4 or 5 reasons why only demons crucified Jesus in the original myth
Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2018 4:06 am
First reason: if the crucifixion happened among the earth and the moon, per Doherty-Carrier. So if you disagree with this, ignore this reason and read the following reasons.
Second reason: the entire point behind the claim that ''the Jews'' crucified Jesus could be introduced only after the 70 CE, in a time when only a so great sin by the Jewish people against their Messiah could have justified a so great historical destruction of Judea by the Romans.
Third reason: the entire point behind the claim that ''the Jews'' crucified Jesus could be introduced only in the second century, in a time when someone (early Gnostic Christians) was denying that the Son of Father was the Jewish Messiah, so that only a Jewish crime against the Son could have confirmed, at least, his Jewish identity. The Jew Paul had no need of specifying that the Son was the Jewish Messiah by pointing the Jewish identity of the his killers, since Gnostics never existed in the lifetime of Paul.
Fourth reason: Pilate is so strictly connected with the fictitious character named ''Jesus Barabbas'', and the latter is so probably a parody of the unknown ''Son of Father'' adored by the Gnostics, that the reasons for a Pilate in the story are reducible to the reasons for a Barabbas in the story: he could be introduced only in a time when occurred intra-Christian polemics between the Gnostic camp and the Judaizing camp (viz.: second century). The Jew Paul had no need of specifying that the Son was the Jewish Messiah by pointing the fact that the Romans killed him as the ''King of the Jews'', since Gnostics never existed in the lifetime of Paul.
Fifth reason: the crucifixion was for Paul a kind of 'Toccata and fugue' event: the Son descended only to be killed rapidly and in incognito by the ''rulers of this age'', and it is difficult to see the Romans and/or the Jews as the killers insofar no reason is given for them crucify the first comer entered (apparently by pure chance) under the their view. Whereas the demons would have killed any being who was seen by them descend in their ''world'' (and therefore guilty and deserving of death only for this entry).
Therefore, in the original myth only the demons crucified Jesus (even if the crucifixion happened on the earth).
Second reason: the entire point behind the claim that ''the Jews'' crucified Jesus could be introduced only after the 70 CE, in a time when only a so great sin by the Jewish people against their Messiah could have justified a so great historical destruction of Judea by the Romans.
Third reason: the entire point behind the claim that ''the Jews'' crucified Jesus could be introduced only in the second century, in a time when someone (early Gnostic Christians) was denying that the Son of Father was the Jewish Messiah, so that only a Jewish crime against the Son could have confirmed, at least, his Jewish identity. The Jew Paul had no need of specifying that the Son was the Jewish Messiah by pointing the Jewish identity of the his killers, since Gnostics never existed in the lifetime of Paul.
Fourth reason: Pilate is so strictly connected with the fictitious character named ''Jesus Barabbas'', and the latter is so probably a parody of the unknown ''Son of Father'' adored by the Gnostics, that the reasons for a Pilate in the story are reducible to the reasons for a Barabbas in the story: he could be introduced only in a time when occurred intra-Christian polemics between the Gnostic camp and the Judaizing camp (viz.: second century). The Jew Paul had no need of specifying that the Son was the Jewish Messiah by pointing the fact that the Romans killed him as the ''King of the Jews'', since Gnostics never existed in the lifetime of Paul.
Fifth reason: the crucifixion was for Paul a kind of 'Toccata and fugue' event: the Son descended only to be killed rapidly and in incognito by the ''rulers of this age'', and it is difficult to see the Romans and/or the Jews as the killers insofar no reason is given for them crucify the first comer entered (apparently by pure chance) under the their view. Whereas the demons would have killed any being who was seen by them descend in their ''world'' (and therefore guilty and deserving of death only for this entry).
Therefore, in the original myth only the demons crucified Jesus (even if the crucifixion happened on the earth).