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The Pagan Christ: Is Blind Faith Killing Christianity?
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Average Rating: out of 14 Reviews
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Price: $14.95
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Sale: $8.39
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Manufacturer: Walker & Company
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EAN (European Article Number): 9780802777416
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Tom Harpur
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Publisher: Walker & Company
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Dewey Decimal Number: 270
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Publication Date: 2006-05-02
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Reading Level: 260
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Description: For forty years and in nine previous books, scholar and religious commentator Tom Harpur has challenged church orthodoxy and guided thousands of readers on subjects as controversial as the true nature of Christ and life after death. Now, in his most radical and groundbreaking work, Harpur digs deep into the origins of Christianity. What he has discovered will have a profound effect on the way we think about religion.
Long before the advent of Jesus Christ, the Egyptians and other peoples believed in the coming of a messiah, a madonna and her child, a virgin birth, and the incarnation of the spirit in flesh. The early Christian church accepted these ancient truths as the very tenets of Christianity but disavowed their origins. What began as a universal belief system based on myth and allegory became instead, in the third and fourth centuries A.D., a ritualistic institution headed by ultraconservative literalists. “The transcendent meaning of glorious myths and symbols was reduced to miraculous, quite unbelievable events. The truth that Christ was to come in man, that the Christ principle was potentially in each of us, was changed to the exclusivist teaching that the Christ had come as a man.”
Harpur’s message is clear: Our blind faith in literalism is killing Christianity. Only with a return to an inclusive religion will we gain a true understanding of who we are and who we are intended to become. Drawing on the work of scholars such as Gerald Massey and Alvin Boyd Kuhn, Tom Harpur has written a book of rare insight and power.
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Customer Reviews
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Review Summary: Interesting But Watch Titles |
Date: 2008-12-28 |
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Details: Very good book but watch the titles.....two different subtitles let me to believe I was buying two different books. |
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Review Summary: Myths Reviewed |
Date: 2008-05-17 |
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Details: Factions in the world that don't believe in Jesus will love this excellent book. Research is solid and goes along with a recent BBC piece on Egypt and correlations to a higher power before there was a Jesus. Christians will burn this book but they should remember that Christians burned at one time, themselves outcasts. |
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Review Summary: The Street of a Thousand Blossoms by Gail Tsukiyama |
Date: 2008-01-12 |
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Details: Gail Tsukiyama has done it again. This book is beautifully crafted. The subject matter is a difficult one as the story takes place during the Second World War from the perspective of the Japanese public. She skillfully draws us into the lives of several Japanese families at the same time showing us how their traditions and ancient arts are interrupted and sometimes lost altogether.
The lack of concern for the people of a country whose government has decided to go to war is well demonstrated. Tsukiyama's book shows the poor attempts to shelter people from such extreme assaults as bombing and starvation, while trying to maintain family values. Their struggle to survive strikes to the very heart.
Hadrianna Thorpe |
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Review Summary: The Pagan Christ - Review |
Date: 2007-12-13 |
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Details: Recently the CBC in Canada aired a program which examined the views put forward by Theologian Tom Harpur in his bestselling book - The Pagan Christ. Harpur's book challenged the literalist view of Christianity and it is not the first time this position has been brought to light.
The mythological figure of the dead and resurrected god-man have long been exposed as universal myth motif that has been enshrined by a long list of cultures predating Christianity as we know it today. The universality of this motif has been meticulously documented, not only by Harpur and one of his main references Gerald Massey, but also the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung and more recently Joseph Campbell. Jung wrote a detailed account of the origins of Christian myth motifs in "Symbols of Transformation" first compiled in 1920. He was later followed by Joseph Campbell whose most recognized work amongst many was "The Hero With A Thousand Faces".
Massey's comparative examination of Christian religon and Egyptian myth produced a staggering number of points of comparison - roughly two hundred in number. His entire volume works are freely available online for examination. While the documentary focused mainly on the Egyptian figures of the Horus and Isis, they could have extended the list to many more mythological figures that share the same characteristics. A detailed comparative examination is included in Harpur's book and reveals a list that includes Tammuz, Adonis, Mithras, Dionysus, Krishna, amongst many others shared these key characteristics that are attributed exclusively to Christ - miraculous births, turning water into wine, death and resurrection, a spiritual leader accompanied by twelve deciples, to name only a few. Many of these motifs are not only confined to the Mediteranean cultures but can been seen in north american myths as well pointing to the fact that they products of human imagination that attempt in symbolic form to enshrine the immeasurable value of the human spirit.
This spirit is myopically viewed as the life force found in the human emotion of love and is in many cultures extended to be the source of a broader range of qualtities that include creativity, memory and in some instances the very "the seat of intelligence". The journey of the archetypical hero in all of these myths was an attempt to enshrine the journey of self-discovery in stories so that they would inspire this inward journey and in turn draw the power of this force outward to the benefit of society.
The path of literalism has left humanity and our collective psyche in a state of fragmentation by obsessing over the tribal peacock feathers of cultural forms and lead us to our present deplorable state that can nowhere be seen more clearly in the eternal Greek tradgedy of the middle east where the world's great religons face off in the endless insanity of war while they defend mythological belief structures that were originally intended to unite humanity by recognizing the common element of the human spirit, or as Joeseph Campbell aptly put it "they're dying for metaphors".
Harper's work is an attempt to draw those people whose adoration of the beauty and power of the human spirit has been lost in the outward projected symbolic forms of religon. The release of the outer forms is the first step in the journey to rediscover what myths were originally intended to represent - the inward journey of self-discovery. To inspire this journey is the goal of Harpur's book. The book is not anti-christian and the idea that it is anti-christian leaves one with great concern as to whether his critics even opened it. Harpur is not requesting that readers dismiss the human spirit, but embrace it on the hopes that as a species we can more forward united and in peace.
Steve - Toronto |
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Review Summary: Highly recommended |
Date: 2007-12-12 |
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Details: Some critics would like to persuade us that Tom Harpur is alone in his opinion but if they would take the time to read the works of other great minds such as C. J. Jung, Joseph Campbell, G.A. Wells and Northrop Frye it will be clear that these scholars are all of the same thinking.
An example of proof of Harpur's claim that Christianity is fashioned after ancient Egyptian themes is found in the fact that the Goddess Isis was referred to as Mother of God and Queen of Heaven ( Theotokos in Greek) well over 1,000 years before the Church gave such titles to Mary.
Some people like to dwell on insignificant details obscuring the core message of the book: Christ is within each and everyone of us.
I found The Pagan Christ very inspiring giving me hope for the future of the church.
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