Deriding the Messiah and the devil in Paul d?Holbach?s Histoire critique de Jésus Christ (1770)
Article
Authorship:
DEL OLMO, ISMAELDate:
2025Publishing House and Editing Place:
MDPIMagazine:
Religions MDPISummary *
This article studies the Histoire critique de Jésus Christ (1770), anonymously published by the Ger-man-French atheist Paul d’Holbach, who edited, expanded, and radicalized an anonymous clan-destine manuscript concerning the life of Jesus and the beginnings of his religious movement. The article analyzes how d’Holbach’s book mocks the figure of Christ, portraying the new faith as a fraudulent enterprise full of false miracles and human weaknesses. In a work where irony, humor, and ridicule are constantly used as narrative strategies, the demonological world provides oppor-tunities for displaying multiple corrosive arguments against Christianity. After reviewing d’Holbach’s philosophical position against the existence of demons, the article studies how the devils’ role in Christian theodicy, the notion of demonic possession, and Christ’s exorcisms are ridiculed in Histoire critique as examples of irrationality, fraud, and superstition. In addition, the article will point to a contemporary debate influencing d’Holbach’s views on what he saw as the connected territories of demonology, credulity, and religious fanaticism: the controversy sur-rounding the 18th century convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard. This heterodox religious movement, characterized by belief in a holy man and miraculous cures, proved invaluable to d’Holbach, who maliciously compared this episode to the beginnings of the Christian movement. Keywords: Paul d’Holbach; Histoire critique de Jésus Christ (1770) ; Anti-demonology; Enlightenment; Convulsionnaires. Information provided by the agent in SIGEVAKey Words
ANTI-DEMONOLOGYHISTOIRE CRITIQUE DE JÉSUS-CHRIST (1770)PAUL D'HOLBACHENLIGHTENMENT