Berserk
|
THE ACADEMIC PARALLELOMANIA OF ACHARYA S.
Acharya S. tries to reduce Jesus to a myth by citing parallels between Jesus and figures like Buddha, Krishna, and Mithra. Her attempt fails on 3 counts: (1) Even if the parallels were legitimate, they are irrelevant because there is not a shred of evidence that the mythic lives of these pagan figures were known to first century Palestinian Jews. (2) Even if Jews were familiar with these pagan myths, no plausible explanation can be offered as to why parochial Jews would respect these myths enough to formulate lies and steal details to invent the life of Jesus. (3) In any case, her alleged list of parallels is largely bogus, the result of incredibly sloppy research.
There is no evidence for Mithraism in Rome prior to 80 AD. So Roman Mithraism was not even present in Palestine in Jesus' day. Almost all of Acharya S's parallels between Mithraism and Christianity involve Roman, not Iranian Mithraism. The First International Congress on Mithraic Studies in the early 1970s stressed the lack of evidence for continuity between Roman Mithraism and its pre-Christian Iranian counterpart. There is simply no connection between the two cults, except for the name "Mithra", some terminology, and some astrological lore that was widely imported into the Roman empire from Babylon anyway. The only evidence of Christian "borrowing" from Mithraism is some 3rd and 4th century Christian art that polemically mimics a Mithraic theme. But this mimicry involves no ideological exchange and is well beyond the formative phase of basic Christianity.
Here are just 12 of Acharya's bogus parallels between Jesus and Mithra: 1. [Acharya:] Mithra was born of a virgin on Dec. 25 in a cave. Reply: Neither the New Testament nor the early church associate Dec. 25 with the date of Christ's birth. Mithra was not born of a virgin in a cave; he was born out of solid rock, which presumably left a hole behind, not a cave.
2. [Acharya:] Mithra was a travelling teacher. There is no evidence that Mithra was a teacher.
3. [Acharya:] Mithra had 12 companions or disciples. Reply: This claim is based on a misunderstanding of a post-Christian Mithraic carving of 12 figures. Modern Mithraic scholars have demonstrated that these 12 figures are not disciples, but zodiac symbols. So no borrowing is involved. Even if there were, Mithraism would have borrowed from Christianity, not vice versa.
4. [Acharya:] As the "great bull of the sun", Mithra sacrificed himself for world peace. Reply: Mithra sacrificed the bull, not himself. There is no evidence in Mithraic temples or inscriptions that the bull symbolizes Mithra himself.
3 of Acharya S's points can be considered together: 5. Mithra was buried in a tomb and rose again after 3 days. 6. His resurrection was annually celebrated. 7. He was called "the Good Shepherd" and identified with both the lamb and the lion. Reply: There is no evidence that Mithra was buried or even that he died. In different ways, both Mithra and Christ were tangentially identified with lion, but there is no evidence Mithra was identified with the lamb or called "the Good Shepherd."
8. [Acharya:] Mithra was viewed as "the Way, the Truth, and the Light" and "the Logos", "Redeemer", "Savior", and "Messiah." Reply: There is not a shred of evidence for the application of any of these titles to Mithra. The status of mediator was assigned to both Mithra and Christ. But Mithra is not, like Jesus, a mediator between God and humanity, but a mediator between Zoroaster's good and evil gods. So this parallel is irrelevant.
9. [Acharya:] Mithra's sacred day was Sunday, hundreds of years prior to Christ's appearance. Reply: This is true for post-Christian Roman Mithraism, but there is no evidence that it is true for pre-Christian Iranian Mithraism. Borrowing is unlikely, but if present, Roman Mithraism borrowed from Christianity.
10. [Acharya:] Mithra had his main festival on what would later become Easter. Reply: There was a a Mithraic festival at the Spring equinox, but it was one of just four, one for each season. Therefore, this parallel is insignificant.
11. [Acharya:] Mithraic religion had a Eucharist or "Lord's Supper", at which Mithra said, "He who shall not eat of my body or drink of my blood, so that he may be one with me and I with him shall not be saved." Reply: The source of this saying is a medieval text and the speaker is Zarathustra, not Mithra. Even if Mithra were the speaker, the medieval date shows that Mithraism would be borrowing from Christianity.
12. [Acharya:] Mithra's annual sacrifice is the passover of the Magi, a symbolic atonement or pledge of moral and physical regeneration. Reply: There is no evidence that Mithra's "sacrifice" was annual, nor does Mithraism use terms like "Passover" and "atonement".
Acharya's parallels with Krishna and Buddha will be treated more briefly. Hindu scholars, Edwin Bryant and Benjamin Walker, are my sources for critiquing Acharya's parallels with Hindu gods. An example of her sloppy research is her claim that, like Jesus, Krishna and the avatar Vithoba were allegedly both crucified. But in fact no Indian gods are portrayed as executed by this distinctly Roman method of execution. Instead, Krishna was accidentally killed when a hunter's arrow penetrated his heel.
Of Acharya's 24 comparisons between Jesus and Krishna, 14 are wrong and the 15th is partially wrong. The 9 similarities are found in the Bhagavata Purana and the Harivamsa which were written centuries after the composition of our Gospels. It is uncertain whether there is any relationship of dependence between the Gospels and these Krishna tales. But if there is, the Hindus have borrowed from Christianity, not vice versa!
Of Acharya's 18 alleged parallels between Jesus and the Buddha, none are correct, though "a few..have some semblance of correctness, but are badly distorted (So Chun-fan Yu, a Buddhist scholar)."
|