Hare
Jesus
Christianity's
Hindu Heritage
Stephen
Van Eck
"Can one go upon hot coals, and his
feet not be burned" (Prov. 6:28)? But of course!
Objective and open-minded scholars long
ago conceded that Christianity is at heart a revamped form of Judaism. In the
process of its development as something distinct from its mother religion, it
became hybridized with so much pagan influence that it ultimately alienated its
original Jewish base and became predominantly Gentile. The source of this pagan
influence is varied and vague in the minds of most advanced Bible critics, but
it may owe more to Hinduism than most people suspect.
The average person does not connect
India with the ancient Middle East, but the existence of some trade between
these two regions is documented, even in the Bible. Note the reference to
spikenard in the Song of Solomon (1:12 ; 4:13-14 ) and in the Gospels (Mark
14:3 ; John 12:3 ). This is an aromatic oil-producing plant (Nardostachys
jatamansi) that the Arabs call sunbul hindi and obtained in trade with India.
It is axiomatic that influence follows
trade, and the vibrant culture of India could not help but impact on anyone
exposed to it. The influence on Judaism came for the most part indirectly,
however, via the Persians and the Chaldeans, who dealt with India on a more
direct basis. (Indeed, the Aryans, who invaded and transformed India over 1500
years before Christ, were of the same people who brought ancient Persia to its
greatest glory. Persia's name today--Iran--is a corruption of Aryan.) The
ancient Judeans absorbed much of this secondhand influence during the
Babylonian captivity of the sixth century B. C., and during the
intertestamental period, when Alexandria became the crossroads of the world,
intellectuals both Jew and Gentile were exposed to a variety of ideas, some of
which originated on the subcontinent.
The precise pattern of influence was
neither observed nor documented, but it can be inferred from the numerous
uncanny similarities in concept and expression, not all of which can be
coincidental. Let us examine the telltale evidence (none of which, it may be
added, depends upon any apocryphal account of the alleged "lost
years" of Jesus in India).
Most Christians are familiar with
Galatians 6:7 , "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap."
Less known is Proverbs 26:27 , "Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall therein,
and he that rolleth a stone, it will return upon him." Both express the
Hindu principle of karma (the sum and the consequences of a person's actions
during the successive phases of his existence), but since no direct connection
can be deduced, we'll merely consider it an interesting coincidence and move
on.
The concept of a soul that is
distinguishable from the body and can exist independently of it is alien to
Judaism. It is first known in Hinduism. Only after the Babylonian captivity did
any such concept arise among the Jews, and it is in the epistles of Paul, the
"debtor to both the Greeks and the Barbarians," that the notion
receives its first clear expression. (See 2 Corinthians 5:8 and 12:3 .)
The Brahmin caste of the Hindus are said
to be "twice-born" and have a ritual in which they are "born in
the spirit." Could this be the ultimate source of the Christian "born
again" concept (John 3:3 )?
The deification of Christ is a
phenomenon often attributed to the apotheosis of emperors and heroes in the
Greco-Roman world. These, however, were cases of men becoming gods. In the
Jesus story, the Divinity takes human form, god becoming man. This is a
familiar occurrence in Hinduism and in other theologies of the region. Indeed,
one obstacle to the spread of Christianity in India, which was attempted as
early as the first century, was the frustrating tendency of the Hindus to
understand Jesus as the latest avatar (incarnation) of Vishnu.
It is in the doctrine of the Trinity
that the Hindu influence may be most clearly felt. Unknown to most Christians,
Hinduism has a Trinity (or Trimurti) too: Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva, who have
the appellations the Creator, the Preserver, and the Destroyer (and
Regenerator). This corresponds to the Christian Trinity in which God created
the heavens and the earth, Jesus saves, and the Holy Spirit is referred to as a
regenerator (Titus 3:5 ). It is interesting to note, furthermore, that the Holy
Spirit is sometimes depicted as a dove, while the Hebrew language uses the same
term for both "dove" and "destroyer"!
The Trinity was a major stumblingblock
for the Jews, who adhered to strict monotheism. The inherent polytheism in the
Trinity doctrine cannot be explained away with the nonsensical claim that three
is one and one is three. Besides, Jesus himself undermined any pretense of
triunity (or omnipotence, for that matter) in Matthew 19:17 , "And he said
unto them, Why callest thou me good? There is none good but one, that is
God...." Matthew 20:23 ; Mark 14:32 ; John 5:30 ; 7:16 and 14:28 also
contradict the Trinitarian concept.
The Hindu scriptures, which are the
oldest in the world, contain a number of astonishingly familiar expressions.
The Upanishads mention things like "the blind led by the blind"
(Matt. 15:14 ) and God's being "the same yesterday, today, and
tomorrow" (Heb. 13:8 ). The path is said to be "narrow and difficult
to tread" (Matt. 7:14 ). They also make reference to "a voice from
out of the fire" (Ex. 3:4 ) and a man's face shining after encountering
God (Ex. 34:29 ). They refer to those who are "wise in their own
conceits" (Prov. 34:29 ; Rom. 12:16 ), warn against "fleshly
desires" (1 Pet. 2:11 ), and advise that "it is not by works alone
that one attains the Eternal" (Gal. 2:16 ]), and "to many it is not
given" to know of metaphysical truth (Matt. 13:11 ). They describe the
Self as "smaller than a mustard seed" (Matt. 17:20 ), and they speak
of "the highest knowledge, having drunk of which, one never thirsts"
(John 4:14 ). And how about this: "Man does not live by breath alone, but
by him in whom is the power of breath" (Matt. 4:4 )?
Sounds a little too familiar, I'd say!
Then there is the Hindu epic, the
Bhagavad-Gita, a story of the second person of the Hindu Trinity, who took
human form as Krishna. Some have considered him a model for the Christ, and
it's hard to argue against that when he says things like, "I am the
beginning, the middle, and the end" (BG 10:20 vs. Rev. 1:8 ). His advent
was heralded by a pious old man named Asita, who could die happy knowing of his
arrival, a story paralleling that of Simeon in Luke 2:25 . Krishna's mission
was to give directions to "the kingdom of God" (BG 2:72), and he
warned of "stumbling blocks" along the way (BG 3:34; 1 Cor. 1:23 ;
Rev. 2:14 ). The essential thrust of Krishna's sayings, uttered to a beloved
disciple, sometimes seems to coincide with Jesus or the Bible. Compare
"those who are wise lament neither for the living nor the dead" (BG
2:11) with the sense of Jesus' advice to "let the dead bury their own
dead" (Matt. 8:22 ). Krishna's saying, "I envy no man, nor am I
partial to anyone; I am equal to all" (BG 9:29) is a lot like the idea
that God is no respecter of persons (Rom. 2:11 ; see also Matt. 6:45 ). And
"one who is equal to friends and enemies... is very dear to me" (BG
12:18) is reminiscent of "love your enemies" (Matt. 6:44 ). Krishna
also said that "by human calculation, a thousand ages taken together is
the duration of Brahma's one day" (BG 8:17), which is very similar to 2
Peter 3:8 .
In fairness, however, one purported
similarity needs to be discredited. Skeptics sometimes cite Kersey Graves in
Sixteen Crucified Saviors or Godfrey Higgin's Anacalypsis (which Graves drew
from) in asserting that Krishna was a crucified deity. No such event occurred
in the Gita or in any recognized Hindu scripture. Given the pronounced
syncretic tendency of Hinduism, it is safe to assume that any odd tales of
Krishna's being crucified arose only after the existence of Christian
proselytism, in imitation of the Christian narrative. It is neither authentic
to Hinduism nor is Hinduism the source of that portion of the Christian
narrative. The same may be said for most of the purported nativity stories. In
my opinion, both Higgins and Graves are highly unreliable sources and should be
ignored.
That notwithstanding, the existence of
uncanny similarities in concept and phraseology in those Hindu writings that
are both ancient and authentic leaves Christians in a difficult quandary. With
the historical reality of Indian influence on the Middle East being an
established fact, how can they account for these similarities with anything
less feeble than coincidence, or less bizarre than the notion of "Satanic
foreknowledge and duplication," which is sometimes invoked to explain the
similarities of Judeo-Christian precursors?
I'll close with Ecclesiastes 1:10 ,
another inconvenient and uncomfortable passage: "Is there anything whereof
it may be said, See, this is new? It hath been already of old time, which was
before us."