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From Bill Restemeyer and the Internet Infidels for The Freethought Web. |
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Did Jesus Christ Really Live? |
by Marshall J. Gauvin |
Page 13
| Great writers wrote
extensively of events of minor importance, but not one of them wrote a word about the
mightiest character who had ever appeared on earth.
Philo's home was in or near Jerusalem, where Jesus is said to have preached, to have performed miracles, to have been crucified, and to have risen from the dead. Had Jesus done these things, the writings of Philo would certainly contain some record of his life. Yet....
The church felt that Josephus ought to recognize Christ, and the dead historian was made to do it. In the fourth century, a copy of "The Antiquities of the Jews" appeared, in which occurred this passage: "Now, there was about this time, Jesus, a wise man,
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If Christ lived, if he was a reformer, if he
performed wonderful works that attracted the attention of the multitude, if he came in
conflict with the authorities and was crucified -- how shall we explain the fact that
history has not even recorded his name? The age in which he is said to have lived was an
age of scholars and thinkers. In Greece, Rome and Palestine, there were philosophers,
historians, poets, orators, jurists and statesmen. Every fact of importance was noted by
interested and inquiring minds. Some of the greatest writers the Jewish race has produced
lived in that age. And yet, in all the writings of that period, there is not one line, not
one word, not one letter, about Jesus. Great writers wrote extensively of events of minor
importance, but not one of them wrote a word about the mightiest character who had ever
appeared on earth -- a man at whose command the leprous were made clean, a man who fed
five thousand people with a satchel full of bread, a man whose word defied the grave and
gave life to the dead. John E. Remsburg, in his scholarly work on "The Christ," has compiled a list of forty-two writers who lived and wrote during the time or within a century after the time, of Christ, not one of whom ever mentioned him. Philo, one of the most renowned writers the Jewish race has produced, was born before the beginning of the Christian Era, and lived for many years after the time at which Jesus is supposed to have died. His home was in or near Jerusalem, where Jesus is said to have preached, to have performed miracles, to have been crucified, and to have risen from the dead. Had Jesus done these things, the writings of Philo would certainly contain some record of his life. Yet this philosopher, who must have been familiar with Herod's massacre of the innocents, and with the preaching, miracles and death of Jesus, had these things occurred; who wrote an account of the Jews, covering this period, and discussed the very questions that are said to have been near to Christ's heart, never once mentioned the name of, or any deed connected with, the reputed Savior of the world. In the closing years of the first century, Josephus, the celebrated Jewish historian, wrote his famous work on "The Antiquities of the Jews." In this work, the historian made no mention of Christ, and for two hundred years after the death of Josephus, the name of Christ did not appear in his history. There were no printing presses in those days. Books were multiplied by being copied. It was, therefore, easy to add to or change what an author had written. The church felt that Josephus ought to recognize Christ, and the dead historian was made to do it. In the fourth century, a copy of "The Antiquities of the Jews" appeared, in which occurred this passage: "Now, there was about this time, Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man, for he was a doer of wonderful works; a teacher of such men as received the truth with pleasure. He drew over to him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles. He was the Christ; and when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men amongst us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him; for he appeared to them alive again the third day, as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other wonderful things concerning him; and the tribe of Christians, so named from him, are not extinct at this day."
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