Posts Tagged With: Christianity

Sorry, Christmas and Christmas Trees Still Not Pagan

Every Christmas we hear people proclaiming Christmas and its traditions were once pagan or still are pagan (“pagan” in this context meaning a non-Christian religion). My first instinct is to laugh at those who think they discovered some long-lost, secret knowledge. My second thought is to turn to history for the truth.

Christianity has a long history of subverting — or appropriating — items, thoughts, days, and locations from other cultures if they agree with Christian teachings. Sometimes these things are given new meanings if they don’t agree Christian beliefs. This method of opening the door to Christianity for people was initiated by the Apostle Paul.

In the Areopagus Sermon, recorded in Acts 17:22–34, Paul argues to the Greeks at their high court on the reality of God by using the words of their own thinkers such as Epimenides, Aratus, and Cleanthes. He starts by pointing to one of their monuments: “I even found an altar with this inscription: TO AN UNKNOWN GOD. So you are ignorant of the very thing you worship — and this is what I am going to proclaim to you.” Paul is subverting parts of their own beliefs that can, or do, point to God, to open their mind to the discussion by highlighting what is already in agreement.

If we go further back, we find more examples of subversion. The Ark of the Covenant is very similar to Egyptian ark designs, and Israel’s temple also has likenesses to Egyptian temples. Why would God give the Israelites instructions to build these using Egyptian archetypes? Probably due their familiarity after living among the Egyptians for so long. However, the Israelites also let other things they had learned corrupt them. The Golden Calf could have been inspired by the Egyptian veneration of the Apis Bull. These are among many Egyptian details recorded in Exodus — including the name Moses which was borrowed from the Egyptian language — which lend credibility to the accounts. Skeptics who doubt the events in Exodus have to explain away all the subtle, and not so subtle, Egyptian references.

There are other examples, but here we have seen God, Paul, and later Christians appropriate objects and writings from other religions and give them new meaning. People who claim these things are bad because they once were pagan, are committing the genetic fallacy. In other words, as I like to say, Who cares what they once meant, what do they mean now? Sure, not everything can be easily appropriated. Some things not at all.

A popular rebranding method was when Christian denominations would take pagan festival dates and rename them and given them new meaning. Does Christmas Day and some of its associated traditions fall under this category as we are often told?

Actually, they do not.

Biblical and ancient documents scholar Wes Huff explains in this video why “All the traditional ‘pagan’ associations and connections with Christmas, when truly put under the microscope, turn out to be themselves more fiction than fact.”

Historian William Tighe concluded after his research, “The ‘pagan origins of Christmas’ is a myth without historical substance.” Wes also provides these two infographics summarizing his research: Christmas is not a Pagan Holiday and So Where does Dec 25 Come from if it’s Not Pagan?

Check out those links for all the research. Most people don’t bother to test what they hear, especially if it fits a preconceived bias of one sort or another. Ultimately, the methodology of opening the door to discussing Christianity by finding points of agreement is a logical and sensical approach.

We can’t really say the same about all the drive-by scholars and their yearly attempts to rewrite history.

Categories: Ancient Documents, Bible, Critical Thinking, History, Traditions | Tags: , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Jesus “Myth” Myth

Recently, I ran across someone claiming Jesus was a myth. This, at first, made me laugh. Not from a religious perspective (though these claims seem to crop up during Easter like clockwork), but from the perspective of ancient history. I also shook my head on the realization that more and more people don’t test such claims. People are way too trusting. That’s another story altogether, but what does history tell us about this “Jesus didn’t exist” theory? Why has the evidence from history has compelled most scholars, regardless of their religious beliefs, to believe Jesus was real? First, this:

There are more ancient documents attesting to Jesus than any other individual from antiquity.

“So what?” says the skeptic. “Most were written by Christians.”

True, but since the writers were Christians (or what we would now consider such), does that automatically mean we should suspect deception? By that logic (or lack of), we should also be suspect of any non-christian writing about Christianity.

More importantly, the Gospels were all written relatively close to the time of Jesus. So people who had seen, known or encountered Jesus were still alive to verify the writings or serve as sources. Verses in Paul’s epistles have been recognized as coming from early creeds that date within a few years (the first two), if not months, from the death of Jesus. In 1 Corinthians 15:3-8 there are various clues that indicate Paul is repeating an early creed, both in the language and style he uses and the underlying Aramaic. This is also why some of Paul’s writings predate the writing of the Gospels.

Also note that other sources do not deny Jesus existed. Jewish writers, who had more reason than anyone else to show Jesus didn’t exist, did not do so. Instead, they argued he wasn’t the Messiah. This brings us to the next important point:

The New Testament is not the only collection of ancient documents writing about Jesus.

Many Christians don’t even know this. Some examples: Roman historian Cornelius Tacitus in Annals; Suetonius, chief secretary of Emperor Hadrian; Flavius Josephus, Jewish historian in Antiquities; Julius Africanus in Extant Writings refers to the lost works of Thallus who describes the darkness and earthquake at the time of Christ’s death; in Pliny the Younger’s Letters; in letters from Emperors Trajan and Hadrian; Jewish documents the Talmud and the Toledoth Jesu; writings by Lucian, second century Greek satirist.

Understand that most of these writers were not “pro-Jesus” by any stretch. Even if some of the Josephus references were added later, as some claim, we are still left with a large body of undisputed writings. Nor have we mentioned the large body of apocryphal books that appeared in those ancient times.

And for those who claim the New Testament is unreliable, I’ll briefly state this: Pseudoscholars claim there are hundreds of thousands of variants between New Testament manuscripts. In reality, most of these variants are spelling variations, using different synonyms or language-to-language translation issues. What you are left with are a few verses like John 7:53-8:11 that are not in early manuscripts and Bibles denote them as such. These verses, and none of the variants, impact the orthodox beliefs of Christianity.

Claiming Jesus is a “myth” is nothing more than a futile attempt to rewrite history.

Categories: Ancient Documents, Bible, Critical Thinking | Tags: , , , , , , | Leave a comment

“Major” Codice Discovery

If you think nothing from antiquity is left to be found, once again archaeology has found yet another historic find. These codices date back to the dawn of Christianity and may contain some of the oldest references to Christ. Scholars are rightly being cautious. Remember the ossuary that supposedly contained Jesus’ bones? Or how the Gospel of Judas was going to rewrite Christianity? Both turned out to be over-hyped duds (pushed by skeptics). This doesn’t have the feel of another tabloid-adventure. Stay tuned for more.

Update: Now the codices are under suspicion of being some sort of fake.

Categories: Ancient Documents, Bible | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

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