Introduction
Apparently, there are cryptic references in the Talmud and other first century writings referring to "Jesus of Nazareth, the sorcerer who founded the Christian cult and was the illegitmate son of a Hebrew peasant girl and the Roman solider Pantera."
If true, this would completely invalidate Christianity, wouldn't it?
...or would it?
This soldier Pantera is referred to enough that it made me start wondering: "Who's Pantera, anyways?"
Besides the above, along with some Virgil and Tacitus, very little historical research went into the writing of this story. I'm just trying to answer the question, "Who's Pantera?" to my own satisfaction. Beyond his name, I don't know anything else about him, though I assume he really lived. Whether or not he was the son of Dura, son of Remus, son of Laomedon, son of Hellenus, I don't know. I just made that up.
If I can somehow explain how Pantera could be referred to as "Father of Christ" without being blasphemous, I am successful.
The name "Pantera" is Latin for "panther." In Miltonian fashion, I am also (technically incorrectly) implying the use of the words "Pan-" (Greek; "all") and "terra" (Latin, "Earth") so that "Sin of Pantera" also means "Sin of All the Earth."
Pantera's sin is proclaiming, "I am the father of Jesus of Nazareth!"
Now a Roman probably can't be expected to think of it as such, but Christians know that Jesus' father is YHVH. So, by saying, "I am the Father of Jesus!" Pantera effectively declares, "I am God!" (Note the "I am") This, naturally, is the Sin of All the Earth. After all, wasn't that Adam's sin? The serpent said, "You shall be like God."
"In Adam's fall, we sinned all."
Through Pantera's sin of lust for Mary, I hope to play that out a little more fully.