Was Jesus a medical student in Egypt?

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“The Database of Eternity”, a new work by the long-legendary Viennese physician Dr. Dr. Johannes Huber now makes the sensational claim that Jesus Christ walked a very different life path on earth during his miraculous earthly existence than previously believed. Accordingly, he could have learned high medicine in Egypt. Leading American historians have long regarded this position as established, but it has not yet been established in Europe.

“The life of Jesus Christ could have been very different than previously thought. The Son of God could have lived in Alexandria as a young man and learned the art of medicine there, for which he would later have performed miraculous works,” says the famous theologian (once personal secretary of the unforgettable Viennese Cardinal König) Johannes Huber. deeply convinced.

The internationally renowned doctor relies on what he considers extremely reliable sources: although this new theory has not yet spread in Europe, American Egyptologists in particular, such as researcher and author Jan Assmann, have been relying on it for a long time. He taught at the University of Heidelberg, was a visiting professor in Paris, Yale and Jerusalem and led a research project in Luxor.

“It is certainly very likely that Jesus worked with friends in Alexandria for a long time,” says Assmann. Accordingly, the Savior lived as a kind of student in Alexandria, where the largest library in the world at that time was the center of all available knowledge of the time. The Son of God learned to heal by the laying on of hands, for example from ascetic groups such as the “Therapists” and the “Essenians”, who sometimes used magical rituals and whose aim was to heal the soul by healing the body.

Magicians and healers
But the ancient Egyptians also had highly developed empirical medicine. That is why they developed a remedy for women’s ailments that contained the same active ingredients as the current Döderlein capsules. For chest pain they recommended barley flour, which is now known to have anti-inflammatory effects.

“It is no wonder that Jesus Christ later also healed women, for example of the blood flow,” says Huber, who is not only a theologian but also a gynecologist, and provides a special medical case study. By the way, almost all Gospels mention that Jesus later appeared in Galilee, present-day Israel, as a healer and ecstatic. His followers are said to have continued this tradition.

In ‘The Database of Eternity’, the Viennese bestselling author now outlines this possible life path of Jesus. He refers, among other things, to the ancient philosopher Kelsos, who lived around 250 AD, whose writings have survived only in fragments and who is considered a proven expert on the early Christians.

Kelsos was the first to write: Jesus Christ ‘studied’ medicine in Egypt. It is said that he previously worked as a carpenter in Galilee and then emigrated to the land of the pyramids with twenty friends – also to learn fascinating healing arts. Several independent apocrypha (religious writings of Jewish or Christian origin from the period between 200 and 400 AD) also state that God called his messengers out of Egypt…

Source: Krone

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