The Stolen How Ancient Myths Became the Bible is a sweeping exploration of the Bible's hidden ancestry—an ambitious journey through millennia of myth, religion, and cultural exchange. Drawing on archaeological discoveries, comparative mythology, and historical scholarship, author C.R. Beaumont reveals how many of the Bible’s most iconic stories—including Creation, the Flood, divine law, resurrection, and the figure of the Savior—were not divinely unique revelations, but remarkable adaptations of far older mythologies from Sumer, Egypt, Babylon, Persia, and beyond.
This book does not aim to debunk faith but to deepen understanding. With lyrical prose and academic precision, Beaumont shows how ancient scribes and prophets inherited, reshaped, and reinterpreted existing sacred narratives to craft a new theological framework that would eventually become the foundation of Judaism and Christianity. These biblical authors did not plagiarize—they participated in the age-old human art of myth-making, transforming cultural memory into spiritual legacy.
The book opens with the groundbreaking 19th-century discovery of the Epic of Gilgamesh and its uncanny resemblance to the story of Noah, a moment that stunned the religious world and sparked modern biblical archaeology. From there, Beaumont dives deep into the ancient Near East—into temple libraries, oral traditions, and royal archives—tracing how myths traveled along trade routes, through diplomatic marriages, wars, and exiles, finding new life in Hebrew and early Christian scripture.
Readers will discover striking parallels between the Bible and earlier the Babylonian Enuma Elish and Genesis 1; the Egyptian Instruction of Amenemope and the book of Proverbs; Zoroastrian dualism and the rise of Satan and apocalypse; Greco-Roman mystery cults and the rituals of baptism and communion. Each chapter unpacks these parallels with care, separating speculation from scholarly consensus and illuminating how theological innovation was often born through cultural adaptation.
In the Hebrew Bible, Yahweh emerges not ex nihilo but as a synthesis of Canaanite deities like El and Baal. In the New Testament, Jesus bears the mythic fingerprints of Osiris, Dionysus, and Mithras—gods who died and rose long before Calvary. Yet rather than diminishing the Bible, these connections elevate it as one of the most impressive literary and religious syntheses in human history.
Beaumont—a combat veteran, theologian, and global traveler—infuses the book with perspective grounded in lived experience. His clear-eyed yet reverent tone invites both the curious believer and the skeptical reader into a conversation that is both timeless and timely.
Whether you are a student of religion, a lover of myth, or someone questioning inherited beliefs, The Stolen Scriptures offers a revelatory map of the sacred stories that shaped the West—and the deeper roots from which they sprang.