Authors: Tom Harpur
ISBN-13: 9780802714497, ISBN-10: 0802714498
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Walker & Company
Date Published: March 2005
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Tom Harpur is a former Anglican priest and professor of Greek and New Testament at the University of Toronto. He is an internationally renowned writer on religious and ethical issues, and the author of nine books, including For Christ's Sake and Life After Death.
Praise for The Pagan Christ
"In this passionate hymn to Christ universal, rather than demythologizing Jesus as so many scholars do, Tom Harpur remythologizes Christ. He identifies the Christian mythos with universal themes drawn, in particular, from Egyptian wisdom, not to debunk Christian truth but to rekindle it with ancient fire." Forrest Church, author of Bringing God Home: A Spiritual Guidebook for the Journey of Your Life
"A thoroughly captivating book .... Harpur describes and shares his intellectual journey extremely powerfully." Globe and Mail
"A truly revolutionary work, devout but subversive in the best sense, with a carefully constructed narrative that challenges believers and non-believers to fundamentally re-examine 'the Greatest Story Ever Told.' ... Harpur has arrived at a dramatic conclusion, firmly held and well detailed." Edmonton Journal
Harpur (religion editor, Toronto Star; For Christ's Sake) has a simple yet challenging thesis: Jesus did not exist. He argues that what was originally meant to be taken spiritually and allegorically was, by the third century, taken literally. A former Anglican priest and former believer in the historical Jesus, Harpur now proposes that religion has an important spiritual meaning, one that was recognized by the Egyptians, and that Egyptian allegory was taken over by Christians and made historical in the character of Jesus. Harpur shows the many correspondences between Christian teaching and Egyptian teaching but tends to go a bit overboard in his interpretations, saying, for example, that "the evidence seems incontestable that the twelve disciples represent twelve deific powers, and not men." He also claims that the Egyptian pictograph representing unharmed wellness and unity was gradually transformed into the Rx symbol for prescriptions, although some argue that it comes from the Latin word recipe ("to take"). For all its faults, Harpur's book is intriguing, and it will be popular among those who question received dogma. For larger religion collections.-Augustine J. Curley, Newark Abbey, NJ Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Author's Note | viii | |
Acknowledgments | ix | |
1 | Discovery: A Bible Story I'd Never Heard Before | 1 |
2 | Setting the Stage: Myths Aren't Fairy Tales | 15 |
3 | Christianity before Christianity: Where It All Began | 27 |
4 | The Greatest Cover-up of All Time: How a Spiritual Christianity Became a Literalist Christianism | 49 |
5 | It Was All Written Before-in Egypt | |
Part I | Ancient Egyptian Religion | 67 |
Part II | Horus and Jesus Are the Same | 77 |
6 | Convincing the Sceptics | 91 |
7 | The Bible-History or Myth? The End of Fundamentalism | 115 |
8 | Seeing the Gospels with New Eyes: Sublime Myth Is Not Biography | 137 |
9 | Was There a Jesus of History? | 157 |
10 | The Only Way Ahead: Cosmic Christianity | 177 |
Epilogue | 195 | |
Appendix A | Background on Three Experts on Mythology, Religion, and Ancient Egypt | 199 |
Appendix B | More Similarities between the Egyptian Christ, Horus, and Jesus | 205 |
Appendix C | Two Strange Passages | 211 |
Glossary | 215 | |
Notes | 219 | |
Bibliography | 229 | |
Index | 237 |