Mushroom In Christian Art - The Identity Of Jesus In The Development Of Christianity (Includes Bonus DVD With Image Art)
In The Mushroom in Christian Art, author John A. Rush uses an
artistic motif to define the nature of Christian art, establish the
identity of Jesus, and expose the motive for his murder. Covering
Christian art from 200 CE (common era) to the present, the author
reveals that Jesus, the Teacher of Righteousness mentioned in the Dead
Sea Scrolls, is a personification of the Holy Mushroom, Amanita muscaria.
The mushroom, Rush argues, symbolizes numerous mind-altering
substances—psychoactive mushrooms, cannabis, henbane, and mandrake—used
by the early, more experimentally minded Christian sects.
Drawing
on primary historical sources, Rush traces the history—and face—of
Jesus as being constructed and codified only after 325 CE. The author
relates Jesus’s life to a mushroom typology, discovering its presence,
disguised, in early Christian art. In the process, he reveals the ritual
nature of the original Christian cults, rites, and rituals, including
mushroom use. The book authoritatively uncovers Jesus’s message of
peace, love, and spiritual growth and proposes his murder as a
conspiracy by powerful reactionary forces who would replace that message
with the oppressive religious-political system that endures to this
day. Rush’s use of the mushroom motif as a springboard for challenging
mainstream views of Western religious history is both provocative and
persuasive.
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