“For a child
will be born to us,
a son will be given to us;
And the government will
rest on His shoulders;
And His name will be called
Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God,
Eternal Father,
Prince of Peace.”
~ Holy Bible,
Book of Isaiah
A blessed Christmas
to you, cherished viewers,
and welcome to
Vegetarian Elite
on Supreme Master
Television.
On this momentous occasion
in celebrating the birth
of Lord Jesus Christ,
we will offer glimpses
into the life of
this most compassionate
Enlightened Master.
As one who lived
to advocate love
for all of humanity,
including animals,
there is extensive evidence
that shows
Jesus led his life as
a pacifist and a vegetarian.
The first clear evidence
that Master Jesus
was a vegetarian
is that his apostles abided
by the plant-based diet.
Church Father Eusebius
wrote in his work
“Demonstratio Evangelica”
(“Proof of the Gospels”):
“They [the apostles]
embraced and persevered
in a strenuous
and a laborious life,
with fasting and abstinence
from wine and meat.”
And in his
“Church History” text,
Father Eusebius wrote
that apostle John
“never ate meat.”
The Early Church Father
St. Clement of Alexandria,
who was also
a vegetarian, wrote about
the apostle Matthew:
“It is far better to be happy
than to have your bodies
act as graveyards
for animals.
Accordingly,
the apostle Matthew
partook of seeds, nuts
and vegetables,
without flesh.”
And in St. Clement’s
“Clementine Homilies,”,
St. Peter is quoted
as having said:
“I live on olives and bread
to which I rarely
only add vegetables.”
In the Gospel
of the Hebrews,
which was sacred to
Early Christian groups
such as the Ebionites,
Jesus Christ
and John the Baptist are
portrayed as vegetarians.
The Ebionites as well as
the other Early Christian
groups were
themselves vegetarians.
The Ebionites accepted
only the Gospel
of the Hebrews
as authentic and
believed that this gospel
was the original
Gospel of Matthew.
In their version of
the Gospel of the Hebrews,
known as the Gospel of
the Ebionites, Jesus said:
“I am come to do away
with sacrifices, and if
you cease not sacrificing,
the wrath of God
will not cease from you.”
According to the Gospel
of the Ebionites,
Lord Jesus also rejected
the Passover meal:
“Where wilt Thou
that we prepare for Thee
to eat the Passover?”
To which he replied:
“I have no desire
to eat the flesh
of this Paschal Lamb
with you.”
The view that
Jesus did not eat lamb
at the Passover meal
is also supported
by His Holiness
Pope Benedict XIV,
who stated:
“In all likelihood
he [Jesus] celebrated
the Passover
with his disciples
in accordance with the
Qumran calendar, hence,
at least one day earlier;
he celebrated it
without a lamb, like
the Qumran community
which did not recognize
Herod’s temple
and was waiting for
the new temple.”
Master Jesus’s brother,
James the Just,
is also reported to
have been a vegetarian.
According to the Church
historian Hegesippus and
the Gospel of Thomas,
Jesus’ brother James
became the leader
of the Early Church
after the passing of Jesus.
Hegesippus, as quoted
by Eusebius, wrote:
“After the apostles, James
the brother of the Lord
surnamed the Just
was made head of
the Church at Jerusalem.
Many indeed
are called James.
This one was holy
from his mother’s womb.
He drank neither wine
nor strong drink,
ate no flesh, never shaved
or anointed himself
with ointment or bathed.
He alone had
the privilege of entering
the Holy of Holies,
since indeed he did not
use woolen vestments
but linen and went alone
into the temple and prayed
in behalf of the people.”
Biblical scholar
Dr. Robert Eisenman
wrote in his highly
acclaimed book “James,
the Brother of Jesus”:
“Because of James’
pre-eminent stature,
the sources for him turn
out to be quite extensive,
more than for any other
comparable character,
even for those
familiar to us as
John the Baptist and Peter.
In fact, extra-biblical
sources contain more
reliable information
about James
than about Jesus.”
Dr. Robert Eisenman
concluded: “Who
and whatever James was,
so was Jesus.”
When Dr. Eisenman
was asked
if it can be assumed that
Jesus was a vegetarian
as well, he replied:
“Almost certainly.”
In an interview with
Supreme Master
Television,
Keith Akers,
author of the book
“The Lost Religion
of Jesus,”
reaffirmed the evidence
that Lord Jesus
was indeed a vegetarian:
There were
a bunch of people
in the Early Church
who didn’t eat meat
and didn’t drink wine.
It’s clear.
We hear from other sources,
that all the Apostles
were vegetarian,
and that James,
the brother of Jesus,
was also a vegetarian.
Hegesippus is quoted
as saying that James,
the brother of Jesus,
was not only a vegetarian,
but he didn’t drink wine.
And he was raised that way.
He was holy
from his mother’s womb.
In other words, he was
vegetarian from his birth.
So why would
Jesus’ parents raise James
as vegetarian,
and not raise Jesus
as a vegetarian?
It was a vegetarian family.
So I think
it’s pretty clear, actually,
that Jesus was a vegetarian.
There are versions
of the Gospels in which
Jesus directly denounced
the eating of meat.
One such version is
the Evangelion
Da-mepharreshe,
also called
the Old Syriac Gospels.
Syriac is a dialect
of Aramaic, the language
in which Jesus spoke.
Two manuscripts of the
Old Syriac Gospels exist:
the Syriac Sinaiticus and
the Curetonian Gospels.
The Syriac Sinaiticus
was found in the
St. Catherine Monastery
on Mt. Sinai in Egypt
in 1892, and
the Curetonian Gospels
were brought from
the Wadi El Natrun
monastery in Egypt
to the British Library
in 1842.
In the Old Syriac Gospels,
Luke 21:34,
Lord Jesus is quoted
as saying:
“Now beware in yourselves
that your hearts
do not become heavy
with the eating of flesh
and with the intoxication
of wine and with
the anxiety of the world,
and that day come up
upon you suddenly;
for as a snare
it will come upon all them
that sit on the surface
of the earth.”
And in the Gospel
of Matthew, there are
also teachings of Jesus
which make the most sense
when deciphered from
a vegetarian standpoint.
For example:
“Woe to you, teachers
of the law and Pharisees,
you hypocrites!
You are like
whitewashed tombs,
which look beautiful
on the outside but
on the inside are full of
the bones of the dead
and everything unclean.
In the same way,
on the outside
you appear to people
as righteous
but on the inside
you are full of hypocrisy
and wickedness.”
Another incident
in the Gospels
that depicts the Master’s
concern for animals is
when he boldly puts an end
to the animal sacrifice.
This is a critical event
in the life of Jesus,
and just the week
before his death,
Jesus goes into the temple
and he disrupts the
animal sacrifice business.
And this is the incident
that everyone remembers
as Jesus overturns
the tables
of the moneychangers.
But in fact, he’s not
primarily interested
in the moneychangers,
he’s interested in
the people that are selling
and buying animals.
Why are they selling
and buying animals?
These are the animals
that are going
to be sacrificed.
The incident in the temple
is actually found
in all four Gospels.
It’s one of the few incidents
in Jesus’ life, which is
found in all four Gospels.
And this is
how John describes it:
“When the Passover
of the Jews was at hand
and Jesus went up
to Jerusalem,
in the temple he found
those who were selling
oxen and sheep
and pigeons
and the moneychangers
at their business.
And making a whip of cord,
he drove them all
with the sheep and oxen
out of the temple.
And he poured out the coins
of the moneychangers
and overturned the tables.
And he told those
who sold the pigeons:
‘Take these things away.’”
And so,
what is going on here?
It’s primarily directed
against the people who
are dealing with animals.
And this is
what got Jesus killed.
The sacrifice of animals
is also condemned
in the Hebrew Bible.
For example,
in the Book of Jesaja
it is stated:
“Whoever slaughters an ox
is like one
who kills a human being;
whoever sacrifices a lamb,
like one
who breaks a dog’s neck”
Distinguished American
monk, Zen priest, and
author Dr. Steven Hairfield
shared with
Supreme Master
Television
his research findings about
Master Jesus Christ’s
upbringing.
Jesus was an Essene.
You read
an older Bible and
you read a newer one
and there are
huge blatant differences.
In the older ones,
it said Jesus would
retire to Mount Carmel;
in the newer Bibles
it said he would
go up on the mountain.
Where’s mountain Carmel?
That’s where they found
the Dead Sea Scrolls,
that was the home
of the Essenes.
Mary, his mother, was
a master in the Essenes,
and she was a leader.
The second thing is:
The older Bibles
don’t say that
Joseph was a carpenter.
What it says is, Joseph
was a master of the craft.
He was an Essene,
he was an alchemist.
So what does that
make Christ? An Essene.
Dr. Hairfield, many think
that Jesus was a vegetarian,
what’s your take on that?
I have no doubt or
no question that he was.
In an interview with
journalist Andrea Bonnie
that was published
in the Irish Independent
newspaper
in December 2008,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
addressed Lord Jesus’
teachings regarding
a compassionate diet
and biblical translation
variances that may have
led to misinterpretations.
Poor Jesus.
Everyone tries
to put meat or fish
into the Lord’s mouth.
He’s a pure vegetarian.
He came
from Essenes tradition
and the Essenes are
vegetarian all the time.
clearly in the Bible
it’s stated in many places,
that humans
should not eat meat at all.
“Be thou not among flesh
eaters and wine drinkers.”
“Meat for the belly,
belly for the meat
and God will destroy
both meat and them.”
“Who told you
to kill all the bullocks
and the she-sheep
to make offer for me?
Please stop the killing
of all these innocents.
Wash your hands because
they are full of blood.
If you continue to do that,
I will turn my head away
when you pray.”
And there is a translated
book from Aramaic,
by Edmund Bordeaux
Szekely, he’s Hungarian.
From the old text books
which were found
in the Vatican archive,
believed to be
the teachings of Jesus.
In that, Jesus instructed
that his disciples should
not eat animal flesh at all.
If the Lord were
to eat fish, why would he
tell his first 12 disciples
to forsake fishing
and follow him
to fish men instead?
(Yes.)
A compassionate Master
like Jesus, who would
carry a stranger’s weak,
injured lamb up the hill
so the lamb would not be
beaten up or kicked
by the shepherd or
dragged by the shepherd,
how would he
eat any living creature?
Keith Akers also
points out the existence
of different versions
of the same biblical story.
If you look at other accounts
of the same incident.
If you look, for example,
at the Early Church Fathers,
who also talk about
these stories,
Irenaeus mentions
the feeding of the 5,000.
Eusebius also mentions
that, and Arnobius,
another early church writer
also discusses Jesus’
feeding of the multitude,
the miraculous feeding
of the multitude.
And in every case
they discuss,
they discuss the bread
but they don’t mention
anything about fish.
So I think that
fish is a later addition.
In fact, if you even look at
the New Testament,
it says, at another point,
when Jesus is talking about
the feeding of
the five thousand, he says,
“Don’t you remember
when I fed the multitudes
and all the bread
that we took up?”
And he doesn’t mention
the fish.
So it looks like,
it looks to me like
some editor went through
and put fish in there.
There’s another
consideration, which you
might want to think about,
and that is that fish is
a mystical symbol
in early Christianity.
Fish was an acronym
in Greek.
So if you take that “Jesus,
Son of God, Savior,” and
spell out the first initials
of that in Greek,
you come up with
“ichthys,” which is
the Greek word for fish.
So, and there’s
a lot of examples of this
is clearly used symbolically
by a lot of people
in early Christianity.
Thank you,
considerate viewers,
for joining us today on
Vegetarian Elite.
Indeed, we have learned
that only through
a non-killing way
of living and eating
can one realize
and manifest peace.
Please watch
Our Noble Lineage
on Sunday, January 2nd
as we investigate more
historical evidences showing
Master Jesus Christ
and the Early Christians
had promulgated
the kind, animal-free diet
for the Christian lineage.
Now, please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Between Master
and Disciples.
May Heaven bless
your ever expanding,
loving heart on
this auspicious holy day
to carry forth
throughout the year.
For more info on
the historical evidence of
Jesus being a vegetarian,
please visit
Keith Aker’s website:
www.compassionatespirit.com
Keith Aker’s book
“The Lost Religion of Jesus”
is available
at the same website or at
www.Amazon.com.