The Gospel of Afranius: Difference between revisions
Strecosaurus (talk | contribs) →Structure and plot: worth mentioning Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
|||
(44 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
| series = |
| series = |
||
| genre = [[Religious criticism]], [[historical novel]], [[spy novel]] |
| genre = [[Religious criticism]], [[historical novel]], [[spy novel]] |
||
| publisher = |
| publisher = Self-published (1st edition) |
||
| release_date = 1995 |
| release_date = 1995 |
||
| media_type = Print |
| media_type = Print |
||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
'''''The Gospel of Afranius''''' ({{ |
'''''The Gospel of Afranius''''' ({{Langx|ru|Евангелие от Афрания|Evangeliye ot Afraniya}}) is a 1995 [[counterapologetic]] polemic by Russian scientist and writer [[Kirill Eskov]]. Its illustrative novel part is a [[dramatic portrayal of Jesus]]. In this work, Eskov constructs a demythologised account of the events of the [[Synoptic Gospels|Gospels]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Mina|first=Mikhail|date=1998-04-30|title=In retrospect by Mikhail Mina|url=https://www.nature.com/articles/31855|journal=Nature|language=en|volume=392|issue=6679|pages=884|doi=10.1038/31855|bibcode=1998Natur.392..884M |s2cid=35300944 |issn=1476-4687}}</ref> |
||
⚫ | |||
==Publication history== |
==Publication history== |
||
⚫ | As described by Eskov,<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.kulichki.com/moshkow/PROZA/ESKOV_K/s_zilant.txt | title=Кирилл Еськов. Путешествие дилетанта }}</ref> earnest attempts of his religious close friend, [[Sergey Kalugin]], a musician and poet, to convert him led him to creation of this book as a response. Eskov [[self-published]] this work in 1995 after several Russian book publishers turned him down, as they feared the book could spark a controversy and draw the ire of the resurgent [[Russian Orthodox Church]].<ref name=":0" /> As of 2020, it has received five subsequent editions in Russian by regular publishers (2001 by [[AST (publisher)|ACT]], 2003 by Фолио, 2005 by ЭНАС, 2016 by Алькор Паблишерс and 2019 by Престиж Бук); the latter three are anthologies combining it with several other works by Eskov.<ref name=":1" /> In 2003 it was also translated to [[Polish language|Polish]] (and published by Solaris).<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|title=Ewangelia według Afraniusza – encyklopediafantastyki.pl|url=http://encyklopediafantastyki.pl/index.php?title=Ewangelia_wed%C5%82ug_Afraniusza|access-date=2020-12-28|website=encyklopediafantastyki.pl}}</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite web|title=Esensja: "Fantastyczny apokryf" – Sebastian Chosiński|url=https://esensja.pl/ksiazka/recenzje/tekst.html?id=212|access-date=2020-12-28|website=Esensja.pl|language=pl-PL}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite web|title=Esensja: "Bazując na Bułhakowie" – Wojciech Gołąbowski|url=https://esensja.pl/ksiazka/recenzje/tekst.html?id=210|access-date=2020-12-28|website=Esensja.pl|language=pl-PL}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Esensja: "Nie znacie dnia, ani godziny, ani sposobu" – Paweł Pluta|url=https://esensja.pl/ksiazka/recenzje/tekst.html?id=211|access-date=2020-12-28|website=Esensja.pl|language=pl-PL}}</ref> Spanish<ref>{{Cite book|title=El evangelio secreto|first=Kiril|last=Yeskov|date=September 1, 2006|publisher=Bibliópolis|isbn=8496173623 }}</ref> and Bulgarian<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.colibri.bg/eng/books/2140/kirill-eskov-the-gospel-of-afranius|title=The Gospel of Afranius, Kiril Eskov|accessdate=August 9, 2024|via=www.colibri.bg}}</ref> translations were also published. |
||
As described by Eskov,<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.kulichki.com/moshkow/PROZA/ESKOV_K/s_zilant.txt | title=Кирилл Еськов. Путешествие дилетанта }}</ref> earnest attempts of his religious close friend, [[Sergey Kalugin|a musician and poet]], to convert him led him to creation of this book as a response. |
|||
⚫ | An online English version, endorsed by Eskov, appeared in December 2022.<ref name=":eng">[http://fan.lib.ru/img/e/eskov/afranius_engl/afranius_engl.pdf PDF], taken from [http://fan.lib.ru/e/eskov/ Eskov's official publication page]; see also the (much shorter, 16 pages) [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/384737077_The_Double_Conspiracy_Theory_A_New_Combination_Hypothesis_For_Explaining_The_Apparent_Resurrection_Of_Jesus_Of_Nazareth condensed version] by the translator. A direct translation of the 1995 edition (different from the 2022 version) - [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D2DM2PCB Amazon link], also approved by Eskov, appeared in 2024.</ref> |
||
⚫ | Eskov [[self-published]] this work in 1995 after several Russian book publishers turned him down, as they feared the book could spark a controversy and draw the ire of the resurgent [[Russian Orthodox Church]].<ref name=":0" /> As of 2020, it has received five subsequent editions in Russian by regular publishers (2001 by [[AST (publisher)|ACT]], 2003 by Фолио, 2005 by ЭНАС, 2016 by Алькор Паблишерс and 2019 by Престиж Бук); the latter three are anthologies |
||
==Structure and plot== |
==Structure and plot== |
||
The book is divided into two parts. The first part is a non-fiction essay and polemic in which the author, a Russian biologist, challenges the claims made by [[Josh McDowell]], an American |
The book is divided into two parts. The first part is a non-fiction essay and polemic in which the author, a Russian biologist, challenges the claims made by [[Josh McDowell]], an American evangelical [[Christian apologetics|apologist]] and [[Evangelism|evangelist]], in his book ''[[The Resurrection Factor]]'' (1981).<ref name=":0" /> McDowell's book argues that events portrayed in the [[New Testament]], specifically, the [[resurrection of Jesus]], cannot be explained without miracles and have to be seen as a proof of the direct intervention of God. Eskov took McDowell's book as a challenge and decided to publish his own in response. In this part of the book, he overviews the known historical facts and engages with a number of McDowell's arguments.<ref name=":0" /> |
||
The second part of the book is a novel and a [[dramatic portrayal of Jesus]], through a story of Afranius (a character from [[Mikhail Bulgakov]]'s ''[[Master and Margarita]]''), in the novel said to be the head of [[Pontius Pilate]]'s secret service, and his successful manipulation of [[Jesus|Jesus Christ]] and [[Apostles in the New Testament|the apostles]]. The Romans are concerned with the violent opposition to their rule from the factions associated with the religion of [[Judaism]], and design a plan (''Operation [[Ichthys]]'') to create a new, more pacifist local religious movement that would weaken (and ideally eclipse) the dominant Judaism factions while being less antagonistic to the Roman rule. For that purpose they choose a new sect organized around Jesus Christ as the most suitable to their goals, and infiltrate it with an undercover operative ([[Judas Iscariot|Judas]]), tasked among other things with spreading miracle stories like Jesus walking on water by pretending to have eyewitnessed them (which would be later repeated by others to create [[Ascension of Jesus|the Ascension narrative]]). Meanwhile, [[John the Baptist]], seen as a competitor to Jesus, is executed. The Roman plot culminates with the Roman agents staging two fake [[resurrection]]s (first of [[Lazarus of Bethany]], second of Jesus). The plan succeeds at discrediting the rabbinical court ([[Sanhedrin]]) and deceiving the apostles who became convinced they witnessed a series of [[supernatural]] miracles, while in fact what they have seen were [[Gaslighting|staged events orchestrated by paid performers and Roman agents]].<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" /> |
The second part of the book is a novel and a [[dramatic portrayal of Jesus]], through a story of Afranius (a character from [[Mikhail Bulgakov]]'s ''[[Master and Margarita]]''), in the novel said to be the head of [[Pontius Pilate]]'s secret service, and his successful manipulation of [[Jesus|Jesus Christ]] and [[Apostles in the New Testament|the apostles]]. The Romans are concerned with the violent opposition to their rule from the factions associated with the religion of [[Judaism]], and design a plan (''Operation [[Ichthys]]'') to create a new, more pacifist local religious movement that would weaken (and ideally eclipse) the dominant Judaism factions while being less antagonistic to the Roman rule. For that purpose they choose a new sect organized around Jesus Christ as the most suitable to their goals (cf. [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John%2011%3A47-48&version=NIV John 11:47-48]), and infiltrate it with an undercover operative ([[Judas Iscariot|Judas]]), tasked among other things with spreading miracle stories like Jesus walking on water by pretending to have eyewitnessed them (which would be later repeated by others to create [[Ascension of Jesus|the Ascension narrative]]). Meanwhile, [[John the Baptist]], seen as a competitor to Jesus, is executed. The Roman plot culminates with the Roman agents staging two fake [[resurrection]]s (first of [[Lazarus of Bethany]], second of Jesus). The plan succeeds at discrediting the rabbinical court ([[Sanhedrin]]) and deceiving the apostles who became convinced they witnessed a series of [[supernatural]] miracles, while in fact what they have seen were [[Gaslighting|staged events orchestrated by paid performers and Roman agents]].<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" /> |
||
Due to intense operational secrecy, Pilate and Afranius do not report about this discretionary operation to Rome, and their secret is thus soon gone, with a hidden scroll being the only memory of it. The plan also partially succeeds in the long term when Jewish-Christians refuse to participate in the Jewish War, confirming Pilate and Afranius's foresight. Their plan has an unexpected and unforeseen byproduct: upon having a religious vision, [[Paul of Tarsus]] starts converting Gentiles to Christianity, starting a new world religion (and this, according to the narrative, is the second true coincidence important for the origins of Christianity - likened in the book to a virus, one that has both "escaped from a lab" and randomly mutated - after Peter misunderstands Joseph's reply from mountain fog, praising his son Jesus, as the direct voice of God).<ref name=":eng" />{{Primary source inline|date=May 2023}} |
|||
⚫ | The story is Eskov's illustration of his preceding essay's positions, arguing that all the events as portrayed in the New Testament, and corroborated by known archeological and historical evidence, could be explained without the need for a supernatural intervention;<ref name=":0" /> moreover, Eskov points out that some facts, like the reference to the resurrected Jesus having a "different form" in Mark 16:12 |
||
⚫ | The story is Eskov's illustration of his preceding essay's positions, arguing that all the events as portrayed in the New Testament, and corroborated by known archeological and historical evidence, could be explained without the need for a supernatural intervention;<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":eng" /> moreover, Eskov points out that some facts, like the reference to the resurrected Jesus having a "different form" in Mark 16:12, or lack of an appearance to Jesus's mother Mary (not mentioned in either the Gospels or Paul's list), as well as some subtler considerations, are more naturally explained by his hypothesis than by bona fide miracles; he also notes that even without taking the evidence into account, his explanation is more plausible than the explanation that Jesus actually rose from the dead and flew up into the sky to sit on a throne in Heaven.<ref name=":eng" /> (The other major alleged miraculous act of God, creation of the world ''[[ex nihilo]]'', is also discussed in the appendix of the book for completeness and is likewise offered a token miracle-free alternative consistent with cosmological constraints, namely that the origin of the Universe came from a quantum foam bubble in another eternal empty Universe; the translator later published another model,<ref>{{Cite arXiv |title=Is a Quantum Gravity Era Necessary?|first=Bogdan|last=Veklych|date=October 3, 2023|class=gr-qc |eprint=2310.02338}} Popularly summarized in [https://www.callidusphilo.com/2021/04/cosmology.html#Goldberg]</ref> presented by [[Aron Ra]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7txEy8708I|title=Eternal Cosmological Model|date=September 17, 2023|accessdate=August 9, 2024|via=YouTube}}</ref>)<ref name=":eng" />{{Primary source inline|date=May 2023}} |
||
==Reception== |
==Reception== |
||
In 1997, the book won the Grand Prix at the Festival of Science Fiction Authors in [[Odesa]] (Fancon, Фанкон).<ref name=":0" /> It also won a Big Zilant award in 2001 at the {{ill|Zilantkon|ru|Зиланткон}}.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|url=https://fantlab.ru/work17072|title=Кирилл Еськов "Евангелие от Афрания"|language=ru}}</ref> |
In 1997, the book won the Grand Prix at the Festival of Science Fiction Authors in [[Odesa]] (Fancon, Фанкон).<ref name=":0" /> It also won a Big Zilant award in 2001 at the {{ill|Zilantkon|ru|Зиланткон}}.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|url=https://fantlab.ru/work17072|title=Кирилл Еськов "Евангелие от Афрания"|language=ru}}</ref> Reviewing this work for ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' in 1998, Mikhail Mina noted that it is an expression of Soviet-era [[state atheism]] clashing with [[Religion in Russia|post-Soviet resurgence of religious belief]]. He observes that it is both a pleasant read (with "humour [that] is sometimes biting, but never insulting") and a successful counter to McDowell, noting that it would likely "find many interested readers if it were published in English".<ref name=":0" /> |
||
Reviewing this work for ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' in 1998, Mikhail Mina noted that it is an expression of [[State atheism|Soviet era state atheism]] clashing with [[Religion in Russia|post-Soviet resurgence of religious belief]]. He observes that it is both a pleasant read (with "humour [that] is sometimes biting, but never insulting") and a successful counter to McDowell, noting that it would likely "find many interested readers if it were published in English".<ref name=":0" /> |
|||
⚫ | Historian [[Richard Carrier]] noted that this work is "popular in the slavic world, from Russia, Poland, the Baltics, and Ukraine" and "much overlooked" in the West; he praised it and concluded that it "disproves Christianity".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.richardcarrier.info/archives/23827|title=Christianity Is a Conspiracy Theory • Richard Carrier|first=Richard|last=Carrier|date=May 21, 2023}}</ref> |
||
A short synopsis of this work was a top 5 finalist of the 2023 TITAN Screenwriting Contest.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://industrialscripts.com/2023-titan-semi-finalists/#h-1-page-film-and-tv-pitches|title=Announcing the 2023 TITAN Awards Semi-Finalists|date=September 30, 2023}}</ref> |
|||
==Possible Old Testament prequel== |
|||
⚫ | Historian [[Richard Carrier]] noted that this work is "popular in the slavic world, from Russia, Poland, the Baltics, and Ukraine" and "much overlooked" in the West; he praised it and concluded that it "disproves Christianity".<ref name=":Carrier">{{Cite web|url=https://www.richardcarrier.info/archives/23827|title=Christianity Is a Conspiracy Theory • Richard Carrier|first=Richard|last=Carrier|date=May 21, 2023}}</ref> A short synopsis of this work was a top 5 finalist of the 2023 TITAN Screenwriting Contest.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://industrialscripts.com/2023-titan-semi-finalists/#h-1-page-film-and-tv-pitches|title=Announcing the 2023 TITAN Awards Semi-Finalists|date=September 30, 2023}}</ref> |
||
Eskov has considered writing a prequel to "The Gospel of Afranius", tentatively titled "The Book of Elisha", in which the Old Testament miracles of Elijah and Elisha would be explained in the same style - e.g. including, among other things, Elijah using flammable liquid and hidden candles to light up the altar to Yahwe and prove him to Baal-worshippers, or Elisha, the sole witness of Elijah's ascension, killing him to assume his place and telling everyone that he ascended to Heaven. As of 2023, he hasn't published it yet. |
|||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
* [[Political decoy]] |
* [[Political decoy#Sukarno / unknown (1950s)|Political decoy § Sukarno/unknown (1950s)]] |
||
* [[Zersetzung]] |
|||
* "[[The Legend of Sleepy Hollow]]" |
|||
* [[Myth of Er#Comparative mythology|Myth of Er § Comparative mythology]] |
|||
* ''[[Scarlet Sails (novel)|Scarlet Sails]]'' |
|||
* [[Historicity of Jesus]] |
* [[Historicity of Jesus]] |
||
Latest revision as of 04:34, 5 November 2024
Author | Kirill Eskov |
---|---|
Original title | Евангелие от Афрания |
Language | Russian |
Genre | Religious criticism, historical novel, spy novel |
Publisher | Self-published (1st edition) |
Publication date | 1995 |
Publication place | Russia |
Media type |
The Gospel of Afranius (Russian: Евангелие от Афрания, romanized: Evangeliye ot Afraniya) is a 1995 counterapologetic polemic by Russian scientist and writer Kirill Eskov. Its illustrative novel part is a dramatic portrayal of Jesus. In this work, Eskov constructs a demythologised account of the events of the Gospels.[1]
Publication history
[edit]As described by Eskov,[2] earnest attempts of his religious close friend, Sergey Kalugin, a musician and poet, to convert him led him to creation of this book as a response. Eskov self-published this work in 1995 after several Russian book publishers turned him down, as they feared the book could spark a controversy and draw the ire of the resurgent Russian Orthodox Church.[1] As of 2020, it has received five subsequent editions in Russian by regular publishers (2001 by ACT, 2003 by Фолио, 2005 by ЭНАС, 2016 by Алькор Паблишерс and 2019 by Престиж Бук); the latter three are anthologies combining it with several other works by Eskov.[3] In 2003 it was also translated to Polish (and published by Solaris).[4][5][6][7] Spanish[8] and Bulgarian[9] translations were also published.
An online English version, endorsed by Eskov, appeared in December 2022.[10]
Structure and plot
[edit]The book is divided into two parts. The first part is a non-fiction essay and polemic in which the author, a Russian biologist, challenges the claims made by Josh McDowell, an American evangelical apologist and evangelist, in his book The Resurrection Factor (1981).[1] McDowell's book argues that events portrayed in the New Testament, specifically, the resurrection of Jesus, cannot be explained without miracles and have to be seen as a proof of the direct intervention of God. Eskov took McDowell's book as a challenge and decided to publish his own in response. In this part of the book, he overviews the known historical facts and engages with a number of McDowell's arguments.[1]
The second part of the book is a novel and a dramatic portrayal of Jesus, through a story of Afranius (a character from Mikhail Bulgakov's Master and Margarita), in the novel said to be the head of Pontius Pilate's secret service, and his successful manipulation of Jesus Christ and the apostles. The Romans are concerned with the violent opposition to their rule from the factions associated with the religion of Judaism, and design a plan (Operation Ichthys) to create a new, more pacifist local religious movement that would weaken (and ideally eclipse) the dominant Judaism factions while being less antagonistic to the Roman rule. For that purpose they choose a new sect organized around Jesus Christ as the most suitable to their goals (cf. John 11:47-48), and infiltrate it with an undercover operative (Judas), tasked among other things with spreading miracle stories like Jesus walking on water by pretending to have eyewitnessed them (which would be later repeated by others to create the Ascension narrative). Meanwhile, John the Baptist, seen as a competitor to Jesus, is executed. The Roman plot culminates with the Roman agents staging two fake resurrections (first of Lazarus of Bethany, second of Jesus). The plan succeeds at discrediting the rabbinical court (Sanhedrin) and deceiving the apostles who became convinced they witnessed a series of supernatural miracles, while in fact what they have seen were staged events orchestrated by paid performers and Roman agents.[4][5][6]
Due to intense operational secrecy, Pilate and Afranius do not report about this discretionary operation to Rome, and their secret is thus soon gone, with a hidden scroll being the only memory of it. The plan also partially succeeds in the long term when Jewish-Christians refuse to participate in the Jewish War, confirming Pilate and Afranius's foresight. Their plan has an unexpected and unforeseen byproduct: upon having a religious vision, Paul of Tarsus starts converting Gentiles to Christianity, starting a new world religion (and this, according to the narrative, is the second true coincidence important for the origins of Christianity - likened in the book to a virus, one that has both "escaped from a lab" and randomly mutated - after Peter misunderstands Joseph's reply from mountain fog, praising his son Jesus, as the direct voice of God).[10][non-primary source needed]
The story is Eskov's illustration of his preceding essay's positions, arguing that all the events as portrayed in the New Testament, and corroborated by known archeological and historical evidence, could be explained without the need for a supernatural intervention;[1][10] moreover, Eskov points out that some facts, like the reference to the resurrected Jesus having a "different form" in Mark 16:12, or lack of an appearance to Jesus's mother Mary (not mentioned in either the Gospels or Paul's list), as well as some subtler considerations, are more naturally explained by his hypothesis than by bona fide miracles; he also notes that even without taking the evidence into account, his explanation is more plausible than the explanation that Jesus actually rose from the dead and flew up into the sky to sit on a throne in Heaven.[10] (The other major alleged miraculous act of God, creation of the world ex nihilo, is also discussed in the appendix of the book for completeness and is likewise offered a token miracle-free alternative consistent with cosmological constraints, namely that the origin of the Universe came from a quantum foam bubble in another eternal empty Universe; the translator later published another model,[11] presented by Aron Ra.[12])[10][non-primary source needed]
Reception
[edit]In 1997, the book won the Grand Prix at the Festival of Science Fiction Authors in Odesa (Fancon, Фанкон).[1] It also won a Big Zilant award in 2001 at the Zilantkon .[3] Reviewing this work for Nature in 1998, Mikhail Mina noted that it is an expression of Soviet-era state atheism clashing with post-Soviet resurgence of religious belief. He observes that it is both a pleasant read (with "humour [that] is sometimes biting, but never insulting") and a successful counter to McDowell, noting that it would likely "find many interested readers if it were published in English".[1]
Historian Richard Carrier noted that this work is "popular in the slavic world, from Russia, Poland, the Baltics, and Ukraine" and "much overlooked" in the West; he praised it and concluded that it "disproves Christianity".[13] A short synopsis of this work was a top 5 finalist of the 2023 TITAN Screenwriting Contest.[14]
See also
[edit]- Political decoy § Sukarno/unknown (1950s)
- Zersetzung
- "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"
- Myth of Er § Comparative mythology
- Scarlet Sails
- Historicity of Jesus
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g Mina, Mikhail (1998-04-30). "In retrospect by Mikhail Mina". Nature. 392 (6679): 884. Bibcode:1998Natur.392..884M. doi:10.1038/31855. ISSN 1476-4687. S2CID 35300944.
- ^ "Кирилл Еськов. Путешествие дилетанта".
- ^ a b Кирилл Еськов "Евангелие от Афрания" (in Russian).
- ^ a b "Ewangelia według Afraniusza – encyklopediafantastyki.pl". encyklopediafantastyki.pl. Retrieved 2020-12-28.
- ^ a b "Esensja: "Fantastyczny apokryf" – Sebastian Chosiński". Esensja.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2020-12-28.
- ^ a b "Esensja: "Bazując na Bułhakowie" – Wojciech Gołąbowski". Esensja.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2020-12-28.
- ^ "Esensja: "Nie znacie dnia, ani godziny, ani sposobu" – Paweł Pluta". Esensja.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2020-12-28.
- ^ Yeskov, Kiril (September 1, 2006). El evangelio secreto. Bibliópolis. ISBN 8496173623.
- ^ The Gospel of Afranius, Kiril Eskov. Retrieved August 9, 2024 – via www.colibri.bg.
- ^ a b c d e PDF, taken from Eskov's official publication page; see also the (much shorter, 16 pages) condensed version by the translator. A direct translation of the 1995 edition (different from the 2022 version) - Amazon link, also approved by Eskov, appeared in 2024.
- ^ Veklych, Bogdan (October 3, 2023). "Is a Quantum Gravity Era Necessary?". arXiv:2310.02338 [gr-qc]. Popularly summarized in [1]
- ^ "Eternal Cosmological Model". September 17, 2023. Retrieved August 9, 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ Carrier, Richard (May 21, 2023). "Christianity Is a Conspiracy Theory • Richard Carrier".
- ^ "Announcing the 2023 TITAN Awards Semi-Finalists". September 30, 2023.