The Pagan Christ: Recovering the Lost Light
by Tom Harpur ISBN: 0887621457
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: The Pagan Christ: Recovering the Lost Light by Gwen NowakChristians today are caught on the cusp of a conundrum of mythic
proportions. In fact, the issue at hand is the nature of myth itself.
The area under intense scrutiny is that undefined interface between
history and myth. Christian fundamentalists argue that the Bible
should be read as history-as literal history. Other interpreters,
most recently Tom Harpur, argue that the Bible must be read
metaphorically, as myth. Many others have argued that the Bible
needs to be read both ways, including historian D. H. Akenson
[Surpassing Wonder, 1998] and theologian Marcus Borg [The Heart of
Christianity, 2003].
At the centre of the swirling debate is the man Jesus aka The
Christ.' At the margin is the mother of Jesus, most often referred
to as The Blessed Virgin Mary' but also recognized as Miriam [Hebrew]
or Maryam [Aramaic] as a result of recent quests for the historical
Mary of Nazareth.
A tumult of countervailing commentary and opinion was generated by
Mel Gibson's take' on Jesus in his movie The Passion of The Christ,
released to coincide with Christian Holy Week 2004. A portion of
the heated exchange is relevant to the history vs. myth conundrum.
Gibson's stunning [sic] portrayal of the crucifixion of Jesus caused
secular critics to argue that no human being could have survived
Gibson's version of the scourging long enough to be actually
crucified. Faithful Christians countered that Gibson's Jesus,
properly referred to as The Christ', was divine, ergo he was
superhuman, ergo he could naturally' survive all extremes of human
torture. Most agreed that Mary fulfilled her marginal movie role
as grieving mother with amazing grace.
Meanwhile millions of people have been reading Dan Brown's phenomenally
successful novel The Da Vinci Code as fact, when it is in fact a
fiction. In this novel Jesus is just a man-i.e., fully human not
divine. Brown's Jesus does not die by crucifixion, he marries Mary
Magdalene and has children whose descendants now live in France.
(Imagine Mary not as iconic Virgin Mother but as fully human
grandmother.) Biblical scholars and clergy have responded to Brown's
very real though fictional threat to the traditional, and in their
view factual, doctrine of the divinity of Jesus by producing a
plethora of pamphlets and books to prove that Brown's take' on Jesus
is a mis-take.
Tom Harpur rushed to press his latest and most controversial book
The Pagan Christ in order to catch the phenomenal wave of attention
generated by Gibson's Jesus. Harpur's stunning proclamation that
the bible is pure myth-that there never was a historical Jesus-runs
directly counter to Christian orthodoxy (Gibson's view) that Jesus
was both human and divine as well as to Brown's fictional version,
the just plain human Jesus. Given Harpur's reputation as a biblical
scholar and theologian as well as the large readership of his Toronto
Star column of many years, it is not surprising that The Pagan
Christ is selling very well. This of course generates more work for
defenders of orthodoxy who see Harpur as all-mightily misguided
when he eliminates the historical Jesus but retains a mythical/divine
Christ. There seems to be less concern that Harpur discards the
historical Mary along with her son.
Meanwhile Mary appears, albeit on the media margins, by way of the
latest book by award-winning author Lesley Hazleton. Hazleton's
catchy subtitle promises a "flesh-and-blood biography of the
Virgin Mother." Should Harpur happen to see Hazleton's Mary
displayed beside his Pagan Christ he would likely scoff. Given his
relatively recent conversion to the conclusion that Jesus never
lived as a flesh-and-blood son of any flesh-and-blood mom Harpur
would presumably dismiss Hazleton's Mary as yet another corruption
of bible history.' (He might prefer Charlene Spretnak's latest book,
Missing Mary.) The Mary of Spretnak's personal quest is not the
homespun Nazarene woman of the Gospels but rather the great mythic
"Queen of Heaven" so unceremoniously dethroned at Vatican
II.
Interestingly, both Hazleton and Harpur have spent the last several
years working out their hypotheses about the historic/mythic nature
of their subjects, both writers presumably unaware of the research
and conclusions of the other. Yet somewhat serendipitously the blue/
black/white covers of both their books do blend rather nicely, a
blend that belies the two author's very different assumptions and
resolutions about just who Jesus and Mary might have been.
Hazleton assumes that in spite of the astonishingly sparse data
that we have about the mother of Jesus in the New Testament, that
she did in fact exist-there is a real woman to be found, or recovered.
Hazleton attempts to draw a kind of composite portrait of such a
woman by sifting through the scant references to Mary [the Galilean
Maryam] in the New Testament. As well she follows in the footsteps
of other researchers looking for the historical Mary by investigating
the historical anthropological social context of the Palestine of
Mary's time.
Harpur assumes that the astonishingly sparse historical data about
Jesus outside of the New Testament is unquestionable support for
his claim that the historical Jesus never existed. Harpur labours
to present, or re-present, Jesus as one more mythic iteration of
the archetypal dying/rising/god/man clones of the ancient world.
To this end he reprises extensively the research and conclusions
of previous scholars who discovered significant parallels for NT
imagery and action in the much earlier mythos of ancient Egypt.
Harpur endorses the conclusion of these scholars that the NT Jesus
was a fully rescripted version of the god Horus of the ancient
Egyptian pantheon.
Both Hazleton and Harpur carefully address some of the same notions
and problems. Both authors offer correctives to the traditional and
negative understanding of the term pagan'; they both critically
examine the problematic second to fourth centuries c.e. when so
many gnostic gospels were repressed or destroyed; they both explore
the relevance of myth, allegory and symbol as they inform meaning
for sacred texts; and both see fundamentalist literalist interpretations
of scripture as entirely misguided. They also agree that Christianity
was never a brand new religion with a brand new story and a brand
new symbol system.
But Hazleton and Harpur do not work out of the same context. Hazleton
labours to show Jesus's mother, the Galilean Maryam, grounded in
place and time, in local geography and contemporary history, as
well as the prevailing mythologies of her time. So Hazleton offers
extended tours of Galilee and environs; she provides a lengthy
reprise of background events from contemporary Jewish historian
Josephus; and she parses in detail the Isis and Horus mythology,
with emphasis on her putative Maryam's connection with the ubiquitous
Isis. Hazleton articulates her final resolution of the tension
between the historical and mythical manifestations of Mary with
relaxed confidence: "For if Jesus was the spiritual child of
Wisdom, he was also the earthly child of Maryam. He could be seen
as having two mothers-or the two mothers, the spiritual and the
earthly, could be seen as one."
In striking contrast, Harpur labours to show Jesus grounded in
ancient mythology, specifically in the figure of the Egyptian god
Horus, a dying/rising god figure who is in turn grounded in the
great surround of nature and the cosmos. Harpur views every biblical
reference to history as mere historical dress for what is actually
Judaeo-Christianity's extended allegory about Incarnation-the
indwelling of God or divine essence in every human. He points out
that the notion of divine indwelling is not unique to Christianity
but is "the central teaching of all ancient belief systems
everywhere." In full agreement with his selected sources Harpur
states that Christianity's orthodox dogma about Incarnation is
entirely bogus when it limits Incarnation to one historical man who
lived [not!] 2000 years ago. For Harpur Incarnation is a true myth
i.e., not a fiction, a myth that, properly understood, reopens the
door to authentic cosmic Christianity. Meanwhile Harpur presses his
readers to accept his conclusion that the historical data seemingly
present in the NT does not permit a historical interpretation of
the narrative. He dismisses Josephus's several references to a
historical Jesus as entirely unreliable, a conclusion that respected
historian D. H. Akenson rejects [Surpassing Wonder]. As well, Harpur
intimates that John the Baptist of the Gospels was also a rescript
of a mythical figure in the Egyptian mythos without offering to
explain how a mythic John could have been accorded solid historical
status by Josephus. An alert reader of such a rigorously one-sided
vision might justifiably wonder if s/he is being pressured to throw
out the historical baby to preserve the mythic bathwater.
In contrast to Harpur's heated evangelical urgency to eliminate the
historical Jesus, Hazleton seems the epitome of cool objectivity
about her recovery of a historical Mary. Unfortunately, her subtitle's
promise of a biography' does prove misleading. Hazleton's Maryam
emerges as a sketchy heroine of variable narrative possibilities,
especially when Hazleton considers the ancient and bedevilled
question of the paternity of Jesus. According to Hazleton, Joseph
may have been Jesus's biological father; or he may not have existed
at all (Harpur's view). Maryam could have been a victim of rape by
a Roman soldier; on the other hand the rapist might have been a man
from the local community. Not to worry, Maryam and her illegitimate
child would easily and unquestioningly be integrated into Maryam's
extended family. None of the residual hints in the Gospels themselves
that the conception of Jesus was a public scandal intrude on
Hazleton's idealized rendering of the relationship between Maryam
and her healer/rebel son. And even though the Gospel of Luke
highlights the solidarity between Maryam and her much older relative
Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, Hazleton does not include
Elizabeth in the story. Instead she creates for Maryam a wholly
fictional, fairy/god/grandmother named Salome. Harpur might well
use Hazleton's virtual Maryam as more proof positive that the quest
for a historical Mary is futile because, as he claims, no historical
figure embodying the Virgin Mother archetype ever actually existed.
In spite of the above caveats, those who see the mythic/historic
debate as crucial and compelling should add The Pagan Christ and
Mary to their reading lists. Harpur will sharply raise the consciousness
of Christians who feel oh so cozy/comfortable with traditional
triumphalist Christian historiography and orthodoxy. The material
Harpur presents raises questions that need to be addressed, not
repressed. But Harpur's unwavering conclusion that "Christianity
began as a cult with almost wholly Pagan origins and motivations
in the first century" should not be taken as the last word on
the subject. Hazleton does offer an elegantly discursive corrective
to Harpur's overhasty splitting of history and myth. Her confident
exploration of paradox, divinity and mystery sheds light on the
dialectical tension between history and myth. Hazleton endeavours
to negotiate that tension; Harpur feels compelled to negate it.
|