Several years ago I wrote the following compilation of thoughts about what I perceive to be the non-Hebraic nature of Christ and Christianity. Having made some modifications to the text, I wanted to share it with you here. I hope you find the contents of my article here thought inducing at the very least. Nevertheless, do not loose faith in Christ, as many do once traditionally held beliefs concerning him are challenged. Allow your faith in Christ grow even stronger when you begin seeing his boundless nature and divine essence in a new light. I would be glad to entertain any questions and comments and I’m even open to criticisms.
Armenian
Our Christian God represented by God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit is a supreme deity known to mankind since the dawn of time. I hope one day we Christians, especially evangelicals amongst us, will realize this as fact and stop preaching a theological paradox known today as Judeo-Christian belief system. Allow me to first being by stating that the nature of Christ, our God, has more in common with Zoroaster's Ahura Mazda (Armenian: Aramazd) than with Moses' tribal god called Yahweh.
Was Christ a J-ew?
I believe that our clergy places too much emphasis on the literal interpretations of traditional J-ewish scriptures and not enough on the vast and complex histories, philosophies and theologies of the ancient Near East and Asia Minor. Regardless of New Testament passages suggesting a J-ewish lineage to Christ, the very essence of Christ and Christianity are exclusively pagan in nature, thereby canceling out any possibility that he may have been a J-ewish rabbi or the J-ewish Messiah. What's more, although Christ is said to have lived within Palestine during the first century AD, we the faithful must remember that Christ was God manifest. Thus, humanizing him or making him out to be a mere J-ew, an African, or a Scandinavian for that matter, is an affront to the universal reality of a supreme deity. What’s more, Christ’s philosophies and all subsequent theologies associated with traditional Christianity are virtually all non-J-ewish in nature and character as well. There are many aspects of church rituals within the Catholic and Orthodox faiths that are strikingly pagan in character. However, for the purpose and intent of this article I will only address the non-Hebraic nature of Christ and not dwell in the many pagan rituals that exist within our traditional churches.
To begin with, many J-ewish scholars throughout history have suggested that Christ was not a J-ew. The Talmud, the absolute scriptural authority within Judaism, clearly suggests that Christ was not a J-ew. However, let us put aside for a moment what they, or what we Christians for that matter, have to say about Christ and let's begin to look at the very nature of Christ and the theologies and philosophies he represented more closely. Many biblical scholars today agree that when he preached to the masses in Palestine Christ exclusively quoted from the Septuagint. This would be odd for a J-ew to do because the Septuagint was the Greek translation of the J-ewish scriptures that J-ewish scholars and rabbinical authorities throughout history have strongly condemned as utterly corrupted by paganism. A simple question arises here: Why did Christ not quote from traditional Hebrew texts, the Tanakh/Torah, and instead chose to quote texts that J-ews universally claim to be pagan corrupted? It is also worthy to note that Christ's J-ewish apostles seem to have been Hellenized. Moreover, why did Christ speak Aramaic and not Hebrew? More importantly, why were the very first worshipers of the newly born infant Christ Zoroastrian priests (the three Magi of the east)? Why are there discrepancies regarding Christ's J-ewish genealogy in the Gospels? And finally, how did Christianity spread like wildfire through the pagan world and got no where within J-ewish society?
I am not surprised at how fast Greeks, Assyrians, Armenians, Copts, Ethiopians, Romans and Hellenized J-ews embraced Christianity, these people recognized God’s manifestation on earth and his universal message. The social egalitarianism, universality of the Triune God and the theological concepts represented by Christ and his message were familiar to the ancient pagans of the civilized world. This familiarity of pagans towards Christs nature, in essence, explains the unprecedented and astronomically fast spread of the Christian faith. In my opinion, Christ was the God known to all gentiles under different names and different forms at different times and different locations. And for reasons yet unknown, his last manifestation was in Palestine approximately two thousand years ago. It is crucial, however, to remember that Palestine at the time was heavily influenced by Greeks, Egyptians and Romans. Moreover, the general region of Palestine, which was adjacent to the great pagan theological centers of Alexandria, Byblos and Babylon, was also home to many pagan cults and Greco-Roman and Zoroastrian centers of worship.
Pagan influences upon Judaism and Christianity
There is not much that is unique within Judaic belief. The J-ewish biblical traditions, which are known to have been compiled within the first century AD, are not original theological concepts. Upon close analysis, they seem to be nothing more than reinterpretations of the aforementioned pagan traditions, the overpowering foreign traditions that they were exposed to during their long and turbulent national journey. Since Babylon has a very bad reputation within religious circles, for the sake of objectivity it should be mentioned that ancient Babylon was a great center of theology, a city within which existed good and evil, truth and lie, God and Satan.
Within this perspective let’s look at some of the key locations, events and individuals within J-ewish sacred tradition that are inherently tied to Babylon: Abraham the “father” of J-ews was a Babylonian. Noah, the second Adam, was a Sumerian/Babylonian. The Garden of Eden is said to have been located within historic Armenia, which was located north of Babylon. Well known to us all, the known world at the time was repopulated after the Great Deluge from the Armenian region of Mount Ararat. And finally, the longterm captivity of the J-ewish nation within Babylon. Thus, simply taking into account the aforementioned core biblical tales and beliefs, it should be easy to see that the core foundations of the sacred scriptures found within the J-ewish Torah (the first five books of the J-ewish Tanakh) were clearly non-J-ewish in nature and may have actually been Anatolian and/or Mesopotamian in origin. It is also important to note here that the sacred traditions of the Persians, Armenians, Babylonians, Egyptians, Indians and the Hellenic world predated that of Judaism by many centuries.
In the opinion of many scholars, it was precisely during the captivity of the J-ews (sixth century BC) within Babylon that the Hebrew tribal deity known as Yahweh began taking more recognizable forms that are familiar to us Christians today. Observing religion from this perspective, it is easy to conclude that Christianity was the natural continuation and/or evolution of the primordial realization by man of a universal creator God. This primordial realization by man clearly echoes the well known biblical accounts of the Garden of Eden, the Great Flood and the Tower of Babylon. Civilized man first lived, as the biblical and archaeological sources attest, within Mesopotamia and Asia Minor, known universally as the Cradle of Civilization.
Council of Nicaea
When one closely studies the Christian Gospels and the J-ewish scriptures one clearly sees that there are essentially no similarities between the nature, ethics and theosophies associated with the Triune God of Christianity and the tribal deity found within the so-called Old Testament - other than the ones that seem to be coincidental or simply contrived by Christ's J-ewish apostles in order to "fit" Christ into Hebrew society and tradition. Some Christian apologists today claim that pagan element that may exist within Christianity was a result of doctrinal formulations made during the Church councils such as the Council of Nicaea, the first major convention of prominent Christian leaders held within Byzantium in 325 AD under the close supervision of the pagan Emperor Constantine the Great.
It should be taken into consideration that prior to the Council of Nicaea there were many popular forms of Christianity in existence and some of the them, such as the Marcionites, wanted nothing to do Judaic traditions. However, when the powerful Roman Emperor at the time cast his final verdict all other Christian schools of thought simply disappeared. The Emperor Constantine chose a school of thought that essentially combined the Christian and J-ewish traditions, known at the time as the Pauline sect of Christianity. The Pauline Christians, with the Emperor's stamp of approval, proved to be very violent, mercilessly eradicating all other groups that opposed them. Another consequence of the church council was the rejection and subsequent destruction of various troublesome texts at the time that simply did not fit into the Pauline mentality, such as the Gospels of Thomas.
Why did Constantine take this action? Based on contemporary accounts, Constantine was a very warlike man. He was a proud pagan until the last day of his life. He was cunning and he was ruthless. After the split of the Rome Empire, Constantine found himself ruling over a large number of J-ews, many of them prominent, within his eastern half of the Roman Empire. It is also said that Constantine had many prominent J-ews within his royal court. Some historians claim that Constantine intent at Nicaea was to unite his pagan, Christian and J-ewish subjects under one religious banner. At the time, J-ews and Christians formed a large minority in the Roman Empire. After the final sacking of Jerusalem by Rome, the wealthy Hellenized J-ews, as well as many ordinary J-ews, moved into Roman held territories. The famous Roman J-ewish historian Josephus is just one example. Let's also not forget that at the time in question religion was a powerful sociopolitical institution, much like what democracy, capitalism, socialism or communism are today. Thus, directly controlling a given population's religion meant controlling the population. Therefore, as a result of the geopolitical climate within the eastern Roman Empire at the time we got the brand of Christianity tat we are familiar with today.
Non-Judaic tenants within Christianity
It is also important to note that Palestine at the time of Christ had a strong cult called the Essenes. This was a reclusive group of eccentric individuals who's members chose to abandon earthly possessions and live aesthetic lives in the desert. Historians today consider the Essenes to be more-or-less a Zoroastrian cult within Palestine. This group is also said to have been severely persecuted by orthodox J-ews at the time. According to many biblical scholars, the Essene connection to early Christianity is very strong. Many of the social attributes associated with early Christians closely resemble that of the Essenes. Some prominent biblical scholars even claim that John the Baptist and Christ may have been Essenes as well. Perhaps the narrated friction that existed in the Gospels between the John the Baptist and the Sadducees and the Pharisees and the ultimate beheading of John the Baptist authenticates this speculation.
Nevertheless, let's keep in mind that biblical scholars state that the scriptures were written within a generation or two after Christ's crucifixion and resurrection. Thus, the following non-J-ewish elements within Christianity existed generations before the famous Council of Nicaea. Therefore, no one can rightfully claim that the Nicaean Council, or any other church council for that matter, manipulated the scriptures of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and various other agnostic gospels in order to incorporate pagan beliefs into the Christian texts.
How could one reconcile or associate the following natures and characteristics of Christ and Christianity with classical Judaism? A brief look at the non-J-ewish nature of Christianity as it existed at the time of Christ:
Armenian
Non-Judaic Nature of Christ
Zoroastrian Priests Worshiping the Infant Christ
Zoroastrian Priests Worshiping the Infant Christ
Our Christian God represented by God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit is a supreme deity known to mankind since the dawn of time. I hope one day we Christians, especially evangelicals amongst us, will realize this as fact and stop preaching a theological paradox known today as Judeo-Christian belief system. Allow me to first being by stating that the nature of Christ, our God, has more in common with Zoroaster's Ahura Mazda (Armenian: Aramazd) than with Moses' tribal god called Yahweh.
Was Christ a J-ew?
I believe that our clergy places too much emphasis on the literal interpretations of traditional J-ewish scriptures and not enough on the vast and complex histories, philosophies and theologies of the ancient Near East and Asia Minor. Regardless of New Testament passages suggesting a J-ewish lineage to Christ, the very essence of Christ and Christianity are exclusively pagan in nature, thereby canceling out any possibility that he may have been a J-ewish rabbi or the J-ewish Messiah. What's more, although Christ is said to have lived within Palestine during the first century AD, we the faithful must remember that Christ was God manifest. Thus, humanizing him or making him out to be a mere J-ew, an African, or a Scandinavian for that matter, is an affront to the universal reality of a supreme deity. What’s more, Christ’s philosophies and all subsequent theologies associated with traditional Christianity are virtually all non-J-ewish in nature and character as well. There are many aspects of church rituals within the Catholic and Orthodox faiths that are strikingly pagan in character. However, for the purpose and intent of this article I will only address the non-Hebraic nature of Christ and not dwell in the many pagan rituals that exist within our traditional churches.
To begin with, many J-ewish scholars throughout history have suggested that Christ was not a J-ew. The Talmud, the absolute scriptural authority within Judaism, clearly suggests that Christ was not a J-ew. However, let us put aside for a moment what they, or what we Christians for that matter, have to say about Christ and let's begin to look at the very nature of Christ and the theologies and philosophies he represented more closely. Many biblical scholars today agree that when he preached to the masses in Palestine Christ exclusively quoted from the Septuagint. This would be odd for a J-ew to do because the Septuagint was the Greek translation of the J-ewish scriptures that J-ewish scholars and rabbinical authorities throughout history have strongly condemned as utterly corrupted by paganism. A simple question arises here: Why did Christ not quote from traditional Hebrew texts, the Tanakh/Torah, and instead chose to quote texts that J-ews universally claim to be pagan corrupted? It is also worthy to note that Christ's J-ewish apostles seem to have been Hellenized. Moreover, why did Christ speak Aramaic and not Hebrew? More importantly, why were the very first worshipers of the newly born infant Christ Zoroastrian priests (the three Magi of the east)? Why are there discrepancies regarding Christ's J-ewish genealogy in the Gospels? And finally, how did Christianity spread like wildfire through the pagan world and got no where within J-ewish society?
I am not surprised at how fast Greeks, Assyrians, Armenians, Copts, Ethiopians, Romans and Hellenized J-ews embraced Christianity, these people recognized God’s manifestation on earth and his universal message. The social egalitarianism, universality of the Triune God and the theological concepts represented by Christ and his message were familiar to the ancient pagans of the civilized world. This familiarity of pagans towards Christs nature, in essence, explains the unprecedented and astronomically fast spread of the Christian faith. In my opinion, Christ was the God known to all gentiles under different names and different forms at different times and different locations. And for reasons yet unknown, his last manifestation was in Palestine approximately two thousand years ago. It is crucial, however, to remember that Palestine at the time was heavily influenced by Greeks, Egyptians and Romans. Moreover, the general region of Palestine, which was adjacent to the great pagan theological centers of Alexandria, Byblos and Babylon, was also home to many pagan cults and Greco-Roman and Zoroastrian centers of worship.
Pagan influences upon Judaism and Christianity
There is not much that is unique within Judaic belief. The J-ewish biblical traditions, which are known to have been compiled within the first century AD, are not original theological concepts. Upon close analysis, they seem to be nothing more than reinterpretations of the aforementioned pagan traditions, the overpowering foreign traditions that they were exposed to during their long and turbulent national journey. Since Babylon has a very bad reputation within religious circles, for the sake of objectivity it should be mentioned that ancient Babylon was a great center of theology, a city within which existed good and evil, truth and lie, God and Satan.
Within this perspective let’s look at some of the key locations, events and individuals within J-ewish sacred tradition that are inherently tied to Babylon: Abraham the “father” of J-ews was a Babylonian. Noah, the second Adam, was a Sumerian/Babylonian. The Garden of Eden is said to have been located within historic Armenia, which was located north of Babylon. Well known to us all, the known world at the time was repopulated after the Great Deluge from the Armenian region of Mount Ararat. And finally, the longterm captivity of the J-ewish nation within Babylon. Thus, simply taking into account the aforementioned core biblical tales and beliefs, it should be easy to see that the core foundations of the sacred scriptures found within the J-ewish Torah (the first five books of the J-ewish Tanakh) were clearly non-J-ewish in nature and may have actually been Anatolian and/or Mesopotamian in origin. It is also important to note here that the sacred traditions of the Persians, Armenians, Babylonians, Egyptians, Indians and the Hellenic world predated that of Judaism by many centuries.
In the opinion of many scholars, it was precisely during the captivity of the J-ews (sixth century BC) within Babylon that the Hebrew tribal deity known as Yahweh began taking more recognizable forms that are familiar to us Christians today. Observing religion from this perspective, it is easy to conclude that Christianity was the natural continuation and/or evolution of the primordial realization by man of a universal creator God. This primordial realization by man clearly echoes the well known biblical accounts of the Garden of Eden, the Great Flood and the Tower of Babylon. Civilized man first lived, as the biblical and archaeological sources attest, within Mesopotamia and Asia Minor, known universally as the Cradle of Civilization.
Council of Nicaea
When one closely studies the Christian Gospels and the J-ewish scriptures one clearly sees that there are essentially no similarities between the nature, ethics and theosophies associated with the Triune God of Christianity and the tribal deity found within the so-called Old Testament - other than the ones that seem to be coincidental or simply contrived by Christ's J-ewish apostles in order to "fit" Christ into Hebrew society and tradition. Some Christian apologists today claim that pagan element that may exist within Christianity was a result of doctrinal formulations made during the Church councils such as the Council of Nicaea, the first major convention of prominent Christian leaders held within Byzantium in 325 AD under the close supervision of the pagan Emperor Constantine the Great.
It should be taken into consideration that prior to the Council of Nicaea there were many popular forms of Christianity in existence and some of the them, such as the Marcionites, wanted nothing to do Judaic traditions. However, when the powerful Roman Emperor at the time cast his final verdict all other Christian schools of thought simply disappeared. The Emperor Constantine chose a school of thought that essentially combined the Christian and J-ewish traditions, known at the time as the Pauline sect of Christianity. The Pauline Christians, with the Emperor's stamp of approval, proved to be very violent, mercilessly eradicating all other groups that opposed them. Another consequence of the church council was the rejection and subsequent destruction of various troublesome texts at the time that simply did not fit into the Pauline mentality, such as the Gospels of Thomas.
Why did Constantine take this action? Based on contemporary accounts, Constantine was a very warlike man. He was a proud pagan until the last day of his life. He was cunning and he was ruthless. After the split of the Rome Empire, Constantine found himself ruling over a large number of J-ews, many of them prominent, within his eastern half of the Roman Empire. It is also said that Constantine had many prominent J-ews within his royal court. Some historians claim that Constantine intent at Nicaea was to unite his pagan, Christian and J-ewish subjects under one religious banner. At the time, J-ews and Christians formed a large minority in the Roman Empire. After the final sacking of Jerusalem by Rome, the wealthy Hellenized J-ews, as well as many ordinary J-ews, moved into Roman held territories. The famous Roman J-ewish historian Josephus is just one example. Let's also not forget that at the time in question religion was a powerful sociopolitical institution, much like what democracy, capitalism, socialism or communism are today. Thus, directly controlling a given population's religion meant controlling the population. Therefore, as a result of the geopolitical climate within the eastern Roman Empire at the time we got the brand of Christianity tat we are familiar with today.
Non-Judaic tenants within Christianity
It is also important to note that Palestine at the time of Christ had a strong cult called the Essenes. This was a reclusive group of eccentric individuals who's members chose to abandon earthly possessions and live aesthetic lives in the desert. Historians today consider the Essenes to be more-or-less a Zoroastrian cult within Palestine. This group is also said to have been severely persecuted by orthodox J-ews at the time. According to many biblical scholars, the Essene connection to early Christianity is very strong. Many of the social attributes associated with early Christians closely resemble that of the Essenes. Some prominent biblical scholars even claim that John the Baptist and Christ may have been Essenes as well. Perhaps the narrated friction that existed in the Gospels between the John the Baptist and the Sadducees and the Pharisees and the ultimate beheading of John the Baptist authenticates this speculation.
Nevertheless, let's keep in mind that biblical scholars state that the scriptures were written within a generation or two after Christ's crucifixion and resurrection. Thus, the following non-J-ewish elements within Christianity existed generations before the famous Council of Nicaea. Therefore, no one can rightfully claim that the Nicaean Council, or any other church council for that matter, manipulated the scriptures of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and various other agnostic gospels in order to incorporate pagan beliefs into the Christian texts.
How could one reconcile or associate the following natures and characteristics of Christ and Christianity with classical Judaism? A brief look at the non-J-ewish nature of Christianity as it existed at the time of Christ:
The Holy Trinity (had similar counterparts only within the pagan world)
The Holy Spirit (appears exclusively within the Christian Gospel and the only other place that such a being is mentioned is within the Zoroastrian Avesta)
God being all good, not capable of evil (exclusively Zoroastrian in nature)
The Son of God (a non-J-ewish concept that was ubiquitous within the pagan world)
The nature and order of the angelic world (exclusively Zoroastrian in nature)
Proselytizing (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Nature of the spirit world (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Sainthood (exclusively pagan in nature)
Clergy celibacy (exclusively pagan in nature)
The performance of healing miracles (exclusively pagan in nature)
The virgin giving birth to God (exclusivly pagan in nature)
God descending to earth to dwell with mankind (exclusivly pagan in nature)
God being all-good, compassionate and loving (exclusivly Zoroastrian in nature)
Last judgment at the end-days (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Savior of mankind (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Cleansing and purification rites through water (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Partaking in a communal meal ritual (pagan/Mithraic in nature)
The nature of the demonic world, Satan and heaven/hell (exclusivly Zoroastrian in nature)
Divine numerology, symbolic numbers such as forty, seven, three, twelve, etc (exclusively pagan in nature)
The Holy Spirit (appears exclusively within the Christian Gospel and the only other place that such a being is mentioned is within the Zoroastrian Avesta)
God being all good, not capable of evil (exclusively Zoroastrian in nature)
The Son of God (a non-J-ewish concept that was ubiquitous within the pagan world)
The nature and order of the angelic world (exclusively Zoroastrian in nature)
Proselytizing (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Nature of the spirit world (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Sainthood (exclusively pagan in nature)
Clergy celibacy (exclusively pagan in nature)
The performance of healing miracles (exclusively pagan in nature)
The virgin giving birth to God (exclusivly pagan in nature)
God descending to earth to dwell with mankind (exclusivly pagan in nature)
God being all-good, compassionate and loving (exclusivly Zoroastrian in nature)
Last judgment at the end-days (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Savior of mankind (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Cleansing and purification rites through water (exclusivly pagan in nature)
Partaking in a communal meal ritual (pagan/Mithraic in nature)
The nature of the demonic world, Satan and heaven/hell (exclusivly Zoroastrian in nature)
Divine numerology, symbolic numbers such as forty, seven, three, twelve, etc (exclusively pagan in nature)
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