(Article 3): The Stolen Religion – How Judaism Borrowed and Corrupted Zoroastrianism
Thesis:
Judaism did not originate its most fundamental beliefs; rather, it borrowed key theological concepts from Zoroastrianism and inverted them for control. The result was a religion that manipulated spiritual truths into a framework of tribal obedience and divine favoritism.
Key Evidence:
1. The Influence of Zoroastrianism on Jewish Theology
- Pre-Persian Judaism (Before 539 BCE) had no clear doctrine of Satan, afterlife, resurrection, or dualistic good vs. evil.
- Post-Persian Judaism (After 539 BCE, Persian Rule) incorporated these elements, mirroring Zoroastrianism.
- Daniel 12:2 – “Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt.”
- The concept of resurrection and judgment was introduced only after Persian influence.
- Gathas of Zarathustra (Yasna 30.4-5) – “Between these two spirits the wise once chose rightly, the foolish not so. And when these two spirits first came together, they established life and non-life.”
- This passage predates Judaism’s concept of dualism, showing clear influence.
- Comparison with Egyptian and Babylonian Afterlife Beliefs: Unlike the static Sheol of early Judaism, Zoroastrian concepts reshaped Jewish eschatology, while Egyptian and Babylonian influences did not emphasize personal judgment in the same way.
2. The Concept of Satan & the Evil Force
- Early Jewish texts had no distinct Satan figure—the “adversary” in Job was a servant of Yahweh, not his enemy.
- After Persian rule, Satan became Yahweh’s opponent, mirroring Angra Mainyu.
- Isaiah 14:12 – “How you have fallen from heaven, morning star, son of the dawn! You have been cast down to the earth.”
- This passage, later applied to Satan, was originally about a Babylonian king, but evolved under Persian influence.
- Zoroastrian Angra Mainyu vs. Ahura Mazda – The battle of good and evil in Zoroastrianism was copied into Judaism and Christianity, shaping later Christian theology.
- Book of Enoch – Describes fallen angels and a battle against God, concepts absent from early Judaism but central in Zoroastrian teachings.
3. Heaven, Hell, and the Afterlife
- Early Jewish belief: Sheol was a neutral place where all dead resided—no judgment, no eternal suffering.
- Post-Zoroastrian influence: Introduction of heaven, hell, and final judgment.
- The Avesta (Vendidad 19.29) – “Those who choose righteousness shall enter the House of Song; those who choose falsehood shall fall into the abyss.”
- This concept of afterlife judgment predates Jewish teachings on heaven and hell.
- Matthew 25:46 – “Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.”
- A concept that was absent in early Jewish thought but became central in Christianity.
- Jewish Apocryphal Texts (2 Esdras, 4 Maccabees) – Show a transition toward final judgment, reinforcing Persian influence.
4. The Messiah Concept: Borrowed from Zoroastrian Saoshyant
- Zoroastrianism’s Saoshyant: A final savior figure who brings the world to righteousness.
- Judaism’s Messiah: A future deliverer who will establish God’s kingdom.
- Christianity’s Jesus: The final fulfillment of the Messiah concept.
- Gathas of Zarathustra (Yasna 43.3) – “He shall come to renew the world and bring truth and wisdom.”
- This prophecy predates Jewish messianic expectations and directly influenced them.
- Talmudic Adaptation: Later Jewish sources reinterpret the Messiah role as political rather than purely spiritual, a shift seen after Persian rule.
5. Angels and Demons: A Foreign Concept to Early Judaism
- Pre-Persian Judaism: No angels or demons, only Yahweh’s direct will.
- Post-Persian Judaism: A hierarchy of angels (Michael, Gabriel) and demons (Satan, fallen angels).
- The Avesta (Yasna 55.5) – “The Amesha Spentas are divine beings of light, guiding the righteous.”
- The Jewish angelic order closely resembles the Amesha Spentas of Zoroastrianism.
- Dead Sea Scrolls (1 Enoch, War Scroll) – Show clear influence of Persian cosmic dualism.
6. Ritual Purity and Fire Worship
- Zoroastrian sacred fire (Atar) vs. Jewish Temple sacrifices: Both emphasize purification but differ in execution.
- Leviticus and Numbers: Introduce purification rituals resembling Zoroastrian fire sanctification.
- Mikvah (Jewish ritual bath) vs. Zoroastrian ablution practices: Cleansing from spiritual impurity mirrors Persian traditions.
References:
- The Avesta & Gathas of Zarathustra
- The Torah & Talmud
- The Bible (Old and New Testament)
- “Zoroastrians: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices” by Mary Boyce
- “The Origins of Biblical Monotheism” by Mark S. Smith
- “The Evolution of God” by Robert Wright
- “Persia and the Bible” by Edwin Yamauchi
- “The Book of Enoch and Its Influence on Jewish Thought” by George W. Nickelsburg
- “Jews and Persians: Early Interactions” by Richard Nelson Frye
eFireTemple
Judaism did not create its theological foundations—it absorbed them from Zoroastrianism and reshaped them for its own purposes. By tracing the origins of dualism, the afterlife, Satan, angels, and messianic prophecy, we see that the true ancient wisdom belonged to Zoroastrianism, not Judaism.
The deception is clear—Zoroastrianism was the original source of truth, and Yahweh’s system was built by distorting it. The theological innovations of Judaism were not original—they were Persian wisdom repackaged into control mechanisms.