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Discovering the Historical Jesus


Article # : 14870 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 10 / 1988  3,496 Words
Author : Andrew Wilson
Andrew Wilson is associate professor of biblical studies at the Unification Theological Seminary. His publications include True Family Values (1996) and World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts (1991). He has collaborated on textbooks in the field of moral education and also spent several years researching and planning an encyclopedia oriented around values.

       JESUS WITHIN JUDAISM
       New Light from Exciting Archaeological Discoveries
       James H. Charlesworth
       New York: Doubleday/Anchor Bible Reference Library, 1988
       288 pp., $20.00
       
        The quest for the historical Jesus, nearly abandoned in the early part of this century, is being revived by New Testament scholars in the eighties, thanks to a wealth of new archeological discoveries. Discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Nag Hammadi Codices, and a profusion of new pseudepigraphic texts, many of which were written or circulated among Palestinian Jews during the lifetime of Jesus of Nazareth, has spurred what may be a paradigm shift in biblical scholarship.
       
        For generations, seminarians have been taught to be skeptical of any claims about the historical Jesus. Form critics have analyzed the words attributed to Jesus in the Gospels and have determined that the great majority of them were creations of the early Christians' faith in the resurrected Jesus, rather than accurate recollections of the earthy Jesus. The gospel writers, moreover, were not eyewitnesses to the events of Jesus' life--Mark, the earliest gospel, was written after the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in A.D. 70, forty years after Jesus had been crucified. They used older sources and edited them to construct theological documents that expressed the kerygma, or proclamation, of the church. This proclamation, was based upon the salvific meaning found in the events surrounding Jesus' death and resurrection: Though crucified under Pontius Pilate, Jesus overcame death and was raised up as Lord and ... (1994 of 20524 Characters)
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