IS THE

NEW TESTAMENT

FILLED WITH MYTHS?
Chapter 14

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D

id the Gospel writers give us an accurate description of the Jesus who lived in history? Can we sincerely believe the supernatural aspects of the life they attributed to Him? One major argument against the historicity of the Jesus of the New Testament has been the similarity of mythological elements found in pagan religions during the same time the early Christian church was active. One source asks:

 

If you Christians believe the stories of Jesus' miracles, if you believe the story of Jesus' miraculous birth, if you believe the story that Jesus was raised from the dead and ascended into Heaven, then how can you refuse to believe precisely the same stories when they are told of the other Savior Gods: Herakles, Asklepios, the Dioscuri, Dionysos, and a dozen others I could name?

 

Christian college students are often devastated to hear of ancient religions which contained stories of resurrections, dying saviors, baptismal initiations, miraculous births, and the like. The inference, of course, is that the early Christian writers borrowed these stories and attributed them to Jesus as they formulated the Christian religion. Jewish scholar Pinchas Lapide states:

 

If we add to all these disturbing factors the statement that in the ancient world there were not less than a round dozen of nature deities, heroes, philosophers, and rulers who, all long before Jesus, suffered and died, and rose again on the third day, then the skepticism of most non Christians can easily be understood ...

 

The imprisonment of the savior of the world, his interrogation, the condemnation, the scourging, the execution in the midst of the criminals, the descent into hell -yes, even the heart blood of the dying gushing out of a spear wound, all these details were believed by millions of believers of the Bel-Marduk mystery religion whose central deity was called the savior sent by the Father, the one who raises the dead, the Lord and the Good Shepherd. 41/40-41

 

Did the early Christians turn a human Jesus into a supernatural figure by borrowing supernatural elements from the mystery religions? In this section, we will attempt to answer that question by (1) examining some specific alleged mythical roots of central Christian doctrine and practice; (2) identifying some fallacies committed by those who link Christianity with mystery religions; and (3) observing the uniqueness of the gospel description of Jesus when compared to the literature of the mystery religions.

 

Alleged Mythical Roots of

Christian Doctrine and Practice

 

1. The Taurobolium

 

The taurobolium was primarily associated with the cult of Cybele and Attis. It has been suggested as the source of inspiration for Revelation 7:14: "and they have washed their robes ... in the blood of the lamb"; and 1 Peter 1:2: "that you may obey Jesus Christ and be sprinkled with His blood." It also has been suggested as the inspiration for Christian baptism as explained in Romans 6. The rite, as described by the ancient writer, Prudentius, called for the high priest being consecrated to be led down into a deep pit. The top of the pit is covered over by a wooden mesh grating. Then a huge bull, draped with flowers, has its breast pierced with a sacred spear; the gaping wound emits a wave of hot blood, and the smoking river flows into the woven structure beneath it and surges wide.

 

... The falling shower rains down a foul dew, which the priest buried within catches, putting his shameful head under all the drops, defiled both in his clothing and in all his body.

 

Yea, he throws back his face, he puts his cheeks in the way of the blood, he puts under it his ears and lips, he interposes his nostrils, he washes his very eyes with the fluid, nor does he even spare his throat but moistens his tongue, until he actually drinks the dark gore.

 

... The pontiff, horrible in appearance, comes forth, and shows his wet head, his beard heavy with blood, his dripping fillets and sodden garments.

 

This man, defiled with such contagions and foul with the gore of the recent sacrifice, all hail and worship at a distance, because profane blood and a dead ox have washed him while concealed in a filthy cave. 64/1011-50

 

There are several reasons the taurobolium cannot be the source for any Christian doctrine or practice.

 

First, the passage describes the consecration of a high priest, not a new convert.

 

Second, there is no indication that the early Christians used actual blood in their rituals. Blood was simply a symbol of Jesus pouring His life out for His own, as can be seen when we fill in the words to Revelation 7:14 which we omitted in the first paragraph under this point: "and they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb."

 

Third, Christians (especially Jewish Christians) would have been repulsed by the practice. Prudentius was a Christian, and his words "foul dew," "shameful head," "defiled both in his clothing and in all his body," indicate that he considered the whole rite to be crude and blasphemous.

 

Fourth, and most important, the taurobolium post-dates the New Testament writings by almost a hundred years. The German scholar Gunter Wagner has written the definitive work on Christianity and the mystery religions. In it he explains:

 

The taurobolium in the Attis cult is first attested in the time of Antoninus Pius for A.D. 160. As far as we can see at present it only became a personal consecration at the beginning of the third century A.D. The idea of a rebirth through the instrumentality of the taurobolium only emerges in isolated instances toward the end of the fourth century A.D.; it is not originally associated with this blood-bath.

 

Nash concludes his investigation by saying:

 

It is clear, then, that the New Testament emphasis on the shedding of blood should not be traced to any pagan source. The New Testament teaching should be viewed in the context of its Old Testament background -the Passover and the Temple sacrifices.

 

In view of the late date of the taurobolium, if any borrowing was done, we suspect it was from the Christians, not by the Christians.

 

2. Baptism

 

Ceremonial washings have been observed as a means of purification by religions all over the world and from long before the time of Jesus. It has therefore been suggested that Christians copied their rite of baptism from pagan religions around them. But this is a gross oversimplification.

Even to draw a strict parallel with Jewish baptism would be an oversimplification. For a thorough treatment of this subject, Gunter Wagner's, Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries, should be consulted.

 

Christian baptism is a demonstration of the believer's identification with Jesus in His death, burial and resurrection. For the mystery cults it was different. Herman Ridderbos, professor of New Testament at Kampen Seminary in The Netherlands, states that "nowhere in the mystery religions is such a symbolism of death present in the 'baptism' ritual." 66/24

 

More important, the chronology once again does not agree with a syncretistic view. Nash indicates:

 

Ceremonial washings that antedate the New Testament have a different meaning from New Testament baptism, while pagan washings after A.D. 100 come too late to influence the New Testament and, indeed, might themselves have been influenced by Christianity.

 

The evidence points to the practice of Christian baptism originating in Jewish baptism, having its meaning rooted in the historical events of the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus.

 

3. Resurrection

 

An alleged example of resurrection in ancient myth is provided by the early Egyptian cult of Isis and Osiris. The myth has Osiris being murdered by his brother Seth who then sinks the coffin containing Osiris's body in the Nile River. Osiris's wife, Isis, the goddess of heaven, earth, sea, and the unseen world below, discovers her husband's body and returns it to Egypt. Seth, however, regains the body, cuts it into fourteen pieces, and scatters it abroad. Isis counters by recovering the pieces. Nash continues:

 

It is at this point that the language used to describe what follows is crucial. Sometimes those telling the story are satisfied to say that Osiris came back to life. (As I shall point out later, even this statement claims too much.) But some writers go much too far and refer to Osiris's "resurrection."

 

Nash's later discussion continues:

 

Which mystery gods actually experienced a resurrection from the dead? Certainly no early texts refer to any resurrection of Attis. Attempts to link the worship of Adonis to a resurrection are equally weak. Nor is the case for a resurrection of Osiris any stronger. After Isis gathered together the pieces of Osiris's dismembered body, he became "Lord of the Underworld." As Metzger comments, "Whether this can be rightly called a resurrection is questionable, especially since, according to Plutarch, it was the pious desire of devotees to be buried in the same ground where, according to local tradition, the body of Osiris was still lying." One can speak then of a "resurrection" in the stories of Osiris, Attis, and Adonis only in the most extended of senses. And of course no claim can be made that Mithras was a dying and rising god. French scholar Andre Boulanger concludes: "The conception that the god dies and is resurrected in order to lead his faithful to eternal life is represented in no Hellenistic mystery religion."

 

If the "savior-gods" mentioned above can be spoken of as resurrected, then we need to differentiate Jesus' resurrection from theirs. Jesus was a person of history who rose from the dead never to die again. He appeared in the flesh several times before His ascension, and the story was told by eyewitnesses. James D. G. Dunn concludes:

 

The parallel with visions of Isis and Asclepius ... is hardly close. These were mythical figures from the dim past. In the sightings of Jesus we are talking about a man who had died only a few days or weeks earlier.

 

Another issue related to the resurrection has to do with the amount of time between the crucifixion and the resurrection. Attis is supposed to have come back to life four days after his death, one account has Osiris being reanimated two or three days after his death, and it is even suggested that Adonis may have been "resurrected" three days after his death. In the case of all three, there is no evidence earlier than the second century A.D. for the supposed "resurrection" of these mystery gods. Norman Anderson states that

 

if borrowing there was by one religion from another, it seems clear which way it went. There is no evidence whatever, that I know of, that the mystery religions had any influence in Palestine in the early decades of the first century. And the difference between the mythological experiences of these nebulous figures and the crucifixion "under Pontius Pilate" of one of whom eyewitnesses bore testimony to both his death and resurrection is again obvious. 9/53-54

 

4. Rebirth

 

In 1925, Samuel Angus wrote:

 

Every Mystery-Religion, being a religion of redemption, offered means of suppressing the old man and of imparting or vitalizing the spiritual principle. Every serious mystes (initiate) approached the solemn sacrament of Initiation believing that he thereby became "twice-born," a "new creature," and passed in a real sense from death unto life by being brought into a mysterious intimacy with the deity.

 

Others also have claimed that the concept of rebirth is central to the mystery religions and that Christianity depended on them for its doctrine of the new birth. But the evidence for such claims is slim. The ceremonial washings of the Eleusinian cult were never attached to the idea of rebirth. There is only one reference attaching "rebirth" to the cult of Cybele and Attis. The reference is a fourth-century A.D. interpretation from Sallustius, whom one would expect was influenced by Christianity, not vice-versa. Only two debatable references, both from the second century A.D. "use the imagery of rebirth." Nash continues:

 

While there are several sources that suggest that Mithraism included a notion of rebirth, they are all post-Christian. The earliest ... dates from the end of the second century A.D. . . .

 

The most frequently discussed evidence alleged to prove the presence of rebirth in a mystery religion is an inscription on a Roman altar that appears to connect the taurobolium with a belief in rebirth. The Latin inscription taurabolio criobiolioque in aeternum renatus can be translated "reborn for eternity in the taurobolium and criobolium."

 

... But the problems connected with this hypothesis are enormous. For one thing, the Roman altar containing the inscription dates from A.D. 376.

 

Before Nash, Machen had recounted this observation:

 

It may come as a ' shock, therefore, to readers of recent discussions to be told that as a matter of fact the phrase does not appear until the fourth century, when Christianity was taking its place as the established religion of the Roman world. If there is any dependence, it is certainly dependence of the taurobolium upon Christianity, and not of Christianity upon the taurobolium. 45/240-41

 

5. Sacrificial Death of the Deity

 

From the earliest Greek mythologies all the way through Roman times, it was common to ascribe deity to outstanding individuals. Some of these were fictional mythological characters, others were elevated humans, usually Greek philosophers or Roman emperors. This practice was normal in polytheistic cultures.

 

The Jews were different. For them there was only one God. It is therefore remarkable that Palestinian Jews, and among them one of the most respected of their Pharisees, would begin proclaiming the deity of one who had walked among them. It would have been hard enough to begin proclaiming the message within the Roman world. But to start in Jerusalem, among the Jews - that was ridiculous! Still the evidence shows that the Christian gospel sprouted first among the Jews.

 

Is it possible that these Jews could have shaped their message from the mystery cults? Not likely. The claim to deity in the mystery religions did often spring from the stories concerning the so-called god's death and return to life again (at least spiritually). We have already seen that Jesus' resurrection is not paralleled in the mystery religions except where these religions tried to copy Christianity. Nash gives six differences between the deaths of the so-called savior-gods and that of Jesus:

 

(1)   None of the so-called savior-gods died for someone else. The notion of the Son of God dying in place of His creatures is unique to Christianity.

(2)   Only Jesus died for sin. It is never claimed that any of the pagan deities died for sin. As Wagner observes, to none of the pagan gods, "has the intention of helping men been attributed. The sort of death that they died is quite different (hunting accident, self-emasculation, etc.)."

(3)    Jesus died once and for all (Hebrews 7:27; 9:25-28; 10:10-14). In contrast, the mystery gods were vegetation deities whose repeated death and resuscitation depict the annual cycle of nature.

(4)    Jesus' death was an actual event in history. The death of the god described in the pagan cults is a mythical drama with no historical ties.

(5)    Unlike the mystery gods, Jesus died voluntarily. Nothing like the voluntary death of Jesus can be found in the mystery cults.

(6)    And finally, Jesus' death was not a defeat but a triumph. Christianity stands entirely apart from the pagan mysteries in that its report of Jesus' death is a message of triumph.

 

 

 

 Fallacies of Linking Christianity

With Mystery Religions

 

The first to plead his case seems just, until another comes and examines him (Proverbs 18:17).

 

At first sight, some of the similarities between Christianity and various mystery religions are so striking that one feels compelled to believe Christianity borrowed certain phrases, stories, doctrines or practices from them. Skeptical critics, by ignoring or withholding certain facts, often give a distorted picture of Christianity's alleged relationship with the mystery religions.

 

The evidence shows that the early Christian spokesmen steadfastly refused to accept anything contrary to the gospel, which had been revealed to them. Look at Paul and Barnabas in Lystra. No sooner had a lame man been healed at Paul's command than the whole city rushed out raising their voice, saying in the Lycaonian language,

 

"The gods have become like men and have come down to us."

 

And they began calling Barnabas, Zeus, and Paul, Hermes, because he was the chief speaker.

 

And the priest of Zeus, whose temple was just outside the city, brought oxen and garlands to the gates, and wanted to offer sacrifice with the crowds (Acts 14:11-13).

 

What an opportunity! If ever the early Christians had wanted to borrow from the mystery religions (even if just to attract more people to the faith), they could have made Christianity polytheistic right then and there! But no. It took Paul, formerly Saul the Pharisee, up to three years in Arabia and Damascus to reconcile the idea of a suffering, rising, divine Messiah with his Old Testament monotheistic convictions. And so,

 

when the apostles, Barnabas and Paul, heard of it, they tore their robes and rushed out into the crowd, crying out and saying, "Men, why are you doing these things? We are also men of the same nature as you, and preach the gospel to you in order that you should turn from these vain things to a living God, WHO MADE THE HEAVEN AND THE EARTH AND THE SEA, AND ALL THAT IS IN THEM."... And even saying these things, they with difficulty restrained the crowds from offering sacrifice to them (Acts 14:14,15,18).

 

The fickle multitude was so disappointed, the very next day they were persuaded to stone Paul and leave him for dead outside the gates of their city.