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Hidden Gospels: How the Search for Jesus Lost its Way

Philip Jenkins
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 noi 2002
The rediscovery of several lost texts of early Christianity, which contain long-lost accounts of the life of Jesus, has aroused great public interest and media excitement. Some writers claim that these 'hidden gospels' - particularly the famous Gospel of Thomas - provide revolutionary new information about the life of Jesus and about the early days of Christianity. This book tells how these ancient works were rediscovered, and how and why people came to make such far-reaching claims about them, claims which could have a dramatic effect on the faith and practice of contemporary Christianity. Although these texts have received a great deal of attention, Jenkins argues, their historical value is vastly inflated. Hidden Gospels debunks excessive claims about the historical value and importance of these texts, and argues that the writings are popular because they seem to justify radical, feminist, and post-modern positions in the modern churches.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780195156317
ISBN-10: 0195156315
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 141 x 219 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Hiding and Seeking; Fragments of a Faith Forgotten; The First Gospels? Q and Thomas; Gospel Truth; Hiding Jesus; Daughters of Sophia; Into the Mainstream; The Gospels in the Media; The Next New Gospel

Recenzii

Racy and provocative study ... entertaining.
Timely and well-researched book ... This book is a welcome antidote to contemporary fashions ... Jenkins has struck a belated and unfashionable blow for commonsense.
An excellent book ... It combines a substantial knowledge of recent NT study with a sensitivity to the wider intellectual and cultural context that lends such study its greatest importance. It is written with the great intellectual virtues of care, rigour and lucidity, and is yet accessible to a wide readership ... it is very well informed, written in a style untrammelled by professional jargon, and betrays nothing in the way of an 'agenda' or ideé fixe.
A sober, and sobering, account of how some scholars have enthusiastically embraced "new" or "hidden" gospels which just happen to support certain currently fashionable ideologies--and of just how unwarranted such claims actually are.
Jenkins has brilliantly identified the mythic dimension of the recent fascination with hidden gospels and alternative Christianities.
Jenkins makes clear that the inflated claims of the boosters of the Gospel of Thomas are neither well founded nor all that new. This book places the recent 'selling of Nag Hammadi' within the larger context of American academic politics, social trends, and New Age religions, and does all this in a manner that remains accessible to the general reader.
One of the many services of Mr Jenkins's fine, carefully argued book is to put discussion about what happened in Palestine 2,000 years ago on more reliable ground.