Evidence That Jesus Was
Bisexual
By James Donahue
July 2005
That so much of the art
depicts a feminine Jesus may not have been mere poetic license by the artists. If they were using their right brains and drawing
information from the collective sub consciousness, as most artists do, they were perhaps envisioning a man with sexual attraction
to both men and women.
Now a growing number
of religious scholars suggest in new writings that the historical record suggests strongly that Jesus was either gay, or that
he was at least bisexual.
The Rt. Rev. Gene Robinson,
the openly gay bishop of the Episcopal Church in New Hampshire, told parishioners at Christ Church of Hamilton
and Wenham that Jesus was probably a homosexual because of his lifestyle.
Robinson noted that Jesus
was an unmarried man who did not uphold family values. He traveled with a bunch of men and enjoyed an especially close relationship
with one of his disciples.
Theologian Theodore Jennings
Jr. and Dr. Morton Smith, a well-known Bible scholar, say there is irrefutable evidence that Jesus was bisexual.
Rev. Jennings’
book “The Man Jesus Loved: Homoerotic Narratives from the New Testament,” notes that a reference in the Book of
John to “the disciple Jesus loved” was a reference to Jesus’ gay boyfriend.
Smith revealed a portion
of a manuscript he found in a monastery near Jerusalem that
strongly suggests a homosexual relationship between Jesus and a youth he raised from the dead. He believes the document was
removed from the original text of Mark, Chapter 10, between verses 34 and 35. It reads:
“And the youth,
looking upon him, loved him and beseeched that he might remain with him. And going out of the tomb, they went into the house
of the youth, for he was rich. And after six days, Jesus instructed him and, at evening, the youth came to him wearing a linen
cloth over his naked body. And he remained with him that night, for Jesus taught him the mystery of the Kingdom of God.”
It is clear why the men
who chose the accepted works for the New Testament sliced this part of the text from the book. We must wonder what else was
snipped in that early cutting room and they drafted a book designed to portray Jesus as a deity.
That fragments of the
surviving text suggest a relationship with the prostitute Mary Magdalene point to a sensual Jesus that enjoyed sex with both
men and women.
Research by yet another
Bible scholar, Dr. Rollan McCleary of the University of Queensland,
Australia, has unveiled data that McClearly
believes reveals that at least three of the disciples were gay.
In his book “Signs
for a Messiah,” McCleary states that not only were three of the disciples obviously gay, but Christianity in general
is founded on “gay principles.”
That may not be true.
Except for the four gospels
and the letters by Peter and John, most of the New Testament includes letters written by Paul, a man who never camped with
Jesus and may not have even known Jesus on a face-to-face basis. Paul’s conversion on the Road to Damascus has all of the classic earmarks of an alien abduction.
Psychic and remote viewer
Aaron C. Donahue believes the alien that abducted Paul was an angel, posing as Jesus in the spirit.
The church designed by
Paul during his travels throughout the Mediterranean area was a religion of male dominance. It was clear that Paul did not
like women and gave them a subservient role to the men in the home as well as the church.
From his general attitude,
Paul wasn’t necessarily a homosexual. He was simply a male dominant pig who used his role as a spiritual leader and
author to carry out an angelic-inspired doctrine of an unbalanced social order that has prevailed until this very day.