Salvation can be defined as the deliverance from sin and
its penalties; the path to salvation, however, varies from one religion to
another. In Christianity, salvation is found through the Doctrine of
Vicarious Atonement. Since human nature is considered in Christianity to
be wayward and sinful, this doctrine states that Jesus "rendered full
satisfaction" to God for the sins of man through his death and
resurrection. In a nutshell, Jesus took our place, and his death absolves
us of our sins.
This is contrary to what is found in the Torah
where God says: " ...every man shall be put to death for his own
sin" (Deut. 24:16)
The matter of Jesus, as savior of mankind, is refuted in
the Quran, wherein God says that He "...has stamped them with their
disbelief...for their saying 'We killed God's Messenger, Christ Jesus, the
son of killed nor crucified him, even though it seemed so to them..."
(4:155, 157).
Salvation According to Jesus
Nowhere in the four gospels did Jesus explicitly
state that he would die to save mankind from sin. When approached by a man
who asked what he could do to gain eternal life, Jesus told him to
keep the Commandments (Mat. 19: 16,17); in other words, to
obey God's Law. To a similar question put to him by a lawyer, as recorded
in the gospel of Luke, Jesus told him to love God and his fellow
man (Luke 10:25-28).
The role of Jesus is made clear in the Quran where
God says: "Christ, the son of Mary, was no more than a Messenger; many
were the Messengers that passed away before him...see how God doth make
His Signs clear to them, yet see in what ways they are deluded away from
the truth" (5:75).
The mission of Jesus was not, therefore, to set up
a new method of achieving salvation, much less the founding of a new
system of belief; as even the Bible points out, Jesus sought
only to take the Jews from their emphasis on ritual back to that of
righteousness (Mat. 6:1-8).
Paul of Tarsus
For the origin of the doctrine of atonement, one does not
go to the teachings of Jesus, but instead to the words of Paul, the
true founder of Christianity; in teachings of present Christian terms and
practices.
Like many Jews, Paul had no use for the teachings of Jesus, and he himself persecuted the followers of
Jesus for
their unorthodox beliefs. This zealous persecutor was turned into an
ardent preacher, however, through a sudden conversion around 35 CE Paul
claimed that a resurrected Jesus appeared to him in a vision,
thereby, choosing Paul as his instrument for carrying his teachings to the
Gentiles (Gal. 1:11; 12:15,16).
Paul's credibility in any capacity is questionable,
however, when considering that: (1) there are four contradictory
versions of his so-called "conversion" (Acts 9:3-8;
22:6-10; 26:13-18; Gal. 1:15-17); (2) God says, in passages such as Num. 12:6,
Deut. 18:20 and Ez.
13:8,9 that revelations come ONLY from Him, and (3) accounts
of numerous disagreements between the other disciples and Paul regarding
his teachings are recorded in Acts.
Experience and observation had taught Paul that preaching
among the Jews was not feasible; he, therefore, chose to go to the
non-Jews. By doing so, however, Paul disregarded a direct command from Jesus against preaching to other than a Jew (Mat.
10:5,6). In short, Paul set aside the actual teachings of
Jesus in his desire to be a success.
The Pagan Influence
Among the pagans of Paul's time, a wide variety of gods
existed. Although these gods had different names and were embraced by
people from different areas of the world -- Adonis from Syria, Dionysus
from Thrace, Attis from Phrygia, for instance -- the basic concept in each
cult was the same: these sons of gods died violent deaths and then rose
again to save their people.
Since the pagans had tangible savior-gods in their old
religions, they wanted nothing less from the new; they were not able to
accept any sort of an invisible Deity. Paul was quite accommodating,
preaching therefore of a savior named Jesus Christ, the son of God,
who died and then rose again to save mankind from sin (Rom.
5:8-11; 6:8,9).
The Bible itself points out the error of Paul's thinking.
While each of the four gospels contain an account of the crucifixion of
Jesus, these accounts are strictly hearsay; none of the disciples of Jesus
were witness to such, having fled his side in the Garden (Mark
14:50).
In the Torah, God says that one who is "hanged
upon a tree" --crucified-- is "accursed" (Deut.
21:23). Paul side-stepped this by saying that Jesus became
accursed in order to take on the sins of man (Gal. 3:13); in
so doing, however, Paul set aside the very Law of God.
The resurrection, wherein Paul says that Jesus
"conquered" death and sin for mankind (Rom. 6:9,10),
plays such an important part that one who does not believe in it is not
considered a good Christian (I Cor. 15:14).
Here, too, the Bible lends little support to
Paul's notions; first of all, not only was there no eyewitness to the
actual resurrection, but all post-resurrection accounts are in
contradiction with each other as to who went to the gravesite, what
happened there, and even where and to whom Jesus appeared (Mat.
28; Mark 16; Luke 24; John
20).
Secondly, although Christianity states that the body
following resurrection will be in a spiritual form (I Cor.
15:44), Jesus had obviously not changed, for he both ate
with his disciples (Luke 24:30,41-43), and allowed them to
touch his wounds (John 20:27). Finally, as the divine
son of God in Christianity, Jesus is said to share in God's
attributes; one cannot fail to wonder, however, just how it can be
possible for God to die...
In his desire to win souls among the pagans, Paul simply
reworked a number of major pagan beliefs to come up with the Christian
scheme of salvation. No prophet-- including Jesus himself--taught
such concepts; they were authored entirely by Paul.
The Ultimate Sacrifice
Long accustomed to making sacrifices to their gods, the
pagans easily grasped Paul's notion that Jesus was the "ultimate
sacrifice" whose blood washed away sin. A common ceremony during this time
in various Middle Eastern cults, such as those of Attis and Mithras, was
that of the "taurobolium": a person descended into a pit covered
over with grillwork upon which a bull (or ram), said to represent the
pagan deity himself, was then ceremoniously slain. By covering himself
with the blood, the person in the pit below was said to have been "born
again" with his sins washed away.
It is worth noting that the Jews had given up sacrifice
back in 590 BCE following the destruction of their Temple. Paul's notions,
therefore, were in direct contradiction to both Old Testament teaching
(Hosea 6:6) and even to the teaching of Jesus himself
(Mat. 9:13) which stressed how God desired good virtues, not
sacrifice.
While Paul stressed that God's "love" was behind
the sacrifice of Jesus (Rom. 5:8), the Doctrine of
Atonement instead shows a harsh Deity satisfied only by the murder of
his own innocent son. Paul was way off base here, for the Old Testament is
full of references to the love and mercy of God to man (Ps.
36:5-10; Ps. 103:8-17) revealed through His
forgiveness (Ex. 34:6,7; Ps. 86:5-7), of which
even Jesus spoke (Mat. 6:12).
Pagan influence in Christianity even extends to its
sacrad symbol. Although Paul calls the cross of Jesus "the power of
God" (I Cor. 1:18), reference works, such as the
Encyclopedia Britannica, Dictionary of Symbols, and The
Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art point out that
the cross was used as a religious symbol centuries before the birth of Jesus. Bacchus of Greece, Tammuz of Tyre, Bel of Chaldea, and Odin
of Norway are just a few examples of ancient pagan gods whose sacred
symbol was that of a cross.
Original Sin
Central to the Doctrine of Atonement is Paul's notion
that mankind is a race of wrong-doers, having inherited from Adam his sin
in eating of the forbidden fruit. As a result of this Original Sin, man
cannot serve as his own redeemer; good works are to no avail, says Paul,
for even these cannot satisfy the justice of God (Gal.
2:16).
As a result of Adam's sin, man is doomed to die. By his
death, however, Jesus took on the punishment due man; through his
resurrection, Jesus conquered death, and righteousness was restored. To
earn salvation, a Christian need only have faith in the death and
resurrection of Jesus (Rom. 6:23).
Despite its prominent place in Christianity, the notion
of an "original sin" is not found among the teachings of any prophet, Jesus included. In the Old Testament, God says: "...the son
shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear
the iniquity of the son" (Ez.18:20-22). Personal
responsibility is also stressed in the Qur'an where God says: "...no
bearer of burdens can bear the burden of another...man can have nothing
but what he strives for" (53:38,39).
The doctrine of original sin gave Paul the means to
justify pagan influence in his scheme of salvation. Irresponsibility
became the hallmark of Christianity through this doctrine, however, for by
"transferring" sins onto Jesus, Christians assume no responsibility for
their actions.
Salvation in Islam
By the seventh century, the doctrines conceived by Paul
had been embellished to the point where Christianity was not almost
entirely a man-made religion. At this time, God chose to send Muhammad as His Final Messenger in order to set things straight
once and for all for mankind.
Since God is Almighty, He doesn't need the charade
concocted by Christians in order to forgive man. In the Qur'an, God says
we are all created in a state of goodness (30:30); He has not
burdened man with any "original sin", having forgiven Adam and Eve
(2:36-38; 7:23,24) as He forgives us (11:90;
39:53-56).
As we are all personally responsible for our actions
(2:286; 6:164) there is no need for a humanly concocted
savior in Islam; salvation comes from God alone (28:67).
Thus did Islam seek to restore the true meaning to
monotheism, for in the Qur'an God asks: "Who can be better in religion
than one who submits his whole self to God, does good, and follows the way
of Abraham the true in faith?" (4:125; 41:33).
The Religion of Man
The evidence is overwhelming that the concept of
salvation in Christianity--its Doctrine of Vicarious
Atonement--came not from God but from man via pagan rituals and
beliefs.
Paul effectively shifted the center of worship away from
God by saying that Jesus was the divine agent of their
salvation (Gal. 2:20). In so doing, however, Paul set
aside all teachings of God's prophets, and even the concept of monotheism
itself, since God in Christianity needs Jesus for His divine
"helper".
Take a Closer Look
With his very salvation at stake here, the Christian
should take a closer look at what he believes in and why. God says in the Qur'an:
"O People of the Book! Commit no excesses in your
religion, nor say of God aught but the truth. Christ Jesus, the son of
Mary, was no more than a Messenger of God...for God is One God; glory be
to Him: far exalted is He above having a son. To him belong all things in
the heavens and on earth. And enough is God as a Disposer of Affairs."
(4:171).
Aisha Brown
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