The first shows a longshot of three men on crosses (so, Jesus and the two thieves). The second is a medium shot depicting Longinus with his spear raised at the foot of the cross, of which we only see Jesus' feet in shadow. Yellow narration boxes are in both, referring to Jesus as "Christ" and "our dying savior."
Presumably timeline writer Dave Wielgosz included that entry because it is the origin of the Spear of Destiny. Indeed, the entry includes the sentence, "In future years, the weapon becomes known as the Spear of Destiny."
While the spear appeared in stories like John Ostrander and Tom Mandrake's volume of The Spectre, 1999's Day of Judgement and the lead story in JLA Secret Files and Origins 2004, its greatest import in the history of the DCU was that it was a powerful magical artifact that Adolf Hitler wielded during World War II. His possession of the spear was used as a retroactive explanation for why the Golden Age heroes (be they from Earth-2 or, later, the 1930s and 1940s of the shared, post-Crisis DCU) didn't just fly across the Atlantic and put a stop to the Nazis in couple of hours.
(I feel like I've read stories featuring at least two different versions of the spear's ability to keep the likes of Superman, The Spectre and Doctor Fate at bay; in one, it erected an impenetrable forcefield over the European theater of the war, while in the other, if heroes got too close to it, it would allow Hitler to take control of them, and wield their considerable powers against the allies. If any of you guys know when the spear was first used as a retcon explanation for why the JSoA didn't fight in the frontlines during WWII, please let me know; I am assuming this was a Roy Thomas thing, likely from All-Star Squadron...?)
Regardless of exactly why Weilgosz included Jesus' crucifixion, I was excited to see it, as it establishes Jesus as a real historical figure with at least some literal magical properties, rather than something more equivocal, as one might find in a book about our universe's Jesus.
And while DC comics may allude to Jesus, there's usually a degree of separation between the characters or action and Jesus as a historical figure. One quite famous attempt to include Jesus in a DC comic book story was scrapped at the last minute in 1989...although I guess they are finally going to publish it sometime this year.
But Weilgosz's mention of Jesus here, in the context of this timeline, suggests Christ is as much a DC character as, say, The Silent Knight or Tomahawk or Balloon Buster or Black Orchid or Ballistic. I find that interesting. Interesting, if not entirely surprising. As I've noted previously, what Douglas Wolk said about the Marvel Universe in his All of The Marvels also seems to apply to the DC Universe. That is, that there, all mythologies are apparently literally true. And that, obviously, includes Christianity.
For that reason, I was quite eager to see the comic from which those panels featuring Longinus at the foot of the cross that were used to illustrate the mention of Jesus came from, as they seemed to indicate a retelling of the crucifixion story, which would obviously need to include Jesus as a character, right? Thankfully, the New History timeline also includes notations of which particular comics the events it refers to occurred in. This story of Longinus and the spear was from 1977's Weird War Tales #50, published the same year I was born!
Unfortunately, the issue, like so much of the 124-issue, 1971-1983 series, hasn't been collected (Although I think it would have been a perfect candidate for the old Showcase Presents, black-and-white phonebook-like format...maybe some of it will end up in future DC Finest collections...?) DC doesn't often collect their comics in ways that reflect my own personal reading habits of following particular tangents or falling down particular rabbit holes like, say, collecting all the comics featuring the Spear of Destiny into a single omnibus, for example.So, it took some doing to track a copy of this issue down. To my surprise, when I finally did, I found that the panels used to illustrate the crucifixion in New History of the DC Universe weren't taken from a comic book retelling of the crucifixion story but rather appear in a sequence illustrating someone else telling a story about those events. So here again is an example of Jesus appearing in a story being told within a story, a level of narrative padding or distance built into a comic seemingly featuring him.
In other words, here is yet another comic which suggests that Jesus is real, but only shows him to us from some distance, acknowledging Jesus without ever exploring him as a character.
The story is entitled "--An Appointment With Destiny!", and it is a 17-pager written by Steve Englehart, and pencilled and inked by the aforementioned Ayers and Alcala. The cover, by Ernie Chan and Vince Colletta, depicts a startled American G.I. being menaced by a skeleton in a German helmet wielding the spear. (Skimming the series' cover gallery on the Grand Comics Database, Weird War Tales seems to suggest that there were an awful lot of skeletons fighting in WWII.)
The story opens on April 30, 1945 in Adolf Hitler's bunker. With a Luger in hand, the Fuhrer shouts to his assembled advisors in English that the Allies are in Berlin, and their shells have begun to shake the bunker:
The end has come for the Reich, and me! But fear not, my loyal and faithful friends!
Another will scale the heights we failed to reach! Wait for him, after I am gone! Wait for--
--AN APPOINTMENT WITH DESTINY!
He and Eva then leave the room and shut the door ("What we must do is not for others' eyes!"), and two big, red "BAMM" sound effects are heard through the door.
Suddenly there's an explosion, and in charge a pair of American soldiers, their dialogue exchange introducing them as Walker and Baxter. They seem to know exactly what they've found too, calling the bunker "the chief rat's nest!" and mentioning snatching "Uncle Adolf" before "the Russkies" arrive.
There's a brief, bloodless firefight that takes up all of one panel, and when they question the last surviving Nazi, he says that Hitler is gone and, portentously, "Now, we shall all await--the coming man!"
No sooner does Walker find the bodies of Hitler and Eva Braun—rather tastefully posed and free of blood; DC did still abide by the Comics Code Authority at the time of publication, after all—than he catches sight of another man out of the corner of his eye, a fleeting figure that seems to be wearing a military uniform under a reddish-brown fur coat, with a World War I-era helmet on its head.
The figure flees, and Walker gives chase, climbing into the ruined but deserted streets of Berlin.
Out of nowhere, a spear flies, and lands bloodlessly in Walker's chest. He falls to his knees, clutching the wooden shaft, and then to his back, surviving just long enough to hear the speech about the weapon delivered by the mysterious figure:
On this day, the Spear of Destiny has brought death to Adolf Hitler, the greatest man our race has ever known!
You could scarcely have been spared.
Death comes to all who encounter this spear. Death--and power!
Power to stir men's blood, and raise a cry of battle! Power to stride unheard through rubble, and kill with unerring accuracy! Yes, and power even stranger than that!
Power--and death!
Which will I savor first, eh?
I-- the coming man!
While delivering that last line, the figure seems to rise into the air, as if he is about to fly away—another strange power of the spear's, perhaps?—or maybe Walker is just starting to lose it as he dies. Throughout these panels, though the "Coming Man" is presented in medium shot looking directly at the reader, his identity is still hidden, his face shaded by the rim of his helmet in two panels, and he appears only in silhouette in another.
Baxter eventually finds Walker, and hears his comrade's strange story, a story that Walker claims he was only able to tell because the power of the spear kept him alive until he could tell someone. Promising Walker he would get the Nazi that killed him, Baxter sets off in search of the Coming Man.
He finds a trail of footprints in the snow that start out of nowhere, presumably made when the Coming Man came back down to ground. He encounters some Russian soldiers who order him to fall in with them, but he flees—"I've gotta see a man about a spear!"—and they fire on him.
He manages to escape but not without being wounded. Using a stick as a crutch, he carries on, following the trail to a castle outside of Berlin.
Within, he's greeted first by a Chinese servant named Fong, and then the German master of the castle, an aristocrat with a monocle named Baron Kragen, and, finally, Ilse, Kragen's fetching young daughter (I assumed Kragen is a bad guy, perhaps even the Coming Man, upon his initial appearance, simply because he has a monocle. Does anyone other than a bad guy ever have a monocle in a comic book story?)
With the war over—"We Germans are as happy to see this madness end as you are," the Baron says—he offers Baxter his hospitality, and Ilse dresses his wounds. At dinner, Kragen notices Baxter eyeing his missing left hand, and then tells him how he lost it to a tiger and, after Baxter's none-too-subtle questioning, he discusses the history of the Spear of Destiny:
Here is where those panels in the New History timeline are taken. As you can see, they are illustrations of Kragen's story about the spear being told to Baxter.The next tier of panels from the page traces it the spear from ancient Rome to the sights of a young Hitler: And here we learn that the spear became a powerful magical artifact. Apparently "any warlord who held it knew greatness", although they would eventually die themselves (Of course, everyone dies eventually, so I'm not sure what kind of curse that is meant to be). Alexander the Great, Napoleon "and many others" are named as men who have possessed the spear before Hitler.
The story of the spear out of the way, Baxter again makes his suspicions that Kragen is the Coming Man known, and Kragen makes it known that he was only being so hospitable because he suspected Baxter of being an advance scout for an American force.
Downed by poison administered via his fork, Baxter awakes in a cell, beyond the bars of which Ilse and Fong come to...taunt him? Deliver exposition...? She explains how Germany's "first attempt at world domination" (WWI, I guess) had failed, and now this second attempt has failed as well. But that Hitler and her father had "come to terms" previously, so that if Hitler failed, Kragen would inherit the spear and begin the third attempt.
Baxter snatches Ilse through the bars and threatens to kill her unless Fong releases her (He addresses Fong derisively as "Fu Manchu", which seems pretty racist; on the other hand, he does have a moustache referred to as "the Fu Manchu", so...maybe not...?).
Baxter finds a sword in the castle, and with it in hand searches for the Baron, ultimately finding him talking to himself atop a castle turret."The Aryan dream will rise again!" Kragen screams at the end of his little three-panel monologue, giving Baxter the opening to reply, "'Cause it's full of hot air, Baron!"
They fight, the Baron employing his laser gun hand and proclaiming himself a "bionic man" (remember, though set in the forties, this was written in the seventies, when that world had cachet) and "the wave of the future!"
The fight lasts about a page, during which Baxter is able to snatch the spear from the Baron's hands—er, hand, I guess—and plunges it into his stomach ("Gott im Himmell! I--I am murdered!"). Now it's Baxter's turn to make a bit of a speech ("You were fightin' the next war, but I had to finish this one!"), after which Ilse, one of the straps of her dress now broken off, charges Baxter with a dagger, and he impales her on the spear.
With tears in his eyes, Baxter's wonders, "Could it be this peace we fought so hard for--won't last forever", but before he can even pronounce a question mark, Fong cuts him down with a volley of machine gun fire from behind. (So Baxter obviously won't live to see 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine setting off another land war in Europe, or 2025, when the Trump administration and its allies began their attempt to introduce a new, dumb version of fascism to the United States).
Here are the last two panels:
For the story's protagonist Baxter, it's obviously a tragic ending, with him ultimately losing his life while making the realization that even a peace as hard-fought as World War II's may be doomed to be temporary.It's interesting how Englehart frames the Spear of Destiny as a sort of artifact that inspires war wherever it goes, drawing a direct connection between the spear falling into a Chinese man's hands and the culmination of the Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949...connecting it to the wars that followed it until the present of the 1970s, from the Korean war to Vietnam.
Englehart further tries to predict the next global hotspot, the Middle East or Africa.
Now, when Englehart wrote this story, he definitely wasn't thinking about DC comics continuity, as in 1977 the DC Universe wasn't nearly as coherent a shared setting as it would later become and, I have to confess, I have no idea which "Earth" in the DC multiverse their war comics (and many of their other non-superhero genre offerings) were meant to be set on. The more popular characters from their war comics—Sgt. Rock, The Unknown Soldier. The Haunted Tank, etc.—would eventually meet with various DC heroes and share adventures, suggesting they did indeed exist in the DCU (and both History of the DC Universe and New History of the DC Universe suggest their adventures ocurred in the DCU shared-setting).
But Englehart's seems to at least partially line-up with the history of the Spear of Destiny that John Ostrander wrote in a 1994 four-issue arc of The Spectre. In Spectre #21's "Troubled Waters," the spear goes from Longinus (depicted by artist Tom Mandrake standing at the edge of the giant eye socket of a giant skull upon which there are three crucified men in the distance, the artists play on the fact that Chris was crucified at Golgotha, Latin for "the place of the skull") to Saladin, then St. George, then Hitler.
After the war, though, rather than falling into Chinese hands, it is found in Berlin by the Russians, and spends years in the collection of "a high-placed Soviet official". Eventually, supervillan/terrorist Kobra gets his hands on it, and then U.S. operative Nightshade steals it from him, delivering it to Sarge Steel.
No one in the U.S. seems to actually possess it, though; rather, it ends ups lost in a Washington, D.C. warehouse until a special operative assigned by the then-president Clinton finds it and gives it to Superman.
So it would seem that the main difference between Englehart's 1977 predicted future of the spear and Ostrander's 1994 history of the spear would only contradict one another as to where it was between World War II and whenever Kobra got it, which wouldn't really be too hard to reconcile (For example, it could have gone to China and been in Asia between the end of WWII and when the Soviet collector acquired it). I'm murky on when exactly—like, what decade—it would be when Kobra had it, though; according to The Spectre, it was right about the time the JSoA entered Ragnarok, which I guess would be in the 1980s...but I'm not sure whether those events still "happened" or not in current DC continuity (New History remains very, very vague about Justice Society history).
At any rate, the spear spent about a decade in space (The Spectre put it in orbit in 1994's Spectre #22, then the heroes recovered it to sue against a rogue Spectre in 1999's Day of Judgment before the Sentinels of Magic sent it to the sun in its aftermath), and the last I saw of it was the lead story in JLA Secret Files and Origins 2004, but it looks like it's last, still in-continuity appearance may have been 2009 Final Crisis tie-in miniseries, Final Crisis: Revelations...?
Hmm... Maybe after I finish reading all of Detective Chimp's appearances, I can start tracking the Spear of Destiny trough DC history...






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