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Was the New Testament Influenced by Pagan Religions
by Ronald Nash
from the Christian Research Journal,
Winter 1994, page 8.
The Editor-in-Chief of the Christian Research Journal is Elliot Miller.
Summary
Many Christian college students have encountered criticisms of
Christianity based on claims that early Christianity and the New
Testament borrowed important beliefs and practices from a number of
pagan mystery religions. Since these claims undermine such central
Christian doctrines as Christ's death and resurrection, the charges
are serious. But the evidence for such claims, when it even exists,
often lies in sources several centuries older than the New
Testament. Moreover, the alleged parallels often result from
liberal scholars uncritically describing pagan beliefs and
practices in Christian language and then marveling at the striking
parallels they think they've discovered.
During the first half of the twentieth century, a number of
liberal authors and professors claimed that the New Testament
teaching about Jesus' death and resurrection, the New Birth, and
the Christian practices of baptism and the Lord's Supper were
derived from the pagan mystery religions. Of major concern in all
this is the charge that the New Testament doctrine of salvation
parallels themes commonly found in the mystery religions: a
savior-god dies violently for those he will eventually deliver,
after which that god is restored to life.
Was the New Testament influenced by the pagan religions of the
first century A.D.? Even though I surveyed this matter in a 1992
book,[1] the issues are so important -- especially for Christian
college students who often do not know where to look for answers --
that there is considerable merit in addressing this question in a
popular, nontechnical format.
WHAT WERE THE MYSTERY RELIGIONS?
Other than Judaism and Christianity, the mystery religions were
the most influential religions in the early centuries after Christ.
The reason these cults were called "mystery religions" is that they
involved secret ceremonies known only to those initiated into the
cult. The major benefit of these practices was thought to be some
kind of salvation.
The mystery religions were not, of course, the only
manifestations of the religious spirit in the eastern Roman Empire.
One could also find public cults not requiring an initiation
ceremony into secret beliefs and practices. The Greek Olympian
religion and its Roman counterpart are examples of this type of
religion.
Each Mediterranean region produced its own mystery religion.
Out of Greece came the cults of Demeter and Dionysus, as well as
the Eleusinian and Orphic mystery religions, which developed
later.[2] Asia Minor gave birth to the cult of Cybele, the Great
Mother, and her beloved, a shepherd named Attis. The cult of Isis
and Osiris (later changed to Serapis) originated in Egypt, while
Syria and Palestine saw the rise of the cult of Adonis. Finally,
Persia (Iran) was a leading early locale for the cult of Mithras,
which -- due to its frequent use of the imagery of war -- held a
special appeal to Roman soldiers. The earlier Greek mystery
religions were state religions in the sense that they attained the
status of a public or civil cult and served a national or public
function. The later non-Greek mysteries were personal, private, and
individualistic.
Basic Traits
One must avoid any suggestion that there was one common mystery
religion. While a tendency toward eclecticism or synthesis
developed after A.D. 300, each of the mystery cults was a separate
and distinct religion during the century that saw the birth of the
Christian church. Moreover, each mystery cult assumed different
forms in different cultural settings and underwent significant
changes, especially after A.D. 100. Nevertheless, the mystery
religions exhibited five common traits.
(1) Central to each mystery was its use of an annual vegetation
cycle in which life is renewed each spring and dies each fall.
Followers of the mystery cults found deep symbolic significance in
the natural processes of growth, death, decay, and rebirth.
(2) As noted above, each cult made important use of secret
ceremonies or mysteries, often in connection with an initiation
rite. Each mystery religion also passed on a "secret" to the
initiate that included information about the life of the cult's god
or goddess and how humans might achieve unity with that deity. This
"knowledge" was always a secret or esoteric knowledge, unattainable
by any outside the circle of the cult.
(3) Each mystery also centered around a myth in which the deity
either returned to life after death or else triumphed over his
enemies. Implicit in the myth was the theme of redemption from
everything earthly and temporal. The secret meaning of the cult and
its accompanying myth was expressed in a "sacramental drama" that
appealed largely to the feelings and emotions of the initiates.
This religious ecstasy was supposed to lead them to think they were
experiencing the beginning of a new life.
(4) The mysteries had little or no use for doctrine and correct
belief. They were primarily concerned with the emotional life of
their followers. The cults used many different means to affect the
emotions and imaginations of initiates and hence bring about "union
with the god": processions, fasting, a play, acts of purification,
blazing lights, and esoteric liturgies. This lack of any emphasis
on correct belief marked an important difference between the
mysteries and Christianity. The Christian faith was exclusivistic
in the sense that it recognized only one legitimate path to God and
salvation, Jesus Christ. The mysteries were inclusivistic in the
sense that nothing prevented a believer in one cult from following
other mysteries.
(5) The immediate goal of the initiates was a mystical
experience that led them to feel they had achieved union with their
god. Beyond this quest for mystical union were two more ultimate
goals: some kind of redemption or salvation, and immortality.
Evolution
Before A.D. 100, the mystery religions were still largely
confined to specific localities and were still a relatively novel
phenomenon. After A.D. 100, they gradually began to attain a
widespread popular influence throughout the Roman Empire. But they
also underwent significant changes that often resulted from the
various cults absorbing elements from each other. As devotees of
the mysteries became increasingly eclectic in their beliefs and
practices, new and odd combinations of the older mysteries began to
emerge. And as the cults continued to tone down the more
objectionable features of their older practices, they began to
attract greater numbers of followers.
RECONSTRUCTING THE MYSTERIES
It is not until we come to the third century A.D. that we find
sufficient source material (i.e., information about the mystery
religions from the writings of the time) to permit a relatively
complete reconstruction of their content. Far too many writers use
this late source material (after A.D. 200) to form reconstructions
of the third-century mystery experience and then uncritically
reason back to what they think must have been the earlier nature of
the cults. This practice is exceptionally bad scholarship and
should not be allowed to stand without challenge. Information about
a cult that comes several hundred years after the close of the New
Testament canon must not be read back into what is presumed to be
the status of the cult during the first century A.D. The crucial
question is not what possible influence the mysteries may have had
on segments of Christendom after A.D. 400, but what effect the
emerging mysteries may have had on the New Testament in the first
century.
The Cult of Isis and Osiris
The cult of Isis originated in Egypt and went through two major
stages. In its older Egyptian version, which was not a mystery
religion, Isis was regarded as the goddess of heaven, earth, the
sea, and the unseen world below. In this earlier stage, Isis had a
husband named Osiris. The cult of Isis became a mystery religion
only after Ptolemy the First introduced major changes, sometime
after 300 B.C. In the later stage, a new god named Serapis became
Isis's consort. Ptolemy introduced these changes in order to
synthesize Egyptian and Greek concerns in his kingdom, thus
hastening the Hellenization of Egypt.
From Egypt, the cult of Isis gradually made its way to Rome.
While Rome was at first repelled by the cult, the religion finally
entered the city during the reign of Caligula (A.D. 37-41). Its
influence spread gradually during the next two centuries, and in
some locales it became a major rival of Christianity. The cult's
success in the Roman Empire seems to have resulted from its
impressive ritual and the hope of immortality offered to its
followers.
The basic myth of the Isis cult concerned Osiris, her husband
during the earlier Egyptian and nonmystery stage of the religion.
According to the most common version of the myth, Osiris was
murdered by his brother who then sank the coffin containing
Osiris's body into the Nile river. Isis discovered the body and
returned it to Egypt. But her brother-in-law once again gained
access to the body, this time dismembering it into fourteen pieces
which he scattered widely. Following a long search, Isis recovered
each part of the body. It is at this point that the language used
to describe what followed is crucial. Sometimes those telling the
story are satisfied to say that Osiris came back to life, even
though such language claims far more than the myth allows. Some
writers go even further and refer to the alleged "resurrection" of
Osiris. One liberal scholar illustrates how biased some writers are
when they describe the pagan myth in Christian language: "The dead
body of Osiris floated in the Nile and he returned to life, this
being accomplished by a baptism in the waters of the Nile."[3]
This biased and sloppy use of language suggests three
misleading analogies between Osiris and Christ: (1) a savior god
dies and (2) then experiences a resurrection accompanied by (3)
water baptism. But the alleged similarities, as well as the
language used to describe them, turn out to be fabrications of the
modern scholar and are not part of the original myth. Comparisons
between the resurrection of Jesus and the resuscitation of Osiris
are greatly exaggerated.[4] Not every version of the myth has
Osiris returning to life; in some he simply becomes king of the
underworld. Equally far-fetched are attempts to find an analogue of
Christian baptism in the Osiris myth.[5] The fate of Osiris's
coffin in the Nile is as relevant to baptism as the sinking of
Atlantis.
As previously noted, during its later mystery stage, the male
deity of the Isis cult is no longer the dying Osiris but Serapis.
Serapis is often portrayed as a sun god, and it is clear that he
was not a dying god. Obviously then, neither could he be a rising
god. Thus, it is worth remembering that the post-Ptolemaic mystery
version of the Isis cult that was in circulation from about 300
B.C. through the early centuries of the Christian era had
absolutely nothing that could resemble a dying and rising
savior-god.
The Cult of Cybele and Attis
Cybele, also known as the Great Mother, was worshiped through
much of the Hellenistic world. She undoubtedly began as a goddess
of nature. Her early worship included orgiastic ceremonies in which
her frenzied male worshipers were led to castrate themselves,
following which they became "Galli" or eunuch-priests of the
goddess. Cybele eventually came to be viewed as the Mother of all
gods and the mistress of all life.
Most of our information about the cult describes its practices
during its later Roman period. But the details are slim and almost
all the source material is relatively late, certainly datable long
after the close of the New Testament canon.
According to myth, Cybele loved a shepherd named Attis. Because
Attis was unfaithful, she drove him insane. Overcome by madness,
Attis castrated himself and died. This drove Cybele into great
mourning, and it introduced death into the natural world. But then
Cybele restored Attis to life, an event that also brought the world
of nature back to life.
The presuppositions of the interpreter tend to determine the
language used to describe what followed Attis's death. Many writers
refer carelessly to the "resurrection of Attis." But surely this is
an exaggeration. There is no mention of anything resembling a
resurrection in the myth, which suggests that Cybele could only
preserve Attis's dead body. Beyond this, there is mention of the
body's hair continuing to grow, along with some movement of his
little finger. In some versions of the myth, Attis's return to life
took the form of his being changed into an evergreen tree. Since
the basic idea underlying the myth was the annual vegetation cycle,
any resemblance to the bodily resurrection of Christ is greatly
exaggerated.
Eventually a public rehearsal of the Attis myth became an
annual event in which worshipers shared in Attis's "immortality."
Each spring the followers of Cybele would mourn for the dead Attis
in acts of fasting and flagellation.
It was only during the later Roman celebrations (after A.D.
300) of the spring festival that anything remotely connected with
a "resurrection" appears. The pine tree symbolizing Attis was cut
down and then carried corpse-like into the sanctuary. Later in the
prolonged festival, the tree was buried while the initiates worked
themselves into a frenzy that included gashing themselves with
knives. The next night, the "grave" of the tree was opened and the
"resurrection of Attis" was celebrated. But the language of these
late sources is highly ambiguous. In truth, no clear-cut,
unambiguous reference to the supposed "resurrection" of Attis
appears, even in the very late literature from the fourth century
after Christ.
The Taurobolium
The best-known rite of the cult of the Great Mother was the
taurobolium. It is important to note, however, that this ritual was
not part of the cult in its earlier stages. It entered the
religion sometime after the middle of the second century A.D.
During the ceremony, initiates stood or reclined in a pit as a
bull was slaughtered on a platform above them.[6] The initiate
would then be bathed in the warm blood of the dying animal. It has
been alleged that the taurobolium was a source for Christian
language about being washed in the blood of the lamb (Rev. 7:14) or
sprinkled with the blood of Jesus (1 Pet. 1:2). It has also been
cited as the source for Paul's teaching in Romans 6:1-4, where he
relates Christian baptism to the Christian's identification with
Christ's death and resurrection.
No notion of death and resurrection was ever part of the
taurobolium, however. The best available evidence requires us to
date the ritual about one hundred years after Paul wrote Romans
6:1-4. Not one existing text supports the claim that the
taurobolium memorialized the death and "resurrection" of Attis. The
pagan rite could not possibly have been the source for Paul's
teaching in Romans 6. Only near the end of the fourth century A.D.
did the ritual add the notion of rebirth. Several important
scholars see a Christian influence at work in this later
development.[7] It is clear, then, that the chronological
development of the rite makes it impossible for it to have
influenced first-century Christianity. The New Testament teaching
about the shedding of blood should be viewed in the context of its
Old Testament background -- the Passover and the temple sacrifice.
Mithraism
Attempts to reconstruct the beliefs and practices of Mithraism
face enormous challenges because of the scanty information that has
survived. Proponents of the cult explained the world in terms of
two ultimate and opposing principles, one good (depicted as light)
and the other evil (darkness). Human beings must choose which side
they will fight for; they are trapped in the conflict between light
and darkness. Mithra came to be regarded as the most powerful
mediator who could help humans ward off attacks from demonic
forces.[8]
The major reason why no Mithraic influence on first-century
Christianity is possible is the timing: it's all wrong! The
flowering of Mithraism occurred after the close of the New
Testament canon, much too late for it to have influenced anything
that appears in the New Testament.[9] Moreover, no monuments for
the cult can be dated earlier than A.D. 90-100, and even this
dating requires us to make some exceedingly generous assumptions.
Chronological difficulties, then, make the possibility of a
Mithraic influence on early Christianity extremely improbable.
Certainly, there remains no credible evidence for such an
influence.
STRIKING PARALLELS?
Enough has been said thus far to permit comment on one of the
major faults of the above-mentioned liberal scholars. I refer to
the frequency with which their writings evidence a careless, even
sloppy use of language. One frequently encounters scholars who
first use Christian terminology to describe pagan beliefs and
practices, and then marvel at the striking parallels they think
they have discovered. One can go a long way toward "proving" early
Christian dependence on the mysteries by describing some mystery
belief or practice in Christian terminology. J. Godwin does this in
his book, Mystery Religions in the Ancient World, which describes
the criobolium (see footnote 6) as a "blood baptism" in which the
initiate is "washed in the blood of the lamb."[10] While uninformed
readers might be stunned by this remarkable similarity to
Christianity (see Rev. 7:14), knowledgeable readers will see such
a claim as the reflection of a strong, negative bias against
Christianity.
Exaggerations and oversimplifications abound in this kind of
literature. One encounters overblown claims about alleged
likenesses between baptism and the Lord's Supper and similar
"sacraments" in certain mystery cults. Attempts to find analogies
between the resurrection of Christ and the alleged "resurrections"
of the mystery deities involve massive amounts of
oversimplification and inattention to detail.
Pagan Rituals and the Christian Sacraments
The mere fact that Christianity has a sacred meal and a washing
of the body is supposed to prove that it borrowed these ceremonies
from similar meals and washings in the pagan cults. By themselves,
of course, such outward similarities prove nothing. After all,
religious ceremonies can assume only a limited number of forms, and
they will naturally relate to important or common aspects of human
life. The more important question is the meaning of the pagan
practices. 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.[11] Sacred meals in the pre-Christian Greek mysteries
fail to prove anything since the chronology is all wrong. The Greek
ceremonies that are supposed to have influenced first-century
Christians had long since disappeared by the time we get to Jesus
and Paul. Sacred meals in such post-Christian mysteries as
Mithraism come too late.
Unlike the initiation rites of the mystery cults, Christian
baptism looks back to what a real, historical person -- Jesus
Christ -- did in history. Advocates of the mystery cults believed
their "sacraments" had the power to give the individual the
benefits of immortality in a mechanical or magical way, without his
or her undergoing any moral or spiritual transformation. This
certainly was not Paul's view, either of salvation or of the
operation of the Christian sacraments. In contrast with pagan
initiation ceremonies, Christian baptism is not a mechanical or
magical ceremony. It is clear that the sources of Christian baptism
are not to be found either in the taurobolium (which is post
first-century anyway) or in the washings of the pagan mysteries.
Its sources lie rather in the washings of purification found in the
Old Testament and in the Jewish practice of baptizing proselytes,
the latter being the most likely source for the baptistic practices
of John the Baptist.
Of all the mystery cults, only Mithraism had anything that
resembled the Lord's Supper. A piece of bread and a cup of water
were placed before initiates while the priest of Mithra spoke some
ceremonial words. But the late introduction of this ritual
precludes its having any influence upon first-century Christianity.
Claims that the Lord's Supper was derived from pagan sacred
meals are grounded in exaggerations and oversimplifications. The
supposed parallels and analogies break down completely.[12] Any
quest for the historical antecedents of the Lord's Supper is more
likely to succeed if it stays closer to the Jewish foundations of
the Christian faith than if it wanders off into the practices of
the pagan cults. The Lord's Supper looked back to a real,
historical person and to something He did in history. The occasion
for Jesus' introduction of the Christian Lord's Supper was the
Jewish Passover feast. Attempts to find pagan sources for baptism
and the Lord's Supper must be judged to fail.
The Death of the Mystery Gods and the Death of Jesus
The best way to evaluate the alleged dependence of early
Christian beliefs about Christ's death and resurrection on the
pagan myths of a dying and rising savior-god is to examine
carefully the supposed parallels. The death of Jesus differs from
the deaths of the pagan gods in at least six ways:
(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.[13]
(2) Only Jesus died for sin. As Gunter 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.)."[14]
(3) Jesus died once and for all (Heb. 7:27; 9:25-28; 10:10-14).
In contrast, the mystery gods were vegetation deities whose
repeated deaths and resuscitations depict the annual cycle of
nature.
(4) Jesus' death was an actual event in history. The death of
the mystery god appears in a mythical drama with no historical
ties; its continued rehearsal celebrates the recurring death and
rebirth of nature. The incontestable fact that the early church
believed that its proclamation of Jesus' death and resurrection was
grounded in an actual historical event makes absurd any attempt to
derive this belief from the mythical, nonhistorical stories of the
pagan cults.[15]
(5) Unlike the mystery gods, Jesus died voluntarily. Nothing
like this appears even implicitly in the mysteries.
(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. Even as Jesus
was experiencing the pain and humiliation of the cross, He was the
victor. The New Testament's mood of exultation contrasts sharply
with that of the mystery religions, whose followers wept and
mourned for the terrible fate that overtook their gods.[16]
The Risen Christ and the "Rising Savior-Gods"
Which mystery gods actually experienced a resurrection from the
dead? Certainly no early texts refer to any resurrection of Attis.
Nor is the case for a resurrection of Osiris any stronger. One can
speak of a "resurrection" in the stories of Osiris, Attis, and
Adonis only in the most extended of senses.[17] For example, after
Isis gathered together the pieces of Osiris's dismembered body,
Osiris became "Lord of the Underworld." This is a poor substitute
for a resurrection like that of Jesus Christ. And, no claim can be
made that Mithras was a dying and rising god. 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.[18] Any unbiased examination of the evidence
shows that such claims must be rejected.
Christian Rebirth and Cultic Initiation Rites
Liberal writings on the subject are full of sweeping
generalizations to the effect that early Christianity borrowed its
notion of rebirth from the pagan mysteries.[19] But the evidence
makes it clear that there was no pre-Christian doctrine of rebirth
for the Christians to borrow. There are actually very few
references to the notion of rebirth in the evidence that has
survived, and even these are either very late or very ambiguous.
They provide no help in settling the question of the source of the
New Testament use of the concept. The claim that pre-Christian
mysteries regarded their initiation rites as a kind of rebirth is
unsupported by any evidence contemporary with such alleged
practices. Instead, a view found in much later texts is read back
into earlier rites, which are then interpreted quite speculatively
as dramatic portrayals of the initiate's "new birth." The belief
that pre-Christian mysteries used "rebirth" as a technical term
lacks support from even one single text.
Most contemporary scholars maintain that the mystery use of the
concept of rebirth (testified to only in evidence dated after A.D.
300) differs so significantly from its New Testament usage that any
possibility of a close link is ruled out. The most that such
scholars are willing to concede is the possibility that some
Christians borrowed the metaphor or imagery from the common speech
of the time and recast it to fit their distinctive theological
beliefs. So even if the metaphor of rebirth was Hellenistic, its
content within Christianity was unique.[20]
SEVEN ARGUMENTS AGAINST CHRISTIAN DEPENDENCE ON THE MYSTERIES
I conclude by noting seven points that undermine liberal
efforts to show that first-century Christianity borrowed essential
beliefs and practices from the pagan mystery religions.
(1) Arguments offered to "prove" a Christian dependence on the
mysteries illustrate the logical fallacy of false cause. This
fallacy is committed whenever someone reasons that just because two
things exist side by side, one of them must have caused the other.
As we all should know, mere coincidence does not prove causal
connection. Nor does similarity prove dependence.
(2) Many alleged similarities between Christianity and the
mysteries are either greatly exaggerated or fabricated. Scholars
often describe pagan rituals in language they borrow from
Christianity. The careless use of language could lead one to speak
of a "Last Supper" in Mithraism or a "baptism" in the cult of Isis.
It is inexcusable nonsense to take the word "savior" with all of
its New Testament connotations and apply it to Osiris or Attis as
though they were savior-gods in any similar sense.
(3) The chronology is all wrong. Almost all of our sources of
information about the pagan religions alleged to have influenced
early Christianity are dated very late. We frequently find writers
quoting from documents written 300 years later than Paul in efforts
to produce ideas that allegedly influenced Paul. We must reject the
assumption that just because a cult had a certain belief or
practice in the third or fourth century after Christ, it therefore
had the same belief or practice in the first century.
(4) Paul would never have consciously borrowed from the pagan
religions. All of our information about him makes it highly
unlikely that he was in any sense influenced by pagan sources. He
placed great emphasis on his early training in a strict form of
Judaism (Phil. 3:5). He warned the Colossians against the very sort
of influence that advocates of Christian syncretism have attributed
to him, namely, letting their minds be captured by alien
speculations (Col. 2:8).
(5) Early Christianity was an exclusivistic faith. As J. Machen
explains, the mystery cults were nonexclusive. "A man could become
initiated into the mysteries of Isis or Mithras without at all
giving up his former beliefs; but if he were to be received into
the Church, according to the preaching of Paul, he must forsake all
other Saviors for the Lord Jesus Christ....Amid the prevailing
syncretism of the Greco-Roman world, the religion of Paul, with the
religion of Israel, stands absolutely alone."[21] This Christian
exclusivism should be a starting point for all reflection about the
possible relations between Christianity and its pagan competitors.
Any hint of syncretism in the New Testament would have caused
immediate controversy.
(6) Unlike the mysteries, the religion of Paul was grounded on
events that actually happened in history. The mysticism of the
mystery cults was essentially nonhistorical. Their myths were
dramas, or pictures, of what the initiate went through, not real
historical events, as Paul regarded Christ's death and resurrection
to be. The Christian affirmation that the death and resurrection of
Christ happened to a historical person at a particular time and
place has absolutely no parallel in any pagan mystery religion.
(7) What few parallels may still remain may reflect a Christian
influence on the pagan systems. As Bruce Metzger has argued, "It
must not be uncritically assumed that the Mysteries always
influenced Christianity, for it is not only possible but probable
that in certain cases, the influence moved in the opposite
direction."[22] It should not be surprising that leaders of cults
that were being successfully challenged by Christianity should do
something to counter the challenge. What better way to do this than
by offering a pagan substitute? Pagan attempts to counter the
growing influence of Christianity by imitating it are clearly
apparent in measures instituted by Julian the Apostate, who was the
Roman emperor from A.D. 361 to 363.
A FINAL WORD
Liberal efforts to undermine the uniqueness of the Christian
revelation via claims of a pagan religious influence collapse
quickly once a full account of the information is available. It is
clear that the liberal arguments exhibit astoundingly bad
scholarship. Indeed, this conclusion may be too generous. According
to one writer, a more accurate account of these bad arguments would
describe them as "prejudiced irresponsibility."[23] But in order to
become completely informed on these matters, wise readers will work
through material cited in the brief bibliography.
NOTES
1 See Ronald Nash, The Gospel and the Greeks (Richardson, TX:
Probe Books, 1992). The book was originally published in 1984
under the title, Christianity and the Hellenist World.
2 I must pass over these Greek versions of the mystery cults.
See Nash, 131-36.
3 Joseph Klausner, From Jesus to Paul (New York: Macmillan,
1943), 104.
4 See Edwin Yamauchi, "Easter -- Myth, Hallucination, or
History?" Christianity Today, 29 March 1974, 660-63.
5 See Gunter Wagner, Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries
(Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, 1967), 260ff.
6 When the ceremony used a lamb, it was the criobolium. Since
lambs cost far less than bulls, this modification was rather
common.
7 See Nash, chapter 9.
8 For more detail, see Nash, 143-48.
9 See Franz Cumont, The Mysteries of Mithra (Chicago: Open
Court, 1903), 87ff.
10 Joscelyn Godwin, Mystery Religions in the Ancient World (New
York: Harper and Row, 1981), 111.
11 See Nash, chapter 9.
12 See Herman Ridderbos, Paul: An Outline of His Theology
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1975), 24.
13 See Martin Hengel, The Son of God (Philadelphia: Fortress
Press, 1976), 26.
14 Wagner, 284.
15 See W. K. C. Guthrie, Ortheus and Greek Religion, 2d ed.
(London: Methuen, 1952), 268.
16 See A. D. Nock, "Early Gentile Christianity and Its
Hellenistic Background," in Essays on the Trinity and the
Incarnation, ed. A. E. J. Rawlinson (London: Longmans, Green,
1928), 106.
17 See J. Gresham Machen, The Origin of Paul's Religion (New
York: Macmillan, 1925), 234-35.
18 See Nash, 161-99.
19 See Nash, 173-78.
20 See W. F. Flemington, The New Testament Doctrine of Baptism
(London: SPCK, 1948), 76-81.
21 Machen, 9.
22 Bruce M. Metzger, Historical and Literary Studies: Pagan,
Jewish, and Christian (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1968), 11. The
possible parallels in view here would naturally be dated late,
after A.D. 200 for the most part.
23 Gordon H. Clark, Thales to Dewey (Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1957), 195.
Suggested Reading
- Seyoon Kim, The Origin of Paul's Gospel (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1982).
- J. Gresham Machen, The Origin of Paul's Religion (New York:
Macmillan, 1925).
- Ronald Nash, The Gospel and the Greeks (Richardson, TX: Probe
Books, 1992).
- Gunter Wagner, Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries
(Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, 1967).
End of document, CRJ0169A.TXT (original CRI file name),
"Was the New Testament Influenced by Pagan Religions?"
release A, August 31, 1994
R. Poll, CRI
A special note of thanks to Bob and Pat Hunter for their help in
the preparation of this ASCII file for BBS circulation.)
Copyright 1994 by the Christian Research Institute.
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