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Holger Kersten

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(Redirected fromThe Jesus Conspiracy)
German writer (born 1951)

Holger Kersten
Born1951 (age 73–74)
Magdeburg
OccupationWriter
LanguageGerman
SubjectSpeculation on the life of Jesus Christ
Notable worksJesus Lived in India

Holger Kersten (born 1951) is a German writer on myth, legend, religion, andesoteric subjects. He is best known for speculative books about timeJesus spent in India.[1] Kersten's views have received no support from mainstream scholarship.[2]

Jesus Lived in India (1983)

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Jesus Lived in India[3] promotes the claim ofNicolas Notovitch (1894) regarding theunknown years of Jesus between the ages of twelve and twenty-nine, supposedly spent in India. The consensus view amongst modern scholars is that Notovitch's account of the travels of Jesus to India was a hoax. Kersten also promotesAhmadiyya founderGhulam Ahmad's claims regarding time spent by Jesus in India between the age of 33 and 120, and his burial at theRoza Bal shrine inSrinagar. Kersten additionally draws on earlier material byLouis Jacolliot,Andreas Faber-Kaiser, and German novelistSiegfried Obermeier (1983).[4] The book was translated into Chinese in 1987.[5]

Like others before him, Kersten follows Mirza Ghulam Ahmad in his sources, such as a passage in theBhavishya Purana, which refers to Jesus as "Isa-Masih" (Jesus the Messiah). The passage describes the Hindu kingShalivahana travelling to mountains, where he meets a man who calls himself Isa, son of a virgin. Isa says he has ministered to theMlecchas, explaining that he has reformed their lives by recommending principles of mental purity, usingjapa by chanting holy names, and meditation. Kersten interprets this as a record of Jesus in Kashmir. In reality, the passage is an 18th-century dialogue also featuringMuhammad, and not an early source, as Ahmad claimed.[6] Most scholars consider this part of the Purana to be a 19th-century interpolation.[7]

The book achieved great popularity in Germany and overseas, though it competed with the better-known Obermeier's book in Germany. IndologistGünter Grönbold included a highly critical debunking of Obermeier and Kersten's interpretations of Buddhist sources among various expositions of Jesus in India theories inJesus in Indien. Das Ende einer Legende (Jesus in India, the end of a Legend, 1985).[8]Wilhelm Schneemelcher, in introducing the subject ofNew Testament Apocrypha (1991), uses Kersten by way of illustration of the development of legendary Gospel traditions and notes how Kersten "attempted to work upNotovitch andAhmadiyya legends, with many other alleged witnesses, into a complete picture."[9] Douglas T. McGetchin notes that once his story had been re-examined by historians, Notovitch confessed to having fabricated the evidence.[10]

However, in 1922,Swami Abhedananda visited theHemis Monastery in Ladakh, India, and corroborated much of Notovitch's story. Given access to the manuscripts on Jesus Christ, Abhedananda later published an abbreviated version of Notovich's translated account.[11] After Abhedananda's death in 1939, one of his disciples inquired about the documents at the monastery but was told they had disappeared.[12]

The Original Jesus (1994)

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In a later work, co-written withparapsychologistElmar R. Gruber (b. 1955),Der Ur-Jesus (1994), translated asThe Original Jesus (1995), Kersten argues that Buddhism appears to have had a substantial influence on the life and teachings of Jesus.[13][14][15] They hold that Jesus was influenced by the teachings and practices ofTherapeutae, described by the authors as teachers of the BuddhistTheravada school then living in Judaea, although the only account of this group, an extensive description byPhilo of Alexandria, describes the Therapeutae as a charismaticHellenistic Jewish community following theLaw of Moses. Gruber and Kersten assert that Jesus lived the life of a Buddhist and taught Buddhist ideals to his disciples. In doing so, their work draws on earlier comparisons betweenBuddhism and Christianity, including that of Oxford New Testament scholarBurnett Hillman Streeter (1932), who argued that the moral teachings of theGautama Buddha hold four remarkable resemblances to theSermon on the Mount.[citation needed]

The Jesus Conspiracy (1997)

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Kersten and Gruber later developed the ideas of the two earlier books and connected them to theTurin Shroud inDas Jesus-Komplott: die Wahrheit über das Turiner GrabtuchThe Jesus Conspiracy: The Turin Shroud and the Truth About the Resurrection.[16] andJesus starb nicht am Kreuz — Die Botschaft des Turiner Grabtuchs (1998) (Jesus Did Not Die on the Cross: The Message of the Shroud of Turin).[17]The Jesus Conspiracy proposes that theVatican interfered with the 1988Radiocarbon 14 dating of the Shroud of Turin to show amedieval date for its origin. The authors propose that the shroud is the authentic burial cloth of Jesus, but that evidence, including blood tracks, shows that Jesus was alive following hiscrucifixion. They argue that theMandylion, orImage of Edessa, known from the sixth century, was the shroud, but folded to only show the face of Jesus. Because Jesus surviving the cross would contradict the teaching of theResurrection, the central belief inChristianity, the authors allege that the Vatican used a piece from a 13th-century cloth with a similarherringbone weave to the Shroud of Turin as a substitute in thecarbon dating. In part three, Gruber attempts to explain many details concerning what happened in "that dramatic hour ofGood Friday". The book repeats Kersten's earlier arguments that after the crucifixion, Jesus moved to India.[18][19]

Critical response

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None of Kersten's works have found any support in mainstream scholarship — either Biblical or Indologist. Noted German scholar ofNew Testament ApocryphaWilhelm Schneemelcher, in a revision of his standard work prior to his death in 2003, and in unusually strong language for the scholarly community, states that Kersten's work is based on "fantasy, untruth and ignorance (above all in the linguistic area)" and "has nothing to do with historical research."[2]Gerald O'Collins and Daniel Kendall opined that "Kersten's discredited book" is simply the repackaging of Notovich and Ahmad's material for consumption by the general public.[20]

Bibliography

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  • Jesus Lived in India (1983)
  • The Original Jesus (1994)
  • The Jesus Conspiracy (1997)
  • Jesus starb nicht am Kreuz — Die Botschaft des Turiner Grabtuchs (1998)

See also

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References

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  1. ^Reinhard FeldmeierDie Bibel: Entstehung - Botschaft - Wirkung 2004 Page 164 "In Deutschland war es vor allem Holger Kersten, der mit seinem Buch »Jesus lebte in Indien« (zuerst 1984, Neuauflage 1993)23 die These vom Indienaufenthalt Jesu populär machte. Die bereits oben angesprochene »Lücke im Leben Jesu«"
  2. ^abNew Testament Apocrypha, Vol. 1: Gospels and Related Writings byWilhelm Schneemelcher and R. Mcl. Wilson (1 December 1990)ISBN 066422721X page 84. "Such works, in which fantasy, untruth and ignorance (above all in the linguistic area) are combined, and which are in addition marked by anti-Church feeling, have nothing to do with historical research."
  3. ^*Jesus lebte in Indien – Sein geheimes Leben vor und nach der Kreuzigung. Ullstein-Verlag, Berlin 1998,ISBN 3-5483-5490-4, (1. Auflage: Droemer Knaur, München 1983,ISBN 3-426-03712-2).
  4. ^Mark BotheDie Jesus-in-Indien-Legende Über eine alternative Lebensgeschichte des Jesus von Nazareth 3 Die modernen Autoren. Wie eingangs erwähnt sieht Grönbold diese Quellen als Grundsteine für die moderne JiIL an. Choudhury, Faber-Kaiser, Obermeier und Kersten hätten die Idee für ihre Theoreme aus diesen Quellen entnommen und ihre Beweisargumente gingen auf die Autoren der ersten Phase wie Jacolliot zurück.
  5. ^Chinese edition: 霍尔根·凯斯顿, translators 赵振权 and 王宽湘 title:《耶稣在印度》, published 国际文化出版公司 1987
  6. ^Holger Kersten,Jesus Lived in India: His Unknown Life Before and After the Crucifixion, Penguin Books India, 2001, p.260.
  7. ^See Swami Parmeshwaranand, "Christ in the Bhavisya Purana",Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Purānas, Sarup, 2001, pp.278ff; Wendy Doniger,Purāna Perennis: Reciprocity and Transformation in Hindu and Jaina Texts, SUNY Press, 1993, p.105.
  8. ^Daniel Kendall – 1996 On reissuing Venturini in Gregorianum — Page 258 Pontificia università gregoriana (Rome) "The whole story of how this legend was simply created (without a shred of evidence in its support), spread widely among a gullible public and still finds such latter-day exponents as Holger Kersten is splendidly told by Günther Grönbold. In Jesus Survived CrucifixionSoami Divyanand offers a recent repetition of the legend originally fashioned by Ghulam Ahmad. Divyanand draws on Kersten' s discredited book, Jesus Lived in India."
  9. ^New Testament Apocrypha: Gospels and Related Writings – Page 84 Wilhelm Schneemelcher, R McL Wilson - 1991
  10. ^Indology, Indomania, and Orientalism byDouglas T. McGetchin (1 January 2010) Fairleigh Dickinson University PressISBN 083864208X page 133 "Faced with this cross-examination, Notovich confessed to fabricating his evidence."
  11. ^ Chaitanya, Brahmachari Bhairab; Swami Abhedananda's Journey into Kashmir and Tibet; Ramakrishna Vedanta Math, Calcutta, 1987 (first published in Bengali in 1929) pp.119-121, 164-166;ISBN 0874816432
  12. ^ Richard, Hooper; Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, and Lao Tzu; 2012 p. 176ISBN 1571746803
  13. ^Der Ur-Jesus — Die buddhistischen Quellen des frühen Christentums. Langen-Müller Verlag, München 1994,ISBN 3-7844-2504-6.
  14. ^Gruber, Elmar; Kersten, Holger. (1995).The Original Jesus. Shaftesbury: Element Books.
  15. ^Zohar, Danah (9 July 1995)."In search of the gospel truth".The Independent. London. Retrieved21 February 2012.
  16. ^Das Jesus-Komplott: die Wahrheit über das Turiner Grabtuch. Heyne-Verlag, München 1997,ISBN 3-453-12307-7.
  17. ^Jesus starb nicht am Kreuz — Die Botschaft des Turiner Grabtuchs. Langen-Müller Verlag, München 1998,ISBN 3-7844-2688-3, (mit Elmar R. Gruber).
  18. ^Sengupta, Reshmi (22 September 2005)."When Jesus came to India!".The Telegraph (Calcutta). Calcutta, India. Archived fromthe original on 13 May 2006. Retrieved21 February 2012.
  19. ^"The curious trail of Christ".The Telegraph (Calcutta). Calcutta, India. 4 April 2006. Archived fromthe original on 14 May 2006. Retrieved21 February 2012.
  20. ^Gerald O'Collins Daniel KendallEssays in Christology and Soteriology 1996 p169
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