Yes I’m sure; he will be crucified again, because he is an atheist. (Oh … don’t get angry with me, I can prove what I say). While he is crucified by fundamental theists, others (religious, nonreligious, spiritual but not religious) will wash their hands like Pontius Pilate.
This is my proof to say Jesus is a thiest
During the trial of Jesus, the high priests asked Jesus,
"Are you the son of god?"Jesus replied,
"You are right in saying I am,"
Then they condemned Jesus for blasphemy (Luke 22:70- 71). The high priests then turned him over to the Roman procurator Pontius Pilate, based on an accusation of sedition for forbidding the payment of taxes and claiming to be King of the Jews. When Jesus came before Pilate, Pilate asked him,
"Are you the king of the Jews?"Jesus replied,
"It is as you say."
Jesus says that he is the son of god. Yes he is correct. But not in Christian sense of he is the son of a god who hired womb of Virgin Mary to give birth to his son. But in real sense of son of god who is the image of goodness and ultimate joy. Actually god is a quality. Jesus knew it. He loved humanity. He sympathized with the poor. He told them not to pay unfair taxes. He was a rebellion.
And Jesus says that he is the king of Jews. For normal people he is a mad man. Here also Jesus is correct not in common sense but in real sense of a king. A real king should love his people, should work for goodness of people, should be fair on everyone and should be able to show the correct path to his people. So Jesus knew that he was the king of his people.
Everyone knew that he was loving and mad man. He was crucified not because of his funny sayings but because of his teaching. He taught to people to think logically. He showed them how the government and church exploit the people together.
Same thing happened to Socrates. He was poisoned not because of his funny and mad sayings about gods but because of his teaching on how to think logically.
And these are the reasons to say he will be crucified again
1. Sir Salman Rushdie
The Satanic Verses is Salman Rushdie's fourth novel, first published in 1988 and inspired in part by the life of Muhammad.
. In mid-February 1989, following a violent riot against the book in Pakistan, the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Supreme Leader of Iran and a Shi'a Muslim scholar, issued a fatwa calling on all good Muslims to kill Rushdie and his publishers, or to point him out to those who can kill him if they cannot themselves.
As of early 2009 Rushdie has not been physically harmed, but others connected with the book have suffered violent attacks. Hitoshi Igarashi, the Japanese language translator of the book, was stabbed to death on July 11, 1991; Ettore Capriolo, the Italian language translator, was seriously injured in a stabbing the same month; William Nygaard, the publisher in Norway, barely survived an attempted assassination in Oslo in October 1993, and Aziz Nesin, the Turkish language translator, was the intended target in the events that led to the Sivas massacre on July 2, 1993 in Sivas, Turkey which resulted in the deaths of 37 persons.
2. Taslima Nasrin
is a Bengali Bangladeshi ex-doctor turned author who has been living in exile since 1994. From a modest literary profile in the late 1980s, she rose to global fame by the end of the twentieth century owing to her radical feminist views and her criticism of Islam in particular and of religion in general.
Since fleeing Bangladesh in 1994 she has lived in many countries, and currently (2009) lives in New York after expulsion from India in 2008 where she was denounced by the Muslim clergy and received death threats from Islamic fundamentalists. She works to build support for secular humanism, freedom of thought, equality for women, and human rights by publishing, lecturing, and campaigning.