We’re up to Book VII and things are going quickly
because I’m skimming to find something that I need to comment on in this novel.
It is Tishri the year that Pilate robbed the temple
treasury to pay for civic improvements. Judah has led a group of Galileans in
attacking Romans. If you were going to write a more vraisemblable work
about these times, this is what you should prepare Judah for from the start of
the book: joining or starting the Sicarii, a group of Jewish rebels against
Rome.
In fact, if Judah had been a real person, here’s how
the story would go. At some point, he would become known as Judah the Sicarius.
He probably knew a number of people named Joshua and he would have tried to
recruit one or more for this band. Word would get out, the Romans might use one
of them as a lure to capture Judah. It would fail and the Romans would crucify
Joshua as an example to the Sicarii. Judah’s son Menachem would go on to be a
leader of the Masada uprising.
Everybody who knew Judah’s Joshua would deny that he
was a rebel. Then you would get the “he was a good boy” narrative we hear from
mothers of so many suspects. There were a lot of people running around at this
time preaching or prophesying the overthrow of Rome. Some of them had the
reputation of miracle-workers.
Oral traditions studies show that characters in two
narratives may be confused with each other over time, leading to fusion of
stories about them. The preachers or miracle workers didn’t have to all be
named Joshua, for their activities to be loaded onto the story of the good
Joshua who was crucified for no reason, except that he knew Judah the Sicarius.
It doesn’t take long for these shifts to happen. It
took two or three months for a GOP narrative about a (non-existent)
whistleblower “proving” that Trump did nothing worth FBI investigation, to
become a MAGA narrative about a hero hiding evidence that the FBI would try to
exploit against Trump. Both narratives tar the FBI, which was tracking down the
January 6 insurrectionists. In 1911, a rumor that a murder victim’s corpse was
rolled up in a carpet in a Kyiv city apartment, took two years to morph into
the corpse being stored in the apartment for three days (the number three shows
up in dozens of oral narratives the world over).
So a hundred years after Judah the Sicarius, not only can
Joshua the non-rebel turn into a miracle-worker persecuted by the Romans, but
people with a good Greek education are promoting him to other people like
themselves. Writing the first Christian scriptures in Greek would be a
no-brainer. Latin works appeared as it became less dangerous to communicate
with Romans.
I’m not saying this is how it happened. I’m not saying
that Christian writings have everything wrong. I’m saying that they admit to
the beginning of their faith in a low-income and probably low-literacy
environment, and when you share information by word of mouth, it follows AxelOlrik’s principles of development. And what I have outlined above is exactly
what Olrik says happens in word-of-mouth communications.
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