Taking on the Christ Myth: Does Horus Really Parallel Jesus?

Why This Series Exists

This post is part of The God Question’s response series to The Problem of God by Mark Clark, a book that aims to defend Christianity from common objections. We believe these objections deserve more serious engagement than Clark provides. Using reason, evidence, and clear thinking, we’re exploring each chapter’s claims—pointing out what holds up, what doesn’t, and what’s missing. We begin not with belief, but with curiosity. That’s the difference.


Horus and Jesus: Does the Parallel Hold Up?

In this section of Chapter 4, Mark Clark attempts to debunk the “Christ Myth” theory by challenging the alleged parallels between Jesus and Horus, the Egyptian deity. According to Clark, the proponents of the myth theory—like Acharya S (D.M. Murdock), Peter Joseph (of Zeitgeist), and Tom Harpur—fail to engage primary sources and rely instead on one another’s claims without verification. His tone is confident, and he appeals to academic discipline to suggest the entire Horus-Jesus parallel falls apart under scrutiny.

But how accurate is Clark’s own critique?


A Fair Point… But Also a Straw Man?

Clark’s strongest point is methodological: many popularizers of the Christ Myth theory don’t cite original Egyptian texts or hieroglyphs when making claims like “Horus had twelve disciples.” Instead, they cite 19th- and 20th-century authors such as Gerald Massey, who often wrote without scholarly accountability.

Clark pounces on this, arguing that no Egyptologist affirms such parallels and that the twelve-disciples claim isn’t found in the Book of the Dead or any known Egyptian text. He notes Massey couldn’t even remember where he had read it.

Fair enough. Credibility matters. But here’s the problem: Clark then suggests that because one exaggerated claim is weak, the entire discussion is nonsense. That’s the real fallacy here.


The Danger of Dismissing Everything

Even if it turns out that Horus didn’t have twelve disciples, or wasn’t born of a virgin on December 25, that doesn’t mean all parallels between mythological figures and Jesus dissolve. It means we need to separate exaggeration from evidence.

Clark frames the issue as if any failed parallel—no matter how minor—proves that Jesus is unique and historical. But that’s not how comparative mythology works. Many ancient religious stories share thematic structures: divine births, suffering saviors, resurrections, cosmic battles, miraculous healings, and chosen disciples. These motifs span cultures because they speak to universal human longings. We shouldn’t dismiss them outright—we should ask what they reveal.


Let’s Talk About the Virgin Birth

Clark challenges the claim that Horus was “born of a virgin” by offering a gruesome counter-narrative: that Horus was conceived after Isis hovered over the severed phallus of her dismembered husband Osiris. He concludes that this is not a virgin birth.

He’s right: the Horus myth is not a one-to-one match for the nativity in Matthew and Luke. But his rebuttal misses the forest for the trees. Virgin or magical conception stories are not unique to Christianity. They appear in various forms across mythological systems—including Greek (Perseus), Roman (Romulus), and even Buddhist traditions. The existence of these birth legends raises a real question: Why do so many religious founders need miraculous births to validate them?


What About December 25?

Clark argues that Horus did not share a birthday with Jesus—and that, in fact, Jesus wasn’t born on December 25 anyway. The Christian date, he says, was chosen later by Pope Julius I to challenge Saturnalia, not based on history.

This argument defeats itself. If Jesus wasn’t born on December 25, then there’s no reason to deny the Horus-December 25 claim as a meaningful parallel. It’s irrelevant. More importantly, the broader point still stands: both Horus and Jesus had festivals celebrating their births during the winter solstice period—a key symbolic time in ancient religions. That’s what matters here: the motif, not the calendar accuracy.


Miracles, Disciples, and Crucifixion

Clark attacks the idea that Horus had disciples—pointing to depictions of Horus with animal companions (a turtle, a lion, a bear, a tiger) and claiming they were not disciples in any religious sense. He suggests this stretches all credibility.

And perhaps it does. But here again, the rebuttal feels too smug and too convenient. Christianity does not get to claim historical superiority merely by mocking the mythologies that came before. If anything, the similarities—however stylized or exaggerated—should prompt deeper reflection: Why does the Jesus story echo so many earlier themes?

Even if the parallels aren’t exact, the recurrence of crucifixion, death, and resurrection in pre-Christian stories should make us wonder: Is Christianity building on a mythological foundation it never acknowledged?


What Clark Gets Right—And What He Avoids

To be fair, Clark is right to call out sloppy sourcing. Some Christ Myth proponents have overstated their case. But Clark’s selective rebuttals also avoid stronger scholarly arguments—such as those presented by Richard Carrier, Robert Price, and others—who offer more rigorous critiques of the historical Jesus.

Instead of wrestling with their evidence, Clark chooses easy targets and brushes the rest aside.


The Real Issue

Ultimately, this section is less about Horus and more about how people engage inconvenient questions. Clark defends Christianity by insisting the Jesus story is utterly unique. But the evidence suggests otherwise: Christianity borrowed, absorbed, and reshaped common religious themes that came long before the first century.

That doesn’t automatically prove Jesus never existed. But it does undercut claims of originality—and invites us to take the Christ Myth idea seriously, not sweep it away with a chuckle.


Why the Resurrection Never Happened — And Why That Matters

📅 Today is Day 20 of The 20-Day Easter Special

🚨 Let’s Say It Plainly

After twenty days of scrutiny—comparing claims, dissecting texts, exploring psychology, history, theology, and myth—we’re ready to say what many suspect, and some already know:

The resurrection of Jesus never happened.

Not in the literal, physical, historical sense claimed by most Christians.

Not as an actual dead man walking out of a tomb in Roman-occupied Judea.

And not in any way that should command our moral allegiance, public policy, or existential loyalty.

Let’s break down why.


🧭 Reapplying The God Question’s Core Philosophy

  1. Does the resurrection claim rely on evidence or belief?
  2. Are alternative explanations considered?
  3. Is there independent corroboration?
  4. Is the claim falsifiable?
  5. Does the explanation raise more questions than it answers?

After applying these questions to every aspect of the Easter story, here’s what we found:


1. 🔍 It Relies on Belief, Not Evidence

There is no verifiable evidence that Jesus came back from the dead. All claims stem from internal Christian writings—none contemporary, none neutral, and none coherent.

  • No tomb confirmed.
  • No body found.
  • No names on eyewitness accounts.
  • No Roman records.
  • No Jewish documentation.

Belief fills the gaps—and then dares us to call that “faith.”


2. 🔁 Alternative Explanations Fit Better

Everything in the resurrection narrative has naturalistic explanations that are far more plausible:

  • Apparitions and visions? Common after traumatic death.
  • Empty tomb? A later legend.
  • Devotion despite death? So did followers of Osiris, Mithras, and countless others.

Christianity is not unique. It is a cultural remix of dying-and-rising myths, made palatable to Greco-Roman ears.


3. 🔗 No Independent Corroboration Exists

No outside historian mentions the resurrection until long after the supposed event. Even early Christian writings—Paul’s letters—say almost nothing about an empty tomb or physical sightings.

If a dead man truly rose and appeared to hundreds, it’s strange no one beyond the movement cared enough to mention it.


4. ❌ The Claim Is Unfalsifiable

The beauty of the resurrection myth (for the believer) is that it’s immune to failure:

  • Don’t find evidence? “Blessed are those who believe without seeing.”
  • Find contradictions? “Each account adds richness.”
  • Don’t feel God? “You must be hardened by sin.”

Nothing can prove it false—so nothing can prove it true.


5. ❓ It Creates More Confusion Than Clarity

A god-man must die to appease himself so he can forgive us for what he created us to be?

That’s not just illogical—it’s morally incoherent.

And it asks us to worship the system that created the pain.

The resurrection myth encourages passivity in the face of injustice (“Jesus will fix it in the next life”) and emotional manipulation (“He died for you—what will you do for him?”).

It demands surrender, not inquiry. Loyalty, not logic.


✊ Why It Matters

Some will say: “Even if it’s not true, the resurrection inspires hope.”

But false hope is not harmless:

  • It’s used to justify suffering (“your pain has purpose”).
  • It’s used to cover corruption (“don’t worry, God will judge in the end”).
  • It’s used to escape reality (“this life doesn’t matter as much as the next one”).

If the resurrection never happened, then we—humans—are responsible for building meaning, fixing injustice, and finding hope in one another.

And that’s not bad news.

That’s the beginning of honest, grounded, collective morality.


🧭 The God Question’s Final Invitation

The resurrection myth is beautiful, ancient, poetic—and false.

But that doesn’t leave us empty. It frees us.

It frees us to grieve without platitudes. It frees us to ask without shame. It frees us to love without fear. It frees us to build a better world—not because God will fix it, but because no one else will.

And that’s why truth matters.

Let’s keep asking. Let’s keep building.


📺 For Further Exploration

Video: The Resurrection: A Critical Examination of The Easter Story – Jonathan MS Pearce (Part 1)

Overview: In this in-depth discussion, philosopher and author Jonathan MS Pearce delves into his book The Resurrection: A Critical Examination of the Easter Story. He systematically analyzes the resurrection narratives, highlighting inconsistencies and exploring naturalistic explanations.


📅 Note: After we wrap up our 20-Day Easter Special on April 20, we’ll return to our regular schedule of posting three times a week:

  • Tuesdays & Fridays – our structured explorations through all 11 blog categories
  • Sundays – our Sunday Special Feature, where we critically respond to real-world religious claims in real time

We hope you’ll stay with us as we continue asking bold questions and applying reason to faith.