Revision as of 17:22, 20 April 2005 edit67.216.215.219 (talk) An explanitory note.← Previous edit | Revision as of 18:23, 20 April 2005 edit undoGazpacho (talk | contribs)14,585 edits copyedit. You make me sad, Loudon TN.Next edit → | ||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
Her book, ''The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold'' is an expanded version of her web site. It is based in secondary sources, including ]'s "Women's Encyclopedia of Myth and Secrets" and "]" by ]. The latter is the main source of her book. Both of these have themselves been criticised, as of suspect authority. The followup book ''The Suns of God'' expanded on this premise. In it she writes primarily on the lives of Krishna and Buddha, and how they parallel Jesus Christ. | Her book, ''The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold'' is an expanded version of her web site. It is based in secondary sources, including ]'s "Women's Encyclopedia of Myth and Secrets" and "]" by ]. The latter is the main source of her book. Both of these have themselves been criticised, as of suspect authority. The followup book ''The Suns of God'' expanded on this premise. In it she writes primarily on the lives of Krishna and Buddha, and how they parallel Jesus Christ. | ||
The similarities claimed between these three figures are often not seen as valid by the adherents of the faiths she contrasts Christianity to. For instance, neither ] nor ] are believed by their followers to have been ] as Acharya S claims. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 18:23, 20 April 2005
Acharya S is the pen name of Dorothy Melne Murdock, an American critic of Christianity who operates a web site, "Truth be Known". On it she contends that Jesus is a fictional person, and a plagiarised pagan myth stolen by the Early Christian Church, and supposed as an actual person so as to unify the Roman State.
She bills herself as a historian, mythologist, religious scholar, and linguist, as well as an archeologist. As academic qualification she holds a Master of Liberal Arts degree from Franklin and Marshall College.
Her book, The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold is an expanded version of her web site. It is based in secondary sources, including Barbara Walker's "Women's Encyclopedia of Myth and Secrets" and "The World's 16 Crucified Saviors" by Kersey Graves. The latter is the main source of her book. Both of these have themselves been criticised, as of suspect authority. The followup book The Suns of God expanded on this premise. In it she writes primarily on the lives of Krishna and Buddha, and how they parallel Jesus Christ.
The similarities claimed between these three figures are often not seen as valid by the adherents of the faiths she contrasts Christianity to. For instance, neither Krishna nor the Buddha are believed by their followers to have been crucified as Acharya S claims.