NEW TESTAMENT EVIDENCE AGAINST JESUS MIRACLES
PAUL DISBELIEVED IN JESUS’
MIRACLES
WERE JESUS’ MIRACLES MYTHICAL?
The four gospels contain stories about the miracles of Jesus. We will see that this evidence contradicts
earlier statements by Christian apostles and scholars. The miracles of Jesus never happened.
The first existing Christian writings are the letters of
In 2 Corinthians 8 he says the Corinthians are to remember that Jesus was rich but for their sake he became poor to make them rich out of his poverty. He added that this didn’t mean that to give relief to the starving and the poor they had to make things difficult for themselves but to use their surplus! So Jesus then was clearly a totally rich man who gave it all up. This denies the gospels which have a Jesus who was born in a stable, had poor parents, had to wander about homeless and often hungry and whose invectives against the rich were harsh in the extreme. Paul means that Jesus was literally rich. There is no room for the idea that he only meant that Jesus had the supernatural power to take whatever he wanted and was rich in that sense but didn’t use it. God or the Son of God incarnate then should have the power to enjoy all the gold in the world for its theirs and their magic can get it for them. Jesus then was only acting poor but wasn’t poor at all if he was one of these. He was like a multi-trillionaire who doesn’t use his money but lives in a box with the homeless. Such a man wouldn’t be poor. In Paul’s description of Jesus as rich and then poor we see that he denied that Jesus was God or had the magical power to turn stones into bread or even bread into money. He denied the gospel Jesus who claimed supernatural powers. So Jesus was literally rich but gave it all away. This isn’t in the gospels at all and he contradicts them so they are false.
Paul informs us that the most important thing in Christianity is to
teach that Jesus died for us and rose according to the scriptures. He asserted that Jesus proved it by
manifesting himself to many (1 Corinthians 15:3). Paul knew that the OT prophecies alone
proved nothing and so did his people so he was admitting that there was no
evidence for Jesus being God’s Son apart from the witness of those who said
they saw the resurrected Jesus. How do
I know that? Because the Jews would
have taught that the resurrection may have been a satanic hoax. It did not do any good to persuade people
it was not the Devil’s work so Jesus performing benevolent miracles was
necessary to prove that God was doing good through him. If Paul had known of Jesus doing miracles
he would have included them as an essential part of the solid basis of the
gospel.
If Jesus had did miracles then Paul would not have argued for the
resurrection of Jesus on the basis that the faith would be nonsense and the
witnesses liars if it were not true (1 Corinthians 15). Why?
For in the first place he was talking to those who did think the
witnesses were liars and he used a bad argument for his backup. He was not saying that the resurrection is
true for people saw Jesus for nobody stressed it more strongly than him that
the religious opinions of most human beings cannot be trusted. He was trying to convince unbelieving
“Christians” (v12). He would not have
used a weak argument if Jesus had performed miracles. He would have mentioned the miracles and
told them to investigate them for if they verified them that would mean that
Jesus rose for it would be most likely.
When a man tries to do his best to prove something and his best is a
shambles it is obvious that he can do no better.
Paul’s evangelism for Charismatism proves that he did not believe that
Jesus did miracles. He regarded the
charisms as signs and said that they were needed to develop perfect knowledge
of the gospel and moaned that he did not have this knowledge (1 Corinthians
13:8-13). Perfect knowledge does not
mean the completion of revelation for Paul held that the apostles knew all
that God wanted the world to know and were the foundations of the faith. By perfect knowledge he means being sure
that Christianity is true. The
charisms were required to provide evidence meaning that apart from Jesus’
apparitions they had no evidence.
Not once did he ascribe magical prowess to his Lord Jesus. If it had been at the back of his mind he
would not have endorsed charismatic miracles that were so obviously
fake. He would have pointed those who
wanted evidence to the miracles of Jesus.
He was obviously desperate for evidence to justify his Christian faith
when he had to present the charisms.
Paul proclaimed the charisms to be true miracles. He knew that if one could not be sure at
times who was sending the miracles God or Satan that it was undeniable that
these miracles are not evidence for anything. If those miracles are not evidence then no
miracles are. He would have been
making nothing of the miracles of Jesus by accepting something as ineffectual
and flimsy as the evidence of the charisms.
To have them considered evidence he would have had to ban the
charisms.
Some say that he would have to say that the charisms are not evidence
for anything for they could be affected by Satan but that this couldn’t be
said about the miracles of Christ because Christ being the Son of God was
beyond the influence of Satan. If so,
then Paul could use the charisms but not count them as evidence. But he did and that is that. And he also said that our perception that
Jesus was the Son of God is a charism, the supernatural gift of faith.
Paul knew nothing of a Jesus who had done miracles of healing and
raised the dead.
Paul wrote that Jesus had been so changed by the resurrection that what
he was before that time is to be forgotten (2 Corinthians 5:16). His rejection of Jesus having done miracles
could not be clearer.
Paul said that the pre-existing Jesus laid aside his glory to become a
man and kept it concealed until he rose from the dead (Philippians 2:7,
8). According to the Church which is
anxious to avoid what this implies, this means that he hid his divine beauty
as in image. But seeing his glory is
not seeing his appearance for a spirit doesn’t have one. It is seeing what he does and all his acts
are miraculous including everything that happens on earth for he holds all
things in being. How could he show his
glory by an act that is not miraculous?
It is impossible! Jesus
“manifested his glory” at
The testimony closest to Jesus lets it slip that he did no
miracles. The hints are a little hard
to find which shows that nobody can say they are later interpolations
inserted for the mischievous purpose of ruining Christianity. As time went by the Church made up miracle
stories which even came to be believed by the Jews who thought they were
black magic.
Paul may have thought that the risen Jesus only does miracles.
Paul wrote, “We estimate and regard no one from a [purely] human point
of view [in terms of natural standards of human value]. [No] even though we once did estimate
Christ from a human viewpoint and as a man, yet now [we have such knowledge
of Him that] we know him no longer [in terms of the flesh]” (2 Corinthians
5:16, The Amplified Bible).
To find the
meaning of this we have to work out what from a human viewpoint means.
Paul does not say it is a wrong human viewpoint so
that is out. He isn’t accusing it of
being wrong but there is some flaw in it.
Christians argue that
it means judging Christ by human standards and not God’s. But he says we. He is speaking for the Church which was
still mainly Jewish then and he was a Jew himself. He judged Christ by God’s standards for he
had God’s Law.
Other Christians think that he is just saying that natural faith in
Jesus as God’s Son is human estimation for it is not miraculously caused by
God. And that supernatural faith which
is faith that is a gift from God is the kind we have now. But he wrote we including himself. He received the gift when he fell off his
horse during a vision of Jesus and had no time to have anything other than
supernatural faith (Acts 22:10, 11; Galatians 1:12-16).
What Paul means by human viewpoint is knowing Christ and other people
as human beings. We do not know them
that way anymore but know them in their changed supernatural or unnatural
state as children of God for the past is to be forgotten. The life Jesus had before his death and
resurrection are now irrelevant. All
that is relevant is the risen Jesus dwelling in his people who is known by
the spiritual favours he gives not by going to see him or talk to him. There would be no point in putting the life
of Christ out of mind unless it were an ordinary run-of-the-mill life. There is nothing interesting about it. This proves that Jesus did no signs or
miracles. It would be blasphemy to say
that they don’t matter and Paul wouldn’t have said it.
A minority of scholars believe that the gospels were fairy-tales with a
moral in them. The theory is supposed
to have some New Testament support.
Satan tempted Jesus to jump from the temple for he would be
miraculously preserved from harm.
Jesus refused saying that it would be tempting God to do that.
Satan wanted Jesus to convert others by this miracle – there would have
been no temptation in it without an audience.
If Jesus had miracle powers it would not have been tempting God to use
them. They were his powers. God being all powerful can do what he
wishes. If something could have bad
consequences God’s providence can avert them.
It would have been tempting God if Jesus had no miracle powers at
all. And Satan would probably have
wanted him to die from the fall. Satan
wasn’t very confident in Jesus’ powers either!
In Matthew 12, after Jesus cast out a devil and chastised the Jewish
leaders for saying it was the Devil did it he thought he had proven to them
he could do miracles for and by God.
Then they asked him for a sign and he replied that this evil age looks
for a sign but will get none but that of Jonah. Just like Jonah was in the belly of the
whale for three days and three nights (Jonah 2:1) so Jesus said he would be
inside the earth. He means that he
will rise again. This is the only
place where he talks like this. In
Luke 11 he tells the crowd that the evil age seeks a sign but will get only
the sign of Jonah for Jesus will be to the people what Jonah, the prophet of
repentance, was to
“Jesus said that the mystery of
the kingdom was hidden from outsiders because he only gave it in parables
they couldn’t understand (Mark 4:11).
This mystery could be revealed in action as much as in words. Jesus is saying that he told events of his
past life in a way cloaked in symbolism when telling them clearly would
divulge the mystery. The gospellers
put such stories in the New Testament”.
Jesus speaking in
parables is hardly evidence that the whole of the gospel material is a
parable. But you can work out the
gospel parables without needing explanations.
On that basis the scholars would reply that the parables have a
further meaning that we have no decoding method for. If the parables don’t say what they seem to
be saying then the gospel material that narrates the actions of Jesus could
also be in need of decoding.
Jesus’ statement
implies that the gospel material and perhaps its true meaning was hidden
except from high-level trusted Christians.
There was something to be hidden which is tantamount to indicating
that the miracles are mythological.
“Mark 6:51, 52 related that the
confusion of the disciples about Jesus walking on water proved their minds
were closed to what the multiplication of the loaves indicated. The Christian answer is that it was about
possessing what such powers meant.
Mark is saying they had seen what it meant but they refused to admit
they could see it and closed their minds.
The disciples already knew from the scriptures and from Jesus that
miracles proved nothing. They were not
arguing about whether or not they were tricks or really paranormal. It was the meaning of the events they
refused to see. And we know that Mark did not indicate that Jesus was more
than a prophet with supernatural powers.
If Jesus made thousands of loaves fall out of two baskets in front of
thousands, then only a lunatic would say there was trickery afoot. The only possible conclusion is that the
author of the story not necessarily the author of Mark is hinting that the
miracles never literally happened. The
confusion of the disciples is a hint that the non-literal understanding is
required. The gospels were incubated
in the Church for the Church so the Church when it speaks of the disciples
speaks of itself. The gospels like the
Book of Revelation have seemingly literal stories which are not literal at
all.”
Some say that the apostles did not realise that the events symbolised
that Jesus was the Saviour or the Son of God.
His giving the food symbolised his devotion to others while his
walking on water displayed his power and his power to cleanse hearts. Jesus liked people to look at what he did
and find the things he symbolised with them.
But Jesus didn’t want to be seen as Messiah and didn’t emphasise the
saviour role which wasn’t mentioned until much later. And we must remember that whatever it was
that should have been realised it was something already realised deep down.
So the exegesis of the scholars is probably correct.
“Jesus said that miracles had no apologetic significance (Matthew
7). But he also said that he did
wonders to prove that his mission was authorised by God (Matthew
11:2-6). This could be a contradiction
or Jesus could simply be saying that his strange works were not miracles but
perfectly normal events that showed his wisdom under the divine
guidance. They were signs of goodness
but not signs that disturbed the order of nature. This solution for the discrepancy would be
a denial that he could do miracles or denied that we should take any miracle
stories literally.”
The only thing that is at fault here is forgetting that the apparent
contradiction might really be a contradiction – it might be a clue that there
is a hidden meaning in the miracle tales.
We don’t know if the argument is correct. But it proves that nobody can prove that
the gospels have one true interpretation and that that interpretation is
hidden under symbols and stories and can only be cracked if one has the
code. The surface story might contain
the true story and the true story might reveal nothing unusual about
Jesus. We just don’t know. And that is fine. Taking the miracle stories as non-literal
is an option and that is sufficient for silencing anybody who has the cheek
to say they must be taken literally and no other way.
The stories would be hidden because they contain dangerous facts but
not embarrassing ones for they are best permitted to go out of existence.
The practice of telling stories that have a hidden meaning isn’t at all
unusual. We find it in the Book of
Daniel and Revelation and in some of the writings of the Dead Sea
Scrolls. Proving that he was mentally
unbalanced and that those who took him with more than a pinch of salt were as
bad, Paul claimed that he found that a story from Genesis was not literally
true but had a secret meaning (Galatians 4:21-31). He would not have been knowingly dishonest
for people could use that method of interpretation to make the scriptures
mean anything and it would be bad example and show himself up. The meaning he thought he got from it
didn’t teach anything controversial so he wouldn’t have sanely done something
like that in order to teach stuff that his flock already accepted.
Paul, had he been hearing miracle stories of Jesus, would not have been
taking them literally.
Some reply that you cannot take this as evidence that the gospels are
not literally true for even if the entire Old Testament is an allegory the
New Testament which claims to be superior would too serious to be
non-literal. This is nonsense for the
Old Testament claims to be the preparation for the New. It is more important than the New in the
sense that the New depends on it for authority and divine sanction. A non-literal preparation is useless and
could be a preparation for just about anything – the Cabala for example in
its many sects is one example of useless and misleading such preparation
could be.
Some say that Paul might have looked on Genesis as an allegory but you
can have a literal story that has an allegorical sense so don’t think he is
denying that Genesis is historical.
But Paul never gave any hint that the story was history. He used it to prove a point which it could
only do if the allegory was the only true meaning. Otherwise the story could have been used to
prove anything.
Even if it is unlikely that the gospels have a secret meaning we just
do not know. We would be glad if they
had for then that would destroy the grounds for belief in their wonder-tales
and above all save the world from the perils of religious fundamentalism.
When Jesus said in John that his words all had a veiled meaning he
might just have meant that they were hard to grasp. He would not have meant that they are all
strictly like that so the clear ones would have been exceptions and many of
them are clear eg. John 8:14-18.
If Jesus’ telling Peter that where he is going he cannot follow hides
something then it follows that Peter’s question inquiring where he will go
also must be a code and if that is a code then so must be the record that
Peter asked him this. That would mean
that John was never meant for public eyes but only for those who could
understand the story below the surface.
There might be no way to crack the code if there is one for God could
mean a specific person when it occurs on the first line of the original manuscript
and another person when it appears elsewhere.
It might be that the surface story is literally true and that there is
a hidden story under it.
It could be argued that when John has Jesus saying that the Law of Moses
requires two reliable witnesses at least before a testimony should be
listened to and when Jesus says he is one witness to his own claims and God
is the other that this is so absurd that it could be a hint that Jesus had no
supernatural powers. He could have
made three angels appear to the people he was testifying to, to tell them who
he was and that his message was true.
He couldn’t so he desperately had to resort to a dumb argument.
If John is the oldest gospel then it could be that its fairy-tales
started off the rest culminating in the production of literal-minded
gospels. If John is in code then any
other gospels that claim to be literally true are its rivals and one cannot
believe that both are the word of God.
The Catholic Encyclopaedia challenges the view that the
gospellers did not mean for anybody to take their stories about Jesus’ feats
literally but they were only meant to be legends to get across the power of
Jesus over our hearts and spirits. It
quotes Acts 4:20 and Luke 1:2 to prove that they meant to be historical. But the apostles saying in Acts that they
saw all Jesus said and did does not prove that Luke was telling the truth for
he is the only person that says it was all history and that the apostles told
his stories as historical. There is
something amiss when the apostles are appointed the supreme witnesses and an
inferior who was not even an apostle has to tell us that the apostles
functioned as such. It makes Luke, who
was not an apostle and who could not even give his name though it would have
been no harm for he was hardly an important personage – and it is not hard to
figure out why – a better witness than they were! The fact that Jesus never intended this
implies that Luke’s gospel is not the word of God. There is not a shred of evidence that his
gospel had apostolic approval. It
would be as absurd as writing something that fitted Catholic teaching and
treating it as being on the level of a papal encyclical. The same goes for the Mark gospel. Only Matthew and especially John have any
right to be considered as possibly being the word of the apostles though that
does not mean I think they are!
Anyway perhaps the apostles did say such things but Luke only thinks he
knows that they meant or would have accepted the miracles he recounts. Perhaps Luke was misled by the
legend-makers who had come to believe in what they told him.
The way a few of the miracles are the cause of controversy and
investigation implies that they are literal.
For example see Luke 6:6-11 and John 9. And Jesus said they were signs. But perhaps the investigation was part of
the legend too. For example, in John 9
the Jews check out about a man born blind being cured by Jesus. That could be to show the stubbornness of
the human heart rather than an investigation just like the miracle might have
been only told for some moral reason.
The gospels never clearly put the miracles all on the same level. Some would have been beyond investigation
and maybe it is these ones that are the legends. And legends or not they were signs for
Jesus.
The biggest problem is that the gospels do not all say which miracles
are signs and which are legends or if indeed any are at all. But we don’t know if the gospels except
Luke intended to be literally true. It
could be that the miracles are a hint that they were not literally true. If Jesus had really been an adept
miracle-monger the Jews would have been afraid to publicly kill him in case
he would come back. At the most they
would have tried exiling him discreetly.
Conclusion
The miracles of Jesus are lies or legends. We cannot take them seriously.