5.1.
The New Testament misquotes and misinterprets the Old Testament.
At times it manufactures verses to suit its purposes.
5.2. According to Matthew 2:15, when the little boy Jesus, along
with Joseph and Mary, fled to Egypt to escape from Herod, this
“fulfilled what the Lord had said through the prophet: ‘Out
of Egypt I called my son.’” But Matthew only quoted
the second half of the verse in Hosea. What the prophet really
said was this: “When Israel was a child, I loved him, and
out of Egypt I called My son.” The verse has to do with
Israel, not Jesus, and it is recounting a historical event, not
giving a prophecy. And you claim that Matthew was inspired. Hardly!
5.3. Matthew 2:23 says that when Jesus moved to the town of Nazareth,
this “fulfilled what was said through the prophets: ‘He
will be called a Nazarene.’” There’s only one
problem. The prophets never said this! Matthew actually made it
up.
5.4. Matthew
27:9–10 is totally confused. First Matthew quotes part of
a prophecy from Zechariah, then he says it comes from Jeremiah,
and then he takes the whole thing totally out of context. What
a mess!
5.5. Hebrews
10:5 is one of the worst examples of New Testament Scripture-twisting.
The writer quotes from Psalm 40, where the psalmist says, “You
have opened my ears,” but he applies it to Jesus and changes
the words to read, “A body you have prepared for me.”
Could you imagine anything more dishonest?
5.6.
The New Testament is full of historical inaccuracies.
5.7. None of
the important historical writers of the period—Roman or
Jewish—make mention of Jesus. It’s questionable whether
he even existed.
5.8. Modern
scholars are in complete agreement that the Gospels portray a
mythical Jesus. There is very little that we can really know about
his life.
5.9. Jesus was not born of a virgin. In fact, we have traditions
that actually tell us who Jesus’ real father was—and
it wasn’t Joseph! Anyway, the idea of a god being born to
a virgin is just one of several pagan myths that made its way
into the New Testament.
5.10. The genealogies of Jesus given by Matthew and Luke are hopelessly
contradictory.
5.11. The Messiah
is David’s son. If Jesus were really born of a virgin, then
Joseph was not his father and he is really not a descendant of
David, even according to Matthew’s genealogy. And if you
claim that Luke’s genealogy is that of Mary, Jesus still
doesn’t qualify, since the genealogy in Luke goes through
David’s son Nathan, whereas the Messianic promises must
go through David’s son Solomon. Therefore, Jesus cannot
be the Messiah.
5.12. Jesus
cannot be the Messiah because he is a descendant of King Jehoiachin.
God cursed both this king and his offspring, saying that none
of his descendants would ever sit on the throne of David.
5.13. Jesus
did work some miracles, but they were not by God’s power.
We have traditions that tell us he learned magical arts in Egypt.
5.14. Jesus
didn’t fulfill any of the Messianic prophecies. We know
that the New Covenant writers actually reconstructed the life
of Jesus so as to harmonize it with certain predictions made by
the prophets.
5.15. When
Jesus failed to fulfill the prophecies, his followers invented
the myth of his substitutionary death, his resurrection, and finally,
his second coming, which, of course, they completely expected
in his lifetime.
5.16. Do you
want irrefutable proof that the authors of the New Testament didn’t
know what they were talking about? Well, look at Matthew 23:35,
where Jesus states that the last martyr spoken of in the Hebrew
Scriptures was Zechariah son of Berechiah. Actually, that was
the name of the biblical prophet (see Zech. 1:1); the last martyr
was Zechariah son of Jehoiada (see 2 Chron. 24:20–22). So,
either Jesus, your alleged Messiah, didn’t know his Bible,
or else Matthew (or the final editor of his book) didn’t
know the Tanakh. Either way, this is a glaring error that cannot
be ignored.
5.17. The New
Testament is self-contradictory (especially the Gospels)!
5.18. Matthew
claims that when Jesus died on the cross, “the tombs broke
open and the bodies of many holy people who had died were raised
to life. They came out of the tombs, and after Jesus’ resurrection
they went into the holy city and appeared to many people”
(Matt. 27:52–53). This is obviously complete nonsense, without
any hint of historical support. If such an incredible event ever
took place—something like “the night of the living
dead” in ancient Jerusalem—someone would have recorded
it.
5.19. The teachings
of Jesus are impossible, dangerous, and un-Jewish (“Hate
your mother and father,” “Let the dead bury their
own dead,” “Give to whoever asks you,” etc.).
There’s no way he should be followed.
5.20. The New Covenant is anti-Semitic. It is filled with negative
references to the Jewish people, and it blames them for the death
of Jesus.
5.21. The Jesus of the New Testament is hardly Jewish. In fact,
he even refers to the Torah as “your Law”—precisely
because it was not his own.
5.22. Jesus was a false prophet. He claimed that his apostles
would live to see his return, a prediction he missed by two thousand
years. He also predicted that not one stone in Jerusalem would
be left standing when the Romans destroyed it. Well, have you
ever heard of the Wailing Wall?
5.23. Jesus was a cruel and undisciplined man. He violated the
Torah by cursing—and hence, destroying—a perfectly
good fig tree for not bearing figs even though the New Testament
writers tell us that it was not the time for figs. So much for
your wonderful Messiah! He even called a Gentile woman a dog when
she approached him for help.
5.24. Actually, Jesus also taught that salvation came through
obeying the Law. Just read Matthew 5:17–20; 7:21; 19:16–30;
25:31–46. This whole “gospel of grace” message
is the invention of Paul and the other writers.
5.25. The teachings of the New Testament may have started out
Jewish, but before long, they became totally pagan. This was done
intentionally, since the Jews rejected Jesus as Messiah and only
the pagans would listen to the message.
5.26. Jesus was really all right. He was a good Jew and a fine
rabbi. It was Paul who messed everything up and founded Christianity.
5.27. If you study world religions, you will see that the teachings
of Jesus borrow extensively from Hinduism and Buddhism.
5.28. Jesus abolished the Law.
5.29. Paul abolished the Law.
5.30. The Torah is forever, every jot and title, and only traditional
Jews keep it. In fact, even the so-called new covenant of Jeremiah
31 says that God will put the Torah in our hearts. Therefore,
since Jesus abolished the Torah, he cannot be the Messiah.
5.31. Anyone who changes the Law—no matter what signs or
wonders he performs—is a false prophet. That applies to
Jesus!
5.32. Observance of the Sabbath has been the hallmark of the Jewish
people, separating us from other nations and identifying us with
the covenant of God. Since Christianity changed the Sabbath, Christianity
is obviously not for the Jewish people.
5.33. According to Mark 7:19, Jesus abolished the dietary laws.
5.34. If the death of Jesus really inaugurated the new covenant
spoken of by Jeremiah the prophet, then why hasn’t it been
fulfilled?