Pharyngula; Memphis Flyer; The Conversation; Sheldon S., S. Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
European artists go to town promoting a fantasy: Nordic Jesus Christ Surfer Dude |
Jesus wasn't white: he was a North African/Middle Eastern Jew (theconversation.com) |
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I'm Nordic-Aryan Jesus. I surf. |
- "Jesus Christ Surfer Dude"? (Memphis Flyer)
Most charitably, it says that Jesus isn’t a historical figure to most Christians; his reality isn’t a concern, and they need make no effort to put him in a place, time, or people.
Republican/Conservative, too |
He can be freely warped to fit the ideology of Europe, Rome, the USA, anything. Either way, who feels a need or desire to worship or respect a cartoon?
(via Zeno)
- I have forgiven Jesus – Stuff and Things (freethoughtblogs.com)
- Why Israel can't be in Africa (even though it is); A "Middle East" was invented to obscure North Africa with distorted maps online
How Jesus became white — and why's it time to correct that
Emily McFarlan Miller, Religious News Service, June 24, 2020
Head of Christ (Warner E. Sallman) |
It felt “weird,” Rev. Carr said.
Until that moment, she’d always thought Jesus was white.
At least that’s how he appeared when she was growing up.
A copy of Warner E. Sallman’s painting “Head of Christ” hung in her home, depicting a meek Jesus with blue eyes turned heavenward and blond hair cascading over his shoulders in waves with highlights.
The painting, which has been reproduced a billion times, came to define what the central figure of Christianity... More
"Viking Jesus"? Yes, he's a Germanic Saxon
Nordic: An old Saxon poem depicts Jesus as a Viking warrior chief (wearethemighty.com) |
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If I get any lighter, I'll become the holy ghost |
Selling the “Prince of Peace” to the Germanic-Saxon tribes of Northern Europe was particularly hard, so Christians reframed Jesus in a way the locals could better understand. Saxons were pretty much forced to accept Christianity in the 8th and 9th centuries after a killer named Charlemagne rolled across Northern Europe with a giant sword he called “Joyous” and forced everyone there to take communion [become Christian] or take three feet of steel. More
To make accepting the Christian God easier for Pagan northerners, "Jesus" was recreated in a Saxon poem called Heliand, an epic that mixed Christian ideals with the Germanic warrior ethos. |
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