Son of Man or Son of Satan?
Unlike
jehovah, Jesus calls himself son of man. But then, was he really a human
being?
Matthew
4:1-3: “Then the spirit led Jesus into the desert to be tempted by the
devil.
After
spending forty days and nights without food, Jesus was hungry.” Jesus fasted
in
the desert
during the period. This means that he spent forty days and nights without
food and
without water. It is anatomically impossible for a human creature to survive
that
long
without drinking any water. Since Jesus has done it, he is no human. He does
not
need food
or water to keep ticking.
He
announced to the disciples that he eats food of a kind unknown to them. John
4:31-34:
“Meanwhile, his disciples were urging him, master, take some food. But he
told
them, I
have food to eat of which you know nothing. My meat is to do the will of him
who
sent me.”
John
carefully says that blood as well as water came out from him when he was
pierced.
John 19:34: “But one of the soldiers opened his side with a spear; and
immediately blood and water flowed out.”
When a
dead body is pierced, blood may come out. If the bladder is pierced, a
mixture of
blood and urine might come out, but not one of blood and water. This can be
distinguished only by laboratory examination. But John, who was present at
the scene
says, he
saw blood as well as water flowing out.
Man can
only be redeemed from Satan the devil supreme by man. Knowing it,
Jesus
rebelliously affects to be son of man.
Jesus goes
into anger and orders “Silence!” when a certain familiar devil blurted
on an
occasion: “I know exactly who you are” (Mark 1:24). But he is evasive when
another
devil challenges him with regard to his protestations of sonship of god.
In the
course of his unanticipated remark, the first devil also said “holy one of
god.”
The free
use of this descriptive text by a devil betokens the true nature of the
bible
as
self-expression of Satan the devil supreme. Satan is the only character in
the band of
fallen
angels who affects still to be a god after having lost that title for ever
by failure to
hold
goodness when the concept of man first began. In that process he necessarily
affects to
be the only god.
Jesus in
fact threatened the first devil (Mark 1:25) upon hearing his words and had
also
exclaimed “Silence!” Most versions of Mark rebelliously suppress the threat
and
exclamation, duly investing them in the process with singular pertinence.
Mark 1:25:
“Jesus
spoke to him threateningly; Silence! he said; come out of him.”
Obviously,
Jesus does not want the devil to continue in the same vein after he said
abruptly:
“I know exactly who you are.” The all-important “exactly” is suppressed by
most
versions of Mark!
The second
devil is cited at Matthew 4:3: “Then the tempter approached, and said
to him, if
thou art the son of god, bid these stones turn into loaves of bread.”
This is an
open challenge from a fellow devil who evidently knows Jesus’ true
identity
and knows too that he is not the son of god as he affects. He boldly asks
Jesus to
turn the
stones lying nearby into bread and prove the claim. Jesus on his part does
not
take up
the challenge. He instead quotes from what his supposed father had already
before
caused Moses to write.
Incidentally, on the subject of devils or fallen angels, Jude has this to
say: “The
angels,
too, who left the place assigned to them, instead of keeping their due
order, he
has
imprisoned in eternal darkness, to await their judgement when the great day
comes”
(Jude 6).
The
biblical almighty affirms his almightiness in the first sentence of the
bible
where he
says he created heaven and earth in the beginning. There is no proof for
this
claim of
his. On the other hand, the fallen angels whom he says he kept in darkness
for
ever have
come up to the surface. Hence, the almightiness of the almighty is merely an
affectation.
The fact
is nobody has imprisoned these devils. They came up to the surface of
their own
accord in the aftermath of the surfacing of Satan their chief through the
murderer
Moses.
The Vedas
count angels at 330 million in number, of whom a third dropped to the
nether
world by the self-force of unrighteous act on their part.
There
exists in the bible a text that rebelliously furnishes the same proportion
of
fallen
angels. The text is Revelation 12:3-4: “Then a second portent appeared in
heaven;
a great
dragon was there, fiery-red, with seven heads and ten horns, and on each of
the
seven
heads a royal diadem; his tail dragged down a third part of the stars in
heaven.”
The stars
still in the sky signify gods.
Considering the number of angels in the Vedas, the third part of the angels
who
fell would
come up to 110 millions. There is a text in Revelation itself which confirms
the above.
The text is “Then I looked and heard the voice of many angels, numbering
thousands
upon thousands, and ten thousand times ten thousand (5:11).
Jesus
rebelliously dangled before his very first followers a novel prospect of end
of the
world.
They were assured of his ensuing reappearance in glory and their bodily
transportation to an eternally lasting heaven. All of this were to occur
during their
lifetime
itself.
Matthew
10:23: “I promise you, the son of man will come, before your task with
the cities
of Israel is ended.”
Just a few
pages down, he extends the time limit indefinitely by widening the
designated
territory to the whole world.
Matthew
24:14: “This gospel of the kingdom must first be preached all over the
world, so
that all nations may hear the truth; only after that will the end come.”
To repeat.
Jesus initially says he will return before the preaching of his so-called
gospel is
concluded in all the cities of Israel. He says subsequently that he will
only come
after the
same gospel is preached all over the world. It is clear from the second
declaration that his purpose is the ample preaching of his rebellious gospel
throughout
the world
by the men whom he had enrolled.
If he had
said this in the beginning to those miserable men, they would have left
him then
and there. For, it would have been immediately seen by them as an impossible
task. This
is why he first promises the disciples that he will come back before they
have
finished
preaching the so-called gospel in the cities of Israel. The promise was
never
kept. It
turned instead into a deceit—although he had said in Matthew 24:34-35:
“Truly I
say to you
that this generation will by no means pass away until all these things
occur.
Heaven and
earth will pass away, but my words will by no means pass away.”
Jesus says
at Matthew 28:20: “And behold I am with you always, yes, till the end
of the
era.”
He begins
saying that he will be with them for ever and immediately afterwards
adds that
he will be with them only till the end of the ongoing era. According to
Vedas,
the
ongoing era is Kaliyuga (Sanskrit for ‘Age of War’––Ed.). It began at the
end of the
previous
age, known as Dwapara. The era of Kali began after upon the ascent of
Bhagwan
Sri Krishna to the heavenly world.
What Jesus
says in reality is that he will last only upto the end of Kali. However,
being a
rebel and resolute enemy of the human race, he rebelliously equates his own
coextensive Kali age with the life span of the world itself. In reality,
Kali is but one of
four
different eras, each one following the other without interruption. The Vedas
while
saying
that the world is beginningless and endless, also declare that Kalki Avatar
will
appear at
Kali-end, and restore Sanatana Dharma––‘goodness everlasting’.
Jesus
obviously wants Kali to last for ever, as Jesus and Kali are one and the
same. For
this reason he declared in his parting words that he would be with them for
ever.
Jesus’
declaration of his forthcoming return is now 2000 years old. If Jesus had
any truth
in him, his return and the end of the world should have come about long long
ago.
It all
shows that there is no truth in Jesus and that he is liar and the father of
lies.
John 8:44:
“You belong to your father that is the devil, and are eager to gratify the
appetites
which are your father’s. He, from the first, was a murderer; and as for
truth, he
has never
taken his stand upon that; there is no truth in him. When he asserts
falsehood,
he is only uttering what is natural to him; he is all false, and it was he
who
gave
falsehood its birth.”
This is a
knowing statement. Every word in it pertains to the speaker himself,
namely,
Jesus. They are realised in him and in no one else. Any person who considers
Jesus and
his rebellious outpourings in the so-called gospels will come to the same
conclusion, especially when he examines those words in any one of the four
books in
comparison
with the same text in a different book.