Dm murdock biography
- Dorothy Milne Murdock (March 27, 1960 – December 25, 2015), better known by her pen names Acharya S and D. M. Murdock, was an American writer supporting the.
- D.M.
- In 1999, Murdock published her first book The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold, arguing the concept of Jesus Christ as myth and that the Christ.
- •
D.M. Murdock
Dorothy Milne Murdock,[1] mer känd under författarnamnet Acharya S, född 1961, död 25 december 2015,[2][3] var författare och förespråkare av Jesusmyten. Hon har skrivit sex böcker och drev webbsidan Truth be Known. Hon menade att kristendomen baseras på tidigare myter och att de personer som förekommer i kristendomen baseras på romerska, grekiska, egyptiska och andra myter.
Biografi
[redigera | redigera wikitext]D.M. Murdock tog en Bachelor of Liberal Arts vid Franklin and Marshall College i klassisk litteratur, grekiska civilisationen. Därefter studerade hon vid American School of Classical Studies at Athens i Grekland. Den 25 december 2015 avled hon i sviterna av cancer.[3][4]
Karriär
[redigera | redigera wikitext]I sitt författarskap använde hon namnet acharya, som är ett begrepp inom hinduismen för ledare av ett kloster eller en sekt. Acharya kan också betyda handledare för en elev.
Hon publicerade 1999 sin första bok The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold. I den hävdade hon att historien om Jesus är en förfalskn
- •
As an Indian sage once said: Prayer is wonder, reverence. Prayer is receptivity for the miracle that surrounds you. Prayer is surrender to beauty, to the grandeur, to this fantastic experience. Prayer is a non-argumentative dialogue with existence. It is not a discussion... it is a love-dialogue. You don’t argue... you simply whisper sweet nothings.
Dorothy Milne Murdock, better known by her pen names Acharya S, was an American writer supporting the Christ myth theory that Jesus never existed as a historical person, but was rather a mingling of various pre-Christian myths, Sun deities and dying-and-rising deities.
She wrote and operated a website focused on history, religion and spirituality, and astro-theology. She asserted the pre-Christian religious civilizations understood their myths as allegorical, but Christians obliterated evidence by destroying suppressing literature after they attained control of the Roman Empire, leading to widespread illiteracy in the ancient world, ensuring the mythical nature of Christ's story was hidden. She argued the Christian canon, as well a
- •
Did you know that:
- Mithra [sic] was born on December 25th.
- He was considered a great traveling teacher and master.
- He had 12 companions or disciples.
- He performed miracles.
- He was buried in a tomb.
- After three days he rose again.
- His resurrection was celebrated every year.
- Mithra was called “the Good Shepherd.”
- He was considered “the Way, the Truth and the Light, the Redeemer, the Savior, the Messiah.”
- He was identified with both the Lion and the Lamb.
- His sacred day was Sunday, “the Lord’s Day,” hundreds of years before the appearance of Christ.
- Mithra had his principal festival on what was later to become Easter, at which time he was resurrected.
- His religion had a Eucharist or “Lord’s Supper”
Or that very much the same is also true of Horus, Krishna and Prometheus?
These claims, and others equally strange, were widely circulated on the early internet. They originated from a website, www.truthbeknown.com, run by a woman calling herself “Acharya S”.[1]
These claims were met with much deri
Copyright ©vanflat.pages.dev 2025