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Topic: Was Jesus a Zombie?
no photo
Wed 08/11/10 11:27 PM
I started to post this in 'general religion', then realized it would probably end up getting deleted.

I think this question is equally serious as, and has equal validity as, many theological questions.

From:
http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Zombie_Jesus


After dying, Jesus was raised from the dead and once more walked among the living. This, of course, would only be possible if he were a zombie; Zombie Jesus is the identity of Jesus following the Resurrection. In zombie form, Jesus retained his unending love for mankind, in particular, he loved their sweet, delectable brains. Many of his followers were surprised when, instead of offering God's salvation, Zombie Jesus voraciously consumed their faces.
Today, it is widely believed that Jesus was the source of most modern-day zombies. When he was resurrected, Zombie Jesus infected his disciples with the blood of the new "Holy Alliance", thus creating the first wave of a whole new era of zombie mayhem, which would spread terror on a level unseen since the infection of a cadre of elite Greek philosophers by Zombie Plato several centuries before. This new batch of zombies was later able to develop the Roman Catholic Church, after the political elite of the Roman Empire were zombified by Alberto the Great (who was actually a zombie-vampire hybrid created by Constantine with the help of his right hand man, Albert Einstein). It is widely known that the modern Catholic Church is full of zombies, with its highest position of authority occupied by a hive-mind zombie-vampire referred to as the "Zombie Pope".



TexasScoundrel's photo
Sat 08/14/10 11:23 AM
If Jesus came back from the dead, he's a zombie.

This notion came to me a few years ago.

KerryO's photo
Sat 08/14/10 06:08 PM
Edited by KerryO on Sat 08/14/10 06:09 PM

If Jesus came back from the dead, he's a zombie.

This notion came to me a few years ago.


I was always creeped out by Holy Communion, with its cannabalistic overtones. And then the Fundies get all WTF about voodoo in Haiti, saying it's the reason their deity shook the place to rubble a little bit ago?

How Killer Klowns From Outer Space is that??

-Kerry O.

no photo
Sun 08/15/10 12:59 AM


If Jesus came back from the dead, he's a zombie.

This notion came to me a few years ago.


I was always creeped out by Holy Communion, with its cannabalistic overtones. And then the Fundies get all WTF about voodoo in Haiti, saying it's the reason their deity shook the place to rubble a little bit ago?

How Killer Klowns From Outer Space is that??

-Kerry O.


Yep. As wee lad I noticed that communion was red wine, and I thought they did that on purpose to make it more 'blood like'....the sick bastards.

wux's photo
Mon 08/16/10 03:06 PM
Edited by wux on Mon 08/16/10 03:18 PM

Clever quote. In the old days I read an article in a mainstream magazine that said that Jesus never died. In those days they already knew some drugs that could make a living man appear dead.

Jesus was made to die because basically he said "give the romans what they deserve (i.e. pay taxes) and give to God what He deserves. (Jesus was still ahead of the miraculous transformation to becoming God, otherwise he would have been rich by then.) Some historians think this was the operative statement that made Jesus a dead man, and survive his death at the same time.

In Judea people did not want to pay taxes. Jesus was probably a very respected man, a holy man, revered by quite a lot of people, and known by even more people. He was an influential man in spiritual matters. And sprituality and mullah (money) had mixed boundaries in those days, things were not that well defined and delienated from each other.

Pilate was supportive of Jesus, and Rome (the caesar's office) encouraged Pilate to keep this relationship sustained. When Rome heard that Jesus is on the side of the "let's pay taxes" group, they sent word to Pilate to help Jesus. But the locals wanted him dead. If it became known to Rome that Pilate had helped to crucify or in any way murder Jesus, his head would have rolled.

So he told some of Jesus friends that they will stage a mock-death. The drugs were brought in, Jesus was told of this, and when he drank the glass of vinegar, he drank the poison/drug that gave him the appearance of a dead man. So much so, that they pierced his chest to see, to prove, he's dead. But blood came out, since his heart was still beating.

At any rate, it was Friday very close to sunset, so they took him off the cross, and put his body in a cave. His buddies slipped in during the night, very likely with the aid given by Pilate. They somehow nursed Jesus back to life, with the antidotes of the poison. He came back. He came out of the cave on Monday, claimed resurrection, or maybe others claimed it for his sake. He walked around like a Zombie for a few days.

The story continues that Pilate probably had him travel to Alexandria (everyone went to Alexandria who was in the who is who of intellectual and spiritual elite at the time). Or else Jesus could not survive the poison and the injuries suffered, and simply died.

This is unprovable, but I find it likely and probably. The two guys, buddies of his, were seen walking around with little bottles of potions that week-end. Or so I hear the Bible says. I don't even know this part for sure. Pilate and Rome certainly would not want to anger the Jews by trying to save him from crucifiction. But even then there was strict law, secular law, enforced by the Roman Empire. Just like the Governor of Texas or the Governor of Florida could not get away these days with miscounting votes, because the law of the United States would forbid them from doing that, Pilate also had to observe the law in all his actions. He tried every possible legal route, he could not. The Jews wanted to see the infidel's blood. The infidel wanted them to pay taxes, and that was the biggest blasphemy in the entire Judea at the time.

His resurrection is suspicious, unless you are a Christian and can believe the impossible. His cry "my cup hath runneth full" is quizzical at best -- the drugs acted quickly, altering his cognitive faculties. He bled after he was believed to have died. My only addition to this story that helps its cause, is that Jesus died amazingly quickly, in a matter of hours. Nobody died that quickly on the cross, at least not from beign crucified. The type of crucifiction that they subjugated Jesus to, involved tying somebody's arms to the cross bar, giving him leverage but a poor one by way of a slippery or at least slanted foot-rest. The crucified person could not breath unless he made an effort to stand straight, which he had to do with the strenght in his arms, and a little by balancing on the slanted foot rest. When his arms got tired, he had to relax them. This made his body drop, and he could not breathe, at least not well. Think of waterboarding. A lot of torture depends on people having the illusion they can't breathe. So crucified people survived very long, and that's why crucifiction was started often on Fridays, since there was no way in hell that the victims would need to be buried on the Sabbeth. My addition is that it is not at all likely that a previously well-sustained man would die so quickly from crucificiton -- gives support to the poison theory.

I believe the version by the writer of this magazine article. It makes sense on so many levels, and definitely more sense than the Bible ever could convince me of, as far as the truth is concerned as claimed by the Bible.

wux's photo
Tue 08/17/10 07:12 AM


Yep. As wee lad I noticed that communion was red wine, and I thought they did that on purpose to make it more 'blood like'....the sick bastards.


In our little Church of Satan, in the old village community of long-established farming families, we drank of the challiette of "Bloody Mary" on Sundays during anti-mass. Much for the same reason.

no photo
Tue 01/18/11 06:41 PM
Jesus, my friend, may not have been the "son o god" he may be a zombie. But thats ok right? Were all different :)
haha

wux's photo
Tue 01/18/11 07:34 PM
Edited by wux on Tue 01/18/11 07:35 PM

Jesus, my friend, may not have been the "son o god" he may be a zombie. But thats ok right? Were all different :)
haha


(puts up hand) I am not.

gc49's photo
Thu 01/20/11 05:26 AM
don t let george a romero know that lol

there s no zombies and no jesus


getdrunk1990's photo
Mon 06/27/11 10:07 AM
Yes but first Jesus was a mexican

valerytozer's photo
Sat 01/19/13 02:54 PM
thats funny but true lol, but if IF jseus was real, any man could have done any of the things he was clamed he did, ninjas in japan 30,000 years befor jesus could walk on water ans fly. the egyptions had batteys and could move whole buildings , the junery to he o
asia was not that long a man could have walked from middle east to aisa learned a few trricks and bin back in what 5 or 10 years. as for dieing, pepole even today have been know to come back to life or have been thought to have died. n to top it of fankncents n myrph oils are healing oils

RKISIT's photo
Fri 03/08/13 04:36 PM
George Carlin said it best "why would i join a cult whose symbol is a man nailed to 2 pieces of wood."

no photo
Fri 03/08/13 08:29 PM
This thread was brought back from the dead! Zombie thread!

RKISIT's photo
Sat 03/09/13 04:59 AM

This thread was brought back from the dead! Zombie thread!

It's a miracle?indifferent

TexasScoundrel's photo
Sun 03/10/13 04:43 AM
I thought something was eating my brain.

no photo
Sat 03/16/13 09:28 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0ZqQznblZo

JaYL6942's photo
Fri 12/12/14 06:04 PM
No, Jesus would not have been a zombie. He would have been a Lich.

A Lich is an undead, who was a very powerful person in life.. a highly placed priest, for example. A zombie on the other-hand is your commoner, average, everyday joe, type rotting corpse.

I believe Jesus would have fit much better as a Lich, because who is higher in the church than the "son of god"?

Ɔʎɹɐx's photo
Fri 12/12/14 11:47 PM

Thazager1's photo
Mon 03/30/15 11:57 AM
He never really died, he only appeared that way. After going through what he did, he fell into a coma, which to the people back then looked like he was dead. So when he awoke days later, he came out of the coma.

SacramentAl's photo
Mon 03/30/15 05:44 PM
I find it appropriate that the topic of religion and zombies converges here. Think about the parallel: in good zombie series, the undead population naturally exceeds that of the living, effectively making them the majority. Their primary objective, historically at least, has been to convert all the living into their ranks, or destroy them. I don't know if anyone ever used zombies in any form of media as social commentary about religious fanaticism but it's kind of scary when you think about how similar they are...

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