more at
https://www.thedailybeast.com/did-jesus-poop?ref=home
It’s actually a serious theological debate, involving would-be popes, saints,
and historians since the dawn of Christianity
What Jesus said and did when he was alive is, quite clearly, a subject of great
interest to Christians today. And the New Testament tells us a great deal about
some of the details of Jesus’ life: he was circumcised, he was rude to his
parents, he walked around (sometimes on water), he rode donkeys, he cried, he
got angry, and he shared meals with his followers. The Bible says absolutely
nothing about Jesus’ sex life (although Dan Brown has hypothesized quite enough
about that already), but it’s equally silent on the question of digestion.
Everybody poops, but did Jesus?
If you’re thinking, “Yes, he was a human being, But oh my G-o-d why are you
bringing this up? Talking about Jesus’ bowel movements is like discussing my
parent’s sex life,” then that’s understandable. But if it seems like we at The
Daily Beast have jumped the shark this week, then you’ll be interested to know
that this was a centuries-long debate among the Church Fathers, for whom
digestion was often a much more important question than sex.
In the second century a popular Christian teacher named Valentinus wrote in a
letter to a man called Agathopous that Jesus “was continent, enduring all
things. (The risen) Jesus digested divinity: he ate and drank in a special way
without excreting his solids. He had such a great capacity for continence that
the nourishment within him was not corrupted, for he did not experience
corruption.” In other words Jesus was special and never defecated although, as
scholar Christoph Markschies has written, Valentinus was talking about Jesus
after his resurrection so we are already in “special” territory.
At the time Valentinus was a priest and a teacher in Rome. At one point he even
came close to being elected the bishop of Rome (you know, the role of the pope).
Later, at the insistence of those who disagreed with him, he would be removed
from his position and, later still, condemned as a heretic. For many, though, as
Dr. Stephen Young of Appalachian State University told The Daily Beast, he was
“a popular Christian teacher who offered one among several competing ‘deeper’
understandings of Jesus and God… [a bit] like contemporary Christian teachers
who aren't so much pastors of specific churches but … who attract the interest
of Christians from all sorts of different Evangelical churches or
denominations.” It’s not really fair to dismiss him out of hand as a heretic.
Still, you’re thinking, Valentinus turned out to be a heretic, so maybe his
opinion doesn’t count? Perhaps, but there were other “orthodox” Christians who
agreed with Valentinus on this point. Ismo Dunderberg, a professor at the
University of Helsinki and author of Beyond Gnosticism, pointed out that the
orthodox Christian philosopher and teacher Clement of Alexandria (now a saint,
if that matters to you), agreed: “The one point that Clement agreed with
Valentinus on was that Jesus didn’t do number two.” Clement also wrote that
Jesus being divine didn’t have to eat but he did so to avoid giving the
impression that he wasn’t human.
Why is everyone talking about this? Well there’s a lot at stake here. Much of
early Christian theological debate is taken up with the issue of how Jesus is
both a god and a human being. Early on there were some early Christians who
thought that Jesus only “seemed” to have a human body but in reality was a god.
You can see why Christians who held this position thought Jesus never went to
the bathroom. This position, which is known as Doceticism, would come to be
rejected as heresy, but those who wanted to argue that Jesus was truly human
have to explain how the combination of humanity and divinity works. While they
are doing that they are also trying to avoid the idea that the divinity in Jesus
is somehow defiled by or corrupted by all the disgusting aspects of human
bodies. Excrement, in particular, was just the kind of disgusting thing that
people wanted to avoid.
As late as the fourth and fifth centuries A.D., a period when pretty much all
Christians agree that Jesus had a real human body, Christians are still debating
the poop question. Epiphanius, a late fourth century monk and bishop who spent a
great deal of his time denouncing heretics, denies that Jesus ever eliminated
solid waste (Panarion 77). Kelley Spoerl, a professor at St. Anselm College and
the author of several important articles on this subject, told me that what’s
interesting is the context in which Epiphanius does this. During this section of
the Panarion he was fighting with a group of Christians known as Apollinarians.
Apollinarians believed that Jesus did not have a rational human soul and
Epiphanius (and all modern Christians) strongly rejected this idea. Where
Epiphanius was willing to agree with the Apollinarians was on the question of
bathroom visits. As Spoerl told me: “Epiphanius agrees with those Apollinarians
who think Jesus did not excrete solid waste even though he disagrees with their
other theories about Jesus’s lack of a rational human soul or the claim that
Jesus’s body/flesh is somehow different from ours.” So once again you have
theologians who disagree on other points of this issue ‘reaching across the
aisle’ on the question of digestion.
What’s uniting these conversations about Jesus’ digestion, Spoerl told me “is a
clear desire to affirm the historical, physical reality of Jesus’s body—but, in
Epiphanius’s case, to avoid the perceived defilement that the body brings”
In order to make his case Epiphanius appeals to another well-known case in which
people may not have excreted, namely, the Moses-led Israelites who wandered in
the wilderness eating manna supplied by God. Rabbinic interpretations of what
happened in the wilderness maintained that as the Israelites were eating “the
bread of angels” (manna) they didn’t excrete it because it was “bread that is
absorbed in the limbs” (Sifré to Numbers 88). Though Epiphanius doesn’t mention
them, there were ancient Greeks who were also rumoured never to have gone to the
bathroom. Dunderberg mentioned that two philosophers discussed in the ancient
compilation Lives of the Philosophers never excreted solid waste either.
In part this conversation reflects a cultural abhorrence of excrement. It’s not
so pleasant. Early Christian descriptions of hell describe people buried up to
their necks in piles of the stuff. You can see why people don’t want to
associate it with an incarnate deity.
Simultaneously, there are some serious medical underpinnings to the debate.
Ancient medical thought about how digestion works seems to have been driving a
lot of this conversation. Claire Bubb, a medical historian at the Institute for
the Study of the Ancient World at NYU, told me that most ancient theories of
digestion relied on the concept of heat and the individual capacity to produce
it. “Aristotle, in whose theories heat plays a critical role in general, leans
particularly hard into this correlation. Heat for him is unambiguously what
turns ingested food into nourishment suitable for the body. Further, he believes
that the degree of heat is variable in different individuals, but that some are
closer to perfect than others.”
Because digestion is so individual, Bubb said, “It would not be hard for someone
working within the Aristotelian tradition to take this claim to the next level
and argue that a person with the most perfect degree of heat would be capable of
most perfectly digesting his foods.” For anyone who subscribed to this system of
thought the claim that Jesus never digested food wasn’t a denial of his
humanity; it was an endorsement of his perfect body.
At the same time, not everyone agreed. Some people, Bubb said, thought that
digestion was about crushing and grinding, not heat. The Roman era doctor Galen
argued that “the quantity of waste products [depends on] the nature of foods
consumed.” For Galen “radishes… are barely food at all and most of their
substance is simply not suitable for assimilation, with the result that almost
as much as is consumed must be excreted. Even a perfectly constructed body could
not avoid this.” So you can see why other Christians would have disagreed with
Valentinus and Epiphanius about the issue of excrement.
Of course modern theories of digestion are more Galenic than Aristotelian. If
you want to say that Jesus was truly human, you have to admit that he used the
bathroom. For the pragmatically minded there’s the issue of nutrition: Jesus
lived on a high-fibre ancient Mediterranean diet; we have to imagine that
life-long constipation was the least of his problems.
Today there’s really no ‘official’ position on Jesus’ bathroom habits. The
Catechism of the Catholic Church states, following the statements of the Council
of Chalcedon in 451 CE , that Jesus is “truly man and truly God” and is “like us
in all things but sin.” As excretion is a normal part of being human, Jesus
would have passed solid waste just like everyone else.
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