Bureaucrats, Interface administrators, Administrators (Semantic MediaWiki), Curators (Semantic MediaWiki), Editors (Semantic MediaWiki), Suppressors, Administrators, trusted
15,174
edits
mNo edit summary |
m (+mistype corrected) |
||
| Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
{{Vertical space|}} | {{Vertical space|}} | ||
The pedigree is from Panther, or Panthera, the father of Ben-Perachia’s pupil. Epiphanius then knew of no other person. Since that time I have put the facts together for myself. Very briefly they are these. The Jesus of the Talmud was the pupil of Jehoshua, son of Perachia, a Hebrew teacher, well known to history, who began to teach about 3606 (year of the world), or {{Style S-Small capitals| b.c.}} 154. This | The pedigree is from Panther, or Panthera, the father of Ben-Perachia’s pupil. Epiphanius then knew of no other person. Since that time I have put the facts together for myself. Very briefly they are these. The Jesus of the Talmud was the pupil of Jehoshua, son of Perachia, a Hebrew teacher, well known to history, who began to teach about 3606 (year of the world), or {{Style S-Small capitals| b.c.}} 154. This Rabbi was one of the Sanhedrim in the reign of Alexander Jannseus, who was King of the Jews {{Style S-Small capitals| b.c.}} 106. About this time there was a religious revolt, and some 50,000 Jews were put to death; others fled. It is known that Ben-Perachia sought safety with his pupil in Egypt. It is related in the Babylonish Gemara (Tract. Sanhedrim, fol. 107, and Sota, fol. 47) that during the persecution of the Rabbis by King Alexander Jannaeus, Jehoshua, the son of Perachia, fled into Egypt, taking with him his pupil, Jesus, who was the son of Panthera, and that they both went to Alexandria, and were initiated into the Egyptian mysteries, or, as it was said, they became magicians: that is, magii. | ||
I calculate from the data that Ben-Panthera was born about 120, and died about 70 {{Style S-Small capitals| b.c.}}, at the age assigned to Jesus by Irenaeus, who affirms that “those who were conversant with John in Asia” to whom John himself “conveyed the information;” and “all the Elders” testified that Jesus was teaching from his fortieth to his fiftieth year of age.† | I calculate from the data that Ben-Panthera was born about 120, and died about 70 {{Style S-Small capitals| b.c.}}, at the age assigned to Jesus by Irenaeus, who affirms that “those who were conversant with John in Asia” to whom John himself “conveyed the information;” and “all the Elders” testified that Jesus was teaching from his fortieth to his fiftieth year of age.† | ||