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Barrie Wilson

Auteur de How Jesus Became Christian

6 oeuvres 204 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Barrie Wilson is professor of humanities and religious studies at York University in Toronto. A specialist in early Christian origins, this is his first book intended for a general audience. Building on contemporary critical scholarship, it addresses some of the major puzzles he has identified afficher plus while teaching biblical studies over a twenty-year period. An award-winning educator, his previous academic books focused on textual interpretation. For more information please visit www.barriewilson.com. afficher moins

Comprend les noms: Barrie A. Wilson

Œuvres de Barrie Wilson

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This is a long overdue review of a great new book. Wilson highlights the tension of Christianity’s founding movement, and asks the question: Was Jesus a Jew or a Christian? Paul’s brand of Christianity, especially, Wilson finds anti-Semitic, in stark contrast to the Gospel of Matthew and its reliance upon Torah. Paul, Wilson theorizes, hijacked Jesus for himself, turning Christianity into a Gentile religion.

Wilson’s portrayal of conflicting religions—the “Jesus movement” of the Jews, and the “Christ movement” of Paul—makes for fascinating reading. Paul experienced a mystical vision of the Christ, and everything he teaches flows from that deep, spiritual, ongoing connection between Christ and Paul. What used to be so simple became a complex theology, Paul’s message that all could be saved in Christ resounding throughout the Roman world.

Wilson discusses the book of Acts and its “revisionist history,” entwining Paul’s world with the Jesus movement as if they are one and the same, and concludes that there is simply no corroborating evidence for the Acts version. Instead, Paul’s letters betray an entirely different atmosphere. The Book of Acts invented history, and the version of Christianity we know today is better labeled “Paulinity.” The Jesus movement slowly faded away. In effect, the Jesus Cover-Up Thesis contends that early Christianity effectively killed off the historical Jesus. In the epilogue, Wilson encourages recovering the human Jesus and rediscovering his Jewish roots.

A thought-provoking and well-written book, definitely worth reading.
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DubiousDisciple | 1 autre critique | Jul 31, 2011 |
This is a good book on the split in the early Church. I think his portrayal of the Ebionites as Torah-observant Jews is somewhat misleading, though. Yes, they were Jews, but they had their own idea of what the "Law" was which was very deviant from first-century Judaism.
 
Signalé
KeithAkers | 1 autre critique | Jun 5, 2010 |

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Œuvres
6
Membres
204
Popularité
#108,207
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
2
ISBN
22

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