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Recently our
mailbox has been filled with people whose faith has been shaken by
allegations in a movie entitled Zeitgeist. The movie, which was released
in June, 2007, claims it "was created as a nonprofit filmiac expression
to inspire people to start looking at the world from a more critical
perspective and to understand that very often things are not what the
population at large think they are."1
The part that
has concerned our viewers is Part 1, titled "The Greatest Story Ever
Told." In this section the filmmakers claim (with extensive
documentation) that there is nothing original about Christianity – that
Jesus (if He even existed at all, which they question) and everything
recorded about Him in the Bible are simply a rehash of ancient pagan
(mystery) religions or legends of Greek and Roman gods.
The truth is
that all the allegations made about Jesus and Christianity in this movie
were investigated decades ago and shown to be at best overstatement, and
at worst outright fabrication.
We are
reprinting below an article we released more than 10 years ago which
addresses some of the allegations made in this movie, in particular, the
resurrection of Jesus, and similar "resurrections" among pagan gods. For
further information on this and other topics, we suggest you secure a
copy of Lee Strobel’s "The Case for the Real Jesus" (available from this
ministry), which has one entire chapter devoted to answering these same
charges. Mr. Strobel offers additional resources for those who want to
study the historical truth behind the allegations made in Zeitgeist and
a host of similar offerings.
Christianity,
the Resurrection of Christ and the Mystery Religions
by Dr. John
Ankerberg and Dr. John Weldon
Many
university and college courses in Christianity or comparative religion
express the view that Christianity is merely a variation of a more
ancient religious theme. They teach that the Christian faith developed
from or was influenced by the ancient pagan mystery religions of Rome,
Greece, Egypt, etc. Therefore, the conclusion of such courses is that
Christian faith is not unique (as it claims), but at best an imitation
faith, alleging to be something it is not. Professors draw numerous
"parallels" between the motifs of "dying and rising" "savior" gods, and
then, observing the centrality of the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ in Christian faith, assert that certainly, or at least probably,
Christianity was merely a later revisionist form of such pagan religion.
In the last
hundred years, numerous books have been written which attempt to defend
this idea. Among these are J. M. Robertson’s Pagan Christs2
and Kersey Graves’ The World’s Sixteen Crucified Saviors or
Christianity Before Christ.3 This idea has also formed
one line of argumentation for the larger theme that Jesus never even
existed, as in G. A. Wells’ Did Jesus Exist?4 More
recently, this concept has been popularized by the late mythologist
Joseph Campbell in The Power of Myth, The Masks of God,
and other books, largely as a means to "discredit" Christianity.
What were the
mystery cults? Allegedly, the teachings of the mystery religions were
revealed by the Egyptian god Thoth. They were eclectic religious cults
that stressed nature religion, oaths of secrecy, brotherhood, and
spiritual quest. They offered rites of initiation that were associated
with or dedicated to various gods and goddesses of the ancient world. In
fact, these rites often inculcated contact, or "union," with the "gods"
(spirits). Participants hoped to attain knowledge, power, and
immortality from their worship and contact with these gods. In essence,
the mystery religions were part and parcel of the world of the occult in
ancient Europe and Asia. They were idolatrous, opposed Christian
teachings, and not infrequently engaged in gross or immoral practices.5
Nevertheless,
it was the theme of alleged dying and rising savior-gods which initially
sparked the interest of some scholars and many skeptics as to whether or
not Christianity was a derivative of the mysteries. For example, if
there were religious cults in Palestine at the time of Christ which
believed in a mythological central figure who periodically died and came
back to life in harmony with certain agricultural/fertility cycles, it
could be argued that Christianity was merely the offshoot of such a
religion and that its distinctive theological teachings were later
inventions. Hence, the appeal of such an idea to skeptics of
Christianity.
If true,
Christianity would have only been a variation of an earlier pagan
religious worldview, a religion that later evolved its distinctive
theological doctrines, e.g., about Jesus Christ being the unique
incarnation of God and Savior of men. In fact, in this scenario, the
biblical Jesus need never even have existed. The mysteries were, after
all, based on mythical gods. Hence, some critics (not historians) argue
that Jesus was only an invented figure patterned after the life cycles
of mythological gods such as Attis, Cybele, Osiris, Mithra, Adonis,
Eleusis, Thrace, Dionysus, etc.
Regardless,
one consequence of interpreting Christianity as an embellished mystery
religion is the conclusion that Christian faith per se is the invention
of men, not a revelation from God. In the end, virtually all the unique
teachings of New Testament theology, including the distinctive doctrines
on Jesus Christ, God, man, sin, salvation, etc., are viewed as mere
religious innovation after the fact. For example, concerning Jesus
Christ, this would mean His incarnation and virgin birth, miracles and
teachings, atonement for sin, physical resurrection from the dead,
promised return, etc., are not historical facts, but later revisions of
pagan stories. In essence, the cardinal teachings of orthodox
Christianity become lies and falsehoods, a conclusion that warms the
heart of some people today.
But is it
Christianity that is the invention and deception or is such a theory
itself the invention and deception of atheists and skeptics merely to
"discredit" Christianity? If we examine the manner in which this concept
is utilized, not to mention the fact that not a shred of evidence exists
in support, one can begin to see where the real invention lies. One
illustration is atheist John Allegro’s text, The Sacred Mushroom and
the Cross. Allegro is lecturer in Old Testament and Inter-Testamental
Studies at the University of Manchester. He weaves the origin of
Christianity into pagan religious sects, rituals, secret eulogies and
the hallucinogenic properties of a particular mushroom. Thus, "The death
and resurrection story of Jesus follows the traditional patterns of
fertility mythology, as has long been recognized."6 Logically
then for Allegro, the New Testament is a "hoax," because the "validity
of the whole New Testament story is immediately undermined."7
Not surprisingly, he claims it is foolish for Christians to maintain
their religion is a unique revelation from God.8 As a result,
Allegro’s closing paragraph gives the reader the "assurance" that "we no
longer need to view the Bible through the mists of piety,..."9
Really?
The truth is
that Allegro’s views are credible only to skeptics who already wish to
find "evidence" to support their skepticism. Dr. J. N. D. Anderson is an
authority on comparative religion and Professor of Oriental Laws and
Director of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies at the University of
London. He observes that Allegro’s book "has been dismissed by fifteen
experts in Semitic languages and related fields,... as ‘not based on any
philological or other evidence that they can regard as scholarly’— and
has met with scathing criticism in review after review."10]
Yet today it continues to be used in college courses on Christianity.
Unfortunately
for skeptics, when Allegro’s theory – or that involving any other
mystery tradition – is objectively examined and compared with
Christianity, only superficial similarities remain because Christianity
and the mystery religions are as distinct as night and day.11
Even secular scholars have rejected this idea of Christianity borrowing
from the ancient mysteries. The well-respected Sir Edward
Evans-Pritchard writes in Theories of Primitive Religion that
"The evidence for this theory… is negligible."12 Negligible
is defined in Webster’s New World Dictionary as, that which "can
be neglected or disregarded because small, unimportant, etc.; trifling."
In fact, the
gods of the mysteries do not even resurrect; at best they are only
resuscitated within the context of a gross mythology. Samuel N. Kramer’s
thorough work showed that the alleged resurrection of Tammuz (a
fertility god of Mesopotamia) was based on "nothing but inference and
surmise, guess and conjecture."13 Pierre Lambrechts maintains
that in the case of the alleged resurrection of Adonis, no evidence
exists, either in the early texts or the pictorial representations. The
texts which refer to a resurrection are quite late, that is, from the
second to the fourth centuries A.D.14] He reveals that for
Attis there is no suggestion that he was a resurrected god until after
150 A.D.15 In the case of Adonis, there is a lapse of at
least 700 years.16 If borrowing occurred, it seems clear
which way it went.
The cult of
Isis and Osiris ends with Osiris becoming lord of the underworld while
Isis regathers his dismembered body from the Nile River and subsequently
magically restores it. E. A. Wallace Budge, who, Dr. Wilbur Smith
asserts, is "one of the greatest authorities of our century on ancient
religions,"17 has this to say about the cult of Osiris:
There is nothing in the
texts which justify the assumption that Osiris knew he would rise from
the dead, and that he would become king and judge of the dead, or that
Egyptians believed that Osiris died on their behalf and rose again in
order that they might also rise from the dead.18
Smith also
observes French scholar Andre Boulanger’s observation that, "The idea
that the god dies and rises again to lead his worshippers to eternal
life does not exist in any Hellenic mystery religion.19
It would
appear then, that the real mythology is not in the origin of
Christianity but in the minds of skeptics who are confusing such beliefs
with the historical person and work of Jesus of Nazareth. (This is
especially evident when one considers the immoral lives and deeds of the
pagan deities since these are entirely disharmonious with the life and
deeds of Jesus Christ.)
Indeed, as
noted, scholars long ago refuted the idea that Christianity is related
to the mysteries. Consider just a few of the great differences between
Christian belief and the mystery cults that makes the claim of identity
look foolish:
As for the motif of dying
and rising saviour-god, which has so often been compared with the
unique event which gave birth to Christianity, Metzger points out that
the formal resemblance between them must not be allowed to obscure the
great differences in content. In all the Mysteries which tell of a
dying god, he dies "by compulsion and not by choice, sometimes in
bitterness and despair, never in a self-giving love." There is a
positive gulf between this and the Christ who asserted that no man
could take his life from him but that he laid it down of his own will
(Jn. 10:17; Mt. 26:28); the Johannine pictures of the cross as the
place where Jesus was "glorified" and the Christian celebration of the
Passion as a victory over Satan, sin and death. Similarly, there is
all the difference in the world between the rising or re-birth of a
deity which symbolizes the coming of spring (and the re-awakening of
nature) and the resurrection "on the third day" of an historical
person.20
Former atheist
and Cambridge and Oxford scholar C.S. Lewis emphasized that the biblical
concept of God in both Old and New Testaments is in no way compatible
with the nature gods of the mysteries.
On the other hand, Jahweh
is clearly not a Nature-God. He does not die and come to life
each year as a true corn-king should…. He is not the soul of Nature
nor any part of Nature. He inhabits eternity; he dwells in the high
and holy place; heaven is his throne, not his vehicle; earth is his
footstool, not his vesture One day he will dismantle both and make a
new heaven and earth. He is not to be identified even with the "divine
spark" in man. He is "God and not man." His thoughts are not our
thoughts….21
In fact, Lewis
had previously recorded that upon his first serious reading of the New
Testament, he was "chilled and puzzled by the almost total absence of
such ideas in the Christian documents."22 In other words, he
was familiar with the theories suggesting resemblance between
Christianity and the Mysteries, expected to find them, and was shocked
to discover their absence.
E. O. James
concludes,
There is no valid
comparison between the synoptic story of Jesus of Nazareth and the
mythological accounts of the mystery divinities of Eleusis, Thrace,
Phrygia or Egypt.... Similarly, the belief in the resurrection of
Christ is poles removed from the resuscitation of Osiris, Dionysus or
Attis in an annual ritual based on primitive conceptions of
mummifications, and the renewal of the new life in the spring.23
No less an
authority than the great comparative religion scholar, Mircea Eliade,
points out that not only is the idea of Christian borrowing from the
Mysteries wrong but that any borrowing probably first began on the part
of the mysteries:
In 1958, one year before
[Joseph] Campbell started publishing his fanciful theories in the
Masks of God volumes, Mircea Eliade published in Patterns of
Initiation a series of lectures he had given at the University of
Chicago in the fall of 1956. In one of those lectures, Eliade said
recent research did not support the theories that the origin of
Christianity was influenced by pagan mystery cults. "There is no
reason to suppose that primitive Christianity was influenced by the
Hellenistic mysteries," said Eliade. In fact, the reverse may actually
be true….24
Further, and
probably most damaging, there is simply no evidence that the mystery
religions exerted any influence in Palestine in the first three decades
of the first century. If so, where did the material originate to make
Christianity a mystery religion? In fact, one wonders why such parallels
would be suggested at all.25] The manuscripts we possess
prove that the teachings of Jesus and Paul are those given in the New
Testament; sufficient time never existed for the disciples to be
influenced by the mysteries even if they were open to the idea, which
they weren’t.
Finally, when
the influence of the Mysteries did reach Palestine, principally through
Gnosticism, the early church did not accept it but renounced it
vigorously as trafficking in pagan myths. The complete lack of resulting
syncretism is difficult to explain if Christianity was ultimately a
derivative of such paganism. Obviously, it wasn’t.
As the Apostle
Peter emphasized, "We did not follow cleverly invented stories
when we told you about the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ,
but we were eyewitnesses of his majesty" (2 Peter 1:16)
Notes
1 http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/statement.htm.
Zeitgeist is a German expression meaning roughly "the spirit of the
Age."
2 John M. Robertson,
Pagan Christs (New Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1967).
3 Kersey Graves, The
World’s Sixteen Crucified Saviors or Christianity Before Christ
(New Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1971).
4 G. A. Wells, Did Jesus
Exist? (Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1975).
5 Cf. Encyclopedia
Britannica, Macropedia, 15th edition, s.v., "Mystery Religions."
This material is taken from the author’s The Secret Teachings of
the Masonic Lodge: A Christian Perspective (Chicago: Moody Press,
1991), pp. 244-245.
6 John Allegro, The
Sacred Mushroom and the Cross (New York: Bantam, 1971), p. 154.
7 Ibid., p. 193.
8 Ibid., p. 192.
9 Ibid., p. 205.
10 J. N. D. Anderson,
Christianity: The Witness of History (London: Tyndale, 1970), p.
15.
11 Cf., Jack Finegan,
Myth and Mystery: An Introduction to the Pagan Religions of the
Biblical World (Baker, 1989).
12 In Tom Snyder, Myth
Conceptions (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1995), 191, citing the
1965 ed., p. 42.
13 Samuel N. Kramer,
Mythologies of the Ancient World (Garden City, NY: Doubleday,
1961), p. 10 from Josh McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict
(Arrowhead Springs, San Bernardino, CA: Campus Crusade for Christ,
1972), p. 263.
14 P. Lambrechts, "La’
Resurrection de Adonis," in Melanges Isidore Levy, 1955, pp.
207-240 as cited in Edwin Yamauchi, "The Passover Plot or Easter
Triumph?" in Montgomery, ed., Christianity for the Tough Minded
(Minneapolis, MN: Bethany, 1973).
15 Ibid.
16 Encyclopedia
Britannica, 1969, Vol. 15, article on Adonis.
17 Wilbur M. Smith,
Therefore Stand (New Canaan, CT: Keats, 1981), p. 583.
18 Ibid.
19 Ibid.
20 J. N. D. Anderson,
Christianity and Comparative Religion (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 1977), p. 38.
21 C. S. Lewis,
Miracles: A Preliminary Study (London: Collins/Fontana, 1970), p.
119.
22 Ibid., p. 118.
23 Anderson, p. 41,
emphasis added.
24 Snyder, p. 194.
25 . E.g., Anderson, p. 22.
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