| Porphyry (234-305 A.D.),a Hellenized Jew who
came from Tyre, was a pupil of the philosopher Plotinus. He was a
philosopher who adopted a lofty moral position and was interested in the
occult sciences. He wrote a treatise Against the Christians, in
which he noted the inconsistencies in the Gospels and the absurdity of
Christian dogmas, in particular of the incarnation and
resurrection.
Even supposing that some Greeks were stupid enough to think that gods
dwell in statues, this would be a purer conception than to accept that the
divine had descended into the womb of the Virgin Mary, that he had become
an embryo, that after his birth he had been wrapped in swaddling clothes
stained with blood, bile and worse...Why, then he was taken before the
high priest and governor, did not the Christ say anything worthy of a
divine man? He allowed himself to be struck; spat upon in the face,
crowned with thorns... Even if he had to suffer by order of God, he should
have accepted the punishment but should not have endured his passion
without some bold speech, some vigorous and wise word addressed to Pilate
his judge, instead of allowing himself to be insulted like one of the
rabble from off the streets.
A remarkable lie (a reference to the description of the resurrection
in I Thess. 4:14)! If you sang that to mindless beasts which can do
nothing but make a noise in response you would make them bellow and cheep
with a deafening din at the idea of men of flesh flying through the air
like birds, or carried on a cloud... Porphyry
|