Jesus
and Gurus
ChristianAnswers.Net
Did Jesus go to India as a child and learn
from Hindu Gurus?
Modern Hindu guru.
Many New Agers have claimed that Jesus went to
India as a child to learn from Hindu gurus. He allegedly later went to Israel and
performed miracles learned from these gurus, and taught doctrines He derived
from them. Such an idea is preposterous.
To begin with, Jesus' teaching about God was
not pantheistic ("all is God"), as was that of the gurus of India.
Jesus never cited the Hindu Vedas but always
the Jewish Old Testament which proclaimed the monotheistic God of Judaism (see
Mark 12:29). There is virtually NO evidence that Jesus studied in India. Though
the Gospels do not directly address Jesus' childhood, there are convincing
indirect evidences that He remained in Palestine. Luke 2:52 summarizes Jesus'
life from age 12: "And Jesus kept increasing in wisdom and stature, and in
favor with God and man."
Jesus, of course, was both God and human. As
God, He was omniscient (all-knowing) and all-wise; He could never "grow in
wisdom" from the divine perspective. In His humanity, however, He probably
gained wisdom as did other Jewish boys, by studying the Old Testament
Scriptures (Psalm 1:2) and listening to the wisdom of the elders.
Jesus was known in His community as a
carpenter (Mark 6:3) and a carpenter's son (Matthew 13:55). It was customary
among the Jews for fathers to teach their sons a trade. Joseph would have
taught Jesus the trade of carpentry as Jesus matured in the Palestine area.
That carpentry played a role in His life is clear because some of His parables
and teachings drew upon that experience. For example, He told of building a
house on rock as opposed to sand (Matthew 7:24-27). Luke 4:16 is a key text to
refute the idea that Jesus went to India. At the beginning of His three-year
ministry, Jesus "came to Nazareth, where He had been brought up; and as
was His custom, He entered the synagogue on the Sabbath and stood up to
read." Jesus was brought up in Nazareth, not India, and His custom was to
visit the synagogue, not Hindu temples. After Jesus finished reading on this
occasion, "all were speaking well of Him, and wondering at the gracious
words which were falling from His lips; and they were saying, 'Is this not
Joseph's son?'" (Luke 4:22). Those in the synagogue recognized Jesus as a
local resident. It is also noteworthy that Jesus read from the Old Testament
Scriptures. The Old Testament, for which Jesus often displayed reverence (see
Matthew 5:18), warns about staying away from false gods and religious systems
(Exodus 20:2-3; 34:14; Deuteronomy 6:14; 13:10; 2 Kings 17:35) -- this would
include Hinduism . The Old Testament clearly distinguishes the creation from
the Creator, unlike Eastern (Hindu) pantheism, and teaches the need for
redemption, not enlightenment. Author: Dr. Ron Rhodes of Reasoning from the
Scriptures Ministries.
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