Who
Could Have Invented Jesus?
Now
we have left the evidence of fulfilled prophecy behind, and
must go on to look at a very different kind of evidence. This
will involve making a study of Jesus Christ Himself.
"Ah,"
you may say, "but this begs the question. How do we know
that there ever was such a person? Whats the use of assuming
that the gospels tell the truth about Jesus, and then building
conclusions on such a shaky foundation?"
Quite
so. Very true. And I have no intention of doing any such thing.
All I shall assume is that the gospels are either fact, or
fiction, or a mixture of the two. (You wont disagree with
that, will you?) Then we shall examine the gospels critically
to see which of those three alternatives seems most likely.
Fair enough?
But
before we begin, it is worth noting that even unbelievers
generally recognise that the gospels are not pure fiction.
One of the most learned of all unbelievers was Sir James Frazer.
His classic history of magic and religion, The Golden
Bough, was a landmark in twentieth century scholarship.
He wrote:
"My
theory assumes the historical reality of Jesus of Nazareth
as a great religious and moral teacher [not, you will notice,
as the Son of God] who founded Christianity and was crucified
at Jerusalem under the governorship of Pontius Pilate. The
testimony of the gospels, confirmed by the hostile evidence
of Tacitus (Ann. 15,44) and the younger Pliny (Epist. 10,96)
appears amply sufficient to establish these facts to the
satisfaction of all unprejudiced enquirers. It is only the
details of the life and death of Christ that remain, and
will probably always remain, shrouded in the mists of uncertainty.
The doubts which have been cast upon the historical
reality of Jesus are, in my judgment, unworthy of serious
attention. Quite apart from the positive evidence of
history and tradition, the origin of a great religious and
moral reform is inexplicable without the personal existence
of a great reformer."1
(The italics are mine.)
Inventing
the Uninventable
About
500 years ago there lived in Italy one of the greatest geniuses
of all time, Leonardo da Vinci. Besides painting some of the
worlds greatest pictures, he was a research scientist of the
first rank. He is often said to have "invented"
the aeroplane, the steamship, and the submarine.
Perhaps
"invented" is too strong a word, because he never
built any such machines. He did, however, first hatch out
the ideas that hundreds of years later led to the development
of those modern marvels. So we can give him the benefit of
the doubt and say that, in a sense, he did invent them.
His
inventions were brilliant, but not impossible. All the background
knowledge that he needed was to hand. But there were certain
things that he did not invent, because in his day they were
uninventable. He could not invent a heart-lung machine, because
he did not know about the circulation of the blood; more than
a century was to elapse before Harvey discovered that. Nor
could Leonardo invent an atom bomb, because he regarded matter
as solid stuff; until modern scientists discovered that atoms
were not solid lumps after all, but hollow spheres peppered
with electric particles, the atom bomb was uninventable.
Now
the argument I shall put forward in this chapter is this:
the Jesus of whom we read in the gospels was, at the time
the gospels were written, uninventable. Consequently
the Jesus of the gospels must have been a historical character,
not a fictional one.
The
first thing to note is that nobody wanted a person like the
Jesus of the New Testament. (To avoid repetition I shall not
keep saying "the Jesus of the New Testament" but
simply "Jesus" - while, for the time being, leaving
completely open the question whether He was a historical character
or a fictitious one.) Paul summed up the situation when he
wrote:
"But
we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling block,
and unto the Gentiles foolishness."2
Nearly
all the Jews had no time for Him. They were bigots, completely
set in their religious ways. This man turned all their religious
ideas upside down. He was nothing like the conquering king
of a Messiah that they wanted. No Jew would have wanted to
invent such an improbable, unacceptable kind of Messiah.
Nearly
all the Gentiles had no use for Him, either. He was altogether
unlike the kind of men they admired. Theirs was a cruel, selfish,
lustful world. Human life was cheap. They would leave unwanted
babies (girls, usually) to die with as little compunction
as we drown unwanted kittens.
Their
pleasures were mostly immoral ones: watching gladiators fighting
to the death, or worshipping at idolatrous temples which were
often only glorified brothels. It is hard to imagine any Gentile
inventing a Jesus whose teaching was so full of condemnation
for the Gentile way of life.
Into
this harsh world came Jesus, teaching things that made men
marvel. He preached the necessity of unselfish love, love
that stopped at nothing, love that led men to lay down their
lives rather than use force against others. He preached it,
and He set the example Himself. He refused to defend Himself,
or even to let His disciples defend Him.3
Instead, He went meekly to a horrible death.
We
are not now concerned with the weighty question of whether
Christians today should be pacifists. My personal opinion
is in favour of Christian pacifism today, but that is beside
the point. At the moment we are not concerned with opinions
but with facts. The relevant facts are:
- That
Jesus introduced to a hostile world the entirely new teaching
of "Love to the uttermost".
- In
keeping with this, He and His apostles preached pacifism.
4
- He
constantly lived up to His own teaching, even though it
led Him to a cruel death.
- There
is plenty of historical evidence that the early Christian
Church followed His difficult teaching, including pacifism.5
It
is not surprising that the originator of these unpopular teachings
made few converts at first. In the very early days Christianity
was a small sect "everywhere spoken against".6
It was an unpopular minority religion.
True,
by the fourth century it had grown great. But only because
the standards had been lowered, the fine new teaching had
been watered down. Yet even despite this watering down, despite
the wickedness that has been done in the name of Christ by
millions of unworthy professors of Christianity-despite everything,
the teaching of Jesus has met the worlds need.
Where
men have truly followed the teaching of the gospels, all that
is best in the sad story of mankind has followed. Even unbelievers
admit that. Here are the words of a famous American who did
not believe that Jesus was the Son of God, Theodore Parker:
"Consider
what a work his [Christ's] words and deeds have wrought
in the world. Remember that the greatest minds, the richest
hearts, have set no loftier aim, no truer method than his
of perfect love to God and man. Shall we be told that such
a man never lived - the whole story is a lie! Suppose that
Plato and Newton never lived. But who did their wonders,
and thought their thought? It takes a Newton to forge a
Newton. What man could have fabricated a Jesus?"7
Besides
paying tribute to all that the Christian message has done
for mankind, Parker takes up the question with which we began:
could anyone have invented Jesus? And although he regarded
Jesus as a mere man, he answered with a resounding, "No!"
Another
famous writer who was a complete unbeliever, John Stuart Mill,
backs him up:
"It
is of no use to say that Christ as exhibited in the gospels
is not historical, and that we know not how much of what
is admirable has been superadded by the tradition of his
followers. Who among his disciples or among their proselytes
was capable of inventing the sayings ascribed to Jesus,
or of imagining the life and character revealed in the gospels?
Certainly not the fishermen of Galilee, still less the early
Christian writers."8
His
Sublime character
So
far so good. The idea that any lesser men could have "invented"
Jesus begins to look unlikely. But the evidence is not yet
conclusive. We must go a little further, and study more closely
the character of this Jesus.
To
save space, we shall only be able to consider the last twenty-four
hours of His life. As we do this, it is important that you
bear two things in mind:
- We
shall be dodging about between all four gospels, because
this is the only way we can build up a complete picture
of Him. So, if Jesus was invented, He had not one inventor
but four, all skilfully co-operating to produce a realistic
result.
- Many
of the facets of His character that we shall examine are
not on the surface of the record. We have to look very carefully,
to dig them out from where they lie, half-buried in the
text. Does this look like fiction, or fact? Novelists do
not usually hide all their best points, so that only a diligent
student can find them!
We
enter the gospel story on the evening before He is crucified.
He is in an upstairs room with the twelve apostles, where
they are about to have supper. He knows that this will be
the last meal of His mortal life, and He intends to make it
a memorable one. Two passages summarise one aspect of this
meal:
"
When Jesus knew that His hour was come . . . having loved
His own which were in the world, He loved them unto the
end."9
"And
He said unto them, With desire I have desired to eat this
passover with you before I suffer ... And He took bread,
and gave thanks, and brake it, and gave unto them, saying,
This is My body which is given for you; this do in remembrance
of Me. Likewise also the cup after supper, saying, This
cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is shed for you."
10
From
these two passages, we can deduce:
- That
He knew what was coming to Him. He had often said that one
day He would be crucified,11
and now the time had arrived.
- Nevertheless,
He was not thinking of the frightful pain that would soon
be racking His own body. His only concern was love for His
disciples: "He loved them unto the end."
- By
comparing similar expressions in the Old Testament, we can
see that "with desire I have desired" is a Jewish
way of saying, "with a very intense desire". For
their sakes He was terribly keen to hold that ceremonial
meal with them.
- He
turned that meal into a dramatised parable. He broke bread,
and used it to represent the next days tearing of His own
flesh. He poured wine, and made it a symbol of His blood
that would soon be flowing from a multitude of wounds.
Any
other man would have wanted to forget about the torture that
was coming to him tomorrow. But Jesus was prepared to bring
it vividly to mind. Although it was so painful to Himself,
He knew that this simple ceremony would benefit His disciples
for centuries to come. And so He performed it with eager desire.
A
further group of verses shows up another aspect of that meal:
"
He poureth water into a basin, and began to wash the disciples
feet, and to wipe them with the towel wherewith He was girded...
So after He had washed their feet, and had taken His garments,
and was set down again, He said unto them, Know ye what
I have done to you? Ye call me Master and Lord, and ye say
well, for so I am. If I then, your Lord and Master, have
washed your feet, ye also ought to wash one anothers feet.
12
"
And as they did eat, He said, Verily I say unto you, that
one of you shall betray Me. And they were exceeding sorrowful,
and began every one to say unto Him, Lord, is it I?"13
One
aspect of His character lies right on the surface here. He
was an exceedingly humble man. He was willing to do a very
tiring and unpleasant job. But why did He do it? Couldn't
they all wash their own feet?
He
was not the sort of man to show off. Nor was He doing an unnecessary
chore just so that He could give them a lecture about helping
one another. There was a very good reason for His action,
but it takes a careful student of the gospels to discover
it.
We
learn the reason from another gospel. Soon after supper the
disciples found themselves unable to stay awake.14
Evidently they were all utterly weary with overwork and lack
of sleep. So the Masters work upon their tired feet was a
real and necessary act of loving kindness.
But
there is yet another lesson lying under the surface. It lies
behind that chorus of astonishment, "Is it I?" which
rose up when He said, "One of you shall betray Me."
Obviously
they had not the slightest idea who the traitor was. But Jesus
knew. John says so, explicitly.15
A few minutes before, Jesus had washed the feet of Judas.
And He must have washed the traitors feet with the same
loving care that He bestowed upon the other eleven. Otherwise
someone would have noticed, and said, "Have you seen
how the Master is looking at Judas? I wonder whats wrong."
But
nobody noticed any difference-hence that repeated question,
"Is it I?"
What
superhuman love, if these records really are true and Jesus
really did behave like that!
But
what superhuman artistry if Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were
four deceivers, weaving together the most elaborately hidden
pen portrait in the history of fiction!
Gethsemane
Supper
is over. Judas Iscariot has gone off alone to earn his blood
money. Jesus and the faithful eleven go out into the darkness
of the Garden of Gethsemane. In one part of the garden the
disciples drop to the earth exhausted, and sleep.
In
another part, Jesus begins His last great struggle against
His mortal body.
"He
kneeled down, and prayed, saying Father if Thou be willing,
remove this cup from Me; nevertheless not My will, but Thine,
be done. And there appeared an angel unto Him from heaven,
strengthening Him. And being in an agony He prayed more
earnestly, and His sweat was as it were great drops of blood
falling down to the ground."16
This
does not read like fiction. No gospel writer would want to
invent an incident like that. Inventors of propaganda might
have told a tale about Jesus facing death with unruffled calm.
But the gospel writers were not inventors of propaganda. They
record how the Son of God admitted that one side of Him would
have liked to escape crucifixion. They portray Him as fighting
a terrific battle to overcome His human desire-a battle so
great that He was in agony, while the sweat poured off Him
like blood.
How
easily this story could have been (yes, and has been) misinterpreted
by the immature as something unworthy of the Son of God. But
the apostles wrote it just the same. They wrote with the candour
of men who have nothing to hide, who are only concerned to
record the plain, unvarnished facts.
No
sooner has Jesus won His battle than lights appear, coming
through the olive trees towards His little band. They hear
the clink of steel, and the tramp of many men. Unless something
is done quickly there will be twelve arrests instead of one,
and eleven extra crosses on Calvary tomorrow.
The
next act of Jesus always reminds me of Captain Oates of the
Antarctic, who said goodbye to his friends and walked off
into the blizzard to die, hoping that through his sacrifice
they might survive. "It was the act of a brave man and
an English gentleman," wrote Captain Scott in his diary.
When
Scotts diary was found, he and his fellows were all dead.
Yet everybody takes it for granted that Scott was telling
the truth. His account bears all the marks of a true record.
And similarly Johns gospel reads like sober fact, not glamourised
fiction.
"Jesus
therefore, knowing all things that should come upon Him,
went forth and said unto them, Whom seek ye? They answered
Him, Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus saith unto them, I am He.
And Judas also, which betrayed Him, stood with them. As
soon then as He had said unto them, I am He, they went backward,
and fell to the ground. Then asked He them again, Whom seek
ye? And they said, Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus answered, I
have told you that I am He: if therefore ye seek Me, let
these go their way."17
But
what lies behind that strange statement in the middle of the
passage, "they went backward and fell to the ground"?
The reader inevitably wonders what made a strong force of
armed men do that. If John had been writing fiction, would
he have left that question unanswered? Surely not. By stating
the fact, and leaving us to draw our own conclusions, John
shows that he is no embroiderer of fancy tales
As
so often happens, another book of the Bible supplies the probable
explanation for us. When Christs first martyr, Stephen, was
in a somewhat similar position, his executioners "saw
his face as it had been the face of an angel".18
If the face of Jesus similarly shone with angelic glory for
a moment, it is not surprising that His enemies staggered
backwards in terror.
To
the Cross
So
the innocent man was led away, to be sentenced on a trumped-up
charge with the aid of bribed witnesses. Yet He would not
argue in His own defence.19 When
He spoke it was for the sake of others.
He
even showed a measure of sympathy for Pilate, to whom He said:
"Thou couldest have no power at all against Me, except
it were given thee from above. Therefore he that delivered
Me unto thee hath the greater sin."20
With
the rough heavy cross upon His shoulder, He struggled along
the road to Calvary. Even then, His thoughts were upon others
rather than Himself.
"And
there followed Him a great company of people, and of women,
which also bewailed and lamented Him. But Jesus turning
unto them said, Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for Me,
but weep for yourselves, and for your children. For, behold,
the days are coming, in the which they shall say, "Blessed
are the barren, and the wombs that never bare, and the breasts
which never gave suck.""21
It
was to be thirty-odd years before the Roman armies came to
destroy Jerusalem. But to Jesus, that dreadful day to come
was even more tragic than His own immediate plight.
Even
while He hung on the cross, in His final awful pain, He could
still help others.
He
cried with a loud voice, "My God, My God, why hast Thou
forsaken me?"22 Though at
first sight this looks like weakness or despair it was nothing
of the kind. Those words are actually the first line of Psalm
22, which, as we saw in Chapter
4 is a wonderfully detailed prophecy of the events on
that dreadful day. By reciting this title-line of a well-known
Jewish hymn, Jesus was as good as saying, "Look everybody!
See how Messianic prophecy is being fulfilled today. See,
and believe!"
He
prayed for His executioners to be forgiven, because they did
not understand the enormity of their offence.23
He
arranged for a faithful disciple to take care of His heartbroken
mother.24
He
comforted the dying thief who had come to believe in Him at
the eleventh hour.25
When
there was nothing else left for Him to do, He gave a shout
of triumph-"It is finished!"26
Then, with quiet dignity, He died:
"He
said, Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit. And having
said thus, He gave up the ghost."27
We
have not been able to look at more than a fraction of the
gospel records of the crucifixion. But what we have seen is
a picture of a man like no other man, a man that no first-century
legend-spinner could possibly have invented. No wonder that
the centurion who watched it all said, "Truly, this man
was the Son of God!"28
Did
the Gospel Writers Exaggerate?
We
have disposed of one possibility. The gospels are not pure
fiction. But there is that other possibility, that they might
be a mixture of fact and fiction. Could the gospel writers
have described an "ordinary" good man, and then
added all sorts of imaginary sayings and events, just as a
modern writer might write a novel about Napoleon or Julius
Caesar?
This
suggestion also runs against the facts. Here are four solid
reasons for believing that the gospels are all fact, not a
mixture of fact and fiction.
- The
gospel writers sound like reliable men. You will need
to read all four gospels for yourself to appreciate that
this is so. Then you will see that these books were obviously
not written by men out to create a sensation. They each
tell their tale in a simple, straightforward way. Where
it is appropriate they point out how Old Testament prophecy
was fulfilled in Jesus. Apart from this, they write like
men reporting facts, not like men determined to impress
their readers.
They
are not afraid to mention things that, to a casual reader,
may seem unfavourable to their cause. They report some surprising
acts and sayings of Jesus which, at first glance, seem to
show Him in an unfavourable light. We have to study these
passages very closely, often by comparing one gospel with
another, before we can see that Jesus did in fact have good
reason for everything He said and did. (We have seen several
examples of this already in this chapter.)
Again,
they are not at all like four dishonest witnesses determined
to present a united front. Each tells his story from his own
point of view, regardless of what the others have said. Sometimes
it even looks as if they contradict each other. Only
when you study the records closely can you see that there
is real harmony behind the apparent contradictions, as Chapter
19 shows.
All
these things are the marks of honest men, telling a true story.
- Their
stories hang together as a whole. If the gospels are
a mixture of fact and fiction, then which bits are the factual
bits? Hundreds of unbelievers and half-believers have tried
to answer this question to their own satisfaction.
But
no two have ever reached exactly the same conclusion. They
have been attempting the impossible. It cant be done. The
gospels do not read like a patchwork album. They read like
a consistent, unified record. (If you should think that modern
scholars have shown that the gospels are in fact a patchwork
album, please reserve your judgment until you have read Part
Two of this book.)
Our
character study showed that the Jesus of the gospels had a
character far above that of any other man. Take away all the
passages that indicate a superhuman character for Jesus, and
there is very little left. The four gospels are absolutely
consistent in their message that Jesus was a uniquely righteous
person; consequently, it makes sense to accept that He was.
Once
you grant this, everything else in the gospels follows naturally.
Despite His quiet humility He had a serene confidence that
He was sinless, that He was Messiah, that He was Son of God.
All this ties up with His perfect character; it is what we
might have expected.
So
are the stories of His miracles. The very presence of the
Son of God on earth was itself a miracle. Nothing could be
more natural than that He should work some miracles for the
good of mankind while He was here.
If
you have an old, worn-out Bible to spare, try this little
experiment. Blot out all the miracles from your four gospels,
and see what is left. You will find that the remaining fragments
often fail to make sense. This clearly shows that the miracle
stories are not something added as an afterthought, but are
an integral part of the original record.
(Please
dont shut your mind to these facts because some people argue
that it is unscientific to believe in miracles. We shall be
looking at miracles from a scientific viewpoint in Chapter
21.)
- They
did not keep on writing. These four books are the best
sellers of a ll the worlds literature. Yet they are extremely
brief. They occupy only twenty or thirty pages each, in
the average printed Bible. No other writings by Matthew
or Mark are known, and only about another thirty pages by
Luke and twenty by John.
If
their writing were the product of their own genius, why didnt
they keep on writing? Creative geniuses cannot bear to stop
after one short outburst. But since the gospel writers did
stop so soon, they were evidently not men of genius eager
to express themselves in creative work. Nor could they have
been spurred on by the desire for fame.
Some
unbelievers suggest that they did keep on writing, but that
their other works were not preserved. But this only creates
another problem: why did their readers not bother to keep
the other works of these brilliant authors? Hundreds of pages
of the writings of less gifted Jews and Greeks of that period
have survived, but only a handful of pages by Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John. Why?
If
we regard these men as mere literary geniuses the problem
is insoluble. Bestseller writers have seldom or never been
known to burst into full flower with one brief work of superb
artistry, and then stop. If only one gospel writer had done
so, we might perhaps explain it as a remarkable exception
to the general rule. But since two have done it, and the other
two have added only a few more pages by way of sequel,29
we need some better explanation.
There
is only one explanation that makes psychological sense. They
must have been single-minded men with one purpose: to set
down a few facts of tremendous importance. They told their
tale briefly and accurately-and then stopped.
- They
do not tell us what Jesus looked like. Fiction writers
almost always give us some sort of picture of their great
heroes. If Matthew, Mark, Luke and John really were adding
fiction to fact, surely one of them would have dropped some
hint about the appearance of Jesus. Yet none of them gives
us a clue.
We
have no idea whether He was short or tall, fat or thin, dark
or fair, handsome or ugly. Why not? There is one obvious explanation
which fits the facts. God said to an Old Testament prophet:
"The
Lord seeth not as man seeth, for man looketh on the Outward
appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart."30
The
evidence before us suggests that Jesus really was the Son
of God. How very fitting that God should guide the pens of
the four men who described His Son, to ensure that they gave
us a perfect picture of His "heart", but not the
slightest idea of His "outward appearance".
| 1
Quoted by A. R. Short, in Why Believe? Inter-Varsity
Press, London, 7th edn., 1958 |
2
1 Cor. 1:23 |
3
Matt. 26:50-53 |
| 4
For example, Matt. 5:38-48; 10:16; Rom. 12:17-21 |
5
See G. C. Field, Pacifism and Conscientious Objection.
Cambridge University Press, 1945. Also Bertrand Russell,
Power (chapter 7), George Allen and Unwin, London,
1938. These two eminent philosophers cannot have been
biased in favour of Christian pacifism, since they both
declared themselves to be non-Christian and non-pacifist.
(It is a common mistake to think of Bertrand Russell as
a pacifist. His philosophy was to support what he regarded
as "just" wars, and oppose "unjust"
wars. Thus he opposed the first world war and the Vietnam
war, but supported the war against Hitler.) Yet both writers
accepted as a fact that the early Church was, by and large,
a pacifist community. For a detailed statement of the
historical evidence, see C. J. Cadoux, The Early Church
and the World. T. and T. Clark, Edinburgh, 1925 |
6
Acts 28:22 |
| 7
Life of Jesus, in Collected Works of Theodore
Parker, edited by F. P. Cobbe. Trjibner, London,
1863-71 |
8
John Stuart Mill, Essays on Nature, the Utility of
Religion and Theism. Longmans, London, 1874 |
9
John 13:1 |
| 10
Luke 22:15-20 |
11
For example, Matt. 26:2 |
12
John 13:5, 12-14 |
| 13
Matt. 26:21, 22 |
14
Mark 14:37-40 |
15
John 13:11 |
| 16
Luke 22:41-44 |
17
John 18:4-8 |
18
Acts 6:15 |
| 19
Mark 15:3-5 |
20
John 19:11 |
21
Luke23:27-29 |
| 22
Matt. 27:46 |
23
Luke 23:34 |
24
John 19:25-27 |
| 25
Luke 23:39-43 |
26
John 19:30 |
27
Luke 23:46 |
| 28
Mark 15:39 |
29
The Acts of the Apostles, by Luke; the Book of Revelation
and three short letters, by John. |
30
1 Sam. 16:7 |
|