If anything I think I see a King Arthur metaphor more than anything else in the way he was "brought back to life" when his kingdom needed him.
British, there was no England then.Kahless pulled the first bat'leth out of a pool of lava, Arthur pulled excaliber out of a english pool of water. Pretty close.
Wasn't a big part of Kahless's claim to fame the fact that he was a kickass warrior, though? Jesus, on the other hand, was a peaceful man (from what I've heard). I'd think that's a big enough difference to qualify Kahless as not quite a Jesus figure.
Wasn't a big part of Kahless's claim to fame the fact that he was a kickass warrior, though? Jesus, on the other hand, was a peaceful man (from what I've heard). I'd think that's a big enough difference to qualify Kahless as not quite a Jesus figure.
Yeah and Jesus wasn't a Klingon, either. This is why we call it "allegory".
let's put all that aside an talk about how Jesus didn't actually have forehead ridges. There's absolutely nothing incredulous about that.
Seems to me that there are plenty of messianic and semi-messianic figures that could be seen as inspirations for the Kahless story -- Moses, David, Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha, Ashoka, Arthur, and others. No need to just see it through a Christian lens.
That wasn't my point, though. I didn't say he had to be a klingon for a connection between them to make sense. I just meant I thought Jesus isn't the most accurate allegory for Kahless because a lot of Kahless's legend was built on physical prowess and standing up to others by actually fighting physically.
Wasn't a big part of Kahless's claim to fame the fact that he was a kickass warrior, though? Jesus, on the other hand, was a peaceful man (from what I've heard). I'd think that's a big enough difference to qualify Kahless as not quite a Jesus figure.
Kahless was a lot of people rolled into one. He's ... Romulus and Remus,
Seems to me that there are plenty of messianic and semi-messianic figures that could be seen as inspirations for the Kahless story -- Moses, David, Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha, Ashoka, Arthur, and others. No need to just see it through a Christian lens.
If anyone is seeing it through a "Christian lens" then it's the fault of the writers for writing it that way. None of those figures you mention was put to death by a tyrant, and promised to one day return from heaven to his followers.
No one says of Moses, "Open your heart to Moses- seek him without doubt and he will give you answers" this stuff is so blatantly Christian in symbolism and imagery that the sheer obtusity being demonstrated in this thread can only be on purpose.
oh yes, I am entirely sure that the writers of Star Trek meant for Kahless to be an Ashoka allegory: like anyone even knows who the hell that is.
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