SUMMARY
Professor Jiang lectures Beijing high school students on Jesus' true teachings, emphasizing the divine spark, forgiveness, and love over institutionalized Christianity, drawing from the Gospel of Thomas and scholarly evidence.
STATEMENTS
- Jesus is worshipped by about two billion people, making him the most famous historical figure.
- Christianity features major ideas like Jesus as son of God, dying for sins, and returning for judgment.
- Original sin stems from eating the forbidden fruit in Eden, leading to humanity's redemption through Jesus.
- Christianity demands belief in Jesus for salvation, contrasting with other religions' focus on good deeds.
- As a missionary religion, Christianity aggressively converts others to prevent eternal damnation.
- Miracles explain Christianity's confusing elements, discouraging questioning and promoting blind faith.
- Scholarly consensus places Jesus' birth around 4 BCE in Galilee.
- John the Baptist, an apocalyptic preacher, was Jesus' teacher, warning of God's imminent return.
- Jesus developed his own following with a distinct message from John's.
- Romans crucified Jesus, a punishment reserved for thieves, bandits, or rebels.
- Jesus likely appeared as a rebel to Roman authorities.
- James the Just, Jesus' brother, led the post-crucifixion movement called the Poor or Ebionites.
- The Bible's four Gospels present Jesus as divine son redeeming humanity through sacrifice.
- Jesus' ministry involved healing, exorcism, and preaching goodness against Jewish legalism.
- Jewish priests plotted against Jesus, leading to betrayal by Judas and handover to Romans.
- Pontius Pilate reluctantly ordered crucifixion amid Jewish demands.
- Jesus resurrected after three days, instructing disciples to spread the gospel.
- Biblical narrative blames Jewish priests for Jesus' death, fueling historical antisemitism.
- Jewish tradition embraces debate without resorting to betrayal to outsiders.
- Unwritten Jewish laws prohibit informing on fellow Jews to Romans.
- James' protection by Jewish authorities contradicts claims of priestly conspiracy.
- Romans executed Jesus independently due to their brutality.
- Jesus taught recognition of the inner divine spark for immortality.
- The kingdom of God exists inside and outside oneself, not in external realms.
- Organized religion cannot grant true knowledge; self-discovery is essential.
- The material world is a false, dead corpse; recognizing this elevates one above it.
- God values individual exploration and creativity over blind obedience.
- Rich merchants and the powerful prioritize materialism, missing spiritual feasts.
- Freedom and individual responsibility cause anxiety, leading to church imposition of order.
- Jesus' sacrifice demonstrates God's self-punishment to teach forgiveness without enslavement.
- Death resets the soul for eternal learning across infinite lives.
IDEAS
- Worship of Jesus surpasses that of Alexander the Great or Socrates due to his message of inner divinity.
- Christianity's exclusivity in salvation through belief creates aggressive missionary zeal.
- Scholarly evidence limits certain facts about Jesus, separating myth from history.
- Crucifixion's slow suffocation highlights Roman cruelty as punishment for rebellion.
- Biblical portrayal of Jewish betrayal ignores cultural norms of internal debate.
- Divine spark concept unites Jesus' teachings with Homer, Zoroaster, and Plato.
- Roman triumph stems from embracing a false, evil world, dooming them spiritually.
- Loving enemies reveals their inner torment, fostering true liberation.
- Gospel of Thomas emphasizes self-knowledge over external authority.
- Kingdom within rejects hierarchical religion, promoting personal enlightenment.
- Infancy symbolizes unity before worldly divisions; adulthood requires reuniting opposites.
- Material pursuits intoxicate like wine, blinding people to spiritual thirst.
- Priests hoard knowledge, but serpentine cunning aids true seeking.
- Empire as corpse underscores non-compliance as power.
- Shepherd prioritizing lost sheep values creativity over conformity.
- Banquet parable excludes materialists from divine joy.
- Infinite lives allow gradual awakening despite societal brainwashing.
- Church as Satanic force imposes order to ease freedom's burden.
- Jesus' kiss forgives the inquisitor, igniting spark despite resistance.
- Ransom theory fails; God's freedom gift demands self-sacrifice for learning.
- Evil compounds, dimming spark until God's humble incarnation restores balance.
- Analogy of self-whipping father illustrates sacrificial redemption.
- Universe's perfection includes cycles of destruction for growth.
- Sermon on the Mount blesses the meek, inverting worldly hierarchies.
- Loving enemies fulfills divine perfection in an imperfect world.
- Heart's treasures endure beyond earthly decay.
- Eye as body lamp reflects inner light shaping reality.
- Serving money equates to Satan, choosing worldly over spiritual triumph.
- True entry to kingdom requires doing God's will, not mere profession.
- Memory fades at death, but soul's glow determines next life's elevation.
INSIGHTS
- Belief systems like Christianity thrive on exclusivity, but true spirituality democratizes divine access.
- Historical distortions blame victims to absolve oppressors, perpetuating cycles of persecution.
- Inner divine spark transcends material success, revealing evil's hollow victories.
- Forgiveness of enemies liberates both forgiver and forgiven from hatred's prison.
- Self-discovery, not dogma, activates immortality by aligning with universal source.
- Material intoxication veils spiritual poverty; awakening demands painful truth-seeking.
- Hierarchies suppress knowledge to maintain control, but personal cunning unveils it.
- Recognizing world's falsity empowers rebellion against unjust empires.
- Creativity and exploration honor the divine more than rote obedience.
- Wealth's allure excludes from eternal feast, prioritizing transient over timeless.
- Individual responsibility burdens, yet eternal souls afford infinite chances for growth.
- Institutions feign benevolence by enforcing order, masking fear of freedom.
- Sacrificial love teaches through humility, breaking vengeance's chain.
- Cycles of life-death enable soul evolution, turning mistakes into wisdom.
- Inverting hierarchies elevates the oppressed as spiritually supreme.
- Perception shapes reality; pure vision attracts corresponding light.
- Dual allegiance to spirit and matter fractures wholeness.
- Authentic action, not invocation, aligns with cosmic will.
- Societal pressures dim spark, but heart's glow guides true fulfillment.
- Patience in divine love allows gradual enlightenment across eons.
QUOTES
- "There are about two billion people in the world today who believe that Jesus is God."
- "If you believe in Jesus, if you're a Christian, you will go to heaven. But if you do not believe in Jesus, you will burn in hell."
- "Christianity is a very problematic uh religion. It raises a lot of questions."
- "The Romans crucified Jesus. We don't know why. We know that the Romans killed Jesus."
- "Jesus was probably a rebel or the Romans considered him a rebel."
- "The world that we live in is a false world. It is a corpse. It's a dead world."
- "Use our imagination, use our heart, use our empathy and look into their minds and you can see how tormented they are."
- "If you really want to do good in the world, you have to forgive your enemy. You have to love your enemy."
- "Whoever finds interpretation of these saying will not experience death."
- "The kingdom is inside of you and it is outside of you. When you comes to know yourself, then you will become known."
- "When you make the two one, and when you make the inside like the outside, and the outside like the inside."
- "There is light within the man of light and he lights up the whole world."
- "Whoever has come to understand the world as found only a corpse, and whoever has found a corpse is superior to the world."
- "I care for you more than the 99."
- "Businessmen and merchants will not enter the places of my father."
- "Thou does not love them at all. Thou who does come to give thy life for them."
- "The greatest gift the magnanimity of God as he created gave the gift most suited to his goodness. Gift that he most prices was a freedom of the world."
- "Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."
- "Love your enemy and pray for those who persecute you."
- "No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other."
HABITS
- Seek self-knowledge through persistent questioning until inner truth astonishes.
- Recognize and nurture the divine spark daily via imagination and empathy.
- Practice loving and forgiving enemies to release personal and collective demons.
- Avoid material accumulation, focusing instead on spiritual treasures.
- Embrace debate and reform without betraying communal solidarity.
- Explore creatively, prioritizing lost personal paths over conformity.
- Reflect on life's intoxication, shaking off distractions for repentance.
- Be innocent yet cunning like serpents in pursuing forbidden knowledge.
- Shine inner light through good deeds, illuminating others without hierarchy.
- Make opposites one—inside/outside, male/female—for unity.
- Mourn losses to invite comfort, thirsting for righteousness.
- Let heart guide over mind, maturing love to understand mysteries.
- Forgive self after justice, remembering eternal compassion.
- View world cycles as opportunities for soul growth via mistakes.
- Pray for persecutors, perfecting impartial benevolence.
- Store no earthly treasures, directing heart heavenward.
- Maintain pure eyes for light-filled perception.
- Do Father's will through action, not mere words.
FACTS
- Jesus was born around 4 BCE in Galilee, four years before the calendar's zero.
- Crucifixion caused death by slow suffocation over three days due to exhaustion.
- Nag Hammadi discovery in 1945 unearthed lost texts like the Gospel of Thomas.
- Ebionites, led by James the Just, emphasized poverty and Jesus' humanity.
- Jewish groups—Sadducees, Pharisees, Essenes—debated rituals without lethal betrayal.
- Romans reserved crucifixion for lowest criminals or state threats.
- Gospel of Thomas contains 114 sayings without narrative, focusing on gnosis.
- Plato's cave allegory parallels Thomas' seeking process of pain to rule.
- Rumi's poetry echoes Thomas' view of the world as a prison for drunks.
- Brothers Karamazov critiques church as imposing Satanic order for peace.
- Dante rejects ransom theory, favoring self-sacrifice for true freedom.
- Sermon on the Mount inverts power, blessing meek over mighty.
- Leonardo's Last Supper hides Lamentations 3:31-33 reference to compassion.
- Two billion adhere to Christianity, spanning diverse denominations.
- Galilee's coastal location exposed Jesus to cosmopolitan influences.
- Herod rebuilt Jerusalem's temple, central to Jewish life.
- Infinite soul cycles allow reincarnation for learning across lifetimes.
- Catholic Church emerged post-Constantine, aligning with Roman power.
REFERENCES
- Gospel of Thomas
- Gospel of Matthew
- Divine Comedy by Dante
- Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
- Iliad by Homer
- Odyssey by Homer
- Zoroastrian teachings of Zoroaster
- Plato's Republic (Allegory of the Cave)
- Rumi's poetry
- Gospel of Mark
- Gospel of Luke
- Gospel of John
- Lamentations (Bible)
- Nag Hammadi library
- AI depiction of crucifixion
- Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper
HOW TO APPLY
- Begin daily reflection by questioning sayings from Gospel of Thomas for personal interpretation.
- Identify inner divine spark through meditation, visualizing unity with universal source.
- Practice empathy by imagining enemies' torments, journaling insights to build compassion.
- Reject material distractions by listing pursuits that intoxicate, then replace with creative acts.
- Engage in debates on spiritual topics without judgment, fostering Jewish-style argumentation.
- Explore lost personal aspects like neglected talents, dedicating time weekly to rediscover.
- Shake off "wine" of routine by fasting from media one day, seeking spiritual thirst.
- Adopt serpentine wisdom: feign ignorance in hierarchies to access hidden knowledge privately.
- Shine light via one good deed daily, sharing without seeking credit.
- Unite opposites by balancing work/rest, inside/outside through nature walks.
- Mourn past errors openly, inviting comfort through supportive conversations.
- Mature heart by feeling over thinking: respond to conflicts with love first.
- Forgive self post-consequence, affirming Jesus' eternal compassion aloud.
- Embrace mistakes as growth: after failure, note lessons for soul evolution.
- Pray for adversaries specifically, noting shifts in perception.
- Audit treasures: donate one material item weekly, focusing on heart's virtues.
- Check eye's health: adjust views to see goodness, avoiding dark influences.
- Align actions with will: before decisions, ask if they serve divine purpose.
ONE-SENTENCE TAKEAWAY
Jesus' divine spark teaches forgiving enemies through inner light, freeing souls eternally.
RECOMMENDATIONS
- Prioritize Gospel of Thomas over canonical Bibles for authentic Jesus insights.
- Cultivate self-belief over organized faith to access personal divinity.
- Invert hierarchies by empowering the meek in daily interactions.
- Use imagination to pierce world's falsity, revealing interconnected unity.
- Forgive radically, even self, to break vengeance cycles.
- Shun materialism for spiritual feasts that endure beyond death.
- Embrace pain of truth-seeking like escaping Plato's cave.
- Love enemies to expose their demons, promoting collective healing.
- Glow inner light through creative, non-conformist actions.
- View empires as corpses, refusing compliance with evil.
- Accept infinite lives for patient soul growth without rush.
- Balance freedom's anxiety with heart-led decisions.
- Reject church authority if it hoards knowledge or enforces blindness.
- Remember Jesus' kiss: respond to evil with silent forgiveness.
- Make mistakes boldly, treating death as reset for wisdom.
- Bless peacemakers and pure-hearted in community building.
- Store heavenly treasures by acts of mercy and righteousness.
- Serve one master: spirit over money, for true triumph.
MEMO
In a captivating lecture delivered to his Beijing high school students on November 27, 2025, Professor Jiang delves into the enigmatic figure of Jesus, stripping away centuries of doctrinal layers to reveal a philosopher-prophet whose message resonates with universal truths. Far from the divine king of mainstream Christianity, Jiang portrays Jesus as a rebel teacher born around 4 BCE in cosmopolitan Galilee, disciple of the apocalyptic John the Baptist, whose crucifixion by Romans marked him as a threat to imperial order. Drawing on scholarly consensus, Jiang notes only four certainties: Jesus' birth, mentorship, execution as a rebel, and the succession by brother James leading the Ebionite poor. This contrasts sharply with the Bible's narrative of a son-God sacrificing for sins, a story Jiang argues was Roman-invented to shift blame onto Jews, ignoring Jewish traditions of debate and solidarity against outsiders.
The core of Jesus' teachings, as unearthed in the 1945 Nag Hammadi discovery of the Gospel of Thomas, emphasizes an inner divine spark—a fragment of the universal source connecting all souls. Jiang aligns this with poets like Homer and Zoroaster, and philosophers like Plato, asserting Jesus democratized access to the divine for the uneducated masses. Unlike Christianity's demand for belief or eternal hellfire, Thomas urges self-knowledge: "The kingdom is inside of you and outside," rejecting external heavens or priestly keys. Jesus saw the Roman world as a "corpse," a false realm where evil triumphs temporarily, but true power lies in recognizing this illusion and loving enemies to free them from torment. Parables like the shepherd seeking one lost sheep valorize individual creativity over obedience, while the banquet excludes materialistic merchants, inverting worldly hierarchies.
Jiang explores why Jesus' message exploded in popularity amid Roman brutality: it empowered slaves and the oppressed by affirming their spiritual superiority, activating the spark through compassion and forgiveness. Yet this freedom bred anxiety, as depicted in Dostoyevsky's Brothers Karamazov, where the Grand Inquisitor accuses Jesus of burdening humanity with choice. The church, Jiang contends, became a Satanic force—Roman Empire reborn—imposing miracle, mystery, and authority to shepherd the unwilling masses, preferring order to chaos. Jesus' silent kiss forgives even this inquisitor, igniting latent spark, underscoring eternal patience for soul evolution across infinite lives.
Dante's Divine Comedy resolves Christianity's sacrificial logic: God's freedom gift demanded self-punishment to humble humanity without enslaving it. Through Beatrice's dialogue, Dante explains that disobedience dimmed the spark, compounding evil until incarnation allowed learning via remorse—God whipping himself like a father for a wayward child. This redemption path teaches forgiveness as justice's cornerstone, preventing vengeance spirals. The Sermon on the Mount echoes: bless the meek, love enemies, store heart treasures, for perception shapes reality under spiritual law.
Death, in this view, resets the soul minus memories but carrying glow's intensity, enabling reincarnation for growth. Jiang warns against brainwashing toward materialism; true fulfillment glows when loving or teaching aligns with the spark. Leonardo's Last Supper subtly nods to Lamentations' compassion: no eternal cast-off. Jesus wasn't Christian—he rebelled against all dogma.
Ultimately, Jiang positions Jesus as portal to the vine for all, not elite poets. In a world still ruled by Satanic money and power, his call to forgive, imagine, and unite opposites offers timeless liberation. Next, he promises unpacking the Catholic Church's Roman roots, a competing force to Jesus' spark.
This lecture challenges students: ignore societal dimming, brave individual paths. For two billion believers, it reframes worship from blind faith to activated divinity, promising not heaven's gate but inner kingdom's rule.