From Beyond Good and Evil:
"Is it possible that underneath the holy fable and disguise of Jesus' life there lies concealed one of the most painful cases of the martyrdom of knowledge about love: the martyrdom of the most innocent and desirous heart, never sated by any human love; demanding love, to be loved and nothing else, with hardness, with insanity, with terrible eruptions against those who denied him love; the story of a poor fellow, unsated and insatiable in love, who had to invent hell in order to send to it those who did not want to love him-- and finally, having gained knowledge about human love, had to invent a god who is all love, all ability to love... Anyone who feels that way, who knows this about love-- seeks death."
I think this is a brilliant bit of psychoanalysis of the character of Jesus. Speculative of course, but insightful. It is a commonplace that Jesus=Love, but it seems to me that, if looked into too closely, there is a certain pathological element to that specific kind of love. Something counterintuitively vengeful about that sort of absolute demand to be loved. Something revolutionary, uncompromising, unhealthy, and perhaps even--as Nietzsche concludes-- suicidal.
While he implicitly denies Jesus' divinity, Nietzsche seems to have a great deal of sympathy for Jesus ("a poor fellow"). Also, it seems to me, a certain admiration for him.


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