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Many university and college courses on Christianity or comparative
religion express the view that Christianity is merely a variation of a
more ancient religious theme. They teach that Christian faith
developed from or was influenced by the ancient pagan mystery
religions of Rome, Greece, and Egypt. Therefore, the conclusion of
such courses is that Christian faith is not unique as it claims, but
at best an imitation faith, claiming to be something it really is not.
Professors draw numerous "parallels" between the motifs of "dying and
rising," "savior"-gods, and then, observing the centrality of the
death and resurrection of Jesus Christ in Christian faith, assert that
Christianity was merely a later form of such pagan religions.
In the last hundred years, numerous books have been written that
attempt to defend this idea. Among these are J.M. Robertson’s
Pagan
Christs1 and Kersey Graves’
The World’s Sixteen Crucified Saviors or Christianity Before Christ.2
This idea has also formed one line of argumentation for the larger
theme that Jesus never existed as in G. A. Wells’
Did Jesus Exist?3
and more recently this concept has been popularized by the late
mythologist Joseph Campbell in The Power of Myth, The Masks of God,
and other books meant to, at least in part, discredit
Christianity.
What were the mystery cults? Allegedly, the teachings of the
mystery religions were revealed by the Egyptian god Thoth. They were
eclectic religions cults that stressed nature religion, oaths of
secrecy, brotherhood, and spiritual quest. They offered rites of
initiation that were associated with or dedicated to various gods and
goddesses of the ancient world. In fact, these rites often inculcated
contact, or "union," with the "gods" (spirits). Participants hoped to
attain knowledge, power, and immortality from their worship and
contact with these gods. In essence, the mystery religions were part
and parcel of the world of the occult in ancient Europe and Asia. They
were idolatrous, opposed Christian teachings, and not infrequently
engaged in gross or immoral practices.4
Nevertheless, it was the theme of alleged dying and rising
savior-gods that initially sparked the interest of some scholars and
many skeptics as to whether or not Christianity was a derivative of
the mysteries. For example, if there were religious cults in Palestine
at the time of Christ who believed in a mythological central figure
who periodically died and came back to life in harmony with certain
agricultural or fertility cycles, it could be argued that Christianity
was merely the offshoot of such a religion and that its distinctive
theological teachings were later inventions. Hence the appeal of such
an idea to skeptics of Christianity.
If true, Christianity would have been only a variation of an
earlier pagan religious worldview, a religion that later evolved its
distinctive theological doctrines about Jesus Christ being the unique
incarnation of God and savior of men. In fact, in this scenario, the
biblical Jesus need never even have existed. The mysteries were, after
all, based on mythical gods. Hence, some critics (not historians)
argue that Jesus was only an invented figure patterned after the life
cycles of mythological gods such as Attis, Cybele, Osiris, Mithra,
Adonis, Eleusis, Thrace, Dionysus, and the like.
One consequence of interpreting Christianity as an embellished
mystery religion is the conclusion that Christian faith per se is the
invention of men, not a revelation from God. In the end, virtually all
the unique teachings of New Testament theology, including the
distinctive doctrines on Jesus Christ, God, man, sin, salvation, and
so on, are viewed as mere religious innovation after the fact. For
example, concerning Jesus Christ, this would mean His incarnation and
virgin birth, miracles and teachings, atonement for sin, physical
resurrection from the dead, and promised return are not historical
facts, but later revisions of pagan stories. In essence, the cardinal
teachings of orthodox Christianity become lies and falsehoods.
But is it Christianity that is the invention and deception, or
is such a theory itself the invention and deception of atheists
and skeptics merely to discredit Christianity? If we examine the
manner in which this concept is utilized, not to mention the fact that
not a shred of evidence exists in support, one can begin to see where
the real invention lies. One illustration is atheist John
Allegro’s text, The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross. Allegro is a
lecturer in Old Testament and Inter-Testamental Studies at the
University of Manchester. He weaves the origin of Christianity into
pagan religious sects, rituals, secret eulogies, and the
hallucinogenic properties of a particular mushroom. Thus, "The death
and resurrection story of Jesus follows the traditional patterns of
fertility mythology, as has long been recognized."5
Logically then, for Allegro, the New Testament is a "hoax" because the
"validity of the whole New Testament story is immediately undermined."6
Not surprisingly, he claims it is foolish for Christians to maintain
their religion is a unique revelation from God.7
As a result, Allegro’s closing paragraph gives the reader the
"assurance" that "we no longer need to view the Bible through die
mists of piety."8
The truth is that Allegro’s views are credible only to skeptics who
already wish to find "evidence" to support their skepticism. Dr. J. N.
D. Anderson is an authority on comparative religion, a professor of
Oriental Laws, and director of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies
at the University of London. He observes that Allegro’s book "has been
dismissed by fifteen experts in Semitic languages and related
fields... as ‘not based on any philological or other evidence that
they can regard as scholarly’—and has met with scathing criticism in
review after review."9 Yet today it
continues to be used in college courses on Christianity.
Unfortunately for skeptics, when Allegro’s theory—or that involving
any other mystery tradition—is objectively examined and compared with
Christianity, only superficial similarities remain because
Christianity and the mystery religions are as distinct as night and
day.10 Even secular scholars have
rejected this idea of Christianity borrowing from the ancient
mysteries. The well respected Sir Edward Evans-Pritchard writes
in Theories of Primitive Religion that, "The evidence for this
theory... is negligible."11
Negligible is defined in the Webster’s New World Dictionary as
that which "can be neglected or disregarded because small,
unimportant, trifling."
In fact, the gods of the mysteries do not even resurrect; at best
they are only resuscitated within the context of a gross mythology.
Samuel N. Kramer’s thorough work showed that the alleged resurrection
of Tammuz (a fertility god of Mesopotamia) was based on "nothing but
inference and surmise, guess and conjecture."12
Pierre Lambrechts maintains that in the case of the alleged
resurrection of Adonis no evidence exists, either in the early texts
or the pictorial representations. The texts which refer to a
resurrection are quite late, from the second to the fourth centuries
A.D.13 He reveals that for Attis
there is no suggestion that he was a resurrected god until after 150
A.D.14 In the case of Adonis, there
is a lapse of at least 700 years.15
If borrowing occurred, it seems clear which way it went.
The cult of Isis and Osiris ends with Osiris becoming lord of the
underworld while Isis regathers his dismembered body from the Nile
River and subsequently magically restores it. E. A. Wallace Budge, who
Dr. Wilbur Smith asserts is "one of the greatest authorities of our
century on ancient religions,"16
has this to say about the cult of Osiris: "There is nothing in the
texts which justify the assumption that Osiris knew he would rise from
the dead, and that he would become king and judge of the dead, or that
Egyptians believed that Osiris died on their behalf and rose again in
order that they might also rise from the dead."17
Smith also observes French scholar Andre Boulanger’s observation that,
"The idea that the god dies and rises again to lead his worshippers to
eternal life does not exist in any Hellenic mystery religion."18
It would appear then, that the real mythology is not in the origin
of Christianity but in the minds of skeptics who are confusing such
beliefs with the historical person and work of Jesus of Nazareth.
(This is especially evident when one considers the immoral lives and
deeds of the pagan deities since these are entirely disharmonious with
the life and deeds of Jesus Christ.)
Indeed, as noted, scholars long ago refuted the idea that
Christianity is related to the mysteries. Consider just a few of the
great differences between Christian belief and the mystery cults that
makes the claim of identity look foolish:
As for the motif of a dying and rising savior-god, which has so
often been compared with the unique event which gave birth to
Christianity, Metzger points out that the formal resemblance between
them must not be allowed to obscure the great differences in
content. In all the Mysteries which tell of a dying god, he dies "by
compulsion and not by choice, sometimes in bitterness and despair,
never in a self-giving love." There is a positive gulf between this
and the Christ who asserted that no man could take his life from him
but that he laid it down of his own will (John 10:17; Matthew
26:53); the Johannine pictures of the cross as the place where Jesus
was "glorified"; and the Christian celebration of the Passion as a
victory over Satan, sin and death. Similarly, there is all the
difference in the world between the rising or re-birth of a deity
which symbolizes the coming of spring (and the re-awakening of
nature) and the resurrection "on the third day" of an historical
person.19
Former atheist and Cambridge and Oxford scholar C. S. Lewis
emphasizes that the biblical concept of God in both Old and New
Testaments is in no way compatible with the nature gods of the
mysteries.
On the other hand, Jahweh is clearly not a Nature-God. He
does not die and come to life each year as a true corn-king should…
He is not the soul of Nature nor any part of Nature. He inhabits
eternity; he dwells in the high and holy place; heaven is his
throne, not his vehicle, earth is his foot-stool, not his vesture.
One day he will dismantle both and make a new heaven and earth. He
is not to be identified even with the "divine spark" in man. He is
"God and not man." His thoughts are not our thoughts....20
In fact, Lewis had previously recorded that upon his first serious
reading of the New Testament, he was "chilled and puzzled by the
almost total absence of such ideas in the Christian documents."21
In other words, he was familiar with the theories suggesting
resemblance between Christianity and the mysteries, expected to find
them, and was shocked to discover their absence.
E. O. James concludes,
There is no valid comparison between the synoptic
story of Jesus of Nazareth and the mythological accounts of the
mystery divinities of Eleusis, Thrace, Phrygia or Egypt....
Similarly, the belief in the resurrection of Christ is poles removed
from the resuscitation of Osiris, Dionysus or Attis in an annual
ritual based on primitive conceptions of mummifications, and the
renewal of the new life in the spring.22
No less an authority than the late comparative religion scholar
Mircea Eliade points out that not only is the idea of Christian
borrowing from the mysteries wrong, but that any borrowing probably
first began on the part of the mysteries:
In 1958, one year before Campbell started publishing his fanciful
theories in the Masks of God volumes, Mircea Eliade published
in Patterns of Initiation a series of lectures he had given
at the University of Chicago in the fall of 1956. In one of those
lectures, Eliade said recent research did not support the theories
that the origin of Christianity was influenced by pagan mystery
cults. "There is no reason to suppose that primitive Christianity
was influenced by the Hellenistic mysteries," said Eliade. In fact,
the reverse may actually be true:
"The renaissance of the mysteries in the first centuries of our
era may well be related to the rise and spread of Christianity....
certain mysteries may well have reinterpreted their ancient rites in
the light of the new religious values contributed by Christianity."
Eliade added that it was only much later, when Christianity had
to compete with the renaissance of the mystery cults, that
Christians began to borrow from the religious symbols of these
cults. They did this in order to help them explain their religion to
others (not to modify it), thereby hoping to win converts.23
Further, and probably most damaging, there is simply no evidence
that the mystery religions exerted any influence in Palestine in the
first three decades of the first century. If so, where did the
material originate to make Christianity a mystery religion? In fact,
one wonders why such parallels would be suggested at all.24
The manuscripts we possess prove that the teachings of Jesus and Paul
are those given in the New Testament; sufficient time never existed
for the disciples to be influenced by the mysteries even if they were
open to the idea, which they weren’t. When the influence of the
mysteries did reach Palestine, principally through Gnosticism, the
early church did not accept it but renounced it vigorously as
trafficking in pagan myths. The complete lack of resulting syncretism
is difficult to explain if Christianity was ultimately a derivative of
such paganism.
To illustrate, Mythraism was a chief adversary of Christianity,
having a large following in the Roman army by 200 A.D.25
The Encyclopaedia Britannica comments, "One of the last of the
Oriental Mystery cults to reach the West, Mythraism, was also one of
the most rigorous, and in the final death struggle of paganism it
emerged as a chief rival and opponent of Christianity."26
But from the earliest moment, the resistance of the Christian Church
to all such mystical cults was absolute. One authority on comparative
religion, Dr. Robert Speer, author of The Finality of Jesus Christ,
observes that:
No Christian teacher of the first two centuries conceived the
Christian gospel as a gospel to be bracketed in a fellowship with
Stoicism and Neoplatonism, or Christ as a savior to be named with
Mythra, or the Lord Jesus to be named with Lord Serapis or Lord
Dionysus. The early church named One Name, and One Name Alone (see
Romans 5:15, 17, 19)... and it steadfastly resisted every heresy
from gnosticism onward which imperiled the New Testament view of the
personality and primacy of Christ... Against every assault of
gnosticism and… against almost every conceivable objection to
Christianity which the modern mind of our time has raised, the
Christian thought of the first two centuries stood its ground
utterly and unyieldingly.27
Indeed, Christianity waged intellectual warfare, without
compromise, against the mystery religions and their varied moral and
theological deficiencies. That such deficiencies were indeed varied
can be seen in the following accounts describing the Cybelene,
Egyptian, Persian, and Dionysian mysteries. No wonder the church so
resolutely opposed them!
In the wild orgies of worship associated with that [cybelene]
mystery religion, some devotees voluntarily wounded themselves and,
becoming intoxicated with the view of blood [cf. 1 Kings 18:28],
with which they sprinkled their altars, they believed they were
uniting themselves with their divinity. Others sacrificed their
virility to the gods.
St. Augustine wrote that, as a young man, he "took pleasure in
the shameful games which were celebrated in honor of the gods and
goddesses," including Cybele. On the day consecrated to her
purification, "here were sung before her couch productions so
obscene and filthy for the ear... so impure, that not even the
mother of the foulmouthed players themselves could have formed one
of the audience."
During the ceremonial rites dedicated to the Great Mother, a
young man stood beneath a platform upon which a steer was
slaughtered and showered himself with the animal’s blood. After the
blood bath, the gore-covered mystic offered himself to the
veneration of the crowd. The ceremony was known as the taurobolia...
The Egyptian goddess Isis was honored especially by "women with
whom love was a profession"…. The morals of the cult of Isis and
Osiris were viewed by the Roman community at large as very loose,
and the mystery surrounding it excited the worst suspicions.
Persia introduced dualism as a fundamental principle of religion,
and deified the evil principle. It was taught that both evil and the
supreme deity must be worshiped.… The Persian Mazdeans brought the
dimension of magic to their rites and made their "mysteries" a
reversed religion with a liturgy focused on the infernal powers.
"There was no miracle the experienced magician might not expect to
perform with the aid of demons.... Hence the number of impious
practices performed in the dark, practices the horror of which is
equaled only by their absurdity: preparing beverages that disturbed
the senses and impaired the intellect; mixing subtle poisons
extracted from demonic plants and corpses already in the state of
putridity; immolating children in order to read the future in their
quivering entrails or to conjure up ghosts...."28
And:
The initiation ceremonies usually mimed death and resurrection.
This was done in the most extravagant manner. In some ceremonies,
candidates were buried or shut up in a sarcophagus; they were even
symbolically deprived of their entrails and mummified (an animal’s
belly with entrails was prepared for ceremony). Alternately, the
candidates were symbolically drowned or decapitated. In imitation of
the Orphic myth of Dionysis Zagreus, a rite held in which the heart
of a victim, supposedly a human child, was roasted and distributed
among the participants to be eaten.... In the Dionysus and Isis
mysteries, the initiation was sometimes accomplished by a "sacred
marriage," a sacral copulation.29
Again, if Christianity were really simply a derivation of such
mystery religions, why did it so staunchly oppose them? The only
explanation is that no such similarity existed because Christianity
always was what it always claimed—a unique revelation from God.
We may conclude our topic by noting the research of Dr. Ronald H.
Nash, head of the Department of Philosophy and Religion at Western
Kentucky University and director of its graduate studies in philosophy
and religion, and author of a number of books including Ideas of
History, Christian Faith and Historical Understanding, Faith and
Reason, and The Case for Biblical Christianity. In
Christianity & the Hellenistic World, he offers a devastating
critique of this theory.
In evaluating the alleged borrowing concerning Christ’s death and
resurrection. Dr. Nash points out that the death of Jesus is distinct
from the deaths of the pagan gods in at least half a dozen different
ways. For example, none of the dying and rising "savior-gods" ever
died for someone else, and they never claimed to die for sin. The
concept of the incarnate Son of God dying a propitiatory,
substitutionary atonement for man is a doctrine that is wholly unique
to Christianity. In addition, biblically, Jesus died one time for all
sin, whereas the pagan gods were often vegetation deities who mimicked
the annual cycles of nature in their repeated deaths and
resuscitations. Further, Jesus died in space-time history, whereas the
pagan deities were simply myths. Finally, Jesus died voluntarily and
His death was a victory, not a defeat, both of which stand in contrast
to concepts found in the pagan cults.30
In essence, regardless of the major biblical doctrine we are referring
to, whether it be the nature of God, the incarnation, redemption, the
resurrection, or the new birth, none of these reveals any dependence
whatsoever upon the mystery religions.
Dr. Nash thus refers to the "serious errors" made by those who
propose the alleged parallels31 and
remarks, "The tide of scholarly opinion has turned dramatically
against attempts to make early Christianity dependent on the so-called
dying and rising gods of Hellenistic paganism."32
Yet one need only take a course in comparative religion or the
origin of Christianity at your local college or university to see how
frequently this grotesque caricature continues to be taught as
"historical fact." It’s almost as bad as the documentary hypothesis of
the Pentateuch, which also lives on, despite a similar entombment.33
In conclusion, Nash summarizes eight of the most serious weaknesses
in the critics’ claim that Christianity was derived from the
mysteries. First, similarity does not prove dependence. The fact of
some similarities between Christianity and the mysteries no more
proves Christianity was derived from them than similarities between
dogs and cats proves dogs derived from cats. Second, even the alleged
similarities "are either greatly exaggerated or invented." Third, "the
chronology is all wrong" because the basic beliefs of Christianity
were in existence in the first century, while the full development of
the mystery religions did not happen until the second century.
Historically, it is unlikely that any significant encounter took place
between Christianity and the pagan mystery religions until the third
Century. Fourth, as a devout Jew, the Apostle Paul would never have
considered borrowing his teachings from pagan religion. There is not
the slightest hint of pagan beliefs in his writings. Fifth, as a
monotheistic religion with a coherent body of doctrine, Christianity
could hardly have borrowed from a polytheistic and doctrinally
contradictory paganism. Sixth, first century Christianity was an
exclusivistic faith, not a syncretistic one, which it would have
become had borrowing been significant. Seventh, Christianity is
demonstrably grounded in the actual events of history, not myths.
Eighth, if any borrowing did occur, it was the other way around. In
other words, as Christianity grew in influence and expanded in the
second and third centuries, the pagan systems, recognizing this
threat, would be likely to borrow elements of Christianity to
capitalize upon its success. For example, the pagan rite of bathing in
bull’s blood (taurobolium) initially held its spiritual efficacy at 20
years. But once in competition with Christianity, the cult of Cybele,
recognizing that Christians were promised eternal life by faith in
Jesus, raised the efficacy of their rite "from 20 years to eternity."34
The best way for students or other inquirers to refute the idea of
any collusion between Christianity and the mystery cults is simply to
study the mystery religions and compare them carefully with the
teachings of the New Testament. It is indeed regrettable that so many
professors on our college and university campuses have failed to do
this before they wrongly instructed their students that Christianity
was only an offshoot of ancient paganism.
Notes:
1 John M. Robertson, Pagan
Christs (New Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1967),
2 Kersey Graves, The Worlds
Sixteen Crucified Saviors or Christianity Before Christ (New
Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1971).
3 G. A. Wells, Did Jesus
Exist? (Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1975).
4 Cf. Encyclopaedia
Britannica, Macropaedia, 15th
ed., s.v., "Mystery Religions," Some of this material is taken from
the authors’ The Secret Teachings of the Masonic Lodge: A
Christian Perspective (Chicago: Moody Press, 1991), pp. 244-245.
5 John Allegro, The Sacred
Mushroom and the Cross (New York: Bantam, 1981), p. 154.
6 Ibid., p. 193.
7 Ibid., p. 192.
8 Ibid., p. 205.
9 J. N. D. Anderson,
Christianity: The Witness of History (London: Tyndale, 1970), p.
15.
10 Cf., Jack Finegan, Myth
and Mystery: An Introduction to the Pagan Religions of the Biblical
World (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1989),
11 In Tom Snyder, Myth
Conceptions (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1995), p. 191,
citing the 1965 ed., p. 42.
12 Samuel N. Kramer,
Mythologies of the Ancient World (Garden City, NY: Doubleday,
1961), p. 10 from Josh McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict
(San Bernardino, CA: Campus Crusade for Christ, 1981), p. 263.
13 P. Lambrechts, "La’
Resurrection de Adonis," in Melanges Isadore Levy, 1955, pp.
207-240 as cited in Edwin Yamauchi, "The Passover Plot or Easter
Triumph?" in J. W. Montgomery, (ed), Christianity for the
Tough-Minded (Minneapolis: Bethany, 1971).
14 Ibid.
15 Encyclopaedia Britannica,
1969, Vol. 15, article on Adonis.
16 Wilbur M. Smith,
Therefore Stand (New Canaan, CT: Keats, 1981), p. 583.
17 Ibid.
18 Ibid.
19 J. N. D. Anderson,
Christianity and Comparative Religion (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 1977), p. 38.
20 C. S. Lewis, Miracles: A
Preliminary Study (London: Collins/Fontana, 1970), p. 119.
21 Ibid., p. 118.
22 Anderson, p. 41, emphasis
added.
23 Snyder, p. 194.
24 E.g., Anderson, p. 22.
25 Geoffrey W. Bromiley,
"Mysticism" in Everett F. Harrison (ed.), Baker’s Dictionary of
Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1972), p. 366.
26 Encyclopaedia Britannica,
1969, vol. 15, pp. 604-605.
27 Robert Speer, The
Finality of Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1968), p.
100.
28 As cited in Paul A. Fisher,
Behind the Lodge Door: Church, State and Freemasonry
(Washington, DC: Shield Press, 1987), pp. 273-274.
29 Encyclopaedia Britannica,
Macropedia, 15th
edition, s.v., "Mystery Religions."
30 Ronald H. Nash,
Christianity & the Hellenistic World (Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan/Probe, 1984), pp. 171-172.
31 Ibid., pp. 172-173.
32 Ibid., p. 173.
33 Critics also maintain that
the Apostle Paul borrowed his ideas from the mystery religions, but
Nash shows how weak this argument is. In fact, this idea was refuted
70 years ago in J. Gresham Machen’s The Origin of Paul’s Religion
and more recently by the Korean scholar Seyoon Kim in The Origin
of Paul’s Gospel.
34 Nash, pp. 192-199; citing
Bruce Metzger on the cult of Cybele.
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