This is a short post on something that continues to confuse me.
This is the story of "lolly pop Jesus."
Once upon a time, Jesus came to earth.
2000 years later, people start to read Jesus's teachings, life, and works through the Gospels but come to an interesting conclusion: "He was a good teacher, but he couldn't have been Divine."
Ok, then it seems to me you are facing a problem here. Even the earliest Gospels record Jesus as making claims to divinity: "Son of Man," "God's One and Only Son," "I and the Father are One" "I am the Way the Truth and the Life." He does not, as most Jewish teachers of the day did, speak in meager terms, but called it "My Father" "My Kingdom" which is no doubt why the Gospel records many times in which the Jews pick up rocks to stone him and finally send him to Pontious Pilate to be crucified for heresy. Aside from that, most outside historical sources affirm that he was crucified for heresy and made such claims, many calling him a "sorcerer." So how exactly do you address this?
"No, you see all that divine stuff was added in by later people who wanted to see him as God. Really, Jesus was just a teacher."
Ok, now youve got another problem, and the most important one: you've made the bizarre and unbased assumption that all of the Gospels were originally a bunch of humble statements with no claims to divinity when, all the sudden, a bunch of scheming apostles come along and write in a bunch of Jesus saying divine stuff despite the fact that A) the Gospels name specific witnesses that would have been alive to testify against them and B) the Gospels make the apostles look like the dumbest people on planet earth, yet they didnt think of changing them to make themselves look good and C) the apostles changed their own fate from being simple followers of a Jewish teacher to cultic apostles that would all get brutally murdered later. If the apostles did write these things in, they must have actually been the dumbest people on earth.
Despite the holes in that argument, the main problem is this: you've asserted that the Gospels have been tampered with and changed, so now you have destroyed the credibility of the same sources where you get Jesus's teachings. If the Gospels were so obviously tampered with as youve asserted, then by no means can you say with any certainty that Jesus said "blessed are the poor in spirit" or "turn the other cheek." For all you know, these are also just random additions by apostles, and possibly not even the same person (welcome to the Multiple Jesus hypothesis). As it stands, there is no point praising Jesus's teachings and at the same time negating their authenticity. At this point, Jesus's good teachings are no better than a feel good quote on an Urban Outfitters handbag, cited "anonymous" or would be better at home in a random quotebook of Hebrew proverbs than in any sort of organized biography.
Not only do I think this thought process is fraught with errors, but also just plain intellectually dishonest. What historian would ever think its ok to ignore some of the things Plato said because you found some of it offensive? What fervent atheist philosopher would be ok with you taking offensive passages out of Bertrand Russel's "Why I'm not a Christian"? Is not picking what you want and discarding the rest intellectually dishonest and disrespectful of history? So why does this differ with Jesus?
Funny enough, even after 60 years, the old Lord Liar Lunatic argument still readily applies here: people are always looking for the middle way with Jesus, a way to soften him up and make him more cuddly and cute and instead of the guy on the street corner who's claiming divinity and talking about hell; but the fact is Jesus is who He was, and denying that doesnt make you open minded, rather just makes you the fool who wants to look all day at the landscape he painted instead of going outside.
And this is the story of the lolly pop Jesus: a prophet that fits in your pocket, good for five minutes of enjoyment, and can be thrown in the trash can later.
That is all.
~Jared
3 comments:
Well done, Jared. He is who He is. Grandma
In the beginning, back in the garden, a similar argument arose - "Indeed, has God said..." I enjoy your writing, Jared. Keep it up!
Well thought, well written. And as always, thanks for sharing.
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