Discover more in these hand-picked books Tell me what you think;  read what others say.  
Stuff you need to know before the POCM makes sense. Ideas, rituals and myths Christianity boosted from the Pagans. Some of the Pagan's dying-resurrected godmen The Triumph of Christianity Discover mainstream scholarship about Christianity's Pagan origins What did the Christians borrow? So what?
the ideas, myths and rituals christianity borrowed from the pagans Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first gods whose dad was a god and whose mom was a mortal woman Christianity has baptism -- Paganism had it first Christians share a sacred meal with their God -- Pagans did it first Christians believe in eternal life -- but Paganism believed in it first
Jesus did miracles -- Pagan Gods did them first Jesus fulfilled prophecy -- Pagan Gods fulfilled prophecy first God and the immortal soul -- Paganism had 'em first Christianity thinks it has monotheism -- Paganism had it first Jesus' God lives in Heaven on High -- Pagan Gods lived there first pagan dead went to the underworld Jesus made clever quips -- Pagan cynic philosophers made them first
Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first


the
guarantee of salvation were in the hands of the goddess, and the initiation ceremony itself a kind of voluntary death and salvation through divine grace." [Apuleius, Metamorphosis, Book 11, 21]

Was Christianity new?  Was Christianity unique? If there's anything new and unique about Christianity, it's that Jesus saves, right?  Amazingly, that's wrong.  By the time of Jesus the tradition of Gods who save was at least six or seven hundred years old.  Wow!

 

Orpheus/ Dionysus When Homer wrote the Iliad and Odyssey maybe around 800 BC, the archaic Greek Olympic Gods were not savoirs -- they didn't help people survive death, or have a better life after death. Salvation wasn't something Gods did.

Orpheus changed that.  In the sixth, maybe the seventh century BC he worked on the myth of the imported-to-Greece Thracian* God Dionysus, and turned it into a religion of morality and salvation.  As far as we know Orpheus was the first guy in the west to do this.

* Thrace
Thrace was a country north and east of Greece, along the coast of the Adriatic.  You read about the ancients, Thrace comes up a lot.
There's some other country there now.  Nobody cares

How do we know about Orpheus? Well, fragments of the Orphic Gospel, called the "Orhic Hymns," are quoted by ancient writers, and Orphism lasted into late antiquity and comes up a lot in ancitent texts.

Anyway, by the forth century Plato (yes, that Plato) was writing about Orpheus and his theology of salvation -- and not just of eternal life, but of eternal life made better for Orphic believers.

 

The Orphic God plates
In Italy, in the third or fourth century BC, texts written on gold plates and buried with the dead, describe the souls of Dionysus followers in the afterlife, drinking not from one particular spring in Hades, but from another cool pool -- and that will give them divinity and eternal life.

 

Don't believe me, believe the ancients themselves.

Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first
 

Sabazius A fresco in Rome shows one of the God's faithful, now dead, banqueting among the immortal blessed.

Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first

 

Osiris' followers found salvation in his rebirth. The exact ritual steps of the initiation into the Mysteries of Osiris, we don't know -- they were kept secret on pain of death. That the initiation meant salvation could be written -- and was.

"The keys of hell and the guarantee of salvation were in the hands of the goddess, and the initiation ceremony itself a kind of voluntary death and salvation through divine grace."  [Apuleius, Metamorphosis, Book 11, 21]

And, "Be of good cheer, O initiates, for the god is saved, and we shall have salvation for our woes." [Firmicus Maternus, The Error of Pagan Religions, 22.1]

Quoting the Goddess Isis: " I have come with solace and aid. Away then with tears. Cease to moan. Send sorrow fleeing. Soon through my providence shall the sun of your salvation rise." [Apuleius, Metamorphoses 11.5]

Don't believe me, believe the ancients themselves.

Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first  
   

Mithras Inscriptions in a Mithraeum (temple of Mithras) in Rome read:

Enough said.

"reborn and created for delights," and "you have saved us by the shedding of eternal blood."

Don't believe me, believe the ancients themselves.

Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first  
   

Cybele and Attis: The Festival of Joy -- the celebration of Attis' death and rebirth. On March 22 a pine tree was brought to the sanctuary of Cybele, on it hung the effigy of Attis. The God was dead. Two days of mourning followed, but when night fell on the eve of the third day, March 25th, the worshippers turned to joy,

because >

"... suddenly a light shone in the darkness; the tomb was opened; the God had risen from the dead...[and the priest] softly whispered in their ears the glad tidings of salvation. The resurrection of the God was hailed by his disciples as a promise that they too would issue triumphant from the corruption of the grave." [for more see Frazer, Attis, chapter 1]

POCM quotes modern scholars

Jesus saves -- Pagan Gods saved first  
 

The next time you're in Church
ask yourself:"What about what I'm hearing was new and unique with Christianity, and what was already part of other religions in a culture where over and over again new religions were built with old parts?"

Next time you're in church... When they get to the part about
the salvation of your soul, remember Osiris, Mithras, Sabazius, Eleusis. You'll know you're hearing about stuff that predated Christianity by hundreds of years -- in a culture where over and over people built new religions out of old parts.

Wow!