Part 7
While many students believe that Jesus was a purely mythical being, without actual existence save in the brains of religious Christians, I see no reason to doubt that a certain Jewish rabbi may have come out of the rebellious province of Galilee about the time of Herod. Such messiahs had come before him and such have succeeded him. Some of the messiahs subsequent to Jesus were: one who appeared in Persia in 1138, another in Arabia in 1167, and one in Moravia at the close of the twelfth century. Eldavid proclaimed himself messiah in Persia in 1199, Sabathai Tzevi assumed the title of "King of Kings" in 1666 and was executed at Constantinople by the Sultan. So late as 1829 there appeared in India the eight-year-old son of a peasant who was a wonderful serpent charmer and was called Marayum Powar. It was an ancient belief that the ability to handle serpents unharmed was a proof that one had become perfectly holy--absorbed in God! Therefore, numerous people came to believe Powar a god and in ten months ten thousand followers were about him, baptizing and performing miraculous cures--and his cult seemed well on the road to establishment when, over-confident of his power, he was bitten by a serpent and died. His followers, after vainly awaiting his resurrection, dispersed.
That Jesus' whole career is lost in encircling myth is no proof that the original figure never existed. There is plenty of historical evidence to show that the central portion of Europe was once ruled by a king named Karl, and we do not doubt this simply because a great cloud of myths has been gathered about the name of St. Charlemagne, any more than we feel bound to believe that because he once lived he must now necessarily exist, sleeping in a mountain, until it shall be necessary for him to spring forth and save the German fatherland.
One set of students assert that the Christ was merely the personification of vegetable life, claiming that his death and resurrection typify the death and revivification of vegetation. Others hold that he is the modern phase of the eternal sun-god. To sustain this hypothesis the following allegorical interpretation of his supposed career is offered as an explanation. He was born on the early dawn of the twenty-fifth day of December, the day on which commences the sun's apparent revolution around the earth; his birth was announced by the brilliant morning star; his virgin mother was the pure and beautiful dawn; his temptation was his struggle with the adverse clouds which he dispersed; his trial, execution, and death were emblematic of the solar decline and crucifixion at the beginning of winter; his descent into hell was typical of the three days of the winter solstice; and his resurrection and ascension refer to the return of the sun after its seeming extinction.
I have now shown that among the great majority of the nations of antiquity, no matter as to how they may have differed in the details, all held one general idea of faith in a savior-mediator between man and the supreme deity. Some such medium seemed necessary to them, for they had not reached that intellectual plane on which one feels able to hold direct communication with the creator. Modern Christianity, in all its forms, still panders to this ancient superstition that man must needs have an agent between himself and his God. He must have an intercessor between his weakness and God's power--and vengeance.
But when the human mind is freed from superstition and men learn that right living and a clean ethical code is all that is required, then they will cease to bow, either physically or mentally, to any humanly invented mediator, and their enlarged ideas of the justice of the supreme deity will prohibit any belief in impossible demi-gods. However, for the majority, that happy time of emancipation is still in the distant future, and, until its dawn lightens the general intelligence, men will continue to adore and supplicate the mediator whom inheritance and environment have taught them to revere, as Krishna, Buddha, Mithras, or the Christ, as the case may be.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Apocryphal New Testament, Being All the Gospels, Epistles and Other Pieces Now Extant, Attributed in the First Four Centuries to Jesus Christ, His Apostles, and their Companions, and not Included in the New Testament by its Compilers. London. Printed for William Hone, 1821.
Baring-Gould, S.--Curious Myths of the Middle Ages. London. 1877. Legends of the Patriarchs and Prophets, and other Old Testament Characters. New York. 1872. The Origin and Development of Religious Beliefs. New York. 1870. 2 vols.
Blavatsky, H. P.--Isis Unveiled: A Master-key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science and Mythology. New York. 1891. 2 vols.
Bourke, John G.--Scatalogic Rites of All Nations. Washington. 1891.
Bunsen, Christian Charles Josias.--Christianity and Mankind; Their Beginnings and Prospects. London. 1854. 7 vols. God in History; or, The Progress of Man's Faith in the Moral Order of the World. London. 1868. 3 vols.
Castan, L'Abee Em.--Les Origines du Christianisme d'apres la tradition catholique. Paris. 1869. 2 vols. Les Origines du Christianisme d'apres la critique rationaliste contemporaine. Paris. 1868.
Chantepepie de la Saussaye, P. D.--The Religion of the Teutons. Boston. 1902.
Cheetham, S.--The Mysteries--Pagan and Christian. London. 1897.
Christlieb, Theodore.--Modern Doubt and Christian Belief. New York. 1874.
Clodd, Edward.--Myths and Dreams. London. 1885.
Colenso, John William.--Lectures on the Pentateuch and Moabite Stone. London. 1873.
Conway, Moncure Daniel.--Idols and Ideals, with an essay on Christianity. New York. 1877.
Doane, T. W.--Bible Myths and Their Parallels in Other Religions. New York.
Dorman, Rushton M.--The Origin of Primitive Superstitions, etc. Philadelphia. 1881.
Draper, John William.--History of the Conflict between Religion and Science. New York. 1881. History of the Intellectual Development of Europe. New York. 1878. 2 vols.
Farrar, J. A.--Paganism and Christianity. London. 1891. Primitive Manners and Customs. New York. 1879.
Figuier, Louis.--Histoire du Merveilleux dans les temps modernes. Paris. 1880. 4 vols.
Fiske, John.--Myths and Myth-Makers. Boston. 1901.
Frazer, J. C.--The Golden Bough. London. 1890. 2 vols.
Frothingham, Octavius Brooks.--The Cradle of the Christ. New York. 1877.
Gibbon, Edward.--The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Philadelphia. 1876. 6 vols.
De Gubernatis, Angelo.--Zoological Mythology; or, The Legends of Animals. London. 1872. 2 vols.
Hardwick, Charles.--Christ and Other Masters. London. 1874.
Hargraves, Jennings.--The Rosicrucians. Their Rites and Mysteries. London. 1870. 2 vols.
Harnack, Adolph.--The Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries. Translated by James Moffatt. New York. 1904. 2 vols.
Herodotus.--Translation of G. C. Macauley. London. 1890. 2 vols.
Hislop, Alexander.--The Two Babylons; or, The Papal Worship, etc. Edinburgh. 1862.
Hone, William.--Ancient Mysteries Described, etc. London. 1823.
Hudson, Thompson Jay.--The Law of Psychic Phenomena. Chicago. 1896.
Inman, Thomas.--Ancient Faiths and Modern. London. 1876. Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism. London. 1869.
Jameson, Mrs.--Legends of the Madonna. London. 1852.
Jevons, Frank Byron.--An Introduction to the History of Religion. London. 1896.
Lang, Andrew.--Custom and Myth. London. 1884. Myth, Ritual, and Religion. London. 1887. 2 vols.
Lecky, William Edward Hartpole.--History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne. London. 1877. 2 vols. History of the Rise and Influence of the Spirit of Rationalism in Europe. New York. 1866. 2 vols.
Kundy, J. P.--Monumental Christianity. London. 1889.
Macdonald, James.--Religion and Myth. London. 1893.
Middleton, Conyers.--A Letter from Rome. London. 1847.
Des Mousseaux.--Les Haunts Phenomenes de la Magie Moeurs et Pratiques des Demons. 1852.
Muller, Max.--Chips from a German Workshop. London. 1867. 2 vols.
Orr, James.--The Virgin Birth of Christ. New York. 1907.
Picart, Bernard.--The Ceremonies and Religious Customs of the Various Nations of the Known World, etc. London. 1733. 7 vols.
Priestley, Joseph.--An History of the Corruptions of Christianity. Birmingham. 1793. 2 vols.
Renan, Ernest.--The Life of Jesus. Translated by C. E. Wilboir. New York. 1865.
Sharpe, Samuel.--Egyptian Mythology and Egyptian Christianity. London. 1863.
Smith, W. Robertson.--Lectures on the Religion of the Semites. Edinburgh. 1889.
Strauss, David Friedrich.--The Life of Jesus. Translated by George Eliot. London. 1892.
Tuttle, Hudson.--The Career of the Christ-Idea in History. Boston. The Career of the God-Idea in History. Boston.
NOTE
[1] The use of unleavened bread by the Greek church caused great disputes between it and the Latin in the eleventh century, but the latter finally accepted it on the argument that as the Christ instituted the supper during the passover, he must have used it, as there was no leaven procurable at that time.
End of Project Gutenberg's The Christian Mythology, by Brigham Leatherbee