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Pastimes : Ask God -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sam Ferguson who wrote (21216)10/20/1998 3:03:00 PM
From: Sam Ferguson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 39621
 
If there was ample evidence for the historicity of Jesus, why
did his biographers resort to forgery? The following admissions by
Christian writers themselves show the helplessness of the early
preachers in the presence of inquirers who asked for proofs. The
The belief in Jesus, then, is founded on secondary documents,
altered and edited by various hands; on lost originals, and on
church historian, Mosheim, writes that, "The Christian Fathers
deemed it a pious act to employ deception and fraud."
[Ecclesiastical Hist., Vol. I, p. 347.] Again, he says: "The
greatest and most pious teachers were nearly all of them infected
with this leprosy." Will not some believer tell us why forgery and
fraud were necessary to prove the historicity of Jesus.

Another historian, Milman, writes that, "Pious fraud was
admitted and avowed" by the early missionaries of Jesus. "It was an
age of literary frauds," writes Bishop Ellicott, speaking of the
times immediately following the alleged crucifixion of Jesus. Dr.
Giles declares that, "There can be no doubt that great numbers of
books were written with no other purpose than to deceive." And it
is the opinion of Dr. Robertson Smith that, "There was an enormous
floating mass of spurious literature created to suit party views."
Books which are now rejected as apocryphal were at one time
received as inspired, and books which are now believed to be
infallible were at one tune regarded as of no authority in the
Christian world. It certainly is puzzling that there should be a
whole literature of fraud and forgery in the name of a historical
person. But if Jesus was a myth, we can easily explain the legends
and traditions springing up in his name.

The early followers of Jesus, then, realizing the force of
this objection, did actually resort to interpolation and forgery in
order to prove that Jesus was a historical character.

One of the oldest critics of the Christian religion was a
Pagan, known to history under the name of Porphyry; yet, the early
Fathers did not hesitate to tamper even with the writings of an
avowed opponent of their religion. After issuing an edict to
destroy, among others, the writings of this philosopher, a work,
called Philosophy of Oracles, was produced, in which the author is
made to write almost as a Christian; and the name of Porphyry was
signed to it as its author. St. Augustine was one of the first to
reject it as a forgery. [Geo. W. Foote. Crimes of Christianity.] A
more astounding invention than this alleged work of a heathen
bearing witness to Christ is difficult to produce. Do these
forgeries, these apocryphal writings, these interpolations, freely
admitted to have been the prevailing practice of the early
Christians, help to prove the existence of Jesus? And when to this
wholesale manufacture of doubtful evidence is added the terrible
vandalism which nearly destroyed every great Pagan classic, we can
form an idea of the desperate means to which the early Christians
resorted to prove that Jesus was not a myth. It all goes to show
how difficult it is to make a man out of a myth.