-Caveat Lector-

 http://www.sonic.net/sentinel/naij3.html


 Proving the historic Jesus

 By Harry V. Martin

 Copyright FreeAmerica and Harry V. Martin, 1995

 EDITOR'S NOTE:  This article does not debate the divinity nor the
 spiritual aspects of Christianity, but only the historical evidence
 that Jesus Christ did, in fact, exist.  The recent finding of the
 burial cave of Caiaphas, the high priest, adds even more evidence
 to the general historical truth of the New Testament.

 Most Biblical scholars, historians, archeologist and even the
 clergy are knowledgeable about one fact of Christianity that the
 Christian worshipper is not, there is limited historical facts to
 establish finite historical evidence that Jesus Christ existed.
 The vast majority of what Christians believe today is based purely
 on the New Testament , a collection of writings and testimony of
 those who knew Jesus and from those who never saw him.  The origin
 of the New Testament was not the "bible" of the Christians until
 after 150 A.D.  The actual "bible" of the early Christians was the
 Septuagint, the Greek Old Testament.  For more than a century after
 the death of Christ, the early Christians relied on the Old
 Testament.

 The writings in the New Testament were mostly from men of little
 literary learning, they were from long-time memories, and some were
 from hearsay.  Biblical scholars have often pointed to glaring
 errors in the New Testament, conflicts in the testimonies between
 those who knew Jesus.  Many "books" or testimonies were omitted
 from the New Testament.  The writers of these Testaments were less
 concerned with the historical accuracies of their words and more
 concerned with the spiritual meanings of Christ's teachings.

 The most fascinating time in Christianity began after the death of
 Christ through to the conclusion of Emperor Constantine's Christian
 conclave, the true shaping of Christianity as we know it today,
 this epic period merged the diverse views of the Apologists to the
 Gnostics.  Jesus Christ and his Disciples were not part of the long
 series of debates that established Christian dogma.  The Early
 Christian Fathers, published by The Westminster Press, states, "The
 most striking facts about early Christian literature are its rich
 variety and its almost exclusively Gentile authorship.  Outside the
 New Testament writings, little belongs to the first century, the
 only considerable document being Clement's Letter to the Church of
 Corinth."  No Jewish Christian literature appears to have survived
 the ages.  Few Jewish Christians from the Palestinian Church
 survived after the fifth century, though their teachings and work
 can be found in the religion of Islam.  The Gentiles, and not the
 Jewish Christians who lived and worshipped in the land of Jesus,
 dominated the Christian religion, and changed much of its original
 concepts.

 EARLY CHRISTIAN SCHISM

 The main battlelines in the second century focused around the
 "Orthodox" Christians and the Gnostics.  After Constintine's
 conclave, the Gnostics vanished into history, some of their work
 survived and was unearthed in 1945 near Nag Hammadi in Upper Egypt.
 The discovered writings are known as the Nag Hammadi library, the
 Gnostic manuscripts virtually begin where the Dead Sea Scrolls end.
 These writings provide insights into early Judaism and the roots of
 Christianity.  The Gnostics challenged the New Testament and
 rejected the Old Testament.  They viewed the Jewish and Christian
 revelations as antithetical, noting the contrast of the good God
 revealed by Jesus Christ with the Old Testament God of retaliation
 and vengeance.  The Gnostics, in essence, were responsible for
 doing away with the Old Testament as the sacred book of Christians,
 and in its place supplied a cannon called The Gospel and the
 Apostile.  There was no unity in determining which books should be
 contained in the New Testament until the fourth century.

 The Early Christian Fathers states, that Christian doctrine was
 established to embrace the Gentile concepts.  "To interpret it to
 the Gentile mind, its affinities were the best in pagan religious
 thought were utilized.  To maintain it against persecution, the
 martyr was willing to suffer.  Finally, to ensure the perpetuity of
 the faith, the Church built up a close knit organization that was
 as uncompromising toward heresy and schism as it was toward the
 demands of the State."  In The Verdict of History by Gary R.
 Habermas, this concept is carried further.  "The charge is often
 made that Jesus' message was actually quite different from the one
 which Christians have traditionally taught concerning him.  This
 sometimes is said to be the case, for instance, because the Gospels
 represent the teachings of the early church and not those of Jesus
 himself."  Hugh Schonfield, a noted religious scholar, explains why
 the changes may have taken place.  He states that Jesus was a
 teacher who was true to Judaism and who had no desire to start any
 new religion.  "That is why, for instance, he never proclaimed his
 own deity," Schonfield wrote.  Schonfield even challenges the early
 Church by claiming they may have written some of the New Testament
 books and influenced others to rewrite the story of Jesus.  "The
 result is that Christian theology as it is taught today is not the
 teachings of Jesus and the apostles."

 Paul's writings reveal little of the historical Jesus.  A few
 historians have stated that Paul knew little of Jesus' historical
 life, the time of his birth, or death, for instance.  G.A. Wells
 indicates that Paul may have conceived of Jesus as a supernatural
 being who led a very obscure life that was ended by crucifixion,
 perhaps even centuries before Paul's own time.  But Paul was not
 interested in historical details, nor were the other writers of the
 New Testament, spiritual considerations dominated their thoughts.
 Habermas states that the "Gospels do not purport to record actual
 historical events, but that they simply report the faith of early
 Christians.  We know much less about the historical Jesus than the
 Gospels actually recorded, for these writers were just not too
 concerned with history."

 HISTORICAL RECORDS

 Roman historian Cornelius Tacitus recorded information pertaining
 to Jesus, thus removing the only supporting source for His
 existence as being in the New Testament.  In 115 A.D., Tactius
 wrote about the great fire in Rome, "Consequently, to get rid of
 the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most
 exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called
 Christians by the populace.  Christus, from whom the name had its
 origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberious
 at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most
 mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke
 out not only in Judea, the first source of the evil, but even in
 Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the
 world find their center and become popular.  Accordingly, an arrest
 was first made of all who pleaded guilty; then upon their
 information, an immense multitude was convicted, not so much of the
 crime of firing the city, as of hatred against mankind.  Mockery of
 every sort was added to their deaths, Covered with the skins of
 beasts, they were torn by dogs and perished, or were nailed to
 crosses, or were doomed to the flames and burnt, to serve as a
 nightly illumination, when daylight had expired.  Nero offered his
 gardens for the spectacle, and was exhibiting a show in the circus,
 while he mingled with the people in the dress of charioteer or
 stood aloft on a car.  Hence, even for criminals who deserved
 extreme and exemplary punishment, there arose a feeling of
 compassion; for it was not, as it seemed, for the public good,
 but to glut one man's cruelty, that they were being destroyed."

 It is believed by some scholars that Tactius gained his information
 about Christ from official records, perhaps actual reports written
 by Pilate.  Tactius also wrote about the burning of the Jerusalem
 temple by the Romans in 70 A.D.  The Christians are mentioned as a
 group that were connected with these events.  "All we can gather
 from this reference is that Tactius was also aware of the existence
 of Christians other than in the context of their presence in Rome,"
 states Habermas.  Gaius Suetonius Tranquillas, chief secretary of
 Emperor Hadrian, wrote, "Because the Jews at Rome caused continuous
 disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus, he expelled them from
 the City."  Chrestus is a variant spelling of Christ.  Suetonius
 refers to a wave of riots that broke out in a large Jewish
 community in Rome during the year 49 A.D.  As a result, the Jews
 were banished from the city.

 Jewish historian Flavius Josephus, a member of a priestly family
 and who became a Pharisee at the age of 19, became the court
 historian for Emperor Vespasian.  In the Antiquities, he wrote
 about many persons and events of first century Palestine.  He makes
 two references to Jesus.  The first reference is believed
 associated with the Apostle James.  "...he brother of Jesus, who
 was called Christ."  He also wrote, "At this time there was a wise
 man who was called Jesus.  And his conduct was good and (he) was
 known to be virtuous.  And many people from among the Jews and
 other nations became his disciples.  Pilate condemned him to be
 crucified and to die.  And those who had become his disciples did
 not abandon his discipleship.  They reported that he had appeared
 to them three days after his crucifixion and that he was alive,
 accordingly, he was perhaps the messiah concerning whom the
 prophets have recounted wonders."  These historical writings
 predated the Old Testament.  Josephus died in 97 A.D.

 Before Tacitus, Suetonius or Josephus, Thallus wrote about the
 crucifixion of Jesus.  His writing date to circa 52 A.D. and the
 passage on Jesus was contained in Thallus' work on the Eastern
 Mediterranean world from the Trojan War to 52 A.D.  Thallus noted
 that darkness fell on the land at the time of the crucifixion.
 He wrote that such a phenomenon was caused by an eclipse.  Though
 Christ was not proclaimed a deity until the fourth century, Pliny
 the Younger, a Roman author and administrator who served as the
 governor of Bithynia in Asia Minor, wrote in 112 A.D., two hundred
 years before the "deity" proclamation, that Christians in Bithynia
 worshipped Christ.

 Two references have been made to a report by Pontius Pilate.
 The references include Justin Martyr (150 A..D.) and Tetullian
 (200 A.D.). Both references correspond with the fact that there
 was an official document in Rome from Pilate.  The Pilate report
 detailed the crucifixion but also reported acts of miracles.
 Emperor Tiberius acted on Pilate's report, according to Tertullian,
 to the Roman Senate.  "Tiberius accordingly, in whose days the
 Christian name made its entry into the world, having himself
 received intelligence from Palestine of events which had clearly
 shown the truth of Christ's divinity, brought the matter before the
 senate, with his own decision in favor of Christ.  The senate,
 because it had not given the approval itself, rejected his
 proposal.  Caesar held to his opinion, threatening wrath against
 all accusers of the Christians."

 RECORDED IN THE TALMUD

 The Talmud, which consists of Jewish traditions handed down orally
 from generation to generation, was organized by Rabbi Akiba before
 his death in 135 A.D.  The writings in the Talmud embrace the
 legal, ritual and exegetical commentaries that have developed right
 down to contemporary times.  In Sanhedrin 43a, reference to Jesus
 is found.  "On the eve of the Passover, Yeshu was hanged.  For
 forty days before the execution took place, a herald went forth and
 cried, 'He is going forth to be stoned because he has practiced
 sorcery and enticed Israel to apostasy.  Any one who can say
 anything in his favor, let him come forward and plead on his
 behalf.  But since nothing was brought forward in his favor, he was
 hanged on the eve of the Passover."  If Jesus had been stoned, his
 death would have been at the hands of the Jews.  The fact he was
 crucified shows that the Romans intervened.  The Talmud also speaks
 of five of Jesus' disciples and recounts their standing before
 judges who made individual decisions about each one, deciding that
 they should be executed.  No deaths are recorded.

 Other Talmud references to Jesus indicated that Jesus was "treated
 differently from others who led the people astray, for he was
 connected with royalty."  These Talmud accounts were written long
 before the New Testament was assembled.  They provide clear
 evidence that Jesus did live.  The Talmud does not embrace Christ
 as a deity and would have no reason to sanction his existence.
 The Talmud also states that Jesus was 33 or 34 years old when he
 died.  The risen Christ is the foundation of Christianity.  But
 Christ would have to have lived and died before His resurrection
 could become an historical factor.

 Toledoth Jesu is also part of Jewish writing, as well.  The
 disputed text states that the disciples of Jesus had planned to
 steal the fallen body of Christ.  However, a gardener named Juda
 discovered their plans and dug a new grave in his garden.  Then he
 removed Jesus' body from Joseph's tomb and placed it in his own
 newly dug grave.  The disciples came to the original tomb, found
 Jesus' body gone and proclaimed him risen.  The Jewish leaders also
 proceeded to Joseph's tomb and found it empty.  Juda then took them
 to his grave and dug up the body of Jesus.  The Jewish leaders were
 greatly relieved and wanted to take the body.  Juda replied that he
 would sell them the body of Jesus and did so for thirty pieces of
 silver.  The Jewish priests then dragged Jesus' body through the
 streets of Jerusalem.  Strangely enough, Juda and Judas are
 similar, in the Talmud Juda receives thirty pieces of silver and in
 the New Testament Judas receives thirty pieces of silver.  Shortly
 after this time, the Emperor decreed that grave robbing in
 Palestine would be a capital offense.

 These commentaries have been discredited by Jewish and Christian
 scholars.  The anti-Christian commentary was created in the fifth
 century.  The importance of this passage, historically correct or
 not, is to place Jesus in the tomb of Joseph after crucifixion and
 to record the consternation of the Jewish Priests.  This places
 historic significance on the fact that Jesus did live and die in
 history.  He was not a myth.

 The New Testament speaks of a census at the time of Christ's birth.
 Historical records indicate that a census was ordered in Syria and
 Judea between 6 and 5 B.C. and 5 and 6 A.D.  Returning to a
 person's home city was definitely the practice of the time.  Luke
 refers to Quirinius being governor of Syria during the time of the
 census, again historically correct.

 The second century Greek satirist Lucian, though speaking
 derisively of Jesus and the early Christians, does establish the
 worship of Christ within the first century of his death.  "The
 Christians, you know, worship a man to this day, the distinguished
 personage who introduced their novel rites, and was crucified on
 that account... You see, these misguided creatures start with the
 general conviction that they are immortal for all time, which
 explains the contempt of death and voluntary self-devotion which
 are so common among them; and then it was impressed on them by
 their original lawgiver that they are all brothers, from the moment
 that they are converted, and deny the gods of Greece, and worship
 the crucified sage, and live after his laws.  All this they take
 quite on faith, with the result that they despise all worldly
 goods, alike, regarding them merely as common property."

 THE BURIAL CAVE OF CAIAPHAS, THE LATEST FIND

 The New Testament refers to the High Priest Caiaphas.  Records of
 the Temple of Jerusalem where destroyed and history has not been
 able to verify that Caiaphas, like Christ, existed.  If no evidence
 existed of Caiaphas when the New Testament was embraced by the
 Christians of the second century, then it would have been a fact
 lost to history.  But now, 1,950 years after the crucifixion of
 Jesus, a public works project building a water park in November
 1990 accidentally uncovered an ancient burial cave.  The
 inscription in the burial chamber was that of the Caiaphas family.
 The Caiaphas name had only been mentioned in the New Testament and
 by Flavius Josephus, no Jewish records have been found with
 Caiaphas' name linked to being the high priest.  The remains of a
 60-year-old man were found in the burial cave that may have been
 the High Priest Caiaphas.  The inscription on his craved ossuary,
 fit for a high priest, was the name Yehosef bar Qafa (Joseph, son
 of Caiaphas).  Coins found in the cave were bronze minted in 42/43
 (C.E.) during the reign of Herod Agrippa I.  These are similar to
 images of coins found on the Shroud of Turin -- believed by many
 scientists to be the burial shroud of Christ.

 According to Ronny Reich in an article in Biblical Archaeology
 Review, "Very few of the hundreds of people who walk through the
 pages of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament have been attested
 in archeological finds.  Now, to that small list, we may add, in
 all probability, the high priest who presided at Jesus' trial, or
 at least a member of his family."  It adds, "From the period
 between the second century B.C.E. and the second century C.E.,
 there are only six such names, and perhaps you will exclude one or
 two of these because they are names of rulers or former rulers.
 Three of these names, however, are especially pertinent here
 because they, like Caiaphas, come from priestly families."

 The New Testament only refers to the High Priest as Caiaphas, but
 Josephus refers to him as Joseph, who was called Caiaphas of the
 high priesthood.  Joseph or Caiaphas was the high priest in
 Jerusalem between 18 and 36 C.E.

 The debate over the divinity of Christ may never end, but
 historical evidence has become more supportive of the fact that
 Jesus can be proved historically to have lived, to have been a
 dominant figure during his lifetime and of a major concern to the
 establishment of the Temple and of Rome.  What his exact words
 were, may have been lost in history.  Robin Lane Fox writes in The
 Unauthorized Version, Truth and Fiction in the Bible, "Recognition
 does not require historical truth... In the Bible we recognize a
 human awareness in what scores of anonymous authors have written.
 This level of recognition is not at all the same as reverence for
 the Bible as a handbook for life, a role for which its detail is
 not well suited.  The Gospels are not often specific on detailed
 points of conduct, and as a handbook they would be very patchy
 indeed.  Those who want such details have to look back to the
 Hebrew books of law... As for the four Gospels, the idea that they
 usually give us Jesus' exact words in their exact context is a
 popular mirage; there are too many disagreements.'  She adds,
 "In the Bible, therefore, we recognize human truth even when the
 stories themselves are untrue."

 CONCLUSION

 Though the New Testament has many historical errors, the fact is
 that many of its points have been proven historically correct.
 Roman historians, Jewish historians, the finding of the Gnostic
 materials at Nag Hammadi and now the finding of Caiaphas' burial
 cave, establishes an historic fact that Jesus lived and died in a
 time and a place described in the New Testament.  Some of the
 evidence supporting these writings surfaced nearly 2000 years
 later, adding a strong rule of evidence toward their historic
 accuracy.  Many books were omitted from the compilation of the
 New Testament, the writings of John and of Mary, for instance, were
 never included in the scriptures.  But the same is true with the
 Old Testament.  It was the early church father, in the case of the
 New Testament, that made the decisions on the composition of the
 New Testament.

 The exact words of Jesus may not be contained in the New Testament,
 but the essence of his teachings appeared to be confirmed from
 sources outside the New Testament.








DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to