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Jesus was a magician who made people hallucinate about His miracles
All sorts of excuses and challenges have been
offered to contradict or explain away the miraculous accounts of
Jesus' life. Among the weaker challenges offered is that Jesus
was some sort of a magician who was able to get people to hallucinate
about His miracles. In other
words, countless people were all seeing Jesus do things that were not
really happening and it was Jesus who was perpetrating this deception
upon them. Let's take the account of where Jesus feeds
the five thousand with five loaves and two fish (Matt.
14:19-21). Though it is certainly possible to have one person
hallucinate about this, how do the critics account for five thousand people
hallucinating about the same thing at the same time? Or how
about the resurrection? How do the critics explain the accounts
of Jesus appearing to the disciples with holes in His feet and
hands? How did Jesus get numerous people to believe a lie about
His resurrection (a mass hallucination?) after the Romans, who were
experts at executions, not only flogged Him severely, beat Him, and
hung Him on a cross for six hours and then pierced His side where
water and blood came out? How did Jesus do that?
Some have alleged that Jesus went to the far
east and learned many "tricks" and techniques for
influencing people as well as controlling His bodily functions so as
to appear dead. Of course, this kind of theory lacks any
evidence at all and is nothing more than conjecture and
guesswork. Besides, the Bible says in Luke 2:51 that Jesus from
a very young age continued in subjection to His parents. This
means that in that culture, Jesus was obligated to stay with His
earthly parents and care for them in accordance to the Ten
Commandments which stated that He was to honor His mother and
father. His obligation was to be there and care for them
in their old age, not abandoning them for some journey to the far east
in order to learn techniques of mind control.
Hallucinations are misperceptions, false interpretations of reality.
It is certainly possible for a single person to have a hallucination about something. But,
how do you get two, three, or four people to misperceive reality and
claim to see the same thing at the same time -- like Jesus'
resurrection? That is very
difficult to do. In fact, have you ever heard of a group of
people succumbing to a mass hallucination and all of them believe the
same thing?
But then, some might say that Jesus was able
to hypnotize people which would account for the mass
hallucination. But you must remember that if Jesus were
hypnotizing people, then He would have had to do it over and over
again in different circumstances (in homes, in temples, in open
fields, in boats, from the cross, etc), with hostile audiences
(Pharisees, Sadducees, etc.), as well as those who were already
believing Him. If Jesus was so good a hypnotizing people and getting
them to believe things that weren't true (which makes Him a deceiver),
then why did He not fool people and escape the sentence of being
beaten and crucified? Or is it all part of the incredibly great
hoax that Jesus somehow managed to accomplish on hundreds and hundreds
of people.
Also, did Jesus teach His
disciples how to do mystical and/or mind control techniques? If that is so, then where is the
evidence? Merely
claiming that Jesus could do it, does not mean that it is true.
There must be some compelling evidence to support the claim.
Simply stating that miracles cannot happen and this must
mean that Jesus was a magician or some sort, is begging the
question. In other words, the critics assume to be true the
thing they are trying to prove; namely, that miracles cannot happen. They
then base conclusions upon that assumption which cannot be proven at
all.
In order to maintain the theory that Jesus
was a master magician who caused people to hallucinate it would seem
that the person holding that position must himself be hallucinating.
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Matthew J. Slick, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
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