name for that of Jehovah merely because it began with a <i>J</i>
-and has been explained by twentieth-century Hebraists as meaning
-<i>Jah-help</i>? The idea is exquisitely humorous. While they were
-about it why did the Nazarenes not adopt the name Immanuel, which in
-that allegorical romance (which from Mr. Smith we know to be the
-character of Matthew&rsquo;s Gospel) they fished up out of the Hebrew
-prophet Isaiah? If Jehovah was not good enough for them, Immanuel was
-surely better than the name Jeshua, with its associations of pillage
-and murder. But apart from these considerations, as the name
-<i>Jeshua</i> is Hebrew, it follows that the secret sectaries who had
-this cult must have been of a Jewish cast. But, if so, what Jew, we
-ask, ever heard of a God called Jeshua or Joshua? As I have already
-pointed out, the very memory of such a God, if there ever was one,
-perished long before the Book of Joshua could have been written. Like
-the gods Daoud and Joseph, with whom writers of this class seek to
-conjure our wits out of our heads, a god Joshua is a mere preposterous
-superfetation of a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb196" href="#pb196"
-name="pb196">196</a>]</span>disordered imagination. &ldquo;There were
-abundant reasons,&rdquo; writes Mr. Smith (p. 16),</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">why the name <i>Jesus</i> should be the Aaron&rsquo;s
-rod to swallow up all other designations. Its meaning, which was
-<i>felt</i> to be Saviour, was grand, comforting, uplifting. The notion
-of the world-Saviour thrust its roots into the loam of the remotest
-antiquity.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Supposed confusion of Jesus with
-<i>i&#275;somai</i></span> One regrets to have to criticize such
-dithyrambic outpourings of Mr. Smith&rsquo;s heart. But, granted there
-was a widespread expectation, such as Suetonius records, of Messiahs
-who were to issue from Jud&aelig;a and conquer all the world, who ever
-heard of the name Joshua being assigned in advance to one of them? Who
-ever in that age <i>felt</i> the name <i>Jesus</i> to be grand,
-comforting, uplifting? Is not Mr. Smith attributing his own feelings,
-as he sat in a Sunday school, to Jews and Gentiles of the first
-century? I add Gentiles, for he pretends that the name Jesus appealed
-to the Greek consciousness also as a derivative of the Ionic future
-<span class="trans" title="I&#275;somai"><span class="Greek" lang=
-"grc">&#7992;&#8053;&sigma;&omicron;&mu;&alpha;&iota;</span></span>
-<i>i&#275;somai</i> = I will heal. Now what Christian writer ever made
-this <i>rapprochement</i>? Not a single one. Surely, if we are minded
-to argue the man Jesus out of existence, we ought to have a <i lang=
-"la">vera causa</i> to put in his place, a belief, or, if we like it
-better, a myth which was really believed, and is known to have entered
-deeply into the lives and consciences of men? It is true that the idea
-of a Messiah did so enter, but not in the form in which Mr. Smith loves
-to conceive it. The Messiah was such a human figure as Suetonius had
-heard of; he was a man who should, as we read in Acts, restore the
-kingdom of David. &ldquo;Lord, dost Thou at this time restore the
-kingdom to Israel?&rdquo; is the question the apostles are said
-(<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%201:7&amp;version=NRSV">Acts
-i, 7</a>) to have <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb197" href="#pb197"
-name="pb197">197</a>]</span>put to Jesus as soon as his apparitions
-before them had revived the Messianic hopes which his death had so
-woefully dashed. The incident is probably apocryphal, yet its presence
-in the narrative illustrates what a Messiah was then expected by
-Christians to achieve. Judas Maccab&aelig;us, Cyrus, Bar Cochba, Judas
-of Galilee&mdash;these and other heroes of Israel had the quality of
-Messiahs. They were all men, and not myths. The suggestion, then, that
-the name Jesus was one to conjure with is idle and baseless; and if his
-name had been Obadiah or Nathaniel, Professor Smith would have been
-equally ready to prove that these were attractive names, bound to
-triumph and &ldquo;swallow up all other designations.&rdquo; He only
-pitches on the name of Jesus for his pre-Christian Saviour-god because
-he finds it in the Gospels; but inasmuch as he sees in them mere
-allegorical romances, entirely unhistorical and having no root in
-facts, there is no reason for adopting from them one name more than
-another. How does he know that the appellation Jesus is not as much of
-a Nazarene fiction as he holds every other name and person and incident
-to be which the Gospels contain? Is it not more probable that this
-highly secretive sect, with their horror of &ldquo;tell-tale,&rdquo;
-would keep secret the name of their Saviour-god, as the Essenes kept
-secret the names of their patron angels? The truth is, even Mr. Smith
-cannot quite divest himself of the idea that there is some historical
-basis for the Gospels; otherwise he would not have turned to them for
-the name of his Saviour-god.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Mr. Smith denies all historicity to Acts
-and Epistles</span> More consistently, however, than Mr. Robertson,
-Professor Smith denies that there are any allusions to the real Jesus
-in the rest of the New Testament. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb198"
-href="#pb198" name="pb198">198</a>]</span>The Acts and Epistles do not,
-he says (p. 23), &ldquo;recognize at all the <i>life of Jesus as a
-man</i>,&rdquo; though &ldquo;their general tenour gives great value to
-the <i>death of Jesus as a God</i>.&rdquo; This is a new reading of the
-documents in question, for the Pauline conviction was that Jesus had
-been crucified and died <i>as a man</i>, and, being raised up from
-death by the Spirit, had been promoted to be, what he was antenatally,
-a super-human or angelic figure<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4404src"
-href="#xd25e4404" name="xd25e4404src">8</a>&mdash;a Christ or Messiah,
-who was to come again on earth and judge mankind. Of his mere humanity
-while on this earth, and as long as he was associating with human
-disciples, Paul entertained no doubts. How could he, inasmuch as he had
-stayed with them at Jerusalem? Mr. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb199"
-href="#pb199" name="pb199">199</a>]</span>Robertson, as we saw,
-although he dissipates Jesus in the Gospels into a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, nevertheless is so impressed by the Pauline &ldquo;references
-to a crucified Jesus&rdquo; (p. 364) that he resuscitates Jesus Ben
-Pandira out of the limbo of the Talmud. Perhaps he strains at a gnat
-after swallowing a camel. Anyhow, I will leave Mr. Smith to settle
-accounts with him, and turn to a fresh point, which has not occurred to
-either of them.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Contrast of Christian belief in Jesus with
-cult of Adonis or Osiris</span> It is this. Adonis and Osiris were
-never regarded by their votaries as having been human beings that had
-recently lived and died on the face of this earth. The Christians, in
-strong contrast with them and with all other pagans ever heard of, did
-so regard Jesus from first to last. Why so, when they knew that from
-the first he was a God and up in heaven? Why has the fact of his
-unreality, as these writers argue it, left no trace of itself in
-Christian tradition and literature? According to this new school of
-critics, the Nazarenes, when they wrote down the Gospels, knew
-perfectly well that Jesus was a figment, and had never lived at all.
-And yet we never get a hint that he was only a myth, and that the New
-Testament is a gigantic <i lang="fr">fumisterie</i>. Why so? Why from
-the very first did the followers of Jesus entertain what Mr. Smith
-denounces as &ldquo;an a priori concept of the Jesus&rdquo; (p. 35)?
-Why, in other words, were they convinced from the beginning that he was
-a man of flesh and blood, who had lived on earth among them? The
-&ldquo;early secrecy,&rdquo; the &ldquo;esoterism of the primitive
-cult&rdquo; (p. 39), says Mr. Smith, &ldquo;was intended to be only
-temporary.&rdquo; If so, why could not the Nazarenes, primarily
-interested as they were, not in lies and bogus, but in disseminating
-their lofty monotheism, have thrown <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb200" href="#pb200" name="pb200">200</a>]</span>off the disguise some
-time or other, and explained to their spiritual children that the
-intensely concrete life of Jesus which they had published in our Gospel
-of Mark meant nothing; that it was all an allegory, and no more, of a
-Saviour-god, who had never existed as a human being, nor even as the
-docetic phantasmagoria of the Gnostic? &ldquo;Something sealed the lips
-of that (Nazarene) evangelist,&rdquo; and the Nazarenes have kept their
-secret so well through the ages that it has been reserved for Mr. Smith
-first to pierce the veil and unlock their mystery. He it is who has at
-last discovered that &ldquo;in proto-Mark we behold the manifest
-God&rdquo; (p. 24).</p>
-<p>Now what possessed the Nazarenes so firmly to impose on the world
-through the Gospels an erroneous view of their God, that for 2,000
-years not only their spiritual offspring, the Christians, but Jews and
-pagans as well, have believed him to have lived on earth, a man of
-flesh and blood and of like passions with themselves? Was the deception
-necessary? The votaries of Osiris and Adonis were never so tricked. The
-adherents of the Augustalian cult, the pious Greeks and Syrians who
-thronged to be healed of their diseases at the shrines of Apollonius,
-believed, of course, that their patron saints and gods had lived, prior
-to their apotheosis, upon earth; and so they had. But a follower of
-Osiris or &AElig;sculapius would have opened his eyes wide with
-astonishment if you asked him to believe that his Saviour had died only
-the other day in Jud&aelig;a. Not so a Christian; for the Nazarene
-monotheists had so thoroughly fooled him with their Gospels that he was
-ready to supply you with dates and pedigrees and all sorts of other
-details about his Saviour&rsquo;s personal history. And yet all the
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb201" href="#pb201" name=
-"pb201">201</a>]</span>time, had he only known it, his religion
-laboured under the same initial disadvantage as the cult of Osiris or
-&AElig;sculapius&mdash;that, namely, of its founder never having lived
-at all. What, then, did &ldquo;such students of religion, as the first
-Christians were&rdquo; (<i lang="la">Ecce Deus</i>, p. 65), imagine was
-to be gained by hood-winking their descendants for the long centuries
-which have intervened between them and the advent of Professor W. B.
-Smith? <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb202" href="#pb202" name=
-"pb202">202</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3896" href="#xd25e3896src" name="xd25e3896">1</a></span> Mr.
-Robertson recognizes (p. 124), though without realizing how much it
-damages his theory, that the miracles of the Gospels are &ldquo;visibly
-unknown to the Paulinists&rdquo;&mdash;presumably the early churches
-addressed by Paul in his Epistle. Do we not here get a glimpse of an
-early stage of the story of Jesus before it was overlaid with
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb170n" href="#pb170n" name=
-"pb170n">170</a>]</span>miracles? Yet Mr. Robertson, in defiance of
-logic, argues that the absence of miraculous tales of Jesus in the
-Paulines confirms what he calls &ldquo;the mythological
-argument.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3896src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4069" href="#xd25e4069src" name="xd25e4069">2</a></span> It is
-true that this is from a speech put into Paul&rsquo;s mouth by the
-author of Acts; but Paul himself is no less emphatic in <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Rom%201:23&amp;version=NRSV">
-Romans i, 23</a>, where of the Greeks he writes that, &ldquo;though
-they knew God, they glorified him not as God&#8202;&hellip;. Professing
-themselves wise, they were turned into fools, and changed the glory of
-the incorruptible God for the likeness of an image of a corruptible
-man.&rdquo; Such were the feelings excited in Paul by a statue of
-Pheidias; how different from those it roused in his contemporary Dion,
-who wrote as follows of it: <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb181n" href=
-"#pb181n" name="pb181n">181</a>]</span>&ldquo;Whoever among mortal men
-is most utterly toilworn in spirit, having drunk the cup of many
-sorrows and calamities, when he stands before this image must utterly
-forget all the terrors and woes of this mortal life.&rdquo; So strong
-was the prejudice of the Church (due exclusively to its Jewish origin)
-against plastic or pictorial art that Eusebius and Epiphanius condemned
-pictures of Christ as late as the fourth century, while the Eastern
-churches, even to-day, forbid statues of Jesus and of the Saints. Of
-the great gulf which separated Jew from Gentile on such points Mr.
-Robertson seems not to have the faintest notion.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e4069src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4125" href="#xd25e4125src" name="xd25e4125">3</a></span> I trust
-my readers will forgive my use of a fox-hunting phrase in so serious a
-context, but I cannot think of any other so apt.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e4125src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4190" href="#xd25e4190src" name="xd25e4190">4</a></span> P. 48.
-After citing the rather problematic allusion to Plato (Rep. ii, 361 D)
-in the apology of Apollonius (c. 172), the just man shall be tortured,
-he shall be spat on, and, last of all, he shall be crucified. Harnack
-has said that there is no other reference to this passage of Plato in
-old-Christian literature. &ldquo;Why<span class="corr" id="xd25e4192"
-title="Not in source">?</span>&rdquo; asks Mr. Smith. &ldquo;Because
-Christians were not familiar with it? Impossible. The silence of the
-Christians was intentional, and the reason is obvious. The passage was
-tell-tale. Similarly we are to understand their silence about the
-pre-Christian Nazarenes and many other lions that were safest when
-asleep.&rdquo; This is in the true vein of a <span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e4195" title=
-"Source: Bacon-Shakespearian">Bacon-Shakesperians</span> armed with his
-cypher.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4190src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4199" href="#xd25e4199src" name="xd25e4199">5</a></span> See note
-(1).&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4199src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4206" href="#xd25e4206src" name="xd25e4206">6</a></span>
-Elsewhere Mr. Smith qualifies this position, p. 35: &ldquo;Of course,
-the cult was not intended to remain, and did not in fact remain,
-secret; it was at length brought into the open.&rdquo; But perhaps Mr.
-Smith is here alluding to his own revelation.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e4206src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4297" href="#xd25e4297src" name="xd25e4297">7</a></span>
-<a class="biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible"
-href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2016:9&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark xvi, 9</a>. The circumstance that <a class="biblink xd25e45"
-title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mk%2016:9-20&amp;version=NRSV">
-Mark xvi, 9&ndash;20</a>, was added to the Gospel by another hand in no
-way diminishes the significance of the passage here
-adduced.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4297src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4404" href="#xd25e4404src" name="xd25e4404">8</a></span> In the
-same manner, as we know from Origen (<i>Com. in Evang. Ioannis</i>,
-tom. xiii, 27), the Samaritans had a Messiah named Dositheos, who rose
-from the dead, and professed himself to be the Messiah of prophecy. His
-sect survived in the third century, as also his books, which, as Origen
-says, were full of &ldquo;myth&rdquo; about him to the effect that he
-had not tasted of death, but was somewhere or other still alive. By all
-the rules of criticism as used by Mr. Robertson and his friends, we
-must deny that Dositheos ever lived. The idea of a human hero being an
-angel or divine power made flesh was common among Jews, and in their
-apocryph, &ldquo;The Prayer of Jacob&rdquo; (see Origen, <i>op.
-cit.</i>, tom. ii, 25), that worthy represented himself as such in the
-very language of Paul and of the Fourth Gospel: &ldquo;I who spoke to
-you, I, Jacob and Israel, am an angel of God and a primeval spirit, as
-Abraham and Isaak were created in advance of all creatures. But I,
-Jacob, &hellip; called Israel by God, a man seeing God, because I am
-first-born of all living beings made alive by God.&rdquo; We also learn
-that Uriel was sent forth by God to herald Jacob&rsquo;s descent upon
-earth, where he &ldquo;tabernacled among men.&rdquo; Jacob declares
-himself to be &ldquo;archangel of the power of God, and arch-captain
-among the sons of God, Israel the foremost minister of the
-Presence.&rdquo; Paul, we observe, did not need to go outside Judaism
-for his conceptions of Jesus, nor Justin Martyr either, who regularly
-speaks of Jesus as an archangel. So also among the pagans. In Augustus
-C&aelig;sar his contemporaries loved to detect one of the great gods of
-Olympus just descended to earth in the semblance of a man. He was the
-god Mercury or some other god incarnate. His birth was a god&rsquo;s
-descent to earth in order to expiate the sins of the Romans. Thus
-Horace, <i>Odes</i>, I, 2, v. 29: <i lang="la">Cui dabit partes scelus
-expiandi Juppiter</i>, and cp. v. 45: <i lang="la">Serus in c&oelig;lum
-redeas</i>&mdash;&ldquo;Mayest thou be late in returning to
-heaven.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4404src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch7" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e254">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter VII</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">DR. JENSEN</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="marginnote">Babylonian influence on Greek
-religion slight;</span> The three writers whose views I have so far
-considered agree in denying that Jesus was a real historical personage;
-but their agreement extends no further, for the Jesus legend is the
-precipitate, according to Professor W. B. Smith, of a monotheistic
-propaganda; according to Mr. Robertson, of a movement mainly
-idolatrous, polytheistic, and pagan. There exists in Germany, however,
-a third school of denial, which sees in the Jesus story a duplicate of
-the ancient Babylonian Gilgamesch legend. The more extreme writers of
-this school have endeavoured to show that not only the Hebrews, but the
-Greeks as well, derived their religious myths and rites from ancient
-Babylon; and their general hypothesis has on that account been
-nicknamed <i>Pan-Babylonismus</i>. This is not the place to criticize
-the use made of old Babylonian mythology in explanation of old Greek
-religion, though I do well to point out that the best students of the
-latter&mdash;for example, Dr. Farnell&mdash;confine the indebtedness of
-the Greeks to very narrow limits.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">on Hebrew religion more important;</span>
-The case of the Hebrew scriptures and religion stands on different
-ground; for the Jews were Semites, and their myths of creation and of
-the origin and early history of man are, by the admission even of
-orthodox divines of to-day, largely borrowed from the more ancient
-civilization of Babylon. Thus <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb203"
-href="#pb203" name="pb203">203</a>]</span>Heinrich Zimmern (art.
-&ldquo;Deluge,&rdquo; in <i lang="la">Encyclop&aelig;dia Biblica</i>)
-writes: &ldquo;Of all the parallel traditions of a deluge, the
-Babylonian is undeniably the most important, because the points of
-contact between it and the Hebrew story are so striking that the view
-of the dependence of one of the two on the other is directly suggested
-even to the most cautious of students.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">yet a Jew may have possessed some
-imagination of his own</span> This undoubted occurrence of Babylonian
-myths in the Book of Genesis has provided some less critical and
-cautious cuneiform scholars with a clue, as they imagine, to the entire
-contents of the Bible from beginning to end. It is as if the Jews, all
-through their literary history of a thousand years, could not possibly
-have invented any myths of their own, still less have picked a few up
-elsewhere than in Babylon. Accordingly, in a volume of 1,030 enormous
-pages, P. Jensen has undertaken to show<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4469src" href="#xd25e4469" name="xd25e4469src">1</a> that the New
-Testament, no less than the Old, was derived from this single
-well-spring. Moses and Aaron, Joshua, Jeroboam, Rehoboam, Hadad, Jacob
-and Esau, Saul, David and Jonathan, Joseph and his brethren, Potiphar,
-Rachel and Leah, Laban, Zipporah, Miriam sister of Moses, Dinah, Simeon
-and Levi, Jethro and the Gibeonites and Sichemites, Sarah and Hagar,
-<span class="marginnote">Gilgamesch, Eabani, and the holy harlot,
-protagonists of the entire Old Testament</span>Abraham and Isaac,
-Samson, Uriah and Nathan, Naboth, Elijah and Elisha, Naaman, Benhadad
-and Hazael, Gideon, Jerubbaal, Abimelech, Jephthah, Tobit, Jehu, and
-pretty well any other personage in the Old Testament, are duplicates,
-according to him, of Gilgamesch or his companion the shepherd Eabani
-(son of Ea), or of the Hierodule or sacred prostitute, <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb204" href="#pb204" name="pb204">204</a>]</span>and
-of a few more leading figures in the Babylonian epic. There is hardly a
-story in the whole of Jewish literature which is not, according to
-Jensen, an echo of the Gilgamesch legend; and every personage, every
-incident, is freely manipulated to make them fit this Procrustean bed.
-No combinations of elements separated in the Biblical texts, no
-separations of elements united therein, no recasting of the fabric of a
-narrative, no modifications of any kind, are so violent as to deter Dr.
-Jensen. At the top of every page is an abstract of its argument,
-usually of this type: &ldquo;<i lang="de">Der Hirte Eabani, die
-Hierodule und Gilgamesch. Der Hirte Moses, sein Weib und
-Aaron.</i>&rdquo; In other words, as Moses was one shepherd and Eabani
-another, Moses is no other than Eabani. As there is a sacred prostitute
-in the Gilgamesch story, and a wife in the legend of Moses, therefore
-wife and prostitute are one and the same. As Gilgamesch was companion
-of Eabani, and Aaron of Moses, therefore Aaron was an <i>alias</i> of
-Gilgamesch. Dr. Jensen is quite content with points of contact between
-the stories so few and slight as the above, and pursues this sort of
-loose argument over a thousand pages. Here is another such rubric:
-&ldquo;<span lang="de">Simson-Gilgamesch&rsquo;s Leiche und
-Saul-Gilgamesch&rsquo;s Gebeine wieder ausgegraben,
-Elisa-Gilgamesch&rsquo;s Grab ge&ouml;ffnet.</span>&rdquo; In other
-words, Simson, or Samson, left a corpse behind him (who does not?);
-Saul&rsquo;s bones were piously looked after by the Jabeshites;
-Elisha&rsquo;s bones raised a dead Moabite by mere contact to fresh
-life. These three figures are, therefore, ultimately one, and that one
-is Gilgamesch; and their three stories, which have no discernible
-features in common, are so many disguises of the Gilgamesch epos.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">as also of the entire New
-Testament</span>But Dr. Jensen transcends himself in the New
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb205" href="#pb205" name=
-"pb205">205</a>]</span>Testament. &ldquo;The Jesus-saga,&rdquo; he
-informs us (p. 933), &ldquo;as it meets us in the Synoptic Gospels, and
-equally as it meets us in John&rsquo;s Gospel, stands out among all the
-other Gilgamesch Sagas which we have so far (<i>i.e.</i>, in the Old
-Testament) expounded, in that it not merely follows up the main body of
-the Saga with sundry fragments of it, like so many stragglers, but sets
-before us a long series of bits of it arranged in the original order
-almost undisturbed.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4498src" href=
-"#xd25e4498" name="xd25e4498src">2</a></p>
-<p>And he waxes eloquent about the delusions and ignorance of
-Christians, who for 2,000 years have been erecting churches and
-cathedrals in honour of a Jesus of Nazareth, who all the time was a
-mere <i>alias</i> of Gilgamesch.</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">John&mdash;Eabani</span> Let us, then, test
-some of the arguments by which this remarkable conclusion is reached.
-Let us begin with John the Baptist (p. 811). John was a prophet, who
-appeared east of the Jordan. So was Elias or Elijah. Elijah was a hairy
-man, and John wore a raiment of camel&rsquo;s-hair; both of them wore
-leather girdles.</p>
-<p>Now, in the Gilgamesch story, Eabani is covered with hair all over
-his body (p. 579&mdash;&ldquo;<span lang="de">am ganzen Leibe mit
-Haaren bedeckt ist</span>&rdquo;). Eabani (p. 818) is a hairy man, and
-presumably was clad in skins (&ldquo;<span lang="de">ist ein haariger
-Mann und vermutlich mit Fellen bekleidet</span>&rdquo;). Dr. Jensen
-concludes from this that John and Elijah are both of them, equally and
-independently, duplicates or understudies of Eabani. It <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb206" href="#pb206" name=
-"pb206">206</a>]</span>never occurs to him that in the desert
-camel&rsquo;s-hair was a handy material out of which to make a coat, as
-also leather to make girdles of, and that desert prophets in any story
-whatever would inevitably be represented as clad in such a manner. He
-has, indeed, heard of Jo. Weiss&rsquo;s suggestion that Luke had read
-the LXX, and modelled his picture of John the Baptist on Elijah; but he
-rejects the suggestion, for he feels&mdash;and rightly&mdash;that to
-make any such admissions must compromise his main theory, which is that
-the old Babylonian epic was the only source of the evangelists. No (he
-writes), John&rsquo;s girdle, like Elijah&rsquo;s, came straight out of
-the Saga (&ldquo;<span lang="de">wohl durch die Sage bedingt
-ist</span>&rdquo;). Nor (he adds) can Luke&rsquo;s story of Sarah and
-Zechariah be modelled on Old Testament examples, as critics have
-argued. On the contrary, it is a fresh reflex of Gilgamesch
-(&ldquo;<span lang="de">ein neuer Reflex</span>&rdquo;), an independent
-sidelight cast by the central Babylonian orb (&ldquo;<span lang=
-"de">ein neues Seitenst&uuml;ck</span>&rdquo;), and is copied direct.
-We must not give in to the suggestion thrown out by modern critics that
-it is a later addition to the original evangelical tradition. Far from
-that being so, it must be regarded as an integral and original
-constituent in the Jesus-saga (&ldquo;<span lang="de">So wird man
-zugestehen m&uuml;ssen, dass sie keine Zugabe, sondern ein
-integrierender Urbestandteil der Jesus-sage ist</span>&rdquo;).</p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Jesus&mdash;Gilgamesch</span> From this and
-many similar passages we realize that the view that Jesus never lived,
-but was a mere reflex of Gilgamesch, is not, in Jensen&rsquo;s mind, a
-conclusion to be proved, but a dogma assumed as the basis of all
-argument, a dogma to which we must adjust all our methods of inquiry.
-To admit any other sources of the Gospel story, let alone historical
-facts, would be to infringe the exclusive apriority, as <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb207" href="#pb207" name="pb207">207</a>]</span>a
-source, of the Babylonian epic; and that is why we are not allowed to
-argue up to the latter, but only down from it. If for a moment he is
-ready to admit that Old Testament narrative coloured Luke&rsquo;s
-birth-story, and that (for example) the angel&rsquo;s visit in the
-first chapter of Luke was suggested by the thirteenth chapter of
-Judges, he speedily takes back the admission. Such an assumption is not
-necessary (&ldquo;<span lang="de">allein n&ouml;tig ist ein solche
-Annahme nicht</span>&rdquo;).</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So much,&rdquo; he writes (p. 818),</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">of John&rsquo;s person alone. Let us now pursue the
-Jesus Saga further.</p>
-<p>In the Gilgamesch Epic it is related how the Hunter marched out to
-Eabani with the holy prostitute, how Eabani enjoyed her, and afterwards
-proceeded with her to Erech, where, directly or in his honour, a
-festival was held; how he there attached himself to Gilgamesch, and how
-kingly honours were by the latter awarded to him. We must by now in a
-general way assume on the part of our readers a knowledge of how these
-events meet us over again in the Sagas of the Old Testament. In the
-numerous Gilgamesch Sagas, then [of the Old Testament], we found again
-this rencounter with the holy prostitute. And yet we seek it in vain in
-the three first Gospels in the exact context where we should find it on
-the supposition that they must embody a Gilgamesch Saga&mdash;that is
-to say, immediately subsequent to John&rsquo;s emergence in the desert.
-Equally little do we find in this context any reflex of Eabani&rsquo;s
-entry into the city of Erech, all agog at the moment with a festival.
-On the other hand, we definitely find in its original position an echo
-of Gilgamesch&rsquo;s meeting with Eabani.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4552src" href="#xd25e4552" name="xd25e4552src">3</a></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb208" href="#pb208" name=
-"pb208">208</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="marginnote">Evangelists borrowed their saga from
-Gilgamesch epos alone</span> Let us pause a moment and take stock of
-the above. In the epic two heroes meet each other in a desert. John and
-Jesus also meet in a desert; therefore, so argues Jensen, John and
-Jesus are reproductions of the heroes in question, and neither of them
-ever lived. It matters nothing that neither John nor Jesus was a
-Nimrod. This encounter of Gilgamesch and Eabani was, as Jensen reminds
-us, the model of every Old Testament story in which two males happen to
-meet in a desert; therefore it must have been the model of the
-evangelists also when they concocted their story of John and Jesus
-meeting in the wilderness. But how about the prostitute; and how about
-the entry into Erech? How are these lacun&aelig; of the Gospel story to
-be filled in? Jensen&rsquo;s solution is remarkable; he finds the
-encounter with the prostitute to have been the model on which the
-fourth evangelist contrived his story of Jesus&rsquo;s visit to Martha
-and Mary. For that evangelist, like the synoptical ones, had the
-Gilgamesch Saga stored all ready in his escritoire, and finding that
-his predecessors had omitted the prostitute he hastened to fill up the
-lacuna, and doubled her into Martha and Mary. In this and many other
-respects, so we are assured by Jensen, the fourth evangelist reproduces
-the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb209" href="#pb209" name=
-"pb209">209</a>]</span>Gilgamesch epic more fully and systematically
-than the other evangelists, and on that account we must assign to
-John&rsquo;s setting of the life of Christ a certain preference and
-priority. He is truer to the only source there was for any of it. The
-other lacuna of the Synoptic Gospels is the feasting in Erech and
-Eabani&rsquo;s entry amid general feasting into that city. The
-corresponding episode in the Gospels, we are assured, is the triumphant
-entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, which the Fourth Gospel, again hitting
-the right nail on the head, sets at the beginning of Jesus&rsquo;s
-ministry, and not at its end. But what, we still ask, is the Gospel
-counterpart to the honours heaped by Gilgamesch on Eabani? How dull we
-are! &ldquo;The baptism of Jesus by John must, apart from other
-considerations, have arisen out of the fact that Eabani, after his
-arrival at Gilgamesch&rsquo;s palace, is by him allotted kingly
-honours.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4587src" href="#xd25e4587"
-name="xd25e4587src">4</a></p>
-<p>So then Eabani, who as a hairy man was John the Baptist, is now, by
-a turn of Jensen&rsquo;s kaleidoscope, metamorphosed into Jesus, for it
-is John who did Jesus the honour of baptizing him. Conversely,
-Gilgamesch, who began as Jesus, is now suddenly turned into John. In
-fact, Jesus-Gilgamesch and John-Eabani have suddenly changed places
-with one another, in accordance, I suppose, with the rule of
-interpretation, somewhere laid down by Hugo Winckler, that in astral
-myths one hero is apt to swop with another, not only his stage
-properties, but his personality. But fresh surprises are in store for
-Jensen&rsquo;s readers. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb210" href=
-"#pb210" name="pb210">210</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Over scores of pages he has argued that John the Baptist is no other
-than Eabani, because he so faithfully fulfils over again the
-<i>r&ocirc;le</i> of the Eabanis we meet with in the Old Testament. For
-example, according to Luke (i, 15, and vii, 33) John drinks no wine,
-and is, therefore, a Nazirean, who eschews wine and forbears to cut his
-hair. Therein he resembles Joseph-Eabani, and Simson-Eabani, and
-Samuel-Eabani, and also Absolom, who, as an Eabani, had at least an
-upper growth of hair. And as the Eabani of the Epic, with the long
-head-hair of a woman, drinks water along with the wild beasts in the
-desert, and as Eabani, in company with these beasts, feeds on grass and
-herbs alone, so, at any rate according to Luke, John ate no
-bread.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4601src" href="#xd25e4601" name=
-"xd25e4601src">5</a></p>
-<p>Imagine the reader&rsquo;s consternation when, after these
-convincing demonstrations of John&rsquo;s identity with Eabani, and of
-his consequent non-historicity, he finds him a hundred pages later on
-altogether eliminated, as from the Gilgamesch Epic, so from the Gospel.
-For the difficulty suddenly arises before Dr. Jensen&rsquo;s mind that
-John the Baptist, being mentioned by Josephus, must after all have
-really lived; but if he lived, then he cannot have been a mere reflex
-of Eabani. Had he only consulted Dr. Drews&rsquo;s work on the
-<i>Witnesses to the Historicity of Jesus</i> (English translation, p.
-190), he would have known that &ldquo;the John <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb211" href="#pb211" name="pb211">211</a>]</span>of
-the Gospels&rdquo; is no other than &ldquo;the Babylonian Oannes,
-Joannes, or Hanni, the curiously-shaped creature, half fish and half
-man, who, according to Berosus, was the first law-giver and inventor of
-letters and founder of civilization, and who rose every morning from
-the waves of the Red Sea in order to instruct men as to his real
-spiritual nature.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Why could not Dr. Jensen consult Dr. Drews &ldquo;as to the real
-spiritual nature&rdquo; of John the Baptist? Why not consult Mr.
-Robertson, who overwhelms Josephus&rsquo;s inconvenient testimony to
-the reality of John the Baptist (in 18 <i>Antiq.</i>, v, &sect; 2) with
-the customary &ldquo;suspicion of interpolation.&rdquo; Poor Dr. Jensen
-lacks their resourcefulness, and is able to discover no other way out
-of his <i>impasse</i> than to suppose that it was originally Lazarus
-and not John that had a place in his Gilgamesch Epic, and that some
-ill-natured editor of the Gospels, for reasons he alone can divine,
-everywhere struck out the name of Lazarus, and inserted in place of it
-that of John the Baptist, which he found in the works of Josephus. Such
-are the possibilities of Gospel redaction as Jensen understands
-them.</p>
-<p>One more example of Dr. Jensen&rsquo;s system. In the Gospel, Jesus,
-finding himself on one occasion surrounded by a larger throng of people
-than was desirable, took a boat in order to get away from them, and
-passed across the lake on the shore of which he had been preaching and
-ministering to the sick. The incident is a commonplace one enough, but
-nothing is too slight and unimportant for Dr. Jensen to detect in it a
-Gilgamesch parallel, and accordingly he writes thus of it: &ldquo;As
-for Xisuthros, so for Jesus, a boat is lying ready, and like Xisuthros
-and Jonas, Jesus <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb212" href="#pb212"
-name="pb212">212</a>]</span>&lsquo;flees&rsquo; in a
-boat.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4674src" href="#xd25e4674"
-name="xd25e4674src">6</a> Xisuthros, I may remind the reader, is the
-name of the flood-hero in Berosus. Hardly a single one of the parallels
-which crowd the thousand pages of Dr. Jensen is less flimsy than the
-above. Without doing more violence to texts and to probabilities, one
-could prove that Achilles and Patroclus and Helen, &AElig;neas and
-Achates and Dido, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza and Dulcinea, were all
-of them so many understudies of Gilgamesch, Eabani and his temple
-slave; and we almost expect to find such a demonstration in his
-promised second volume.</p>
-<p>I cannot but think that my readers will resent any further specimens
-of Dr. Jensen&rsquo;s system. He has not troubled himself to acquire
-the merest <i>a b c</i> of modern textual criticism. He has no sense of
-the differences of idea and style which divide the Fourth from the
-earlier Gospels, and he lacks all insight into the development of the
-Gospel tradition. He takes Christian documents out of their historical
-context, and ignores their dependence on the Judaism of the period
-<span class="sc">B.C.</span> 100 to <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 100.
-He has no understanding of the prophetic, Messianic and Apocalyptic
-aspects of early Christianity, no sense of its intimate relations with
-the beliefs and opinions which lie before us in apocryphs like the Book
-of Enoch, the Fourth Esdras, the Ascent of Isaiah, the Testaments of
-the Patriarchs. He has never learned that in the four Gospels he has
-before him successive stages or layers of stratification of Christian
-tradition, and he accordingly treats them as a single literary block,
-of which every part is of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb213" href=
-"#pb213" name="pb213">213</a>]</span>the same age and evidential value.
-Like his Gilgamesch Epic the Gospels, for all he knows about them,
-might have been dug up only yesterday among the sands of Mesopotamia,
-instead of being the work of a sect with which, as early as the end of
-the first century, we are fairly well acquainted. Never once does he
-ask himself how the authors of the New Testament came to have the
-Gilgamesch Epic at the tips of their tongues, exactly in the form in
-which he translates it from Babylonian tablets incised 2,000 years
-before Christ? By what channels did it reach them? Why were they at
-such pains to transform it into the story of a Galilean Messiah
-crucified by the Roman Governor of Jud&aelig;a? And as Paul and Peter,
-like everyone else named in the book, are duplicates of Gilgamesch and
-Eabani, where are we to draw the line of intersection between heaven
-and earth; where fix the year in which the early Christians ceased to
-be myths and became mere men and women? This is a point it equally
-behoves Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson and Professor W. B. Smith to clear
-up our doubts about. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb214" href="#pb214"
-name="pb214">214</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4469" href="#xd25e4469src" name="xd25e4469">1</a></span> <i lang=
-"de">Das Gilgamesch Epos in der Weltliteratur</i>, 1906.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e4469src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote" lang="de"><span class="label"><a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e4498" href="#xd25e4498src" name="xd25e4498">2</a></span> P.
-933: &ldquo;Die Jesus-sage nach den Synoptikern&mdash;wie auch die nach
-Johannes&mdash;unterscheidet sich nun aber von allen anderen bisher
-er&ouml;rterten Gilgamesch-sagen dadurch, dass sie hinter dem Gros der
-Sage nicht nur einzelne Bruchst&uuml;cke von ihr als Nachz&uuml;gler
-bringt, sondern eine <i>lange Reihe von St&uuml;cken der Sage in fast
-ungest&ouml;rter urspr&uuml;nglicher Reihenfolge</i>,&rdquo;
-etc.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4498src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote" lang="de"><span class="label"><a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e4552" href="#xd25e4552src" name="xd25e4552">3</a></span> P.
-818. So weit von Johannis Person allein. Verfolgen wir nun die
-Jesus-Sage weiter.</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">Im <i>Gilgamesch</i> Epos wird erz&auml;hlt,
-wie zu Eabani in der W&uuml;ste der J&auml;ger mit der Hierodule
-hinauszieht, wie <i>Eabani</i> ihrer habe geniesst, und dann mit ihr
-nach Erech kommt, wo grade oder ihm zu Ehre ein <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb208n" href="#pb208n" name=
-"pb208n">208</a>]</span>Fest gefeiert wird, wie er sich dort an
-<i>Gilgamesch</i> anschliesst und ihn durch Diesen k&ouml;nigliche
-Ehren zuteil werden. Welche Metamorphosen diese Geschehnisse in den
-Sagen des alten Testaments erlebt haben, darf jetzt in der Hauptsache
-als bekannt vorausgesetzt werden. In zahlreichen
-<i>Gilgamesch</i>-Sagen fanden wir nun die Begegnung mit der Hierodule
-wieder. Aber vergeblich suchen wir sie dort in den drei ersten
-Evangelien, wo ihr Platz w&auml;re, falls diese etwa eine
-<i>Gilgamesch</i>-Sage enthalten sollten, n&auml;mlich unmittelbar
-hinter Johannis Auftreten in der W&uuml;ste. Ebenso wenig finden wir an
-dieser Stelle etwa einen Reflex von Eabani&rsquo;s Einzug in das
-festlich erregte Erech. Wohl dagegen treffen wir an urspr&uuml;nglicher
-Stelle ein Wiederhall von Gilgamesch&rsquo;s Begegnung mit
-<i>Eabani</i>.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4552src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote" lang="de"><span class="label"><a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e4587" href="#xd25e4587src" name="xd25e4587">4</a></span> P.
-820. Jesu Taufe durch Johannes w&auml;re sonst auch daraus geworden,
-dass <i>Eabani</i>, nach dem er an Gilgamesch&rsquo;s Hof gelangt ist,
-durch Diesen K&ouml;niglicher Ehren teilhaft wird.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e4587src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote" lang="de"><span class="label"><a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e4601" href="#xd25e4601src" name="xd25e4601">5</a></span> Nach
-Lukas (<span lang="en"><a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=lk%201:15&amp;version=NRSV">i,
-15</a> and <a class="biblink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=lk%207:33&amp;version=NRSV">
-vii, 33</a></span>) trinkt Johannes keinen Wein, ist also ein
-Nasir&auml;er<span class="corr" id="xd25e4610" title=
-"Source: .">,</span> der <i>keinen Wein trinkt</i> und <i>dessen Haar
-nicht kek&uuml;rzt</i> wird, ebenso wie Joseph-<i>Eabani</i>, wie
-Simson als ein <i>Eabani</i>, wie Samuel-<i>Eabani</i>, wie Absolom als
-<i>Eabani</i> wenigstens einen <i>&uuml;ppigen</i> <i>Haar</i>wuchs
-besitzt, und wie der Eabani des Epos, mit dem <i>langen Haupthaar</i>
-eines Weibes, in der W&uuml;ste mit den Tieren zusammen Wasser trinkt,
-und wie <i>Eabani</i> mit diesen Tieren zusammen nur <i>Gras</i> und
-<i>Krauter frisst</i>, so <i>isst</i> Johannes, nach Lukas wenigstens,
-kein Brot.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4601src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote" lang="de"><span class="label"><a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e4674" href="#xd25e4674src" name="xd25e4674">6</a></span> P.
-838: Wie f&uuml;r Xisuthros, liegt f&uuml;r Jesus ein Schiff bereit,
-und, wie Xisuthros und Jonas, &ldquo;flieht&rdquo; Jesus in ein
-Schiff.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4674src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="epilogue" class="div1 epilogue"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#xd25e261">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">EPILOGUE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Of the books passed in review in the preceding pages,
-as of several others couched in the same vein and recently published in
-England and Germany, perhaps the best that can be said is this, that,
-at any rate, they are untrammelled by orthodox prejudice, and
-fearlessly written. That they belong, so to speak, to the extreme left,
-explains the favour with which they are received by that section of the
-middle-class reading public which has conceived a desire to learn
-something of the origins of Christianity. Unschooled in the criticism
-of documents, such readers have learned in the school Bible-lesson and
-in the long hours of instruction in what is called Divinity, to regard
-the Bible as they regard no other collection of ancient writings. It
-is, as a rule, the only ancient book they ever opened. They have
-discovered that orthodoxy depends for its life on treating it as a book
-apart, not to be submitted to ordinary tests, not to be sifted and
-examined, as we have learned from Hume and Niebuhr, Gibbon and Grote,
-to sift ancient documents in general, rejecting <i lang="la">ab
-initio</i> the supernatural myths that are never absent from them. The
-acuter minds among the clergy themselves begin nowadays to realize that
-the battle of Freethought and Rationalism is won as far as the miracles
-of the Old Testament are concerned; but as regards those of the New
-they are for ever trying to close up their ranks and rally <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb215" href="#pb215" name=
-"pb215">215</a>]</span>their hosts afresh. Nevertheless, the man in the
-street has a shrewd suspicion that apologetics are so much special
-pleading, and that miracles cannot be eliminated from the Old and yet
-remain in the New Testament. He has never received any training in
-methods of historical research himself, and it is no easy thing to
-obtain; but he is clever enough to detect the evasions of apologists,
-and, with instinctive revulsion, turns away to writers who &ldquo;go
-the whole hog&rdquo; and argue for the most extreme positions, even to
-the length of asserting that the story of Jesus is a myth from
-beginning to end. Any narratives, he thinks, that have the germs of
-truth in them would not need the apologetic prefaces and commentaries,
-the humming and hawing, the specious arguments and wire-drawn
-distinctions of divines, any more than do Froissart or Clarendon or
-Herodotus. If the New Testament needs them, then it must be a mass of
-fable from end to end. Such is the impression which our modern
-apologists leave on the mind of the ordinary man.</p>
-<p>I can imagine some of my readers objecting here that, whereas I have
-so rudely assailed the method of interpretation of New Testament
-documents adopted by the Nihilistic school&mdash;I only use this name
-as a convenient label for those who deny the historical reality of
-Jesus Christ&mdash;I nevertheless propound no rival method of my own.
-The truth is there is no abstract method of using documents relating to
-the past, and you cannot in advance lay down rules for doing so. You
-can only learn how to deal with them by practice, and it is one of the
-chief functions of any university or place of higher education to imbue
-students with historical method by setting before <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb216" href="#pb216" name="pb216">216</a>]</span>them
-the original documents, and inspiring them to extract from them
-whatever solid results they can. A hundred years ago the better men in
-the college of Christchurch at Oxford were so trained by the dean,
-Cyril Jackson, who would set them the task of &ldquo;preparing for
-examination the whole of Livy and Polybius, thoroughly read and studied
-in all their comparative bearings.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4706src" href="#xd25e4706" name="xd25e4706src">1</a> No better
-curriculum, indeed, could be devised for strengthening and developing
-the faculty of historical judgment; and the schools of <i>Literae
-Humaniores</i> and <i>Modern History</i>, which were subsequently
-established at Oxford, carried on the tradition of this enlightened
-educationalist. In them the student is brought face to face in the
-original dialects with the records of the past, and stimulated to
-&ldquo;read and study them in their comparative bearings.&rdquo; One
-single branch of learning, however, has been treated apart in the
-universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and pursued along the lines of
-tradition and authority&mdash;I mean the study of Christian
-antiquities. The result has been deplorable. Intellectually-minded
-Englishmen have turned away from this field of history as from
-something tainted, and barely one of our great historians in a century
-deems it worthy of his notice. It has been left to parsons, to men who
-have never learned to swim, because they have never had enough courage
-to venture into deep water. As we sow, so we reap. The English Church
-is probably the most enlightened of the many sects that make up
-Christendom. Yet <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb217" href="#pb217"
-name="pb217">217</a>]</span>what is the treatment which it accords to
-any member of itself who has the courage to dissociate himself from the
-&ldquo;orthodoxy&rdquo; of the fourth century, of those Greek Fathers
-(so-called) in whom the human intelligence sank to the nadir of
-fanaticism and futility? An example was recently seen in the case of
-the Rev. Mr. W. H. Thompson, a young theological tutor of Magdalen
-College in Oxford, who, animated by nothing but loyalty for the Church,
-recently liberated his soul about the miracles of the Gospels in a
-thoroughly scholarly book entitled <i>Miracles in the New
-Testament</i>. The attitude of the clergy in general towards a work of
-genuine research, which sets truth above traditional orthodoxy, was
-revealed in a conference of the clergy of the southern province, held
-soon after its publication on May 19, 1911. The following account of
-that meeting is taken from the <i>Guardian</i> of May 26,
-1911:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The Rev. R. F. Bevan, in the Canterbury Diocesan
-Conference on May 19, 1911, proposed &ldquo;that this Conference is of
-opinion that the clergy should make use of the light thrown on the
-Bible by modern criticism for the purposes of religious
-teaching.&rdquo; The Bishop of Croydon moved the following rider:
-&ldquo;But desires to record its distrust of critics who, while holding
-office in the Church of Christ, propound views inconsistent with the
-doctrines laid down in the creeds of the Church.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He said it was needful to define what was meant by modern criticism.
-He referred to a book which had been published quite lately by the Dean
-of Divinity of Magdalen College, Oxford, a review of which would be
-found in the <i>Guardian</i> of May 12. He must honestly confess he had
-not read the book for himself&#8202;&hellip;. He then premised from the
-review that the work in question rejects the evidence both for the
-Virgin Birth of Christ and for his bodily <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb218" href="#pb218" name="pb218">218</a>]</span>Resurrection from the
-tomb &hellip;, and added that the toleration by Churchmen of such
-doctrines and such views being taught within the bosom of the Church
-was to him most sad and inexplicable. If such was the instruction which
-young Divinity students were receiving at the universities, no wonder
-that the supply of candidates for ordination was falling off.</p>
-<p>The Rev. J. O. Bevan said it was not in the power of any man or any
-body of men to ignore the Higher Criticism or to suppress it. It had
-&ldquo;come to stay,&rdquo; and its influence for good or evil must be
-recognized.</p>
-<p>The President (Archbishop of Canterbury) said that &ldquo;Bible
-teaching ought to be given with a background of knowledge on the part
-of the teacher. He should deprecate as strongly as anybody that men who
-felt that they could not honestly continue to hold the Christian creeds
-should hold office in the Church of England. But he saw no connection
-between the sort of teaching which the Conference had now been
-considering and the giving up of the Christian creed. The Old Testament
-was a literature which had come down to them from ancient days. Modern
-investigation enabled them now to set the earlier stages of that
-literature in somewhat different surroundings from those in which they
-were set by their fathers and grandfathers.&rdquo; With regard to the
-book which had been referred to, the Archbishop said that, if the rider
-proposed was intended to imply a censure upon a particular writer,
-nothing would induce him to vote for it, inasmuch as he had not read
-the book, and knew nothing, at first hand, about it. He thought members
-ought to pause before they lightly gave votes which could be so
-interpreted.</p>
-<p>The motion, on being put to the meeting, was carried with one
-dissentient. The rider was also carried by a majority.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It amounts, then, to this, that a rule of limited liability is to be
-observed in the investigation of early Christianity. You may be
-critical, but not up to the point of calling in question the Virgin
-Birth <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb219" href="#pb219" name=
-"pb219">219</a>]</span>or physical resurrection of Christ. The Bishop
-of Croydon opines that the free discussion of such questions in
-University circles intimidates young men from taking orders. If he
-lived in Oxford, he would know that it is the other way about.<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e4745src" href="#xd25e4745" name="xd25e4745src">2</a>
-If Mr. Thompson had been allowed to say what he thought, unmolested; if
-the Bishops of Winchester and of Oxford had not at once taken steps to
-silence and drive him out of the Church, students would have been
-better encouraged to enter the Anglican ministry, and the more
-intellectual of our young men would not avoid it as a profession hard
-to reconcile with truth and honesty and self-respect.</p>
-<p>In the next number of the same journal (June 2, 1911) is recorded
-another example of how little our bishops are inclined to face a plain
-issue. It is contained in a paragraph headed thus:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">SYMBOLISM OF THE ASCENSION.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">The Bishop of Birmingham on the Second
-Coming.</span></p>
-<p>Preaching to a large congregation in Birmingham Cathedral &hellip;
-the Bishop of Birmingham said that people had found difficulty in
-modern times about the Ascension, because, they said,
-&ldquo;God&rsquo;s heaven is no more above our heads than under our
-feet.&rdquo; That was perfectly true. But there were certain ways of
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb220" href="#pb220" name=
-"pb220">220</a>]</span>expressing moral ideas rooted in human thought,
-and we did not the less speak continually of the above and the below as
-expressing what was morally high and morally low, and we should go on
-doing so to the end. The ascension of Jesus Christ and his concealment
-in the clouds was a symbolical act, like all the acts after his
-Resurrection; it was to impress their minds with the truth of his
-mounting to the glory of God. Symbols were the best means of expressing
-the truth about things which lay outside their experience; and the
-Ascension symbolized Christ&rsquo;s mounting to the supreme state of
-power and glory, to the perfect vision of God, to the throne of all the
-world&#8202;&hellip;. The Kingdom was coming&mdash;had to come at
-last&mdash;&ldquo;on earth as it is in heaven&rdquo;; and one day, just
-as his disciples saw him passing away out of their experience and
-sight, would they see him coming back into their experience and their
-sight, and into his perfected Kingdom of Humanity.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Now, I am sure that what people in modern times chiefly want to know
-about the Ascension is whether it really happened. Did Jesus in his
-physical body go up like a balloon before the eyes of the faithful, and
-disappear behind a cloud, or did he not? That is the plain issue, and
-Dr. Gore seems to avoid it. If he believes in such a miracle, why
-expatiate on the symbolism of all the acts of Jesus subsequent to his
-resurrection? Such a miracle was surely sufficient unto itself, and
-never needed our attention to be drawn to its symbolical aspects and
-import. Does he mean that the legend is no more than &ldquo;a certain
-way of expressing moral ideas rooted in human thought&rdquo;? May we
-welcome his insistence on its moral symbolism as a prelude to his
-abandonment of the literal truth of the tale? I hope so, for in not a
-few apologetic books published by divines during the last twenty-five
-years I have encountered a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb221" href=
-"#pb221" name="pb221">221</a>]</span>tendency to expatiate on the moral
-significance of extinct Biblical legends. It is, as the Rev. Mr. Figgis
-expresses it, a way of &ldquo;letting down the laity into the new
-positions of the Higher Criticism.&rdquo; Would it not be simpler, in
-the end, to tell people frankly that a legend is only a legend? They
-are not children in arms. Why is it accounted so terrible for a
-clergyman or minister of religion to express openly in the pulpit
-opinions he can hear in many academical lecture-rooms, and often
-entertains in the privacy of his study? When the Archbishop of
-Canterbury tells his brother-doctors that &ldquo;modern investigation
-enables them now to set the earlier stages of Old Testament literature
-in somewhat different surroundings from those in which they were set by
-their fathers and grandfathers,&rdquo; he means that modern scholarship
-has emptied the Old Testament of its miraculous and supernatural
-legends. But the Anglican clergyman at ordination declares that he
-believes unfeignedly the whole of the Old and New Testaments. How can
-an Archbishop not dispense his clergy from belief in the New, when he
-is so ready to leave it to their individual consciences whether they
-will or will not believe in the Old? The entire position is hollow and
-illogical, and most of the bishops know it; but, instead of frankly
-recognizing facts, they descant upon the symbolical meaning of tales
-which they know they must openly abandon to-morrow. One is inclined to
-ask Dr. Gore why Christ could not have imparted in words to his
-followers the secret of his mounting to the supreme state of power and
-glory? Did they at the time, or afterwards, set any such interpretation
-on the story of his rising up from the ground like an airship or an
-exhalation? Of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb222" href="#pb222" name=
-"pb222">222</a>]</span>course they did not. They thought the earth was
-a fixed, flat surface, and that, if you ascended through the several
-lower heavens, you would find yourself before a great white throne, on
-which sat, in Oriental state, among his winged cherubim, the Most High.
-They thought that Jesus consummated the hackneyed miracle of his
-ascension by sitting down on the right hand of this Heavenly Potentate.
-If Dr. Gore doubts this, let him consult the voluminous works of the
-early Fathers on the subject. The entire legend coheres with ancient,
-and not with modern, cosmogony. How can it possibly be defended to-day
-on grounds of symbolism, or on any other? The same criticism applies to
-the legend of the Virgin Birth. The Bishop of London is reduced to
-defending this thrum of ancient paganism by an appeal to the biological
-fact of parthenogenesis among insects. Imagine the mentality of a
-modern bishop who dreams that he is advancing the cause of true
-religion and sound learning by assimilating the birth of his Saviour to
-that of a rotifer or a flea!</p>
-<p>The books of Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson and others of their school
-are, no doubt, blundering extravaganzas, all the more inopportune
-because they provoke the gibes of Dr. Moulton; but they are at least
-works of Freethought. Their authors do not write with one eye on the
-truth and the other on the Pope in the Vatican, or on the obsolete
-dogmas of Byzantine speculation. It is possible, therefore, to discuss
-with them, as it is not with apologists, who take good care never to
-lay all their cards on the table, and of whom you cannot but feel, as
-the great historian Mommsen remarked, that they are chattering in
-chains (<i lang="la">ex vinculis sermocinantes</i>). In the
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb223" href="#pb223" name=
-"pb223">223</a>]</span>investigation of truth there can be no mental
-reserves, and argument is useless where the final appeal lies to a Pope
-or a creed. You cannot set your hand to the plough and then look
-back.</p>
-<p>It was not, then, within the scope of this essay to try to determine
-how much and what particular incidents traditionally narrated of Jesus
-are credible. Such a task would require at least a thousand pages for
-its discharge; I have merely desired to show how difficult it is to
-prove a negative, and how much simpler it is to admit that Jesus really
-lived than to argue that he was a solar or other myth. The latter
-hypothesis, as expounded in these works, offends every principle of
-philology, of comparative mythology, and of textual criticism; it
-bristles with difficulties; and, if no better demonstration of it can
-be offered, it deserves to be summarily dismissed.</p>
-<p>On the other hand, no absolute rules can be laid down a priori for
-the discerning in early Christian or in any other ancient documents of
-historical fact. But students embarking on a study of Christian origins
-will do well to lay to heart the aphorism of Renan (<i lang="fr">Les
-Ap&ocirc;tres, Introd.</i> xxix), that &ldquo;one can only ascertain
-the origin of any particular religion from the narratives or reports of
-those who believed therein; for it is only the sceptic who writes
-history <i lang="la">ad narrandum</i>.&rdquo; It is in the very nature
-of things human that we could not hope to obtain documents more
-evidential than the Gospels and <i>Acts</i>. It is a lucky chance that
-time has spared to us the Epistles of Paul as well, and the sparse
-notices of first-century congregations and personalities preserved in
-Josephus and in pagan writers. For during the first two or three
-generations of its existence the Church interested few <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb224" href="#pb224" name=
-"pb224">224</a>]</span>except itself. In the view of a Josephus, the
-Jewish converts could only figure as Jews gone astray after a false
-Messiah, just as the Gentile recruits were mere Judaizers,
-objects&mdash;as he remarks, <i>B. J.</i>, II, 18, 2&mdash;of equal
-suspicion to Syrian pagans and Jews alike, an ambiguous, neutral class,
-spared by the knife of the pagans, yet dreaded by the Jews as at heart
-aliens to their cause.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4794src" href=
-"#xd25e4794" name="xd25e4794src">3</a> There were no folklorists or
-comparative religionists in those days watching for new cults to
-appear; and there could be little or no inclination to sit down and
-write history among enthusiasts who dreamed that the end of the world
-was close at hand, and believed themselves to be already living in the
-last days. For this is the conviction that colours the whole of the New
-Testament; and that it does so is a signal proof of the antiquity of
-much that the book contains. If a Christian of the first century ever
-took up his pen and wrote, it was not to hand down an objective
-narrative of events to a posterity whose existence he barely
-contemplated, but, as against unbelieving Jews, to establish from
-ancient prophecy his belief in Jesus as the promised Messiah, or
-perhaps as the Word of God made flesh. All Christians were aware that
-Jews, both in Jud&aelig;a and of the Dispersion, roundly denied their
-Christ to have been anything better than an impostor and violator of
-the Law. They heard the pagans round them echoing the scoffs of their
-Messiah&rsquo;s own countrymen. Accordingly, the earliest literature of
-the Church, so far as it is not merely homiletic and hortative, is
-controversial, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb225" href="#pb225" name=
-"pb225">225</a>]</span>and aims at proving that the Jewish people were
-mistaken in rejecting Jesus as the Messiah. The Jews neither then nor
-now have fought with mere shadows; and just in proportion as they bore
-witness against his Messiahship, they bore witness in favour of his
-historical reality. It is a pity that the extreme negative school
-ignore this aspect of his rejection by the Jews.</p>
-<p>Let me cite one more wise rule laid down by Renan in the same
-<i>Introduction</i>: &ldquo;An ancient writing can help us to throw
-light, firstly, on the age in which it was composed, and, secondly, on
-the age which preceded its composition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This indicates in a general fashion the use which historians should
-make of the New Testament. We have at every turn to ask ourselves what
-the circumstances its contents reveal presuppose in the immediate past
-in the way both of ideas or aspirations and of fact or incidents.</p>
-<p>In conclusion, I cannot do better than quote the words in which
-Renan defines in general terms the sort of historical results we may
-hope to attain in the field of Christian origins. It is from the
-<i>Introduction</i> already cited, pp. vi and vii:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">In histories like this, where the general outline
-(<i>ensemble</i>) alone is certain, and where nearly all the details
-lend themselves more or less to doubt by reason of the legendary
-character of the documents, hypothesis is indispensable. About ages of
-which we know nothing we cannot frame any hypothesis at all. To try to
-reconstitute a particular group of ancient statuary, which certainly
-once existed, but of which we have not even the debris, and about which
-we possess no written information, is to attempt an entirely arbitrary
-task. But to endeavour to recompose the friezes of the Parthenon from
-what remains <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb226" href="#pb226" name=
-"pb226">226</a>]</span>to us, using as subsidiary to our work ancient
-texts, drawings made in the seventeenth century, and availing ourselves
-of all sources of information; in a word, inspiring ourselves by the
-style of these inimitable fragments, and endeavouring to seize their
-soul and life&mdash;what more legitimate task than this? We cannot,
-indeed, after all, say that we have rediscovered the work of the
-ancient sculptor; nevertheless, we shall have done all that was
-possible in order to approximate thereto. Such a method is all the more
-legitimate in history, because language permits the use of dubitative
-moods of which marble admits not. There is nothing to prevent our
-setting before the reader a choice of different suppositions, and the
-author&rsquo;s conscience may be at rest as soon as he has set forth as
-certain what is certain, as probable what is probable, as possible what
-is possible. In those parts of the field where our footstep slides and
-slips between history and legend it is only the general effect that we
-must seek after&#8202;&hellip;. Accomplished facts speak more plainly
-than any amount of biographic detail. We know very little of the
-peerless artists who created the <i>chefs d&rsquo;&oelig;uvre</i> of
-Greek art. Yet these <i>chefs d&rsquo;&oelig;uvre</i> tell us more of
-the personality of their authors and of the public which appreciated
-them than ever could do the most circumstantial narratives and the most
-authentic of texts.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb227" href="#pb227" name=
-"pb227">227</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4706" href="#xd25e4706src" name="xd25e4706">1</a></span> I cite
-an unfinished memoir of my grandfather, W. D. Conybeare, himself a
-pioneer of geology and no mean pal&aelig;ontologist, who owed much of
-his discernment in these fields to such a training in historical method
-as he describes.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4706src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4745" href="#xd25e4745src" name="xd25e4745">2</a></span> Within
-the last two months the theological faculties of Oxford and Cambridge,
-and the examining chaplains (of various bishops) resident in those
-universities, have addressed a petition to the Archbishop of Canterbury
-praying him to absolve candidates for Ordination of the necessity of
-avowing that &ldquo;they believe unfeignedly in the whole of the Old
-and New Testaments,&rdquo; because so many competent and well-qualified
-students are thereby deterred from taking holy orders. The Archbishop
-would, it seems, make the individual clergyman&rsquo;s conscience the
-sole judge (to the exclusion of the Bishop of Croydon) of the propriety
-of his retaining his orders in spite of his rejection of this and that
-tradition or dogma. That is at least a sign that opinion is on the
-move.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4745src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4794" href="#xd25e4794src" name="xd25e4794">3</a></span> Such is
-Renan&rsquo;s interpretation of this passage in <i lang=
-"fr">L&rsquo;Ante-Christ</i>, ed. 1873, p. 259, and he is undoubtedly
-right in detecting in it a reference to the Christians scattered abroad
-in the half-Syrian and pagan, half-Jewish and monotheist, cities of
-Syria.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4794src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="back">
-<div id="ix" class="div1 index"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#xd25e269">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Acts of the Apostles, their testimony in favour of the
-historicity of Jesus, 113 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; their evidence, outside the <i>we</i> sections, with
-respect to Paul, 120 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-it agrees with that of the Pauline Epistles, 131</p>
-<p>Anthropology, how conceived of by Robertson and Drews, 94, 178
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Antiochus Epiphanes, legend of his finding a human victim in the
-Holy of Holies accepted by Mr. Robertson, 51</p>
-<p>Aphraates, the Syrian Father, on the divinity of Jesus, 176</p>
-<p>Apion, his fables accepted by Mr. Robertson, 51, 54</p>
-<p>Apollonius of Tyana, in spite of the parallelisms of his story with
-that of Jesus, is allowed by Mr. Robertson to have really lived, 6,
-45;<br>
-his exorcisms, 13;<br>
-mythical elements in his history do not deter Mr. Robertson from
-allowing that he really lived, 46 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; miracles worked at his shrine, 200</p>
-<p>Apollonius, Senator of Rome, <span class=
-"sc">C.A.D.</span><span class="corr" id="xd25e4877" title=
-"Not in source">,</span> 182;<br>
-his apology for Christianity, 188 <i>note</i></p>
-<p>Apollos and &ldquo;the things concerning Jesus,&rdquo; 35
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Apologetic works awake legitimate suspicion, among moderns, even of
-the historicity of Jesus, 214</p>
-<p>Apostles known to Paul were not companions of Jesus, but leaders of
-the Sun-myth sect and subordinates of the Jewish High Priest, 140;<br>
-they concocted the <i>Didach&eacute;</i> or Teaching of the Twelve
-Apostles, 141, 185</p>
-<p>Apparitions of Jesus to the faithful, 149</p>
-<p>Arnold, Matthew, Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s appreciation of him, 172</p>
-<p>Ascension into heaven of Jesus, a symbolic act according to Dr.
-Gore, 219 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Asses, Jesus&rsquo;s ride on the two, explained by Mr. Robertson,
-22, 76</p>
-<p>Athanasian orthodoxy, based on the Fourth Gospel, 103</p>
-<p>Athanasius&rsquo;s Christology, 3</p>
-<p>Augustus C&aelig;sar, worshipped as an incarnate God, 57, 198
-<i>note</i></p>
-<p>Babylonian myths in the Bible, 203</p>
-<p>Bacon-Shakesperians find their rivals in the domain of New Testament
-exegesis in Messrs. Robertson, Drews, and W. B. Smith, 182, 188
-<i>note</i></p>
-<p>Baptism of John to be astrally explained according to Dr. Drews,
-155</p>
-<p>Bevan, Rev. R. F., pleads for recognition in English pulpits of
-scientific methods, 217</p>
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Rev. J. O., his plea for recognition in English
-Church of the Higher Criticism, 218 <i>Bifrons</i>, new meaning of,
-discovered by Mr. Robertson, 63, 77</p>
-<p>Birth legends of Jesus, as supplied by Luke and Matthew,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb228" href="#pb228" name=
-"pb228">228</a>]</span>evidence a popular belief that he had lived,
-99</p>
-<p>Brethren of Jesus, only such in a Pickwickian sense, according to
-Robertson, Drews, and W. B. Smith, 145 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Burkitt, Prof. F. C, on <i>Nazareth</i>, 42</p>
-<p>Canterbury, Archbishop of, on Bible criticism, 218</p>
-<p>Carpenter, Dr. Estlin, his criticisms of Mr. Robertson, 76, 113</p>
-<p>Celsus&rsquo;s Gospel contained story of Judas Iscariot, 137</p>
-<p>Cephas, or Peter, personally opposed by Paul, 135 <i>Christ</i>, or
-Messiah, meaning of the name, 11</p>
-<p>Christian literature of early centuries mainly anti-Jewish, 224,
-225</p>
-<p>Christianity, early, in the travel document of Acts, 116, 117</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Christist&rdquo; receipt for manufacturing a Gospel, 95</p>
-<p>Christians, first so called at Antioch, 165</p>
-<p>Church objects to sane criticism of the Bible, 1, 3</p>
-<p>Circumcision accepted by the earliest Christians, according to Drews
-and Robertson, 89</p>
-<p>Clement of Rome cites the Pauline Epistles, 126;<br>
-his description of the Neronian persecution, 161</p>
-<p>Clement&rsquo;s <i>Recognitions</i>, 81</p>
-<p>Comparative religion, its true methods, 71 <i>foll.</i>, 178
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>&ldquo;Composite myth&rdquo; invoked by Drews and Robertson in
-explanation of Jesus itself wholly inexplicable, 25, 48, 74, 77,
-79;<br>
-how &ldquo;the composite myth&rdquo; waged war on the gods and
-goddesses he was composed of, 69;<br>
-a wilfully absurd hypothesis, 90, 95, 181</p>
-<p>Conybeare, William Daniel, on Oxford historical studies, 216</p>
-<p>Cosquin, M. Emmanuel, his work a model of the comparative method,
-178</p>
-<p>Cox, Sir George, on Sun-myths, 18</p>
-<p>Credulity of the hypercritical school of writers, 124, 182</p>
-<p>Croce, Benedetto, upon nature of history, 1</p>
-<p>Croydon, Bishop of, his obscurantism shared by the majority of the
-clergy, 217 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Crucifixion, absurdity of the parallels invoked by Mr. Robertson, 50
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Cumont, Prof. F., on Mithras, 64</p>
-<p>Deacons, the Seven, in Acts, 117</p>
-<p>Deification of men common in antiquity&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, Augustus
-C&aelig;sar, the Pharaohs&mdash;compatible with the reality of the
-persons deified, 57, 86, 198</p>
-<p>Demoniacs exorcized alike by Jesus and Apollonius, 13</p>
-<p>Demonology of earlier Gospels excluded from Fourth Gospel, 86,
-170</p>
-<p>Demons in Gospels explained by W. B. Smith as heathen gods and
-goddesses, 67, 189 <i>Didach&eacute;</i>, or Teaching, of the Twelve
-Apostles, a Jewish document adopted by the Christists, 89</p>
-<p>Dieterich&rsquo;s <i>Abraxas</i>, 39</p>
-<p>Diogenes Laertius&rsquo;s life of Solon, 4; of Plato, 58</p>
-<p>Dion of Rome on the art of Phidias, 180 <i>note</i></p>
-<p>Dionysius-Jesus rides two asses at once according to Mr. Robertson,
-22, 76</p>
-<p>Docetes, nature of their tenets, 86, 103 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Docetism in Philo and in Book of Tobit, 106</p>
-<p>Documents, historical, conditions of their right and legitimate use,
-215</p>
-<p>Dositheos, the Samaritan Messiah, 198 <i>note</i> <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb229" href="#pb229" name="pb229">229</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Drews, Robertson, W. B. Smith, Jensen, their critical canons condemn
-nearly all historical figures to unreality, 6, 7</p>
-<p>Drews, Dr., embraces the figment of a Sun-god Joshua, 30
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-espouses Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s misunderstanding of El Tabari, 35;<br>
-on Joseph-Kinyras, 65;<br>
-on the home life of the Messiah, 67;<br>
-he admits much of early Christian literature besides the Gospels to be
-prior to the year 100, 3, 4, 100;<br>
-admits Mark to be the oldest Gospel, 9;<br>
-on Pilate, Longinus, the Javelin man, and the Milky Way, 27
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-espouses the pre-philological etymologies of Mr. Robertson, 69, 70;<br>
-admits presence of Jewish rites and beliefs in earliest Christianity,
-89;<br>
-misunderstands nature of Gnostic Docetism, 104 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-also of Jewish Messianic belief in early second century, 107;<br>
-attaches importance to Paul as the real founder of Christianity,
-113;<br>
-opines that Tacitus was interpolated from Sulpicius Severus by Poggio,
-161 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-on the <i>Chrestiani</i> or votaries of Serapis, 165;<br>
-his account of John the Baptist, 210</p>
-<p>Durkheim, Emile, on primitive religion, 19;<br>
-on the right limits of comparison, 72</p>
-<p>Eabani alternately identified by P. Jensen with Jesus and John the
-Baptist, 209</p>
-<p>Elephantin&eacute;, papyri of fifth century <span class=
-"sc">B.C.</span> lately recovered there, 32</p>
-<p>El Tabari&rsquo;s allusions to Joshua, misused by Mr. Robertson,
-34</p>
-<p>Ephrem&rsquo;s commentary on Acts, 120</p>
-<p>Epimenides according to the canons of the hypercritics never lived,
-5</p>
-<p>Eschatology of New Testament inexplicable on Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s
-hypothesis, 102, 224;<br>
-ruled out in the Fourth Gospel, 170</p>
-<p>Esotericism of early Christianity feigned by Drews, Robertson, and
-Smith, 16;<br>
-a cloak for the wild improbability of their views, 31, 90, 91, 183, 188
-<i>foll.</i> <i>Essene</i> meant a healer, according to Prof. W. B.
-Smith, 37</p>
-<p>Eusebius of C&aelig;sarea testifies from ancient documents to the
-early hatred of Jews for the memory of Jesus, 112</p>
-<p>Farnell, Dr., Rector of Exeter College, on Babylonian elements in
-ancient religion and civilization of Greece, 202</p>
-<p>Figgis, Rev. Mr., on Higher Criticism, 221</p>
-<p>Fish symbolism, misunderstood by Mr. Robertson, 21</p>
-<p>Fourth Gospel, its characteristics, 86, 102, 103, 170</p>
-<p>Frazer, Dr. J. G., and Dr. Drews, 142;<br>
-esteemed by Dr. Drews as being almost as great an authority as Mr.
-Robertson, 35</p>
-<p>Galatians, Epistle of Paul to, in relation to the narrative of Acts,
-131;<br>
-its genuineness, 139</p>
-<p>Gardner, Prof. Percy, on the two asses, 76, 113</p>
-<p>Gospels, transcripts of an annually recurring mystery-play
-representing the death of a Sun-god, vegetation sprite, called Joshua,
-and same as Attis, Tammuz, Osiris, etc., 48 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-a monotheistic allegory according to W. B. Smith, 74, 85, 145, 191;<br>
-not Messianic romances, 81;<br>
-beginnings of the deification of Jesus traceable in the later ones,
-86;<br>
-evolution in them of Christology, 169 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Synoptic, their true inter-relations ignored by Mr.
-Robertson <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb230" href="#pb230" name=
-"pb230">230</a>]</span>whenever it suits his purpose, 173
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Hardy, Mr. E. G., his work on Christianity in relation to the Roman
-Government, 161</p>
-<p>Hawkins, Sir John, his linguistic studies of Luke&rsquo;s Gospel and
-of Acts, 118</p>
-<p>Hebrews, epistle to, testifies to historicity of Jesus, 152</p>
-<p>High priest of the Jews presided over the secret society of
-&ldquo;Christists,&rdquo;<a id="xd25e5203" name="xd25e5203"></a>
-135;<br>
-and sent forth the Twelve Apostles known to Paul, 142, 185</p>
-<p>Hippolytus, Bishop of Ostia, on the Docetism of the second century,
-107</p>
-<p>Historical evidence, nature of, according to Benedetto Croce, 1;<br>
-conditions of, 7, 8</p>
-<p>Historical method. <i>See</i> Jackson, Langlois, Renan</p>
-<p>Historical reality and dates rarely ascribed by their votaries to
-such Gods as Adonis and Osiris, 199</p>
-<p>Historical statements in ancient authors so many problems to be
-explained, whether admitted or denied, 7, 8</p>
-<p>Horace regarded Augustus C&aelig;sar as a god from heaven made
-flesh, 198 <i>note</i></p>
-<p>Humanity of Jesus in belief of early Christians, 176
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Human sacrifice discarded by Jews long before other races discarded
-it, 50</p>
-<p>Hyginus&rsquo;s myth of Bacchus and the two asses, 25, 76</p>
-<p>Hypercriticism of Drews, Robertson, and W. B. Smith involves the
-unreality of Solon, Epimenides, Pythagoras, Apollonius of Tyana,
-4&ndash;6;<br>
-its wilful improbabilities, 31;<br>
-resembles old-fashioned orthodoxy in its failure to appreciate
-evidence, 43;<br>
-consents in profane history to separate off miracles from normal
-events, yet refuses to do so in sacred history, 45 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-becomes mere credulity, 124, 182;<br>
-would abolish all history, 167;<br>
-is a repercussion from orthodox obscurantism, 168;<br>
-damages the cause of Rationalism, 186</p>
-<p>Ignatius of Antioch on Docetism of the early second century, 105</p>
-<p>Ignatian testimony to Pauline Epistles, 126</p>
-<p>Independent witnesses to the same facts, their importance explained,
-8, 9, 96, 97, 123</p>
-<p>Interpolations of New Testament, hypothesis of, invoked at random by
-the hypercritical school as suits their argument, 125, 135</p>
-<p>Jackson, Cyril, Dean of Christ Church, his educational ideals,
-216</p>
-<p>Jacob&rsquo;s prayer, a Jewish apocryph, cited by Origen, 198
-<i>note</i></p>
-<p>Jairus&rsquo;s daughter, miracle of her being raised from the dead
-paralleled in the life of Apollonius, 47</p>
-<p>James, brother of Jesus, visited by the author of the
-travel-document, 100</p>
-<p>Janus&mdash;Peter, 63, 77, 143</p>
-<p>Jensen, Dr. P., 142;<br>
-traces the entire Bible to the myth of Gilgamesch, 203;<br>
-on &ldquo;the Jesus-saga,&rdquo; 205 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-his account of John the Baptist, 206 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-criticism of his method, 212</p>
-<p>Jerome, on encratite grounds, represented James, not as the brother,
-but as the cousin, of Jesus, 148</p>
-<p>Jesus Barabbas, 50, 52</p>
-<p>Jesus Ben Pandira, Mr. Robertson takes refuge in him in order to
-escape admitting the identity of Paul&rsquo;s Jesus with <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb231" href="#pb231" name=
-"pb231">231</a>]</span>Jesus of Nazareth, 143 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-turns out to be identical, after all, 151 <i>foll.</i>; 184, 199</p>
-<p>Jesus, his birth at winter solstice, 20 <i>Jesus</i>, the name,
-connected by Prof. Smith with the Greek word <i><span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e5319" title=
-"Source: iesomai">i&#275;somai</span></i>&mdash;&ldquo;I will
-heal,&rdquo;<a id="xd25e5322" name="xd25e5322"></a> 196</p>
-<p>Jesus cult, its original secrecy as conjectured by Prof. W. B.
-Smith, 192</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jesus, the God of the Hebrews,&rdquo; in the papyrus of
-Wessely, 39</p>
-<p>Jews, their Messianic hopes in early second century, 108;<br>
-their hatred and ridicule of the man Jesus, 108 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-their hostility to pagan myths and art regularly ignored by Drews and
-Robertson, 25, 29, 73, 90, 91, 93 <i>foll.</i>, 180, 183</p>
-<p>Johannine Epistles testify to historicity of Jesus, 153</p>
-<p>John the Baptist, alternately an astral myth and an Essene,
-according to Dr. Drews, 155</p>
-<p>Josephus describes the Christians as Judaizers of an ambiguous and
-neutral class, detested alike by Jews and pagans, 224;<br>
-his notice of John the Baptist, 154;<br>
-of Jesus, 156;<br>
-of James the brother of Jesus, 157 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Joseph in the Gospels an alias of the God Joseph, of the old man in
-Apuleius, of Kinyras, etc., 65</p>
-<p>Joshua ben Jehozadak turned into a Sun-myth by Dr. Drews, 32</p>
-<p>Joshua, Samaritan Book of, its age over-estimated by Dr. Drews,
-33</p>
-<p>Joshua the Sun-god not deducible from the Book of Joshua, 17,
-30;<br>
-an invention of Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s, 17 <i>note</i>;<br>
-his pagan aliases, 29;<br>
-adopted by Dr. Drews, 30;<br>
-deliberately suppressed by Old Testament writers, according to Mr.
-Robertson, 33, 34;<br>
-his virgin mother Miriam an invention of Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s, 33
-<i>foll.</i>, 92;<br>
-why chosen out as the god to be humanized by Christists, 87;<br>
-why should he have died annually?, 82 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Judaic elements in early Christianity admitted by Drews and
-Robertson, 89</p>
-<p>Judaic exclusiveness of Jesus&rsquo;s idea of the Kingdom of God,
-13, 132, 133</p>
-<p>Judas Iscariot, 137</p>
-<p>Jude, Epistle of, testifies to a real Jesus, 153</p>
-<p>Judgment of Israel, na&iuml;ve picture of it in the Gospels, 14</p>
-<p>Justin Martyr on Jewish Messianic hopes in early second century,
-108;<br>
-on Jewish execration of the real man Jesus in the same age, 109
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-regarded Jesus as an incarnate archangel, 198 <i>note</i></p>
-<p>Keys and Peter, meaning of, 64</p>
-<p>Khonds of India, their human sacrifices invoked by Mr. Robertson in
-explanation of the Crucifixion, 55</p>
-<p>Kingdom of God, old Persian elements therein, 10, 11;<br>
-its immediate advent preached in turn by John the Baptist and by Jesus,
-10 <i>foll.</i>, 101 <i>foll.</i>, 178</p>
-<p>Kraus, Samuel, on Talmudic and Jewish traditions of Jesus, 151
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Lamb, Jesus represented as&mdash;why?, 21</p>
-<p>Langlois and Seignobos on the value and limitations of the Argument
-from Silence, 129;<br>
-on nature of ancient documents, 168;<br>
-on the credulity which besets hypercriticism, 182, 186</p>
-<p>Last judgment assigned to Jesus-Osiris, 21</p>
-<p>Last Supper, how handled by Mr. Robertson, 150 <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb232" href="#pb232" name="pb232">232</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Liddon, Canon, his superstitious attitude towards Biblical
-criticism, 128</p>
-<p>Lightfoot&rsquo;s <i lang="la">Hor&aelig; Hebraic&aelig;</i> on
-Jesus Ben Pandira, 152</p>
-<p>Loisy, Prof. Alfred, his commentaries, 169</p>
-<p>Longinus the Centurion, his legend set back in reign of Nero by Dr.
-Drews, 28</p>
-<p>Lorinser, Dr., censured by Robertson for his derivation of
-Krishnaism from Christianity, 75 <i>foll.</i>, 78</p>
-<p>Luke expressly mentioned as author of the travel document in
-Ephrem&rsquo;s text of Acts, 120</p>
-<p>Luke&rsquo;s Gospel, its date and relations to Matthew and Mark,
-98</p>
-<p>Maia = Maria, 69, 70</p>
-<p>Maira = Maria, 70</p>
-<p>Marcion&rsquo;s use of Luke&rsquo;s Gospel, 119</p>
-<p>Marett on right method in comparative investigations of religion,
-73, 74, 77</p>
-<p>Mark&rsquo;s Gospel, admitted by Dr. Drews to be the oldest, 9;<br>
-<i>r&eacute;sum&eacute;</i> of its contents, 10 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-its priority denied by Mr. Robertson whenever it suits his purpose,
-23;<br>
-its author had never heard of the legend of the Virgin Birth, 44
-<i>foll.</i>, 175</p>
-<p>Mary, Mother of Jesus. Her name a form of <i>Myrrha</i>,
-<i>Moira</i>, <i>Maya</i>, <i>Maia</i>, etc., according to Mr.
-Robertson and Dr. Drews, 69</p>
-<p>Matthew&rsquo;s Gospel, its date and relations to Mark and Luke,
-99</p>
-<p>Max Muller, Friedrich, on Sun-myths, 18</p>
-<p>Maya = Maria, 69, 70</p>
-<p>Melito of Sardis, his Apology for Christianity, 150</p>
-<p>Merris = Maria, 70</p>
-<p>Messianic expectations in early second century, as reflected in
-Justin Martyr, 108;<br>
-they dominate the Synoptic Gospels, 178</p>
-<p>Messianism of the New Testament ignored or misunderstood by Messrs.
-Drews, Robertson, W. B. Smith, and other deniers of the historicity of
-Jesus, 101</p>
-<p>Miracles of the Gospels, 2</p>
-<p>Miraculous and non-miraculous elements according to Messrs.
-Robertson and Drews co-exist in works of profane history without
-prejudicing their veracity, but in the Gospels they pretend that they
-form an impenetrable block of myth, 45 <i>foll.</i>, 168
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Mithras-Peter, 63, 143 <i>Moira</i> = Maria, 69, 70 <i>Moirai</i>,
-the three, identified by Mr. Robertson with the three Maries, 179</p>
-<p>Mommsen, his verdict on Apologists, 3, 222</p>
-<p>Monotheistic propaganda absent from the Gospels, which nevertheless,
-on W. B. Smith&rsquo;s view, reflect a monotheistic crusade, 187,
-190</p>
-<p>Mount, Sermon upon the, explained by Robertson on astral principles,
-20, 21</p>
-<p>Myrrha = Maria, 69, 70 <i>Myth, Magic, and Morals</i> cited, 1,
-44</p>
-<p>Mythical accretions differently estimated by Messrs. Robertson and
-Drews in secular and in sacred history, 45 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Myths of ancient gods, in what way they contrast with the Gospels,
-82</p>
-<p>Nazareth same as Chorazin according to F. C. Burkitt, 41
-<i>Nazoraei</i> of Epiphanius, how Prof. W. B. Smith conjures with
-them, 41;<br>
-for Matthew the word meant simply <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb233"
-href="#pb233" name="pb233">233</a>]</span>&ldquo;dwellers in
-Nazareth,&rdquo; <i>ibid.</i> <i>note</i></p>
-<p>Nero&rsquo;s persecution of Christianity, 160 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Novels, ancient Greek, contrasted with the Gospels, 82</p>
-<p>Oannes or Ea equated with John the Baptist by Dr. Drews, 155</p>
-<p>Orthodox obscurantism responsible for the vagaries of Messrs.
-Robertson, Drews, W. B. Smith, and similar writers, 1, 128, 168</p>
-<p>Origen on the Samaritan Messiah Dositheos, 198 <i>note</i>;<br>
-his confused citations of Josephus mislead Prof. W. B. Smith, 157
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Osiris = Jesus in the last judgment, 21;<br>
-his death, 48;<br>
-his statuette suggested the scourging of the money-changers by Jesus,
-62, 77</p>
-<p>Oxford, Bishop of, on the symbolical character of the Ascension, 219
-<i>Pan-Babylonismus</i>, 202</p>
-<p>Papias&rsquo;s evidence about the Gospels, 10;<br>
-on Judas Iscariot, 137</p>
-<p>Parables of Jesus mainly turn on the imminence of the kingdom of
-heaven, 13</p>
-<p>Paton, W. R., on the Sacaea, 53</p>
-<p>Paul&rsquo;s general aloofness from the historical Jesus, 138;<br>
-did not prevent his testifying to the main facts of his life, 132
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Paul&rsquo;s lack of appreciation of Greek art, 180;<br>
-his rivalry with the older Apostles, 134</p>
-<p>Pauline Epistles, how handled by the deniers of Jesus&rsquo;s
-historicity, 125;<br>
-evidence of their antiquity in Marcion, Ignatius, and Clement of Rome,
-125 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-mainly genuine, if judged by their contents, 131;<br>
-their evidence as regards historicity of Jesus, 132 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-their picture of Jesus, 169</p>
-<p>Peter, an understudy of Mithras or of Janus or of Proteus, 62
-<i>foll.</i>, 143;<br>
-his Epistle testifies to an historical Jesus, 153</p>
-<p>Peter, Gospel ascribed to, recognizes the Twelve Apostles, 13</p>
-<p>Pfleiderer, Dr., Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s judgment of him, 172</p>
-<p>Philonean character of Johannine Gospel, 103, 111</p>
-<p>Philo&rsquo;s embassy to Caligula, 180;<br>
-his docetic views as to angels visiting Abraham, 106;<br>
-his description of mob-mockery in Alexandria of the King of the Jews,
-53</p>
-<p>Pilate, the Javelin man of Dr. Drews, 27</p>
-<p>Plato, his supposed prophecy of Jesus, 188 <i>note</i>;<br>
-Mr. Robertson&rsquo;s arguments leave no room for historicity, 57;<br>
-his virgin birth compatible, according to Mr. Robertson, with his
-reality, 58</p>
-<p>Play, annual mystery-plays of Jesus invented by Mr. Robertson, 48
-<i>foll.</i>, 91, 135 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Pliny&rsquo;s notice of the Christians of Bithynia, 40, 162
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-Prof. W. B. Smith&rsquo;s attempt to explain it away, 163</p>
-<p>Poggio interpolated Tacitus from Sulpicius Severus, according to Dr.
-Drews, 161 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Pre-Christian Jesus, no evidence needed to prove his reality,
-according to Prof. W. B. Smith, 32;<br>
-far-fetched character of the hypothesis, 35 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Prephilological etymologies of Messrs. Robertson and Drews, 70,
-179</p>
-<p>Proteus&mdash;Peter, 63, 143</p>
-<p>Pythagoras, judged by the rules of the hypercritics, not an
-historical figure, 5</p>
-<p><i>Q</i>, or the non-Marcan source embedded in Matthew and Luke, 10
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb234" href="#pb234" name=
-"pb234">234</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Reduplications, rhetorical, their frequency in Hebrew literature,
-24, 76</p>
-<p>Renan, on character of early history of Christianity, 223
-<i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Resurrected Jesus appears to five hundred men at once, 149</p>
-<p>Revelation of John, testifies to a real Jesus, 153</p>
-<p>Robertson, Mr. J. M., not properly esteemed in Germany, according to
-Dr. Drews, 15;<br>
-his invention of the Sun-god Joshua, 17;<br>
-sets Mark later than Matthew, when it serves his purpose to do so,
-23;<br>
-his ideas of evidence exampled in his handling of El Tabari, 34;<br>
-his hypothesis of mystery-plays representing death of Joshua the
-Sun-god, 48 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-censures Dr. Lorinser for deriving Krishna myths from Christianity, 75
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-admits presence of Jewish elements in primitive Christianity, 89;<br>
-adopts Jesus Ben Pandira, 143 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-and <i>passim</i></p>
-<p>Sacaea, character of, 52</p>
-<p>Samaritan apocryph of Joshua, 33</p>
-<p>Savages deify humble objects rather than the sublime in nature,
-18</p>
-<p>Schmiedel&rsquo;s &ldquo;Pillars,&rdquo; how dealt with by Mr.
-Robertson, 172 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Secrecy of early Christian cult and propaganda a fiction of Prof. W.
-B. Smith&rsquo;s fancy, 188, 190</p>
-<p>Silence, argument from, 42, 119, 129 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Slain god cult, the idea not primitive in Christianity, but a
-development of Pauline thought, 177</p>
-<p>Smith, Prof. W. B., uses the Gospels as historical documents
-whenever it suits his argument, 192, 197;<br>
-on the sublimity of the initial letter <i>J</i>, 195;<br>
-on the <i>Acts</i> and Epistles, 197;<br>
-on esoterism of early Church, 192 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-his hypothesis of a pre-Christian Jesus, 32;<br>
-his hypothesis based on the exiguous evidence of <a class=
-"biblink xd25e45" title="Link to cited location in Bible" href=
-"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2018:24&amp;version=NRSV">
-Acts xviii, 24</a> <i>foll.</i>, 35;<br>
-insists on the monotheistic significance of the Gospels, 74, 187,
-190;<br>
-his hypothesis that Jesus was an ancient monotheist deity humanized,
-84, 124;<br>
-he misunderstands the Gospels, and turns them into allegory, 85
-<i>foll.</i>, 188 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-disputes the antiquity of the Pauline Epistles, 126 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-his use of the argument <i>from silence</i>, 130;<br>
-attempts to explain away the brethren of Jesus, 145 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-his theory that the Gospels represent a &ldquo;crusade for
-monotheism,&rdquo;<a id="xd25e5834" name="xd25e5834"></a> 187
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-he contradicts his main presuppositions in order to argue from the
-Gospels at all, 191</p>
-<p>Socialism, modern, resembles apocalyptic faith of earliest
-Christians, 102</p>
-<p>Solomon, Psalms of, upon the Messiah as the Last Judge, 21</p>
-<p>Solon, doubts implied by the hypercritics as to his historicity,
-4</p>
-<p>Spencer, Dr. John, on methods of comparative religion, 72</p>
-<p>Suetonius&rsquo;s application of epithet <i>Malefica</i> to
-Christian religion, 161, 165</p>
-<p>Suetonius on oriental messiahs, 196;<br>
-his phrase <i lang="la">impulsore Chresto</i>, its meaning according to
-Dr. Drews, 164 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Sulzbach, A., on Peter&rsquo;s keys, 64</p>
-<p>Sunday-school style of criticism of Robertson, Drews, and W. B.
-Smith, 23, 43, 168, and <i>passim</i></p>
-<p>Sun-myth phase of comparative mythology, though obsolete,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb235" href="#pb235" name=
-"pb235">235</a>]</span>yet upheld in books of Drews and Robertson, 18,
-and <i>passim</i></p>
-<p>Tacitus&rsquo;s references to the Christians, how handled by W. B.
-Smith, 159 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-supported by Clement of Rome, 161</p>
-<p>Temple cleansing, story of, originated according to Mr. Robertson in
-a statuette of Osiris with a scourge, 61 <i>foll.</i>, 77</p>
-<p>Thecla, story of, 81</p>
-<p>Theophilus, Luke&rsquo;s exordiums addressed to him attest a belief
-on part of both as well as of many others that Jesus was no myth, 99,
-100</p>
-<p>Thomas, apostle, legends of, 81</p>
-<p>Thompson, Rev. W. H., his work on miracles, how received in the
-English Church, 217</p>
-<p>Tobit, Book of, Docetism in, 106</p>
-<p>Toldoth Jeschu, or Jewish tradition of Jesus, 151 <i>foll.</i></p>
-<p>Travel document, or <i>We</i> sections, in Acts, 100;<br>
-a summary of their contents, 115 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-probably written by the author of Acts and not merely an independent
-document used up by him, 118</p>
-<p>Twelve Apostles the Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 20, 78;<br>
-identical with the twelve apostles of the Jewish High Priest, 135
-<i>foll.</i>;<br>
-Paul&rsquo;s rivalry with them, 134, 138</p>
-<p>Universities of Oxford and Cambridge have ignored the study of
-Christian antiquities, 216</p>
-<p>Van Manen&rsquo;s favourable estimate of Acts accepted by Messrs.
-Drews and Robertson, 113 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-his absurd system of dating ancient literature espoused by Messrs.
-Robertson and Drews, 119, 125 <i>foll.</i>, 137</p>
-<p>Virgin Birth Legend, Messrs. Robertson and Drews insist that it was
-part and parcel of the earliest evangelical tradition, 44 <i>foll.</i>,
-170, 175;<br>
-in spite of their virgin births, Plato and Augustus are admitted by Mr.
-Robertson to have been real men, 49 <i>foll.</i>;<br>
-lateness of Gospel records thereof admitted by Mr. Robertson, 50,
-92</p>
-<p>Virgin Mary, late introduction of her feasts in the Church, 171</p>
-<p>Weiss, Prof. Jo., on influence of the Septuagint on Luke&rsquo;s
-account of the birth of John the Baptist, 206</p>
-<p>Wellhausen&rsquo;s commentary on the Gospels, 169;<br>
-his view of the date of composition of the Gospels of Mark and Luke,
-97</p>
-<p>Wendland, Prof. Paul, on the Sacaea, 53</p>
-<p>Wessely&rsquo;s papyrus mentions &ldquo;Jesus the God of the
-Hebrews,&rdquo; 39</p>
-<p>William Tell myth, 42</p>
-<p>Winckler, Prof. Hugo, his astral methods of interpreting myths,
-209;<br>
-on Sun and Moon myths in the Old Testament, 87, 142</p>
-<p>Xisuthros = Jesus, in Dr. Jensen&rsquo;s Gilgamesch Epos, 211</p>
-<p>Zimmern, Prof. Heinrich, on the Deluge, 203</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 imprint"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd25e5977">WATTS AND CO., PRINTERS, JOHNSON&rsquo;S
-COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="transcribernote">
-<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2>
-<h3 class="main">Availability</h3>
-<p class="first">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no
-cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give
-it away or re-use it under the terms of the <a class="seclink xd25e45"
-title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/license" rel=
-"license">Project Gutenberg License</a> included with this eBook or
-online at <a class="seclink xd25e45" title="External link" href=
-"https://www.gutenberg.org/" rel="home">www.gutenberg.org</a>.</p>
-<p>This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
-at <a class="exlink xd25e45" title="External link" href=
-"http://www.pgdp.net/">www.pgdp.net</a>.</p>
-<p>Some of the works this book critizes are available from project
-Gutenberg (<a class="seclink xd25e45" title="External link" href=
-"https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/search/?query=J.+M.+ROBERTSON">works</a>
-by J. M. Robertson; <i><a class="pglink xd25e45" title=
-"Link to Project Gutenberg ebook" href=
-"https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/45540">The Christ Myth</a></i> by
-Arthur Drews).</p>
-<h3 class="main">Metadata</h3>
-<table class="colophonMetadata">
-<tr>
-<td><b>Title:</b></td>
-<td>The Historical Christ</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Author:</b></td>
-<td>Frederick Cornwallis Conybeare (1856&ndash;1924)</td>
-<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/2542939/" class=
-"seclink">Info</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Language:</b></td>
-<td>English</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Original publication date:</b></td>
-<td>1914</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Keywords:</b></td>
-<td>Drews, Arthur, -- 1865-1935</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Jesus Christ -- History and criticism</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Robertson, J. M. -- (John Mackinnon), -- 1856-1933</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Smith, William Benjamin, -- 1850-1934</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3>Catalog entries</h3>
-<table class="catalogEntries">
-<tr>
-<td>Related WorldCat catalog page:</td>
-<td><a href="https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/20048312" class=
-"seclink">20048312</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Encoding</h3>
-<p class="first"></p>
-<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3>
-<ul>
-<li>2017-09-14 Started.</li>
-</ul>
-<h3 class="main">External References</h3>
-<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These
-links may not work for you.</p>
-<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3>
-<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p>
-<table class="correctiontable" summary=
-"Overview of corrections applied to the text.">
-<tr>
-<th>Page</th>
-<th>Source</th>
-<th>Correction</th>
-<th>Edit distance</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e757">24</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">19</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">18</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e1284">53</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">foll.</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">fol.</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e1729">80</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bacon-Shaksperians</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bacon-Shakesperians</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e1832">87</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">as Alten</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">alten</td>
-<td class="bottom">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e1892">89</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Didache</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Didach&eacute;</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2000">95</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bacon-Shakespeareans</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bacon-Shakesperians</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2156">106</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">20, 21</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">19</td>
-<td class="bottom">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2249">110</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">passages</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">episodes</td>
-<td class="bottom">5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2405">116</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">At Cyprus they stay with <i>an early
-disciple</i></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">they stay with <i>an early disciple</i> from
-Cyprus</td>
-<td class="bottom">22</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3268">147</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">twice</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Deleted</i>]</td>
-<td class="bottom">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3348">149</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Why</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">why</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3386">151</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">But, since the Bezan omission does not cover
-the whole of the matter taken from Corinthians, we may suppose that
-Luke borrowed the words from the Epistle in question.</td>
-<td class="bottom">166</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3415">152</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Horae Hebraicae</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Hor&aelig; Hebraic&aelig;</td>
-<td class="bottom">4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3845">167</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">of</td>
-<td class="bottom">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4130">185</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">(</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4136">185</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">)</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4192">188</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">?</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4195">188</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bacon-Shakespearian</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bacon-Shakesperians</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4610">210</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4877">227</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e5203">230</a>,
-<a class="pageref" href="#xd25e5322">231</a>, <a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5834">234</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Deleted</i>]</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e5319">231</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">iesomai</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">i&#275;somai</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Abbreviations</h3>
-<p>Overview of abbreviations used.</p>
-<table class="abbreviationtable" summary=
-"Overview of abbreviations used.">
-<tr>
-<th>Abbreviation</th>
-<th>Expansion</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">Ztschr. f.d. Neutest. Wissenschaft</td>
-<td class="bottom">Zeitschrift f&uuml;r die neutestamentliche
-Wissenschaft</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Historical Christ;, by Fred. C. Conybeare
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Historical Christ;
- Or, An investigation of the views of Mr. J. M. Robertson,
- Dr. A. Drews, and Prof. W. B. Smith
-
-Author: Fred. C. Conybeare
-
-Release Date: September 18, 2017 [EBook #55575]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORICAL CHRIST; ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
-Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
-made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE HISTORICAL CHRIST;
-
- OR,
-
- AN INVESTIGATION OF THE VIEWS OF Mr. J. M. ROBERTSON,
- Dr. A. DREWS, and Prof. W. B. SMITH
-
- BY
-
- FRED. C. CONYBEARE, M.A., F.B.A.,
-
- HONORARY FELLOW OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, OXFORD;
- HON. LL.D. OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ST. ANDREWS;
- HON. DOCTOR OF THEOLOGY OF GIESSEN
-
-
- [ISSUED FOR THE RATIONALIST PRESS ASSOCIATION, LIMITED]
-
-
- LONDON:
- WATTS & CO.,
- 17 JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.
- 1914
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PREFACE vii
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. HISTORICAL METHOD 1
- II. PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS 81
- III. THE ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE 96
- IV. THE EPISTLES OF PAUL 125
- V. EXTERNAL EVIDENCE 154
- VI. THE ART OF CRITICISM 167
- VII. DR. JENSEN 202
-
- EPILOGUE 214
- INDEX 227
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-This little volume was written in the spring of the year 1913, and is
-intended as a plea for moderation and good sense in dealing with the
-writings of early Christianity; just as my earlier volumes entitled
-Myth, Magic, and Morals and A History of New Testament Criticism were
-pleas for the free use, in regard to the origins of that religion,
-of those methods of historical research to which we have learned
-to subject all records of the past. It provides a middle way between
-traditionalism on the one hand and absurdity on the other, and as doing
-so will certainly be resented by the partisans of each form of excess.
-
-The comparative method achieved its first great triumph in the
-field of Indo-European philology; its second in that of mythology
-and folk-lore. It is desirable to allow to it its full rights in
-the matter of Christian origins. But we must be doubly careful
-in this new and almost unworked region to use it with the same
-scrupulous care for evidence, with the same absence of prejudice
-and economy of hypothesis, to which it owes its conquests in other
-fields. The untrained explorers whom I here criticize discover on
-almost every page connections in their subject-matter where there
-are and can be none, and as regularly miss connections where they
-exist. Parallelisms and analogies of rite, conduct, and belief
-between religious systems and cults are often due to other causes
-than actual contact, inter-communication, and borrowing. They may
-be no more than sporadic and independent manifestations of a common
-humanity. It is not enough, therefore, for one agent or institution
-or belief merely to remind us of another. Before we assert literary
-or traditional connection between similar elements in story and myth,
-we must satisfy ourselves that such communication was possible. The
-tale of Sancho Panza and his visions of a happy isle, over which he
-shall hold sway when his romantic lord and master, Don Quixote, has
-overcome with his good sword the world and all its evil, reminds us
-of the naif demand of the sons of Zebedee (Mark x, 37) to be allowed
-to sit on the right hand and the left of their Lord, so soon as he
-is glorified. With equal simplicity (Matthew xix, 28) Jesus promises
-that in the day of the regeneration of Israel, when the Son of Man
-takes his seat on his throne of glory, Peter and his companions shall
-also take their seats on twelve thrones to judge the twelve tribes
-of Israel. The projected mise en scene is exactly that of a Persian
-great king with his magnates on their several "cushions" of state
-around him. There is, again, a close analogy psychologically between
-Dante's devout adoration of Beatrice in heaven and Paul's of the risen
-Jesus. These two parallels are closer than most that Mr. Robertson
-discovers between Christian story and Pagan myth, yet no one in his
-senses would ever suggest that Cervantes drew his inspiration from
-the Gospels or Dante from the Pauline Epistles. In criticizing the
-Gospels it is all the more necessary to proceed cautiously, because
-the obscurantists are incessantly on the watch for solecisms--or
-"howlers," as a schoolboy would call them; and only too anxious to
-point to them as of the essence of all free criticism of Christian
-literature and history.
-
-Re-reading these pages after the lapse of many months since they were
-written, I have found little to alter, though Prof. A. C. Clark, who
-has been so good as to peruse them, has made a few suggestions which,
-where the sheets were not already printed, I have embodied. I append
-a list of errata calling for correction.
-
-
-Fred. C. Conybeare.
-
-March 1, 1914.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-HISTORICAL METHOD
-
-
-[Orthodox obscurantism the parent of Sciolism] In Myth, Magic, and
-Morals (Chapter IX) I have remarked that the Church, by refusing to
-apply in the field of so-called sacred history the canons by which
-in other fields truth is discerned from falsehood, by beatifying
-credulous ignorance and anathematizing scholarship and common sense,
-has surrounded the figure of Jesus with such a nimbus of improbability
-that it seems not absurd to some critics of to-day to deny that he
-ever lived. The circumstance that both in England and in Germany the
-books of certain of these critics--in particular, Dr. Arthur Drews,
-Professor W. Benjamin Smith, and Mr. J. M. Robertson--are widely read,
-and welcomed by many as works of learning and authority, requires
-that I should criticize them rather more in detail than I deemed it
-necessary to do in that publication.
-
-[B. Croce on nature of History] Benedetto Croce well remarks in his
-Logica (p. 195) that history in no way differs from the physical
-sciences, insofar as it cannot be constructed by pure reasoning,
-but rests upon sight or vision of the fact that has happened, the
-fact so perceived being the only source of history. In a methodical
-historical treatise the sources are usually divided into monuments
-and narratives; by the former being understood whatever is left to
-us as a trace of the accomplished fact--e.g., a contract, a letter,
-or a triumphal arch; while narratives consist of such accounts of
-it as have been transmitted to us by those who were more or less
-eye-witnesses thereof, or by those who have repeated the notices or
-traditions furnished by eye-witnesses.
-
-[Relative paucity of evangelic tradition] Now it may be granted that
-we have not in the New Testament the same full and direct information
-about Jesus as we can derive from ancient Latin literature about
-Julius Caesar or Cicero. We have no monuments of him, such as are the
-commentaries of the one or the letters and speeches of the other. It
-is barely credible that a single one of the New Testament writers,
-except perhaps St. Paul, ever set eyes on him or heard his voice. It
-is more than doubtful whether a single one of his utterances, as
-recorded in the Gospels, retains either its original form or the idiom
-in which it was clothed. A mass of teaching, a number of aphorisms
-and precepts, are attributed to him; but we know little of how they
-were transmitted to those who repeat them to us, and it is unlikely
-that we possess any one of them as it left his lips.
-
-[and presence of miracles in it,] And that is not all. In the four
-Gospels all sorts of incredible stories are told about him, such as
-that he was born of a virgin mother, unassisted by a human father;
-that he walked on the surface of the water; that he could foresee the
-future; that he stilled a storm by upbraiding it; that he raised the
-dead; that he himself rose in the flesh from the dead and left his
-tomb empty; that his apostles beheld him so risen; and that finally
-he disappeared behind a cloud up into the heavens.
-
-[explains and excuses the extreme negative school] It is natural,
-therefore--and there is much excuse for him--that an uneducated man
-or a child, bidden unceremoniously in the name of religion to accept
-these tales, should revolt, and hastily make up his mind that the
-figure of Jesus is through and through fictitious, and that he never
-lived at all. One thing only is certain--namely, that insofar as the
-orthodox blindly accept these tales--nay, maintain with St. Athanasius
-that the man Jesus was God incarnate, a pre-existent aeon, Word of God,
-Creator of all things, masked in human flesh, but retaining, so far as
-he chose, all his exalted prerogatives and cosmic attributes in this
-disguise--they put themselves out of court, and deprive themselves of
-any faculty of reply to the extreme negative school of critics. The
-latter may be very absurd, and may betray an excess of credulity in
-the solutions they offer of the problem of Christian origins; but
-they can hardly go further along the path of absurdity and credulity
-than the adherents of the creeds. If their arguments are to be met,
-if any satisfactory proof is to be advanced of the historicity
-of Jesus, it must come, not from those who, as Mommsen remarked,
-"reason in chains," but from free thinkers.
-
-[Yet Jesus is better attested than most ancients] Those, however,
-who have much acquaintance with antiquity must perceive at the outset
-that, if the thesis that Jesus never existed is to be admitted, then
-quite a number of other celebrities, less well evidenced than he,
-must disappear from the page of history, and be ranged with Jesus in
-the realm of myth.
-
-[Age of the earliest Christian literature] Many characteristically
-Christian documents, such as the Epistle of Barnabas, the Shepherd
-of Hermas, and the Teaching of the Apostles, are admitted by Drews to
-have been written before A.D. 100. [1] Not only the canonical Gospels,
-he tells us, [2] were still current in the first half of the second
-century, but several never accepted by the Church--e.g., spurious
-gospels ascribed to Matthew, Thomas, Bartholomew, Peter, the Twelve
-Apostles. These have not reached us, though we have recovered a large
-fragment of the so-called Peter Gospel, and find that it at least
-pre-supposes canonical Mark. The phrase, "Still current in the first
-half of the second century," indicates that, in Dr. Drews's opinion,
-these derivative gospels were at least as old as year 100; in that
-case our canonical Gospels would fall well within the first. I will
-not press this point; but, anyhow, we note the admission that within
-about seventy years of the supposed date of Jesus's death Christians
-were reading that mass of written tradition about him which we call
-the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. They were also reading
-a mass of less accredited biographies--less trustworthy, no doubt,
-but, nevertheless, the work of authors who entertained no doubt that
-Jesus had really lived, and who wished to embellish his story.
-
-[If Jesus never lived, neither did Solon,] If, then, armed with
-such early records, we are yet so exacting of evidence as to deny
-that Jesus, their central figure, ever lived, what shall we say of
-other ancient worthies--of Solon, for example, the ancient Athenian
-legislator? For his life our chief sources, as Grote remarks (History
-of Greece, Pt. II, ch. 11), are Plutarch and Diogenes, writers who
-lived seven and eight hundred years after him. Moreover, the stories
-of Plutarch about him are, as Grote says, "contradictory as well
-as apocryphal." It is true that Herodotus repeats to us the story of
-Solon's travels, and of the conversations he held with Croesus, King of
-Lydia; but these conversations are obviously mere romance. Herodotus,
-too, lived not seventy, but nearly one hundred and fifty years later
-than Solon, so that contemporary evidence of him we have none. Plutarch
-preserves, no doubt, various laws and metrical aphorisms which were
-in his day attributed to Solon, just as the Christians attributed an
-extensive body of teaching to Jesus. If we deny all authenticity to
-Jesus's teaching, what of Solon's traditional lore? Obviously Jesus
-has a far larger chance to have really existed than Solon.
-
-[or Epimenides,] And the same is true of Epimenides of Crete, who
-was said to be the son of the nymph Balte; to have been mysteriously
-fed by the nymphs, since he was never seen to eat, and so forth. He
-was known as the Purifier, and in that role healed the Athenians
-of plagues physical and spiritual. A poet and prophet he lived,
-according to some, for one hundred and fifty-four years; according
-to his own countrymen, for three hundred. If he lived to the latter
-age, then Plato, who is the first to mention him in his Laws, was
-his contemporary, not otherwise.
-
-[or Pythagoras,] Pythagoras, again, can obviously never have lived
-at all, if we adopt the purist canons of Drews. For he was reputed,
-as Grote (Pt. II, ch. 37) reminds us, to have been inspired by the
-gods to reveal to men a new way of life, and found an order or
-brotherhood. He is barely mentioned by any writer before Plato,
-who flourished one hundred and fifty years later than he. In the
-matter of miracles, prophecy, pre-existence, mystic observances,
-and asceticism, Pythagoras equalled, if he did not excel, Jesus.
-
-[or Apollonius of Tyana] Apollonius of Tyana is another example. We
-have practically no record of him till one hundred and twenty
-years after his death, when the Sophist Philostratus took in hand
-to write his life, by his own account, with the aid of memorials
-left by Damis, a disciple of the sage. Apollonius, like Jesus and
-Pythagoras, was an incarnation of an earlier being; he, too, worked
-miracles, and appeared after death to an incredulous follower, and
-ascended into heaven bodily. The stories of his miracles of healing,
-of his expulsions of demons, and raising of the dead, read exactly
-like chapters out of the Gospels. He, like Jesus and Pythagoras,
-had a god Proteus for his father, and was born of a virgin. His birth
-was marked in the heavens by meteoric portents. His history bristles
-with tales closely akin to those which were soon told of Jesus; yet
-all sound scholars are agreed that his biographer did not imitate the
-Gospels, but wrote independently of them. If, then, Jesus never lived,
-much less can Apollonius have done so. Except for a passing reference
-in Lucian, Philostratus is our earliest authority for his reality;
-the life written of him by Moeragenes is lost, and we do not know
-when it was written. On the whole, the historicity of Jesus is much
-better attested and documented than that of Apollonius, whose story
-is equally full of miracles with Christ's.
-
-[Miracles do not wholly invalidate a document] The above examples
-suffice. But, with the aid of a good dictionary of antiquity,
-hundreds of others could be adduced of individuals for whose reality
-we have not a tithe of the evidence which we have for that of Jesus;
-yet no one in his senses disputes their ever having lived. We take
-it for certain that hundreds--nay, thousands--of people who figure
-on the pages of ancient and medieval history were real, and that,
-roughly speaking, they performed the actions attributed to them--this
-although the earliest notices of them are only met with in Plutarch,
-or Suidas, or William of Tyre, or other writers who wrote one hundred,
-two hundred, perhaps six hundred years after them. Nor are we deterred
-from believing that they really existed by the fact that, along with
-some things credible, other things wholly incredible are related of
-them. Throughout ancient history we must learn to pick and choose. The
-thesis, therefore, that Jesus never lived, but was from first to last
-a myth, presents itself at the outset as a paradox. Still, as it is
-seriously advanced, it must be seriously considered and that I now
-proceed to do.
-
-[Proof of the unhistoricity of Jesus, how attainable] It can obviously
-not pass muster, unless its authors furnish us with a satisfactory
-explanation of every single notice, direct or indirect, simple or
-constructive, which ancient writers have transmitted to us. Each
-notice must be separately examined, and if an evidential document
-be composite, every part of it. Each statement in its prima facie
-sense must be shown to be irreconcilable with what we know of the
-age and circumstances to which it pretends to relate. And in every
-case the new interpretation must be more cogent and more probable
-than the old one. Jesus, the real man, must be driven line by line,
-verse by verse, out of the whole of the New Testament, and after that
-out of other early sources which directly or by implication attest his
-historicity. There is no other way of proving so sweeping a negative
-as that of the three authors I have named.
-
-[How to approach ancient documents] For every statement of fact in
-an ancient author is a problem, and has to be accounted for. If it
-accords with the context, and the entire body of statement agrees
-with the best scheme we can form in our mind's eye of the epoch,
-we accept it, just as we would the statement of a witness standing
-before us in a law court. If, on the other hand, the statement does not
-agree with our scheme, we ask why the author made it. If he obviously
-believed it, then how did his error arise? If he should seem to have
-made it without himself believing it, then we ask, Why did he wish
-to deceive his reader? Sometimes the only solution we can give of
-the matter is, that our author himself never penned the statement,
-but that someone covertly inserted it in his text, so that it might
-appear to have contained it. In such cases we must explain why and in
-whose interest the text was interpolated. In all history, of course,
-we never get a direct observation, or intuition, or hearing of what
-took place, for the photographic camera and phonograph did not exist
-in antiquity. We must rest content with the convictions and feelings
-of authors, as they put them down in books. To one circumstance,
-however, amid so much dubiety, we shall attach supreme importance; and
-that is to an affirmation of the same fact by two or more independent
-witnesses. One man may well be in error, and report to us what never
-occurred; but it is in the last degree improbable that two or more
-[Value of several independent witnesses in case of Jesus] independent
-witnesses will join forces in testifying to what never was. Let us,
-then, apply this principle to the problem before us. Jesus, our authors
-affirm, was not a real man, but an astral myth. Now we can conceive of
-one ancient writer mistaking such a myth for a real man; but what if
-another and another witness, what if half a dozen or more come along,
-and, meeting us quite apart from one another and by different routes,
-often by pure accident, conspire in error. If we found ourselves in
-such case, would we not think we were bewitched, and take to our heels?
-
-[The oldest sources about Jesus] Well, I do not intend to take to my
-heels. I mean to stand up to the chimeras of Messrs. Drews, Robertson,
-and Benjamin Smith. And the best courage is to take one by one the
-ancient sources which bear witness to the man Jesus, examine and
-compare them, and weigh their evidence. If they are independent,
-if they agree, not too much--that would excite a legitimate
-suspicion--but only more or less and in a general way, then, I
-believe, any rational inquirer would allow them weight, even if none
-were strictly contemporaries of his and eye-witnesses of his life. In
-the Gospel of Mark we have the earliest narrative document of the New
-Testament. This is evident from the circumstance that the three other
-evangelists used it in the composition of their Gospels. Drews, indeed,
-admits it to be one of the "safest" results of modern discussion
-of the life of Jesus that this Gospel is the oldest of the surviving
-four. He is aware, of course, that this conclusion has been questioned;
-but no one will doubt it who has confronted [The Gospel of Mark used
-in Matthew and Luke] Mark in parallel columns with Luke and Matthew,
-and noted how these other evangelists not only derive from it the
-order of the events of the life of Jesus, but copy it out verse
-after verse, each with occasional modifications of his own. Drews,
-however, while aware of this phenomenon, has yet not grasped the
-fact that it and nothing else has moved scholars to regard Mark as
-the most ancient of the three Synoptics; quite erroneously, as if he
-had never read any work of modern textual criticism, he imagines that
-they are led to their conclusion, firstly by the superior freshness
-and vividness of Mark, by a picturesqueness which argues him to
-have been an eye-witness; and, secondly, by the evidence of Papias,
-who, it is said, declared Mark to have been the interpreter of the
-Apostle Peter. In point of fact, the modern critical theologians,
-for whom Drews has so much contempt, attach no decisive weight in
-this connection either to the tradition preserved by Papias or to the
-graphic qualities of Mark's narratives. They rest their case mainly
-on the internal evidence of the texts before them.
-
-[Contents of Mark] What, then, do we find in Mark's narrative?
-
-Inasmuch as my readers can buy the book for a penny and study it
-for themselves, I may content myself with a very brief resume of
-its contents.
-
-It begins with an account of one John who preached round about Judaea,
-but especially on the Jordan, that the Jews must repent of their sins
-in order to their remission; in token whereof he directed them to take
-a ritual bath in the sacred waters of the Jordan, just as a modern
-Hindoo washes away his sins by means of a ritual bath in the River
-Jumna. An old document generally called Q. (Quelle), because Luke and
-Matthew used it in common to supplement Mark's rather meagre story,
-adds the reason why the Jews were to repent; and it was this, that
-the Kingdom of Heaven was at hand. [Drews's account of Messianism]
-Drews, in his first chapter of The Christ Myth, traces out the idea
-of this Kingdom of God, which he finds so prominent in the Jewish
-Apocalyptics of the last century before and the first century after
-Christ, and attributes it to Persian and Mithraic influence. Mithras,
-he says, was to descend upon the earth, and in a last fierce struggle
-overwhelm Angromainyu or Ahriman and his hosts, and cast them down
-into the nether world. He would then raise the dead in bodily shape,
-and after a general judgment of the whole world, in which the wicked
-should be condemned to the punishments of hell and the good raised
-to heavenly glory, establish the "millennial kingdom." These ideas,
-he continues, penetrated Jewish thought, and brought about a complete
-transformation of the former belief in a messiah, a Hebrew term
-meaning the anointed--in Greek Christos. For, to begin with, the Christ
-was merely the Jewish king who represented Jahwe before the people,
-and the people before Jahwe. He was "Son of Jahwe," or "Son of God"
-par excellence; later on the name came to symbolize the ideal king
-to come--this when the Israelites lost their independence, and were
-humiliated by falling under a foreign yoke. This ideal longed-for
-king was to win Jahwe's favour; and by his heroic deeds, transcending
-those of Moses and Joshua of old, to re-establish the glory of Israel,
-renovate the face of the earth, and even make Israel Lord over all
-nations. But so far the Messiah was only a human being, a new David
-or descendant of David, a theocratic king, a divinely favoured prince
-of peace, a just ruler over the people he liberated; and in this
-sense Cyrus, who delivered the Jews from the Babylonian captivity,
-the rescuer and overlord of Israel, had been acclaimed Messiah.
-
-At last and gradually--still under Persian influence, according to
-Drews--this figure assumed divine attributes, yet without forfeiting
-human ones. Secret and supernatural as was his nature, so should the
-birth of the Messiah be; though a divine child, he was to be born in
-lowly state. Nay, the personality of the Messiah eventually mingled
-with that of Jahwe himself, whose son he was. Such, according to Drews,
-were the alternations of the Messiah between a human and a divine
-nature in Jewish apocalypses of the period B.C. 100 to A.D. 100. They
-obviously do not preclude the possibility of the Jews in that epoch
-acclaiming a man as their Messiah--indeed, there is no reason why
-they should not have attached the dignity to several; and from sources
-which Drews does not dispute we learn that they actually did so.
-
-[John and Jesus began as messengers of the divine kingdom on earth]
-Let us return to Mark's narrative. Among the Jews who came to John to
-confess and repent of their sins, and wash them away in the Jordan,
-was one named Jesus, from Nazareth of Galilee; and he, as soon as
-John was imprisoned and murdered by Herod, caught up the lamp,
-if I may use a metaphor, which had fallen from the hands of the
-stricken saint, and hurried on with it to the same goal. We read
-that he went to Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, and saying:
-"The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand; repent ye,
-and believe in the gospel or good tidings."
-
-The rest of Mark is a narrative of what happened to Jesus on this
-self-appointed errand. We learn that he soon made many recruits,
-from among whom he chose a dozen as his particular missionaries
-or apostles. These, after no long time, he despatched on peculiar
-beats of their own. [Jesus's anticipations of its speedy advent]
-He was certain that the kingdom was not to be long delayed, and on
-occasions assured his audience that it would come in their time. When
-he was sending out his missionary disciples, he even expressed to
-them his doubts as to whether it would not come even before they had
-had time to go round the cities of Israel. [He confined the promises
-to Jews] It was not, however, this consideration, but the instinct
-of exclusiveness, which he shared with most of his race, that led
-him to warn them against carrying the good tidings of the impending
-salvation of Israel to Samaritans or Gentiles; the promises were not
-for schismatics and heathens, but only for the lost sheep of the
-house of Israel. Some of these details are derived not from Mark,
-but from the document out of which, as I remarked above, the first
-and second evangelists supplemented Mark.
-
-[Was rejected by his own kindred] Like Luther, Loyola, Dunstan,
-St. Anthony, and many other famous saints and sinners, Jesus, on the
-threshold of his career, encountered Satan, and overthrew him. A
-characteristically oriental fast of forty days in the wilderness
-equipped him for this feat. Thenceforth he displayed, like Apollonius
-of Tyana and not a few contemporary rabbis, considerable familiarity
-with the demons of disease and madness. The sick flocked to him to
-be healed, and it was only in districts where people disbelieved
-in him and his message that his therapeutic energy met with a
-check. Among those who particularly flouted his pretensions were
-his mother and brethren, who on one occasion at least followed him
-in order to arrest him and put him under restraint as being beside
-himself or exalte. [His Parables all turn on the coming Kingdom]
-A good many parables are attributed to him in this Gospel, and yet
-more in Matthew and Luke, of which the burden usually is the near
-approach of the dissolution of this world and of the last Judgment,
-which are to usher in the Kingdom of God on earth. We learn that the
-parable was his favourite mode of instruction, as it always has been
-and still is the chosen vehicle of Semitic moral teaching. [No hint in
-the earliest sources of the miraculous birth of Jesus] Of the later
-legend of his supernatural birth, and of the visits before his birth
-of angels to Mary, his mother, and to Joseph, his putative father,
-of the portents subsequently related in connection with his birth at
-Bethlehem, there is not a word either in Mark or in the other early
-document out of which Matthew and Luke supplemented Mark. In these
-earliest documents Jesus is presented quite naturally as the son of
-Joseph and his wife Mary, and we learn quite incidentally the names
-of his brothers and sisters.
-
-[Late recognition of Jesus as himself the Messiah] Towards the middle
-of his career Jesus seems to have been recognized by Peter as the
-Son of God or Messiah. Whether he put himself forward for that role
-we cannot be sure; but so certain were his Apostles of the matter
-that two of them are represented as having asked him in the naivest
-way to grant them seats of honour on his left and right hand, when
-he should come in glory to judge the world. The Twelve expected to
-sit on thrones and judge the twelve tribes of Israel, and this idea
-meets us afresh in the Apocalypse, a document which in the form we
-have it belongs to the years 92-93.
-
-[His hopes shattered at approach of death] But the simple faith
-of the Apostles in their teacher and leader was to receive a
-rude shock. They accompany him for the Passover to Jerusalem. An
-insignificant triumphal demonstration is organized for him as he
-enters the sacred city on an ass; he beards the priests in the temple,
-and scatters the money-changers who sat there to change strange coins
-for pilgrims. The priests, who, like many others of their kind, were
-much too comfortable to sigh for the end of the world, and regarded
-enthusiasts as nuisances, took offence, denounced him to Pilate as a
-rebel and a danger to the Roman government of Judaea. He is arrested,
-condemned to be crucified, and as he hangs on the cross in a last
-moment of disillusionment utters that most pathetic of cries: "My God,
-my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" He had expected to witness the
-descent of the kingdom on earth, but instead thereof he is himself
-handed over helpless into the hands of the Gentiles.
-
-Such in outline is the story Mark has to tell. The rival and
-supplementary document of which I have spoken, and which admits of
-some reconstruction from the text of Matthew and Luke, consisted
-mainly of parables and precepts which Jesus was supposed to have
-delivered. It need not engage our attention here.
-
-[The mythical theory of Jesus] Now the three writers I have
-named--Messrs. Drews, Robertson, and W. B. Smith--enjoy the singular
-good fortune to be the first to have discovered what the above
-narratives really mean, and of how they originated; and they are
-urgent that we should sell all we have, and purchase their pearl
-of wisdom. They assure us that in the Gospels we have not got any
-"tradition of a personality." Jesus, the central figure, never
-existed at all, but was a purely mythical personage. The mythical
-character of the Gospels, so Drews assures us, has, in the hands of
-Mr. J. M. Robertson, led the way, and made a considerable advance
-in England; he regrets that so far official learning in Germany
-has not taken up a serious position regarding the mythic symbolical
-interpretation of the latter. [3] Let us then ask, What is the gist
-of the new system of interpretation. It is as follows:--
-
-[Jesus = Joshua, a Sun-god, object of a secret cult] Jesus, or Joshua,
-was the name under which the expected Messiah was honoured in a certain
-Jewish secret society which had its headquarters in Jerusalem about
-the beginning of our era. In view of its secret character Drews warns
-us not to be too curious, nor to question either his information or
-that of Messrs. Smith and Robertson. This recalls to me an incident
-in my own experience. I was once, together with a little girl,
-being taken for a sail by an old sailor who had many yarns. One of
-the most circumstantial of them was about a ship which went down in
-mid ocean with all hands aboard; and it wound up with the remark:
-"And nobody never knew nothing about it." Little girl: "Then how
-did you come to hear all about it?" Like our brave old sailor,
-Dr. Drews warns us (p. 22) not to be too inquisitive. We must not
-"forget that we are dealing with a secret cult, the existence of
-which we can decide upon only by indirect means." His hypothesis,
-he tells us, "can only be rejected without more ado by such as seek
-the traces of the pre-Christian cult of Jesus in well-worn places,
-and will only allow that to be 'proved' which they have established
-by direct original documentary evidence before their eyes." In other
-words, we are to set aside our copious and almost (in Paul's case)
-contemporary evidence that Jesus was a real person in favour of a
-hypothesis which from the first and as such lacks all direct and
-documentary evidence, and is not amenable to any of the methods of
-proof recognized by sober historians. We must take Dr. Drews's word
-for it, and forego all evidence.
-
-But let our authors continue with their new revelation. By Joshua, or
-Jesus, we are not to understand the personage concerning whose exploits
-the Book of Joshua was composed, but a Sun-god. The Gospels are a
-veiled account of the sufferings and exploits of this Sun-god. "Joshua
-is apparently [why this qualification?] an ancient Ephraimitic god
-of the Sun and Fruitfulness, who stood in close relation to the Feast
-of the Pasch and to the custom of circumcision." [4]
-
-[Emptiness of the Sun-god Joshua hypothesis] Now no one nowadays
-accepts the Book of Joshua offhand as sound history. It is a
-compilation of older sources, which have already been sifted a good
-deal, and will undergo yet more sifting in the future. The question
-before us does not concern its historicity, but is this: Does the Book
-of Joshua, whether history or not, support the hypothesis that Joshua
-was ever regarded as God of the Sun and of Fruitfulness? Was ever such
-a god known of or worshipped in the tribe of Ephraim or in Israel at
-large? In this old Hebrew epic or saga Joshua is a man of flesh and
-blood. How did these gentlemen get it into their heads that he was a
-Sun-god? For this statement there is not a shadow of evidence. They
-have invented it. As he took the Israelites dryshod over the Jordan,
-why have they not made a River-god of him? And as, according to Drews,
-he was so interested in fruitfulness and foreskins, why not suppose he
-was a Priapic god? They are much too modest. We should at least expect
-"the composite myth" to include this element, inasmuch as his mystic
-votaries at Jerusalem were far from seeing eye to eye with Paul in
-the matter of circumcision.
-
-[The Sun-myth stage of comparative mythology] There was years ago
-a stage in the Comparative History of Religions when the Sun-myth
-hypothesis was invoked to explain almost everything. The shirt of
-Nessus, for example, in which Heracles perished, was a parable of the
-sun setting amidst a wrack of scattered clouds. The Sun-myth was the
-key which fitted every lock, and was employed unsparingly by pioneers
-of comparative mythology like F. Max Mueller and Sir George Cox. It
-was taken for granted that early man must have begun by deifying
-the great cosmic powers, by venerating Sun and Moon, the Heavens,
-the Mountains, the Sea, as holy and divine beings, because they,
-rather than humble and homelier objects, impress us moderns by their
-sublimity and overwhelming force. Man was supposed from the first to
-have felt his transitoriness, his frailty and weakness, and to have
-contrasted therewith the infinities of space and time, the majesty
-of the starry hosts of heaven, the majestic and uniform march of
-sun and moon, the mighty rumble of the thunder. Max Mueller thought
-that religion began when the cowering savage was crushed by awe of
-nature and of her stupendous forces, by the infinite lapses of time,
-by the yawning abysses of space. As a matter of fact, savages do not
-entertain these sentiments of the dignity and majesty of nature. On
-the contrary, a primitive man thinks that he can impose his paltry
-will on the elements; that he knows how to unchain the wind, to oblige
-the rain to fall; that he can, like the ancient witches of Thessaly,
-control sun and moon and stars by all sorts of petty magical rites,
-incantations, and gestures, as Joshua made the sun stand still till
-his band of brigands had won the battle. It is to the imagination
-of us moderns alone that the grandeur of the universe appeals, and
-it was relatively late in the history of religion--so far as it can
-be reconstructed from the scanty data in our possession--that the
-higher nature cults were developed. The gods and sacred beings of
-an Australian or North American native are the humble vegetables and
-animals which surround him, objects with which he is on a footing of
-equality. His totems are a duck, a hare, a kangaroo, an emu, a lizard,
-a grub, or a frog. In the same way, the sacred being of an early
-Semite's devotion was just as likely to be a pig or a hare as the sun
-in heaven; the cult of an early Egyptian was centred upon a crocodile,
-or a cat, or a dog. [5] In view of these considerations, our suspicion
-is aroused at the outset by finding Messrs. Drews and Robertson to be
-in this discarded and obsolete Sun-myth stage of speculation. They
-are a back number. Let us, however, examine their mythic symbolic
-theory a little further, and see what sort of arguments they invoke
-in favour of it, and what their "indirect" proofs amount to.
-
-[Examples of the Sun-god theory of Jesus. The Rock-Tomb] Why was Jesus
-buried in a rock-tomb? asks Mr. Robertson. Answer: Because he was
-Mithras, the rock-born Sun-god. We would like to know what other sort
-of burial was possible round Jerusalem, where soil was so scarce that
-everyone was buried in a rock-tomb. Scores of such tombs remain. Are
-they all Mithraic? Surely a score of other considerations would equally
-well explain the choice of a rock-tomb for him in Christian tradition.
-
-[The date of birthday] Why was Jesus born at the
-winter-solstice? Answer: Because he was a Sun-god.
-
-Our author forgets that the choice of December 25 for the feast of
-the physical birth of Jesus was made by the Church as late as 354
-A.D. What could the cryptic Messianists of the first half of the first
-century know about a festival which was never heard of in Rome until
-the year 354, nor accepted in Jerusalem before the year 440? Time is
-evidently no element in the calculations of these authors; and they
-commit themselves to the most amazing anachronisms with the utmost
-insouciance, or, shall we not rather say, ignorance; unless, indeed,
-they imagine that the mystic worshippers of the God Joshua knew all
-about the date, but kept it dark in order to mystify all succeeding
-generations.
-
-[The twelve disciples] Why did Jesus surround himself with twelve
-disciples? Answer: Because they were the twelve signs of the Zodiac
-and he a Sun-god. We naturally ask, Were the twelve tribes of Israel
-equally representative of the Zodiac? In any case, may not Christian
-story have fixed the number of Apostles at twelve in view of the
-tribes being twelve? It is superfluous to go as far as the Zodiac
-for an explanation.
-
-[The Sermon on the Mount] Why did Jesus preach his sermon on the
-Mount? Answer: Because as Sun-god he had to take his stand on the
-"pillar of the world." In the same way, Moses, another Sun-god,
-gave his law from the Mount.
-
-I always have heard that Moses got his tables of the law up top of
-a mountain, and brought them down to a people that were forbidden to
-approach it. He did not stand up top, and shout out his laws to them,
-as Mr. Robertson suggests. In any case, we merely read in Matthew v
-that Jesus went up into a mountain or upland region, and when he had
-sat down his disciples came to him, and he then opened his mouth and
-taught them. In a country like Galilee, where you can barely walk
-a mile in any direction without climbing a hill, what could be more
-natural than for a narrator to frame such a setting for the teacher's
-discourse? It is the first rule of criticism to practise some economy
-of hypothesis, and not go roaming after fanciful and extravagant
-interpretations of quite commonplace and every-day occurrences.
-
-[The last Judgment] Why was it believed that Jesus was to judge men
-after death? Answer: Because he was a Sun-god, and pro tanto identical
-with Osiris.
-
-Surely the more natural interpretation is that, so soon as Jesus
-was identified in the minds of his followers with the Messiah or
-Christ, the task of judging Israel was passed on to him as part of
-the role. Thus in the Psalms of Solomon, a Jewish apocryph of about
-B.C. 50, we read that the Messiah will "in the assemblies judge the
-peoples, the tribes of the sanctified" (xvii, 48). Such references
-could be multiplied; are they all Osirian? If Mr. Robertson had paid
-a little more attention to the later apocrypha of Judaism, and made
-himself a little better acquainted with the social and religious
-medium which gave birth to Christianity, he would have realized how
-unnecessary are these Sun-mythic hypotheses, and we should have been
-spared his books.
-
-[The Lamb and Fish symbolism] Why is Jesus represented in art and
-lore by the Lamb and the Fishes? Answer: As a Sun-god passing through
-the Zodiac.
-
-This is amazing. We know the reason why Jesus was figured as a Lamb
-by the early Christians. It was because they regarded the paschal
-lamb as a type of him. Does Mr. Robertson claim to know the reasons
-of their symbolism better than they did themselves?
-
-And where did he discover that Jesus was represented as Fishes in Art
-and Lore? He was symbolized as one fish, not as several; and Tertullian
-has told us why. It was because, according to the popular zoology of
-the day, fishes were supposed to be born and to originate in the water,
-without carnal connection between their parents. For this reason the
-fish was taken as a symbol of Jesus, who was born again in the waters
-of the Jordan. A later generation explained the appellation of ichthys
-(ichthus), or Fish, as an acrostic. The letters of the Greek word are
-the initials of the words: Iesous Christos Theou uios soter--i.e.,
-Jesus Christ of God Son, Saviour; but this later explanation came
-into vogue in an age when it was already heretical to say that Jesus
-was reborn in baptism; nor does it explain why the multitude of the
-baptized were symbolized as little fishes in contrast with the Big
-Fish, Christ.
-
-[The two asses] Why did Jesus ride into Jerusalem before his death on
-two asses? Answer: Because Dionysus also rides on an ass and a foal
-in one of the Greek signs of Cancer (the turning point in the sun's
-course). "Bacchus (p. 287) crossed a marsh on two asses."
-
-Mr. Robertson does not attempt to prove that the earliest Christians,
-who were Jews, must have been familiar with the rare legend of Bacchus
-crossing a marsh on two asses; still less with the rare representation
-of the zodiacal sign Cancer as an ass and its foal. It is next to
-impossible; and, even if they were, what induced them to transform the
-myth into the legend of Jesus riding into Jerusalem on two donkeys
-at once? If they had so excellent a legend of Bacchus on his asses
-crossing a marsh, why not be content with it? And the same question
-may be asked in regard to all the other transformations by which these
-"mystic sectaries," who formed the early Church, changed myths culled
-from all times and all religions and races into a connected story of
-Jesus, as it lies before us in the Synoptic Gospels.
-
-Mr. Robertson disdains any critical and comparative study of the
-Gospels, and insists on regarding them as coeval and independent
-documents. Everything inside the covers of the New Testament is
-for him, as for the Sunday-school teacher, on one dead level of
-importance. All textual criticism has passed over his head. He has
-never learned to look in Mark for the original form of a statement
-which Luke or Matthew copied out, and in transferring them to their
-Gospels scrupled not to alter or modify. Accordingly, to suit the
-exigencies of his theory that the Gospels are an allegory of a
-Sun-god's exploits, he here claims to find the original text not in
-Mark, but in Matthew; as if a transcript and paraphrase could possibly
-be prior to, and more authoritative than, the text transcribed and
-brode. Accordingly, he writes (p. 339) as follows: "In Mark xi and Luke
-xix, 30, the two asses become one.... In the Fourth Gospel, again, we
-have simply the colt." And yet by all rules of textual criticism and
-of common sense the underlying and original text is Mark xi, 1-7. In
-it the disciples merely bring a colt which they had found tied at a
-door. The author of the Gospel called of Matthew, eager to discern in
-every incident, no matter how commonplace, which he found in Mark, a
-fulfilment of some prophecy, or another, drags in a tag of Zechariah:
-"Behold, the King cometh to thee, meek, and riding on an ass and upon
-a colt, the foal of an ass." Then, to make the story told of Jesus
-run on all fours with the prophecy, he writes that the disciples
-"brought the ass and the colt, and put on them their garments, and he
-(Jesus) sat on them." He was unacquainted with Hebrew idiom, and so
-not aware that the words, "a colt the foal of an ass," are no more
-than a rhetorical reduplication [6] of an ass. There was, then, but
-one animal in the original form of the story, and, as the French say,
-it saute aux yeux that the importation of two is due to the influence
-of the prophecy on the mind of the transcriber. Why, therefore, go
-out of the way to attribute the tale to the influence of a legend of
-Bacchus, so multiplying empty hypotheses? Mr. Robertson, with hopeless
-perversity, takes Dr. Percy Gardner to task for repeating what he
-calls "the fallacious explanation, that 'an ass and the foal of an
-ass' represents a Greek misconception of the Hebrew way of saying
-'an ass,' as if Hebrews in every-day life lay under a special spell
-of verbal absurdity." [7] [Jewish abhorrence of Pagan myths] But did
-Hebrews in every-day life mould their ideas of the promised Messiah
-on out-of-the-way legends of Bacchus? Were they likely to fashion a
-tale of a Messianic triumph out of Gentile myths? Do we not know from
-a hundred sources that the Jews of that age, and the Christians who
-were in this matter their pupils, abhorred everything that savoured
-of Paganism. They were the last people in the world to construct
-a life of the Messiah out of the myths of Bacchus, and Hermes, and
-Osiris, and Heracles, and the fifty other heathen gods and heroes
-whom Mr. Robertson rolls up into what he calls the "composite myth"
-of the Gospels. But let us return to his criticism of Dr. Gardner. Why,
-it may be asked, was it a priori more absurd of Matthew to turn one ass
-into two in deference to Hebrew prophecy, than for Hebrews to set their
-Messiah riding into the holy city on two asses in deference to a myth
-of Bacchus crossing a marsh on two of them? Is it not Mr. Robertson,
-rather than [Robertson on Drs. Gardner and Carpenter] Dr. Gardner,
-who here lies under a special spell of absurdity? "A glance at the
-story of Bacchus," writes Mr. Robertson, "crossing a marsh on two asses
-... would have shown him that he was dealing with a zodiacal myth." The
-boot is on the other foot. Had Mr. Robertson chosen to glance at the
-Poeticon Astronomicon of Hyginus, a late and somewhat worthless Latin
-author, who is the authority for this particular tale of Bacchus,
-he would have read (ii, 23) how Liber (i.e., Dionysus) was on his
-way to get an oracle at Dodona which might restore his lost sanity:
-Sed cum venisset ad quandam paludem magnam, quam transire non posset,
-de quibusdam duobus asellis obviis factis dicitur unum deprehendisse
-eorum, et ita esse transvectus, ut omnino aquam non tetigerit.
-
-In English: "But when he came to a certain spacious marsh, which he
-thought he could not get across, he is said to have met on the way
-two young asses, of which he caught one, and he was carried across
-on it so nicely that he never touched the water at all."
-
-Here there is no hint of Bacchus riding on two asses, and
-Mr. Robertson's entire hypothesis falls to the ground like a house of
-cards. The astounding thing is that, although he insists on pages 287
-and 453 [8] that Bacchus rode on two asses, and that here is the true
-Babylonian explanation of Jesus also riding on two, he gets the Greek,
-or rather Latin, myth right on p. 339, and recognizes that Dionysus
-was only mounted on one of the asses when he passed the morass or
-river on his way to Dodona. Thus, by Mr. Robertson's own admission,
-Bacchus never rode on two asses at all.
-
-[The Pilate myth] Why was Jesus crucified by Pilate? For an
-answer to this let us for a little quit "the very stimulating and
-informing works," as Dr. Drews calls them, of Mr. Robertson, and
-turn to Dr. Drews's own work on The Witnesses to the Historicity of
-Jesus. [9] For there we find the true "astral myth interpretation"
-in all its glory. The Pilate of Christian legend was, so we learn,
-not originally an historical person at all; the whole story of
-Christ is to be taken in an astral sense; and Pilate in particular
-represents the story of Orion, the javelin-man (Pilatus), with the
-Arrow or Lance constellation (Sagitta), which is supposed to be very
-long in the Greek myth, and reappears in the Christian legend under
-the name of Longinus.... In the astral myth the Christ hanging on
-the cross or world-tree (i.e., the Milky Way) is killed by the lance
-of Pilatus.... The Christian population of Rome told the legend of
-a javelin-man, a Pilatus, who was supposed to have been responsible
-for the death of the Saviour. Tacitus heard the myth repeated, and,
-like the fool he was, took it that Pilate the javelin-man was no other
-than Pilate the Roman procurator of Judaea under Tiberius, who must
-have been known to him from the books of Josephus. [10] Accordingly,
-Tacitus sat down and penned his account of the wholesale massacre
-and burning of Christians by Nero in the fifteenth book of his Annals.
-
-We shall turn to the evidence of Tacitus later on. Meanwhile it
-is pertinent to ask where the myth of Pilatus, of which Drews here
-makes use, came from. The English text of Drews is somewhat confused;
-but presumedly Orion, with his girdle sword and lion's skin, is no
-other than Pilatus; and his long lance, with which he kills Christ,
-further entitles him to the name of Longinus. Or is it Pilatus who
-stabs Orion? It does not matter. Let us test this hypothesis in its
-essential parts.
-
-[The Longinus myth] Firstly, then, Longinus was the name coined
-by Christian legend-mongers of the third or fourth century for the
-centurion who stabbed Jesus with a lance as he hung on the cross. How
-could so late a myth influence or form part of a tradition three
-centuries older than itself? The incident of the lance being plunged
-into the side of Jesus is related only in the Fourth Gospel, and is
-not found in the earlier ones. The author of that Gospel invented it
-in order to prove to his generation that Jesus had real blood in his
-body, and was not, as the Docetes maintained, a phantasm mimicking
-reality to the ears and eyes alone of those who saw and conversed
-with him. This Gospel, even according to the Christian tradition of
-its date, is barely earlier than A.D. 100, and the name Longinus was
-not heard of before A.D. 250 at the earliest. Yet Drews is ready to
-believe that it was on the lips of Christians in the reign of Nero,
-say in A.D. 64.
-
-Secondly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean the
-"javelin-man" for the earliest generations of Roman Christians? The
-language current among them was Greek, not Latin, as the earliest
-Christian inscriptions in the catacombs of Rome testify. The language
-of Roman rites and popes remained Greek for three centuries. Why,
-then, should they have had their central myth of the crucifixion in
-a Latin form?
-
-Thirdly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean a javelin-man
-even to a Latin? Many lexicographers interpret it in Virgil in the
-sense of packed together or dense, and in most authors it bears the
-sense of bald or despoiled.
-
-[Inadequacy of the mythic theory] But, letting that pass, we ask what
-evidence is there that Orion ever had the epithet Pilatus in this
-sense? What evidence that such a myth ever existed at all? There is
-none, absolutely none. It is not enough for these authors to ransack
-Lempriere and other dictionaries of mythology in behalf of their
-paradoxes; but when these collections fail them, they proceed to coin
-myths of their own, and pretend that they are ancient, that the early
-Christians believed in them, and that Tacitus fell into the trap; as if
-these Christians, whom they acknowledge to have been either Jews or the
-converts of Jews, had not been constitutionally opposed to all pagan
-myths and cults alike; as if a good half of the earliest Christian
-literature did not consist of polemics against the pagan myths, which
-were regarded with the bitterest scorn and abhorrence; as if it were
-not notorious that it was their repugnance to and ridicule of pagan
-gods and heroes and religious myths that earned for the Christians,
-as for the Jews, their teachers, the hatred and loathing of the pagan
-populations in whose midst they lived. And yet we are asked to believe
-that the Christian Church, almost before it was separated from the
-Jewish matrix, fashioned for itself in the form of the Gospels an
-allegory of a Sun-god Joshua, who, though unknown to serious Semitic
-scholars, is yet so well known to Mr. Robertson and his friends that
-he identifies him with Adonis, and Osiris, and Dionysus, and Mithras,
-and Krishna, and Asclepius, and with any other god or demi-god that
-comes to hand in Lempriere's dictionary. After hundreds of pages of
-such fanciful writing, Drews warns us in solemn language against the
-attempts "of historical theologians to reach the nucleus of the Gospels
-by purely philological means." The attempt, he declares, is "hopeless,
-and must remain hopeless, because the Gospel tradition floats in
-the air." One would like to know in what medium his own hypotheses
-float. [Joshua the Sun-god a pure invention of the mythic school] Like
-Dr. Drews, Mr. Robertson adopts the Joshua myth as if it were beyond
-question. His faith in "the ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God"
-is absolute. This otherwise unknown deity was the core of what is
-gracefully styled "the Jesuist myth." On examination, however, the
-Joshua Sun-god turns out to be the most rickety of hypotheses. Because
-the chieftain who, in old tradition, led the Jews across the Jordan
-into the land of promise was named Joshua, certain critics, who are
-still in the sun-myth phase of comparative mythology--in particular,
-Stade and Winckler--have conjectured that the name Joshua conceals
-a solar hero worshipped locally by the tribe of Ephraim. Even if
-there ever existed such a cult, it had long vanished when the book
-of Joshua was compiled; for in this he is no longer represented as a
-solar hero, but has become in the popular tradition a human figure,
-a hero judge, and leader of the armies of Israel. Of a Joshua cult
-the book does not preserve any trace or memory; that it ever existed
-is an improbable and unverifiable hypothesis. We might just as well
-conjecture that Romulus, and Remus, and other half or wholly legendary
-figures of ancient history, were sun-gods and divine saviours. But
-it is particularly in Jewish history that this school is apt to
-revel. Moses, and Joseph, and David were all mythical beings brought
-down to earth; and the god David and the god Joshua, the god Moses,
-the god Joseph, form in the imagination of these gentlemen a regular
-Hebrew prehistoric Pantheon. I say in their imagination, for it is
-certain that when the Pentateuch was compiled--at the latest in the
-fifth century B.C.--the Jews no longer revered David, and Joshua, and
-Joseph as sun-gods; while of what they worshipped even locally before
-that date we have little knowledge, and can form only conjectures. In
-any case, that they continued to worship a sun-god under the name of
-Joshua as late as the first century of our era must strike anyone who
-has the least knowledge of Hebrew religious development, who has ever
-read Philo or Josephus, or studied Jewish sapiential and apocalyptic
-literature of the period B.C. 200-A.D. 100, as a wildly improbable
-supposition. [Supposed secrecy of early Christian cult a literary
-trick] Sensible that their hypothesis conflicts with all we know about
-the Jews of these three centuries, these three authors--Messrs. Drews,
-Robertson, and W. B. Smith--insist on the esoterism and secrecy of the
-cryptic society which in Jerusalem harboured the cult. This commonest
-of literary tricks enables them to evade any awkward questions, and
-whenever they are challenged to produce some evidence of the existence
-of such a cult they can answer that, being secret and esoteric, it
-could leave little or no evidence of itself, and that we must take
-their ipse dixit and renounce all hope of direct and documentary
-evidence. They ask of us a greater credulity than any Pope of Rome
-ever demanded.
-
-[Joshua ben Jehozadak also a Sun-god] The divine stage of Joshua,
-then, if it ever existed, was past and forgotten as early as 500
-B.C. It has left no traces. Of the other Joshuas, who meet us in the
-pages of the Jewish scriptures, the most important one is Jeshua or
-Joshua ben Jehozadak, a high priest who, together with Zerubbabel,
-is often mentioned (according to the Encyclopaedia Biblica) in
-contemporary writings. Not only, then, have we contemporary evidence
-of this Joshua as of a mere man and a priest, but we know from it
-that he stooped to such mundane occupations as the rebuilding of the
-Temple. He also had human descendants, who are traced in Nehemiah xii,
-10 fol. down to Jaddua. Of this epoch of Jewish history, in which
-the Temple was being rebuilt, we have among the Jewish and Aramaic
-papyri lately recovered at Elephantine documents that are autographs
-of personages with whom this Joshua may well have been in contact. His
-contemporaries are mentioned and even addressed in these documents,
-so that he and his circle are virtually as well evidenced for us as
-Frederick the Great and Voltaire. Is it credible in the face of such
-facts that the authors we are criticizing should turn this Joshua,
-too, into a solar god? Yet Drews turns with zest to the notice of
-this Joshua, the high priest in Zechariah iii, as "one of the many
-signs" which attest that "Joshua or Jesus was the name under which
-the expected Messiah was honoured in certain Jewish sects." Unless
-he regards this later Joshua also as a divine figure, and no mere
-man of flesh and blood, why does he thus drag him into his argument?
-
-[The suspicion that the compilers of the Old Testament burked
-evidence favourable to the Sun-myth hypothesis] But, after all,
-Messrs. Drews and Robertson are uneasy about the book of Joshua, and
-not altogether capable of the breezy optimism of their instructor,
-Mr. W. B. Smith, who, in Ecce Deus (p. 74), commits himself to the
-naive declaration that, "even if we had no evidence whatever of
-a pre-Christian Jesus cult, we should be compelled to affirm its
-existence with undiminished decision." Accordingly, they both go
-out of their way to hint that the ancient Jews suppressed the facts
-of the Joshua or Jesus Sun-God-Saviour cult. Thus Mr. Robertson
-(Christianity and Mythology, p. 99, note 1), after urging us to
-accept a late and worthless tradition about Joshua, the Son of Nave,
-remarks that "the Jewish books would naturally drop the subject." How
-ill-natured, to be sure, of the authors of the old Hebrew scriptures to
-suppress evidence that would have come in so handy for Mr. Robertson's
-speculations. Dr. Drews takes another line, and in a note draws our
-attention to the fact that the Samaritans possessed an apocryphal book
-of the same name as the canonical book of Joshua. This book, he informs
-us, is based upon an old work composed in the third century B.C.,
-containing stories which in part do not appear in our Book of Joshua.
-
-He here suggests that something was omitted in canonical Joshua by its
-authors which would have helped out his hypothesis of a Joshua Sun-god
-cult. He will not, however, find the Samaritan book encouraging,
-for it gives no hint of such a cult; of that anyone who does not mind
-being bored by a perusal of it can satisfy himself. Drews's statement
-that it is based on an old work composed in the third century B.C. is
-founded on pure ignorance, and the Encyclopaedia Biblica declares it
-to be a medieval production of no value to anyone except the student
-of the Samaritan sect under Moslem rule.
-
-[The evidence of El Tabari about Joshua] Mr. Robertson thinks he has
-got on a better trail in the shape of a tradition as to Joshua which
-he is quite sure the old Jewish scripture writers suppressed. Let us
-examine it, for it affords a capital example of his ideas of what
-constitutes historical evidence. "Eastern tradition," he writes,
-"preserves a variety of myths that the Bible-makers for obvious
-reasons suppressed or transformed." In one of those traditions
-"Joshua is the son of the mythical Miriam; that is to say, there was
-probably an ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God, Jesus, the son of
-Mary." So on p. 285 we learn that the cult of Jesus of Nazareth was
-"the Survival of an ancient solar or other worship of a Babe Joshua,
-son of Miriam." And he continually alludes to this ancient form of
-devotion, not as a mere hypothesis, but as a well-ascertained and
-demonstrable fact. [11]
-
-Let us then explore this remarkable tradition by which "we are
-led to surmise that the elucidation of the Christ myth is not yet
-complete." For such is the grandiose language in which he heralds
-his discovery. And what does it amount to? An Arab, El Tabari, who
-died in Bagdad about the year 925, compiled a Chronicle, of which
-some centuries later an unknown native of Persia made an abridgement
-in his own tongue, and inserted in it as a gloss "the remarkable
-Arab tradition," as it is called in the Pagan Christs (p. 157) of
-Mr. Robertson, albeit he acknowledges in a footnote that it is "not
-in the Arabic original." He asks us accordingly, on the faith of an
-unknown Persian glossator of the late Middle Ages, to believe that the
-canonical Book of Joshua originally contained this absurd tradition,
-and why? Because it would help out his hypothesis that Jesus was an
-ancient Palestinian Saviour-Sun-God, worshipped by a cryptic society
-of Hebrews in Jerusalem, both before and after the beginning of the
-Christian era; and this is the man who writes about "the psychological
-resistance to evidence" of learned men, and sets it down to "malice and
-impercipience" that anyone should challenge his conclusions. As usual,
-Dr. Drews, who sets Mr. Robertson on a level with the author of the
-Golden Bough [12] as a "leading exponent of his new mythico-symbolical
-method," plunges into the pit which Mr. Robertson has dug for him, and
-writes that, "according to an ancient Arabian tradition, the mother of
-Joshua was called Mirzam (Mariam, Maria, as the mother of Jesus was)."
-
-[W. B. Smith's hypothesis of a God Joshua] The source from which
-Messrs. Drews and Robertson have drawn this particular inspiration is
-Dr. W. B. Smith's work, The Pre-Christian Jesus (Der Vorchristliche
-Jesus). This book, we are told, "first systematically set forth the
-case for the thesis of its title." Let us, therefore, consider its
-main argument. We have the following passages in Acts xviii, 24:--
-
-
- Now a certain Jew named Apollos, an Alexandrian by race, a learned
- man, came to Ephesus; and he was mighty in the Scriptures. This
- man had been instructed in the way of the Lord; and, being fervent
- in spirit, he spake and taught carefully the things concerning
- Jesus, knowing only the baptism of John: and he began to speak
- boldly in the synagogue. But when Priscilla and Aquila heard him,
- they took him unto them, and expounded unto him the way of God
- more carefully. And when he was minded to pass over into Achaia,
- the brethren encouraged him, and wrote to the disciples to receive
- him: and when he was come, he helped them much which had believed
- through grace: for he powerfully confuted the Jews, publicly,
- showing by the Scriptures that Jesus was the Christ.
-
-
-Availing ourselves of the canons of interpretation laid down by Drews
-and Robertson, we may paraphrase the above somewhat as follows by
-way of getting at its true meaning:--
-
-"A certain sun-myth hero, as his name Apollos signifies, came to
-Ephesus, which, being the centre of Astarte or Aphrodite worship,
-was obviously the right place for such a hero to pilgrimage unto. He
-was mighty in the Jewish Scriptures, and had been instructed in the
-way of the Lord Joshua, the Sun-God-Saviour of ancient Ephraim. He
-spake and taught carefully the things concerning this Joshua (or
-Adonis, or Osiris, or Dionysus, or Vegetation-god, or Horus--for
-you can take your choice among these and many more). But he knew
-only of the prehistoric ritual of baptism of Cadmus or of Oannes-Ea,
-the ancient culture-god of the Babylonians, who appeared in the form
-of a Fish-man, teaching men by day and at night going down into the
-sea--in his capacity of Sun-god." This Cadmus or Oannes was worshipped
-at Jerusalem in the cryptic sect of the Christists or Jesuists under
-the name of John. His friend Apollos, the solar demi-god, began to
-speak boldly in the synagogue. Priscilla (presumably Cybele, mother
-of the gods), and Aquila, the Eagle-God, or Jupiter, heard him; she
-took him forthwith and expounded to him the way of Jahve, who also
-was identical with Joshua, the Sun-god, with Osiris, etc.
-
-[His forced and far-fetched interpretations of common phrases]
-Professor W. B. Smith is a little more modest and less thorough-going
-in his application of mythico-symbolic methods. He only asks us to
-believe that the trite and hackneyed phrase, "the things concerning
-Jesus," refers not, as the context requires, to the history and
-passion of Jesus of Galilee, but to the mysteries of a prehistoric
-Saviour-God of the same name. We advisedly say prehistoric, for he was
-never mentioned by anyone before Professor Smith discovered him. The
-name Jesus, according to him, means what the word Essene also meant, a
-Healer. [13] Note, in passing, that this etymology is wholly false, and
-rests on the authority of a writer so late, ignorant, and superstitious
-as Epiphanius. Now, why cannot the words, "the things about Jesus,"
-in this context mean the tradition of the ministry of Jesus as it had
-shaped itself at that time, beginning with the Baptism and ending with
-the Ascension, as we read in Acts i, 22? [Apollos and the Baptism of
-John] It cannot, argues Professor Smith, because Apollos only knew the
-baptism of John. The reference to John's baptism may be obscure, as
-much in early Christianity is bound to be obscure, except to Professor
-Smith and his imitators. Yet this much is clear, that it here means,
-what it means in the sequel, the baptism of mere repentance as opposed
-to the baptism of the Spirit, which was by laying on of hands, and
-conferred the charismatic gifts of the Holy Ghost. The Marcionites, and
-after them the Manichean and Cathar sects, retained the latter rite,
-and termed it Spiritual or Pneumatic Baptism; while they dropped as
-superfluous the Johannine baptism with water. It would appear, then,
-that Apollos was perfectly acquainted with the personal history of
-Jesus, and understood the purport of the baptism of repentance as a
-sacrament preparing followers of Jesus for the kingdom of Heaven,
-soon to be inaugurated on earth. Perhaps we get a glimpse in this
-passage of an age when the mission of Jesus in his primitive role
-as herald of the Messianic kingdom and a mere continuer of John's
-mission was familiar to many who yet did not recognize him as the
-Messiah. For, after instruction by Priscilla and Aquila, Apollos set
-himself to confute the Jews who denied Jesus to have been Messiah,
-which, as a mere herald of the approaching kingdom of God, he was
-not. We know that Paul regarded him as having attained that dignity
-only through, and by, the fact of the Spirit having raised him from
-the dead; and did not regard him as having received it through the
-descent of the Spirit on him in the Jordan, as the oriental Christians
-presently believed. Still less did Paul know of the later teaching of
-the orthodox churches--viz., that the Annunciation was the critical
-moment in which Christ became Jesus. In any case, we must not interpret
-the words, "the things about Jesus," in this passage in a forced and
-unnatural sense wholly alien to the writer of Acts. This writer again
-and again recapitulates the leading facts of the life and ministry of
-Jesus, and the phrase, "the things concerning Jesus," cannot in any
-work of his bear any other sense. Moreover, the same author uses the
-very same phrase elsewhere (Luke xxiv, 19) in the same sense. Here
-Cleopas asks Jesus (whom he had failed to recognize), and says:--
-
-
- Dost thou alone sojourn in Jerusalem, and not know the things
- which are come to pass there in these days? And he said unto him,
- What things? And they said unto him, the things concerning Jesus
- of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before
- God and all the people: and how the chief priests and our rulers
- delivered him up to be condemned to death, and crucified him.
-
-
-Such, then, were "the things about Jesus," and to find in them, as
-Professor W. B. Smith does, an allusion to a pre-Christian myth of
-a God Joshua is to find a gigantic mare's-nest, and fly in the face
-of all the evidence. He verges on actual absurdity when he sees the
-same allusion in Mark v, 26, where a sick woman, having heard "the
-things concerning Jesus," went behind him, touched his garment, and
-was healed. Her disease was of a hysterical description, and in the
-annals of faith-healing such cures are common. What she had heard of
-was obviously not his fame as a Sun-god, but his power to heal sick
-persons like herself. [Magical papyrus of Wessely] Professor Smith
-tries to find support for his hardy conjecture in a chance phrase in
-a magical papyrus of Paris, No. 3,009, edited first by Wessely, and
-later by Dieterich in his Abraxas, p. 138. It is a form of exorcism
-to be inscribed on a tin plate and hung round the neck of a person
-possessed by a devil, or repeated over him by an exorcist. In this
-rigmarole the giants, of course, are dragged in, and the Tower of
-Babel and King Solomon; and the name of Jesus, the God of the Hebrews,
-is also invoked in the following terms: "I adjure thee by Jesus the
-God of the Hebrews, Iabaiae Abraoth aia thoth ele, elo," etc. The age
-of this papyrus is unknown; but Wessely puts it in the third century
-after Christ, while Dieterich shows that it can in no case be older
-than the second century B.C. It is clearly the composition of some
-exorcist who clung on to the skirts of late Judaism, for he is at
-pains to inform us in its last line that it is a Hebrew composition
-and preserved among pure men. In that age, as in after ones, not a few
-exorcists, trading on the fears and sufferings of superstitious people,
-affected to be pure and holy; and the mention of Jesus indicates some
-such charlatan, who was more or less cognisant of Christianity and of
-the practice of Christian exorcists. He was also aware of the Jewish
-antecedents of Christianity, and did not distinguish clearly between
-the mother religion and its daughter. That is why he describes Jesus
-as a Hebrew God. We know from other sources that even in the earliest
-Christian age Gentiles used the name of Jesus in exorcisms. The author
-of the document styles Jesus God, just as Pliny informs us that the
-Christians sang hymns "to Christ as to God"--Christo quasi deo. How
-Professor Smith can imagine that this papyrus lends any colour to
-his thesis of a pre-Christian Jesus it is difficult to imagine.
-
-[Jesus a Nazoraean in what sense] Still less does his thesis really
-profit by the text of Matthew ii, 23, in which a prophecy is adduced
-to the effect that the Messiah should be called a Nazoraean, and this
-prophecy is declared to have been fulfilled in so far as Jesus was
-taken by his parents to live at Nazareth in Galilee.
-
-What prophecy the evangelist had in mind is not known. But
-Professor W. B. Smith jumps to the conclusion that the Christians
-were identical with the sect of Nazoraei mentioned in Epiphanius as
-going back to an age before Christ; and he appeals in confirmation
-of this quite gratuitous hypothesis [14] to Acts xxiv, 5, where the
-following of Jesus is described as that of the Nazoraei. It in no way
-helps the thesis of the non-historicity of Jesus, even if he and his
-followers were members of this obscure sect; it would rather prove the
-opposite. Drews, following W. B. Smith, pretends in the teeth of the
-texts that the name is applied to Jesus only as Guardian of the World,
-Protector and Deliverer of men from the power of sins and daemons, and
-that it has no reference to an obscure and entirely unknown village
-named Nazareth. He also opines that Jesus was called a Nazarene,
-because he was the promised Netzer or Zemah who makes all things new,
-and so forth. Such talk is all in the air. Why these writers boggle
-so much at the name Nazoraean is not easy to divine; still less to
-understand what Professor Smith is driving at when he writes of those
-whom he calls "historicists," that "They have rightly felt that the
-fall of Nazareth is the fall of historicism itself." Professor Burkitt
-has suggested that Nazareth is Chorazin spelt backwards. Wellhausen
-explains Nazoraean from Nesar in the name Gennessaret. In any case,
-as we have no first-century gazetteer or ordnance survey of Galilee,
-it is rash to suppose that there could have been no town there of the
-name. True the Talmuds and the Old Testament do not name it; but they
-do not profess to give a catalogue of all the places in Galilee, so
-their silence counts for little. [15] All we know for certain is that
-for the evangelist Nazoraean meant a dweller in Nazareth, and that he
-gave the word that sense when he met with it in an anonymous prophecy.
-
-[Mr. Robertson on myths] I feel that I ought almost to apologize
-to my readers for investigating at such length the hypothesis of a
-pre-Christian Jesus, son of a mythical Mary, and for exhibiting over
-so many pages its fantastic, baseless, and absurd character. But
-Mr. Robertson himself warns us of the necessity of showing no
-mercy to myths when they assume the garb of fact. For he adduces
-(p. 126) the William Tell myth by way of illustrating once for all
-"the fashion in which a fiction can even in a historical period find
-general acceptance." Even so it is with his own fictions. We see them
-making their way with such startling rapidity over England and Germany
-as almost to make one despair of this age of popular enlightenment. It
-is not his fault, and I exonerate him from blame. [His methods those of
-old-fashioned orthodoxy] For centuries orthodox theologians have been
-trying to get out of the Gospels supernaturalist conclusions which were
-never in them, nor could with any colour be derived from them except
-by deliberately ignoring the canons of evidence and the historical
-methods freely employed in the study of all other ancient monuments and
-narratives. They have set the example of treating the early writings of
-Christianity as no other ancient books would be treated. Mr. Robertson
-is humbly following in their steps, but a rebours, or in an inverse
-sense. They insist on getting more out of the New Testament than
-any historical testimony could ever furnish; he on getting less. In
-other respects also he imitates their methods. Thus they insist on
-regarding the New Testament, and in particular the four Gospels, as a
-homogeneous block, and will not hear of the criticism which discerns
-in them literary development, which detects earlier and later couches
-of tradition and narrative. This is what I call the Sunday-school
-attitude, and it lacks all perspective and orientation. Mr. Robertson
-imbibed it in childhood, and has never been able to throw it off. For
-him there is no before and after in the formation of these books,
-no earlier and later in the emergence of beliefs about Jesus, no
-stratification of documents or of ideas. If he sometimes admits it,
-he withdraws the admission on the next page, as militating against
-his cardinal hypothesis. He seems never to have submitted himself to
-systematic training in the methods of historical research--never,
-as we say, to have gone through the mill; and accordingly in the
-handling of documents he shows himself a mere wilful child.
-
-[Thus he insists on the priority in Christian tradition of the Virgin
-Birth legend] His treatment of the legend of the Virgin Birth is an
-example of this mental attitude, which might be described as orthodoxy
-turned upside down and inside out. The Gospel of Mark is demonstrably
-older than those of the other two synoptists who merely copied it
-out with such variations, additions, omissions, and modifications
-as a growing reverence for Jesus the Messiah imposed. It contains,
-no more than the Pauline Epistles and the Johannine Gospel, any hint
-of the supernatural birth of Jesus. It regards him quite simply and
-naturally as the son of Joseph and Mary. In it the neighbours of Jesus
-enumerate by way of contumely the names of his brothers and sisters. I
-have shown also in my Myth, Magic, and Morals that this naturalist
-tradition of his birth dominates no less the whole of the Gospels
-of Matthew and Luke apart from the first two chapters of each, and
-that even in the first chapter of Matthew the pedigree in early texts
-ended with the words "Joseph begat Jesus." I have shown furthermore
-that the belief in the paternity of Joseph was the characteristic
-belief of the Palestinian Christians for over two centuries, that
-it prevailed in Syria to the extent of regarding Jesus and Thomas as
-twin brothers. I have pointed out that the Jewish interlocutor Trypho
-in Justin Martyr's dialogue (c. 150) maintains that Jesus was born a
-man of men and rejects the Virgin Birth legend as a novelty unworthy
-of monotheists, and that he extorts from his Christian antagonist
-the admission that the great majority of Christians still believed
-in the paternity of Joseph.
-
-[His exceptional treatment of Christian tradition] Now Mr. Robertson
-evidently reads a good deal, and must at one time or another have
-come across all these facts. Why, then, does he go out of his way to
-ignore them, and, in common with Professors Drews and W. B. Smith,
-insist that the miraculous tradition of Jesus's birth was coeval with
-the earliest Christianity and prior to the tradition of a natural
-birth? Yet the texts stare him in the face and confute him. Why does he
-shut his eyes to them, and gibe perpetually at the critical students
-who attach weight to them? The works of all the three writers are
-tirades against the critical method which tries to disengage in the
-traditions of Jesus the true from the false, fact from myth, and to
-show how, in the pagan society which, as it were, lifted Jesus up
-out of his Jewish cradle, these myths inevitably gathered round his
-figure, as mists at midday thicken around a mountain crest.
-
-[In secular history he uses other canons and methods,] Their
-insistence that in the case of Christian origins the miraculous
-and the non-miraculous form a solid block of impenetrable myth
-is all the more remarkable, because in secular history they are
-prepared, nay anxious, for the separation of truth from falsehood,
-of history from myth, and continually urge not only its possibility,
-but its necessity. Mr. Robertson in particular prides himself on
-meting out to Apollonius of Tyana a measure which he refuses to
-Jesus the Messiah. [e.g., in criticizing the story of Apollonius]
-"The simple purport," he writes in the Literary Guide, May 1, 1913,
-"of my chapter on Apollonius was to acknowledge his historicity,
-despite the accretions of myth and more or less palpable fiction to
-his biography." And yet there are ten testimonies to the historicity
-of Jesus where there is one to that of Apollonius; yet Apollonius was
-reputed to have been born miraculously, and his birth accompanied by
-the portent of a meteor from heaven, as that of Jesus by a star from
-the east. Like Jesus, he controlled the devils of madness and disease,
-and by the power of his exorcisms dismissed them to be tortured in
-hell. Like Peter, he miraculously freed himself from his bonds; like
-Jesus, he revealed himself after death to a sceptical disciple and
-viva voce convinced him of his ascent to heaven; like him, he ascended
-in his body up to heaven amid the hymns of maiden worshippers. In
-life he spent seven days in the bowels of the earth, and gathered a
-band of disciples around him who acclaimed him as a divine being;
-long after his death temples were raised to him as to a demigod,
-miracles wrought by his relics, and prayer and sacrifice offered to
-his genius. So considerable was the parallelism between his story
-and that of Jesus that the pagan enemies of the Christians began
-about the year 300 to run his cult against theirs, and it was only
-yesterday that the orthodox began to give up the old view that the
-Life of Apollonius was a blasphemous rechauffe of the Gospels. "There
-is no great reason to doubt that India was visited by Apollonius of
-Tyana," writes Mr. Robertson (Christianity and Mythology, p. 273);
-and yet his visit in the only relation we have of it is a tissue of
-marvels and prodigies, his Indian itinerary is impossible, and full of
-contradictions not only of what we know of Indian geography to-day,
-but of what was already known in that day. Yet about his pilgrimage
-thither, declares Mr. Robertson, there is no more uncertainty than
-about the embassies sent by Porus to Augustus, and by the king of
-"Taprobane" to Claudius. "There is much myth," he writes again, p. 280,
-"in the life of Apollonius of Tyana, who appears to be at the bottom
-a real historical personage." In the Gospels we have the story of
-Jairus's daughter being raised to life from apparent death. "A closely
-similar story is found in Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana,
-the girl in each case being spoken of in such a way as to leave open
-the question of her having been dead or a cataleptic." So writes
-Mr. Robertson, p. 334, who thinks that "the simple form preserved
-in Matthew suggests the derivation from the story in Philostratus,"
-overlooking here, as elsewhere, the chronological difficulties. We can
-forgive him for that; but why, we must ask, does the presence of such
-stories in the Gospel irrevocably condemn Jesus to non-historicity,
-while their presence in the Life of Apollonius leaves his historical
-reality intact and unchallenged? Is it not that the application of his
-canons of interpretation to Apollonius would have deprived him of one
-of the sources from which the mythicity of Jesus by his anachronistic
-methods could be deduced?
-
-[The early passion play of the Sun-god Joshua] Mr. Robertson endeavours
-in a halting manner to justify his partiality for Apollonius. "We
-have," he writes (Pagan Christs, p. 283, Sec. 16), "no reason for doubting
-that there was an Apollonius of Tyana.... The reasons for not doubting
-are (1) that there was no cause to be served by a sheer fabrication;
-and (2) that it was a much easier matter to take a known name as a
-nucleus for a mass of marvels and theosophic teachings than to build it
-up, as the phrase goes about the canon, 'round a hole.' The difference
-between such a case and those of Jesuism and Buddhism is obvious. In
-those cases there was a cultus and an organization to be accounted for,
-and a biography of the founder had to be forthcoming. In the case
-of Apollonius, despite the string of marvels attached to his name,
-there was no cultus."
-
-Let us examine the above argument. In the case of "Jesuism"
-(Mr. Robertson's argot for early Christianity) there had to be
-fabricated a biography of Jesus, because there existed an organized
-sect that worshipped Jesus.
-
-The organized sect consisted, according to Mr. Robertson,
-of "Christists" or "Jesuists," and the chief incident for which
-they were organized was an annual play in which the God Jesus was
-betrayed, arrested, condemned, was crucified, died, was buried, and
-rose again. Ober Ammergau has supplied him with his main conception,
-and his annually recurring "Gospel mystery play," as he imagines it
-to have been acted by the "Jesuists," who were immediate ancestors
-of the Christians, is a faithful copy of the modern Passion Play. He
-supposes it to have been acted annually because the hypothetical
-Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, whose mythical sufferings and death it
-commemorated, was an analogue of Osiris, whose sufferings and death
-were similarly represented in Egypt each recurring spring; also
-of Adonis, of Dionysus, of Mithras, and of sundry vegetation gods,
-annually slain to revive vegetation and secure the life of the initiate
-in the next world. Be it remarked also that the annually slain God
-of the Jesuists was not only an analogue of these other gods, but a
-"composite myth" made up of their myths. As we have seen, Mr. Robertson
-is ready to exhibit to us in one or another of their mythologies the
-original of every single incident and actor in the Jesuist play.
-
-Such was the cultus and organization which, according to Mr. Robertson
-and his imitator Dr. Drews, lies behind the Christian religion. The
-latter began to be when the "Jesuist" cult, having broken away from
-Judaism, was also concerned to break away from the paganism in contact
-with which the play would first arise.
-
-[The Gospels a transcript of this play] A biography of the Founder
-of the cult was now called for, by the Founder oddly enough being
-meant the God himself, and not the hierophant who instituted the
-play. The Christian Gospels are the biography in question. They are
-a transcript of the annually performed ritual drama, just as Lamb's
-Tales from Shakespeare are transcripts of Shakespeare's plays.
-
-The first performances of the play, we learn, probably took place in
-Egypt. It ceased to be acted when "it was reduced to writing as part
-of the gospel." How far away from Jerusalem it was that the momentous
-decision was taken by the sect to give up play acting and be content
-with the transcript Mr. Robertson "can hardly divine." He hints,
-however, that some of the latest representations took place in the
-temples built by Herod at Damascus and Jericho and in the theatres
-of the Greek town of Gadara. "The reduction of the play to narrative
-form put all the Churches on a level, and would remove a stumbling
-block from the way of the ascetic Christists who objected to all
-dramatic shows as such."
-
-But where did the play come from? What inspired it? Mr. Robertson makes
-a tour round the Mediterranean, and collects in Part II, Ch. I, of his
-Pagan Christs a lot of scrappy information about mock sacrifices and
-mystery dramas, all of them "cases and modes of modification" of actual
-human sacrifices that were "once normal in the Semitic world." He
-assumes without a tittle of proof, and against all probability, that
-the annual sacrifice of a king or of a king's son, whether in real
-or mimic, held its ground among Jews as a religious ceremony right
-down into our era, and was "reduced among them to ritual form, like
-the leading worships of the surrounding Gentile world." He fashions
-a new hypothesis in accordance with these earlier ones as follows:--
-
-[Joshua or Jesus slain once a year] "If in any Jewish community,
-or in the Jewish quarter of any Eastern city, the central figure in
-this rite (i.e., of a mock sacrifice annually recurring of a man got
-up to represent a god) were customarily called Jesus Barabbas, 'Jesus
-the Son of the Father'--whether or not in virtue of an old cultus of
-a God Jesus who had died annually like Attis and Tammuz--we should
-have a basis for the tradition so long preserved in many MSS. of the
-first gospel, and at the same time a basis for the whole gospel myth
-of the crucifixion."
-
-Here we have a whole string of hypotheses piled one on the other. Let
-us see which have any ground in fact, or cohere with what we know of
-the past, which are improbable and unproven.
-
-[Hypothesis of human sacrifice among Jews] That human sacrifice was
-once in vogue among the Jews is probable enough, and the story of
-the frustrated sacrifice of Isaac was no doubt both a memory and
-a condemnation of the old rite of sacrificing first-born children
-with which we are familiar in ancient Phoenicia and her colony of
-Carthage. That such rites in Judaea and in Israel did not survive the
-Assyrian conquest of Jerusalem is certain. The latest allusion to them
-is in Isaiah xxx, 27-33. This passage is post-exilic indeed; but,
-as Dr. Cheyne remarks (Encycl. Biblica, art. Molech, col. 3,187):
-"The tone of the allusion is rather that of a writer remote from
-these atrocities than of a prophet in the midst of the struggle
-against them."
-
-We may then assume (1) that the custom of human sacrifice disappeared
-among Jews centuries before our era; (2) that in the epoch 100
-B.C. to 100 A.D. every Jew, no matter where he lived, would view
-such rites and reminiscences with horror. As a matter of fact, Philo
-dwells in eloquent language on the horror and abomination of them as
-they were still in his day sporadically celebrated, not among Jews,
-but among pagans.
-
-This being so, is it likely that any Jewish community would keep up
-even the simulacrum of such rites? In Josephus and Philo, who are
-our most important witnesses to the Judaism that just preceded or was
-contemporary with early Christianity, there is no hint of such rites
-as might constitute a memory and mimicry of human victims, whether
-identified with a god or not. No serious pagan writer of that age
-ever accused the Jews of keeping up such rites openly or in secret
-among themselves. [Evidence of Apion accepted by Mr. Robertson]
-Apion alone had a cock-and-bull story of how Antiochus Epiphanes,
-when he took Jerusalem (c. 170 B.C.), found a Greek being fattened up
-by the Jews in the adytum of the temple about to be slain and eaten
-in honour of their god. Of course Mr. Robertson catches at this,
-and writes (Pagan Christs, p. 161) that, "in view of all the clues,
-we cannot pronounce that story incredible." What clues has he? The
-undoubted survival of ritual murder among the pagans of Phoenicia
-in that age is no clue, though it explains the genesis of Apion's
-tale. And Mr. Robertson has one other treasure trove--to wit, the
-obscure reading "Jesus Barabbas" in certain MSS. of Matthew xxvii, 17:
-"Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I release unto you? (Jesus)
-Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ?"
-
-[The sacrificing of the mock king] It has been plausibly suggested
-that the addition Jesus is due to a scribe's reduplication, such
-as is common in Greek manuscripts, of the last syllable of the
-word humin = unto you. The in in uncials is a regular compendium
-for Iesun Jesus. In this way the name Jesus may have crept in before
-Barabbas. The entire story of Barabbas being released has an apocryphal
-air, for Pilate would not have let off a rebel against the Roman rule
-to please the Jewish mob; and the episode presupposes that it was
-the Sanhedrin which had condemned Jesus to death, which is equally
-improbable. What is probable, however, is that the Syrian soldiery
-to whom Pilate committed Jesus for crucifixion were accustomed to the
-Sacaea festival of Babylonian origin, and perhaps to the analogous Roman
-feast of the Saturnalia. In such celebrations a mock king was chosen,
-and vested with the costume, pomp, and privileges of kingship perhaps
-for as long as three days. Then the mimicry of slaying him was gone
-through, and sometimes the mock king was really put to death. Among
-Syrians the name Barabbas may--it is a mere hypothesis--have been the
-conventional appellation of the victim slain actually or in mock show
-on such occasions; and the soldiers of Pilate may have treated him en
-Barabbas. Loisy suggests in his Commentary on the Synoptics that this
-was the genesis of the Barabbas story. That a pagan soldiery treated
-Jesus as a mock king, when they dressed him in purple and set a crown
-of thorns on his head, and, kneeling before him, cried "Hail King of
-the Jews," is quite possible; and serious scholars like Paul Wendland
-(Hermes, Vol. XXXIII (1898), fol. 175) and Mr. W. R. Paton long ago
-discerned the probability.
-
-But it was one thing for Syrians and pagans to envisage the
-crucifixion of Jesus under the aspect of a sacrifice to Molech,
-quite another thing for Jews--whether as his enemies or as his
-partisans--to do so; nor does the Gospel narrative suggest that
-any Jews took part in the ceremony. Perhaps it was out of respect
-for Jewish susceptibilities--and they were not likely to favour any
-mockery of their Messianic aspirations--that Pilate caused Jesus to
-be divested of the purple insignia of royalty and clad in his usual
-garb before he was led out of the guardroom and through the streets
-of Jerusalem on his way to Golgotha.
-
-[Evidence of Philo] We read in Philo (In Flaccum, vi) of a very similar
-scene enacted in the streets of Alexandria within ten years of the
-crucifixion. The young Agrippa, elevated by Caligula to the throne
-of Judaea, had landed in that city, where feeling ran high between
-Jews and pagans. The latter, by way of ridiculing the pretensions of
-the Jews to have a king of their own, seized on a poor lunatic named
-Carabas who loitered night and day naked about the streets, ran him
-as far as the Gymnasium, and there stood him on a stool, so that all
-could see him, having first set a mock diadem of byblus on his head
-and thrown a rug over his shoulders as a cloak of honour. In his hand
-they set a papyrus stem by way of sceptre. Having thus arrayed him,
-as in a mime of the theatre, with the insignia of mock royalty, the
-young men shouldering sticks, as if they were a bodyguard, encircled
-him, while others advanced, saluted his mock majesty, and pretended
-that he was their judge and king sitting on his throne to direct the
-commonwealth. Meanwhile a shout went up from the crowd around of Marin,
-which in the Syrian language signified Lord.
-
-This passage of Philo goes far to prove that the mockery of Jesus
-in the Gospels was no more than a public ridiculing of the Jewish
-expectations of a national leader or Messiah who should revive the
-splendours of the old Davidic kingdom. In any case, the mockery
-is conducted at Jerusalem by Pilate's soldiers (who were not Jews,
-but a pagan garrison put there to overawe the Jews), at Alexandria by
-such Greeks as Apion penned his calumnies to gratify. Mr. Robertson's
-suggestion that the mock ceremony of the crucifixion was performed
-by Jews or Christians is thus as absurd as it is gratuitous. It was
-held in bitter despite of Jews and Christians, it was a mockery and
-reviling of their most cherished hopes and ideals; and yet he does
-not scruple to argue that it is "a basis for the whole gospel myth
-of the crucifixion."
-
-[Evidence of the Khonds] Thus he is left with the single calumny
-of Apion, which deserves about as much credence as the similar
-tales circulated to-day against the Jews of Bessarabia. That is the
-single item of evidence he has to prove what is the very hinge of his
-theory--the supposition, namely, that the Jews of Alexandria first,
-and afterwards the Jews of Jerusalem, celebrated in secret once a year
-ritual dramas representing the ceremonial slaying of a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, Son of the Father and of the Virgin Miriam. It is a far cry to
-the horrible rites of the Khonds of modern India; but Mr. Robertson,
-for whom wide differences of age and place matter nothing when he
-is explaining Christian origins, has discovered in them a key to the
-narrative of the crucifixion of Jesus. He runs all round the world and
-collects rites of ritual murder and cannibal sacraments of all ages,
-mixes them up, lumps them down before us, and exclaims triumphantly,
-There is my "psychological clue" to Christianity. The most superficial
-resemblances satisfy him that an incident in Jerusalem early in our
-era is an essential reproduction of a Khond ritual murder in honour
-of the goddess Tari. Was there ever an author so hopelessly uncritical
-in his methods?
-
-[Origin of the Gospels] The Gospels, then, are a transcript of a mock
-murder of the Sun-god Joshua annually performed in secret by the
-Jews of Jerusalem, for it had got there before it was written down
-and discontinued. One asks oneself why, if the Jews had tolerated
-so long a pagan survival among themselves, they could not keep it
-up a little longer; and why the "Christists" should be so anxious
-"to break away from paganism" at exactly the same hour. Moreover,
-their breach with paganism did not amount to much, since they kept
-the transcript of a ritual drama framed on pagan lines and inspired
-throughout by pagan ideas and myths; not only kept it, but elevated it
-into Holy Scripture. At the same time they retained the Old Testament,
-which as Jews they had immemorially venerated as Holy Scripture; and
-for generations they went on worshipping in the Jewish temple, kept
-the Jewish feasts and fasts, and were zealous for circumcision. What
-a hotchpotch of a sect!
-
-[How could a Sun-god slain annually be slain by Pontius Pilate?] It
-occurs to me to ask Mr. Robertson a few questions about this
-transcript. It was the annual mystery play reduced to writing. The
-central event of the play was the annual death and resurrection of a
-solar or vegetation god, whose attributes and career were borrowed
-from the cults of Osiris, Adonis, Dionysus, and Co. All these gods
-died once a year; and, I suppose, had you asked one of the votaries
-when his god died, he would have answered, Every spring. Now all the
-Gospels (in common with all Christian tradition) are unanimous that
-Jesus only died once, about the time of the Passover, when Pilate was
-Roman Governor of Judaea, when Annas and Caiaphas were high-priests and
-King Herod about. This surely is an extraordinary record for a Sun-god
-who died once a year. And it was not in the transcript only that
-all these fixities of date crept in, for Mr. Robertson insists most
-vehemently that Pilate was an actor in the play. "Even the episode,"
-he writes (Pagan Christs, p. 193), "of the appeal of the priests and
-Pharisees to Pilate to keep a guard on the tomb, though it might be a
-later interpolation, could quite well have been a dramatic scene." In
-Mark and Matthew, as containing "the earlier version" of the drama,
-he detects everywhere a "concrete theatricality." Thus he commits
-himself to the astonishing paralogism that Pilate and Herod, Annas and
-Caiaphas, and all the other personages of the closing chapters of the
-Gospels, were features in an annually recurring passion play of the
-Sun-god Joshua; and this play was not a novelty introduced after the
-crucifixion, for there never was a real crucifixion. On the contrary,
-it was a secret survival among paganized Jews, a bit of Jewish pagan
-mummery that had been going on long ages before the actors represented
-in it ever lived or were heard of. Such is the reductio ad absurdum of
-the thesis which peeps out everywhere in Mr. Robertson's pages. And
-now we have found what we were in search of--namely, the cultus and
-organization to account for which a biography of Jesus had to be
-fabricated. The Life of Apollonius, argues Mr. Robertson, cannot have
-been built up round a hole, and as there was no organized cult of him
-(this is utterly false), there must have been a real figure to fit the
-biography. In the other case the organized and pre-existing cult was
-the nucleus around which the Gospels grew up like fairy rings around
-a primal fungus. It is not obvious why a cult should exclude a real
-founder, or, rather, a real person, in honour of whom the cult was
-kept up. In the worship of the Augustus or of the ancient Pharaoh,
-who impersonated and was Osiris, we have both. Why not have both
-in the case of Jesus, to whose real life and subsequent deification
-the Augusti and the Pharaohs offer a remarkable parallel? But there
-never was any pre-Christian cult and organization in Mr. Robertson's
-sense. It is a monstrous outgrowth of his own imagination.
-
-
-[Historicity of Plato falls by the canons of the mythicists] And
-as in the case of Apollonius, so in the case of other ancients,
-he is careful not to apply those methods of interpretation which he
-yet cannot pardon scholars for not applying to Jesus. Let us take
-another example. Of the life of Plato we know next to nothing. In
-the dialogues attributed to him his name is only mentioned twice;
-and in both cases its mention could, if we adopt Mr. Robertson's
-canons of interpretation, be with the utmost ease explained away as
-an interpolation. The only life we have of him was penned by Diogenes
-Laertius 600 years after he lived. The details of his life supplied
-by Aristoxenus, a pupil of Aristotle, are obviously false. The only
-notices preserved of him that can be claimed to be contemporary are
-the few derived from his nephew Speusippus. Now what had Speusippus
-to tell? Why, a story of the birth of Plato which, as Mr. Robertson
-(p. 293) writes, scarcely differs from the story of Matthew i, 18-25:
-
-"In the special machinery of the Joseph and Mary myth--the warning in a
-dream and the abstention of the husband--we have a simple duplication
-of the relations of the father and mother of Plato, the former being
-warned in a dream by Apollo, so that the child was virgin-born."
-
-Again, just as the Christians chose a "solar date" for the birthday
-of Jesus, so the Platonists, according to Mr. Robertson, p. 308,
-"placed the master's birthday on that of Apollo--that is, either at
-Christmas or at the vernal equinox."
-
-Now in the case of Jesus such legends and events as the above suffice
-to convince Mr. Robertson that the history of Jesus as told in the
-Gospels is a mere survival of "ancient solar or other worship of a
-babe Joshua, son of Miriam," of which ancient worship nothing is
-known except that it looms large in the imagination of himself,
-of Dr. Drews, and of Professor W. B. Smith. On the other hand, we
-do know that a cult of Apollo existed, and that it is no fiction of
-these modern writers. Surely, then, it is time we changed our opinion
-about the historicity of Plato. Is it not as clear as daylight that
-he was the survival of a pre-Platonic Apollo myth? We know the role
-assigned to Apollo of revealer of philosophic truth. Well, here were
-the dialogues and letters of Plato, calling for an explanation of
-their origin; a sect of Platonists who cherished these writings and
-kept the feast of their master on a solar date. On all the principles
-of the new mythico-symbolic system Plato, as a man, had no right
-to exist. "Without Jesus," writes Drews, "the rise of Christianity
-can be quite well understood." Yes, and, by the same logic, no less
-the rise of Platonism without Plato, or of the cult of Apollonius
-without Apollonius. What is sauce for the goose is surely sauce for
-the gander. With a mere change of names we could write of Plato what
-on p. 282 Mr. Robertson writes of Jesus. Let us do it: "The gospel
-Jesus (read dialogist Plato) is as enigmatic from a humanist as from
-a supernaturalist point of view. Miraculously born, to the knowledge
-of many (read of his nephew Speusippus, of Clearchus whose testimony
-'belongs to Plato's generation,' of Anaxilides the historian and
-others), he reappears as a natural man even in the opinion of his
-parents (read of nephew Speusippus and the rest); the myth will not
-cohere. Rationally considered, he (Plato) is an unintelligible portent;
-a Galilean (read Athenian) of the common people, critically untraceable
-till his full manhood, when he suddenly appears as a cult-founder."
-
-[The Virgin Birth no part of the earliest Gospel tradition] Why does
-Mr. Robertson so incessantly labour the point that the belief in
-the supernatural birth of Jesus came first in time, and was anterior
-to the belief that he was born a man of men? This he implies in the
-words just cited: "Miraculously born, to the knowledge of many, he
-reappears as a natural man." A story almost identical with that of
-the Massacre of the Innocents by Herod was, Mr. Robertson tells us
-(p. 184), told of the Emperor Augustus in his lifetime, and appears in
-Suetonius "as accepted history." And elsewhere (p. 395) he writes:
-"It was after these precedents (i.e., of Antiochus and Ptolemy)
-that Augustus, besides having himself given out, like Alexander,
-as begotten of a God, caused himself to be proclaimed in the East
-... as being born under Providence a Saviour and a God and the
-beginning of an Evangel of peace to mankind." Like Plato's story,
-then, so the official and contemporary legends of Augustus closely
-resembled the later ones of Jesus. Yet Mr. Robertson complacently
-accepts the historicity of Plato and Augustus, merely brushing aside
-the miraculous stories and supernatural role. Nowhere in his works
-does he manifest the faintest desire to apply in the domain of profane
-history the canons which he so rigidly enforces in ecclesiastical.
-
-Yet there are passages in Mr. Robertson's works where he seems,
-to use his own phrase, to "glimpse" the truth. Thus, on p. 124 of
-Christianity and Mythology he writes: "Jesus is said to be born
-of a Virgin; but not in the original version of the first gospel;
-and not in the second; and not in the fourth; and not in any writing
-or by any mouth known to or credited by the writers of the Pauline
-Epistles. Here we see how a myth may be superimposed on a cult."
-
-Does not this mean that a cult of Jesus already existed before
-this myth was added, and that the myth is absent in the earliest
-documents of the cult? Again, on p. 274, he writes that "the Christian
-Virgin-myth and Virgin-and-child worship are certainly of pre-Christian
-origin, and of comparatively late Christian acceptance." Yet, when
-I drew attention in the Literary Guide of December 1, 1912, to
-the inconsistency with this passage of the later one above cited,
-which asserts that, "Miraculously born, to the knowledge of many,
-he reappears as a natural man," he replied (January 1, 1913) that
-"a reader of ordinary candour would understand that 'acceptance'
-applied to the official action of the Church." It appears, therefore,
-that in the cryptic secret society of the Joshua Sun-God-Saviour, which
-held its seances at Jerusalem at the beginning of our era, there was
-an official circle which lagged behind the unofficial multitude. The
-latter knew from the first that their solar myth was miraculously
-born; but the official and controlling inner circle ignored the
-miracle until late in the development of the cult, and then at last
-issued a number of documents from which it was excluded. One wonders
-why. Why trouble to utter these documents in which Jesus "reappears as
-a natural man," long after the sect as a whole were committed to the
-miraculous birth? What is the meaning of these wheels within wheels,
-that hardly hunt together? We await an explanation. Meanwhile let us
-probe the new mythico-symbolism a little further.
-
-[The cleansing of the temple] Why did the solar God Joshua-Jesus
-scourge the money-changers out of the temple? Answer: Because it is
-told of Apollonius of Tyana, "that he expelled from the cities of the
-left bank of the Hellespont some sorcerers who were extorting money
-for a great propitiatory sacrifice to prevent earthquakes."
-
-The connection is beautifully obvious like the rest of our author's
-rapprochements; but we must accept it, or we shall lay ourselves open
-to the reproach of "psychological resistance to evidence." Nor must we
-ask how the memoirs of Damis, that lay in a corner till Philostratus
-got hold of them in the year 215, enjoyed so much vogue among the
-"Christists" of Jerusalem long years before they can conceivably have
-been written.
-
-Why on the occasion in question did Jesus make a scourge of cords
-with which to drive the sheep and oxen out of the Temple? Answer:
-"Because in the Assyrian and Egyptian systems a scourge-bearing god is
-a very common figure on the monuments ... it is specially associated
-with Osiris, the Saviour, Judge, and Avenger. A figure of Osiris,
-reverenced as 'Chrestos' the benign God, would suffice to set up among
-Christists as erewhile among pagans the demand for an explanation."
-
-Here we get a precious insight into the why and wherefore of the
-Gospels. They were intended by the "Christists" to explain the
-meaning of Osiris statues. Why could they not have asked one of the
-priests of Osiris, who as a rule might be found in the neighbourhood
-of his statues, what the emblem meant? And, after all, were statues
-of Osiris so plentiful in Jerusalem, where the sight even of a Roman
-eagle aroused a riot?
-
-[Janus-Peter the bifrons] Who was Peter? Answer: An understudy of
-Mithras, who in the monuments bears two keys; or of Janus, who bears
-the keys and the rod, and as opener of the year (hence the name
-January) stands at the head of the twelve months.
-
-Why did Peter deny Jesus? Answer: Because Janus was called bifrons. The
-epithet puzzled the "Christists" or "Jesuists" of Jerusalem, who,
-instead of asking the first Roman soldier they met what it meant,
-proceeded to render the word bifrons in the sense of "double-faced,"
-quite a proper epithet they thought for Peter, who thenceforth
-had to be held guilty of an act of double-dealing. For we must not
-forget that it was the epithet which suggested to the Christists the
-invention of the story, and not the story that of the epithet. But even
-Mr. Robertson is not quite sure of this; and it does not matter, where
-there is such a wealth of alternatives. For Peter is also an understudy
-of "the fickle Proteus." Janus's double head was anyhow common on
-coins, and with that highly relevant observation he essays to protect
-his theories of Janus-Peter from any possible criticisms. Indeed,
-we are forbidden to call in question the above conclusions. They are
-quite certain, because the "Christists" were intellectually "about
-the business of forming myths in explanation of old ritual and old
-statuary" (p. 350). Wonderful people these early "Christists,"
-who, although they were, as Mr. Robertson informs us (p. 348),
-"apostles of a Judaic cult preaching circumcision," and therefore
-by instinct inimical to all plastic art, nevertheless rivalled the
-modern archaeologist in their desire to explain old statuary. They
-seem to have been the prototypes of the Jews of Wardour Street. No
-less wonderful were they as philologists, in that, being Hebrews and
-presumably speaking Aramaic, they took such a healthy interest in
-the meaning of Latin words, and discovered in bifrons a sense which
-it never bore in any Latin author who ever used it!
-
-[The keys of Peter] It appears to have escaped the notice of Professor
-Franz Cumont that Mithras carries in his monuments two keys. The two
-keys were an attribute of the Mithraic Kronos, in old Persian Zervan,
-whom relatively late the Latins confused with Janus, who also had
-two heads and carried keys. That late Christian images of Peter were
-imitated from statues of these gods no one need doubt, and Fr. Cumont
-(Monuments de Mithras, i, 85) does not reject such an idea. It is
-quite another thing to assume dogmatically that the text Matthew xvi,
-19 was suggested by a statue of Janus or of Zervan. To explain it you
-need not leave Jewish ground, but merely glance at Isaiah xxii, 22,
-where the Lord is made to say of Eliakim: "And the key of the house
-of David will I lay upon his shoulder; and he shall open and none
-shall shut; and he shall shut and none shall open." The same imagery
-meets us in Revelation iii, 7 (copied from Isaiah), Luke xi, 52, and
-elsewhere. A. Sulzbach (in Ztschr. f.d. Neutest. Wissenschaft, 1903,
-p. 190) points out that every Jew, up to A.D. 70, would understand
-such imagery, for he saw every evening the temple keys ceremoniously
-taken from a hole under the temple floor, where they were kept under a
-slab of stone. The Levite watcher locked up the temple and replaced the
-keys under the slab, upon which he then laid his bed for the night. In
-connection with the magic power of binding and loosing the keys had,
-of course, a further and magical significance, not in Judaea alone, but
-all over the world, and the Evangelists did not need to examine statues
-of Janus or Zervan in order to come by this bit of everyday symbolism.
-
-N.B.--No connection of Janus-Peter of the Gospels with Peter of the
-Pauline Epistles! The one was a mythical companion of the Sun-god,
-the other a man of flesh and blood, according to Mr. Robertson.
-
-[Joseph and his ass] Who was Joseph? Answer: Forasmuch as "the
-Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred suggestions drawn
-from pagan art and ritual usage" (p. 305), and "Christism was only
-neo-Paganism grafted on Judaism" (p. 338), Joseph must be regarded as
-"a partial revival of the ancient adoration of the God Joseph as well
-as of that of the God Daoud" (p. 303). He was also, seeing that he
-took Mary and her child on an ass into Egypt, a reminiscence; or,
-shall we not say, an explanation of "the feeble old man leading an
-ass in the sacred procession of Isis, as described by Apuleius in
-his Metamorphoses."
-
-There is no mention of Joseph's ass in the Gospels, but that does not
-matter. Dr. Drews is better informed, and would have us recognize
-in Joseph an understudy of Kinyras, the father of Adonis, who "is
-said to have been some kind of artisan, a smith, or carpenter. That
-is to say, he is supposed to have invented the hammer," etc. Might
-I suggest the addition of the god Thor to the collection of gospel
-aliases? The gods Joseph and Daoud are purely modern fictions; no
-ancient Jew ever heard of either.
-
-Why was Jesus crucified?
-
-[The Crucifixion] "The story of the Crucifixion may rest on the remote
-datum of an actual crucifixion of Jesus Ben Pandira, the possible
-Jesus of Paul, dead long before, and represented by no preserved
-biography or teachings whatever."
-
-The Christists were clearly pastmasters in the art of explaining
-ignotum per ignotius. For on the next page we learn that it is not
-known whether this worthy "ever lived or was crucified." In Pagan
-Christs he is acknowledged to be a "mere name." However this be,
-"it was the mythic significance of crucifixion that made the early
-fortune of the cult, with the aid of the mythic significance of the
-name Jeschu = Joshua, the ancient Sun-god."
-
-The meaning of this oracular pronouncement is too profound for me
-to attempt to fathom it. Let us pass on to another point in the new
-elucidation of the Gospels.
-
-[W. B. Smith on exorcisms of devils] What were the exorcisms of evil
-spirits ascribed to the ancient Sun-god Joshua, under his alias of
-Jesus of Nazareth?
-
-In his Pagan Christs, as in his Christianity and Mythology,
-Mr. Robertson unkindly leaves us in the lurch about this matter,
-although we would dearly like to know what were the particular
-archaeological researches of the "Christists" and "Jesuists" that led
-them to coin these myths of exorcisms performed, and of devils cast
-out of the mad or sick by their solar myth. Nor does Dr. Drews help us
-much. Never mind. Professor W. B. Smith nobly stands in the breach, so
-we will let him take up the parable; the more so because, in handling
-this problem, he may be said to have excelled himself. On p. 57, then,
-of Ecce Deus, he premises, in approaching this delicate topic, that
-"in the activity of the Jesus and the apostles, as delineated in the
-Gospels, the one all-important moment is the casting-out of demons."
-
-With this all will agree; but what follows is barely consonant with
-the thesis of his friends. He cites in effect Mark iii, 14, 15, and
-the parallel passages in which Jesus is related to have sent forth
-the twelve disciples to preach and to have authority to cast out the
-demons. Now, according to the mythico-symbolical theory, the career
-of Jesus and his disciples lay not on earth, but in that happy region
-where mythological personages live and move and have their being. As
-Dr. Drews says (The Christ Myth, p. 117): "In reality the whole of
-the family and home life of the Messiah, Jesus, took place in heaven
-among the gods."
-
-Accordingly, Dr. W. B. Smith finds it "amazing that anyone should
-hesitate an instant over the sense" of the demonological episodes
-in the Gospels, and he continues: "When we recall the fact that the
-early Christians uniformly understood the heathen gods to be demons,
-and uniformly represented the mission of Jesus to be the overthrow
-of these demon gods, it seems as clear as the sun at noon that this
-fall of Satan from heaven [16] can be nothing less (and how could it
-possibly be anything more?) than the headlong ruin of polytheism--the
-complete triumph of the One Eternal God. It seems superfluous to
-insist on anything so palpable.... Can any rational man for a moment
-believe that the Saviour sent forth his apostles and disciples with
-such awful solemnity to heal the few lunatics that languished in
-Galilee? Is that the way the sublimist of teachers would found the
-new and true religion?"
-
-In the last sentence our author nods and lapses into the historical
-mood; for how can one talk of a mythical Joshua being a teacher
-and founding a new religion--of his sending forth the apostles and
-disciples? These things are done on earth, and not up in heaven "among
-the gods," as Drews says. It is, perhaps, impertinent, for the rest, to
-criticize so exalted an argument as Professor Smith's; yet the question
-suggests itself, why, if the real object of the mystic sectaries who
-worshipped in secret the "Proto-Christian God, the Jesus," was to
-acquaint the faithful with the triumph of the heavenly Jesus over
-the demon-gods of paganism--why, in that case, did they wrap it up
-in purely demonological language? All around them exorcists, Jewish
-and pagan, were driving out demons of madness and disease at every
-street corner--dumb devils, rheumatic devils, blind devils, devils
-of every sort and kind. Was it entirely appropriate for these mystic
-devotees to encourage the use of demonological terminology, when they
-meant something quite else? "These early propagandists," he tells us,
-p. 143, "were great men, were very great men; they conceived noble
-and beautiful and attractive ideas, which they defended with curious
-learning and logic, and recommended with captivating rhetoric and
-persuasive oratory and consuming zeal."
-
-Surely it was within the competence of such egregious teachers to say
-without disguise what they really meant, instead of beating about the
-bush and penning stories which so nearly reproduced the grovelling
-superstitions of the common herd around them? They might at least have
-issued a Delphin edition of their gospels, with a paraphrase in the
-margin to explain the text and to save the faithful from taking these
-stories literally--for so they took them as far back as we can trace
-the documents; and, what is more, in all those derivative churches all
-over the world which continued the inner life of Professor Smith's
-mystic sectaries, we hear from the earliest age of the appointing
-of vulgar exorcists, whose duty was to expel from the faithful the
-demons of madness and of all forms of sickness.
-
-But worse than this. We know from Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews that
-the same Proto-Christian Joshua-God, who was waging war in heaven
-on the pagan gods and goddesses, was himself a composite myth made
-up of memories of Krishna, AEsculapius, Osiris, Apollo, Dionysus,
-Apollonius, and a hundred other fiends. Mr. Robertson attests this,
-p. 305, in these words: "As we have seen and shall see throughout
-this investigation, the Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred
-suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual usage."
-
-Is it quite appropriate that the pre-Christian Jesus or Joshua
-should turn and rend his pagan congeners in the manner described by
-Professor W. B. Smith? His mythical antecedents, as ascertained by
-Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews, are grotesquely incompatible with the
-role of monotheistic founder assigned him by Professor W. B. Smith. Are
-we to suppose that the learned and eloquent propagandists of his cult
-were aware of this incompatibility, and for that reason chose to veil
-their monotheistic propaganda in the decent obscurity of everyday
-demonological language?
-
-[Mary and her homonyms] Who was Mary, the mother of Jesus?
-
-Let Dr. Drews speak first:--
-
-
- Now if Joseph, as we have already seen, was originally a god,
- Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a goddess. Under the name of Maya,
- she is the mother of Agni--i.e., the principle of motherhood
- and creation simply, as which she is in the Rigveda at one time
- represented by the fire-producing wood, the soft pith, in which
- the fire-stick was whirled; at another as the earth, with which
- the sky has mated. She appears under the same name as the mother of
- Buddha as well as of the Greek Hermes. She is identical with Maira
- (Maera) as, according to Pausanias, viii, 12, 48, the pleiad Maia,
- wife of Hephaistos was called. She appears among the Persians as
- the "virgin" mother of Mithras. As Myrrha she is the mother of
- the Syrian Adonis; as Semiramis, mother of the Babylonian Ninus
- (Marduk). In the Arabic legend she appears under the name of
- Mirzam as mother of the mythical saviour Joshua; while the Old
- Testament gives this name to the virgin sister of that Joshua
- who was so closely related to Moses; and, according to Eusebius,
- Merris was the name of the Egyptian princess who found Moses in
- a basket and became his foster mother.
-
-
-The above purpureus pannus is borrowed by Dr. Drews in the second
-edition of his work from Mr. Robertson's book, p. 297. Here is the
-original:--
-
-
- It is not possible from the existing data to connect historically
- such a cult with its congeners; but the mere analogy of names and
- epithets goes far. The mother of Adonis, the slain "Lord" of the
- great Syrian cult, is Myrrha; and Myrrha in one of her myths is the
- weeping tree from which the babe Adonis is born. Again, Hermes,
- the Greek Logos, has for mother Maia, whose name has further
- connections with Mary. In one myth Maia is the daughter of Atlas,
- thus doubling with Maira, who has the same father, and who, having
- "died a virgin," was seen by Odysseus in Hades. Mythologically,
- Maira is identified with the Dog-Star, which is the star of
- Isis. Yet again, the name appears in the East as Maya, the
- virgin-mother of Buddha; and it is remarkable that, according to
- a Jewish legend, the name of the Egyptian princess who found the
- babe Moses was Merris. The plot is still further thickened by the
- fact that, as we learn from the monuments, one of the daughters
- of Ramses II was named Meri. And as Meri meant "beloved," and the
- name was at times given to men, besides being used in the phrase
- "beloved of the gods," the field of mythic speculation is wide.
-
-
-And we feel that it is, indeed, wide, when, on p. 301, the three
-Marias mentioned by Mark are equated with the three Moirai or Fates!
-
-In another passage we meet afresh with one of these equations,
-p. 306. It runs thus: "On the hypothesis that the mythical Joshua,
-son of Miriam, was an early Hebrew deity, it may be that one form
-of the Tammuz cult in pre-Christian times was a worship of a mother
-and child--Mary and Adonis; that, in short, Maria = Myrrha, and that
-Jesus was a name of Adonis."
-
-[Pre-philological arguments] From such deliverances we gather that
-in Mr. Robertson and his disciples we have survivals of a stage of
-culture which may be called prephilological. A hundred years ago or
-more the most superficial resemblance of sound was held to be enough
-of a ground for connecting words and names together, and Oxford
-divines were busy deriving all other tongues from the Hebrew spoken
-in the Garden of Eden by Adam and Eve. Mr. Robertson sets himself
-(p. 139) to ridicule these old-fashioned writers, and regales us
-with not a few examples of that over-facile identification of cult
-names that have no real mutual affinity which was then in vogue. Thus
-Krishna was held to be a corruption of Christ by certain oriental
-missionaries, just as, inversely, within my memory, certain English
-Rationalists argued the name Christ to be a disguise of Krishna. So
-Brahma was identified with Abraham, and Napoleon with the Apollyon of
-Revelation. One had hoped that this phase of culture was past and done
-with; but Messrs. Robertson and Drews revive it in their books, and
-seem anxious to perpetuate it. As with names, so with myths. On their
-every page we encounter--to use the apt phrase of M. Emile Durkheim
-[17]--ces rapprochements tumultueux et sommaires qui ont discredite
-la methode comparative aupres d'un certain nombre de bons esprits.
-
-[Right use of comparative method] The one condition of advancing
-knowledge and clearing men's minds of superstition and cant by
-application of the comparative method in religion, is that we should
-apply it, as did Robertson Smith and his great predecessor, Dr. John
-Spencer, [18] cautiously, and in a spirit of scientific scholarship. It
-does not do to argue from superficial resemblances of sound that
-Maria is the same name as the Greek Moira, or that the name Maia has
-"connections with Mary"; or, again, that "the name (Maria) appears
-in the East as Maya." The least acquaintance with Hebrew would have
-satisfied Mr. Robertson that the original form of the name he thus
-conjures with is not Maria, but Miriam, which does not lend itself to
-his hardy equations. I suspect he is carried away by the parti pris
-which leaks out in the following passage of his henchman and imitator,
-Dr. Drews [19]: "The romantic cult of Jesus must be combated at all
-costs.... This cannot be done more effectually than by taking its
-basis in the theory of the historical Jesus from beneath its feet."
-
-If "at all costs" means at the cost of common sense and scholarship,
-I cannot agree. I am not disposed, at the invitation of any
-self-constituted high priest of Rationalism, to derive old Hebrew names
-from Egyptian, Greek, and Buddhist appellations that happen to show
-an initial and one or two other letters in common. I will not believe
-that a "Christist" of Alexandria or Jerusalem, in the streets of which
-the Latin language was seldom or never heard, took the epithet bifrons
-in a wrong sense, and straightway invented the story of a Peter who
-had denied Jesus. I cannot admit that the cults of Osiris, Dionysus,
-Apollo, or any other ancient Sun-god, are echoed in a single incident
-narrated in the primitive evangelical tradition that lies before us
-in Mark and the non-Marcan document used by the authors of the first
-and third Gospels; I do not believe that any really educated man or
-woman would for a moment entertain any of the equations propounded
-by Mr. Robertson, and of which I have given a few select examples.
-
-[Marett on method] Mr. Marett, in his essay entitled The Birth
-of Humility, by way of criticizing certain modern abuses of the
-comparative method in the field of the investigation of the origin
-of moral ideas and religious beliefs, has justly remarked that
-"No isolated fragment of custom or belief can be worth much for the
-purposes of comparative science. In order to be understood, it must
-first be viewed in the light of the whole culture, the whole corporate
-soul-life, of the particular ethnic group concerned. Hence the new way
-is to emphasize concrete differences, whereas the old way was to amass
-resemblances heedlessly abstracted from their social context. Which
-way is the better is a question that well-nigh answers itself."
-
-Apply the above rule to nascent Christianity. In the Synoptic Gospels
-Jesus ever speaks as a Jew to Jews. Jewish monotheism is presupposed
-by the authors of them to have been no less the heritage of Jesus
-than of his audiences. The rare exceptions are carefully noticed
-by them. This consideration has so impressed Professor W. B. Smith
-that he urges the thesis that the Christian religion originated as a
-monotheist propaganda. That is no doubt an exaggeration, for it was
-at first a Messianic movement or impulse among Jews, and therefore
-did not need to set the claims of monotheism in the foreground, and,
-accordingly, in the Synoptic Gospels they are nowhere urged. In spite
-of this exaggeration, however, Mr. Smith's book occupies a higher
-plane than the works of Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson, insofar as he
-shows some slight insight into the original nature of the religion,
-whereas they show none at all. They merely, in Mr. Marett's phrase,
-"amass resemblances [would they were even such!] heedlessly abstracted
-from their context," and resolve a cult which, as it appears on the
-stage of history, is Jewish to its core, of which the Holy Scripture
-was no other than the Law and the Prophets, and of which the earliest
-documents, as Mr. Selwyn has shown, are saturated with the Jewish
-Septuagint--they try to resolve this cult into a tagrag and bobtail
-of Greek and Roman paganism, of Buddhism, of Brahmanism, of Mithraism
-(hardly yet born), of Egyptian, African, Assyrian, old Persian, [20]
-and any other religions with which these writers have a second-hand and
-superficial acquaintance. Never once do they pause and ask themselves
-the simple questions: firstly, how the early Christians came to be
-imbued with so intimate a knowledge of idolatrous cults far and near,
-new and old; secondly, why they set so much store by them as the
-mythico-symbolic hypothesis presupposes that they did; and, thirdly,
-why, if they valued them so much, they were at pains to translate them
-into the utterly different and antagonistic form which they wear in
-the Gospels. In a word, why should such connoisseurs of paganism have
-disguised themselves as monotheistic and messianic Jews? Mr. Robertson
-tries to save his hypothesis by injecting a little dose of Judaism
-into his "Christists" and "Jesuists"; but anyone who has read Philo
-or Josephus or the Bible, not to mention the Apostolic Fathers and
-Justin Martyr, will see at a glance that there is no room in history
-for such a hybrid.
-
-[Methods of Robertson and Lorinser] That Mr. Robertson should put his
-name to such works as Dr. Drews imitates and singles out for special
-praise is the more remarkable, because, in urging the independence
-of certain Hindoo cults against Christian missionaries who want
-to see in them mere reflections of Christianity, he shows himself
-both critical and wide-minded. These characteristics he displays
-in his refutation of the opinion of a certain Dr. Lorinser that
-the dialogue between Krishna and the warrior Arjuna, known as the
-Bhagavat Gita and embodied in the old Hindoo Epic of the Mahabharata,
-"is a patchwork of Christian teaching." Dr. Lorinser had adduced a
-chain of passages from this document which to his mind are echoes of
-the New Testament. Though many of these exhibit a striking conformity
-with aphorisms of the Gospels, we are nevertheless constrained to
-agree with Mr. Robertson's criticism, which is as follows (p. 262):--
-
-
- The first comment that must occur to every instructed reader on
- perusing these and the other "parallels" advanced by Dr. Lorinser
- is, that on the one hand the parallels are very frequently such
- as could be made by the dozen between bodies of literature which
- have unquestionably never been brought in contact, so strained
- and far-fetched are they; and that, on the other hand, they are
- discounted by quite as striking parallels between New Testament
- texts and pre-Christian pagan writings.
-
-
-Mr. Robertson then adduces a number of striking parallelisms between
-the New Testament and old Greek and Roman writers, and continues thus:
-"Such parallels as these, I repeat, could be multiplied to any extent
-from the Greek and Latin classics alone.... But is it worth while to
-heap up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly idle?"
-
-[Dionysus and Jesus] It occurs to ask whether it was not worth
-the while of Mr. Robertson to inquire whether the Evangelist could
-"unquestionably have been brought in contact" with the Dionysiac
-group of myths before he assumed so dogmatically, against students
-of such weight as Professor Percy Gardner and Dr. Estlin Carpenter,
-that the myth of Bacchus meeting with a couple of asses on his way
-to Dodona was the "Christist's" model for the story of Jesus riding
-into Jerusalem on an ass? Might he not have reflected that then,
-as now, there was no other way of entering Jerusalem unless you
-went on foot? And what has Jerusalem to do with Dodona? What has
-Bacchus's choice of one ass to ride on in common with Matthew's
-literary deformation, according to which Jesus rode on two asses at
-once? Lastly, what had Bacchus to do with Jesus? Has the Latin wine-god
-a single trait in common with the Christian founder? Is it not rather
-the case that any conscious or even unconscious assimilation of Bacchus
-myths conflicts with what Mr. Marett would call "the whole culture,
-the whole corporate soul-life" of the early Christian community,
-as the surviving documents picture it, and other evidence we have
-not? Yet Mr. Robertson deduces from such paltry "parallels" as the
-above the conclusion that Jesus, on whose real personality a score of
-early and independent literary sources converge, never existed at all,
-and that he was a "composite myth." There is no other example of an
-eclectic myth arbitrarily composed by connoisseurs out of a religious
-art and story not their own; still less of such a myth being humanized
-and accepted by the next generation as a Jewish Messiah.
-
-In the same context (p. 264) Mr. Robertson remarks sensibly enough
-that "No great research or reflection is needed to make it clear
-that certain commonplaces of ethics as well as of theology are
-equally inevitable conclusions in all religious systems that rise
-above savagery. Four hundred years before Jesus, Plato declared that
-it was very difficult for the rich to be good; does anyone believe
-that any thoughtful Jew needed Plato's help to reach the same notion?"
-
-I would ask, does anyone believe that a thoughtful Jew needed the
-stimulus of a statuette of Osiris in order that he should record,
-or, maybe, invent, the story of Jesus clearing the money-changers out
-of the temple with a scourge? Even admitting--what I am as little as
-anyone inclined to admit--that the Peter of the early Gospels is, as
-regards his personality and his actions, a fable, a mere invention of
-a Jewish storyteller, need we suppose that the storyteller in question
-depended for his inspiration on Janus? You might as well suppose that
-the authors of the Arabian Nights founded their stories on the myths of
-Greek and Roman gods. Again, the Jews were traditionally distributed
-into twelve tribes or clans. Let us grant only for argument's sake
-that the life of Jesus the Messiah as narrated in the first three
-Gospels is a romance, we yet must ask, Which is more probable, that
-the author of the romance assigned twelve apostles to Jesus because
-there were twelve tribes to whom the message of the impending Kingdom
-of God had to be carried, or because there are twelve signs in the
-Zodiac? He agrees (p. 347) that Luke's story of the choice of the
-seventy disciples "visibly connects with the Jewish idea that there
-were seventy nations in the world." Why, then, reject the view that
-Jesus chose twelve apostles because there were twelve tribes? Not
-at all. Having decided that Jesus was the Sun-God-Saviour Joshua,
-a pure figment of his brain, Mr. Robertson is ready to violate the
-canons of evidence he appeals to on p. 347, and will have it that in
-the Gospels the apostles are Zodiacal signs, and that their leader
-is Janus, the opener of the year. "The Zodiacal sign gives the clue"
-(p. 339), in his opinion, to this as to much else.
-
-[Dr. Lorinser] Let us return to the case of Dr. Lorinser. "We are asked
-to believe that Brahmans expounding a highly-developed Pantheism went
-assiduously to the (unattainable) New Testament for the wording of a
-number of their propositions, pantheistic and other, while assimilating
-absolutely nothing of distinctively Christian doctrine.... Such a
-position is possible only to a mesmerized believer." Surely one may
-exclaim of Mr. Robertson, De te fabula narratur, and rewrite the
-above as follows: "We are asked to believe that 'Christists,' who
-were so far Jewish as to practise circumcision, to use the Hebrew
-Scriptures, to live in Jerusalem under the presidency and patronage
-of the Jewish High-priest, to foster and propagate Jewish monotheism,
-went assiduously to the (unattainable) rites, statuary, art, and
-beliefs of pagan India, Egypt, Ancient Babylon, Persia, etc., for all
-'the narrative myths' (p. 263) of the story in which they narrated
-the history of their putative founder Jesus, the Jewish Messiah,
-while assimilating absolutely nothing of distinctively pagan doctrine."
-
-Dr. Lorinser, for urging a thesis infinitely less absurd, is denounced
-as "a mesmerized believer"; and on the next page Dr. Weber, who
-agrees with him, is rebuked for his "judicial blindness." Yet in the
-same context we are told that "a crude and naif system, like the
-Christism of the second gospel and the earlier form of the first,
-borrows inevitably from the more highly evolved systems with which
-it comes socially in contact, absorbing myth and mystery and dogma
-till it becomes as sophisticated as they."
-
-It is quite true, as Gibbon observed, that the naif figure of Jesus,
-as presented in the Synoptic Gospels, was soon overlaid with that
-of the logos, and all sorts of Christological cobwebs were within
-a few generations spun around his head to the effacement both of
-the teacher and of what he taught. But in the earliest body of the
-evangelical tradition, as we can construct it from the first three
-Gospels, there is little or nothing that is not essentially Jewish and
-racy of the soil of Judaea. The borrowings of Christianity from pagan
-neighbours began with the flocking into the new Messianic society of
-Gentile converts. The earlier borrowings with which Messrs. Robertson
-and Drews fill their volumes are one and all "resemblances heedlessly
-abstracted from their context," and are as far-fetched and as fanciful
-as the dreams of the adherents of the Banner of Israel, or as the
-cypher of the Bacon-Shakesperians, over which Mr. Robertson is prone
-to make merry. "Is it," to use his own words, "worth while to heap
-up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly idle?"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS
-
-
-[Is Mark's Gospel a religious romance?] I can imagine some people
-arguing that Mark's Gospel might be a religious novel, of which the
-scene is laid in Jerusalem and Galilee among Jews; that it was by a
-literary artifice impregnated with Jewish ideas; that the references
-to Sadducees and Pharisees were introduced as appropriate to the age
-and clime; that the old Jewish Scriptures are for the same reason
-acknowledged by all the actors and interlocutors as holy writ;
-that demonological beliefs were thrown in as being characteristic
-of Palestinian society of the time the writer purported to write
-about; that it is of the nature of a literary trick that the peculiar
-Messianic and Apocalyptic beliefs and aspirations rife among Jews of
-the period B.C. 50-A.D. 160 and later, are made to colour the narrative
-from beginning to end. All these elements of verisimilitude, I say,
-taken singly or together, do not of necessity exclude the hypothesis
-that it may be one of the most skilfully constructed historical novels
-ever written. Have we not, it may be urged, in the Recognitions or
-Itinerary of Saint Clement, in the Acts of Thomas, in the story of
-Paul and Thecla, similar compositions?
-
-[Certainly not in the way assumed by Drews and Robertson,] In view
-of what we know of the dates and diffusion of the Gospels, of their
-literary connections with one another, and of the reappearance of
-their chief personae dramatis in the Pauline letters, such a hypothesis
-is of course wildly improbable, yet not utterly absurd. We have to
-assume in the writer a knowledge of the Messianic movement among the
-Jews, a familiarity with their demonological beliefs and practices,
-with their sects, and so forth; and it is all readily assumable. In
-the Greek novel of Chariton we have an example of such an historical
-romance, the scene being laid in Syracuse and Asia Minor shortly
-after the close of the Peloponnesian war. But such romances are not
-cult documents of a parabolic or allegorical kind, as the Gospels
-are supposed by these writers to be. They do not bring a divine
-being down from Olympus, and pretend all through that he was a man
-who was born, lived, and died on the cross in a particular place and
-at a particular date. We have no other example of documents whose
-authors, by way of honouring a God up in heaven who never made any
-epiphany on earth nor ever underwent incarnation, made a man of him,
-and concocted an elaborate earthly record of him. Why did they do
-it? What was the object of the "Jesuists" and "Christists" in hoaxing
-their own and all subsequent generations and in building up a lasting
-cult and Church on what they knew were fables?
-
-[whose hypothesis is self-destructive,] In the Homeric hymns and other
-religious documents not only of the Greeks, but of the Hindoos, we have
-no doubt histories of the gods written by their votaries; but in these
-hymns they put down what they believed, they did not of set design
-falsify the legend of the god, and describe his birth and parentage,
-when they knew he never had any; his ministrations and teaching career,
-when he never ministered or taught; his persecution by enemies and
-his death, when he was never persecuted and never died. Or are we
-to suppose that all these things were related in the Sun-god Joshua
-legend? No, reply Messrs. Drews and Robertson. For the stories told
-in the Gospels are all modelled on pagan or astral myths; the persons
-who move in their pages are the gods and demigods of Egyptian, Greek,
-Latin, Hindoo legends. Clearly the Saviour-God Joshua had no legend
-or story of his own, or it would not be necessary to pad him out
-with the furniture and appurtenances of Osiris, Dionysus, Serapis,
-AEsculapius, and who knows what other gods besides. And--strangest
-feature of all--it is Jews, men circumcised, propagandists of Jewish
-monotheism, who, in the interests of "a Judaic cult" (p. 348), go
-rummaging in all the dustbins of paganism, in order to construct a
-legend or allegory of their god. Why could they not rest content with
-him as they found him in their ancient tradition?
-
-[and irreconcilable with ascertained history of Judaism] The Gospels,
-like any other ancient document, have to be accounted for. They did
-not engender themselves, like a mushroom, nor drop out of heaven ready
-written. I have admitted as possible, though wild and extravagant,
-the hypothesis of their being a Messianic romance, which subsequently
-came to be mistaken for sober history; and there are of course plenty
-of legendary incidents in their pages. But such a hypothesis need
-not be discussed. It is not that of these three authors, and would
-not suit them. They insist on seeing in them so many manifestoes of
-the secret sect of Jews who worshipped a god Joshua. For Dr. Drews
-and Mr. Robertson the Gospels describe a "Jesuine" mystery play
-evolved "from a Palestinian rite of human sacrifice in which the
-annual victim was 'Jesus the Son of the Father.'" There is no trace
-in Jewish antiquity of any such rite in epochs which even remotely
-preceded Christianity, nor is the survival of such a rite of human
-sacrifice even thinkable in Jerusalem, where the "Christists" laid
-their plot. And why should they eke out their plot with a thousand
-scraps of pagan mythology?
-
-[Prof. Smith's hypothesis of a mythical Jesus mythically humanized in
-a monotheistic propaganda,] I was taught in my childhood to venerate
-the Gospels; but I never knew before what really wonderful documents
-they are. Let us, however, turn to Professor W. B. Smith, who does not
-pile on paganism so profusely as his friends, nor exactly insist on
-a pagan basis for the Gospels. His hypothesis in brief is identical
-with theirs, for he insists that Jesus the man never existed at
-all. Jesus is, in Professor Smith's phrase, "a humanized God"; in the
-diction of Messrs. Drews and Robertson, a myth. Professor Smith allows
-(Ecce Deus, p. 78) that the mere "fact that a myth, or several myths,
-may be found associated with the name of an individual by no means
-relegates that individual into the class of the unhistorical." That is
-good sense, and so is the admission which follows, that "we may often
-explain the legends from the presence of the historical personality,
-independently known to be historic." But in regard to Jesus alone
-among the figures of the past he, like his friends, rules out both
-considerations. The common starting-point of all three writers is that
-the earliest Gospel narratives do not "describe any human character
-at all; on the contrary, the individuality in question is distinctly
-divine and not human, in the earliest portrayal. As time goes on it
-is true that certain human elements do creep in, particularly in Luke
-and John.... In Mark there is really no man at all; the Jesus is God,
-or at least essentially divine, throughout. He wears only a transparent
-garment of flesh. Mark historizes only."
-
-[lacks all confirmation, defies the texts,] How is it, we ask, that
-humanity has pored over the Synoptic Gospels for nearly two thousand
-years, and discerned in them the portraiture at least of a man of flesh
-and blood, who can be imaged as such in statuary and painting? Even
-if it were conceded, as I said above, that the Gospel representation
-of Jesus is an imaginary portrait, like that of William Tell or
-John Inglesant, still, who, that is not mad, will deny that there
-exist in it multiple human traits, fictions may be of a novelist,
-yet indisputably there? Mr. Smith's hardy denial of them can only
-lead his readers to suspect him of paradox. Moreover, the champions
-of traditional orthodoxy have had in the past every reason to side
-with Professor Smith in his attempted elimination of all human traits
-and characteristics. Yet in recent years they have been constrained
-to admit that in Luke and John the human elements, far from creeping
-in, show signs of creeping out. "The received notion," adds Professor
-Smith, "that in the early Marcan narratives the Jesus is distinctly
-human, and that the process of deification is fulfilled in John, is
-precisely the reverse of the truth." Once more we rub our eyes. In Mark
-Jesus is little more than that most familiar of old Jewish figures,
-an earthly herald of the imminent kingdom of heaven; late and little
-by little he is recognized by his followers as himself the Messiah
-whose advent he formerly heralded. As yet he is neither divine nor the
-incarnation of a pre-existent quasi-divine Logos or angel. In John,
-on the other hand, Jesus has emerged from the purely Jewish phase of
-being Messiah, or servant of God (which is all that Lord or Son of God
-[21] implies in Mark's opening verses). He has become the eternal Logos
-or Reason, essentially divine and from the beginning with God. [and
-rests on an obsolete and absurd allegorization of them] Here obviously
-we are well on our way to a deification of Jesus and an elimination
-of human traits; and the writer is so conscious of this that he goes
-out of his way to call our attention to the fact that Jesus was after
-all a man of flesh and blood, with human parents and real brethren who
-disbelieved in him. He was evidently conscious that the superimposition
-on the man Jesus of the Logos scheme, and the reflection back into the
-human life of Jesus of the heavenly role which Paul ascribed to him
-qua raised by the Spirit from the dead, was already influencing certain
-believers (called Docetes) to believe that his human life and actions
-were illusions, seen and heard indeed, as we see and hear a man speak
-and act in a dream, but not objective and real. To guard against this
-John proclaims that he was made flesh. Nevertheless, he goes half way
-with the Docetes in that he rewrites all the conversations of Jesus,
-abolishes the homely parable, and substitutes his own theosophic
-lucubrations. He also emphasizes the miraculous aspect of Jesus,
-inventing new miracles more grandiose than any in previous gospels,
-but of a kind, as he imagines, to symbolize his conceptions of sin
-and death. He is careful to eliminate the demonological stories. They
-were as much of a stumbling-block to John as we have seen them to be
-to Mr. W. B. Smith. We must, therefore, perforce accuse the latter of
-putting a hypothesis that from the outset is a paradox. The documents
-contradict him on every page.
-
-[Why should the robber chief Joshua have been selected as prototype of
-Jesus?] A thesis that begins by flying in the face of the documents
-demands paradoxical arguments for its support; and the pages of all
-three writers teem with them. Of a Jesus that is God from the first
-it is perhaps natural to ask--anyhow our authors have asked it of
-themselves--which God was he? And the accident of his bearing the
-name Jesus--he might just as well have been called Jacob or Sadoc or
-Manasseh, or what not--suggests Joshua to them, for Joshua is the
-Hebrew name which in the LXX was Grecized as Iesoue, and later as
-Iesous. That in the Old Testament Joshua is depicted as a cut-throat
-and leader of brigands, very remote in his principles and practice from
-the Jesus of the Gospels, counts for nothing. The late Dr. Winckler,
-who saw sun and moon myths rising like exhalations all around
-him wherever he looked in ancient history and mythology, [22] has
-suggested that Joseph was originally a solar hero. Ergo, Joshua was one
-too. Ergo, there was a Hebrew secret society in Jerusalem in the period
-B.C. 150-A.D. 50 who worshipped the Sun-God-Saviour Joshua. Ergo,
-the Gospels are a sustained parable of this Sun-god. Thus are empty,
-wild, and unsubstantiated hypotheses piled one on top of the other,
-like Pelion on Ossa. Not a scintilla of evidence is adduced for any
-one of them. First one is advanced, and its truth assumed. The next
-is propped on it, et sic ad infinitum.
-
-[Why make him the central figure of a monotheistic cult?] What,
-asks Professor Smith (Ecce Deus, p. 67), was the active principle of
-Christianity? What its germ? "The monotheistic impulse," he answers,
-"the instinct for unity that lies at the heart of all grand philosophy
-and all noble religion." Again, p. 45: "What was the essence of this
-originally secret Jesus cult, that was expressed in such guarded
-parabolic terms as made it unintelligible to the multitude?... It
-was a protest against idolatry; it was a Crusade for monotheism."
-
-[The earliest Christianity was no monotheistic propaganda] This is,
-no doubt, true of Christianity when we pass outside the Gospels. It is
-only not true of them, because on their every page Jewish monotheism
-is presupposed. Why are no warnings against polytheism put into the
-mouth of Jesus? Why is not a single precept of the Sermon on the
-Mount directed against idolatry? Surely because we are moving in a
-Jewish atmosphere in which such warnings were unnecessary. The horizon
-is purely Jewish, either of Jerusalem as we know it in the pages of
-Josephus or of certain Galilean circles in which even a knowledge of
-Greek seems not to have existed before the third century. The very
-proximity of Greek cities there seems to have confirmed the Jewish
-peasant of that region in his preference of Aramaic idiom, just as
-the native of Bohemia to-day turns his back on you if you address
-him in the detested German tongue.
-
-[Robertson and Drews allow the Jesuists to have been mainly Jewish in
-cult and feeling] Messrs. Robertson and Drews concede that the original
-stock of Christianity was Jewish. Thus we read in Christianity and
-Mythology (p. 415) that the Lord's Prayer derives "from pre-Christian
-Jewish lore, and, like parts of the Sermon (on the Mount), from an
-actually current Jewish document." The same writer admits (p. 338)
-the existence of "Judaic sections of the early Church." When he talks
-(p. 337) of the tale of the anointing of Jesus in Matthew xxvi, 6-13,
-and parallel passages, being "in all probability a late addendum" to
-the "primitive gospel" of Bernhard Weiss's theory, "made after the
-movement had become pronouncedly Gentile," he presupposes that, to
-start with anyhow, the movement was mainly Jewish. He admits that in
-the first six paragraphs of the early Christian document entitled the
-Didache we have a purely Jewish teaching document, "which the Jesuist
-sect adopted in the first or second century." He cannot furthermore
-contest the fact that the Jesuists "took over the Jewish Scriptures
-as their sacred book; that they inherited the Jewish passover and
-the Paschal lamb, which is still slain in Eastern churches; that the
-leaders of the secret sect in Jerusalem upheld the Jewish rite of
-circumcision against Paul." [23] All this is inconceivable if the
-society was not in the main and originally one of Hebrews. When he
-goes on to argue that the Gospels are the manifesto of a cult of an
-old Sun-god Joshua, son of a mythic Miriam, he at least admits that
-the early "Christists" selected from ancient Jewish superstition,
-and not from pagan myth, the central figure of their cult, and that
-they chose for their deity a successor and satellite of Moses with a
-Hebrew lady for his mother. We may take it for granted, then, that the
-parent society out of which the Christian Church arose was profoundly
-and radically Jewish; and Mr. Robertson frankly admits as much when he
-affirms that "it was a Judaic cult that preached circumcision," and
-that "its apostles with whom Paul was in contact were of a Judaizing
-description." Here is common ground between myself and him.
-
-[If so, how could they devote themselves to pagan mystery plays?] What
-I want to know is how it came about that a society of which Jerusalem
-was the focus, and of which the nucleus and propagandists were Jews
-and Judaizers, could have been given over to the cult of a solar god,
-and how they could celebrate mystery plays and dramas in honour of that
-god; how they can have manufactured that god into "a composite myth"
-(p. 336), and constructed in his honour a religious system that was
-"a patchwork of a hundred suggestions drawn from pagan art and ritual
-usage." For such, we are told (p. 305), was "the Christian system."
-
-[Robertson admits that Jews could never borrow from pagan rituals
-in that age] We are far better acquainted with Jewish belief and
-ritual during the period B.C. 400-A.D. 100 than we are with that of
-the pagans. The content of the Greek mysteries is an enigma to our
-best Hellenists; we know next to nothing of the inside of Mithraism;
-for the oriental cults of the late Roman republic and early empire
-we are lamentably deficient in writings that might exhibit to us the
-arcana of their worship and the texture of their beliefs. Not so with
-Judaism. Here we have the prophets, old and late; for the two centuries
-B.C. we have the apocrypha, including the Maccabean books; we have the
-so-called Books of Enoch, of Jubilees, of the Twelve Patriarchs, the
-Fourth Ezra, Baruch, Sirach, and many others. We have the voluminous
-works of Philo and Josephus for the first century of our era; we have
-the Babylonian and other Talmuds preserving to us a wealth of Jewish
-tradition and teaching of the first and second centuries. Here let
-Mr. Robertson speak. As regards the Lord's Prayer and the Sermon
-on the Mount, he insists (p. 415 foll.) that they were inspired by
-parallel passages in the Talmud and the Apocrypha, and he argues with
-perfect good sense for the priority of the Talmud in these words:
-"It is hardly necessary to remark here that the Talmudic parallels
-to any part of the Sermon on the Mount cannot conceivably have been
-borrowed from the Christian gospels; they would as soon have borrowed
-from the rituals of the pagans."
-
-[Yet affirms that Christists, indistinguishable from Jews, did
-so borrow wholesale] And yet he asks us to believe that a nucleus
-of Jews, hidden in Jerusalem, the heart of Judaism, a sect whose
-apostles were Judaizers and vehement defenders of circumcision--all
-this he admits--were, as late as the last half of the first century,
-maintaining among themselves in secret a highly eclectic pagan cult;
-that they evolved "a gospel myth from scenes in pagan art" (p. 327);
-that they took a sort of modern archaeological interest in pagan art
-and sculpture, and derived thence most of their literary motifs;
-that the figure of Jesus is an alloy of Dionysus, Osiris, Adonis,
-Krishna, AEsculapius, and fifty other ancient gods and demigods,
-with the all-important "Sun-God-Saviour Joshua, son of Miriam";
-that the story of Peter rests on "a pagan basis of myth" (p. 340);
-that Maria is the true and original form of the Hebrew Miriam, and
-is the same name as Myrrha and Moira (moira), etc., etc.
-
-[The central idea of a God Joshua a figment of Robertson's fancy]
-Such are the mutually destructive arguments on the strength of which
-we are to adopt his thesis of the unhistoricity of Jesus. His books,
-like those of Dr. Drews, are a welter of contradictory statements,
-unreconciled and irreconcilable. Nevertheless, they reiterate them in
-volume after volume, like orthodox Christians reiterating articles of
-faith and dogmas too sacred to be discussed. Who ever heard before them
-of a Jewish cult of a Sun-God-Saviour Joshua? Such a cult must have
-been long extinct when the book of Joshua was written. Who ever heard
-of this Sun-god having for his mother a Miriam, until Mr. Robertson
-discovered a late Persian gloss to the effect that Joshua, son of Nun,
-had a mother of the name? Even if this tradition were not so utterly
-worthless as it is, it would prove nothing about the Sun-god. On the
-basis of such gratuitous fancies we are asked to dismiss Jesus as a
-myth. [It does not even explain the birth legends of the Christians] It
-does not even help us to understand how the myths of the Virgin Birth
-arose. Since when, I would like to know, did we need such evidence
-against that legend? If I thought that the rebuttal of it depended
-on such evidence, I should be inclined to become a good Papist and
-embrace it. It is enough for me to have ascertained, by a comparison
-of texts and by a study of early Christian documents, that it is a
-late accretion on the traditions of Jesus of Nazareth. That is the
-real evidence, if any be wanted, against it. Mr. Robertson admits that
-the first two chapters of Luke which are supposed--perhaps wrongly--to
-embody this legend are "a late fabulous introduction." Again he writes
-(p. 189): "Only the late Third Gospel tells the story (of Luke i and
-ii); the narrative (of the Birth) in Matthew, added late as it was
-to the original composition, which obviously began at what is now
-the third chapter, has no hint of the taxing."
-
-[Evidence of the Protevangelion] This is good sense, and I am indebted
-to him for pointing out that so loosely was the myth compacted that
-in the Protevangelion (c. 17) the statement is that it was decreed
-"that all should be enrolled who were in Bethlehem of Judaea," not
-all Jews over the entire world.
-
-[Robertson assumes the antiquity of the legend merely to suit his
-theory] Surely all this implies that the legend of the miraculous birth
-was no part of the earliest tradition about Jesus. Nevertheless, it
-is so important for Mr. Robertson's thesis (that Jesus was a mythical
-personage) that he should from the first have had a mythical mother,
-that he insists on treating the whole of Christian tradition, early
-or late, as a solid block, and argues steadily that the Virgin Birth
-legend was an integral part of it from the beginning. Jesus was a
-myth; as such he must have had a myth for a mother. Now a virgin
-mother is half-way to being a mythical one. Therefore Mary was a
-virgin, and must from the beginning have been regarded as such by the
-"Christists." Such are the steps of his reasoning.
-
-[The "Christists" at once extravagantly pagan and extravagantly
-monotheist and Jewish] I have adduced in the preceding pages a
-selection of the mythological equations of Mr. Robertson and Dr. Drews
-in order that my readers may realize how faint a resemblance between
-stories justifies, in their minds, a derivation or borrowing of
-one from the other. Nor do they ever ask themselves how Jewish
-"Christists" were likely to come in contact with out-of-the-way
-legends of Bacchus or Dionysus, of Hermes, of old Pelasgic deities,
-of Cybele and Attis and Isis, Osiris and Horus, of Helena Dendrites,
-of Krishna, of Janus, of sundry ancient vegetation-gods (for they
-are up to the newest lights), of Apollonius of Tyana, of AEsculapius,
-of Herakles and Oceanus, of Saoshyant and other old Persian gods
-and heroes, of Buddha and his kith and kin, of the Eleusinian and
-other ancient mysteries. Prick them with a pin, and out gushes
-this lore in a copious flood; and every item of it is supposed
-to have filled the heads of the polymath authors of the Christian
-Gospels. Every syllable of these Gospels, every character in them,
-is symbolic of one or another of these gods and heroes. Hear,
-O Israel: "Christians borrowed myths of all kinds from Paganism"
-(Christianity and Mythology, p. xii). And we are pompously assured
-(p. xxii, op. cit.) that this new "mythic" system is, "in general,
-more 'positive,' more inductive, less a priori, more obedient to
-scientific canons, than that of the previous critics known to me
-[i.e., to Mr. Robertson] who have reached similar anti-traditional
-results. It substitutes an anthropological basis, in terms of
-the concrete phenomena of mythology, for a pseudo-philosophical
-presupposition." Heaven help the new science of anthropology!
-
-[A receipt for the concoction of a gospel] And what end, we may ask,
-had the "Jesuists" and "Christists" (to use Mr. Robertson's jargon)
-in view, when they dressed up all this tagrag and bobtail of pagan
-myth, art, and ritual, and disguised it under the form of a tale of
-Messianic Judaism? For that and nothing else is, on this theory, the
-basis and essence of the Gospels. Was it their aim to honour paganism
-or to honour Jewish monotheism, when they concocted a "Christ cult"
-which is "a synthesis of the two most popular pagan myth-motives,
-[24] with some Judaic elements as nucleus and some explicit ethical
-teaching superadded" (p. 34). We must perforce suppose that the
-Gospels were a covert tribute to the worth and value of Pagan
-mythology and religious dramas, to pagan art and statuary. If we
-adopt the mythico-symbolical method, they can have been nothing
-else. Its sponsors might surely condescend to explain the alchemy
-by which the ascertained rites and beliefs of early Christians were
-distilled from these antecedents. The effect and the cause are so
-entirely disparate, so devoid of any organic connection, that we would
-fain see the evolution worked out a little more clearly. At one end
-of it we have a hurly-burly of pagan myths, at the other an army of
-Christian apologists inveighing against everything pagan and martyred
-for doing so, all within a space of sixty or seventy years. I only hope
-the orthodox will be gratified to learn that their Scriptures are a
-thousandfold more wonderful and unique than they appeared to be when
-they were merely inspired by the Holy Spirit. For verbal inspiration
-is not, as regards its miraculous quality, in the same field with
-mythico-symbolism. Verily we have discovered a new literary genus,
-unexampled in the history of mankind. You rake together a thousand
-irrelevant thrums of mythology, picked up at random from every age,
-race, and clime; you get a "Christist" to throw them into a sack
-and shake them up; you open it, and out come the Gospels. In all the
-annals of the Bacon-Shakesperians we have seen nothing like it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE
-
-
-[Multiplicity of documents converging on and involving an historical
-Jesus] I have remarked above that if the Gospel of Mark were an
-isolated writing, if we knew nothing of its fortunes, nothing of any
-society that accepted it as history; if, above all, we were without any
-independent documents that fitted in with it and mentioned the persons
-and events that crowd its pages, then it would be a possible hypothesis
-that it was like the Recognitions of Clement, a skilfully contrived
-romance. Such a hypothesis, I said, would indeed be improbable, yet
-not unthinkable or self-destructive. But as a matter of fact we have
-an extensive series of documents, independent of Mark, yet attesting
-by their undesigned coincidences its historicity--not, of course,
-in the sense that we must accept everything in it, but anyhow in
-the sense that it is largely founded on fact and is a record of real
-incident. Were it a mere romance of events that never happened, and
-of people who never lived, would it not be a first-class miracle that
-in another romance, concocted apart from it and in ignorance of its
-contents, the same outline of events met our gaze, the same personages,
-the same atmosphere, moral, intellectual, and religious, the same
-interests? If in a third and fourth writing the same phenomenon
-recurred, the marvel would be multiplied. Would any sane person doubt
-that there was a substratum of fact and real history underlying them
-all? It would be as if several tables in the gambling saloon of Monte
-Carlo threw up the same series of numbers--say, 8, 3, 11, 7, 33,
-21--simultaneously and independently of one another. A few of the
-habitues--for Monte Carlo is a great centre of superstition--might
-take refuge in the opinion that the tables were bewitched; but most
-men would infer that there was human collusion and conspiracy to
-produce such a result, and that the croupiers of the several tables
-were in the plot.
-
-[Mark and Q the two earliest documents] Now Mark's Gospel does not
-stand alone. As I have pointed out in Myth, Magic, and Morals, Luke
-and Matthew hold in solution as it were a second document, called Q
-(Quelle), or the non-Marcan, which yields us a few incidents and a
-great many sayings and parables of Jesus. Now this second document,
-so utterly separate from and independent of Mark that it does not
-even allude to the crucifixion and death episodes, nevertheless has
-Jesus all through for its central figure. No doubt it ultimately came
-out of the same general medium as Mark; but that consideration does
-not much diminish the weight of its testimony. If I met two people
-a hundred yards apart both coming from St. Paul's Cathedral, and if
-they both assured me that they had just been listening to a sermon
-of Dr. Inge's, I should not credit them the less because they had
-been together in church.
-
-That both these documents--I mean Mark and the non-Marcan--were in
-circulation at a fairly early date is certain on many grounds. So great
-a scholar as Wellhausen, a scholar untrammelled by ties of orthodoxy,
-shows in his commentary that Mark, as it lies before us, must have
-been redacted before the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70; so vague are
-its forecasts of disasters that were to befall the holy city. In Luke,
-on the other hand, these forecasts are accommodated to the facts,
-as we should expect to be the case in an author who wrote after the
-blow had fallen.
-
-[The first and third Gospels constitute two more such documents]
-And another consideration arises here. Matthew and Luke wrote quite
-independently of one another--for they practically never join hands
-across Mark--and yet they both assume in their compilations that these
-two basal documents, Mark and the non-Marcan, are genuine narratives of
-real events. They allow themselves, indeed, according to the literary
-fashion of the age, to re-arrange, modify, and omit episodes in them;
-but their manner of handling and combining the two documents is in
-general inexplicable on the hypothesis that they considered them to
-be mere romances. They are too plainly in earnest, too eager to find
-in them material for the life of a master whom they revered. Luke in
-particular prefixes a personal letter to one Theophilus, explaining
-the purpose of his compilation. In it we find not a word about the
-transcribing of Osiris dramas. On the contrary, it will set in order
-for Theophilus a story in which he had already been instructed. It
-is clear that Theophilus had already been made acquainted with "the
-facts about Jesus," perhaps insufficiently, perhaps along lines which
-Luke deprecated. [Luke's prologue argues an indefinite number more
-of such documents] However this be, Luke desires to improve upon the
-information which Theophilus had so far acquired about Jesus. It is
-clear that written and unwritten traditions of Jesus were already
-disseminated among believers. The prologue is inexplicable otherwise,
-and it implies a whole series of witnesses to the historicity of Jesus
-prior to Luke himself, of whom, as I have said, we still have Mark
-and can reconstruct Q. Both Matthew (whoever he was) and Luke, then,
-are convinced of the historicity of Jesus, and regarded Mark and Q as
-historical sources. They exploit them, and they also try to fill up
-lacunas left in these basal documents, and in particular to supply
-their readers with some account of his birth and upbringing. Both
-supplements, of course, are largely fictitious, that of Matthew
-in particular; but they both testify to a fixed consciousness and
-belief among early Christians that the Messiah was a real historical
-person. Such an interest in the birth and upbringing of Jesus as
-Matthew and Luke reveal could never have been felt by sectaries who
-were well aware that he was not a real person, but a solar myth and
-first cousin of Osiris. Had he been known, even by a few believers and
-no more, to have been not a man but a composite myth, people would
-not have craved for details, even miraculous, about his birth and
-parentage and upbringing. Was it necessary to concoct human pedigrees
-for a solar myth, and to pretend that Jacob begat Joseph, and Joseph
-begat Jesus? The very idea is absurd. They wanted such details, and
-got them, just as did the worshippers of Plato, Alexander, Augustus,
-Apollonius, and other famous men. In connection with Osiris and
-Dionysus such details were never asked for and never supplied.
-
-[Implications of Luke's exordium] In the covering letter which forms
-a sort of exordium to his Gospel the following are the words in which
-Luke assures us that others before himself had planned histories of
-the life of Jesus:--
-
-
- Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to draw up a narrative
- concerning those matters which have been fully established (or
- fulfilled) among us, even as they delivered them unto us which
- from the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word,
- it seemed good to me also, having traced out the course of all
- things accurately from the first, to write them unto thee in order,
- most excellent Theophilus; that thou mightest know the certainty
- concerning the things wherein thou wast instructed.
-
-
-This is not the tone of a man who trades in sun-myths. The passage
-has a thoroughly bona fide ring, and declares (1) that Theophilus had
-already been instructed in the Gospel narrative, but not so accurately
-as the writer could wish; (2) that several accounts of Jesus's life
-and teaching were in circulation; (3) that these accounts were based
-on the traditions of those who had seen Jesus and assisted in the
-diffusion of his Messianic and other teachings.
-
-The passage cannot be later than A.D. 100, and is probably as early
-as A.D. 80; many scholars put it earlier. In any case, it reveals a
-consciousness, stretching far back among believers, that Jesus had
-really lived and died. Moreover, it is from the pen of one who either
-had himself visited, with Paul, James the brother (or, according to
-the orthodox, the half-brother) of Jesus at Jerusalem (Acts xxi, 17),
-or--if not that--anyhow had in his possession and made copious use
-of a travel document written by the companion of Paul.
-
-[Luke probably used a document independent of Mark and Q] A study
-of Luke also suggests that he had a third narrative document of his
-own. Thus, without going outside the Synoptic Gospels, we have two,
-if not three, wholly independent accounts of the doings and sayings
-of Jesus, and an inferential certainty that they were not the only
-ones which then existed. In the earliest Christian writers, moreover,
-citations occur that cannot well be referred to the canonical Gospels,
-but which may very well have been taken from the other narratives which
-Luke assures us were in the possession of the earliest Church. These
-narratives, like all other wholly or partly independent documents,
-must have differed widely from one another in detail; for their authors
-probably handled the tradition as freely as Matthew and Luke handle
-Mark. [Messianic and apocalyptic character of these early documents]
-But the inspiring motive of them all was the belief that a human
-Messiah had founded, or rather begun, the community of believers in
-Palestine. That any of them were contemporary is improbable, for the
-simple reason that the eyes of believers were turned, not backward on
-the life of the herald, but forward to the Kingdom of God or kingdom
-of heaven on earth which he heralded. They all felt themselves to be
-living in the last days, and that the Kingdom was to surprise many
-of them during their lifetime. Nor among the earliest believers
-was this expectation confined to Jews alone; it extended equally
-to Gentile converts. Thus Paul, in his epistles to the Corinthians,
-labours to answer the pathetic query his converts had addressed to
-him--namely, why the kingdom to come so long delayed; why many of them
-had fallen sick and some had died, while yet it tarried. Men and women
-who breathed such an atmosphere of tense expectation, as a passage
-like this and as the Gospel parables reveal, could not be solicitous
-for annals of the past. Still less is the attitude revealed that of
-people nurtured on ritual dramas of an annually slain and annually
-resuscitated god; for in that case they only needed to wait for the
-manifestation they yearned for, until the following spring, when the
-god would rise afresh to secure salvation for his votaries. The tone
-of this passage of Paul, as of all the earliest Christian documents,
-shows that the mind's eye of the common believer, as had been the
-founder's, was dazzled with the apocalyptic splendours soon to
-be revealed, with the beatitudes shortly to be fulfilled in the
-faithful. They were as wayfarers walking in a dark night towards
-a light which is far off, yet, because of its brightness and of the
-lack of an interposed landscape to fix the perspective, seems close at
-hand. Many a Socialist workman, especially on the continent, cherishes
-a similar dream of a good time coming ere long for himself and his
-fellows. He has no sense of the difficulties which for many a weary
-year--perhaps for ever--will hinder the realization of his passionately
-desired ideal. It is better so, for we live by our enthusiasms, and
-are the better for having indulged in them; if the labourer had none,
-he would be a chilly, useless being. Happily the Socialist seldom
-reflects how commonplace he would probably find his ideal if it were
-suddenly realized around him. Such were the eschatological hopes and
-dreams rife in the circles among which the Synoptic Gospels and their
-constituent documents first saw the light; they are revealed on their
-every page, and, needless to say, are inexplicable on Mr. Robertson's
-hypothesis. Devoid of sympathy with his subject, incapable of seeing
-it against its true background, without tact or perspective, he has
-never felt or understood the difficulties which beset his central
-hypothesis. He therefore attempts no explanation of them.
-
-[Character of the Fourth Gospel] Of the Fourth Gospel I have already
-said whatever is strictly necessary in this connection. It hangs
-together with the Johannine epistles; and its writer certainly had
-the Gospel of Mark before him, for he derives many incidents from it,
-and often covertly controverts it. It seems to belong to the end of
-the first century, and was in the hands of Gnostic sects fairly early
-in the second--say about 128. When it was written, the Gnosis of the
-Hellenized Jews, and in especial of Philo, was invading the primitive
-community. The Messianic and human traits of Jesus, still so salient
-in Mark and Matthew, though less so in Luke, are receding into the
-background before the opinion that he had been the representation
-in flesh of the eternal Logos. All his conversations are re-written
-to suit the newer standpoint; the homely scenes and surroundings of
-Galilee are forgotten as much as can be, and Samaria and Jerusalem--a
-more resounding theatre--are substituted. The teaching in parables
-is dropped, and we hear no more of the exorcisms of devils. Such
-things were unedifying, and unworthy of so sublime a figure, as
-much in the mind of this evangelist as of the fastidious Professor
-W. B. Smith. Hence it may be said that the Fourth Gospel has made
-the fortune of the Catholic Church; without it Athanasius could never
-have triumphed, nor the Nicene Creed have been penned, nor Professor
-Smith's diatribes have attracted readers. [It is half-docetic] For
-in it Jesus is becoming unreal, a divine pedant masquerading in a
-vesture of flesh. When it was written, the Docetes, as they were
-called, were already beginning to dot the "i's" and cross the "t's"
-of the teachers who sublimated Jesus into the Philonian Logos; and,
-as I said above, it is against them, no doubt, that the caveat--so
-necessary in the context--is entered that in Jesus the Word was
-made flesh. Similarly, in the Johannine epistles certain teachers
-are denounced who declared that Jesus Christ had not come in the
-flesh, and taught that his flesh was only a blind. [Ignatius's
-account of Docetism] We have a fairly full account of these docetic
-teachers in the Epistles of Ignatius, which cannot be much later than
-A.D. 120. From these we gather that they adopted the ordinary tradition
-about Jesus, and believed that he had been born, and eaten and drunk,
-had walked about with his disciples, had delivered his teaching by
-word of mouth, had been crucified by Pontius Pilate, had died, and
-been buried. But all these operations had been unreal and subjective
-in the minds of those who were present at them, as are things we see
-in a dream. They had taken place to the eye and ear of bystanders,
-but not in reality. The partizans, therefore, of the view that Jesus
-never lived deceive themselves when they appeal to the Docetes as
-witnesses on their side. The Docetes lend no colour to their thesis
-of the non-historicity of Jesus, but just the opposite. Drews writes
-(p. 57) that
-
-
- [Drews misunderstands Gnosticism] the Gnostics of the second
- century really questioned the historical existence of Jesus by
- their docetic conception; in other words, they believed only in a
- metaphysical and ideal, not an historical and real, Christ. The
- whole polemic of the Christians against the Gnostics was based
- essentially on the fact that the Gnostics denied the historicity
- of Jesus, or at least put it in a subordinate position.
-
-
-This is nonsense. The Docetes admitted to the full that the Messiah
-had appeared on earth; but, partly to meet the Jewish objections to
-a crucified Messiah, and partly inspired by that contempt for matter
-which was and is common in the East, and has been the inspiring
-motive of much vain asceticism, they shrank from believing that he
-shared with ordinary men their flesh and blood, their secretions and
-evacuations. Matter was too evil for a Messiah, much more for the
-heavenly Logos, to have been encased in it, and so subjected to its
-dominion; to ascribe real flesh to him was to humble him before the
-evil Demiurge, who created matter. [Docetes accepted current Christian
-tradition] The Docetes accordingly took refuge in the idea that his
-body was a phantom, and that in phantom form he had undergone all
-that was related of him in Christian tradition; to which their views
-bear testimony, instead of contradicting it, as Dr. Drews and his
-friends pretend. "If these things," writes Ignatius, "were done by
-our Lord in Semblance, then am I also a prisoner in semblance." This
-means that--mutatis mutandis--the arguments of the Docetes would turn
-Ignatius too, chains and all, into a phantom. Again and again this
-writer affirms that the Docetes believed quite correctly that Jesus
-was born of a virgin and baptized by John, was nailed up for our
-sakes under Pontius Pilate and Herod the Tetrarch, that he suffered,
-died, and raised himself up out of the grave. They only would not
-believe that he underwent and performed all this truly--that is,
-objectively. They insisted that the Saviour had only been among men as
-a phantom, in the same manner as Helen had gone through the siege of
-Troy as a mere phantom. She was not really there, though Greeks and
-Trojans saw and met her daily. She was all the time enjoying herself
-amid the asphodel meadows of the Nile. Even so the disciples, according
-to the Docetes, had heard and seen Jesus all through his ministry;
-yet the body they saw was phantasmal only. The Docetes also argued--so
-we can infer from Ignatius's Epistle to the Church of Smyrna--that, as
-Jesus ate and drank after the resurrection in phantom guise, so he had
-eaten and drunk before his death in no other than phantom guise. The
-answer of Ignatius to this is: "I know and believe that he was in the
-flesh even after the resurrection"; and he forthwith relates how the
-risen Jesus approached Peter and his company, who thought they were
-in the presence of a phantom or ghost, and said to them: "Lay hold and
-handle me, and see that I am not a demon without a body." Everything,
-then, that we read about the Docetes shows that on all points, in
-respect of the miraculous incidents of Jesus's life no less than
-of the natural, they blindly accepted the record of evangelical
-tradition. Their heresy was not to deny what the tradition related,
-but to interpret it wrongly. [Docetism in Philo,] Philo had long before
-set the example of such an interpretation, when in his commentaries,
-which were widely read by Christians in the second century, he asserted
-that the angels who appeared to Abraham at the oak of Mambre, and
-ate and drank with him, only ate and drank in semblance, and not in
-reality. They laid a spell on the eyes of Abraham, and of the other
-guests at the banquet. [and in Tobit] So in the Book of Tobit xii,
-19, the angel says: "All these days did I appear unto you; and I did
-neither eat nor drink, but it was a vision ye yourselves saw."
-
-In the same way, Jesus laid a spell on the eyes of his followers, in
-the belief of this very early sect of Christian believers. [Professor
-Smith and Hippolytus] Professor W. B. Smith, like his two companions,
-writes as if Docetism were an asset in favour of his thesis
-that Christianity began as the cult of a slain God, and that "the
-humanization of this divinity proceeds apace as we descend the stream
-of tradition." Yet the Docetic doctrine, as given in the report of
-Hippolytus, and adduced by Mr. Smith himself (p. 88), exactly bears
-out the estimate of its import with which one rises from a study of
-the Ignatian Epistles. It is from Hippolytus's Refutation of Heresies,
-viii, 10, and runs thus:--
-
-
- Having come from above, he (Jesus) put on the begotten (body),
- and did all things just as has been written in the Gospels;
- he washed himself in Jordan, etc.
-
-
-Hippolytus was in contact with Docetes, and familiar with their
-writings and arguments. What better proof could we have than this
-citation of the fact that they servilely adopted the traditions of
-Jesus recorded in the Gospels? They were not supplying an answer to
-imaginary Jews who had objected to Christianity on the score that
-Jesus had never lived. Their speciality was to interpret the Gospel
-record, which they did not dream of disputing, along phantasmagoric
-lines. There was still left in the Church enough common sense
-and historic insight to brush their interpretation on one side as
-nonsensical.
-
-[Drews misunderstands Justin Martyr] Drews once more has conjured up
-out of Justin Martyr a Jew of the second century who denied the human
-existence of Jesus. The relevant passage is at p. 16 of his Witnesses
-to the Historicity of Jesus, and runs as follows:--
-
-
- It is not true, however, as has recently been stated, that no Jew
- ever questioned the historical reality of Jesus, so that we may
- see in this some evidence for his existence. The Jew Trypho, whom
- Justin introduces in his Dialogue with Trypho, expresses himself
- very sceptically about it. "Ye follow an empty rumour," he says,
- "and make a Christ for yourselves." "If he was born and lived
- somewhere, he is entirely unknown" (viii, 3). This work appeared
- in the second half of the second century; it is therefore the
- first indication of a denial of the human existence of Jesus,
- and shows that such opinions were current at the time.
-
-
-Professor Drews has, I regret to say, failed to read his text
-intelligently. So I will transcribe the passage of Justin in full,
-premising that it was more probably written in the first than in the
-second half of the second century. The dialogue is between a Jew and
-an ex-Platonist who has turned Christian, and the Jew says with an
-ironical smile to the Christian:--
-
-
- The rest of your arguments I admit, and I admire your religious
- enthusiasm. Nevertheless, you would have done better to stick to
- Plato's or any other sage's philosophy, practising the virtues of
- endurance and continence and temperance, rather than let yourself
- be ensnared by false arguments and follow utterly worthless
- men. For if you had remained loyal to that form of philosophy and
- lived a blameless life, there was left a hope of your rising to
- something better. But as it is you have abandoned God and put your
- trust in man, so what further hope is left to you of salvation? If,
- then, you are willing to take advice from myself--for I already
- have come to regard you as a friend--begin first by circumcising
- yourself, and next keep in the legal fashion the sabbath and the
- festivals and the new moons of God, and in a word fulfil all the
- commandments written in the Law, and then perhaps you will attain
- unto God's mercy. But Messiah (or Christ), even supposing he has
- come into being and exists somewhere or other, is unrecognized,
- and can neither know himself as such nor possess any might,
- until Elias having come shall anoint him and make him manifest
- unto all. But you (Christians), having lent ear to a vain report,
- feign a sort of Messiah unto yourselves, and for his sake are
- now rashly going to perdition.
-
-
-There is a parallel passage in the Dialogue, c. cx, where the
-Christian interlocutor, after reciting the prophecy of Micah, iv,
-1-7, adds these words:--
-
-
- I am quite aware, gentlemen, that your rabbis admit all the words
- of the above passage to have been uttered about, and to refer to
- the Messiah; and I also know that they deny him so far to have
- come, or, if they say he has come, then that it is not yet known
- who he is. However, when he is manifested and in glory, then,
- they say, it will be known who he is. And then, so they say,
- the things foreshadowed in the above passage will come to pass.
-
-
-[The Jews in Justin testify to Jesus's historicity] The sense, then,
-of the passage adduced by Drews is perfectly clear, and exactly the
-opposite of that which he puts upon it. The Christ or Messiah referred
-to by the Jew is not that man of Nazareth in whom the Christians
-had falsely recognized the signs of Messiahship. No, he is, on the
-contrary, the Messiah expected by the Jews; but the latter has not so
-far come; or, if he has come, still lurks in some corner unrecognized
-until such time as Elias, to whom the role appertains, shall appear
-again and proclaim him. There is not a word of Jesus of Nazareth not
-having come, or of his being still unrecognized. The gravamen of the
-Jew is that the ex-Platonist had been chicaned by Christians into
-believing that the Messiah had already come in the person of Jesus,
-and had been recognized in him. The passage, therefore, has exactly
-the opposite bearing to what Drews imagines.
-
-[Second century Jews did not detest mere shadows] There is, too,
-another very significant point to be made in this connection. It is
-this, that the Jews of that age would not have borne the bitter grudge
-they did against the Christians if the latter had merely devoted
-themselves to the cult of a mythical personage, a Sun-God-Saviour,
-who never existed at all. They were quite well capable of ridiculing
-myths of such a kind, as the story of Bel and the Dragon shows. Jesus,
-however, was a real memory to them, and one which they detested. Their
-hatred for him was that which you bear for a man who has upset your
-religion and trampled on your prejudices--the sort of hatred that
-Catholics have for the memory of Luther and Calvin; it was not in any
-way akin to their mockery of idols, their disgust for the demons that
-inhabited them, their abhorrence of their votaries. It was hatred
-of a religious antagonist, odium theologicum of the purest kind,
-and hatred like that with which the Ebionites for generations hated
-the memory of Paul. Jesus had violated and set at naught the law of
-Moses. A solar myth could not do that.
-
-To this hatred of the Jews for the memory of Jesus, and to the early
-date at which it showed itself, Dr. Drews himself bears witness when,
-on p. 12 of the work cited, he writes as follows:--
-
-
- There is no room for doubt that after the destruction of Jerusalem,
- and especially during the first quarter of the second century,
- the hostility of the Jews and Christians increased; indeed, by the
- year 130 the hatred of the Jews for the Christians became so fierce
- that a rabbi whose niece had been bitten by a serpent preferred
- to let her die rather than see her healed "in the name of Jesus."
-
-
-[Chwolson on early Rabbis] Chwolson argues from this and similar
-episodes that the Rabbis of the second half of the first century,
-or the beginning of the second, were well acquainted with the person
-of Christ. "Here," says Drews, "he clearly deceives himself and
-his readers if the impression is given that they had any personal
-knowledge of him." The self-deception is surely on the part of
-Dr. Drews. Chwolson does not imply that any Rabbis of the years 50-100
-had a personal knowledge of Jesus, in the sense of having seen him
-or conversed with him; for he is not given to writing nonsense. He
-does, however, imply that they knew of him as a real man who had
-lived and done them a power of evil. If they had only known him as
-a solar myth, their hostility to his followers, admitted by Drews,
-would be inexplicable; equally inexplicable if, as Dr. W. B. Smith
-contends, he had been a merely heavenly power, a divine Logos or God,
-incidentally the object of a monotheist cult. In that case the Jews
-would rather have been inclined to fall on the neck of the Christians
-and welcome them; and their cult would have been no more offensive
-to them than the theosophy of Philo the Jew, from which it would
-have been hardly distinguishable. Justin Martyr furthermore makes
-statements on this point which perfectly agree with the story of the
-hostile Rabbi adduced by Drews. [In the Jewish synagogues Jesus was
-regularly execrated] Not in one, but in half-a-dozen, passages he
-testifies that in his day the Jews in all their synagogues, at the
-conclusion of their prayers, cursed the memory of Jesus, execrated
-his name and personality (for name meaned personality in that age),
-and poured ridicule on the soi-disant Messiah that had been crucified
-by the Romans. "Even to this day," Justin exclaims (ch. xciii), "you
-persevere in your wickedness, imprecating curses on us because we can
-prove that he whom you crucified is Messiah." He records (ch. cviii)
-"that the Jews chose and appointed emissaries whom they sent forth
-all over the world to proclaim that a godless heresy and unlawful had
-been vamped up by a certain Jesus, a charlatan of Galilee. They were
-to warn their compatriots that the disciples had stolen him out of the
-tomb in which, after being unnailed from the cross, he had been laid,
-and then pretended that he had been raised from the dead and ascended
-into heaven."
-
-[Eusebius's evidence on this point] At first sight the above is a
-mere rechauffe of Matt. xxviii, 13; but Eusebius, who had in his
-hands much first- and second-century literature of the Christians
-and Hellenized Jews that we have not, attests a similar tradition,
-and declares that he found it in the publications of the ancients. [25]
-
-
- The priests and elders of the Jewish race who lived in Jerusalem
- wrote epistles and sent them broadcast to the Jews everywhere among
- the Gentiles, calumniating the teaching of Christ as a brand-new
- heresy and alien to God; and they warned them by letters not to
- receive it. And their apostles took their epistles, written on
- papyrus ... and ran up and down the earth, maligning our account
- of the Saviour.... It is still the custom of the Jews to give
- the name of Apostles to those who carry encyclical letters from
- their rulers.
-
-
-Note that Eusebius does not weave in the story of the disciples
-stealing their Master's body from out of the tomb. From his omission of
-it, and from the dissimilarity of his language, we can infer that the
-"publications of the ancients" from which he derived his information
-were not the works of Justin, but an independent source, which may also
-have been in Justin's hands. In any case, the Jews were not given to
-tilting at windmills; their secular and bitter hatred of the very name
-of Jesus, the relentless war waged with pen and sword from the first
-between the Christians and themselves--all this is attested by the
-earliest writings of the Church. It already colours Luke's Gospel, and
-is a leading inspiration of the Johannine. It alone is all-sufficient
-to dissipate the hypotheses of these twentieth-century fabulists.
-
-[Evidence of Acts] Let us turn to the Acts of the Apostles, the only
-book of the New Testament which contains a history of the Apostolic
-age. In the last half of this book is embedded, as even Van Manen
-admitted, a travel document or narrative of voyage undertaken by
-its author in common with Paul. Whether or no the fellow-traveller
-was the compiler of the Third Gospel and of Acts is not certain; but
-he was assuredly a man named Luke. It does not matter. "It is not,"
-writes Dr. Drews (Christ Myth, p. 19),
-
-
- the imagined historical Jesus, but, if anyone, Paul, who is
- that "great personality" that called Christianity into life as
- a new religion; and the depth of his moral experience gave it
- the strength for its journey, the strength which bestowed upon it
- victory over the other competing religions. Without Jesus the rise
- of Christianity can be quite well understood; without Paul, not so.
-
-
-[Van Manen on Acts and Paul] We infer from the above that, on the
-whole, Drews accepts the narrative of Paul's sayings and doings as
-given in Acts, and does not consider it a mere record of the feats a
-solar hero performed, not on earth, but in heaven. We gather also that
-Mr. Robertson takes the same indulgent view of Acts, for he frequently
-impugns the age of the Pauline epistles and the evidence they contain
-on the strength of "Van Manen's thesis of the non-genuineness" of
-them. "In point of fact," he writes (p. 453), "Van Manen's whole case
-is an argument; Dr. Carpenter's is a simple declaration."
-
-But Van Manen never for a moment questioned the historical reality
-of Jesus. What he insisted upon is [26] that
-
-
- there is no word, nor any trace, of any essential difference as
- regards faith and life between Paul and other disciples.... He
- is a "disciple" among the "disciples." What he preaches is
- substantially nothing else than what their mind and heart are
- full of--the things concerning Jesus.
-
-
-Van Manen, however, allows
-
-
- that Paul's journeyings, his protracted sojourn outside of
- Palestine, his intercourse in foreign parts with converted Jews
- and former heathen, may have emancipated him (as it did so many
- other Jews of the Dispersion) without his knowing it, more or
- less--perhaps in essence completely--from circumcision and other
- Jewish religious duties, customs, and rites.
-
-
-Concerning Paul the same writer says (op. cit., art, "Paul") that
-Acts gives us
-
-
- a variety of narratives concerning him, differing in their dates,
- and also in respect of the influences under which they were
- written.... With regard to Paul's journeys, we can in strictness
- speak with reasonable certainty and with some detail only of
- one great journey, which he undertook towards the end of his
- life. (Acts xvi, 10-17; xx, 5-15; xxi, 1-18; xxvii, 1-xxviii, 16.)
-
-
-[Evidence of the we sections of Acts] It is upon Acts, then, that Van
-Manen bases his estimate, which we just now cited, of Paul's relations
-with the other disciples. He refuses, and rightly, "to assume that
-Acts must take a subordinate place in comparison with the principal
-epistles of Paul." In effect, his assault on the Pauline Epistles
-rests on the assumption that the record of Paul's activity presented
-in Acts is the more trustworthy wherever it appears to conflict with
-the Pauline Epistles, and in particular with Galatians. In accepting
-Van Manen's conclusion, Mr. Robertson implicitly accepts his premises,
-one of which is the superior reliability of Acts in general, and in
-particular of the four sections enumerated above, and characterized by
-the use of the word "we." For the moment, therefore, let us confine
-ourselves to the ninety-seven verses of these "we" sections, which
-are obviously from the pen of a fellow-traveller of Paul. We find it
-recorded in them that Paul was moved by a vision to go and preach the
-Gospel [27] in Macedonia; that at Philippi a certain woman named Lydia,
-who already worshipped God--i.e., was a heathen converted to Jewish
-monotheism--had opened her heart in consequence to give heed to the
-things spoken by Paul. We infer that Paul's Gospel supplemented in
-some way her monotheism. She and her household became something more
-than mere worshippers of God, and were baptized. We learn that Paul
-and his companion reckoned time by the Jewish feasts and fasts--e.g.,
-by the days of unleavened bread--but at the same time were in the habit
-of meeting together with the rest of the faithful on the first day of
-the week, in order to break bread and discourse about the faith. At
-Tyre, as at Troas, they found "disciples" who, like Paul, arranged
-future events, or were warned of them through the Spirit. At Caesarea,
-of Palestine, they stayed with Philip the evangelist, who was one
-of the seven, and had four daughters--virgins who did prophesy. They
-also met there a certain prophet Agabus, who was a mouthpiece of the
-Holy Ghost, and as such foretold that the Jews at Jerusalem, of whose
-plots against Paul we elsewhere hear in these sections, would deliver
-him into the hands of the Gentiles. Paul, in his turn, declares his
-readiness to be bound and die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord
-Jesus. they stay with an early disciple from Cyprus, Mnason, and,
-on reaching Jerusalem, the brethren received them gladly. And the
-day following Paul went in with us unto James; and all the elders
-(of the Church) were present. Paul relates to them the facts of his
-ministry among the Gentiles. In the course of the final voyage to
-Rome, when all the crew have despaired of their lives, because of
-the violence of the storm and of the ship leaking, Paul comes to the
-rescue, and informs them that the angel of the God whom he served,
-and whose he was, had stood by him in the night, saying: "Fear not,
-Paul; thou must stand before Caesar." He therefore could not perish by
-shipwreck, nor they either. In Melita the trivial circumstance that
-the bite of a viper, promptly shaken off by him into the fire, did
-not cause Paul to swell up (i.e., his hand to be inflamed), or die,
-caused the barbarians to acclaim him as a god; and in the sequel the
-sick in the island flock to him, and are healed. At Puteoli Paul and
-his companion find brethren, as they had found them at Jerusalem and
-elsewhere; and presently they enter Rome.
-
-In these sections, then, we have glimpses of a brotherhood disseminated
-all about the Mediterranean whose members were Monotheists of the
-Jewish type, but something besides, in so far as they accepted a
-gospel which Paul also preached, about a Lord Jesus Christ; these
-brethren solemnly broke bread on the first day of the week. In these
-sections we breathe the same atmosphere of personal visions, of angels,
-of prophecy, of direct inspiration of individuals by the Holy Ghost,
-of the cult of virginity, which we breathe in the rest of Acts and
-throughout the Pauline Epistles. [Philip one of the seven] We meet
-also with a Philip, an evangelist, and one of the seven. Who were the
-seven? We turn to an earlier chapter of Acts, [28] and read that in
-the earliest days of the religion at Jerusalem, in order to satisfy
-the claims of the widows of Greek Jews who were neglected in the daily
-ministration, the twelve apostles had called together the multitude
-of the faithful, and chosen seven men of good report, full of the
-Spirit and of wisdom to serve the tables, because they, the Twelve,
-were too busy preaching the word to attend to the catering of the new
-Messianic society. The first on the list of these seven deacons was
-Stephen, the second Philip. When, therefore, in the later passage
-the fellow-traveller of Paul refers to Philip as one of the seven,
-he assumes that we know who the seven were; and he can only expect
-us to know it because we have read the earlier chapter which narrates
-their appointment. The fellow-traveller of Paul, therefore, was aware
-of the appointment of the seven deacons, and testifies thereto. Here
-we have irrefragable evidence of the historicity of verses 1-6 of
-chapter vi of Acts, and at the same time a strong presumption that the
-fellow-traveller of Paul was himself the redactor, if not the author,
-of the earlier chapters (i-xv) of Acts, as he is obviously of the
-last half (ch. xvi to end); for that last half coheres inseparably
-with the contiguous we sections.
-
-[Literary unity of Acts] Have we, then, any way of testing this
-presumption that the fellow-traveller who penned these we sections
-also penned the rest of Acts? We have, though it is one which can
-only appeal to trained philologists, and I doubt if Messrs. Drews and
-Robertson are likely to give to such an argument its due weight. The
-linguistic evidence of the we sections has been sifted and tested by
-Sir John Hawkins in his Horae Synopticae. The statistic of words and
-phrases cannot lie. It proves that the writer of Acts, and consequently
-of the Third Gospel, "was from time to time a companion of Paul in
-his travels, and that he simply and naturally wrote in the first
-person when narrating events at which he had been present."
-
-This is the best hypothesis which a study of the language of Acts
-and of the Third Gospel permits us to accept. I do not say it is
-the only possible one, and I expect Mr. Robertson and his pupil,
-Dr. Drews, to reject it with scorn, for their philology is of the
-sort which recognizes in Maria the same name as Moira and Myrrha. The
-only other explanations of the presence of we in these sections are,
-either that a compiler who used the diary of the fellow-traveller
-left it standing in the document when he embodied it in his narrative,
-through carelessness and by accident, or else that he left it of set
-design, and because he wished his readers to identify him with the
-older reporter, and so to pass for a companion of Paul. The first
-of these explanations is very improbable; the second not only much
-too subtle, but out of keeping with the babbling, but credulous,
-honesty which everywhere shows itself in Acts.
-
-[Van Manen's system of dating Luke and Acts would postpone all
-ancient literature to the Middle Ages] It is true that Van Manen
-assumes a priori, and without a shadow of proof, that Luke and Acts
-were written as late as the period 125-150. His only argument is
-that Marcion already had the former in his hands as early as 140;
-and he is prone to make the childish assumption that the date of
-composition of any book in the New Testament is exactly that of
-its earliest ascertainable use by a later author. Such a mode of
-reasoning is utterly false and uncritical, and would, if applied in
-other fields, prove that the great mass of ancient literature was
-not ancient at all, but composed in the tenth or later centuries
-to which our earliest MSS. belong; for we have no citations either
-in contemporary or in nearly contemporary writers of nine-tenths of
-the whole volume of the old Greek and Latin literatures. Most of it,
-if we applied Van Manen's canons of evidence (which, of course, are
-accepted and improved upon by the three writers I am criticizing),
-would turn out to have been written as late as the renaissance of
-European learning. It is a fallacious test, and Van Manen would
-have shrunk from the paradox of enforcing it in regard to any other
-literature than the New Testament. It would appear as if the orthodox
-traditionalists, by insisting that the Bible must not be judged and
-criticized like other books, have prejudiced not merely their own
-cause--that would not matter--but the cause of sober history. They
-have invested it with such an atmosphere of mystery and falsetto, with
-what I may call a Sunday-school atmosphere, that a certain class of
-inquirers rush to an opposite extreme, and insist on canons of evidence
-and authenticity which would, if consistently used, eliminate all
-ancient literature and history. One form of error provokes the other.
-
-[Ephrem's commentary on Acts] We have examined for their evidence
-as regards the Early Church those sections which directly evidence
-the hand of a companion of Paul, who was probably Luke the physician,
-seeing that tradition was unanimous in ascribing the Third Gospel and
-Acts to him. Some scholars have observed that the old Syriac version
-cited by Ephrem the Syrian in his commentary [29] on Acts read in Acts
-xx, 13, as follows: "But I, Lucas, and those with me, going before
-to the ship, set sail for Assos," where the conventional text reads:
-"But we, going before." The pronoun we in this passage cannot include,
-as it usually does, Paul, who had taken another route and had left
-directions that they should call for him; this may have led Ephrem
-to substitute the paraphrase I, Lucas, and those with me. Anyhow,
-without further evidence, we can hardly use Ephrem's citation as a
-proof of the Lucan authorship of Acts. [Evidence of those parts of
-Acts which cohere with the we sections] But we must anyhow consider
-the evidence as to Paul's beliefs which is to be gathered from the
-sections of Acts which immediately cohere with the travel document,
-and which clearly depended for their information on a source closely
-allied to them and of the same age and provenance. Firstly, then,
-it is noticeable that all this last part of Acts is relatively free
-from the fabulous details which mar the earlier part descriptive of
-the exploits of Peter. Next we note that Paul, on entering a city,
-goes straight to the Jewish Synagogue, and that the gospel with which
-he undertakes to supplement their monotheism consisted not of tidings
-about an ancient Palestinian Sun-god named Joshua, or Dionysus or
-Krishna, or Osiris, or AEsculapius, or Mithras, nor about a vegetation
-or harvest demon of any kind, nor about any of the other members
-of the Christian pandemonium invented by Mr. Robertson and adopted
-by Dr. Drews. No; on the contrary, at Thessalonica Paul spent three
-sabbaths trying to convince the Jews in their synagogue that Jesus
-must have been the Jewish Messiah promised in the Jewish scriptures,
-because in accordance with prophecy he had suffered and risen from
-the dead. That he taught them, further, that Jesus, qua Christ or
-Messiah, was also the Jewish king whose advent they looked for, is
-obvious from the fact that he was accused on this occasion, as on
-others, of teaching, "contrary to the decrees of Caesar, that there
-was another king, one Jesus." At Corinth Paul found he was wasting
-time in trying to persuade the Jews that Jesus was the Messiah whose
-advent they expected; and he declared to them that thenceforth he would
-devote himself to spreading his good news among the Gentiles. None
-the less he persisted, wherever he afterwards went, in going first
-to the synagogue, so as to give his compatriots a prior chance of
-accepting his spiritual wares, according to the principle enunciated
-in his epistles, that the promises were for the Jews first and only
-after them for the Gentiles. In Acts xxv, 19, Festus lays before King
-Agrippa the case against Paul as he had learned it from the Jewish
-priests and elders at Jerusalem. It amounted to this, that Paul
-affirmed that "one Jesus, who was dead, was really alive." We learn
-in an earlier passage that Paul was a Jew of Tarsus, an adherent
-of the Pharisaic sect which believed in a general resurrection of
-good Jews, that nevertheless he had persecuted the adherents of
-Jesus of Nazareth and connived at the murder of Stephen. He has some
-difficulty in convincing the Roman governor of Judaea that he is not
-a leader of the Jewish sicarii, or sect of assassins, who were ever
-anxious to range themselves on the side of any Messiah ready to show
-fight against the Roman Legions. The impression made on Festus, the
-Roman Governor, by Paul's prophetic arguments about a Messiah who
-had suffered and then risen from the dead was (Acts xxvi, 24) that
-"much learning had made him mad." We can discern all through this
-last half of Acts that attitude of Paul to Jesus which confronts us
-in his epistles. Nothing interests him except his death on the cross
-and his resurrection. Of the rest of his career we learn nothing. In
-one passage, ch. xiii, 26 foll., we have a slightly more detailed
-account of the staple of Paul's teaching, as delivered to the Jews
-when he encountered them in their synagogues. He informed them of how
-"they that dwell in Jerusalem and their rulers" had condemned Jesus;
-"though they found no cause of death in him, yet asked they of Pilate
-that he should be slain." They afterwards "took him down from the
-tree and laid him in a tomb. But God raised him from the dead: and
-he was seen for many days of them that came up with him from Galilee
-to Jerusalem, who are now his witnesses unto the people."
-
-There is not much of a vegetation-god story about the above concise
-narrative, which, however, is strikingly independent of the Gospel
-legends concerning the burial and resurrection of Jesus; for,
-according to them, it was the friends and adherents of Jesus, and
-not the rulers, who condemned him, that were careful to bury him;
-and his post-resurrectional appearances are here confined to his
-Galilean followers, who, by virtue of their longer association and
-intimacy with him, would be more likely than others to see him after
-death in dreams and visions.
-
-[Six independent and early documents involve a real Jesus] I have
-now reviewed the historical books of the New Testament. We have in
-them at least six monuments--to wit, Mark, the non-Marcan document,
-the parts of the First and Third Gospels peculiar to their authors,
-the Fourth Gospel, and the history of Paul and his mission given in
-chapters xiii to xxviii of Acts. Perhaps I ought to add the first
-twelve chapters of Acts, of which the information, according to
-Van Manen, was derived from an early and lost document, the Acts
-of Peter. That would make seven monuments. Unless all philological
-analysis is false, the Third Gospel and Acts are from the pen of a
-companion of Paul, and cannot be set later than about 90 A.D. Mark,
-which he used, must be indefinitely earlier, and I have pointed out
-that there are good reasons for setting its date before the year
-70. The non-Marcan document, which critics have agreed to call Q
-(Quelle), cannot be later than Mark, and is probably much earlier,
-judging from the fact that it as yet reported no miracles of Jesus,
-nor hints of his death and resurrection. Now all these documents
-are independent of one another in style and contents, yet they
-all have a common interest--namely, the memory of a historical man
-Jesus; and such data as they isolatedly afford about Jesus agree
-on the whole as closely as any profane documents ever agreed which,
-being written independently and from very different standpoints, yet
-refer to one and the same person. If we see a number of convergent
-rays of light streaming down under clouds across a widely extended
-landscape, we infer a central sun behind the clouds by which they are
-all emitted. Similarly, we have here several traditions and documents
-which converge on a single man, and are all and severally meaningless,
-and their genesis impossible of explanation unless we assume that he
-lived. It is sufficiently incredible that one tradition should (to take
-the hypothesis of non-historicity in its most rational form--that,
-namely, of Professor W. B. Smith) allegorize the myth of a Saviour
-God as the career of a man, and that man a Galilean teacher, in whose
-humanity the Church believed from the first. That six or seven parallel
-traditions should all have hit on the same form of deception and
-allegory is, as I said before, as incredible as that several roulette
-tables at Monte Carlo should independently and at one and the same
-time throw up an identical series of numbers. Credat Judaeus Apella,
-These writers who develop the thesis of the non-historicity of Jesus
-because miracles came to be attributed to him--how could they not in
-that age and social medium?--ask us to believe in a miracle which far
-outweighs any which any religionists ever reported of their founder;
-they themselves have fallen into fathomless depths of credulity.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE EPISTLES OF PAUL
-
-
-[Mr. Robertson's vital interpolations] Now let us turn to the Epistles
-of Paul, a person whom these writers, as we have seen above, admit
-to have lived, and to have played no small part in the establishment
-of Christianity.
-
-In using these Epistles, they all three make a reservation to the
-effect that any evidence which they may supply in favour of the
-historicity of Jesus, and which cannot be explained away, shall be
-regarded as an interpolation; and as it is something that slays his
-hypothesis, Mr. Robertson has taught us to call such evidence "vital
-interpolation." It must die in order that his hypothesis may live. They
-also claim, ab initio, to deny Pauline authorship to any epistles that
-may turn out to be a stumbling-block in the way of their theories,
-and lean to the view of Van Manen and others, who held that the
-entire mass of the Pauline letters are the "work of a whole school
-of second-century theologians"--in other words, forgeries of the
-period 130-140. [Defying textual evidence he relegates the Paulines
-to second century] They would, of course, set them later than that,
-only it is overwhelmingly certain that Marcion made about that time
-a collection of ten of them, which he expurgated to suit his views,
-and arranged in order, with Galatians first; this collection he
-called the Apostolicon. It runs somewhat counter to this view that,
-twenty years earlier, we already have a reference to these Epistles in
-Ignatius, who, with an exaggeration hardly excused by the fact that
-he is addressing members of the Ephesian Church, informs us that the
-Ephesians are mentioned "in every letter" by Paul. Those who desire
-ample proof that Ignatius was well acquainted with Paul's Epistles
-cannot do better than refer to a work, drawn up and published in 1905
-by members of the Oxford Society of Historical Theology, entitled
-The New Testament in the Apostolic Fathers. In this the New Testament
-originals and the citations are arranged in parallel columns in the
-order of their convincingness.
-
-[Professor Smith's kindred thesis offends the facts] At a still
-earlier date--say A.D. 95--Clement of Rome cites the Paulines. As
-Professor W. B. Smith makes Herculean efforts to show that he did
-not, I venture to set before my readers a passage--chap. xxxv, 5,
-6 of his Epistle face to face with Romans i, 29-32--so that they may
-judge for themselves. I print identical words in leaded type:--
-
-
- 1 Clement. Romans.
-
-aporripsantes aph' heauton pasan pepleromenous pase adikia, poneria,
-adikian kai anomian, pleonexian, pleonexia, kakia, mestous, phthonou,
-ereis, kakoetheias te kai dolous phonou, eridos, dolou, kakoetheias,
-psithyrismous te kai katalalias, psithyristas, katalalous,
-theostygian, hyperephanian te theostygeis, hybristas,
-kai alazoneian, kenedoxian te hyperephanous, alazonas, epheuretas
-kai aphiloxenian. kakon, goneusin apeitheis,
- asynetous, asynthetous, astorgous,
-tauta gar hoi prassontes aneleemonas, hoitines to dikaioma
-stygetoi to theo hyparchousin; tou theou epignontes, hoti ta
-ou monon de hoi prassontes auta, toiauta prassontes axioi thanatou
-alla kai hoi syneudokountes eisin, ou monon auta poiousin, alla
-autois. kai syneudokousi tois prassousi.
-
-
-The dependence of Clement's Epistle on that of Paul's Letter to
-the Romans is equally visible if the English renderings of them be
-compared, as follows:--
-
-
- [Translation.]
-
- Clement xxxv, 5, 6. Romans i, 29-32.
-
-Casting away from ourselves all Being filled with all
-unrighteousness and unrighteousness, wickedness,
-lawlessness, covetousness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of
-strife, malignity, and deceit; envy, murder, strife, deceit,
-whisperings and backbitings, malignity; whisperers, backbiters,
-hatred of God, haughtiness and hateful to God, insolent, haughty,
-boastfulness, vainglory and boastful, inventors of evil things,
-inhospitableness. disobedient to parents, without
- understanding, covenant-breakers,
-For they that practise these without natural affection,
-things are hateful to God. And unmerciful: who, knowing the
-not only they which practise ordinance of God, that they which
-them, but also they who consent practise such things are worthy of
-with them. death, not only do the same, but also
- consent with them that practise them.
-
-
-Some of the sources of Paul approximate in text still more to
-Clement--e.g., the reading poneria "wickedness" is not certain. In
-some, "malignity" precedes "deceit." In some, "and" is added before
-the words "not only."
-
-In the above parallel passages the agreement both in kind and sequence
-of the lists of vices is too close to be accidental; and this is
-clinched by the identity of sense and form of the clauses which follow
-the two lists. Nor is this the only example of the influence of the
-Paulines on Clement. We give one more, giving the English only:--
-
-
- Paul (1 Cor. i, 11-13). Clement xlvii, 1.
-
-For it hath been signified unto me Take ye up the epistle of the
-concerning you, my brethren, by blessed Paul, the Apostle, what
-those of Chloe, that there are did he write first to you in the
-contentions among you. Now this I beginning of the good tidings. In
-mean, that each one of you saith, I verity he spiritually indited you
-am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I a letter about himself and Cephas
-of Cephas; and I of Christ. and Apollos.
-
-
-Here Clement only alludes to Paul's letter, not citing it, and he
-betrays a knowledge of the order and times in which Paul wrote his
-Epistles; for he declares that 1 Corinthians was written by Paul in
-the beginning of the good tidings--i.e., of his preaching to them of
-the Gospel. The Corinthians had been first evangelized by him three
-years before. The same phrase meets us in the same sense in Paul
-(Philippians iv, 15):--
-
-
- And ye yourselves also know, ye Philippians, that in the beginning
- of the Gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, etc.
-
-
-Altogether there are thirty passages in Clement's Epistle to the
-Corinthians which indicate more or less clearly a knowledge of the
-Pauline Epistles, including that to Hebrews. If we were tracing
-the relation of two profane authors, no scholar would hesitate to
-acknowledge a direct influence of one on the other. Merely because one
-of them happens to belong to the New Testament, such writers as Van
-Manen, W. B. Smith, et hoc genus omne, feel themselves in duty bound
-to run their heads against a brick wall. The responsibility, it must
-be admitted, lies at the door of orthodox theologians. For centuries
-independent scholars have been warned off the domain of so-called
-sacred literature. The Bible might not be treated as any other book. I
-once heard the late Canon Liddon forecast the most awful fate for
-Oxford if it ever should be. The nemesis of orthodox superstition is
-that such writers as those we are criticizing cannot bring themselves
-to treat the book fairly, as they would other literature; nor is any
-hypothesis too crazy for them when they approach Church history. The
-laity, in turn, who too often do not know their right hand from their
-left, are so justly suspicious of the evasions and arriere-pensee
-of orthodox apologists that they are ready to accept any wild and
-unscholarly theory that labels itself Rationalist.
-
-[Presuppositions of the argument from silence] The Epistles of Paul,
-then, must obviously have been widely known before Marcion issued an
-expurgated edition of them in the year 140. We have shown that many
-of them were familiar to Clement of Rome in the last decade of the
-first century. But even if we had no traces of the Pauline Epistles
-before the year 140, as Van Manen and these writers in the teeth of
-the evidence maintain, it would not follow that they were as late
-as the first irrefragable use of them by a later author. Professor
-W. B. Smith's argument is based on the supposed silence of earlier
-authors, and he entitles his chapter on this subject "Silentium
-Saeculi." A magnificent petitio principii! He has never thought
-over the aptitudes of the "argument from silence." This argument,
-as MM. Langlois and Seignobos remark in their Introduction to the
-Study of History (translation by Berry; London, Duckworth, 1898),
-
-
- is based on the absence of indications with regard to a fact. From
- the circumstance of the fact [e.g., of Paul's writing certain
- epistles] not being mentioned in any document it is inferred
- that there was no such fact.... It rests on a feeling which in
- ordinary life is expressed by saying: "If it were true, we should
- have heard of it." ... In order that such reasoning should be
- justified it would be necessary that every fact should have been
- observed and recorded in writing, and that all the records should
- have been preserved. Now the greater part of the documents which
- have been written have been lost, and the greater part of the
- events which happen are not recorded in writing. In the majority
- of cases the argument would be invalid. It must, therefore, be
- restricted to the cases where the conditions implied in it have
- been fulfilled. It is necessary not only that there should be
- now no documents in existence which mention the fact in question,
- but that there should never have been any.
-
-
-Now it is notorious that in the case of the earliest Christian
-literature there was a special cause at work of a kind to lead to
-its disappearance; this was the perpetual alteration of standards of
-belief, and the anxiety of rival schools of thought to destroy one
-another's books. The philosophic authors above cited further point
-out that "every manuscript is at the mercy of the least accident;
-its preservation or destruction is a matter of pure chance." In the
-case of Christian books malice prepense and odium theologicum were
-added to accident and mere chance.
-
-How, then, can Mr. W. B. Smith be sure that there were not fifty
-writings before the year 140 which by citation or otherwise attested
-the earlier existence of all or some of the Pauline Epistles? We
-have the merest debris of the earliest Christian literature. What
-right has he to argue as if he had the whole of it in the hollow of
-his hand? In such a context the argument from silence is absolute
-rubbish, and he ought to know it. But, alas, the orthodox apologist
-has trained him in this sphere to be content with "demonstrations"
-which in any other would be at once extinguished by ridicule.
-
-[Date of Paulines to be determined by contents] Obviously the
-genuineness and date of the Pauline Epistles can only be determined by
-their contents, and not by a supposed deficiency of allusions to them
-in a literature that is well-nigh completely lost to us. Judged by
-these considerations, and by the hundreds of undesigned coincidences
-with the Book of Acts, we must conclude in regard to most of them
-that they are from the hand of the Paul who is so familiar a figure
-in that book. The author of the Paulines has just the same supreme
-and exclusive interest in the crucifixion, death, and resurrection
-of Jesus the Messiah as the Paul of Acts; he manifests everywhere
-the same aloofness from the earthly life and teaching of Jesus. They
-yield the same story as does Acts of his birth and upbringing, of his
-persecution of the Messianist followers of Jesus and of his conversion;
-much the same record of his missionary travels can be reconstructed
-from the Letters as we have in Acts. Yet there is no sign of borrowing
-on either side. By way of casting doubt on the Pauline Letters the
-deniers of the historicity insist on the fact that in Acts there
-is no hint of Paul ever having written Epistles to the Churches
-he created or visited. Why should there be? [Undesigned agreement
-between Acts and Paulines] To a companion Paul must have been much
-more than a mere writer of letters. To Luke the letter writing must
-have seemed the least important part of Paul's activity, although
-for us the accident of their survival makes the Epistles seem of
-prime importance. In the Epistles, on the other hand, it is objected
-that there is no indication of any use of Acts. How could there be,
-seeing that the book was not penned (except on Van Manen's hypothesis)
-until long after the Epistles had been written and sent? I admit that
-Paul's account in Galatians of his personal history is difficult to
-reconcile with Acts, and has provided a regular crux for critics
-of every school. [30] The numerous coincidences, however, of the
-two writings are all the more worthy of attention. If we found them
-agreeing pat with each other we should reasonably suspect some form
-of common authorship, if not of collusion. As it is they attest one
-another very much in the way in which the letters of Cicero attest
-and are attested by Sallust, Julius Caesar, and other contemporary
-or later writers of Roman history. There is neither that complete
-accord nor complete discord between Acts and Paulines, which would
-lead a competent historian to distrust either as fairly contemporary
-and trustworthy witnesses to the same epoch and province of history.
-
-[Paul witnesses a real Jesus] The testimony of Paul to a real and
-historical Jesus is to be gathered from those passages in which he
-directly refers to him or in which he refers to his brethren and
-disciples, for obviously a solar myth cannot have had brethren nor
-have personally commissioned disciples and apostles. I have pointed
-out in the first chapter of Myth, Magic, and Morals that the interest
-of Paul in the historical Jesus was slender, and have explained why
-it was so. But that is no excuse for ignoring it, or pretending it
-is not there.
-
-[Summary of Pauline evidence] What does it amount to? This, that
-Jesus the Messiah "was born of the seed of David according to the
-flesh" (Rom. i, 2); that "he was born of a woman, born under the
-law"--that is to say, he was born like any other man, and not, as a
-later generation believed, of a virgin mother. It means also that he
-was born into Jewish circles, and that he was brought up as a Jew,
-obedient to the Mosaic law (Gal. iv, 4). His gospel was intended "for
-the Jews in the first instance, but also for the Greeks" (Rom. i, 16,
-ii, 11). He was "made a minister of the circumcision" (Rom. xv, 8);
-in other words, he had no quarrel with circumcision, even if he did
-not go out of his way to insist on it as part of the Law which, in
-the first Gospel it is recorded, he came not to destroy but to fulfil.
-
-[Evidence of Epistles to Timothy] According to Tim. ii, 8, Jesus
-was "of the seed of David according to my gospel." This implies that
-others than Paul did not admit the Davidic ancestry of Jesus, and it is
-implicitly rejected by Jesus himself in Mark xii, 35, as I point out in
-Myth, Magic, and Morals, ch. xii. That is good proof that the Epistle
-preserves a tradition that was quite independent on the later Gospels;
-and that proves that even if the Epistles to Timothy be not Paul's,
-they are anyhow very early documents, and constitute another witness
-to the historicity of Jesus. In the first of them, ch. vi, 13, we learn
-that Christ Jesus witnessed the good confession before Pontius Pilate.
-
-[Pauline evidence as to death of Jesus,] The passages in which Paul
-insists that Jesus was crucified, died, and rose again are so numerous
-that they almost defy collection. In 1 Cor. xv, 3, Paul relates the
-story of the resurrection at length. He says he had "received" it from
-those who believed before himself. From them he had learned that Christ
-had "died for our sins," had been "buried," and "raised on the third
-day," after which he appeared first "to Cephas" or Peter, next "to the
-Twelve"--i.e., the Twelve Apostles of whom we read in the Gospels that
-Jesus chose them and sent them forth to herald to the Jews the speedy
-approach of the Kingdom of God. Next "he appeared to 500 brethren at
-once" of whom most were still alive when Paul wrote; then "to James,"
-then "to all the apostles," and "last of all" to Paul himself.
-
-[and as to his Hebrew disciples] On the strength of this last vision
-of the Lord, Paul claimed to be as good an apostle as any of those who
-were apostles before him (Gal. i, 17). Accordingly, in 1 Cor. ix, 1,
-he writes in answer to those who pooh-poohed his mission: "Am I not
-an apostle? Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" And again, 2 Cor. xi, 22,
-in the same vein: "Are they Hebrews? So am I. Are they Israelites? So
-am I. Are they the seed of Abraham? So am I. Are they ministers of
-Christ? I speak as one beside myself. I am more; in labours more
-abundantly, in prisons," etc.
-
-So 2 Cor. xii, 11: "In nothing came I behind the very chiefest
-apostles."
-
-From such passages we can realize what a purely Hebrew business the
-Church was to begin with. To be an apostle you had to be at least
-a Hebrew, and it is clear that the earlier apostles challenged the
-right of Paul to call himself an apostle on the ground that he had
-not, as they, been a personal follower of Jesus. Their challenge led
-him to preface his Epistles with an assertion of his apostleship:
-"Paul, an apostle of Messiah Jesus."
-
-We learn further (1 Cor. xi, 23 foll.) how on a certain night "the
-Lord Jesus was betrayed" or handed over to his enemies (N.B.--The
-occasion is referred to as one well known); how he then took bread,
-and when he had given thanks, brake it, etc. All this ill agrees with
-the view that Paul believed the Jesus of the Gospels to be an ancient
-Palestinian Sun-God-Saviour Joshua. We read also (1 Cor. ix, 5) that
-"the brethren of the Lord," like "the rest of the apostles and Cephas,"
-led about wives (probably spiritual ones), and Paul claims the same
-right for himself. In Galatians, ch. ii, he recounts how he went
-up to Jerusalem to visit Cephas, and tarried with him fifteen days,
-on which occasion he associated with James, the brother of the solar
-myth. On another occasion this brother of the Sun-god sent emissaries
-to Antioch to warn Peter or Cephas against eating with Gentiles, as
-Paul had taught him to do. Peter had been "intrusted with the gospel
-of the circumcision," as Paul with that of the uncircumcision. On
-this occasion there was a stand-up quarrel between Paul and the older
-apostle of the sun-myth, and Paul's Epistles ring from beginning to
-end with echoes of his quarrel over circumcision with the sun-myth's
-earlier followers.
-
-How do Mr. Robertson and his friends get round all this evidence? Their
-way out of it is beautifully simple. It consists in ruling out every
-passage as an interpolation that stands in their way. So I have seen
-an ill-tempered chess-player, when he lost his queen, kick over the
-chess-table and begin to swear. That is one device. The other is
-to pretend that the apostles with whom Paul was in personal touch
-were not apostles of the solar god, but of the Jewish high priest,
-who was also president of that secret society in whose bosom were
-acted the ritual and dramas or mystery-plays [31] of annually slain
-Joshuas, of vegetation-gods, of Osiris, Krishna, and the whole pack
-of mythical beings out of whom the Jewish Messiah Jesus was compacted.
-
-[The "myth" of the Twelve] Let us take first the "myth," as
-Mr. Robertson styles it, of the Twelve Apostles. Needless to say,
-Mr. Robertson and his friends regard the Gospel story of their choice
-and mission as a fable. But they have the bad grace to turn up afresh
-in Paul's Epistles. Away with them, therefore, exclaims Mr. Robertson;
-and his friends echo his cry.
-
-"In the documents from which all scientific study of Christian origins
-must proceed--the Epistles of Paul--there is no evidence of such a
-body" (Christianity and Mythology, p. 341).
-
-In the passage in which the Twelve are mentioned (1 Cor. xv,
-3 foll.) we are further instructed "there is one interpolation on
-another." It does not in the least matter that the passage stands in
-every manuscript, and in every ancient version and commentator. It
-offends Mr. Robertson and his friends; so we must cut it out. Bos
-locutus est; and he complacently sums up his argument (p. 342) in
-the words: "Paul, then, knew nothing of a 'twelve.'"
-
-[Difficulties about Judas] And yet he notes (p. 354) that in the
-fragments of the Peter Gospel recently recovered from the sands of
-Egypt, Jesus is still credited with twelve disciples immediately
-after the crucifixion, and it is therein related that they "wept and
-grieved" at the loss of their master. No hint, Mr. Robertson justly
-remarks, is here given of the defection of Judas from the group. No
-more is any hint given of it in Paul's Epistle. These two sources,
-therefore, support each other in a most unexpected manner in ignoring
-the Judas story. At the same time twelve disciples or apostles (in the
-context they are the same thing) are incredible as an interpolation;
-for an interpolator would have adjusted his interpolation to the early
-diffused story of Judas's treason, and have written not "the Twelve,"
-but "the Eleven."
-
-Mr. Robertson admits that "at the stage of the composition of this (the
-Peter) Gospel, the Judas myth was not current," and that therefore the
-"Judas myth" is later than that of the Twelve. It must, by parity
-of reasoning, be later than the text of Paul, which, therefore,
-if interpolated, must have been interpolated before the legend,
-if such it be, of Judas the traitor got abroad. Now we already meet
-with this legend in Mark, and it is taken over from him by the other
-evangelists, Matthew embellishing it with the tale of Judas hanging
-himself, and Luke in Acts with that of his bursting asunder. Papias,
-before A.D. 140, knew of further details of Judas's story of a most
-macabre kind; the story stood also in the lost form of gospel used by
-Celsus, about 160-180, against whom Origen wrote. The tale of Judas,
-then, was of wide and early diffusion; yet Mr. Robertson, as we have
-seen, admits that at the time when the Peter Gospel emerged the Judas
-myth was not yet abroad. Neither, then, can it have been current at the
-stage of the interpolating of Paul's Epistle, and this interpolation,
-therefore, is prior to all the Gospels, to Acts, and to the sources
-used by Papias and by the authors of the Peter Gospel and of Celsus's
-Gospel. Nevertheless, on p. 357, Mr. Robertson, as a last method of
-avoiding Paul's testimony on another point, is inclined to "decide
-with Van Manen that all the Pauline Epistles are pseudepigraphic," and
-merely express the views of "second-century Christian champions." He
-therefore commits himself to the supposition that Epistles forged
-not earlier than A.D. 130, were yet interpolated in the interests
-of a tradition in which "the Twelve are treated as holding together
-after the resurrection (p. 354)," which tradition, however, must have
-long before that date been abrogated by the growing popularity of the
-Judas myth. Could texts be treated with greater levity? I may also
-note that the inconsistency of Paul's statement that Jesus "was seen"
-by the Twelve with the Judas story was so patent to scribes of the
-third and fourth centuries that they had already begun to alter it
-in the Greek texts and versions to the statement that "he was seen by
-the Eleven." Now is it likely that Paul's text at any time would have
-been interpolated in such a way as to make it contradict so early
-and popular a Christian belief as that in the treason and hurried
-suicide of Judas? The hypothesis is absurd, and not the less absurd
-because it is framed merely to save the other hypothesis that the
-twelve apostles of the Gospels were for the authors of the Gospels
-and for their readers an allegory of the twelve signs of the Zodiac
-revolving round the solar myth Joshua. Such are the lengths to which
-the exigencies of his "mythic" system drive Mr. Robertson.
-
-[Paul testifies that the older apostles conversed with Jesus] Some
-texts which imply that Paul, if he did not actually see Jesus walking
-about on this earth, yet imply that he might have done so, he seems
-to despair of, and passes them over in silence. Such is the text,
-2 Cor. v, 16: "Wherefore we henceforth know no man after the flesh:
-even though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now we know
-him so no more."
-
-The older apostles, as is implied in verse 12 of the same chapter,
-prided themselves on their personal intercourse with Jesus, and
-twitted Paul with never having enjoyed it. Paul's answer is that
-henceforth--i.e., now that he is converted--he has no interest in any
-man, not even in Jesus, as a being of flesh and blood, but only as a
-vessel filled with the spirit of election, and so a new creature in
-Christ, the first member of the heavenly kingdom on earth. He seems
-to aver that he had actually seen his Redeemer in the flesh, but
-before he was converted. But such knowledge with him counts nothing
-in his own favour; nor will he allow it to count in favour of the
-older apostles. Their association with Jesus in the flesh failed to
-render them apostles in any other sense than his vision of the risen
-Jesus rendered him one also.
-
-But there are other texts in Paul most inconvenient to the zodiacal
-theory of the apostles. Such are the texts I have cited from
-Galatians. How does Mr. Robertson get rid of their evidence?
-
-[Epistle to Galatians attests reality of Peter, John, and James]
-He begins (p. 342) with the usual caveat that the Epistle to the
-Galatians is probably not genuine, and, even if it be, is nevertheless
-"frequently interpolated." And yet any reader, with eyes in his head
-and an intelligence behind them, must recognize in this Epistle a
-writing which, above all other ancient writings, rings true, and
-is instinct with the personality of a missionary, who in it bares
-his inmost heart to his converts. Against this impression, which
-it must leave upon anyone but a pedant, and against the fact that
-in the external tradition there is nothing to suggest either that
-it is not genuine or that it is a mass of interpolations, what has
-Mr. Robertson to offer us in support of his thesis? Nothing, except
-his ipse dixit. We are to accept on a purely philological question the
-verdict of one whose mythological equations are on a par with those
-of the editors of the Banner of Israel. However, he does condescend to
-explain away the apostles with whom, at Jerusalem, Paul held personal
-converse; and, taking from Professor W. B. Smith a cue, which is also
-caught at by Professor Drews, he assures us that the Peter (or Cephas),
-James, and John, whom Paul knew personally, were not men who had been
-"in direct intercourse with Jesus," but were merely "leaders of an
-existing sect"--i.e., of the secret sect of Jews who, after celebrating
-endless ritual dramas of annually slain Joshuas and vegetation-gods,
-had, by dint of prolonged archaeological study of pagan mythology, art,
-and statuary, elaborated the four Gospels, adopted the Old Testament
-as their holy scripture, and Messianic Judaism as their distinctive
-creed; for such in essence the Christianity of the last half of the
-first century was, as even Mr. Robertson will hardly deny.
-
-But Paul (Gal. i, 18, 19) expressly ranks Peter, or Cephas, together
-with James, among the apostles, using that word in a wide sense of
-persons commissioned by Jesus; and he describes James and Cephas and
-John (ii, 9) as men "who were reputed to be pillars," or leading men
-of the Church. He declares that in the end they made friends with him,
-and arranged that he should preach the Kingdom to the uncircumcised
-Gentiles as they were doing to the circumcised Jews.
-
-[The "Twelve" were apostles of the Jewish High Priest!] Now who had
-commissioned these three apostles, if not Jesus? Who had taught them
-about the Kingdom and sent them forth to proclaim it? Mr. Robertson,
-oddly enough, scents a difficulty in the idea of a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, albeit son of Miriam a virgin, sending forth apostles; so
-he decides that "apostles" in Galatians means "the twelve apostles
-of the Patriarch, of whom he must have had knowledge" (p. 342). Of
-what Patriarch? Why, of course, "of the Patriarch or High Priest,"
-whose "twelve apostles" formed "an institution which preceded and
-survived the beginning of the Christian era" (p. 344). And, to use
-Mr. Robertson's own phrase in such connections, "the plot thickens"
-when we find (ibid.) that
-
-
- the twelve Jewish Apostles aforesaid, who were commissioned by the
- High Priest--and later by the Patriarch at Tiberias--to collect
- tribute from the scattered faithful,
-
-
-were no others than the Twelve Apostles who wrote the [And they wrote
-the Didache!] "teaching of the Twelve Apostles," recovered in 1873
-by Bryennios! These "Judaizing apostles preached circumcision,"
-[32] and "were among the leaders of the Jesuist community in its
-pre-Pauline days."
-
-This discovery of Mr. Robertson's is of stupendous interest. It
-amounts to nothing less than this: that the pre-Pauline secret sect of
-"Jesuists" which kept up in Jerusalem the cult of the Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, with his late Persian appendage of a virgin mother Miriam;
-and, not content with doing that, padded it out with ritual dramas
-of vegetation-gods, cults of Osiris, of Dionysus, Proteus, Hermes,
-Janus, and fifty other gods and heroes (whose legends Mr. Robertson
-has studied in Smith's Dictionary of Mythology)--this sect, I say,
-had for its president the Jewish High Priest, and for its "pillars"
-the apostles, or messengers, whom the said High Priest was in the
-habit of sending out to the Jews of the Dispersion for the collection
-of the Temple tribute!
-
-This High Priest, we further learn on p. 342, was the "man" who sent
-out the apostles in the first verse of Galatians, from which apostles
-Paul expressly dissociates himself when he writes: "Paul, an apostle,
-not from men, neither through a man, but through Jesus Christ." Here
-we are to understand that Paul is pitting his Sun-God-Saviour Joshua
-against the Jewish High Priest. The Sun-god has sent him forth, though
-not the other apostles. That must be Mr. Robertson's interpretation,
-and we must give up the older and more obvious one which saw in
-the words "not from men, neither through man," no reference to a
-Jewish high priest or priests, but a mere enhancement of the claim,
-ever reiterated by Paul, that he owed his apostleship direct to the
-risen Jesus Christ and God the Father; so that he held a divine and
-spiritual, not an earthly and carnal, commission.
-
-My readers must by now feel very much like poor little Alice when
-the Black Queen was dragging her across Wonderland. If they find the
-sensation delightful, they can, I daresay, enjoy plenty more of it by
-a closer study of Mr. Robertson's books on the subject. If they do
-not like it, then they must not blame me for taking him seriously;
-for is he not acclaimed by Dr. Drews as our greatest exegete of the
-New Testament, Dr. Frazer alone excepted? Is he not the spiritual
-guide of learned German orientalists like Winckler and Jensen? Has
-not Professor W. B. Smith assured us of how much he feels he can
-learn from such a scholar and thinker, though "he has preferred not
-to poach on his preserves." [33] It is, therefore, incumbent on me
-to probe his work a little further. Let us return to the passage, 1
-Cor. xv, 5, where we are told that Jesus appeared first to Cephas. We
-have already seen that the Peter of the Gospels is in this new system
-alternately a sign of the Zodiac, a Mithraic myth, an alias of Janus,
-of Proteus, a member of any other Pantheon you like. Obviously he has
-nothing to do with Paul's acquaintance. The latter in turn is "not one
-of the pupils and companions of the crucified Jesus" (p. 348). How,
-indeed, could he be, seeing that Jesus is a Sun-god crucified upon
-the Milky Way? No, he is something much humbler--to wit, "simply one
-of the apostles of a Judaic cult that preaches circumcision," and,
-more definitely, as we have seen, one of the twelve apostles of the
-Jewish High Priest. James and John must equally have belonged to this
-interesting band of apostles.
-
-[Jesus of Nazareth was Jesus Ben Pandira,] This being so, it is
-pertinent to ask why Paul so persistently indicates that these apostles
-and pillars of the Church had seen Jesus and conversed with him in
-the flesh. To this question Mr. Robertson attempts no answer. For
-he believes that the crucified Jesus, to whom Paul refers on every
-page of his Epistles, was not the Jesus of Christian tradition,
-but "Jesus Ben Pandira, dead long before, and represented by no
-preserved biography or teachings whatever" (p. 378). This Jesus had
-"really been only hanged on a tree" (ibid.); but "the factors of
-a crucifixion myth," among which we must not forget its "phallic
-significance," for that "should connect with all its other aspects"
-(p. 375),--these factors, says Mr. Robertson, "were conceivably strong
-enough to turn the hanging into a crucifixion."
-
-[who had died one hundred years before] It follows that Paul was quite
-mistaken in indicating the apostles whom he conversed with at Jerusalem
-to be apostles of the crucified one; in order to be so, they must all
-have been over-ripe centenarians, since Pandira had died at least a
-hundred years before. It matters nothing that on the next page (379)
-Mr. Robertson entertains doubts as to whether this worthy ever lived
-at all. Who else, he asks (p. 364), could "the Pauline Jesus, who has
-taught nothing and done nothing," be, save "a doctrinal evolution from
-the Jesus of a hundred years before?" We must, he adds with delightful
-ignoratio elenchi, "perforce assume such a long evolution." Otherwise
-it would not be "intelligible that, even if he had been only hanged
-after stoning, he should by that time have come to figure mythically as
-crucified." He admits that Paul's "references to a crucified Jesus are
-constant, and offer no sign of interpolation." And he is quite ready
-to admit also that, "if the Jesus of Paul were really a personage
-put to death under Pontius Pilate, the Epistles (of Paul) would give
-us the strongest ground for accepting an actual crucifixion." But,
-alas, the Jesus put to death under Pontius Pilate, the Javelin-man,
-is no more than an allegory of Joshua the ancient Palestinian Sun-god,
-rolled up with a vegetation-god and other mythical beings, and slain
-afresh once a year. There is thus no alternative left but to identify
-Paul's crucified Jesus with Jesus Ben Pandira; and Mr. Robertson,
-with a sigh of relief, embraces the alternative, for he feels that
-Paul's evidence is menacing his whole structure.
-
-It was nasty of Paul not to indicate more clearly to us that by
-his crucified Jesus he intended Jesus Ben Pandira; and, in view of
-the circumstance that we have left to us no "biography or teachings
-whatever" of this Jesus, Paul might surely have communicated to us
-some details of his career. It would have saved Mr. Robertson the
-trouble of inventing them.
-
-[James, brother of Jesus, only in a Pickwickian sense] At first
-sight, too, it was extremely inconsiderate of Paul to "thicken the
-plot" by bringing on his stage a brother of Jesus Ben Pandira or
-of the solar myth Joshua. I am not sure which. But Mr. Robertson,
-like Alice, is out for strange adventures, and prepared to face any
-emergency. "Brother," therefore, is here to be taken in a Pickwickian
-sense only. And here we will let Dr. W. B. Smith take up the parable,
-for it is he who has, with the help of St. Jerome, found his friends
-a way out of their difficulty. Moreover, he is more in need of a way
-out than even Mr. Robertson; for he declines to admit behind Jesus of
-Nazareth even--what Mr. Robertson styles, p. 364--"a Talmudic trace of
-a Jesus (Ben Pandira), who was put to death on the eve of the Passover
-about a century before the time of Pontius Pilate." Professor Smith
-cannot hesitate, therefore, to be of opinion that, when Paul calls
-James a brother of the Lord, he does not "imply any family kinship,"
-but one of a "class of earnest Messianists, zealots of obedience"
-to the Mosaic Law. He appeals in confirmation of his conjecture to
-the apostrophe of Jesus when his mother and brethren came to arrest
-him as an ecstatic (Mark iii, 31-35):--
-
-
- Who is my mother and my brethren? ... whosoever shall do the will
- of God, the same is my brother and sister and mother.
-
-
-He also appeals to 1 Cor. ix, 5, where Paul alludes to "the brethren
-of the Lord" as claiming a right to lead about a wife that is a
-sister. And he argues that those who in Corinth, to the imperilling
-of Christian unity, said, some, "I am of Cephas"; others, "I am of
-Christ"; others, "I am of Apollos," were known as brethren of Christ,
-of Cephas, etc. Now it is true that Paul and other early Christian
-writers regarded the members of the Church as brethren or as sisters,
-just as the members of monastic society have ever styled themselves
-brothers and sisters of one another. But there is no example of a
-believer being called a brother of the Lord or of Jesus. [34] The
-passage in Mark and its parallels are, according to Professor Smith,
-purely legendary and allegorical, since he denies that Jesus ever
-lived; and he has no right, therefore, to appeal to them in order to
-decide what Paul intended by the phrase when he used it, as before,
-not of a mythical, but of a concrete, case. However, if Professor
-Smith is intent on appealing to the Gospels, then he must allow equal
-weight to such a text as Matthew xiii, 55: "Is not this the carpenter's
-son? Is not his mother called Mary? and his brethren, James and Joseph
-and Simon and Judas? And his sisters, are they not all with us?"
-
-Did all these people, we may ask, including his mother, stand in a
-merely spiritual relationship to Jesus? Impossible. If they were not
-flesh and blood relations, then the passage is meaningless even as
-allegorical romance. Again, in the very passage to which Professor
-Smith appeals (Mark iii, 31-35), we read that his mother and brethren
-came and stood without, and it was their interference with him that
-provoked the famous apostrophe. Were they, too, only spiritually
-related to him? Were they, too, "earnest Messianists, zealots of
-obedience"? In John's Gospel we hear afresh that his brethren believed
-not in him. Were they, too, mere "earnest Messianists, zealots of
-obedience"? When Josephus, again, alludes to "James the Just who was
-brother of Jesus," is he, an enemy of the Christian faith, adopting
-Christian slang? Does he, too, mean merely to "denote religious
-relation without the remotest hint of blood kinship"? In 1 Cor. ix,
-5, the most natural interpretation is that the brothers of the Lord
-are his real brothers, whose names are supplied in the Gospels.
-
-[Both in Paul and in the Gospels the "myth" has parents and brothers
-and sisters] Here, then, are four wholly independent groups of ancient
-documents, of which one gives us the names of four of the brothers of
-Jesus, clearly indicating that they were real brothers, and sons of
-Mary and the Carpenter; while the other group (the Paulines) speak
-as ever of his "brothers," but give us the name of one only, James;
-the third--viz., the works of Josephus--allude to one only--viz.,
-James, but without indicating that there were not several. Lastly,
-the we document (Acts xxi, 18) testifies that "Paul went in with us
-unto James." Is not this enough? Surely, if we were here treating of
-profane history, no sane student would for a moment hesitate to accept
-such data, furnished by wholly independent and coincident documents,
-as historical. Professor Smith's other guess, that in 1 Cor. ix,
-5, brethren means spiritual brethren, just begs the question, and,
-like his spiritual interpretation of James's relationship, offends
-Greek idiom, as I said above. Paul, like the author of Acts xxi, 17,
-speaks of "the brother" or of "the brethren"--e.g., in 1 Cor. viii,
-11: "the brother for whose sake Christ died"; but when the person
-whose brother it is is named, a blood relationship is always conveyed
-in the Paulines as in the rest of the New Testament. If "brethren
-of the Lord" in 1 Cor. ix, 5, does not mean real brethren, why are
-they distinguished from all the apostles, who on Professor Smith's
-assumption, above all others, merited to be called "brethren of the
-Lord"? The appeal, moreover, to 1 Cor. i, 12 foll., is absurd; for
-Paul is alluding there to factions among the believers of Corinth;
-how is it possible to interpret these factions as brotherhoods? There
-was only one brotherhood of the faithful, according to Paul's ideal;
-and the relationship involved in such phrases as "I of Cephas," "I of
-Paul," is that of a convert to his teacher and evangelist, not that of
-spiritual brethren to each other. As used by his Corinthian converts,
-such phrases were a direct menace to spiritual brotherhood and unity,
-and not an expression of it; and that is why Paul wished to hear no
-more of them. When he makes appeal to them Professor Smith damages
-rather than benefits his argument.
-
-[Jerome's opinion about Jesus's brothers] There remains the appeal
-to Jerome (Ecce Deus, p. 237):--
-
-
- No less an authority than Jerome has expressed the correct idea
- on this point. In commenting on Gal. i, 19, he says (in sum):
- "James was called the Lord's brother on account of his high
- character, his incomparable faith, and his extraordinary wisdom;
- the other apostles are also called brothers" (John xx, 17).
-
-
-Here Professor Smith withholds from his readers the fact that Jerome
-regarded James the brother of Jesus as his first cousin. It is just as
-difficult for a mythical personage to have a first cousin as to have
-a brother. Moreover, the reasons which actuated Jerome to deny that
-Jesus had real brethren was--as the Encyclopaedia Biblica (art. James)
-points out--"a prepossession in favour of the perpetual virginity
-of Mary the mother of Jesus." It is, indeed, a hollow theory that,
-in order to its justification, must take refuge in the Encratite
-rubbish of Jerome.
-
-[Mutual independence of Pauline and Gospel stories of the risen Christ]
-If the crucified Jesus of Paul was Jesus Ben Pandira, stoned to death
-and hanged on a tree between the years B.C. 106-79, then how can Paul
-have written (1 Cor. xv, 6) that the greater part of the 500 brethren
-to whom Jesus appeared were still alive? I neither assert nor deny
-the possibility of so many at once having fallen under the spell of a
-common illusion, though I believe the annals of religious ecstasy might
-afford parallels. But this I do maintain, that the passage records a
-conviction in Paul's mind that Jesus, after his death by crucifixion,
-had appeared to many at once, and that not a hundred years before,
-but at a comparatively recent time. That is also Mr. Robertson's view;
-for, rather than face the passage, he whips out his knife and cuts it
-out of the text. Yet there is not a single reason for doing so, except
-that it upsets his hypothesis; for the circumstance that the incident
-cannot be reconciled with the Gospel stories of the apparitions of
-the risen Christ clearly shows that Paul's text is independent on
-them. Mr. Robertson argues that, if it were not a late interpolation,
-the evangelists would have found it in Paul and incorporated it in
-their Gospels. I ask in turn, why did the interpolator thrust into
-the Pauline letter not only this passage, but at least two other
-incidents (the apparitions to Peter and James) which figure in no
-canonical Gospel? Why, if the Evangelists were bound to consult the
-Paulines in giving an account of these posthumous appearances, was
-not the hypothetical interpolator of the Paulines equally bound to
-consult them? The most natural hypothesis is that the Gospels on one
-side and the Pauline Epistles on the other led independent lives,
-till their respective traditions were so firmly fixed that no one
-could tamper with either of them. The conflict, therefore, such as
-it is, between this Pauline passage and the Gospels is the strongest
-possible proof of its genuineness.
-
-[The Pauline account of the Eucharist] Mr. Robertson's treatment of the
-Pauline description of the origin of the Lord's Supper as described in
-1 Cor. xi, 23-27, is another example of his determination simply to
-rule out all evidence which he cannot explain away. "It is evident,"
-he writes (p. 347), that this whole passage, "or at least the first
-part of it, is an interpolation." We would expect him to produce
-support for this view from some MS. or ancient version for what is so
-evident. Not at all; for he takes no interest in, and has no turn for,
-the scientific criticism of texts a posteriori, but deals with them by
-a priori intuitions of his own. "The passage in question (verses 23,
-24, 25) has every appearance of being an interpolation." He is the
-first to discover such an appearance. It is well known that the words
-"took bread" as far as "in my blood" recur in Luke xxii, 19, 20; and
-this is how Mr. Robertson deals with the problem of their recurrence:
-"No one pretends that the Third Gospel was in existence in Paul's
-time; and the only question is whether Luke copied the Epistle or a
-late copyist supplemented the Epistle from Luke."
-
-Surely there is another alternative--viz., that a copyist of Luke
-supplemented the Gospel from Paul. This is as conceivable as that
-a copyist of Paul supplemented the Epistle from Luke. It is also an
-hypothesis that has textual evidence in favour of it; for the Bezan
-Codex and several old Latin MSS., as well as the old Syriac version,
-omit the words, which is given on your behalf, as far as on your behalf
-is shed--that is to say, the end of verse 19 and the whole of verse
-20. But, since the Bezan omission does not cover the whole of the
-matter taken from Corinthians, we may suppose that Luke borrowed the
-words from the Epistle in question. Here we have a palmary example of
-the mingled temerity and ignorance with which Mr. Robertson applies
-his principle of "vital interpolations" to remove anything from
-the New Testament texts which stands in the way of his far-fetched
-hypotheses and artificial combinations.
-
-[Jesus Ben Pandira in Talmud is Jesus of Nazareth] But it is
-time to inquire whence Mr. Robertson derived his certainty
-that Jesus Ben Pandira died in the reign of Alexander Jannaeus,
-B.C. 106-79. Dr. Samuel Kraus, in his exhaustive study of Talmudic
-notices of Jesus of Nazareth (Das Leben Jesu nach juedischen Quellen,
-Berlin, 1902, p. 242) assumes as a fact beyond dispute that the
-Jeschu or Joshua Ben Pandira (or Ben Stada or Ben Satda) mentioned
-in the Toldoth Jeschu is Jesus of Nazareth. In the Toldoth he is set
-in the reign of Tiberius. This Toldoth is not earlier than A.D. 400,
-and took its information from the pseudo-Hegesippus. The Spanish
-historian Abraham b. Daud (about A.D. 1100) already noticed that
-the Talmudic tradition alluded to by Mr. Robertson set the birth of
-Jesus of Nazareth a hundred years too early; but the same tradition
-corrects itself in that it assigns Salome Alexandra to Alexander
-Jannai as his wife, and then, confusing her with Queen Helena the
-proselyte, brings the incident down to the right date. "The truth is,"
-says Dr. Kraus (p. 183), "we have got to do here with a chronological
-error." Lightfoot, to whose Horae Hebraicae Mr. Robertson refers in his
-footnote (p. 363), also assumed that by Jesus Ben Pandira, or son of
-Panthera, the Talmudists intended Jesus of Nazareth. Celsus (about
-A.D. 170) attested a Jewish tradition that Jesus Christ was Mary's
-son by a Roman soldier named Panthera, and later on even Christian
-writers worked Panthera into Mary's pedigree. Such is the origin of the
-Talmudic tradition exploited by Mr. Robertson. It is almost worthless;
-but, so far as it goes, it overthrows Mr. Robertson's hypothesis.
-
-[The disputed Epistles of Paul so many fresh witnesses] The Epistles
-to Colossians, Thessalonians, and the so-called Pastorals, if they are
-not genuine works of Paul, form so many fresh witnesses against the
-hypothesis of Mr. Robertson and his friends. Such a verse as Col. ii,
-14, where in highly metaphorical language Jesus is said to have
-nailed the bond of all our trespasses to the cross, is an unmistakable
-allusion to the historical crucifixion; as also is the phrase "blood of
-his cross" in the same epistle, i, 20. In 1 Thess. iv, 14, is attested
-the belief that Jesus died and rose again; and again in v, 10. I have
-already indicated the express reference to the crucifixion under
-Pontius Pilate in 1 Tim. v, 13, and the statement in 2 Tim. ii, 8,
-that Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, was of the seed of David. These
-epistles may not be from Paul's hand, but they are unmistakably early;
-and their forgers, if they be forged, undoubtedly held that Jesus had
-really lived. So also did the author, whoever he was, of Hebrews,
-who speaks, ch. ii, 9, of Jesus suffering death, in ii, 18, of his
-"having suffered, being tempted." In vii, 14, we read this: "For it
-is evident that our Lord hath sprung out of Judah." If Jesus was only
-a myth, how could this writer have written, probably before A.D. 70,
-that he was of the tribe of Judah? In ch. xii, 2, we are told that
-Jesus "endured the cross." That this epistle was penned before the
-destruction of Jerusalem by Titus is made probable by the statement
-in ix, 8, that "the first tabernacle is yet standing." Indeed, most
-of the epistle is turned into nonsense by any other hypothesis.
-
-[Catholic Epistles] The first Epistle of Peter is very likely
-pseudepigraphic, but it cannot be later than the year 100. It
-testifies, iv, 1, that Christ "suffered in the flesh."
-
-The Johannine Epistles are probably from the same hand as the Fourth
-Gospel, and belong to the period 90-110 A.D. Their author insists
-(1 John iv, 2), as against the Docetes, that "Jesus Christ is come
-in the flesh."
-
-The Epistle of Jude, about the same date, exhorts those to whom it
-was addressed to "remember the words which have been spoken before
-by the Apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ."
-
-[Book of Revelation] Lastly, the Revelation of John can be definitely
-dated about A.D. 93. It testifies to the existence of several churches
-in Asia Minor in that age, and, in spite of the fanciful and oriental
-character of its imagery, it is from beginning to end irreconcilable
-with the supposition that its author did not believe in a Jesus who
-had lived, died, and was coming again to establish the new Jerusalem
-on earth. In ch. xxii, 16, Jesus is made to testify that he is the
-root and offspring of David. That does not look as if its author
-regarded Jesus as a solar or any other sort of myth.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-EXTERNAL EVIDENCE
-
-
-[Evidence of Josephus] It remains to examine how this school
-of writers handle the evidence with regard to the earliest
-church supplied by Jewish or Pagan writers. I have said enough
-incidentally of the evidence of the Talmud and Toldoth Jeschu, but
-there remains that of Josephus. In the work on the Antiquities of
-the Jews, Bk. xviii, 5, 2 (116 foll.), there is an account of John
-the Baptist, and it is narrated that Herod, fearing an insurrection
-of John's followers, threw him in bonds into the castle of Machaerus,
-and there murdered him. Afterwards, when Herod's army was destroyed,
-the Jewish population attributed the disaster to the wrath of God,
-and saw in it a retribution for slaying so just a man. [35] On the
-whole, Josephus's account accords with the picture we have of John
-in the Synoptic Gospels, except that in the Gospels the place and
-circumstances of his murder are differently given. This difference is
-good evidence that Josephus's account is independent of the Christian
-sources. Nevertheless, Dr. Drews airily pretends that there is a
-strong suspicion of its being a forgery by some Christian hand. As
-for John the Baptist as we meet him in the Gospels, he is, says Drews,
-no historical personage. One expects some reason to be given for this
-negative conclusion, but gets none whatever except a magnificent hint
-that "a complete understanding of the baptism in the Jordan can only
-be attained, if here, too, we take into consideration the translation
-of the baptism into astrological terms" (Christ Myth, p. 121).
-
-[The astral John Baptist] And he proceeds to dilate on the thesis that
-the baptism of Jesus in the Jordan was "the reflection upon earth of
-what originally took place among the stars." This discovery rests
-on an equation--pre-philological, of course, like that of "Maria"
-with "Myrrha"--of the name "John" or "Jehohanan" with "Oannes" or
-"Ea," the Babylonian Water-god. However, this writer is here not a
-little incoherent, for only on the page before he has assured us,
-as of something unquestionable, that John was closely related to the
-Essenes, and baptized the penitents in the Jordan in the open air. Was
-Jordan, too, up in heaven? Were the Essenes there also? Mr. Robertson,
-of course, pursues the same simple method of disposing of adverse
-evidence, and asserts (p. 396) that Josephus's account of John "is
-plainly open to that suspicion of interpolation which, in the case
-of the allusion to Jesus in the same book (Antiq., xviii, 3, 3),
-has become for most critics a certainty." He does not condescend
-to inform his readers that the latter passage [36] is absent from
-important MSS., was unknown to Origen, and is therefore rightly
-bracketed by editors; whereas the account of John is in all MSS.,
-and was known to Origen. But as we have seen before, Mr. Robertson is
-one of those gifted people who can discern by peculiar intuitions of
-their own that everything is interpolated in an author which offends
-their prejudices. He has a lofty contempt for the careful sifting of
-the textual tradition, the examination of MSS. and ancient versions
-to which a scholar resorts, before he condemns a passage of an ancient
-author as an interpolation. Moreover, a scholar feels himself bound to
-show why a passage was interpolated, in whose interests. For, regarded
-as an interpolation, a passage is as much a problem to him as it was
-before. Its genesis has still to be explained. But Messrs. Robertson
-and Drews and Smith do not condescend to explain anything or give
-any reasons. A passage slays their theories; therefore it is a "vital
-interpolation." It is the work of an ancient enemy sowing tares amid
-their wheat.
-
-[Josephus's reference to James, brother of Jesus] John the Baptist
-having been removed in this cavalier fashion from the pages of
-Josephus, we can hardly expect James the brother of Jesus to be left,
-and he is accordingly kicked out without ceremony. It does not matter
-a scrap that the passage (Antiquities xx, 9, 1, 200) stands in the
-Greek MSS. and in the Latin Version. As Professor W. B. Smith's
-argument on the point is representative of this class of critics,
-we must let him speak first (p. 235):--
-
-
- Origen thrice quotes as from Josephus the statement that the
- Jewish sufferings at the hands of Titus were a divine retribution
- for the slaying of James.
-
-
-He then proceeds to quote the text of Origen, Against Celsus, i, 47,
-giving the reference, but mangling in the most extraordinary manner
-a text that is clear and consecutive. For Origen begins (ch. xlvii)
-by saying that Celsus "somehow accepted John as a Baptist who baptized
-Jesus," and then adds the following:--
-
-
- In the Eighteenth Book of his Antiquities of the Jews Josephus
- bears witness to John as having been a Baptist, and as promising
- purification to those who underwent the rite. Now this writer,
- although not believing in Jesus as the Christ, in seeking after the
- cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple,
- whereas he ought to have said that the conspiracy against Jesus was
- the cause of these calamities befalling the people since they put
- to death Christ, who was a prophet, says, nevertheless--although
- against his will, not far from the truth--that these disasters
- happened to the Jews as a punishment for the death of James the
- Just, who was a brother of Jesus called Christ, the Jews having
- put him to death, although he was a man most distinguished for
- his righteousness (i.e., strict observance of the law).
-
-
-In a later passage of the same treatise (ii, 13), which Mr. Smith cites
-correctly, Origen refers again to the same passage of the Antiquities
-(xx, 200) thus: "Titus demolished Jerusalem, as Josephus writes,
-on account of James the Just, the brother of Jesus, the so-called
-Christ." Also in Origen's commentary on Matthew xiii, 55, we have a
-like statement that the sufferings of the Jews were a punishment for
-the murder of James the Just.
-
-Origen therefore cites Josephus thrice about James, and in each
-case he has in mind the same passage--viz., xx, 200. But Mr. Smith,
-after citing the shorter passage, Contra Celsum, ii, 13, goes on
-as follows:--
-
-
- The passage is still found in some Josephus manuscripts; but,
- as it is wanting in others, it is, and must be, regarded as a
- Christian interpolation older than Origen.
-
-
-Will Mr. Smith kindly tell us which are the MSS. in which are found
-any passage or passages referring the fall of Jerusalem to the death of
-James, and so far contradicting Josephus's interpretation of Ananus's
-death in the History of the Jewish War, iv, 5, 2. Niese, the latest
-editor, knows of none, nor did any previous editor know of any.
-
-Mr. Smith then proceeds thus:--
-
-
- Now, since this phrase is certainly interpolated in the one place,
- the only reasonable conclusion is that it is interpolated in
- the other.
-
-
-But "this phrase" never stood in Josephus at all, even as an
-interpolation, and on examination it turns out that Professor Smith's
-prejudice against the passage in which Josephus mentions James, is
-merely based on the muddle committed by Origen. Such are the arguments
-by which he seeks to prove that Josephus's text was interpolated by
-a Christian, as if a Christian interpolator, supposing there had
-been one (and he has left no trace of himself), would not, as the
-protest of Origen sufficiently indicates, have represented the fall of
-Jerusalem as a divine punishment, not for the slaying of James, but
-for the slaying of Jesus. Having demolished the evidence of Josephus
-in such a manner, Mr. Smith heads ten of his pages with the words,
-"The Silence of Josephus," as if he had settled all doubts for ever
-by mere force of his erroneous ipse dixit.
-
-[The testimony of Tacitus] The next section of Professor Smith's work
-(Ecce Deus) is headed with the same effrontery of calm assertion:
-"The Silence of Tacitus." This historian relates (Annals, xv, 44)
-that Nero accused the Christians of having burned down Rome. Nero
-
-
- subjected to most exquisite tortures those whom, hated for
- their crimes, the populace called Chrestians. The author of this
- name, Christus, had been executed in the reign of Tiberius by
- the Procurator Pontius Pilate; and, though repressed for the
- moment, the pernicious superstition was breaking forth again,
- not only throughout Judaea, the fountain-head of this mischief,
- but also throughout the capital, where all things from anywhere
- that are horrible or disgraceful pour in together and are made
- a religion of.
-
-
-In the sequel Tacitus describes how an immense multitude, less for the
-crime of incendiarism than in punishment of their hatred of humanity,
-were convicted; how some were clothed in skins of wild beasts and
-thrown to dogs, while others were crucified or burned alive. Nero's
-savagery was such that it awoke the pity even of a Roman crowd for
-his victims.
-
-Such a passage as the above, written by Tacitus soon after A.D. 100, is
-somewhat disconcerting to our authors. Professor Smith, proceeding on
-his usual innocent assumption that the whole of the ancient literature,
-Christian and profane, of this epoch lies before him, instead of a
-scanty debris of it, votes it to be a forgery. Why? Because Melito,
-Bishop of Sardis about 170 A.D., is the first writer who alludes to
-it in a fragment of an apology addressed to a Roman Emperor. As if
-there were not five hundred striking episodes narrated by Tacitus,
-yet never mentioned by any subsequent writer at all. Would Mr. Smith
-on that account dispute their authenticity? It is only because this
-episode concerns Christianity and gets in the way of his theories,
-that he finds it necessary to cut it out of the text. You can prove
-anything if you cook your evidence, and the wanton mutilation of
-texts which no critical historian has ever called in question is a
-flagrant form of such cookery. In the hands of these writers facts
-are made to fit theory, not theory to fit facts.
-
-[Testimony of Clement agrees with Tacitus] I hardly need add that
-the narrative of Tacitus is frank, straightforward, and in keeping
-with all we know or can infer in regard to Christianity in that
-epoch. Mr. E. G. Hardy, in his valuable book Christianity and the Roman
-Government (London, 1894, p. 70), has pointed out that "the mode of
-punishment was that prescribed for those convicted of magic," and that
-Suetonius uses the term malefica of the new religion--a term which has
-this special sense. Magicians, moreover, in the code of Justinian,
-which here as often reflects a much earlier age, are declared to be
-"enemies of the human race." Nor is it true that Nero's persecution
-as recorded in Tacitus is mentioned by no writer before Melito. It
-is practically certain that Clement, writing about A.D. 95, refers to
-it. He records that a poly plethos, or vast multitude of Christians,
-the ingens multitudo of Tacitus, perished in connection with the
-martyrdom of Peter and Paul. He speaks of the manifold insults and
-torments of men, the terrible and unholy outrages upon women, in
-terms that answer exactly to the two phrases of Tacitus: pereuntibus
-addita ludibria and quaesitissimae poenae. Women, he implies, were,
-"like Dirce, fastened on the horns of bulls, or, after figuring as
-Danaides in the arena, were exposed to the attacks of wild beasts"
-(Hardy, op. cit., p. 72). [Drews on Poggio's interpolations of Tacitus]
-However, Drews is not content with merely ousting the passage from
-Tacitus, but undertakes to explain to his readers how it got there. It
-was, he conjectures, made up out of a similar passage read in the
-Chronicle of Sulpicius Severus (written about 407) by some clever
-forger, probably Poggio, who smuggled it into the text of Tacitus, "a
-writer whose text is full of interpolations." It is hardly necessary
-to inform an educated reader, firstly, that the text of Tacitus is
-recognized by all competent Latin scholars to be remarkably free from
-interpolations; secondly, that Severus merely abridged his account
-of Nero's persecution from the narrative he found in Tacitus, an
-author whom he frequently copied and imitated; thirdly, that Poggio,
-the supposed interpolator, lived in the fifteenth century, whereas
-our oldest MS. of this part of Tacitus is of the eleventh century;
-it is now in the Laurentian Library. I should advise Dr. Drews to
-stick to his javelin-man story, and not to venture on incursions into
-the field of classical philology.
-
-[Pliny's letter to Trajan] Having dispatched Josephus and Tacitus,
-and printed over their pages in capitals the titles The Silence of
-Josephus and The Silence of Tacitus, these authors, needless to say,
-have no difficulty with Pliny and Suetonius. The former, in his
-letter (No. 96) to Trajan, gives some particulars of the Christians
-of Bithynia, probably obtained from renegades. They asserted that
-the gist of their offence or error was that they were accustomed on a
-regularly recurring day to meet before dawn, and repeat in alternating
-chant among themselves a hymn to Christ as to a God; they also bound
-themselves by a holy oath not to commit any crime, neither theft,
-nor brigandage, nor adultery, and not to betray their word or deny a
-deposit when it was demanded. After this rite was over they had had
-the custom to break up their meeting, and to come together afresh
-later in the day to partake of a meal, which, however, was of an
-ordinary and innocent kind.
-
-In this repast we recognize the early eucharist at which Christians
-were commonly accused of devouring human flesh, as the Jews are accused
-by besotted fanatics of doing in Russia to-day, and by Mr. Robertson in
-ancient Jerusalem. Hence Pliny's proviso that the food they partook of
-was ordinary and innocent. The passage also shows that this eucharistic
-meal was not the earliest rite of the day, like the fasting communion
-of the modern Ritualist, but was held later in the day. Lastly, the
-qualification that they sang hymns to Christ as to a God, though to
-Pliny it conveyed no more than the phrase "as if to Apollo," or "as
-if to Aesculapius," clearly signifies that the person so honoured was
-or had been a human being. Had he been a Sun-god Saviour, the phrase
-would be hopelessly inept. This letter and Trajan's answer to it were
-penned about 110 A.D.
-
-Of this letter Professor W. B. Smith writes (p. 252) that in it
-"there is no implication, not even the slightest, touching the purely
-human reality of the Christ or Jesus." Let us suppose the letter had
-referred to the cult of Augustus Caesar, and that we read in it of
-people who, by way of honouring his memory, met on certain days and
-sang a hymn to Augustus quasi deo, "as to a God." We know that the
-members of a college of Augustals did so meet in most cities of the
-Roman Empire. Well, would Mr. Smith contend in such a case that the
-letter carried no implication, not even the slightest, touching the
-purely human reality of the Augustus or Caesar? Of course he would
-not. If this letter were the sole record in existence of early
-Christianity, we might perhaps hesitate about its implications;
-but it is in the characteristic Latin which no one, so far as we
-know, ever wrote, except the younger Pliny, and is accompanied by
-Trajan's answer, couched in an equally characteristic style. It is,
-moreover, but one link in a long chain, which as a whole attests and
-presupposes the reality of Jesus. Mr. Smith, however, does not seem
-quite sure of his ground, for in the next sentence he hints that
-after all Pliny's letter is not genuine. These writers are not the
-first to whom this letter has proved a pons asinorum. Semler began
-the attack on its genuineness in 1784; and others, who desired to
-eliminate all references to Christianity in early heathen writers,
-have, as J. B. Lightfoot has remarked (Apostolic Fathers, Pt. II,
-vol. i, p. 55), followed in his wake. Their objections do not merit
-serious refutation.
-
-[Evidence of Suetonius] There remains Suetonius, who in ch. xxv of his
-life of Claudius speaks of Messianic disturbances at Rome impulsore
-Chresto. Claudius reigned from 41-54, and the passage may possibly
-be an echo of the conflict, clearly delineated in Acts and Paulines
-between the Jews and the followers of the new Messiah. [37] Itacism
-or interchange of "e" and "i" being the commonest of corruptions in
-Greek and Latin MSS., we may fairly conjecture Christo in the source
-used by Suetonius, who wrote about the year 120. Christo, which means
-Messiah, is intelligible in relation to Jews, but not Chresto; and the
-two words were identical in pronunciation. Drews of course upholds
-Chresto, and in Tacitus would substitute for Christiani Chrestiani;
-for this there is indeed manuscript support, but it is gratuitous
-to argue as he does that the allusion is to Serapis or Osiris,
-who were called Chrestos "the good" by their votaries. He does not
-condescend to adduce any evidence to show that in that age or any
-other Chrestos, used absolutely, signified Osiris or Serapis; and
-there is no reason to suppose it ever had such a significance. He is
-on still more precarious ground when he surmises that Nero's victims
-at Rome were not followers of Christ, but of Serapis, and were called
-Chrestiani by the mob ironically, because of their vices. Here we
-begin to suspect that he is joking. Why should worshippers of Serapis
-have been regarded as specially vicious by the Roman mob? Jews and
-Christians were no doubt detested, because they could not join in
-any popular festivities or thanksgivings. But there was nothing to
-prevent votaries of Serapis or Osiris from doing so, nor is there
-any record of their being unpopular as a class.
-
-In his life of Nero, Suetonius, amid a number of brief notices,
-apparently taken from some annalistic work, includes the following:
-"The Christians were visited with condign punishments--a race of men
-professing a new and malefic superstition." On this passage I have
-commented above (p. 161).
-
-[Origin of the name "Christian"] Characteristically enough, Dr. Drews
-assumes, without a shadow of argument, that the famous text in Acts
-which says that the followers of Jesus were first called Christians
-in Antioch is an interpolation. It stands in the way of his new thesis
-that the Roman people called the followers of Serapis--who was Chrestos
-or "good"--Chrestiani, because they were precisely the contrary. [38]
-Tacitus does not say that Nero's victims were so called because of
-their vices. That is a gloss put on the text by Drews. We only learn
-(a) that they were hated by the mob for their vices, and (b) that
-the mob at that time called them Chrestiani. His use of the imperfect
-tense appellabat indicates that in his own day the same sect had come
-to be known under their proper appellation as Christiani. In A.D. 64,
-he implies, a Roman mob knew no better.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE ART OF CRITICISM
-
-
-[Repudiation by the partisans of non-historicity of Jesus of regular
-historical method] Let us pause here and try to frame some ideas of
-the methods of this new school which denies that Jesus ever lived:--
-
-Firstly, they are all agreed that the method they would apply to all
-other figures in ancient history--for example, to Apollonius--shall
-not be used in connection with Jesus. They carelessly deride "the
-attempt of historical theologians to reach the historical nucleus of
-the Gospels by purely philological means" (The Witnesses, p. 129). "The
-process," writes Mr. Robertson, "of testing the Synoptic Gospels down
-to an apparent nucleus of primitive narrative" ... "this new position
-is one of retreat, and is not permanently tenable" (Christianity and
-Mythology, p. 284).
-
-If this be so, we had better abolish our chairs of history at the
-universities, and give up teaching it in the schools; for, in the
-absence of the camera and gramophone, this method is the only one we
-can use. When a Mommsen sets Polybius's, Livy's, and Plutarch's lives
-of Hannibal side by side and "tests them down to an apparent nucleus
-of primitive narrative," does Mr. Robertson take him as a text for a
-disquisition on "the psychological Resistance to Evidence"? If not,
-why does he forbid us to take the score or so of independent memories
-and records of the career of Jesus which we have in ancient literature
-between the years A.D. 50 and 120, and to try to sift them down? Why,
-without any evidence, should we rush to the conclusion that the
-figure on whom they jointly converge was a Sun-god, solar myth,
-or vegetation sprite?
-
-[New Testament literature taken en bloc] Secondly, we may note how
-this disinclination to sift sources and test documents prompts them
-to take en bloc sources and documents which arose separately and
-in succession. Yet it is not simple laziness which dictates to them
-this short and easy method of dealing with ancient documents. Rather
-they have inherited it from the old-fashioned orthodox teachers of
-a hundred years ago, who, convinced of the verbal inspiration of the
-Bible, forbade us to estimate one passage as evidence more highly than
-another. All the verses of the Bible were on a level, as also all the
-incidents, and to argue that one event might have happened, but not
-another, was rank blasphemy. All were equally certain, for inspiration
-is not given by measure. Their mantle has fallen on Mr. Robertson
-and his friends. All or none is their method; but, whereas all was
-equally certain, now all is equally myth. "A document," says (p. 159)
-the excellent work by MM. Langlois and Seignobos which I cited above,
-
-
- (still more a literary work) is not all of a piece; it is composed
- of a great number of independent statements, any one of which
- may be intentionally or unintentionally false, while the others
- are bona fide and accurate.... It is not, therefore, enough to
- examine a document as a whole; each of the statements in it must
- be examined separately; criticism is impossible without analysis.
-
-
-We have beautiful examples of such mixed criticism and analysis in
-the commentaries on the Synoptics of Wellhausen and Loisy, both of
-them Freethinkers in the best sense of the word.
-
-[Incapacity of this school to understand evolution of Christian ideas,]
-I have given several minor examples of the obstinacy with which
-the three writers I am criticizing shut their eyes to the gradual
-evolution of Christian ideas; they exhibit the same perversity in
-respect of the great development of Christological thought already
-traceable in the New Testament.
-
-Paul conceived of Jesus as a Jewish teacher elevated through his
-death and resurrection to the position of Messiah and Son of God. On
-earth he is still a merely human being, born naturally, and subject
-to the law--a weak man of flesh. Raised from the dead by the energy
-of the Spirit, he becomes future judge of mankind, and his gospel
-transcends all distinctions of Jew and Gentile, bondsman or free. In
-Mark he is still merely human; he is the son of Joseph and Mary,
-born and bred like their other sons and daughters. As a man he
-comes to John the Baptist, like others, to confess and repent of
-his sins, and wash them away in Jordan's holy stream. Not till then
-does the descent of the Spirit on him, as he goes up from the Jordan,
-confer a Messiahship on him, which his followers only recognize later
-on. Astounding miracles and prodigies, however, are already credited
-to him in this our earliest Gospel. In the non-Marcan document, or Q,
-so far as we can reconstruct it, he has become Messiah through baptism
-(supposing this section to have belonged to Q, and not to some other
-document used by Luke and Matthew); but few or no miracles [39]
-are as yet credited to him, and the document contained little except
-his teaching. His death has none of the importance assigned to it by
-Paul, and is not mentioned; his resurrection does not seem to have
-been heard of by the author of this document. In Matthew and Luke
-the figure before us is much the same as in Mark; but human traits,
-such as his mother's distrust of his mission, are effaced. We hear
-no more of his inability to heal those who did not believe in him,
-and we get in their early chapters hints of his miraculous birth. In
-John there is, indeed, no hint of such birth; but, on the other hand,
-the entire Gospel is here rewritten to suit a new conception of him as
-the divine, eternal Logos. Demonology tales are ruled out. His role
-as a Jewish Messiah, faithful to the law, has finally retired into
-the background, together with that tense expectation of the end of
-the world, of the final judgment and installation in Palestine of a
-renovated kingdom of David, which inspires the teaching and parables
-of the Synoptic Gospels, just as it inspired Philo, and the Apocalypse
-of the Fourth Esdras and other contemporary Jewish apocrypha.
-
-[especially in connection with the legend of Virgin Birth,] Now,
-in Mr. W. B. Smith's works this development of doctrine about
-Jesus, this succession of phases, is not only reversed, but, with
-singular perversity, turned upside down. Similarly, Mr. Robertson
-and Dr. Drews, in order to secure a favourable reception for their
-hypothesis that Jesus was a Sun-god, insist in the teeth of the
-evidence that the belief in the Virgin Birth was part and parcel of
-the earliest tradition. As a matter of fact, it was comparatively
-late, as the heortology or history of the feasts of the Church
-shows. Of specially Christian feasts, the first was the Sunday,
-which commemorated every week the Resurrection, and the hope of the
-Parousia, or Second Coming. The next was the Epiphany, on January 6,
-commemorative of the baptism when the Holy Spirit descended on Jesus
-and conferred Messiahship.
-
-This feast we cannot trace before the year 125 or 150, and then only
-among Basilidians; among Catholics hardly before 300. Just as the story
-of the Virgin Birth was the latest addition to evangelical tradition,
-so it was the latest of the dominical feasts; and not till 354 did it
-obtain separate recognition in Rome on December 25. Of the feast of the
-Annunciation and of the other feasts of the Virgin we first hear in the
-sixth and succeeding centuries. From this outline we can realize at
-how late a period the legend of the Virgin Birth influenced the mind
-of the Church at large; yet Mr. Robertson, to smooth the way for his
-"mythic" theory, pretends that it was the earliest of all Christian
-beliefs, and without a tittle of evidence invents a pre-Christian
-Saviour-Sun-god Joshua, born of a virgin, Miriam. The whole monstrous
-conception is a preposterous coinage of his brain, a figment unknown to
-anyone before himself and bristling with impossibilities. Witness the
-following passage (p. 284 of Christianity and Mythology), containing
-nearly as many baseless fancies as it contains words:--
-
-
- The one tenable historic hypothesis left to us at this stage
- is that of a preliminary Jesus "B.C.," a vague cult-founder
- such as the Jesus ben Pandira of the Talmud, put to death for
- (perhaps anti-Judaic) teachings now lost; round whose movement
- there might have gradually clustered the survivals of an ancient
- solar or other worship of a Babe Joshua son of Miriam.
-
-
-Such is the gist of the speculations of Messrs. Drews and Robertson,
-as far removed from truth and reality as the Athanasian Creed and
-from sane criticism as the truculent buffooneries of the Futurists
-from genuine art.
-
-We have more than once criticized this tendency of Mr. Robertson to
-insist on the primitiveness of the Virgin Birth legend. He urges it
-throughout his volume, although here and there he seems to see the
-truth, as, e.g., on p. 189, where he remarks that "only the late
-Third Gospel tells the story" of Mary and Joseph going to Bethlehem
-to be taxed, and "that the narrative in Matthew" was "added late to
-the original composition, which obviously began at what is now the
-third chapter." If the legend was part of the earliest tradition,
-why does it figure for the first time in the late Third Gospel and in
-a late addition to the first? In another passage he assures us that
-chapters i and ii of Luke are "a late fabulous introduction." Clearly,
-his view is that, just in proportion as any part of the Gospels is
-late, the tradition it contains must be early; and he it is who talks
-about "the methodless subjectivism" of Dr. Pfleiderer, who, he says,
-"like Matthew Arnold, accepts what he likes" (p. 450).
-
-[and in connection with Schmiedel's "Pillars"] The same inability to
-distinguish what is early from what is late is shown by Mr. Robertson
-in his criticism of Dr. Schmiedel's "pillars"--i.e., the nine Gospel
-texts (seven of them in Mark)--"which cannot have been invented by
-believers in the godhood of Jesus, since they implicitly negate that
-godhood." Of these, one is Mark x, 17 ff., where Jesus uses--to one
-who had thrown himself at his feet with the words: "Good teacher,
-what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" (i.e., life in the kingdom
-to come)--the answer: "Why callest thou me good? No one is good,
-save one--to wit, God." Here many ancient sources intensify Jesus's
-refusal of a predicate which is God's alone; for they run: "Call thou
-me not good." This apart, the Second and Third Gospels may be said
-to agree in reading, "Good master," and, "Why callest thou me good?"
-
-In Matthew, however (xix, 16), we read as follows: "Behold, one came
-to him and said: Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have
-eternal life? And he said unto him, Why askest thou me concerning
-that which is good? One there is who is good," etc.
-
-Now, it is a result of criticism universally accepted to-day that
-Matthew and Luke compiled their Gospels with Mark before them, and
-that any reading in which either of them agrees with Mark must be
-more original than the discrepant reading of a third. Here Matthew
-is the discrepant witness, and he has remodelled the text of Mark to
-suit the teaching which had established itself in the Church about
-A.D. 100 that Jesus was without sin. He accordingly makes Jesus
-reply as a Greek sophist might reply, and not as a Jewish rabbi; and,
-by omitting the predicate "good" before teacher, he turns the words,
-"One there is who is good," into nonsense. By adding it before "thing"
-he creates additional nonsense; for how could any but a good action
-merit eternal life? The epithet is here superfluous. Even then, if
-we were not sure on other grounds that the Marcan story is the only
-source of the Matthaean deformed text, we could be sure that it was,
-because in Mark we have simplicity and good sense, whereas in Matthew
-we have neither. Mr. Robertson, on an earlier page, has, indeed,
-done lip-service to the truth that Mark presents us with the earliest
-form of evangelical tradition; but here he betrays the fact that he
-has not really understood the position, nor grasped the grounds (set
-forth by me in Myth, Magic, and Morals) on which it rests. For he is
-ready to sacrifice it the moment it makes havoc of his "mythological"
-argument, and writes (p. 443): "On the score of simple likelihood,
-which has the stronger claim? Surely the original text in Matthew."
-
-Even if Matthew, Mark, and Luke were rival and independent texts,
-instead of the first and third being, as they demonstrably are,
-copies and paraphrases of Mark, the best--if not the only--criterion
-of originality would be such an agreement of two of them as Mark
-and Luke here present against Matthew. Mr. Robertson, with entire
-ignoratio elenchi, urges in favour of the originality of Matthew's
-variant the circumstance that the oldest MS. sources of that Gospel
-reproduce it. How could they fail to do so, supposing it to be due to
-the redactor or editor of Mark, who was traditionally, but falsely,
-identified with the apostle Matthew? If the reading of Mark be not
-original, how came Luke to copy it from him? The most obvious critical
-considerations are wasted on Mr. Robertson and his friends.
-
-[Schmiedel on the disbelief of Mary in her son] Dr. Schmiedel again
-draws attention to the narrative of how Jesus, at the beginning of his
-ministry, was declared by his own household to be out of his senses,
-and of how, in consequence, his mother and brethren followed him
-in order to put him under restraint. The story offended the first
-and third evangelists, and they partly omit it, partly obscure its
-drift. The fourth evangelist limits the disbelief to the brethren
-of Jesus. The whole narrative is in flagrant antagonism to the Birth
-stories in the early chapters of Matthew and Luke, and to the whole
-subsequent drift of Church tradition. Being gifted with common sense,
-Schmiedel argues that it must be true, because it could never have
-been invented. It, anyhow, makes for the historicity of Jesus. What
-has Mr. Robertson to say about it? He writes (p. 443): "Why should
-such a conception be more alien to Christian consciousness than, say,
-the story of the trial, scourging, and crucifixion?" Here he ignores
-the point at issue. In Christian tradition, whether early or late,
-it was not the mother and brethren of Jesus who tried and scourged and
-crucified him, but inimical Jews and pagans. The latter are at no time
-related to have received an announcement of his birth from an angel,
-as his mother was presently believed to have done. We have, therefore,
-every reason for averring that the conception or idea of his being
-flouted by his own mother and brethren was a thousand times more alien
-to Christian consciousness--at least, any time after A.D. 100--than
-that of his being flouted by a Sadducean priesthood and by Roman
-governors. Once the legend of the Virgin Birth had grown up, such a
-story could not have been either thought of or committed to writing
-in a Gospel. It is read in Mark, and must be what we call a bed-rock
-tradition. If Mr. Robertson cannot see that, he is hopeless. Did he
-not admit (p. 443) that it is "certainly an odd text," so revealing
-his inmost misgivings about it, we should think him so.
-
-[Jesus is not deified in the earliest documents, nor do they reveal
-a "cult" of him] The same vice of mixing up different phases of the
-Christian religion shows itself in the insistence of this school of
-critic that it was from the first a cult of a deified Jesus. Thus
-Mr. Smith writes (Ecce Deus) as follows (p. 6):--
-
-
- We affirm that the worship of the one God under the name,
- aspect, or person of the Jesus, the Saviour, was the primitive
- and indefectible essence of the primitive teaching and propaganda.
-
-
-On the contrary, in the two basal documents, Mark and Q, no such
-worship is discernible. Jesus first comes on the scene as the humble
-son of Joseph and Mary to repent of his sins and purge them away
-in Baptism; he next takes up the preaching of the imprisoned John,
-which was merely that Jews should repent of their sins because the
-kingdom of God, involving a dissolution of the existing social and
-political order, was at hand. This was no divine role, and he is
-represented not as God, but only as the servant of God; for such
-in the Aramaic dialect of that age was the connotation of the title
-"Son of God." In Mark there is no sign of his deification, not even in
-the transfiguration scene; for in that he is merely the human Messiah
-attended by Elias and Moses. From a hundred early indicia we know that
-in the Semitic-speaking churches of the East he remained a human figure
-for centuries; and the Syrian Father Aphraat, as late as 336 in Persia,
-is careful to explain in his homilies that Jesus was only divine as
-Moses was, or as human kings are. It was not till the religion was
-diffused in a pagan medium in which gods had children by mortal women
-that the gross deification of Jesus emerged. The purport of these
-basal documents, moreover, is not to deify Jesus, but to establish as
-against the Jews that he was their promised Messiah and the central
-figure of the Messianic kingdom he preached. That figure, however,
-was never identified with Jehovah, but was only Jehovah's servant,
-anointed king and judge of Israel, restorer of Israel's damaged
-fortunes, fulfiller of her political ideals and hopes. Mr. Smith
-argues that Jesus was deified from the first because his name was
-so often invoked in exorcisms. He even makes the suggestion (p. 17)
-that the initial letter J of Jesus "must have powerfully suggested
-Jehovah to the Jewish consciousness." There is no evidence, and
-less likelihood, of any such thing. The name of Jesus was during
-his lifetime invoked against demons by exorcists who rejected his
-message; just as they used the names of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
-so they were ready to exploit his powerful name; but neither Jews nor
-Christians ever confounded with Jehovah the names or personalities
-they thus invoked; any Jew in virtue of his birth and breeding would
-have regarded such a confusion of a man with his God as flat blasphemy.
-
-[Worship of a slain God no part of the earliest Christianity]
-Messrs. Robertson and Drews similarly insist that Jesus was from the
-first worshipped as a slain God. In the Gospel documents there is
-no sign of anything of the sort. It was Paul who first diffused the
-idea that the crucified Jesus was a victim slain for the redemption
-of human sins. We already have Philo proclaiming that the just man
-is the ransom of the many, so that there is no need to go to pagan
-circles, no need to go outside the pale of Greek Jews, of whom Paul
-was one, for the origin of the idea. He probably found it even in the
-teaching of Gamaliel, in which he was brought up. Mark asks no more
-of his readers than to attribute the Messiahship--a thoroughly human
-role--to his hero, Jesus of Nazareth. Nor does Matthew, who seeks
-at every turn to prove that the actions of Jesus reported by Mark
-were those which, according to the old prophets, a Messiah might be
-expected to perform. How can writers who end their record of Jesus by
-telling us how in the moment of death he cried, "My God, my God, why
-hast thou forsaken me?" realizing no doubt that all his expectations
-of the advent of God's kingdom were frustrated and set at naught; how,
-I say, can such writers have believed that Jesus was Jehovah? The
-idea is monstrous. The truth is these writers transport back into
-the first age of Christianity the ideas and beliefs of developed
-Catholicism, and are resolved that the first shall be last and the last
-first. They have no perspective, and no capacity for understanding
-the successive phases through which a primitive Messianism, at first
-thoroughly monotheistic and exclusively Jewish in outlook and ideals,
-gradually evolved itself, with the help of the Logos teaching, into
-the Athanasian cult of an eternal and consubstantial Son of God.
-
-[Abuse of the comparative method by this school of writers] Thirdly,
-these writers abuse the comparative method. Applied discreetly and
-rationally, this method helps us to trace myths and beliefs back
-to their homes and earlier forms. Thus M. Emmanuel Cosquin (in
-Romania; Paris, 1912) takes the story of the cat and the candle,
-and traces out its ramifications in the mediaeval literature and
-modern folklore of Europe, and outside Europe, in the legends of
-the Pendjab, of Cashmir, Bengal, Ceylon, Tibet, Tunisia, Annam,
-and elsewhere. But the theme is always sufficiently like itself to
-be really recognizable in the various folklore frames in which it
-is found encased. The old philologists saw in the most superficial
-resemblance of sound a reason for connecting words in different
-languages. They never asked themselves how a word got out of Hebrew,
-say, into Greek, or out of Greek into Mexican. Volumes were filled
-with these haphazard etymologies, and the idea of the classification
-of languages into great connected families only slowly made its way
-among us in the last century. I have pointed out that in regard to
-names Messrs. Drews and Robertson are still in this prephilological
-stage of inquiry; as regards myths or stories of incident, they are
-wholly immersed in it. [They fit anything on to anything no matter how
-ineptly,] They never trouble themselves to make sure that the stories
-they connect bear any real resemblance to one another. For example,
-what have the Zodiacal signs and the Apostles of Jesus in common
-except the number twelve? As if number was not the most superficial
-of attributes, the least characteristic and essential. The scene of
-the Gospel is laid in Judaea, where from remote antiquity the Jews
-had classed themselves in twelve tribes. Is it not more likely that
-this suggested the twelve missionaries sent out by Jesus to announce
-the coming kingdom than the twelve signs of the Zodiac? Even if the
-story of the Twelve be legendary, need we go outside Judaism for our
-explanation of its origin?
-
-What, again, have the three Maries in common with the Greek Moirai
-except the number three and a delusive community of sound? Yet
-Mr. Robertson insists that the three Maries at the tomb of Jesus
-were suggested by the Moirai, because these, "as goddesses of birth
-and death, naturally figured in many artistic presentations of
-religious death scenes." As a matter of fact, the representation of
-the Parcae or Fates in connection with death is rare except on Roman
-sarcophagi, mostly of later date than the Gospel story. And when
-they are so found, they represent, not women bringing spices for
-the corpse or mourning for the dead, but the forces, often thought
-of as blind and therefore represented as veiled, which govern the
-events of the world, including birth, life and death. [and forget
-the innate hostility of Jews to Paganism] There was, therefore,
-nothing in the Moirai to suggest the three Maries at the tomb; nor
-is it credible that the Hebrew Christists, given as they must have
-been to monotheism and detesting all statuary, pagan or other, would
-have chosen their literary motives from such a source. Where could
-they see such statuary in or about Jerusalem? It is notorious that
-the very presence of a symbolic eagle used as a military standard
-was enough to create an emeute in Jerusalem. The scheme of the
-emperor Caligula or Caius to set up his statue in Jerusalem in 39-40
-A.D. provoked a movement of revolt throughout Palestine, with which
-the Jews of Egypt and elsewhere were in full sympathy. A deputation
-headed by Philo of Alexandria went to Rome to supplicate the emperor
-not to goad the entire race to frenzy. In the magnificent statues
-which surrounded him on the Parthenon hill, Paul could see nothing
-but idols, monuments of an age of superstition and ignorance which
-God had mercifully overlooked. [40] The hostility of the Jews to all
-pagan art and sculpture was as great as that of Mohammedans to-day. Yet
-Mr. Robertson asks us to believe (p. 327) that the Gospel myths, as
-he assumes them to be, are "evolved from scenes in pagan art." On the
-top of that we afterwards learn from him that it was the Jewish high
-priest with legalistic leanings that presided over the Christists or
-Jesuists. Imagine such a high priest's feelings when he beheld his
-"secret society" evolving their system under such an inspiration as
-Mr. Robertson outlines in the following canons of criticism:--
-
-
- As we have seen and shall see throughout this investigation,
- the Christian system is a patchwork of a hundred suggestions
- drawn from pagan art and ritual usage (p. 305).
-
- Christism borrowed myths of all kinds from paganism (p. xii).
-
- ... the whole Christian legend, in its present terminology,
- is demonstrably an adaptation of a mass of pre-Christian myths
- (p. 136).
-
-
-What a budget of mutually destructive paradoxes; and to crown them
-all Mr. Robertson claims in his introduction (p. xxii) that the method
-of his treatise is
-
-
- in general more "positive," less a priori, more obedient to
- scientific canons than that of the previous critics ... who have
- reached similar anti-traditionalist results. It substitutes an
- anthropological basis, in terms of the concrete phenomena of
- mythology, for a pseudo-philosophical presupposition.
-
-
-[Credulity attends hypercriticism] Fourthly, it is essential to
-note the childish, all-embracing, and overwhelming credulity of
-these writers. To them applies in its full force the paragraph in
-which MM. Langlois and Seignobos describe the perils which beset
-hypercriticism (p. 131, op. cit.):--
-
-
- The excess of criticism, just as much as the crudest ignorance,
- leads to error. It consists in the application of critical canons
- to cases outside their jurisdiction. It is related to criticism as
- logic-chopping is to logic. There are persons who scent enigmas
- everywhere, even where there are none. They take perfectly clear
- texts and subtilize on them till they make them doubtful, under
- the pretext of freeing them from imaginary corruptions. They
- discover traces of forgery in authentic documents. A strange
- state of mind! By constantly guarding against the instinct of
- credulity they come to suspect everything.
-
-
-For these writers, in their anxiety to be original and new, see fit to
-discard every position that earlier historians, like Mommsen, Gibbon,
-Bury, Montefiore--not to mention Christian scholars--have accepted
-as beyond doubt. Their temper is that of the Bacon-Shakesperians;
-and the plainest, simplest, most straightforward texts figure in
-their imaginations as a laborious series of charades, rebuses,
-and cryptograms. That Jesus never existed is not really the final
-conclusion of their researches, but an initial unproved assumption. In
-order to get rid of him, they feign, without any evidence of it, a
-Jewish secret society under the patronage of the Jewish High Priest,
-that existed in Jerusalem well down into the Christian era. This
-society kept up the worship of an old Palestinian and Ephraimitic
-Sun-god and Saviour, named Joshua, son of a virgin, Miriam. Where is
-the proof that such a god was ever heard of in ancient Palestine,
-either early or late, or that such a cult ever existed? There is
-none. It is the emptiest and wildest of hypotheses; yet we are asked
-to accept it in place of the historicity of Jesus. What, again, do
-we know of secret societies in Jerusalem? Josephus and Philo knew of
-none. For the Therapeutae, far from affecting secrecy, were anxious
-to diffuse their discipline and lore even among the Hellenes, while
-the Essenes had nothing secret save the names of the angels they
-invoked in spells. They were a well-known sect, and so numerous that
-a gate of Jerusalem was called the Essene Gate, because they so often
-came in and went forth by it. Were the Pharisees and Sadducees, the
-Scribes, or the Sicarii or zealots, secret sects? We know they were
-not. But is it likely that a sect composed in the main of Jews, and
-patronized, as Mr. Robertson argues, by the High Priest, would have
-kept up in the very heart of monotheistic Judaism a cult of Sun-gods
-and Vegetation-spirits? Could they there have given themselves up to
-the study of pagan statuary, art, and ritual dramas? What possible
-connection is there between the naive picture of Hebrew Messianism
-we have in the Synoptic Gospels and the hurly-burly, the tagrag and
-bobtail of pagan mythologies which Mr. Robertson and his henchman
-Drews rake together pell-mell in their pretentious volumes? How did
-all this paganism abut in a Messianic society which reverenced the
-Old Testament for its sacred scriptures, which for long frequented the
-Jewish Temple, took over the feasts and fasts of Judaism, modelled its
-prayers on those of the Synagogue, cherished in its eastern branches
-the practice of circumcision?
-
-[Mr. Robertson accepts the historicity of Jesus after all] After
-hundreds of pages devoted to the task of evaporating Jesus into
-a Solar or Vegetation-god, and all the personages we meet in the
-Gospels into zodiacal signs or pagan demigods, Mr. Robertson, as we
-have noticed above, finds himself, after all, confronted with the
-same personages in Paul's Epistles. There they are too real even for
-Mr. Robertson to dissipate them into cloud-forms, and too numerous
-to be cut out wholesale. He feels that, if all Paul's allusions to
-the crucified Jesus are to be got rid of as interpolations, then
-no Pauline Epistles will remain. He cuts out, indeed, all he can,
-but there is a residuum of reality. To identify Paul's Jesus with
-the Jesus of the Gospels is too humdrum and obvious a course for
-him. So common-sense and commonplace a scheme does not suit his
-subtle intelligence; moreover, such an identification would upset
-the hundreds of pages in which he has proved that Jesus of Nazareth
-and all his accessories are literary symbols employed by the Jewish
-"Jesuists" to disguise their pagan art and myths. Accordingly, he
-asks us to believe that Paul's Jesus is a certain Jesus Ben Pandira,
-stoned to death a hundred years earlier. This Jesus is a vague
-figure fished up out of the Talmud; but, on examination, we found
-Mr. Robertson's choice of him as an alias for Paul's Jesus to be most
-unfortunate, for competent Talmudic scholars are agreed that Jesus
-Ben Pandira in the Talmud was no other than Jesus of Nazareth in the
-Gospels. Jesus most unkindly insists on being in at his own death,
-[41] in spite of all Mr. Robertson can say or do; and his house
-of cards is crowned with the discovery that the apostles whom Paul
-knew--not being identical with the signs of the Zodiac, like those
-of the Gospels--were no other than the twelve apostles of the Jewish
-High Priest, and that they were the authors of the lately-discovered
-"Teaching of the Apostles." He is very contemptuous for other early
-Christian books which affect apostolic authorship in their titles,
-but falls a ready victim to the relatively late and anonymous editor
-of this "teaching," who to give it vogue entitled it "The Teaching of
-the Lord by the Twelve Apostles to the Gentiles." "The Jesuist sect,"
-he writes (p. 345), "founded on it (the Didache) the Christian myth
-of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus." Everywhere else in his books he
-has argued that the "myth" in question was founded on the signs of
-the Zodiac. Why give up at the eleventh hour the astral explanation
-for an utterly different one? I may add that in the body of the
-Didache the Twelve are nowhere alluded to; that it must be a much
-later document than the Gospels and Paulines, since it quotes them in
-scores of passages; and that the interpolation of the title, with a
-reference to the Twelve Apostles, was a literary trick scarcely older
-than the fourth century, long before which age the Pauline account of
-the resurrection was cited by a score of Christian writers. Lastly,
-we are fain to inquire of Mr. Robertson with whom he identifies "the
-Lord" of the above title--with the Jewish High Priest, or with Jesus
-Ben Pandira, or with the Sun-God-Saviour Joshua.
-
-[Theory of interpolations] I have given many examples of the tendency
-of all these authors to condemn as an interpolation any text which
-contradicts their hypotheses. There is only one error worse than that
-of treating seriously documents which are no documents at all. It is
-that of the man who cannot recognize documents when he has got them. It
-is well, of course, to weigh sources, and the critical investigation
-of authorship lies at the basis of all true history. But, as the
-authors above cited justly remark (p. 99):--
-
-
- We must not abuse it. The extreme of distrust in these matters is
- almost as mischievous as the extreme of credulity. Pere Hardouin,
- who attributed the works of Virgil and Horace to medieval monks,
- was every whit as ridiculous as the victim of Vrain-Lucas. It
- is an abuse of the methods of this species of criticism to apply
- them, as has been done, indiscriminately, for the mere pleasure
- of it. The bunglers who have used this species of criticism
- to brand as spurious perfectly genuine documents, such as the
- writings of Hroswitha, the Ligurinus, and the bull unam sanctam,
- or to establish imaginary filiations between certain annals, on
- the strength of superficial indications, would have discredited
- criticism before now, if that had been possible.
-
-
-It is unhappily easier to discredit criticism in the realm of
-ecclesiastical than of secular history; and this school of writers
-are doing their best to harm the cause of true Rationalism. They
-only afford amusement to the obscurantists of orthodoxy, and render
-doubly difficult the task of those who seek to win people over to a
-common-sense and historical envisagement, unencumbered by tradition
-and superstition, of the problems of early Christianity.
-
-[Professor Smith's monotheistic cult] Lastly, it is a fact deserving of
-notice that the genesis of Christianity as these authors present it is
-much more mysterious and obscure than before. Their explanation needs
-explaining. What, we must ask, was the motive and end in view of the
-adherents of the pre-Christian Jesus or Joshua in writing the Gospels
-and bringing down their God to earth, so humanizing in a story their
-divine myth? Let Professor W. B. Smith speak: "What was the essence,
-the central idea and active principle, of the cult itself?" Here he
-means the cult of the pre-Christian Christ that invented the Gospels
-and diffused them on the market place. "To this latter," he continues,
-"we answer directly and immediately: It was a Protest against idolatry;
-it was a Crusade for monotheism."
-
-And yet he cannot adduce a single text from the Gospels--not even from
-the Fourth--which betrays on the part of Jesus, their central figure,
-any such crusading spirit. Jesus everywhere assumes his hearers
-to be monotheists like himself--he speaks as a Jew to Jews--and
-perpetually reminds them of their Father in heaven. Thus Matt. vi,
-8: "Your Father knoweth what things ye have need of"; Matt. v, 48:
-"Ye therefore shall be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect."
-
-The monotheism of those who stood around the teacher is ever taken
-for granted by the evangelists, and in all the precepts of Jesus
-not one can be adduced that is aimed at the sins of polytheism
-and idolatry. His message lies in a far different region. It is the
-immediate advent of the Messianic kingdom, and the need of repentance
-ere it come. Only when Paul undertakes to bear this message to pagans
-outside the pale of Judaism do we get teaching directed against
-idolatry; and in his Epistles such precepts have a second place,
-the first being reserved to the preaching of the coming kingdom
-and of the redemption of the world by the merits of the crucified
-and risen Messiah, the man Jesus. Most of Paul's letters read as if
-those for whom he wrote them were already proselytes familiar with
-the Jewish scriptures.
-
-[His great Oriental cryptogram] Such is Mr. Smith's fundamental
-assumption, and it is baseless. On it he bases his next great
-hypothesis of "the primitive secrecy of the Jesus cult," which "was
-maintained in some measure for many years--for generations even"
-(p. 45). "Why," he asks, "was this Jesus cult originally secret, and
-expressed in such guarded parabolic terms as made it unintelligible
-to the multitude?" The reason lay in the fact that "it was exactly to
-save the pagan multitude from idolatry that Jesus came into the world"
-(p. 38).
-
-Here the phrase "Jesus came into the world," like all else he did or
-suffered, is, of course, to be understood in a Pickwickian sense,
-for he never came into the world at all. The Gospels are not only
-a romance concocted by "such students of religion as the first
-Christians were" (p. 65), and inspired by their study of Plato, [42]
-and of the best elements in ancient mythology; they are a romance
-throughout--an allegory of a secret pre-Christian Nazarene society
-and of its secret cult (p. 34). Of this society, he tells us, we
-know nothing; esoterism and cult secrecy were its chief interests;
-the "silence of the Christians about it was intentional," [43]
-and, except for the special revelation vouchsafed the other day
-to Professor W. B. Smith, it would have remained for ever unknown,
-and Christianity for ever enigmatic.
-
-In accordance with this postulate of esoterism and cult secrecy among
-the pre-Christian Nazarenes, who subsequently revealed themselves to
-the world as the Christian Church, though even then they "maintained
-for generations the secrecy [44] of their Jesus cult," the Gospels,
-as I said, are an allegory or a charade. Their prima facie meaning is
-never the true one, never more than symbolic of a moral and spiritual
-undersense such as old allegorists like Philo and Origen loved to
-discover in the Bible. Thus, as we saw above, when Jesus is reported to
-have cast out of the Jews who thronged around him devils of blindness,
-deafness, lameness, leprosy, death, what is really intended is that
-he argued pagans out of their polytheism. "It was spiritual maladies,
-and only spiritual, that he was healing" (p. 38). We ask of Mr. Smith,
-why was so much mystification necessary? We are only told that
-"it was in the main a prudential measure, well enough justified,
-but intended to be only temporary" (p. 39). What exact risks they
-were to shun which the sect kept itself secret, and only spake in
-far-fetched allegory, Mr. Smith does not inform us. Is he, too,
-afraid of being regarded as a "tell-tale" (p. 48)?
-
-[Professor Smith resolves all the New Testament as symbolic and
-allegorical] As with the exorcisms, so with all else told of
-Jesus. None of it really happened. As he never lived, so he never
-died. His human life and death are an allegory of the spiritual cult
-and mysteries which the pre-Christian Nazarenes and their descendants,
-the Christians, so jealously and for so long guarded in silence. If he
-never lived, then he never taught, not even in parables. By consequence
-the entire record of his parables, still more of his having chosen
-the parable as his medium of instruction in order to veil his real
-meaning from his audience, is all moonshine. Here, as elsewhere, the
-Gospel text does not mean what it says, but is itself only a Nazarene
-parable conveying, or rather concealing, a Nazarene secret--what sort
-of secret no one, save Professor Smith, the self-appointed revealer
-of their mysterious lore, can tell, and he is silent on the point. On
-Mr. Smith's premisses, then, we cannot rely on the Gospels to inform
-us of anything historical, and, so far as we can follow him, we must,
-if we would discern through them the mind of their Nazarene authors,
-take them upside down. We must discern a pagan medium and homilies
-against polytheism in discourses addressed to monotheistic Jews who
-needed no warnings against idolatry; we must also read the stories
-of Jesus healing paralytics and demoniacs as secret and disguised
-polemics against idolatry.
-
-[Yet claims, where it suits him, to treat it as historical narrative]
-But here mark Professor Smith's inconsistency. Why is he sure that
-the Nazarenes, and after them the earliest Christians, were a secret
-society with a secret cult? They must have been so, he argues, because
-Jesus taught in parables. "The primitive esoterism," he tells us,
-"is admittedly present in Mark iv, 11, 12, 33, 34." These verses
-begin thus: "And he said unto them, unto you is given the mystery
-of the kingdom of heaven: but unto them that are without, all things
-are done in parables."
-
-Now, Mr. Smith's postulate is that he--i.e., Jesus of Nazareth--never
-lived, and so never said anything to anyone. How, then, can he
-appeal to what he said to prove that there was a pre-Christian
-Jesus or Joshua sect, itself secret with a cult and ritual which
-its members were ever on their guard not to reveal? Surely he drops
-here into two assumptions which he has discarded ab initio: first,
-that there is a core of real history in the Gospels; and, second,
-that the Gospel can mean what it says, and that its Nazarene author
-is here not allegorizing, as he usually did.
-
-[His theory contradicts itself] But even if we allow Mr. Smith to break
-with his premisses wherever he needs to do so in order to substantiate
-them, do these verses of Mark support his hypothesis of a sect which
-kept itself, its rites, and its teaching secret? I admit that it was
-pretty successful when it veiled its anti-idolatrous teaching under
-the outward form of demonological anecdotes, and wrote Jews when it
-meant Pagans and Polytheists. But in Mark iv, 34, we are told that
-"to his own disciples Jesus privately expounded all things" after he
-had with many parables spoken the word to such as "were able to hear
-it." It appears, then, that for all their love of secrecy, and in spite
-of all their precautions against "tell-tale" writing, the Nazarenes
-on occasions went out of their way, in their allegorical romance of
-their God Joshua, to inform all who may read it what their parables
-and allegories meant; for in it Jesus sits down and expounds to the
-reader over some twenty-four verses (verses 10-34) the inner meaning
-of the parables which he had just addressed to the multitude. What
-on earth were the Nazarenes doing to publish a Gospel like this,
-and so let the cat out of the bag? Instead of keeping their secret
-they were proclaiming it on the housetops. Again, if the Gospels
-are to such an extent merely allegorical, that we must not assume
-their authors to have believed that Jesus ever lived, how can we
-possibly rely on them for information about such an obscure matter
-as a secret and esoteric pre-Christian Nazarene sect? We can only be
-sure that the evangelists never under any circumstances meant what
-they said; yet Mr. Smith, in defiance of all his postulates, writes,
-p. 40, as follows: "On the basis, then, of this passage alone [i.e.,
-Mark iv, 10-34] we may confidently affirm the primitive secrecy of
-the Jesus cult." Even if the passage rightly yielded the sense he
-tries to extort from it, how can we be sure that that sense is not,
-like the rest of the Gospel, an allegory of something else?
-
-The other passage of the Gospels, Matthew x, 26, 27, to which,
-with like inconsistency, Mr. Smith appeals by way of showing that
-the Nazarenes of set purpose hid their light under a bushel, does
-not bear the interpretation he puts on it. It runs thus: "Fear them
-not therefore: for naught is covered that shall not be revealed,
-and hidden that shall not be known. What I tell you in the darkness,
-speak ye on the housetops; and what ye hear in the ear, proclaim upon
-the housetops."
-
-[Absence of esoterism about Jesus's teaching] The reasonable
-interpretation of the above is that Jesus, being in possession, as he
-thought, of a special understanding, perhaps revelation, of the true
-nature of the Messianic kingdom, and convinced of its near approach,
-instructed his immediate disciples in privacy concerning it in order
-that they might carry the message up and down the land to the children
-of Israel. He therefore exhorts them not to be silent from fear of
-the Jews, who accused him of being possessed of a devil, somewhat as
-his own mother and brethren accused him of being an exalte and beside
-himself. No, they were to cast aside all apprehensions; they must go,
-not to the supercilious Pharisees or to the comfortable priests who
-battened on the people, still less to Gentiles and Samaritans, who
-had no part in the promises made to Israel, but to the lost sheep
-of the house of Israel, and they must preach as they went, saying,
-The kingdom of heaven is at hand. They were to heal the sick, raise
-the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out devils, and in general give
-freely the good tidings which freely they had received from their
-Master, and he from John the Baptist. If they so acted, discarding
-all timidity, then no human repression, no human time-serving, could
-prevent the spread of the good news. What was now hidden from the
-poor and ignorant among his compatriots would henceforth, thanks to
-the courage and devotedness of his emissaries, be made known to them;
-what was now covered, be revealed.
-
-Such is the context of "this remarkable deliverance," as Mr. Smith
-terms it; and nothing in all the New Testament savours less than it
-does of a secret cult of mysterious sectaries, waiting for Mr. Smith to
-manifest their arcana to us twenty centuries later. Here, as everywhere
-else in the New Testament, he has discovered a monstrous mare's nest;
-has banished the only possible and obvious interpretation, in order
-to substitute a chimera of his own.
-
-[It was not a protest against paganism] Mr. Smith credits his
-hypothetical pre-Christian Nazarenes with an ambition and anxiety
-to purge away the errors of mankind. The "essence, the central idea,
-and active principle of the cult itself," he tells us (p. 45), "was
-a protest against Idolatry, a crusade for monotheism." "The fact of
-the primitive worship of Jesus and the fact of the primitive mission
-to all the Gentiles are the two cardinal facts of Proto-Christianity"
-(p. xvii). Why on earth, then, in concocting that pronunciamento of
-their cult which we call the Gospels, did these Nazarenes represent
-the Jesus or Joshua God, even in allegory, as warning his disciples
-on no account to disseminate his cult among Gentiles and Samaritans,
-but only among Jews, who were notoriously monotheists and bitterly
-hostile to every form of idolatry? Why carry coals to Newcastle on
-so huge a scale?
-
-[Why turn God Jeshua into a man at all] And granted that the Nazarenes,
-in their anxiety to be parabolical and misunderstood of their readers,
-wrote Jews when they meant Pagans, was it necessary in the interests
-of their monotheistic crusade to nickname their One God Jesus, to
-represent him as a man and a carpenter, with brothers and sisters,
-and a mother that did not believe in him; as a man who was a Jew with
-the prejudices of a Jew, a man circumcised and insisting that he came
-not to destroy the law of Moses, but to fulfil it; as a man who was
-born like other men of a human father and mother; was crucified, dead
-and buried; whose disciples and Galilean companions, when in the first
-flush of their grief they heard from Mary Magdalene the strange story
-of his first appearing to her after death, still "disbelieved"? [45]
-
-[The comfort of the initial "J"] These Nazarenes were, in their
-quality of "students of religion" (p. 65), intent on converting the
-world from polytheism. Why, then, did they call their sublime deity
-by the name of Jesus? "The word Jesus itself," writes Mr. Smith,
-
-
- also made special appeal to the Jewish consciousness, for it
- was practically identical with their own Jeshua, now understood
- by most to mean strictly Jah-help, but easily confounded with a
- similar J'shu'ah, meaning Deliverance, Saviour, Witness, Matthew
- i, 21. Moreover, the initial letter J, so often representing Jah
- in Hebrew words, must have powerfully suggested Jehovah to the
- Jewish consciousness.
-
-
-But what Jew of the first century, however fond of the tales about
-Joshua which he read in his scriptures, was ever minded to substitute
-his name for that of Jehovah merely because it began with a J and has
-been explained by twentieth-century Hebraists as meaning Jah-help? The
-idea is exquisitely humorous. While they were about it why did the
-Nazarenes not adopt the name Immanuel, which in that allegorical
-romance (which from Mr. Smith we know to be the character of Matthew's
-Gospel) they fished up out of the Hebrew prophet Isaiah? If Jehovah
-was not good enough for them, Immanuel was surely better than the
-name Jeshua, with its associations of pillage and murder. But apart
-from these considerations, as the name Jeshua is Hebrew, it follows
-that the secret sectaries who had this cult must have been of a Jewish
-cast. But, if so, what Jew, we ask, ever heard of a God called Jeshua
-or Joshua? As I have already pointed out, the very memory of such a
-God, if there ever was one, perished long before the Book of Joshua
-could have been written. Like the gods Daoud and Joseph, with whom
-writers of this class seek to conjure our wits out of our heads,
-a god Joshua is a mere preposterous superfetation of a disordered
-imagination. "There were abundant reasons," writes Mr. Smith (p. 16),
-
-
- why the name Jesus should be the Aaron's rod to swallow up all
- other designations. Its meaning, which was felt to be Saviour,
- was grand, comforting, uplifting. The notion of the world-Saviour
- thrust its roots into the loam of the remotest antiquity.
-
-
-[Supposed confusion of Jesus with iesomai] One regrets to have to
-criticize such dithyrambic outpourings of Mr. Smith's heart. But,
-granted there was a widespread expectation, such as Suetonius records,
-of Messiahs who were to issue from Judaea and conquer all the world,
-who ever heard of the name Joshua being assigned in advance to one of
-them? Who ever in that age felt the name Jesus to be grand, comforting,
-uplifting? Is not Mr. Smith attributing his own feelings, as he sat
-in a Sunday school, to Jews and Gentiles of the first century? I
-add Gentiles, for he pretends that the name Jesus appealed to the
-Greek consciousness also as a derivative of the Ionic future Iesomai
-iesomai = I will heal. Now what Christian writer ever made this
-rapprochement? Not a single one. Surely, if we are minded to argue
-the man Jesus out of existence, we ought to have a vera causa to put
-in his place, a belief, or, if we like it better, a myth which was
-really believed, and is known to have entered deeply into the lives
-and consciences of men? It is true that the idea of a Messiah did so
-enter, but not in the form in which Mr. Smith loves to conceive it. The
-Messiah was such a human figure as Suetonius had heard of; he was a man
-who should, as we read in Acts, restore the kingdom of David. "Lord,
-dost Thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?" is the question
-the apostles are said (Acts i, 7) to have put to Jesus as soon as his
-apparitions before them had revived the Messianic hopes which his
-death had so woefully dashed. The incident is probably apocryphal,
-yet its presence in the narrative illustrates what a Messiah was then
-expected by Christians to achieve. Judas Maccabaeus, Cyrus, Bar Cochba,
-Judas of Galilee--these and other heroes of Israel had the quality
-of Messiahs. They were all men, and not myths. The suggestion, then,
-that the name Jesus was one to conjure with is idle and baseless; and
-if his name had been Obadiah or Nathaniel, Professor Smith would have
-been equally ready to prove that these were attractive names, bound to
-triumph and "swallow up all other designations." He only pitches on
-the name of Jesus for his pre-Christian Saviour-god because he finds
-it in the Gospels; but inasmuch as he sees in them mere allegorical
-romances, entirely unhistorical and having no root in facts, there
-is no reason for adopting from them one name more than another. How
-does he know that the appellation Jesus is not as much of a Nazarene
-fiction as he holds every other name and person and incident to be
-which the Gospels contain? Is it not more probable that this highly
-secretive sect, with their horror of "tell-tale," would keep secret
-the name of their Saviour-god, as the Essenes kept secret the names
-of their patron angels? The truth is, even Mr. Smith cannot quite
-divest himself of the idea that there is some historical basis for
-the Gospels; otherwise he would not have turned to them for the name
-of his Saviour-god.
-
-[Mr. Smith denies all historicity to Acts and Epistles] More
-consistently, however, than Mr. Robertson, Professor Smith denies
-that there are any allusions to the real Jesus in the rest of
-the New Testament. The Acts and Epistles do not, he says (p. 23),
-"recognize at all the life of Jesus as a man," though "their general
-tenour gives great value to the death of Jesus as a God." This is a
-new reading of the documents in question, for the Pauline conviction
-was that Jesus had been crucified and died as a man, and, being
-raised up from death by the Spirit, had been promoted to be, what he
-was antenatally, a super-human or angelic figure [46]--a Christ or
-Messiah, who was to come again on earth and judge mankind. Of his mere
-humanity while on this earth, and as long as he was associating with
-human disciples, Paul entertained no doubts. How could he, inasmuch
-as he had stayed with them at Jerusalem? Mr. Robertson, as we saw,
-although he dissipates Jesus in the Gospels into a Sun-God-Saviour
-Joshua, nevertheless is so impressed by the Pauline "references to a
-crucified Jesus" (p. 364) that he resuscitates Jesus Ben Pandira out of
-the limbo of the Talmud. Perhaps he strains at a gnat after swallowing
-a camel. Anyhow, I will leave Mr. Smith to settle accounts with him,
-and turn to a fresh point, which has not occurred to either of them.
-
-[Contrast of Christian belief in Jesus with cult of Adonis or Osiris]
-It is this. Adonis and Osiris were never regarded by their votaries
-as having been human beings that had recently lived and died on the
-face of this earth. The Christians, in strong contrast with them
-and with all other pagans ever heard of, did so regard Jesus from
-first to last. Why so, when they knew that from the first he was a
-God and up in heaven? Why has the fact of his unreality, as these
-writers argue it, left no trace of itself in Christian tradition and
-literature? According to this new school of critics, the Nazarenes,
-when they wrote down the Gospels, knew perfectly well that Jesus was
-a figment, and had never lived at all. And yet we never get a hint
-that he was only a myth, and that the New Testament is a gigantic
-fumisterie. Why so? Why from the very first did the followers of
-Jesus entertain what Mr. Smith denounces as "an a priori concept of
-the Jesus" (p. 35)? Why, in other words, were they convinced from the
-beginning that he was a man of flesh and blood, who had lived on earth
-among them? The "early secrecy," the "esoterism of the primitive cult"
-(p. 39), says Mr. Smith, "was intended to be only temporary." If
-so, why could not the Nazarenes, primarily interested as they were,
-not in lies and bogus, but in disseminating their lofty monotheism,
-have thrown off the disguise some time or other, and explained to
-their spiritual children that the intensely concrete life of Jesus
-which they had published in our Gospel of Mark meant nothing; that
-it was all an allegory, and no more, of a Saviour-god, who had never
-existed as a human being, nor even as the docetic phantasmagoria of the
-Gnostic? "Something sealed the lips of that (Nazarene) evangelist,"
-and the Nazarenes have kept their secret so well through the ages
-that it has been reserved for Mr. Smith first to pierce the veil
-and unlock their mystery. He it is who has at last discovered that
-"in proto-Mark we behold the manifest God" (p. 24).
-
-Now what possessed the Nazarenes so firmly to impose on the world
-through the Gospels an erroneous view of their God, that for 2,000
-years not only their spiritual offspring, the Christians, but Jews
-and pagans as well, have believed him to have lived on earth, a man
-of flesh and blood and of like passions with themselves? Was the
-deception necessary? The votaries of Osiris and Adonis were never so
-tricked. The adherents of the Augustalian cult, the pious Greeks and
-Syrians who thronged to be healed of their diseases at the shrines
-of Apollonius, believed, of course, that their patron saints and
-gods had lived, prior to their apotheosis, upon earth; and so they
-had. But a follower of Osiris or AEsculapius would have opened his
-eyes wide with astonishment if you asked him to believe that his
-Saviour had died only the other day in Judaea. Not so a Christian;
-for the Nazarene monotheists had so thoroughly fooled him with their
-Gospels that he was ready to supply you with dates and pedigrees and
-all sorts of other details about his Saviour's personal history. And
-yet all the time, had he only known it, his religion laboured under the
-same initial disadvantage as the cult of Osiris or AEsculapius--that,
-namely, of its founder never having lived at all. What, then, did
-"such students of religion, as the first Christians were" (Ecce Deus,
-p. 65), imagine was to be gained by hood-winking their descendants
-for the long centuries which have intervened between them and the
-advent of Professor W. B. Smith?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-DR. JENSEN
-
-
-[Babylonian influence on Greek religion slight;] The three writers
-whose views I have so far considered agree in denying that Jesus was
-a real historical personage; but their agreement extends no further,
-for the Jesus legend is the precipitate, according to Professor
-W. B. Smith, of a monotheistic propaganda; according to Mr. Robertson,
-of a movement mainly idolatrous, polytheistic, and pagan. There exists
-in Germany, however, a third school of denial, which sees in the Jesus
-story a duplicate of the ancient Babylonian Gilgamesch legend. The
-more extreme writers of this school have endeavoured to show that not
-only the Hebrews, but the Greeks as well, derived their religious
-myths and rites from ancient Babylon; and their general hypothesis
-has on that account been nicknamed Pan-Babylonismus. This is not
-the place to criticize the use made of old Babylonian mythology in
-explanation of old Greek religion, though I do well to point out that
-the best students of the latter--for example, Dr. Farnell--confine
-the indebtedness of the Greeks to very narrow limits.
-
-[on Hebrew religion more important;] The case of the Hebrew scriptures
-and religion stands on different ground; for the Jews were Semites,
-and their myths of creation and of the origin and early history
-of man are, by the admission even of orthodox divines of to-day,
-largely borrowed from the more ancient civilization of Babylon. Thus
-Heinrich Zimmern (art. "Deluge," in Encyclopaedia Biblica) writes: "Of
-all the parallel traditions of a deluge, the Babylonian is undeniably
-the most important, because the points of contact between it and
-the Hebrew story are so striking that the view of the dependence of
-one of the two on the other is directly suggested even to the most
-cautious of students."
-
-[yet a Jew may have possessed some imagination of his own] This
-undoubted occurrence of Babylonian myths in the Book of Genesis has
-provided some less critical and cautious cuneiform scholars with
-a clue, as they imagine, to the entire contents of the Bible from
-beginning to end. It is as if the Jews, all through their literary
-history of a thousand years, could not possibly have invented any
-myths of their own, still less have picked a few up elsewhere than in
-Babylon. Accordingly, in a volume of 1,030 enormous pages, P. Jensen
-has undertaken to show [47] that the New Testament, no less than
-the Old, was derived from this single well-spring. Moses and Aaron,
-Joshua, Jeroboam, Rehoboam, Hadad, Jacob and Esau, Saul, David and
-Jonathan, Joseph and his brethren, Potiphar, Rachel and Leah, Laban,
-Zipporah, Miriam sister of Moses, Dinah, Simeon and Levi, Jethro and
-the Gibeonites and Sichemites, Sarah and Hagar, [Gilgamesch, Eabani,
-and the holy harlot, protagonists of the entire Old Testament] Abraham
-and Isaac, Samson, Uriah and Nathan, Naboth, Elijah and Elisha, Naaman,
-Benhadad and Hazael, Gideon, Jerubbaal, Abimelech, Jephthah, Tobit,
-Jehu, and pretty well any other personage in the Old Testament,
-are duplicates, according to him, of Gilgamesch or his companion
-the shepherd Eabani (son of Ea), or of the Hierodule or sacred
-prostitute, and of a few more leading figures in the Babylonian
-epic. There is hardly a story in the whole of Jewish literature
-which is not, according to Jensen, an echo of the Gilgamesch legend;
-and every personage, every incident, is freely manipulated to make
-them fit this Procrustean bed. No combinations of elements separated
-in the Biblical texts, no separations of elements united therein,
-no recasting of the fabric of a narrative, no modifications of
-any kind, are so violent as to deter Dr. Jensen. At the top of
-every page is an abstract of its argument, usually of this type:
-"Der Hirte Eabani, die Hierodule und Gilgamesch. Der Hirte Moses,
-sein Weib und Aaron." In other words, as Moses was one shepherd and
-Eabani another, Moses is no other than Eabani. As there is a sacred
-prostitute in the Gilgamesch story, and a wife in the legend of Moses,
-therefore wife and prostitute are one and the same. As Gilgamesch was
-companion of Eabani, and Aaron of Moses, therefore Aaron was an alias
-of Gilgamesch. Dr. Jensen is quite content with points of contact
-between the stories so few and slight as the above, and pursues this
-sort of loose argument over a thousand pages. Here is another such
-rubric: "Simson-Gilgamesch's Leiche und Saul-Gilgamesch's Gebeine
-wieder ausgegraben, Elisa-Gilgamesch's Grab geoeffnet." In other words,
-Simson, or Samson, left a corpse behind him (who does not?); Saul's
-bones were piously looked after by the Jabeshites; Elisha's bones
-raised a dead Moabite by mere contact to fresh life. These three
-figures are, therefore, ultimately one, and that one is Gilgamesch;
-and their three stories, which have no discernible features in common,
-are so many disguises of the Gilgamesch epos.
-
-[as also of the entire New Testament] But Dr. Jensen transcends himself
-in the New Testament. "The Jesus-saga," he informs us (p. 933), "as
-it meets us in the Synoptic Gospels, and equally as it meets us in
-John's Gospel, stands out among all the other Gilgamesch Sagas which
-we have so far (i.e., in the Old Testament) expounded, in that it not
-merely follows up the main body of the Saga with sundry fragments of
-it, like so many stragglers, but sets before us a long series of bits
-of it arranged in the original order almost undisturbed." [48]
-
-And he waxes eloquent about the delusions and ignorance of Christians,
-who for 2,000 years have been erecting churches and cathedrals in
-honour of a Jesus of Nazareth, who all the time was a mere alias
-of Gilgamesch.
-
-[John--Eabani] Let us, then, test some of the arguments by which this
-remarkable conclusion is reached. Let us begin with John the Baptist
-(p. 811). John was a prophet, who appeared east of the Jordan. So was
-Elias or Elijah. Elijah was a hairy man, and John wore a raiment of
-camel's-hair; both of them wore leather girdles.
-
-Now, in the Gilgamesch story, Eabani is covered with hair all over
-his body (p. 579--"am ganzen Leibe mit Haaren bedeckt ist"). Eabani
-(p. 818) is a hairy man, and presumably was clad in skins ("ist
-ein haariger Mann und vermutlich mit Fellen bekleidet"). Dr. Jensen
-concludes from this that John and Elijah are both of them, equally
-and independently, duplicates or understudies of Eabani. It never
-occurs to him that in the desert camel's-hair was a handy material
-out of which to make a coat, as also leather to make girdles of,
-and that desert prophets in any story whatever would inevitably
-be represented as clad in such a manner. He has, indeed, heard of
-Jo. Weiss's suggestion that Luke had read the LXX, and modelled his
-picture of John the Baptist on Elijah; but he rejects the suggestion,
-for he feels--and rightly--that to make any such admissions must
-compromise his main theory, which is that the old Babylonian epic was
-the only source of the evangelists. No (he writes), John's girdle,
-like Elijah's, came straight out of the Saga ("wohl durch die Sage
-bedingt ist"). Nor (he adds) can Luke's story of Sarah and Zechariah
-be modelled on Old Testament examples, as critics have argued. On the
-contrary, it is a fresh reflex of Gilgamesch ("ein neuer Reflex"),
-an independent sidelight cast by the central Babylonian orb ("ein
-neues Seitenstueck"), and is copied direct. We must not give in to the
-suggestion thrown out by modern critics that it is a later addition
-to the original evangelical tradition. Far from that being so, it must
-be regarded as an integral and original constituent in the Jesus-saga
-("So wird man zugestehen muessen, dass sie keine Zugabe, sondern ein
-integrierender Urbestandteil der Jesus-sage ist").
-
-[Jesus--Gilgamesch] From this and many similar passages we realize that
-the view that Jesus never lived, but was a mere reflex of Gilgamesch,
-is not, in Jensen's mind, a conclusion to be proved, but a dogma
-assumed as the basis of all argument, a dogma to which we must adjust
-all our methods of inquiry. To admit any other sources of the Gospel
-story, let alone historical facts, would be to infringe the exclusive
-apriority, as a source, of the Babylonian epic; and that is why we are
-not allowed to argue up to the latter, but only down from it. If for
-a moment he is ready to admit that Old Testament narrative coloured
-Luke's birth-story, and that (for example) the angel's visit in the
-first chapter of Luke was suggested by the thirteenth chapter of
-Judges, he speedily takes back the admission. Such an assumption is
-not necessary ("allein noetig ist ein solche Annahme nicht").
-
-"So much," he writes (p. 818),
-
-
- of John's person alone. Let us now pursue the Jesus Saga further.
-
- In the Gilgamesch Epic it is related how the Hunter marched
- out to Eabani with the holy prostitute, how Eabani enjoyed her,
- and afterwards proceeded with her to Erech, where, directly or in
- his honour, a festival was held; how he there attached himself to
- Gilgamesch, and how kingly honours were by the latter awarded to
- him. We must by now in a general way assume on the part of our
- readers a knowledge of how these events meet us over again in
- the Sagas of the Old Testament. In the numerous Gilgamesch Sagas,
- then [of the Old Testament], we found again this rencounter with
- the holy prostitute. And yet we seek it in vain in the three
- first Gospels in the exact context where we should find it on
- the supposition that they must embody a Gilgamesch Saga--that
- is to say, immediately subsequent to John's emergence in the
- desert. Equally little do we find in this context any reflex of
- Eabani's entry into the city of Erech, all agog at the moment
- with a festival. On the other hand, we definitely find in its
- original position an echo of Gilgamesch's meeting with Eabani. [49]
-
-
-[Evangelists borrowed their saga from Gilgamesch epos alone] Let us
-pause a moment and take stock of the above. In the epic two heroes
-meet each other in a desert. John and Jesus also meet in a desert;
-therefore, so argues Jensen, John and Jesus are reproductions of the
-heroes in question, and neither of them ever lived. It matters nothing
-that neither John nor Jesus was a Nimrod. This encounter of Gilgamesch
-and Eabani was, as Jensen reminds us, the model of every Old Testament
-story in which two males happen to meet in a desert; therefore it must
-have been the model of the evangelists also when they concocted their
-story of John and Jesus meeting in the wilderness. But how about the
-prostitute; and how about the entry into Erech? How are these lacunae
-of the Gospel story to be filled in? Jensen's solution is remarkable;
-he finds the encounter with the prostitute to have been the model on
-which the fourth evangelist contrived his story of Jesus's visit to
-Martha and Mary. For that evangelist, like the synoptical ones, had
-the Gilgamesch Saga stored all ready in his escritoire, and finding
-that his predecessors had omitted the prostitute he hastened to fill
-up the lacuna, and doubled her into Martha and Mary. In this and many
-other respects, so we are assured by Jensen, the fourth evangelist
-reproduces the Gilgamesch epic more fully and systematically than
-the other evangelists, and on that account we must assign to John's
-setting of the life of Christ a certain preference and priority. He
-is truer to the only source there was for any of it. The other lacuna
-of the Synoptic Gospels is the feasting in Erech and Eabani's entry
-amid general feasting into that city. The corresponding episode in
-the Gospels, we are assured, is the triumphant entry of Jesus into
-Jerusalem, which the Fourth Gospel, again hitting the right nail on
-the head, sets at the beginning of Jesus's ministry, and not at its
-end. But what, we still ask, is the Gospel counterpart to the honours
-heaped by Gilgamesch on Eabani? How dull we are! "The baptism of
-Jesus by John must, apart from other considerations, have arisen out
-of the fact that Eabani, after his arrival at Gilgamesch's palace,
-is by him allotted kingly honours." [50]
-
-So then Eabani, who as a hairy man was John the Baptist, is now, by a
-turn of Jensen's kaleidoscope, metamorphosed into Jesus, for it is John
-who did Jesus the honour of baptizing him. Conversely, Gilgamesch,
-who began as Jesus, is now suddenly turned into John. In fact,
-Jesus-Gilgamesch and John-Eabani have suddenly changed places with one
-another, in accordance, I suppose, with the rule of interpretation,
-somewhere laid down by Hugo Winckler, that in astral myths one hero
-is apt to swop with another, not only his stage properties, but his
-personality. But fresh surprises are in store for Jensen's readers.
-
-Over scores of pages he has argued that John the Baptist is no other
-than Eabani, because he so faithfully fulfils over again the role of
-the Eabanis we meet with in the Old Testament. For example, according
-to Luke (i, 15, and vii, 33) John drinks no wine, and is, therefore,
-a Nazirean, who eschews wine and forbears to cut his hair. Therein
-he resembles Joseph-Eabani, and Simson-Eabani, and Samuel-Eabani,
-and also Absolom, who, as an Eabani, had at least an upper growth
-of hair. And as the Eabani of the Epic, with the long head-hair of a
-woman, drinks water along with the wild beasts in the desert, and as
-Eabani, in company with these beasts, feeds on grass and herbs alone,
-so, at any rate according to Luke, John ate no bread. [51]
-
-Imagine the reader's consternation when, after these convincing
-demonstrations of John's identity with Eabani, and of his consequent
-non-historicity, he finds him a hundred pages later on altogether
-eliminated, as from the Gilgamesch Epic, so from the Gospel. For
-the difficulty suddenly arises before Dr. Jensen's mind that John
-the Baptist, being mentioned by Josephus, must after all have really
-lived; but if he lived, then he cannot have been a mere reflex of
-Eabani. Had he only consulted Dr. Drews's work on the Witnesses to
-the Historicity of Jesus (English translation, p. 190), he would have
-known that "the John of the Gospels" is no other than "the Babylonian
-Oannes, Joannes, or Hanni, the curiously-shaped creature, half fish
-and half man, who, according to Berosus, was the first law-giver and
-inventor of letters and founder of civilization, and who rose every
-morning from the waves of the Red Sea in order to instruct men as to
-his real spiritual nature."
-
-Why could not Dr. Jensen consult Dr. Drews "as to the real spiritual
-nature" of John the Baptist? Why not consult Mr. Robertson, who
-overwhelms Josephus's inconvenient testimony to the reality of John
-the Baptist (in 18 Antiq., v, Sec. 2) with the customary "suspicion
-of interpolation." Poor Dr. Jensen lacks their resourcefulness, and
-is able to discover no other way out of his impasse than to suppose
-that it was originally Lazarus and not John that had a place in his
-Gilgamesch Epic, and that some ill-natured editor of the Gospels,
-for reasons he alone can divine, everywhere struck out the name
-of Lazarus, and inserted in place of it that of John the Baptist,
-which he found in the works of Josephus. Such are the possibilities
-of Gospel redaction as Jensen understands them.
-
-One more example of Dr. Jensen's system. In the Gospel, Jesus,
-finding himself on one occasion surrounded by a larger throng of
-people than was desirable, took a boat in order to get away from them,
-and passed across the lake on the shore of which he had been preaching
-and ministering to the sick. The incident is a commonplace one enough,
-but nothing is too slight and unimportant for Dr. Jensen to detect in
-it a Gilgamesch parallel, and accordingly he writes thus of it: "As
-for Xisuthros, so for Jesus, a boat is lying ready, and like Xisuthros
-and Jonas, Jesus 'flees' in a boat." [52] Xisuthros, I may remind the
-reader, is the name of the flood-hero in Berosus. Hardly a single one
-of the parallels which crowd the thousand pages of Dr. Jensen is less
-flimsy than the above. Without doing more violence to texts and to
-probabilities, one could prove that Achilles and Patroclus and Helen,
-AEneas and Achates and Dido, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza and Dulcinea,
-were all of them so many understudies of Gilgamesch, Eabani and his
-temple slave; and we almost expect to find such a demonstration in
-his promised second volume.
-
-I cannot but think that my readers will resent any further specimens
-of Dr. Jensen's system. He has not troubled himself to acquire
-the merest a b c of modern textual criticism. He has no sense of
-the differences of idea and style which divide the Fourth from the
-earlier Gospels, and he lacks all insight into the development of the
-Gospel tradition. He takes Christian documents out of their historical
-context, and ignores their dependence on the Judaism of the period
-B.C. 100 to A.D. 100. He has no understanding of the prophetic,
-Messianic and Apocalyptic aspects of early Christianity, no sense
-of its intimate relations with the beliefs and opinions which lie
-before us in apocryphs like the Book of Enoch, the Fourth Esdras,
-the Ascent of Isaiah, the Testaments of the Patriarchs. He has never
-learned that in the four Gospels he has before him successive stages
-or layers of stratification of Christian tradition, and he accordingly
-treats them as a single literary block, of which every part is of the
-same age and evidential value. Like his Gilgamesch Epic the Gospels,
-for all he knows about them, might have been dug up only yesterday
-among the sands of Mesopotamia, instead of being the work of a sect
-with which, as early as the end of the first century, we are fairly
-well acquainted. Never once does he ask himself how the authors of
-the New Testament came to have the Gilgamesch Epic at the tips of
-their tongues, exactly in the form in which he translates it from
-Babylonian tablets incised 2,000 years before Christ? By what channels
-did it reach them? Why were they at such pains to transform it into
-the story of a Galilean Messiah crucified by the Roman Governor of
-Judaea? And as Paul and Peter, like everyone else named in the book,
-are duplicates of Gilgamesch and Eabani, where are we to draw the
-line of intersection between heaven and earth; where fix the year in
-which the early Christians ceased to be myths and became mere men and
-women? This is a point it equally behoves Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson
-and Professor W. B. Smith to clear up our doubts about.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-EPILOGUE
-
-
-Of the books passed in review in the preceding pages, as of several
-others couched in the same vein and recently published in England
-and Germany, perhaps the best that can be said is this, that, at any
-rate, they are untrammelled by orthodox prejudice, and fearlessly
-written. That they belong, so to speak, to the extreme left,
-explains the favour with which they are received by that section
-of the middle-class reading public which has conceived a desire
-to learn something of the origins of Christianity. Unschooled in
-the criticism of documents, such readers have learned in the school
-Bible-lesson and in the long hours of instruction in what is called
-Divinity, to regard the Bible as they regard no other collection
-of ancient writings. It is, as a rule, the only ancient book they
-ever opened. They have discovered that orthodoxy depends for its
-life on treating it as a book apart, not to be submitted to ordinary
-tests, not to be sifted and examined, as we have learned from Hume
-and Niebuhr, Gibbon and Grote, to sift ancient documents in general,
-rejecting ab initio the supernatural myths that are never absent from
-them. The acuter minds among the clergy themselves begin nowadays to
-realize that the battle of Freethought and Rationalism is won as far
-as the miracles of the Old Testament are concerned; but as regards
-those of the New they are for ever trying to close up their ranks and
-rally their hosts afresh. Nevertheless, the man in the street has
-a shrewd suspicion that apologetics are so much special pleading,
-and that miracles cannot be eliminated from the Old and yet remain
-in the New Testament. He has never received any training in methods
-of historical research himself, and it is no easy thing to obtain;
-but he is clever enough to detect the evasions of apologists, and,
-with instinctive revulsion, turns away to writers who "go the whole
-hog" and argue for the most extreme positions, even to the length of
-asserting that the story of Jesus is a myth from beginning to end. Any
-narratives, he thinks, that have the germs of truth in them would not
-need the apologetic prefaces and commentaries, the humming and hawing,
-the specious arguments and wire-drawn distinctions of divines, any
-more than do Froissart or Clarendon or Herodotus. If the New Testament
-needs them, then it must be a mass of fable from end to end. Such is
-the impression which our modern apologists leave on the mind of the
-ordinary man.
-
-I can imagine some of my readers objecting here that, whereas I have so
-rudely assailed the method of interpretation of New Testament documents
-adopted by the Nihilistic school--I only use this name as a convenient
-label for those who deny the historical reality of Jesus Christ--I
-nevertheless propound no rival method of my own. The truth is there
-is no abstract method of using documents relating to the past, and you
-cannot in advance lay down rules for doing so. You can only learn how
-to deal with them by practice, and it is one of the chief functions
-of any university or place of higher education to imbue students with
-historical method by setting before them the original documents, and
-inspiring them to extract from them whatever solid results they can. A
-hundred years ago the better men in the college of Christchurch at
-Oxford were so trained by the dean, Cyril Jackson, who would set them
-the task of "preparing for examination the whole of Livy and Polybius,
-thoroughly read and studied in all their comparative bearings." [53]
-No better curriculum, indeed, could be devised for strengthening
-and developing the faculty of historical judgment; and the schools
-of Literae Humaniores and Modern History, which were subsequently
-established at Oxford, carried on the tradition of this enlightened
-educationalist. In them the student is brought face to face in the
-original dialects with the records of the past, and stimulated to
-"read and study them in their comparative bearings." One single branch
-of learning, however, has been treated apart in the universities of
-Oxford and Cambridge, and pursued along the lines of tradition and
-authority--I mean the study of Christian antiquities. The result has
-been deplorable. Intellectually-minded Englishmen have turned away from
-this field of history as from something tainted, and barely one of our
-great historians in a century deems it worthy of his notice. It has
-been left to parsons, to men who have never learned to swim, because
-they have never had enough courage to venture into deep water. As we
-sow, so we reap. The English Church is probably the most enlightened
-of the many sects that make up Christendom. Yet what is the treatment
-which it accords to any member of itself who has the courage to
-dissociate himself from the "orthodoxy" of the fourth century, of
-those Greek Fathers (so-called) in whom the human intelligence sank
-to the nadir of fanaticism and futility? An example was recently seen
-in the case of the Rev. Mr. W. H. Thompson, a young theological tutor
-of Magdalen College in Oxford, who, animated by nothing but loyalty
-for the Church, recently liberated his soul about the miracles of
-the Gospels in a thoroughly scholarly book entitled Miracles in the
-New Testament. The attitude of the clergy in general towards a work
-of genuine research, which sets truth above traditional orthodoxy,
-was revealed in a conference of the clergy of the southern province,
-held soon after its publication on May 19, 1911. The following account
-of that meeting is taken from the Guardian of May 26, 1911:--
-
-
- The Rev. R. F. Bevan, in the Canterbury Diocesan Conference on
- May 19, 1911, proposed "that this Conference is of opinion that
- the clergy should make use of the light thrown on the Bible by
- modern criticism for the purposes of religious teaching." The
- Bishop of Croydon moved the following rider: "But desires to
- record its distrust of critics who, while holding office in the
- Church of Christ, propound views inconsistent with the doctrines
- laid down in the creeds of the Church."
-
- He said it was needful to define what was meant by modern
- criticism. He referred to a book which had been published quite
- lately by the Dean of Divinity of Magdalen College, Oxford, a
- review of which would be found in the Guardian of May 12. He must
- honestly confess he had not read the book for himself.... He then
- premised from the review that the work in question rejects the
- evidence both for the Virgin Birth of Christ and for his bodily
- Resurrection from the tomb ..., and added that the toleration by
- Churchmen of such doctrines and such views being taught within the
- bosom of the Church was to him most sad and inexplicable. If such
- was the instruction which young Divinity students were receiving
- at the universities, no wonder that the supply of candidates for
- ordination was falling off.
-
- The Rev. J. O. Bevan said it was not in the power of any man or
- any body of men to ignore the Higher Criticism or to suppress
- it. It had "come to stay," and its influence for good or evil
- must be recognized.
-
- The President (Archbishop of Canterbury) said that "Bible teaching
- ought to be given with a background of knowledge on the part of the
- teacher. He should deprecate as strongly as anybody that men who
- felt that they could not honestly continue to hold the Christian
- creeds should hold office in the Church of England. But he saw
- no connection between the sort of teaching which the Conference
- had now been considering and the giving up of the Christian
- creed. The Old Testament was a literature which had come down to
- them from ancient days. Modern investigation enabled them now to
- set the earlier stages of that literature in somewhat different
- surroundings from those in which they were set by their fathers and
- grandfathers." With regard to the book which had been referred to,
- the Archbishop said that, if the rider proposed was intended to
- imply a censure upon a particular writer, nothing would induce him
- to vote for it, inasmuch as he had not read the book, and knew
- nothing, at first hand, about it. He thought members ought to
- pause before they lightly gave votes which could be so interpreted.
-
- The motion, on being put to the meeting, was carried with one
- dissentient. The rider was also carried by a majority.
-
-
-It amounts, then, to this, that a rule of limited liability is to
-be observed in the investigation of early Christianity. You may be
-critical, but not up to the point of calling in question the Virgin
-Birth or physical resurrection of Christ. The Bishop of Croydon opines
-that the free discussion of such questions in University circles
-intimidates young men from taking orders. If he lived in Oxford,
-he would know that it is the other way about. [54] If Mr. Thompson
-had been allowed to say what he thought, unmolested; if the Bishops
-of Winchester and of Oxford had not at once taken steps to silence
-and drive him out of the Church, students would have been better
-encouraged to enter the Anglican ministry, and the more intellectual
-of our young men would not avoid it as a profession hard to reconcile
-with truth and honesty and self-respect.
-
-In the next number of the same journal (June 2, 1911) is recorded
-another example of how little our bishops are inclined to face a
-plain issue. It is contained in a paragraph headed thus:--
-
-
- SYMBOLISM OF THE ASCENSION.
-
- The Bishop of Birmingham on the Second Coming.
-
- Preaching to a large congregation in Birmingham Cathedral ... the
- Bishop of Birmingham said that people had found difficulty in
- modern times about the Ascension, because, they said, "God's
- heaven is no more above our heads than under our feet." That
- was perfectly true. But there were certain ways of expressing
- moral ideas rooted in human thought, and we did not the less
- speak continually of the above and the below as expressing what
- was morally high and morally low, and we should go on doing so
- to the end. The ascension of Jesus Christ and his concealment
- in the clouds was a symbolical act, like all the acts after his
- Resurrection; it was to impress their minds with the truth of
- his mounting to the glory of God. Symbols were the best means
- of expressing the truth about things which lay outside their
- experience; and the Ascension symbolized Christ's mounting to the
- supreme state of power and glory, to the perfect vision of God,
- to the throne of all the world.... The Kingdom was coming--had to
- come at last--"on earth as it is in heaven"; and one day, just
- as his disciples saw him passing away out of their experience
- and sight, would they see him coming back into their experience
- and their sight, and into his perfected Kingdom of Humanity.
-
-
-Now, I am sure that what people in modern times chiefly want to know
-about the Ascension is whether it really happened. Did Jesus in his
-physical body go up like a balloon before the eyes of the faithful,
-and disappear behind a cloud, or did he not? That is the plain issue,
-and Dr. Gore seems to avoid it. If he believes in such a miracle,
-why expatiate on the symbolism of all the acts of Jesus subsequent to
-his resurrection? Such a miracle was surely sufficient unto itself,
-and never needed our attention to be drawn to its symbolical aspects
-and import. Does he mean that the legend is no more than "a certain way
-of expressing moral ideas rooted in human thought"? May we welcome his
-insistence on its moral symbolism as a prelude to his abandonment of
-the literal truth of the tale? I hope so, for in not a few apologetic
-books published by divines during the last twenty-five years I have
-encountered a tendency to expatiate on the moral significance of
-extinct Biblical legends. It is, as the Rev. Mr. Figgis expresses
-it, a way of "letting down the laity into the new positions of the
-Higher Criticism." Would it not be simpler, in the end, to tell
-people frankly that a legend is only a legend? They are not children
-in arms. Why is it accounted so terrible for a clergyman or minister
-of religion to express openly in the pulpit opinions he can hear in
-many academical lecture-rooms, and often entertains in the privacy of
-his study? When the Archbishop of Canterbury tells his brother-doctors
-that "modern investigation enables them now to set the earlier stages
-of Old Testament literature in somewhat different surroundings from
-those in which they were set by their fathers and grandfathers,"
-he means that modern scholarship has emptied the Old Testament of
-its miraculous and supernatural legends. But the Anglican clergyman
-at ordination declares that he believes unfeignedly the whole of
-the Old and New Testaments. How can an Archbishop not dispense his
-clergy from belief in the New, when he is so ready to leave it to
-their individual consciences whether they will or will not believe
-in the Old? The entire position is hollow and illogical, and most
-of the bishops know it; but, instead of frankly recognizing facts,
-they descant upon the symbolical meaning of tales which they know
-they must openly abandon to-morrow. One is inclined to ask Dr. Gore
-why Christ could not have imparted in words to his followers the
-secret of his mounting to the supreme state of power and glory? Did
-they at the time, or afterwards, set any such interpretation on
-the story of his rising up from the ground like an airship or an
-exhalation? Of course they did not. They thought the earth was a
-fixed, flat surface, and that, if you ascended through the several
-lower heavens, you would find yourself before a great white throne,
-on which sat, in Oriental state, among his winged cherubim, the Most
-High. They thought that Jesus consummated the hackneyed miracle of
-his ascension by sitting down on the right hand of this Heavenly
-Potentate. If Dr. Gore doubts this, let him consult the voluminous
-works of the early Fathers on the subject. The entire legend coheres
-with ancient, and not with modern, cosmogony. How can it possibly be
-defended to-day on grounds of symbolism, or on any other? The same
-criticism applies to the legend of the Virgin Birth. The Bishop of
-London is reduced to defending this thrum of ancient paganism by an
-appeal to the biological fact of parthenogenesis among insects. Imagine
-the mentality of a modern bishop who dreams that he is advancing the
-cause of true religion and sound learning by assimilating the birth
-of his Saviour to that of a rotifer or a flea!
-
-The books of Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson and others of their school
-are, no doubt, blundering extravaganzas, all the more inopportune
-because they provoke the gibes of Dr. Moulton; but they are at least
-works of Freethought. Their authors do not write with one eye on the
-truth and the other on the Pope in the Vatican, or on the obsolete
-dogmas of Byzantine speculation. It is possible, therefore, to discuss
-with them, as it is not with apologists, who take good care never to
-lay all their cards on the table, and of whom you cannot but feel,
-as the great historian Mommsen remarked, that they are chattering in
-chains (ex vinculis sermocinantes). In the investigation of truth
-there can be no mental reserves, and argument is useless where the
-final appeal lies to a Pope or a creed. You cannot set your hand to
-the plough and then look back.
-
-It was not, then, within the scope of this essay to try to determine
-how much and what particular incidents traditionally narrated of Jesus
-are credible. Such a task would require at least a thousand pages for
-its discharge; I have merely desired to show how difficult it is to
-prove a negative, and how much simpler it is to admit that Jesus really
-lived than to argue that he was a solar or other myth. The latter
-hypothesis, as expounded in these works, offends every principle
-of philology, of comparative mythology, and of textual criticism;
-it bristles with difficulties; and, if no better demonstration of it
-can be offered, it deserves to be summarily dismissed.
-
-On the other hand, no absolute rules can be laid down a priori for
-the discerning in early Christian or in any other ancient documents
-of historical fact. But students embarking on a study of Christian
-origins will do well to lay to heart the aphorism of Renan (Les
-Apotres, Introd. xxix), that "one can only ascertain the origin of
-any particular religion from the narratives or reports of those who
-believed therein; for it is only the sceptic who writes history ad
-narrandum." It is in the very nature of things human that we could
-not hope to obtain documents more evidential than the Gospels and
-Acts. It is a lucky chance that time has spared to us the Epistles of
-Paul as well, and the sparse notices of first-century congregations
-and personalities preserved in Josephus and in pagan writers. For
-during the first two or three generations of its existence the Church
-interested few except itself. In the view of a Josephus, the Jewish
-converts could only figure as Jews gone astray after a false Messiah,
-just as the Gentile recruits were mere Judaizers, objects--as he
-remarks, B. J., II, 18, 2--of equal suspicion to Syrian pagans and Jews
-alike, an ambiguous, neutral class, spared by the knife of the pagans,
-yet dreaded by the Jews as at heart aliens to their cause. [55] There
-were no folklorists or comparative religionists in those days watching
-for new cults to appear; and there could be little or no inclination to
-sit down and write history among enthusiasts who dreamed that the end
-of the world was close at hand, and believed themselves to be already
-living in the last days. For this is the conviction that colours the
-whole of the New Testament; and that it does so is a signal proof of
-the antiquity of much that the book contains. If a Christian of the
-first century ever took up his pen and wrote, it was not to hand down
-an objective narrative of events to a posterity whose existence he
-barely contemplated, but, as against unbelieving Jews, to establish
-from ancient prophecy his belief in Jesus as the promised Messiah,
-or perhaps as the Word of God made flesh. All Christians were aware
-that Jews, both in Judaea and of the Dispersion, roundly denied their
-Christ to have been anything better than an impostor and violator
-of the Law. They heard the pagans round them echoing the scoffs of
-their Messiah's own countrymen. Accordingly, the earliest literature
-of the Church, so far as it is not merely homiletic and hortative,
-is controversial, and aims at proving that the Jewish people were
-mistaken in rejecting Jesus as the Messiah. The Jews neither then
-nor now have fought with mere shadows; and just in proportion as they
-bore witness against his Messiahship, they bore witness in favour of
-his historical reality. It is a pity that the extreme negative school
-ignore this aspect of his rejection by the Jews.
-
-Let me cite one more wise rule laid down by Renan in the same
-Introduction: "An ancient writing can help us to throw light, firstly,
-on the age in which it was composed, and, secondly, on the age which
-preceded its composition."
-
-This indicates in a general fashion the use which historians should
-make of the New Testament. We have at every turn to ask ourselves
-what the circumstances its contents reveal presuppose in the immediate
-past in the way both of ideas or aspirations and of fact or incidents.
-
-In conclusion, I cannot do better than quote the words in which Renan
-defines in general terms the sort of historical results we may hope to
-attain in the field of Christian origins. It is from the Introduction
-already cited, pp. vi and vii:--
-
-
- In histories like this, where the general outline (ensemble)
- alone is certain, and where nearly all the details lend themselves
- more or less to doubt by reason of the legendary character of
- the documents, hypothesis is indispensable. About ages of which
- we know nothing we cannot frame any hypothesis at all. To try
- to reconstitute a particular group of ancient statuary, which
- certainly once existed, but of which we have not even the debris,
- and about which we possess no written information, is to attempt an
- entirely arbitrary task. But to endeavour to recompose the friezes
- of the Parthenon from what remains to us, using as subsidiary to
- our work ancient texts, drawings made in the seventeenth century,
- and availing ourselves of all sources of information; in a word,
- inspiring ourselves by the style of these inimitable fragments,
- and endeavouring to seize their soul and life--what more legitimate
- task than this? We cannot, indeed, after all, say that we have
- rediscovered the work of the ancient sculptor; nevertheless, we
- shall have done all that was possible in order to approximate
- thereto. Such a method is all the more legitimate in history,
- because language permits the use of dubitative moods of which
- marble admits not. There is nothing to prevent our setting before
- the reader a choice of different suppositions, and the author's
- conscience may be at rest as soon as he has set forth as certain
- what is certain, as probable what is probable, as possible what
- is possible. In those parts of the field where our footstep slides
- and slips between history and legend it is only the general effect
- that we must seek after.... Accomplished facts speak more plainly
- than any amount of biographic detail. We know very little of the
- peerless artists who created the chefs d'oeuvre of Greek art. Yet
- these chefs d'oeuvre tell us more of the personality of their
- authors and of the public which appreciated them than ever could do
- the most circumstantial narratives and the most authentic of texts.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-
-[1] Page 20 of The Christ Myth, from a note added in the third edition.
-
-[2] Op. cit. p. 214.
-
-[3] The Christ Myth, p. 9. (Zu Robertson hat sie meines Wissens noch
-keiner Weise ernsthaft Stellung genommen, p. vii of German edition.)
-
-[4] Christ Myth, p. 57. In the German text (first ed. 1909, p. 21)
-Mr. Robertson is the authority for this statement (so hat Robertson
-es sehr wahrscheinlich gemacht).
-
-[5] Cp. Emile Durkheim, La Vie Religieuse, Paris, 1912, p. 121,
-to whom I owe much in the text.
-
-[6] Such reduplications are common in Semitic languages, and in John
-xix, 23, 24, we have an exact analogy with this passage of Matthew. In
-Psalm xxii, 18, we read: "They parted my garments among them, and
-upon my vesture did they cast lots." Here one and the same incident
-is contemplated in both halves of the verse, and it is but a single
-garment that is divided. Now see what John makes out of this verse,
-regarded as a prophecy of Jesus. He pretends that the soldiers took
-Jesus's garments, and made four parts, to every soldier a part,
-so fulfilling the words: "They parted my garments among them." Next
-they took the coat without seam, and said to one another: "Let us not
-rend it, but cast lots for it, whose it shall be." The parallel with
-Matthew is exact. In each case what is mere rhetorical reduplication
-is interpreted of two distinct objects, and on this misinterpretation
-is based a fulfilment of prophecy, and out of it generated a new form
-of a story or a fresh story altogether. In defiance of the opinion of
-competent Hebraists, Mr. Robertson writes (p. 338) that "there is no
-other instance of such a peculiar tautology in the Old Testament." On
-the contrary, the Old Testament teems with them.
-
-[7] Christianity and Mythology, p. 286.
-
-[8] Dr. Carpenter had objected that "It has first to be proved
-that Dionysos rode on two asses, as well as that Jesus is the
-Sun-God." Mr. Robertson complacently answers (p. 453): "My references
-perfectly prove the currency of the myth in question"!
-
-[9] The Witnesses, p. 55 (p. 75 of German edition).
-
-[10] Why necessarily from Josephus? Were not other sources of recent
-Roman history available for Tacitus? Here peeps out Dr. Drews's
-conviction that the whole of ancient literature lies before him,
-and that even Tacitus could have no other sources of information than
-Dr. Drews.
-
-[11] On p. 299, Mary, mother of Joshua, does duty for Mary Magdalen. We
-there read as follows: "The friendship (of Jesus) with a 'Mary' points
-towards some old myth in which a Palestinian God, perhaps named Yeschu
-or Joshua, figures in the changing relations of lover and son towards a
-mythic Mary, a natural fluctuation in early theosophy." Very "natural"
-indeed among the Jews, who punished even adultery with death!
-
-[12] Needless to say, Dr. Frazer, as any scholar must, rejects the
-thesis of the unhistoricity of Jesus with derision. Mr. Robertson,
-in turn, imputes his rejection of it to timidity. "He (Frazer) has
-had some experience in arousing conservative resistance," he writes
-in Christianity and Mythology, p. 111. He cannot realize that any
-learned man should differ from himself, except to curry favour with
-the orthodox, or from fear of them.
-
-[13] I could have given Professor Smith a better tip. Philo composed a
-glossary of Biblical and other names with their meanings, which, though
-lost in Greek, survives in an old Armenian version. In this Essene is
-equated with "silence." What a magnificent aid to Professor Smith's
-faith! For if Essene meant "a silent one," then the pre-Christian
-Nazarenes must surely have been an esoteric and secret sect.
-
-[14] Of course, it is possible that Jesus, before he comes on the
-scene, at about the age of thirty, as a follower of John the Baptist,
-had been a member of the Essene sect, as the learned writer of the
-article on Jesus in the Jewish Encyclopaedia supposes. If such a
-sect of Nazoraei, as Epiphanius describes, ever really existed--and
-Epiphanius is an unreliable author--then Jesus may have been a
-member of it. But it is a long way from a may to a must. Even if it
-could be proved that Matthew had such a tradition when he wrote,
-the proof would not diminish one whit the absurdity of Professor
-Smith's contention that he was a myth and a mere symbol of a God
-Joshua worshipped by pre-Christian Nazoraei. The Nazoraei of Epiphanius
-were a Christian sect, akin to, if not identical with, the Ebionites;
-and the hypothesis that they kept up among themselves a secret cult
-of a God Joshua is as senseless as it is baseless, and opposed to all
-we know of them. In what sense Matthew, that is to say the anonymous
-compiler of the first Gospel, understood nazoraeus is clear to anyone
-who will take the trouble to read Matthew ii, 23. He understood by it
-"a man who lived in the village called Nazareth," and that is the
-sense which Nazarene (used interchangeably with it) also bears in
-the Gospel. Mr. Smith scents enigmas everywhere.
-
-[15] How treacherous the argumentum a silentio may be I can
-exemplify. My name and address were recently omitted for two years
-running from the Oxford directory, yet my house is not one of the
-smallest in the city. If any future publicist should pry into my life
-with the aid of this publication, he will certainly infer that I was
-not living in Oxford during those two years. And yet the Argument
-from Silence is only valid where we have a directory or gazetteer or
-carefully compiled list of names and addresses.
-
-[16] See Luke x, 17-20.
-
-[17] La Vie Religieuse, p. 134.
-
-[18] In his De legibus Hebraeorum ritualibus et earum rationibus
-libri tres, printed at the Hague in 1686, but largely written twenty
-years earlier.
-
-[19] The Christ Myth, 2nd ed., p. 18.
-
-[20] It is possible, of course, that Jewish Messianic and apocalyptic
-lore in the first century B.C. had been more or less evolved through
-contact with the religion of Zoroaster; but this lore, as we meet
-with it in the Gospels, derives exclusively from Jewish sources,
-and was part of the common stock of popular Jewish aspirations.
-
-[21] In Mark xv, 39, the utterance of the heathen centurion, "truly
-this man was a Son of God," can obviously not have been inspired
-by messianic conceptions; it can have meant no more than that he
-was more than human, as Damis realized his master Apollonius to be
-on more than one occasion. Nor can Mark have intended to attribute
-Jewish conceptions to a pagan soldier.
-
-[22] For example, he gravely asserts (Die Weltanschauung des alten
-Orients, Leipzig, 1904, p. 41) that Saul's melancholy is explicable
-as a myth of the monthly eclipsing of the moon's light! Perhaps
-Hamlet's melancholy was of the same mythic origin. A map of the stars
-is Winckler's, no less than Jensen's, guide to all mythologies. But,
-to do him justice, Winckler never fell into the last absurdity of
-supposing that Jews at the beginning of our era were engaged in a
-secret cult of a Sun-god named Joshua; on the contrary, he declares
-(op. cit., p. 96), that, just in proportion as we descend the course
-of time, we approach an age in which the heroes of earlier myth are
-brought down to the level of earth. This humanization of the Joshua
-myth was, he held, complete when the book of Joshua was compiled.
-
-[23] Cp. p. 342: "In all his allusions to the movement of his
-day he (Paul) is dealing with Judaizing apostles who preached
-circumcision." And p. 348: "Paul's Cephas is simply one of the apostles
-of a Judaic cult that preaches circumcision."
-
-[24] To wit, of a Sun-god, who is also Mithras and Osiris, and of
-a Vegetation-god annually slain on the sacred tree. We are gravely
-informed that "not till Dr. Frazer had done his work was the psychology
-of the process ascertained." Dr. Frazer must be blushing at this
-tribute to his psychological insight.
-
-[25] Euseb., in Esai, xviii, 1 foll., p. 424, foll. The words might
-mean Justin; but when he quotes Justin he always gives his name. The
-Gospels cannot be intended.
-
-[26] Encycl. Bibl., art, "Paul."
-
-[27] Words italicized in the sequel are citations of the text of Acts.
-
-[28] I expect Dr. Drews and Mr. Robertson, in their next editions,
-to broach the view that the earlier chapter was forged to explain
-the later one, and that in the later one "The Seven" are a cryptic
-reference to the Pleiades.
-
-[29] The relevant part of this commentary is preserved in an old
-Armenian version of which we have ancient MSS.
-
-[30] The difficulties largely vanish on the assumption that Galatians
-is the earliest of the Epistles, and that in Gal. ii, 1, dia d "after
-four" was misread in an early copy as dia id "after fourteen." This
-is Professor Lake's conjecture. Such misreadings of the Greek numerals
-are common in ancient MSS.
-
-[31] Christianity and Mythology, p. 354.
-
-[32] Why did they not do so in their "teaching," if it was
-intended (see p. 344) for the Jews of the Dispersion, instead of
-confining themselves to precepts "simply ethical, non-priestly,
-and non-Rabbinical"?
-
-[33] Ecce Deus, p. 8.
-
-[34] Note in Matthew the phrase (xxiii, 8): "But be ye not called
-Rabbi: for one is your teacher, and all ye are brethren."
-
-[35] The passage in which Josephus mentions John the Baptist runs as
-follows: "To some of the Jews it seemed that Herod had had his army
-destroyed by God, and that it was a just retribution on him for his
-severity towards John called the Baptist. For it was indeed Herod who
-slew him, though a good man, and one who bade the Jews in the practise
-of virtue and in the use of justice one to another and of piety towards
-God to walk together in baptism. For this was the condition under which
-baptism would present itself to God as acceptable, if they availed
-themselves of it, not by way of winning pardon for certain sins,
-but after attaining personal holiness, on account of the soul having
-been cleansed beforehand by righteousness. Because men flocked to him,
-for they took the greatest pleasure in listening to his words, Herod
-took fright and apprehended that his vast influence over people would
-lead to some outbreak of rebellion. For it looked as if they would
-follow his advice in all they did, and he came to the conclusion that
-far the best course was, before any revolution was started by him, to
-anticipate it by destroying him: otherwise the upheaval would come, and
-plunge him into trouble and remorse. So John fell a victim to Herod's
-suspicions, was bound and sent to the fortress of Machaerus, of which
-I have above spoken, and there murdered. But the Jews were convinced
-that the loss of his army was by way of retribution for the treatment
-of John, and that it was God who willed the undoing of Herod."
-
-[36] The suspect passage in which Josephus refers to Jesus runs thus,
-Ant. xviii, 3, 3: "Now about this time came Jesus, a wise man, if
-indeed one may call him a man, for he was a doer of wonderful works,
-a teacher of such men as receive what is true with pleasure, and he
-attracted many Jews and many of the Greeks. This was the 'Christ.' And
-when on the accusation of the principal men amongst us Pilate had
-condemned him to the cross, they did not desist who had formerly
-loved him, for he appeared to them on the third day alive again;
-the divine Prophets having foretold both this and a myriad other
-wonderful things about him; and even now the race of those called
-Christians after him has not died out."
-
-I have italicized such clauses as have a chance to be authentic,
-and as may have led Origen to say of Josephus that he did not
-believe Jesus to be the Christ. For the clause "This was the Christ"
-must have run, "This was the so-called Christ." We have the same
-expression in Matt. i, 16, and in the passage, undoubtedly genuine,
-in which Josephus refers to James, Ant., xx, 9, 1. Here Josephus
-relates that the Sadducee High-priest Ananus (son of Annas of the
-New Testament), in the interval of anarchy between the departure of
-one Roman Governor, Festus, and the arrival of another, Albinus,
-set up a court of his own, "and bringing before it the brother of
-Jesus who was called Christ--James was his name--and some others,
-he accused them of being breakers of the Law, and had them stoned."
-
-In the History of the Jewish War, iv, 5, 2, Josephus records his
-belief that the Destruction of Jerusalem was a divine nemesis for
-the murder of this Ananus by the Idumeans.
-
-There is not now, nor ever was, any passage in Josephus where the
-fall of Jerusalem was explained as an act of divine nemesis for the
-murder of James by Ananus. Origen, as Professor Burkitt has remarked,
-"had mixed up in his commonplace book the account of Ananus's murder
-of James and the remarks of Josephus on Ananus's own murder."
-
-[37] So in Acts xviii, 12, we read of faction fights in Corinth
-between the Jews and the followers of Jesus the Messiah; Gallio,
-the proconsul of Achaia, who cared for none of the matters at issue
-between them, is a well-known personage, and an inscription has lately
-been discovered dating his tenure of Achaia in A.D. 52.
-
-[38] Tacitus very likely wrote Chrestiani. He says the mob called
-them such, but adds that the author of the name was Christ, so
-implying that Christianus was the true form, and Chrestianus a popular
-malformation thereof. The Roman mob would be likely to deform a name
-they did not understand, just as a jack-tar turns Bellerophon into
-Billy Ruffian. Chrestos was a common name among oriental slaves,
-and a Roman mob would naturally assume that Christos, which they
-could not understand, was a form of it.
-
-[39] Mr. Robertson recognizes (p. 124), though without realizing
-how much it damages his theory, that the miracles of the Gospels are
-"visibly unknown to the Paulinists"--presumably the early churches
-addressed by Paul in his Epistle. Do we not here get a glimpse of
-an early stage of the story of Jesus before it was overlaid with
-miracles? Yet Mr. Robertson, in defiance of logic, argues that the
-absence of miraculous tales of Jesus in the Paulines confirms what
-he calls "the mythological argument."
-
-[40] It is true that this is from a speech put into Paul's mouth by
-the author of Acts; but Paul himself is no less emphatic in Romans
-i, 23, where of the Greeks he writes that, "though they knew God,
-they glorified him not as God.... Professing themselves wise, they
-were turned into fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible
-God for the likeness of an image of a corruptible man." Such were the
-feelings excited in Paul by a statue of Pheidias; how different from
-those it roused in his contemporary Dion, who wrote as follows of it:
-"Whoever among mortal men is most utterly toilworn in spirit, having
-drunk the cup of many sorrows and calamities, when he stands before
-this image must utterly forget all the terrors and woes of this mortal
-life." So strong was the prejudice of the Church (due exclusively to
-its Jewish origin) against plastic or pictorial art that Eusebius and
-Epiphanius condemned pictures of Christ as late as the fourth century,
-while the Eastern churches, even to-day, forbid statues of Jesus and
-of the Saints. Of the great gulf which separated Jew from Gentile on
-such points Mr. Robertson seems not to have the faintest notion.
-
-[41] I trust my readers will forgive my use of a fox-hunting phrase
-in so serious a context, but I cannot think of any other so apt.
-
-[42] P. 48. After citing the rather problematic allusion to Plato
-(Rep. ii, 361 D) in the apology of Apollonius (c. 172), the just man
-shall be tortured, he shall be spat on, and, last of all, he shall
-be crucified. Harnack has said that there is no other reference to
-this passage of Plato in old-Christian literature. "Why?" asks
-Mr. Smith. "Because Christians were not familiar with
-it? Impossible. The silence of the Christians was intentional, and
-the reason is obvious. The passage was tell-tale. Similarly we are to
-understand their silence about the pre-Christian Nazarenes and many
-other lions that were safest when asleep." This is in the true vein
-of a Bacon-Shakesperians armed with his cypher.
-
-[43] See note (1).
-
-[44] Elsewhere Mr. Smith qualifies this position, p. 35: "Of course,
-the cult was not intended to remain, and did not in fact remain,
-secret; it was at length brought into the open." But perhaps Mr. Smith
-is here alluding to his own revelation.
-
-[45] Mark xvi, 9. The circumstance that Mark xvi, 9-20, was added to
-the Gospel by another hand in no way diminishes the significance of
-the passage here adduced.
-
-[46] In the same manner, as we know from Origen (Com. in
-Evang. Ioannis, tom. xiii, 27), the Samaritans had a Messiah named
-Dositheos, who rose from the dead, and professed himself to be the
-Messiah of prophecy. His sect survived in the third century, as also
-his books, which, as Origen says, were full of "myth" about him to the
-effect that he had not tasted of death, but was somewhere or other
-still alive. By all the rules of criticism as used by Mr. Robertson
-and his friends, we must deny that Dositheos ever lived. The idea
-of a human hero being an angel or divine power made flesh was common
-among Jews, and in their apocryph, "The Prayer of Jacob" (see Origen,
-op. cit., tom. ii, 25), that worthy represented himself as such in
-the very language of Paul and of the Fourth Gospel: "I who spoke to
-you, I, Jacob and Israel, am an angel of God and a primeval spirit,
-as Abraham and Isaak were created in advance of all creatures. But
-I, Jacob, ... called Israel by God, a man seeing God, because I am
-first-born of all living beings made alive by God." We also learn
-that Uriel was sent forth by God to herald Jacob's descent upon
-earth, where he "tabernacled among men." Jacob declares himself
-to be "archangel of the power of God, and arch-captain among the
-sons of God, Israel the foremost minister of the Presence." Paul,
-we observe, did not need to go outside Judaism for his conceptions
-of Jesus, nor Justin Martyr either, who regularly speaks of Jesus
-as an archangel. So also among the pagans. In Augustus Caesar his
-contemporaries loved to detect one of the great gods of Olympus just
-descended to earth in the semblance of a man. He was the god Mercury
-or some other god incarnate. His birth was a god's descent to earth
-in order to expiate the sins of the Romans. Thus Horace, Odes, I,
-2, v. 29: Cui dabit partes scelus expiandi Juppiter, and cp. v. 45:
-Serus in coelum redeas--"Mayest thou be late in returning to heaven."
-
-[47] Das Gilgamesch Epos in der Weltliteratur, 1906.
-
-[48] P. 933: "Die Jesus-sage nach den Synoptikern--wie auch die
-nach Johannes--unterscheidet sich nun aber von allen anderen bisher
-eroerterten Gilgamesch-sagen dadurch, dass sie hinter dem Gros der
-Sage nicht nur einzelne Bruchstuecke von ihr als Nachzuegler bringt,
-sondern eine lange Reihe von Stuecken der Sage in fast ungestoerter
-urspruenglicher Reihenfolge," etc.
-
-[49] P. 818. So weit von Johannis Person allein. Verfolgen wir nun
-die Jesus-Sage weiter.
-
-Im Gilgamesch Epos wird erzaehlt, wie zu Eabani in der Wueste der Jaeger
-mit der Hierodule hinauszieht, wie Eabani ihrer habe geniesst, und
-dann mit ihr nach Erech kommt, wo grade oder ihm zu Ehre ein Fest
-gefeiert wird, wie er sich dort an Gilgamesch anschliesst und ihn
-durch Diesen koenigliche Ehren zuteil werden. Welche Metamorphosen
-diese Geschehnisse in den Sagen des alten Testaments erlebt haben,
-darf jetzt in der Hauptsache als bekannt vorausgesetzt werden. In
-zahlreichen Gilgamesch-Sagen fanden wir nun die Begegnung mit
-der Hierodule wieder. Aber vergeblich suchen wir sie dort in den
-drei ersten Evangelien, wo ihr Platz waere, falls diese etwa eine
-Gilgamesch-Sage enthalten sollten, naemlich unmittelbar hinter Johannis
-Auftreten in der Wueste. Ebenso wenig finden wir an dieser Stelle etwa
-einen Reflex von Eabani's Einzug in das festlich erregte Erech. Wohl
-dagegen treffen wir an urspruenglicher Stelle ein Wiederhall von
-Gilgamesch's Begegnung mit Eabani.
-
-[50] P. 820. Jesu Taufe durch Johannes waere sonst auch daraus geworden,
-dass Eabani, nach dem er an Gilgamesch's Hof gelangt ist, durch Diesen
-Koeniglicher Ehren teilhaft wird.
-
-[51] Nach Lukas (i, 15 and vii, 33) trinkt Johannes keinen Wein,
-ist also ein Nasiraeer, der keinen Wein trinkt und dessen Haar nicht
-kekuerzt wird, ebenso wie Joseph-Eabani, wie Simson als ein Eabani,
-wie Samuel-Eabani, wie Absolom als Eabani wenigstens einen ueppigen
-Haarwuchs besitzt, und wie der Eabani des Epos, mit dem langen
-Haupthaar eines Weibes, in der Wueste mit den Tieren zusammen Wasser
-trinkt, und wie Eabani mit diesen Tieren zusammen nur Gras und Krauter
-frisst, so isst Johannes, nach Lukas wenigstens, kein Brot.
-
-[52] P. 838: Wie fuer Xisuthros, liegt fuer Jesus ein Schiff bereit,
-und, wie Xisuthros und Jonas, "flieht" Jesus in ein Schiff.
-
-[53] I cite an unfinished memoir of my grandfather, W. D. Conybeare,
-himself a pioneer of geology and no mean palaeontologist, who owed much
-of his discernment in these fields to such a training in historical
-method as he describes.
-
-[54] Within the last two months the theological faculties of Oxford and
-Cambridge, and the examining chaplains (of various bishops) resident
-in those universities, have addressed a petition to the Archbishop
-of Canterbury praying him to absolve candidates for Ordination of the
-necessity of avowing that "they believe unfeignedly in the whole of the
-Old and New Testaments," because so many competent and well-qualified
-students are thereby deterred from taking holy orders. The Archbishop
-would, it seems, make the individual clergyman's conscience the sole
-judge (to the exclusion of the Bishop of Croydon) of the propriety
-of his retaining his orders in spite of his rejection of this and
-that tradition or dogma. That is at least a sign that opinion is on
-the move.
-
-[55] Such is Renan's interpretation of this passage in L'Ante-Christ,
-ed. 1873, p. 259, and he is undoubtedly right in detecting in it a
-reference to the Christians scattered abroad in the half-Syrian and
-pagan, half-Jewish and monotheist, cities of Syria.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Historical Christ;, by Fred. C. Conybeare
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