“The standard explanations for the
crucifixion of Jesus
created a deep mystery of motive and
consequence,
raising many questions about what truly is
God’s plan for our salvation.”
The crucifixion of Jesus Christ (peace be upon him) is
undeniably one of the most emotionally charged and controversial events in all
of religious history. It is also one of the most powerful and political, in
that it laid the foundation for Christianity’s main principle of mankind’s
spiritual salvation – that Jesus Christ was destined by God to die on the cross
for our sins. But is this really God’s or even Jesus’ idea? The facts about
what happened to Jesus 2000 years ago have been shrouded in mystery for as long
as Christianity has existed as a major world religion. The commonly held views
of the events of the crucifixion and the life and purpose of Jesus are well
known to virtually every Christian and most others who have come in contact
with Western Christian nations. But is this view, in fact, the truth? Or is
there another explanation that must be considered for all true believers in
Christ to fully understand Jesus, his status and his mission.
It is this alternate explanation of the reasons for, and results
of, the crucifixion that I wish to bring to light before you now. It is the
universal belief of all Muslims that Jesus did not die on the cross, because
this would prove him to be a false prophet and a false messiah for the Jewish
people, which Muslims do not accept. Islam teaches that Jesus was a true and
beloved prophet of God, just like the Old Testament prophets before him, and
that he was the Messiah foretold for the Jewish people in their scriptures. On
this point, Muslims are closer to Christians in this regard than Jews.
Most Muslims, however, believe as Christians do: that Jesus was
taken up physically alive into heaven and that he will return to Earth again in
the same body before the End of the World -- although Jesus’ mission when he
returns will not be to bring Christianity to the Muslims, but to bring Islam to
the Christians and the rest of the world.
I belong to a Muslim Community known as Ahmadiyyat, founded by
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad in 1889. We believe that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was the Promised
Messiah and Imam Mahdi foretold in Islamic scripture and traditions. As Ahmadi
Muslims, we believe differently about a few key points relating to Jesus and
the crucifixion.
From revelations to the Promised Messiah and through research
done by him and his companions in the l890s, we have conclusive evidence that
Jesus did not die on the cross -- for the same reasons stated earlier – but
unlike the rest of the Muslim world, we believe that Jesus was actually put on
the cross, only he did not die as a result of this crucifixion. He survived so
that he could complete his stated mission to “gather and preach to the Lost
Sheep of the House of Israel” and to fulfill the Sign of Jonah he gave to the
Jews prior to his crucifixion -- as Jonah was “three days and three nights
alive in the belly of the whale,” Jesus, too, would be “three days and three
nights alive in the belly of the earth.” As Jonah survived his ordeal and went
on to successfully preach to his people, so too does Jesus say he will survive
a similar trial and go on to preach to his people, the Lost Ten Tribes of
Israel.
He survived the crucifixion with the Divine help of Almighty God
and the help of his trusted friends. One of these, Nicodemus, was a physician
who treated his wounds with 100 pounds of medicinal plants and spices: the
famed mixture of aloes and myrrh mentioned in the New Testament.
Another close friend was Joseph of Arimathea, a wealthy and
powerful Jew in whose open-air sepulcher Jesus was taken for treatment and
recuperation after the crucifixion. When Mary Magdalene first sees Jesus
outside the tomb, she moves to embrace him but he stops her and says, “Touch me
not, for I have not yet ascended.” That is, he is still suffering from his
recent wounds but has not died from them. He even tells “Doubting Thomas,” who
thinks he’s a ghost (as do all the other disciples), to stick his fingers into
Jesus’ fresh wounds so he may know Jesus is not dead nor a ghost, but very much
alive.
It is our belief that Jesus survived the crucifixion because he
was notand could never be “accursed of God,” and so he could go on
to fulfill his stated mission to preach to his people. We believe that he
traveled extensively throughout the Near East where the Lost Ten Tribes of
Israel were known to be: in Syria, Iraq, Iran, India, Afghanistan and Kashmir.
We believe Jesus eventually died at the age of 120 and is buried in Kashmir, in
the city of Srinagar.
An Ahmadi Imam I know has personally visited the sacred tomb of
Jesus, and has been inside it to clean it and to pay his respects. Many may be
astonished to hear that Jesus’ mother, Mary, is believed to be buried in
Pakistan, in the town named after her: Muree. Some Christians may have heard
that the disciple Thomas is buried in Madras, Southern India. He is. Why was he
there? The tombs of Jesus, Mary and Thomas are all pieces in a religious puzzle
that few Westerners have ever heard of, but to millions of Muslims and Hindus
in the Near East, these places are common knowledge.
The standard explanations for the crucifixion of Jesus created a
deep mystery of motive and consequence, raising many questions about what truly
is God’s plan for our salvation. What were the motivations of the various
groups involved in the crucifixion? What were the consequences of their
involvement? The past 2000 years of world history have been filled with the
reverberations from the events of that terrible day. And most important of all:
Did Jesus truly claim to be God incarnate Who came to be put to death for our
sins? Or did these ideas come from other religions and other, later followers
of Jesus such as Mark, Luke, Paul and the 4th century Roman
Emperor Constantine? None of these men ever met Jesus or witnessed his
crucifixion and its aftermath.
We can learn a lot about the answers to these questions by
examining closely the actions and words of the various people involved in, or
who are said to have witnessed, the crucifixion of Christ.
At the time of the crucifixion, while most people were just
curious bystanders, some of the people were certainly the devoted followers and
relatives of Jesus, such as his mother Mary and the disciples. No one could
argue that this second group was not in deep anguish and sorrow over what was
being done to Jesus. If Mel Gibson’s 2004 film “The Passion of the Christ” can
move entire audiences of devout Christians to tears 2000 years after the
crucifixion, how much more powerful was the experience to those who knew and
loved Jesus during his lifetime?
And surely, the reason for these tears today and 2000 years ago
was the same: those who loved Jesus did not want to see him tortured so cruelly
and be put to death in such an evil and idolatrous manner. And especially if
you were a devout Jew, the spiritual significance of being put to death by
crucifixion was even more painful, because this pain came from the fact that in
the Old Testament, Book of Deuteronomy (21:23), to be put to death on a cross
-- “hanged on a tree” -- was to be proven a false prophet or messiah; to be
accursed of God and to turn away from God and have Him turn away from you
because you have chosen to reject God and follow instead in the footsteps of
Satan. God forbid! How could anyone think Jesus fits this description? No one.
But that is what “accursed of God” means, and this is why it hurt the followers
of Jesus so deeply at the time, and why it hurts me so deeply today as a Muslim
-- where love and respect for Jesus and all other prophets is a requirement of
my faith -- to have Jesus called “Satan” by those who say he was “accursed of
God.” I cannot believe this!
It was no accident that the Jews needed Jesus to be crucified on
a cross -- the sacrificial altar to the Roman sun god. The death of Jesus on
the cross would prove he was a false prophet and not the Messiah the Jews were
expecting to restore to them the Kingdom of David and their holy lands. Was
Jesus a false Messiah? According to Jewish expectations of the time, he was not
what they were looking for. He came to bring them back to the Kingdom of God,
not the Kingdom of David.
The other group of people at the crucifixion was composed of
citizens who disbelieved in Jesus and the Roman soldiers whose job it was to
whip and then crucify him. This group was involved in all kinds of abuse
against him, making fun of him, spitting on him, calling him a liar, a
fabricator, an imposter, and telling him to “save himself and come down off the
cross if he was the Messiah” as he claimed. Could these people have been right
in their accusations? Why did they all assert that the proof of Jesus’ claim to
be the Messiah would be for him to come down off the cross and survive the
crucifixion and not, as Christianity holds, to die as a sinless sacrifice
because of it?
How could this central belief of Christians in the death of
Jesus on the cross for their sins be such a foreign idea to the Jews of Jesus’
time? Should he not have made this idea crystal clear to his followers and
disciples? Jesus should have stated clearly and repeatedly to all his followers,
enemies and accusers at every opportunity that his only purpose in life was to
be put on the cross to die for the sins of mankind.
When Pilate tells the Jews at the trial of Jesus that he plans
to release him, Jesus should have told him, “No, you must crucify me so I can
pay for the sins of the world. This is why I have come.” But he does not say
this – in fact, Jesus never says anything remotely like this at those times
when he should have spoken up the loudest to proclaim his mission: in the court
before Pilate and Herod and the Jewish leaders, and while he is on the cross
afterwards. And in the end, the charge against Jesus for which he was crucified
was not that he was the Son of God, literally or otherwise, but that he was
conspiring to make himself King of the Jews and start a rebellion against the
Roman Empire.
And the one statement Jesus makes while on the cross that seems
to contradict everything we are told about his purpose is: “Father, forgive
them for they know not what they do.” Why was Jesus asking God to forgive them
for crucifying him if that was God’s plan and if that’s what Jesus knew and
wanted as well? And did God forgive them? Was God happy about the crucifixion
or was He angry? Some say the weather was a Sign of God’s displeasure. What
happened?
All of a sudden, they were engulfed in a severe windstorm and
sudden darkness caused by an eclipse of sun, accompanied by an intense
earthquake. They became very frightened, and most of them ran away from the
scene. It can be reasoned that many of those who fled, including many of Jesus’
closest disciples, were all religious-minded Jews who considered the upheaval
in the heavens and the earth to be signs of the displeasure of God at the
events being undertaken against Jesus.
In regards to the recording of the events of the crucifixion,
there are no verifiable first-hand accounts from reliable sources or witnesses
to explain what happened to Jesus after he was taken down from the cross.
Virtually all reputable scholars say that the “John” listed as being present
could not have been the same John who later wrote the Gospel of John and the
Book of Revelation and who is reported to have died in 120 AD – 87 years after
the crucifixion! Nor in the Bible is there a “Gospel of Nicodemus,” the
physician who was an eyewitness to the crucifixion. In fact, a careful
study of the New Testament reveals there was much uncertainty about the events
of the crucifixion. The Holy Quran in 4:159 states with regard to whether or
not the Jews succeeded in killing Jesus by crucifixion: “They were all in a
state of doubt about it -- they had no certain knowledge thereof, but only
pursued a conjecture. None of them were sure (as to what really happened to
Jesus) but they could only guess.”
The Jews knew very well that a strong, healthy person of 33
years, hanging on a cross for 3 to 4 hours, could not die – even Pilate knew
this because he “marveled” at the news that Jesus had died so soon. Pilate knew
that it took days, not hours, to die from crucifixion. In fact, the other two
thieves crucified alongside Jesus were still alive until their legs were
broken. Jesus’ legs were not broken.
The Jews also knew that Pilate favored saving Jesus’ life when
he went so far as to pronounce him “not guilty” before the court. More than
once Pilate tells the Jews that Jesus should be released. In a last-ditch
effort to save him, Pilate proclaims that he will flog Jesus and then release
him – beaten but not dead -- in the hope that this degrading punishment would
satisfy his Jewish enemies. Pilate in no way expected Jesus to die from this
whipping as evidenced by his words “and then release him.” Despite what is
depicted in the movie “The Passion of the Christ” as a merciless, brutal and
prolonged beating of Jesus nearly to death, Christian historians generally
state that Jesus was lashed only 39 times. This would be in accordance with a
“chastisement” as punishment and not a whipping meant to kill someone.
Another event depicted in the film “The Passion of the Christ”
that seems to spell the death blow for Jesus is when the Roman soldier pierces
his side while on the cross. In the movie, the soldier is shown thrusting his
spear savagely up into the body of Jesus. Christians often say that if Jesus
had still been alive on the cross, this deep spear thrust into his side and
presumably up into his heart certainly would have finished him off. But is this
what actually happened? There was no autopsy performed on Jesus to determine
how he died or if he was even dead. And if we examine the piercing event with basic
common sense and with an understanding of the Greek word for “pierce” a
completely different picture emerges.
Jesus was presumed to be dead when the Roman soldiers came to
dispatch the two crucified thieves who were still clearly alive. The soldiers
broke their legs, thus killing them, but they did not break the legs of Jesus,
so he could not have died from clubbing. So it is stated that a soldier takes
his spear and pierces Jesus in the side, and blood and water are reported to
issue forth.
The obvious question is, why did the soldier pierce Jesus’ side?
To “finish him off” as some claim, or to do what would be a natural test for
responsiveness to pain – jab someone with a sharp object to see if they react,
thus indicating they are still alive so you can “finish them off” by breaking
their legs. But when Jesus did not react, the soldiers did not proceed with the
next phase of leg-breaking, believing that he was already dead. The actual
meaning of the Greek word for “pierce” means “to prick or scratch, to jab or
poke.” Not the forceful, full-powered vicious thrust as depicted in “The
Passion of the Christ.”
When trauma victims enter the ER at a hospital, they often
appear dead, with no visible signs of life. One of the first things doctors do
is poke them with something sharp or pull back on their fingernails or toenails
to see if they react from the pain. Another thing they regularly do in trauma
treatment is they put a hole in the injured person’s chest to relieve any
pressure caused by edema – the internal swelling of body organs and tissues --
that may be suppressing vital signs and keeping the heart and lungs from
functioning well. When they do this, the heart often starts beating with
renewed vigor and strength, and the lungs are able to inflate easier as well.
Also, blood and other fluids like water that have collected in the outer
tissues often come gushing out as the pressure is equalized. So in all
probability, the piercing of Jesus’ side saved his life, thus relieving the
pressure on his heart and lungs. And everyone knows blood doesn’t flow out of a
body unless there is a beating heart to produce blood pressure.
Also, after the crucifixion, the body of Jesus was given to his
disciples. This was not the common practice; usually the enemies took the body
so they could desecrate it. But it was Jesus’ friends who took his body down
from the cross -- one of whom, Nicodemus, was purported to be a medical doctor
who treated him with 100 pounds of aloes and myrrh. The Jews have never
anointed the bodies of their dead with perfumes or spices, but the ancient
Greeks and Romans did.
All of this -- taken together with Jesus’ own prediction that he
would be back after three days and nights, fulfilling the sign of Jonah, who
went into the belly of the whale alive, stayed there alive for three days and
nights, and then came out alive -- leads inescapably to the conclusion that
Jesus Christ never meant to die on the cross for anyone’s sins, nor did he in
fact die, but was saved by the Hand of God to disprove the charges by the Jews
that he was a false prophet and a false messiah. God’s destiny sometimes works
just like this – what seems like a defeat is actually a divine means of success
and escape from one’s enemies.
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