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Andrzej Niemojewski (1864–1921) was a Polish social and political activist, poet and writer of the Young Poland period. == God Jesus == * ''God Jesus: The Sun, Moon and Stars as Background to the Gospel Stories'' (Abridged by Violet MacDermot and translated from the German by Anna Meuss and Violet MacDermot. London 1996 —first published 1910.) Albert Schweitzer added two new chapters in the 1913 second edition of his ''Quest of the Historical Jesus''. (''Geschichte der Leben-Jesu-Forschung'', 2. Auflage, 1913)〔(Albert Schweitzer, ''The Quest of the Historical Jesus'', 2d ed. 1913, Ch. 22, p. 451 )〕 which features ''God Jesus'' in one chapter. *Ch. 22, (p. 451–499), "The New Denial of the Historicity of Jesus" (''Die Neueste Bestreitung der Geschichtlichkeit Jesu'') analyzes Drews's thesis, plus eight writers in support of Arthur Drews's thesis about the non-existence of Jesus: J. M. Robertson, Peter Jensen, Andrzej Niemojewski, Christian Paul Fuhrmann, W.B. Smith, Thomas Whittaker, G.J.P.J. Bolland, Samuel Lublinski. Three of them favor mythic-astral explanations. Arthur Drews featured ''God Jesus'' in his 1926 work, ''The Denial of the Historicity of Jesus in Past and Present'' ; A. Niemojewski's main book appeared in 1910. It also shows a divine Jesus preceding any rumours about a human one. Contradictions in the Gospel tales prove that they are impossibly about one and the same person -- especially the sayings aren't from a single person. The sayings are co-opted from Jewish common sources and stuffed into the mouth of the alleged master Jesus. In the Appendix of The Witnesses to the Historicity of Jesus, Drews writes ; If we substitute for the “crucified” Orion of the twenty-second psalm the two other important celestial crosses the vernal cross with the Earn (Lamb) and the autumnal cross with the Cup (skull) below it, the Virgin, Berenice's Hair (''megaddela''=Mary Magdalene), etc.—we have all the astral elements of what Niemojewski calls the “astral ''via dolorosa''” (p. 413). May we suppose, in fine, that Orion itself plays the part of the crucified Saviour? In that case the (weeping) women at the cross are represented by the Pleiades (the “rainsisters”), one of which bears the name of Maja (Maria). The Pleiades also are hair-dressers (''megaddela''), as they are represented in medieval manuscripts on the basis of an old tradition,〔Boll, ''Spaera'', p. 380. Compare the drawing in Thiele's ''Antike Himmelsbilder'' (1898), p. 112.〕 and they culminate when Berenice's Hair rises above the eastern horizon. Electra is supposed to be the centre of the Pleiades. She is the mother of Jasios (Jesus), and is represented as a mourner with a cloth over her head, just in the same way as the Christian Mary. But as Jasios was also regarded, according to another genealogy, as the son of Maja, the mourning Pleiad may also stand for her. As is known, the mother of Jesus also is a dove (''peleids'', Pleiad) in the early Christian conception. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Andrzej Niemojewski」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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