BEYOND THE BLOG

THE CHRIST

Posted by anthonynorth on March 19, 2008

jesus.jpg The story is simple. The facts fall into place like a well rehearsed production. In a stable in Bethlehem, Jesus of Nazareth was born to a Virgin. Tipped off by three Magi from the East, King Herod ordered the murder of all new-born infants, thinking one was to grow to challenge his kingship.
Warned, Mary and Joseph fled with their infant Jesus, and he survived. In His teenage years He is shown as a questioning boy, frustrated, asking things of the priests.

A LIFE

Growing to adulthood as a carpenter, at the age of thirty He went into the wilderness for forty days and forty nights, where He purges Himself, witnessing demons and has His spiritual enlightenment.
He is then baptised in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Collecting around Him Twelve Disciples, He spent three years preaching and healing the sick, passing on His message of love and the coming of the Kingdom of God, before entering Jerusalem.
Riding into the city on a donkey, along a carpet of palms, the attention of the authorities was placed on Him by his preaching and overturning of the stalls of the Temple. Wanted for sedition and blasphemy, a conspiracy is had, betrayed by His disciple, Judas, following a Passover feast where He gave bread and wine as symbolic of the body and blood of His person.
Refusing to deny He was the Son of God, He was crucified, yet three days later, He was Resurrected. Sacrificing Himself to take away the sins of man, He finally ascended to heaven after appearing before His disciples.

DID IT HAPPEN?

The story contains it all. The frustrated youth. The mental torment in the wilderness. The spiritual experience. The charismatic rising from His insecurities. The eccentricity of his three year mission. The scandal of his assault on the temple. The conspiracy of his betrayal. The fantastic death. The on-going Resurrection. And the later embellishments?
Rationally, we can doubt much of the story. His healings could be of psychosomatic illnesses, His raising of the dead Lazarus can be explained as sleeping sickness, people regularly being thought dead throughout history and suddenly coming round.
Jesus walked over water, or did He somehow hypnotically suggest that He had? The feeding of the Five Thousand could equally be a miracle of human sharing. Some researchers, such as Australian Dr Barbara Thiering, note the ‘pesher’.
Here a sentence can have two meanings – one for the public, another for the initiated. Thus, Jesus’ turning of water into wine becomes a miracle for the public, but to the initiated, it records the time when the Gentiles were granted the right to take communion wine.

THE ESSENES

Thiering is one of many researchers who feel that Jesus was an Essene, a member of a four thousand strong cult that occupied Qumran. All male, celibate, pacifist and ascetic, many of their idiosyncracies were reflected in Jesus himself.
It was the Essenes who are believed to have written the Dead Sea Scrolls, found by bedouins in caves close to Qumran in 1947.
However, even if we accept the above interpretations of the miracles – if we deny the Virgin Birth, the temptations by the Devil, the Resurrection – we are still left with a questioning, frustrated child approaching a form of insanity, saved by a spiritual experience, and becoming the charismatic on the road to social change, eventually dying a young, tragic death.
In Jesus we have the classic icon – and also the classic guru, much of this life pattern identical to them all. And we can also discover His life as an embodiment of His society and the requirement for change.

GOD AND JUDAISM

Jesus was a Jew, one of the Chosen People of Abraham, who had made a Covenant with the One God. Previous gods had been pagan and did nothing but reflect the idiosyncracies of the people who created them. But the One God was different.
Without personality, he intervened directly in human history in freeing the Hebrews from Egyptian slavery through his agent, Moses. Further, he placed upon the people the Ten Commandments, demanding obedience to a moral code.
For the first time in history, a God had intervened in human affairs directly and demanded a system of morality intrinsically linked with every event in a person’s life.
This made God invincible, but in the 6th century BC, the Babylonians destroyed the empire built by David and Solomon, thus proving their gods were more powerful than the One God and exiling the Jewish people.
The Jews returned to their Promised Land, but were never again to be a nation until 1948, and the creation of Israel. But if they were the Chosen People of the most powerful God, why had God punished them in this way?

TOWARDS THE MESSIAH

Coming in line with the birth of a tradition to analyse and redefine God’s words, the Jews came to two incredible conclusions. First, they had been chosen by God to suffer. Second, when the time for suffering was at an end, a Messiah would come to bring Paradise.
This was the intellectual tradition into which Jesus came. And we can see in Christ’s suffering a Messiah who embodied the suffering of the Jewish people. He was their society in one man. However, the Jews rejected Jesus as the Son of God.

ST PAUL

But some Jews thought different. Principle among these was the future St Paul, the man who went on to define the Jesus Christ we know of. Fundamental to this process is the fact that Jesus actually said nothing new. The uniqueness of Jesus laid, not in His words, but in the fact that He lived the life He preached. And we can imagine Paul feeling that if a real Messiah could exist, this man would be it.
Although a Jew, Paul had had a Hellenic upbringing – a world where gods ruled in the old, pagan way. And we can see only a small step from thinking of Jesus living a Godly life to becoming an actual superbeing Himself.
Thus, Jesus is raised from humanity to the supernatural. He becomes a mythological Hero. And, as previously argued by many scholars, Paul’s inheritance had a model in the character of Herakles, or Hercules.

HERCULES

Like Jesus, Hercules had a divine father and human mother. An enemy sent snakes to kill him as an infant, but he survived. In life he became the ultimate expression of humanity to his culture, in that he acted as if superhuman.
He carried out the Twelve Labours of Hercules, the last three involving miraculous abilities, including descending to the underworld (death) to redeem the dead before returning to life. And finally, as his body burned on a funeral pyre, a cloud appeared amid a display of thunder and lightning. He was then taken up to heaven, granted godly status and became immortal.

THE TRINITY

The culture of Hercules may be different from that of Jesus, but the elements of the two lives are identical. And with Christ’s Resurrection, His Godly status guaranteed His Church would grow, thus transforming society.
However, by the 4th century another interpretation was placed on Christ with the Trinity, in which He became the Father (God), the Son (human) and the Holy Ghost (spirit) in equal measure. This idea was vital for his continuance to transform society. If Jesus had been a man and not God then His divinity is in doubt.
Further, to have said He was God but not really man would have made His suffering on the Cross irrelevant, for He would not experience pain like a man. And finally, if He was not spirit, then He was not presently with us and not relevant to contemporary life. So in absolute intellectual brilliance, a man becomes an icon – becomes three in one.

IN CONCLUSION

Is the above the true reality of Christ? I don’t know. It is simply how I rationally see it. Whether a Jesus existed or not becomes irrelevant to the ‘ideal’ which became The Christ – arguably a cultural and lasting iconic image.
Based within the mythological tradition of the Hero such as Hercules, He went on to embody everything a society stood for, thus becoming as one with the society. And finally, to guarantee His continued existence, the Trinity allows Him to be in society, but also above it, and forever with us.
I must add that it is not my intention, here, to question anyone’s peacefully held beliefs. This is simply my take on the subject – a subject that truly is the Greatest Story Ever Told.

© Anthony North, March 2008

17 Responses to “THE CHRIST”

  1. “Greatest Story Ever Told”
    That in essence is the reason for “conversion” when people can add the – I believe.
    What they believe in is defined by whoever defines that story in the relativist understanding of their theology.
    Chuffed as usual, to read the post.
    Thanks

  2. Hi Winslie,
    I’m pleased you’re still enjoying my output :-)
    The relativism you speak of is indeed how it usually happens. There is a short essay at the bottom of this post which maybe puts it in perspective:

    Branches of Life

  3. Jim said

    I think there is more, much more to the story. Not trying to take away any thing from your article here, but my own research over the years have only opened up more questions. There are two main avenues one can proceed to research here. The spiritual Jesus, and the historical Jesus. Both extremely interesting!

    I think the introduction of the trinity doctrine was not for shady reasons, but was indeed a transitional period where man took the next step. Not a planned step or prepared step as there was much division on all this for sure. But as flawed as some of us may consider the trinity doctrine, I do believe it is a step in the right direction in understand what god is.

    I believe that this evolution has not stopped AND further enlightenment will follow, even if not in our life time.

  4. baz said

    hi anthony

    are you still trying to find out why we worship a 6 ft tall blue eyed white guy? the story is great theater but the message is what’s meant to be the important part, that love is all, or do unto others as you wish them to do unto you. try it and see what happens to conflict. what a concept!

    not much chance of change yet as christians break all ten comandments all the time, sanctioned by their own churches. jesus and god both had issues with the church, not that the religeous orders ever listened, to busy making money, and usurping power.

    did you have a good easter, hope you took all four days, frowned on, on this side of the pond.

    remember you are god baz

  5. sue hickey said

    Baz needs a kick in the arse. For those who like to diss people searching along various avenues of spirituality, I suggest Chris Hedges’ new book, “Why I Don’t Believe in Atheists” which take people like Richard Dawkins and company to task, and points out that many of these people are quite racist, especially when it comes to Muslims (Hedges lived and worked in the Middle East for years and speaks Arabic!). I liked your essay on “The Christ” because you demonstrate that exploring the nature of God and His/Her spiritual progeny means, ultimately, a willingness to embrace the idea that there is Something bigger than us. (Yet another reason why I step into another realm whenever I listen to Thomas Tallis! Check this beautiful Renaissance composer out, BTW.)

  6. baz said

    hi sue

    anthony puts this site out for people like us to make point and conjecture, not to find the universl truth, that is only a by-product. i am a deist, dawkins is a scientist who dosn’t believe god is pulling his string theory. chritians don’t believe in the reality of a 5 ft 6 in tall brown eyed curly headed dark skined guy. muslims believe christ was an important prophet. the jews believe he was a rebel against the torah. jesus never wanted to start a new religen, but the romans used him to start catholacisum. very few of us think outside the box. god gives us information on our reality every day, but we’ve been taught not to listen.

    remember you are god

    baz

  7. Apologies to all for late replies but I’ve been off-line with tech problems for five days. But now I’m back – hopefully!

    Hi Jim,
    I’m certainly not saying the Trinity was ‘murky’ – except for a touch of politics. I actually think it a marvellous concept.

    Hi Sue,
    I’m pleased you liked the essay. Yes, I’m, convinced there’s something above us. What it is, I don’t know, but it fuels my thoughts.

    Hi Baz,
    I’m not a god. A god is an absolute. As for me, I question myself every day.
    Do you?

  8. baz said

    hi anthony

    welcome back

    anthony i never meant you are a god, i meant, along with all other life on this world, you are god. i am still trying to figure how this works.
    do you not think god is capable of doing anything you can think of? i do question myself every day, becoming a spiritualist in the process. what do you believe?

    remember you are god

    baz

  9. Hi Baz,
    I think I understand you now. All nature is divine. Although that is not, exactly, the Christian message, with God above it all. It is more the pagan interpretation of divine. And if a divine does exist, I think I’d prefer this latter view.

  10. Peg said

    Hi Anthony,

    Just out blogsurfing today and came across your blog and wanted to say how refreshing your viewpoints are. It’s rare to find someone who writes about Christianity (and the other faiths as well) with insight, a positive outlook, and an exploring mind.

    BTW and FWIW (to add my 2p to the above conversation) rather than “you are god” I find it helpful to think “remember God loves you”.

    Peace,
    Peg

  11. GLENDA said

    WHATEVER THE STORY MYTH OR FACT GOD IS THE CREATIVE INTELLIGANCE THAT IS INFINITE IN THE UNIVERSE WHICH MAN HAS AND WILL TRY TO UNDERSTAND BUT OUR MINDSETS WE ARE SO LIMITED TO EVEN FATHOM TO COMPRHEND AN INTRICATE PEICE THIS DIVINE SOURCE….. AND JESUS IS VERY MUCH PART OF THIS IN THE GRAND SCHEME OF THINGS………….

  12. Hi Peg,
    Many thanks for that. I try to keep an open mind on most things.

    Hi Glenda,
    Whatever that force is, it is rational to argue we are not up to the task of understanding. If we could, we would be as one.

  13. CmK said

    No body died for believing in Hercules. Not only did the remaining disciple of Jesus become martyrs, but hundreds afterwards. So, was Jesus “loony” or was he who he said he was? Was he so delusional that he not only believed, but others believed him as well? Hummm…Charles Manson believed him self to be “christ” as well. Whom also had followers that believed. But he didn’t raise anyone from the dead either.

  14. Hi CmK,
    I don’t think it is belief that does damage, but what we do with it. We have a choice between moderation or extremism. I’d choose the former every time.

  15. Chris said

    Hi Anthony,
    I was meandering through your spirituality archive after reading the Halloween post again and came across this piece.
    I have a couple of thoughts and they’re about perceptions and definitions, again!
    The general perception of ‘God’ seems to be of an all-powerful figurehead or, alternatively, a ’singularity’. This doesn’t make sense to me. If ‘God’ is all-encompassing then I think that the Universal Consciousness concept is a much better fit, working at both a macrocosmic and a microcosmic level seems to be far more ‘encompassing’. Of course, if we go down this path, then other elements of ‘proof’ such as the Golden Mean and the quincunx pattern appear to become relevant (there is certainly something to be said about those old philosophers!).
    Your spirituality definition re inner bonding certainly seems to have a ‘harmonic resonance’ to it and we all ‘hum’ don’t we, even good old Mother Earth? :)

  16. Chris said

    Hi Anthony,
    I just had another thought on singularities (this is unrelated to the post but I wasn’t sure where to put it).
    I wonder if its possible if they’re connection/transfer points between layers of the multiverse? If everything is inter-connected I guess that there has to be some sort of transference medium.
    Also, didn’t Stephen Hawking recently postulate that the ‘Big Bang’ may have in fact been a multiple event occurrence to explain the rate of expansion of the Universe?
    Maybe our Universal Consciousness is just one aspect of a Multiversal Consciousness? Things just seem to keep getting bigger, or is that smaller (inner/outer, outer/inner), there is that perception thing again!

  17. Hi Chris,
    I think Christianity realised the problem in your first comment and tried to ratify it with the Trinity. As for the nature of the ’singularity’, I think the only thing that can be said for certain is that it is a mathematical point of infinity. As for most other scientific theories concerning the issue, they’ve fallen right down that rabbit hole and are having tea with Alice ;-)

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>