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South Hill UMC’s New Member

Rev. Barry Burkholder has finally - after two years - accepted the transfer of an openly gay person to the South Hill United Methodist Church in Virginia.

Said gentleman (his name is not known) applied for membership in 2005 after having worshipped there for a while, joined the choir and participated in other fellowship. When he asked to join the church, he was denied because he was gay. This decision was appealed to the bishop and annual conference. All told the then-pastor Edward H. Johnson to accept the man if he was willing to take the various oaths required for membership. Johnson then appealed these ruling all the way to the United Methodist Church’s version of the Supreme Court, called “The Judicial Council”. Much to everyone’s surprise, Johnson won. The Judicial Council ruled that a pastor, as the head of the congregation, had the right to accept or reject any membership application she or he may see fit. This ruling caused something of a fire-storm in the United Methodist Church, primarily among the bishops, clergy and lay leadership. While the UMC bars “open and practicing homosexuals” from becoming clergy or being appointed to churches, it has never made any such restriction for membership. In fact, the UMC has always had a very open and welcoming membership policy. For my own part, I believe that there were two miscarriages of justice in that case. The first is that a United Methodist minister was permitted to reject a man from membership to the church in spite of the fact that he could make every necessary vow. He was able to confess Jesus Christ as his savior, put is trust in His grace, and offer his loyalty to the universal church and the United Methodist Church. These have always been our criteria. We ask that everyone admit that they are a sinner before God and that they are working on their sin. We do not ask that a person delineate each and every sin, and that they even agree to what are sins and what are not. Methodists have always opposed gambling. I would be turning away many good Christian souls at the door if I rejected for membership every person who went to Atlantic City once in a while and thought there was nothing wrong with that. For that matter, I’d turn even more away if I rejected everyone who like a beer with a steak once in a while. We do not demand perfection. We demand a willingness to work on perfection.

The second miscarriage of justice was that the person was denied for being a person who our own theology claims is “a person of sacred worth” even in and as a practicing homosexual. The pastor thought that the theology of the church was not strict enough, rejected it in violation of his covenantal obligation to uphold the church’s teaching, and then claimed that a “person of sacred worth” is not worthy enough to be a self-professed disciple of Jesus Christ in communion with other such disciples.

That is mind boggling!
 

I offer a big and warm welcome to my new brother in Christ and within the connection of the United Methodist Church, whoever you are. In fact, I applaud you for sticking with it when you could have left, gone down the street, and found another church. Your commitment has made us better Christians.

New Pastor Accepts Gay Member

Posted by North West Arkansas Online’s Morning News. Click here.

SOUTH HILL, Va. — The new pastor at a Methodist church that had barred a gay man from membership two years ago has reversed that decision and allowed the man to join.

The Rev. Barry Burkholder, the new leader of South Hill United Methodist Church, told the congregation to accept the man’s transfer from a Baptist church. The denomination has not released the name of the gay congregant.

The former pastor, the Rev. Edward H. Johnson, said in 2005 that he could not accept the man as a member because he would neither repent nor seek to change. Johnson has since been appointed pastor at another Virginia church, Dahlgren United Methodist Church.

The case led to a showdown in church courts between Johnson and the denomination’s Virginia Conference, which oversees congregations and pastors in the region.

The conference tried to bar Johnson from ministry for a year for his decision.

The Methodist Book of Discipline declares gay relationships “incompatible with Christian teaching,” and bars sexually active gays from ordination. However, the denomination has no rules on church membership for openly gay congregants. The mainline Protestant denomination advertises itself as an open and welcoming church.

Johnson appealed his punishment to the highest church court — the Judicial Council — and won. The high court concluded that pastors have the authority to decide who becomes a member of a local church and ordered Johnson reinstated to ministry.

Burkholder told United Methodist News Service last week that the gay man professed that Christ was his savior and that Jesus died for his sins, so he was ready to become a member of the church.

NOTE FROM ANDREW: The sixth paragraph “Methodist Book of Discipline” should read “United Methodist”, that being the actual name of the denomination.

Churches Warned to Follow Campaign Rules

Posted by North West Arkansas Online’s Morning News. Click here.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A lawyer for the United Methodist Church is cautioning clergy against getting caught up in the presidential race as the 2008 election heats up.

The Internal Revenue Service has been warning churches and nonprofits that they risk losing their tax-exempt status by backing a candidate or engaging in partisan activism.

“Churches should take stands on appropriate issues, but it cannot be a substantial part of their ministry,” said Jim Allen, general counsel of the Methodist Council on Finance and Administration.

To protect themselves, Allen said congregations should not invite candidates to speak from the pulpit and avoid statements at any church function that could be interpreted as endorsing or opposing a candidate. Churches, however, are allowed to distribute voters education guides and encourage people to vote.

Pro-Gay Rights Religious Billboard Vandalized

by 365Gay.com Newscenter StaffPosted: April 26, 2007 - 11:00 am ET  in this place.

(Indianapolis, Indiana) Church leaders sponsoring a pro-gay religious billboard campaign in Indianapolis say they will not be deterred after several of the huge signs were painted out.

One of the billboards was completely obliterated with black spray paint.  Another had the words “lie, lie, lie,” spray painted in red.

The campaign is being coordinated by Jesus Metropolitan Community Church of Indianapolis, with support from Faith In America and Metropolitan Community Churches worldwide.  Faith In America is a national organization devoted to ending the injustice of religion-based bigotry against gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people.

Twenty-two billboards featuring pro-gay Biblical messages were put up throughout Indianapolis. The campaign which began earlier this month (story) is to last 30 days.

One billboard proclaims “David loved Jonathan More than women. II Samuel 1:26″ another says “Jesus affirmed a gay couple.  Matthew 8:5-13.” Yet another says “Ruth loved Naomi as Adam loved Eve. Genesis 2:24; Ruth 1:14.”

Police said that to deface the signs the vandals would have needed an extension ladder. A police department spokesperson said that it would be hard to find the culprits, unless they were caught in the act.

Police stations throughout the city have been told to be on the lookout for suspicious activity around the other billboards.

Jesus MCC also has distributed about 2,000 yard signs around the city. Many of them have been pulled out of the ground in front of LGBT supporters homes.

“There was a sense of disappointment, a sense of shock, the church’s pastor, Rev. Jeff Miner, told WRTV.

Milner said he hopes a community sense of outrage helps spur debate. 

“We’re going to share a positive, powerful message how the Bible affirms gay people and we know there is going to be some opposition as we try to get that message out here,” he said.

No one has claimed responsibility for the vandalism.

The Indiana Family Institute which has been pressing for a constitutional amendment to bar same-sex marriage denounced the vandalism but also criticized the billboards messages.

“I think homosexuals are noted in the Bible in a couple of key passages that were an example of sexual sin that is decried by God,” said spokesperson Curt Smith.

Earlier this month a proposed amendment banning same-sex marriage and likely barring any benefits for unmarried couples - same, or opposite-sex - died in a committee at the legislature.

Alternate Endings

In his 2000 book “Jesus: The Evidence,” Ian Wilson summarizes six theories of what happened to Jesus after Good Friday. Let’s have a loko see.

Theories collected by Wilson

• Jesus really rose from grave.  (My Comments)

• The women who reported the empty tomb went to the wrong site.

• Some person unknown to the disciples removed the body.

• The disciples conspired to invent the resurrection story.

• The disciples were hallucinating when they thought they saw Jesus after his death.

• Jesus didn’t actually die on the cross but was resuscitated. (My Comments)

Some other theories:

• Jesus was a mortal man who died, period. Perhaps the story grew as lore.

• The disciples saw a ghost-like incarnation of Christ.

• Jesus not only didn’t really die but went into hiding with his wife, Mary Magdalene.

• Jesus birthed a child with Mary Magdalene, who fled to France with the child (da Vinci Code premise).

• Jesus and Mary had a son, Judah, and they were all buried in a family tomb in Jerusalem (Premise of “The Lost Tomb of Jesus” on Discovery Channel).  (My Comments)

More (My Comments) to follow . . .

God Robs a Bank!

By Tracy Majka, Court TV

A suspect who apparently had delusions of grandeur claimed to be the Almighty himself when he allegedly tried to take money from a Texas bank, according to authorities. The would-be deity’s earthly saga began on April 17, 2007, around 2 p.m. in Forth Worth, Texas.

Police said the man stopped his pickup truck along a highway exit ramp, got out and attempted to wave motorists around his vehicle. When a police officer approached him, the man allegedly said, “I am God. Don’t you know me?” The officer ordered him to move along, and the man did. He drove to Frost Bank. He entered the bank, told a teller he had a weapon and demanded cash, police said. The teller handed over an undisclosed amount of money. Before he left, the suspect instructed the teller not to call police, saying, “No one can see me because I am God.”

But the suspect’s entrance and exit was clearly captured on surveillance video, according to Lieutenant Dean Sullivan of the Forth Worth Police Department. Sullivan said the man never displayed a gun. “He never hurt anybody,” he said. “But he’s a really big guy, so he scared some people.” Later that night, police arrested suspect Frank Anthony Powell, 40, in a Forth Worth neighborhood, after a resident reported a man walking through his neighborhood and acting “strangely.” When police arrived, they recognized Powell from the bank surveillance video, Sullivan said. After a struggle, police Tasered Powell and arrested him. He is currently in a Forth Worth hospital undergoing a mental evaluation and will be charged with robbery of a financial institution, Sullivan said. The money has not yet been recovered. No injuries were reported. And no miracles were performed. All told, he stole more than $5,000 worth of gum, police said.   

The Enemy of My Enemy . . .

There is that old saying: “The enemy of my enemy is my friend.”

 

With that in mind, I offer a hearty congratulations to Wiccans and Neo-Pagans who today won the right to have their pentagram placed on U.S. military gravestone markers. After nearly a month of legal bickering, the Department of Veteran’s Affairs finally allowed the pentagram to be used on the grave markers of soldiers who confessed to be neo-pagans or wiccans.

 

Each Wiccan Altar Is Crafted As It Was To Be My Own

Religious faith has been increasingly marginalized and repressed in the public square of American discourse. Please do not give in to certain columnists and commentators who like to suggest otherwise. Under the banner of “offensive”, free speech (religious and otherwise) is becoming a rarer and more precious commodity. Sometimes, in my more disillusioned moments, I suspect that I might live to see a push to prevent churches from celebrating Easter on the premise that the raising of Jesus from the dead is offensive to supporters of capital punishment, Italians, pagans, Jews, governors, and members of the Israeli Sanhedrin (all of whose decision was over turned that day).

 

This victory by Wiccans is a victory for all people of faith, allowing us to keep our religious integrity, to worship the divine as we each see fit, and to express that faith openly to anyone who might come across our tombstone.

 

A good day for all of us…

 

See AP Story here.

Bleeding Sudan

Darfur has been embroiled in a deadly conflict for over three years.  At least 400,000 people have been killed; more than 2 million innocent civilians have been forced to flee their homes and now live in displaced-persons camps in Sudan or in refugee camps in neighboring Chad; and more than 3.5 million men, women, and children are completely reliant on international aid for survival. Not since the Rwandan genocide of 1994 has the world seen such a calculated campaign of displacement, starvation, rape, and mass slaughter.

Since early 2003, Sudanese armed forces and Sudanese government-backed militia known as “Janjaweed” have been fighting two rebel groups in Darfur, the Sudanese Liberation Army/Movement (SLA/SLM) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM). The stated political aim of the rebels has been to compel the government of Sudan to address underdevelopment and the political marginalization of the region.  In response, the Sudanese government’s regular armed forces and the Janjaweed – largely composed of fighters of nomadic background – have targeted civilian populations and ethnic groups from which the rebels primarily draw their support – the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa.

The Bush Administration has recognized these atrocities – carried out against civilians primarily by the government of Sudan and its allied Janjaweed militias – as “genocide”.  António Guterres, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, has described the situation in Sudan and Chad as “the largest and most complex humanitarian problem on the globe.”  The Sudanese government and the Janjaweed militias are responsible for the burning and destruction of hundreds of rural villages, the killing of tens of thousands of people and rape and assault of thousands of women and girls.

With much international pressure, the Darfur Peace Agreement was brokered in May 2006 between the government of Sudan and one faction of Darfur rebels. However, deadlines have been ignored and the violence has escalated, with in-fighting among the various rebel groups and factions dramatically increasing and adding a new layer of complexity to the conflict. This violence has made it dangerous, if not impossible, for most of the millions of displaced persons to return to their homes. Humanitarian aid agencies face growing obstacles to bringing widespread relief.  In August 2006, the UN’s top humanitarian official Jan Egeland stated that the situation in Darfur is “going from real bad to catastrophic.”  Indeed, the violence in Darfur rages on with government-backed militias still attacking civilian populations with impunity.

On July 30, 2004, the UN Security Council adopted resolution 1556 demanding that the government of Sudan disarm the Janjaweed.  This same demand is also an important part of the Darfur Peace Agreement signed in May of 2006.  On August 31, 2006, the Security Council took the further step of authorizing a strong UN peacekeeping force for Darfur by passing resolution 1706.  Despite these actions, the Janjaweed are still active and free to commit the same genocidal crimes against civilians in Darfur with the aid of the Sudanese government.

International experts agree that the United Nations Security Council must deploy a peacekeeping force with a mandate to protect civilians immediately. Until it arrives, the under-funded and overwhelmed African Union monitoring mission must be bolstered. And governments and international institutions must provide and ensure access to sufficient humanitarian aid for those in need.

HELP NOW!
 

The Anti-Christ comes to Blacksburg, VA

Deep in the dark recesses of the Christian community lurks a demonic little group led by a man named Fred Phelps. Phelps has for years been engaged in what he believes is a moral crusade against the United States and it’s fall from some perceived ethical standard of long ago. He believes that the Unites States has fallen from grace by tolerating homosexuals and we are being punished by God for our sins. He blames gays for the destruction of the Challenger, 9/11, the War in Iraq, and – most recently – the shootings at Virginia Tech. He sometimes refers to gays and lesbians as “these beasts”. He claims the Fire Fighters who died at the World Trade Center and Mr. Rogers are in Hell (not joking!).

And just in case you are not sure that Phelps is serious about blamingGo to fullsize image homosexual persons for all the evils in the world, just check out his website. It is poetically enough called www.godhatesfags.com.  Yup, you read that right. For a hoot, check out the companion sight set up by Phelps in opposition to the lenient laws of Sweden www.godhatessweden.com (Again, not a joke!) Oh yes, Fred Phelps also hates Ronald Reagan, Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist, NFL star Reggie White, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), Jews, Catholics, Scandinavians, and the Irish. Lastly, he claims Al Gore is a “famous fag pimp”. I guess those websites are still pending.

One of Fred Phelps’ more – shall we say – endearing qualities is that he likes to picket funerals. He picketed the funeral of Matthew Shepherd, the young man who was brutally assaulted in Laramie, Wyoming and strung up on a fence facing a road for all to see. He ultimately died after a few days from a fracture that ran from the back of his head to the front of his right ear. 22 year old Shepherd was gay and his attacker admitted this was the reason they attacked and killed the boy.

Every major church – even the most conservative in the America – condemned the attack as brutal, monstrous and opposed to the best values that God commands for each and every one of us. Every one. Even the churches that condemn homosexuality says that – while Shepherd was a sinner – what those two men did to him was worse.Everyone except Fred Phelps, who showed up with a brigade to picket the funeral of Shepherd and denounce any public outcry for the execution of a gay man.

Phelps has in recent years taken to picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq. He believed that Saddam Hussein was the only Muslim leader in the Middle East who allowed the Gospel to be preached and supported him. He believes that 9/11 was God’s condemnation of America for being tolerant to gays and lesbians, and he believes that the present troubles in Iraq are the direct result of God’s displeasure. 

Just this week he announced he would be picketing the funerals for the victims of Seung-Hui Cho, the Virginia Tech mass murderer. Not to fear. Fred is not losing his edge. He believes that Cho is in Hell too, but he believes that Cho “was also fulfilling the word of God.” Apparently, we all needed a wake up call to realize just how mad God was. 

A great theologian once wrote that Christians do not need to contend with non-believers for the conversion of the world. We need to contend with other Christians who are – more often than not – the best argument against Jesus Christ. The Bible says that anyone who stands against the Gospel of Jesus Christ is effectively anti-Christ (2 Thessalonians 2:1-4). Rev. Phelps, I say this in all sincerity and biblical faithfulness: you are the Antichrist, dear sir.

Fred, the best I can pray for you is that one day, when you are cast into the “outer darkness where there is great weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Matt. 22:13-14), you will look around and not find a single Irishman, Swede or homosexual. Perhaps then, as you have a moment to pause because Lucifer gags briefly before swallowing you down, you will realize just how horribly, deeply, and truly you have betrayed the Lord and God you once hoped to serve. 

And for that dreadful day I would say, “God be with you” but I know there are some places even He will not go. May it be so, Amen.

Baigent and the Crucifixion (”Jesus Papers” Response)

I promised to get back to Michael Baigent’s arguments in the Jesus Papers regarding the claim that Jesus of Nazareth survived the crucifixion. There is more to be said about his other claims within this book, but they will have to wait.

Let us look at six of his principal claims:

Argument 1:    Pontius Pilate, who was responsible for ordering the death of Jesus of Nazareth on the cross, actually made a secret deal to save the Galilean’s life. 

Contra:           There is, however, no evidence that this arrangement took place. Baigent’s argument that there was such an agreement is predicated on his assumption that Jesus survived the crucifixion. However, even if Jesus were to have actually survived the crucifixion, there is no guarantee that this would have been at the arrangement of Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of the province of Judea.

            The consequence which Baigent draws from his supposition that Jesus survives is not warranted deduction. Furthermore, it is based on assumptions which our historical records, such as they are, do not back up and, even more, suggest against. No record of the crucifixion suggests any arrangement with Jesus.

Argument 2:  The reason Baigent gives for this arrangement was to solve a problem Jesus and Pontius Pilate had in common. Pilate needed to appease the crowd which was clamoring for the death of Jesus. At the same time, he wanted to let Jesus live, since he argued Jews should pay their taxes to Rome.

Contra:           This is the place where I think Baigent slips deepest into historical fantasy. Having postulated an arrangement between the two of them, Baigent needs to offer a convincing explanation for the genesis of this agreement.

But honestly, why would a Roman governor be making deals with a Galilean peasant? Jesus was not a citizen of Judea (but of the Galillee). He was not a Roman citizen, and so deserved no special protection from the Emperor and his servants (like Pilate). Jesus was a man of no special wealth or status, something Romans were known to respect.  Furthermore, all historical research indicates that Jesus’ movement was of very small number and influence at the time of his execution.

The very idea that the two of them would have made an arrangement to prevent Jesus’ death is like the President of the United States making a covert agreement that the Pentagon should protect an individual ant in my backyard from being step on by one of my dogs. The very idea that Pilate cared more than a little about the execution of Jesus is preposterous.

Argument 3:  It was possible for a person to survive crucifixion, according to Michael Baigent. He cites the writings of the 1st century Jewish historian Josephus. He speaks about a time when he asked for three of his friends to be taken off of crosses, where they had been crucified. The three were taken down, two died, and one survived.

Contra:           I must concede that a person can survive crucifixion. And I will concede that Baigent could have offered more than a few more cases where people were known to have survived crucifixion, whether because of the manner in which it was done or because Roman authorities looked the other way while friends made rescue attempts.

However, the very suggestion that a person “can” survive crucifixion does not mean that a person “has” survived crucifixion. Let me put it this way: A person can survive a gun shot to the head. However, this does not mean that Ernest Hemmingway is actually alive and sipping whiskey in Cuba somewhere. That one person survived crucifixion (or even many) does not mean that this individual man (Jesus) has survived.

The Gospel accounts are suspect for defense here, since Baigent suggests that they are part of the cover up. So, lets use Josephus. That’s the guy Baigent cites to prove that a person can survive a crucifixion. Josephus, in his Antiquities, Book 18, Chapter 3.3, states clearly that Jesus was crucified and killed the behest of Pontius Pilate.
Argument 4:    In order to keep up the charade, Jesus would have been sedated in order to appear as though he had died on the cross. Later, when he was taken down, he would have been revived. This would work, argues Baigent, if you reduce the trauma through drugs, get the person off the cross as soon as possible, and so long as the person receive medical attention quickly. Baigent claims the sponge soaked in vinegar was the means of drugging Jesus. It also induced his apparent (though not actual) death on the cross.

Contra:           Again, it should be noted that there is no evidence at all that this happened. The New Testament says that Jesus was offered some oxoV (John 19:23) meaning sour wine or vinegar.  However, John never says that Jesus drank and, given the account of two other gospels, it seems likely that he did not. Mark 15 says Jesus was offered “esmurnismenon oinon” (wine mixed with myrrh) , but adds that “oV de ouk elaben” (which he did not take). Matthew 27 accounts that prior to the crucifixion, Jesus was offered “oinon meta colhV memigmenon” (wine mixed with gall). However, this account also states clearly enough that “ouk hqelhsen piein” (he chose not to drink). Luke alone mentions nothing on this point.
            So the best argument Baigent could make is that while there may or may not have been a plan to save Jesus from death, and while this plan may or may not have included an attempt to drug Jesus to save him from the trauma of being crucified, Jesus seems to have chosen not to take this drug at the end.

            The only gospel that allows Baigent to suggest that Jesus actually drank, John, concludes his crucifixion narrative with Jesus being harpooned with a spear (19:34). So, even hear, had Jesus survived by taking some sort of drug, he would certainly have been killed at that moment.

Argument 5:    Baigent claims that this charade was further aided by the disciples of Jesus who were given custody of the body within a relatively short time. After a few hours, Jesus was handed over to Joseph of Arimathea and the other disciples. Baigent claims that Jesus was revived shortly after.

            Baigent find support for this is the Gospels. When Joseph of Arimathea goes to Pilate to ask for the body of Jesus, he uses the work “soma”, or living body. When Pilate grant Joseph’s request, he gives Joseph Jesus’ “ptoma”, or dead corpse. Clearly, Joseph of Arimathea knows that Jesus is still alive.

Contra:           Let me do something risky and offer anecdotal evidence of this one. But I am willing to guess that everyone here will side with me on this one. I’ve done many funerals and I have been at many death beds with family members in my capacity as a minister. I have never once heard a family member or friend refer to the remains of their loved one as “their corpse”. I have heard doctors and funeral workers refer to “the corpse” from time to time. The word most often used for the remains of their loved one is “their body”, the same term that was applied to the living instrument of their living souls.

            Why? Because death is hard and this is a minute form of denial. Because it is disrespectful. Because even a dead person is alive forever (whether in heaven or just in our hearts and memories). It does not take a nuclear physicist to see why Joseph would not refer to “the corpse” of his beloved friend. I would not either, even if it would be technically more correct.

            Pontius Pilate, however, would not care one way or another. As for as he was concerned, all the remains of the dead on crosses were technically corpses. As a bureaucrat it would have been second nature for him to use technical terms for a persons’ physical remains.

Argument 6:    Jesus is brought down from the cross quickly (three hours), and as quickly as possible into the tomb where under the cover of darkness, the disciples return with drugs to treat his bleeding and to try to revive him. This is verified by the Gospels which state that Joseph and Nicodemus visited his tomb during the night and brought with them herbs and spices such as aloe and myrrh. Aloe and myrrh are more proper for a living person being healed than a dead person.

Contra:           It is only in one Gospel that we hear about the specific ointments which were included in the burial of Jesus. Aloe and myrrh are mentioned in John 19:39-40, where it is specifically stated that they are wrapped into the burial shroud of Jesus. Of course, this begs the question as to why Baigent accepts one fact but not the other. Why does he get to have aloe and myrrh being for healing and the saving of Jesus’ life, but not the dead body that these spices are wrapped into? Why the spices but not the dead body? This is “pick and choose” history to say the least.

            But this all ignores the far more obvious reason such spices would have been present at the burial of Jesus. Dead bodies smell strong and they smell bad. Aloe and myrrh smell strong and they smell good. Almost every known culture of the ancient world put spices on the dead to cover up the smell of decomposition. Aloe and myrrh were among the most common in the Middle East for this practice. And John, the Gospel author, even explains this in the texts (19:40). Again, I wonder by Baigent gets to have the spices and the anointing, but he gets to dismiss John’s own explanation of why they were there and the fact that they were placed on a dead body. This is still more “pick and choose” history.

Argument Conclusion:  Given all his supposed evidence, Baigent believes that it is clear Jesus must have survived the crucifixion.

Contra Conclusion:    With all his arguments, there is one last thing which Baigent is at pains to explain. See, all of the accounts of the death of Jesus are in agreement that he actually died.

If Jesus had not died, why would the early Christians have covered this up? It would have been extraordinarily good news for his followers. They would have been shouting it from the roof tops. They would have claimed that God had delivered Jesus and this showed the triumph of God’s will.

Baigent’s argument would only make sense if the early disciples had already decided that they were going to make Jesus into a God, and build a huge international organization around his myth centered on the Vatican, a pope and all that. But that is putting the cart before the horse to say the least.

They would have had every reason to show that God had saved Jesus from death. And that is in fact the reason for the disciples’ joyful proclamation of Easter. They are so happy exactly because God has saved Jesus from the grave and because God nullified the crucifixion. Why would they make up something as improbably as a resurrection (for which there was not specific Jewish precedent at the time), when they would have had a far clearer and easier to grasp explanation for the survival of Jesus at hand?

Baigent’s arguments are ludicrous to say the least.