In mythology, Christ myth, aka Christian mythology, Christ fable, Christ myth theory, etc., refers the myth of the divine virgin birth of a man, named Jesus Christ, invented in the period 100-300AD (see: silent historians problem), rescripted as the god-man leader of the Judeo-Christian pantheon.
See also
● Achristism
● God character rescripts
● Jesus never existed
● Osiris rescripts
Further reading
● aylor, Robert. (1829). The Diegesis: a Discovery of the Origin, Evidences, and Early History of Christianity, Never Yet Before or Elsewhere so Fully and Faithfully Set Forth (Arc) (Osiris, 5+ pgs) . London: Richard Carlile.
● Cooper, William R. (1877). The Horus Myth in its Relation to Christianity. Hardwick & Bogue.
● Sharpe, Samuel. (1863). Egyptian Mythology Egyptian Christianity: with their Influence on the Opinions of Modern Christendom (pg. xii; image, pg. 114). J.R. Smith.
● Drews, Arthur. (1909). The Christ Myth (Die Christusmythe). Prometheus, 1911.
External links
● Christ myth theory – Wikipedia.