Mike Curtiss (16
June 2011)
"The 19 False Christs
of Ancient Times Moses of Crete"
Dear Doves,
In order to better understand the power and effective delusion
that a figure claiming to be Messiah can hold over people, I
thought it would be prudent to learn who and how they decieved
'even the elect, it that were possible' I don't need to remind
any of your that once again this old tired world awaits a
Savior. Within the major faith disciplines expectations are high
that God Himself will soon appear to sort out this mess. As
people who read their scripture, we know that before the Second
Advent, we must endure this last final false messiah. We can
learn much from reading about those false messiahs of antiquity
to be better able to discern the truth.
Agape,
Mike Curtiss
Messianic claimants (19)
Moses of Crete (448 CE)
Source: Socrates, History of the Church 7.38.
Story: Talmudic calculations led to the believe that the Messiah
would come in 440 CE (Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin 97b) or 471
CE (Babylonian Talmud, `Aboda Zara 9b). In 448, these
expectations seemed to be fulfilled, when someone announced to
bring the Jews from the Cretan Diaspora to Jerusalem.
About this period a great number of Jews who
dwelt in Crete were converted to Christianity, through the
following disastrous circumstance. A certain Jewish impostor had
the impudence to assert that he was Moses, and had been sent
from heaven to lead out the Jews inhabiting that island, and
conduct them through the sea. For he said that he was the same
person that formerly preserved the Israelites by leading them
through the Red Sea. During a whole year therefore he
perambulated the several cities of the island, and persuaded the
Jews to confide in his assurances. He moreover bid them renounce
their money and other property, pledging himself to guide them
through a dry sea into the land of promise. Deluded by such
expectations, they neglected business of every kind, despising
what they possessed, and permitting any one who chose to take
it. When the day appointed by this deceiver for their departure
had arrived, he himself took the lead, and all following with
their wives and children, they proceeded until they reached a
promontory that overhung the sea, from which he ordered them to
fling themselves headlong into it.
Those who came first to the precipice did so,
and were immediately destroyed, part of them being dashed in
pieces against the rocks, and part drowned in the waters. And
more would have perished, had not some fishermen and merchants
who were Christians providentially happened to be present. These
persons drew out and saved some that were almost drowned, who
then in their perilous situation became sensible of the madness
of their conduct. The rest they hindered from casting themselves
down, by telling them the fate of those who had taken the first
leap.
When at length the Jews perceived how
fearfully they had been duped, they blamed their own indiscreet
credulity, and sought to lay hold of the pseudo-Moses in order
to put him to death. But they were unable to seize them, for he
suddenly disappeared, which induced a general belief that it was
some malignant fiend, who had assumed a human form for the
destruction of their nation in that place.