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Buffoonish attempt to reduce the Gospel writers and the Gospels themselves to self-contradiction and therefore to incoherence. Because this is so buffoonish, this is a very fun read. White actually says that raising buffoonish questions makes someone, anyone, a better christian because they are studying the Scriptures (see Preface--Questioning the Scriptures). Nice!
Not recommended for serious Catholic students of Sacred Scripture.
 
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sacredheart25 | Apr 4, 2023 |
DE JESÚS AL CRISTIANISMO

L. Michael White, uno de los mejores especialistas mundiales sobre
los orígenes del cristianismo, nos ofrece la exhaustiva y asombrosa
historia de cómo el cristianismo se desarrolló desde la visión personal
de un humilde campesino judío que vivió en una remota provincia del
Imperio romano hasta llegar a convertirse en la mayor religión
institucionalizada del mundo.

White, que se nutre de las aportaciones hechas por la arqueología
y la historia de la cultura, ha ambientado perfectamente la narración
de los comienzos del cristianismo en su contexto histórico, tanto judío
como grecorromano; en este sentido, la presente obra constituye una
excepcional introducción al Nuevo Testamento; de hecho, es la
introducción más categóricamente histórica que se ha escrito.

L. Michael White
Titular de la cátedra Ronald Nelson Smith de Estudios
Clásicos y Orígenes del Cristianismo y director del Instituto
para el Estudio de la Antigüedad y los Orígenes del
Cristianismo en la Universidad de Texas (Austin), adquirió
fama por el doble galardón obtenido de la PBS Frontline
por los documentales From Jesus to Christ: The First Christians
y Apocalypse!, en los que colaboró como especialista en
historia y coguionista. También dirige las excavaciones
de una de las más antiguas sinagogas grecorromanas en
Ostia (Italia).
 
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FundacionRosacruz | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 28, 2018 |
Explores the origins of Christianity
 
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JackSweeney | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 9, 2017 |
I'm not a great fan of the type of map that substitutes hatching for actual representation of what the mapper considers less important terrain, but the Harper atlas is of a well enough known area to get by with it. But I would have liked about two more maps or illustration of Jerusalem. A useful book given the price constraints.
 
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DinadansFriend | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 15, 2013 |
If anyone out there is looking for a one-stop introduction to early Christianity, this might well be it. In fact, I usually use an index card to try to organize what I want to say in reviews, but about one hundred pages into the book, I realized that there was just so much information here that I would never be able to do justice to everything “From Jesus to Christianity” has to offer. Don’t let the “By The Featured Expert on the PBS Special ‘From Jesus to Christ’” sticker on the front fool you, either. I haven’t seen the PBS special, but I can certainly assure you that this book has more scholarly rigor and vastly more detail than any television program ever could.

I found the first quarter of this book which includes a rich, detailed account of the ways in which ancient Judaism informed both the thought and practice of nascent Christianity (or, as White calls it, the “Jesus cult,” since Christianity wasn’t a word available to the earliest Christians). We get a quick history of post-Davidic Israel with an emphasis on the cultural, social, and political strife that was occurring at the time, including a history of the various imperial occupations with which Jesus dealt, and the radical politics this occasionally spawned.

White then goes on try to construct the historical person of Jesus by looking at the four Gospels and the Pauline corpus. This is where White starts to include a little more rigor than even the more interested readers might want. We get charts detailing the intricacies of the synoptic problem, including the “Two-Source Hypothesis,” “the Two-Gospel Hypothesis (the Griesbach hypothesis,” and the “Farrar-Goulder Hypothesis.” There is another detailed table on page 136-137 discussing the content of the Q source, a.k.a. the “synoptic sayings source.” What are the Two-Source Hypothesis and the Q source? Before reading the book, I couldn’t have told you in any real detail, but White lays it all out beautifully and in context.

I don’t mean any of this to say that the book is hopelessly obscure. It’s not. White gives a detailed account of Paul’s Aegean travel, and an analysis of his letters to various new Christian communities (again, replete with numerous charts). There is a wonderful discussion of the Jewish apocalyptic tradition and Jewish sectarianism and how people dealt with the Gospels in the first century A.D. Thankfully, White includes not just canonical texts, but also non-canonical ones like the Gospel of Thomas.

In later generations, White discussions the development of various Christological controversies and the rise of what he calls “normative self-definition.” How did Christian communities define themselves in relationship to their (often) Jewish past? In relation to Hellenism? For interesting questions to these questions answered through the spectrum of morality and ethics, I heartily recommend another book I recently reviewed for this site, namely Wayne Meek’s “The Origins of Christian Morality: The First Two Centuries.”

I tried to think of some aspect of New Testament history, ancient Christian society, or the literature that White didn’t at least touch on, but couldn’t find one. The material is presented in chronological, which makes things extraordinarily easy to find. This might not be exhaustive for someone interested in the minutiae in, say, the dating controversies of certain books or hermeneutic approaches, but this book provides a more than solid introduction, and has the virtue of having thirty-five pages of endnotes. If there is one thing this book is missing, it’s a chapter-by-chapter reading list, although some of the aforementioned charts do have recommended ancillary reading material. All in all, you can’t really go wrong with using this book as a stepping stone to studying this material.
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kant1066 | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 19, 2012 |
Probably the best introduction to early Christianity that I have yet come across. The tables that show relationships between and summaries of various writings are enough to make the book a valuable resource. Multiple theories on the history surrounding various writings and events are presented along with the proof for each in an unbiased way, which makes this book valuable as a general introduction to the field for newcomers. This book is also especially useful for the background information (the late BCE era), the parallel history of early Judaism (contrary to popular belief, Judaism in fact developed alongside Christianity, not before), and information about Greco-Roman society, history, and customs. Some of the information presented here, though, seems a little outdated (for instance, who honestly still believes that the Secret Gospel of Mark wasn't a hoax?). Overall, not a bad book for a thinking person who is interested in the topic and can take what they read with a grain of salt
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davidpwithun | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2011 |
This is probably the best, most comprehensive book I've read on how Christianity started and what led to the writing of the New Testament.

People often say that you have to understand the culture and political atmosphere of the Scriptures in order to fully understand why certain things were written. To me, this book has shed all the light I need in that area. Beginning before Christ and moving through the time when the Canon was put together, each character and each book in the New Testament is seamlessly historically explained in terms of culture, extra-Biblical sources, and recent scholarly research.

This is a scholarly book, however. So you have to have an interest in the subject in order for the book to be interesting. It wasn't written, in my opinion, to "wow" the general public, though it may anyway.

I highly recommend this book to anyone, and especially Christians - since, at least I believe, it is important to know the history of your faith.
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Aerow | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 15, 2011 |
Comes with an overview and questions for this DVD
 
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DioceseofOttawa | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 15, 2010 |
This is an outstanding history, concise yet thorough. White's use of sidebars, maps, and charts makes the book a very useful reference. This is the best book that I have read on early Christian history.
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dzeek | 5 weitere Rezensionen | May 21, 2009 |
A very useful reference, especially for Hebrew Bible studies but good for the New Testament as well.
 
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auntieknickers | 1 weitere Rezension | Feb 4, 2008 |
From the Publisher:


Frontline explores the life of Jesus and the movement he started, challenging familiar assumptions and conventional notions about the origins of Christianity. Drawing upon new and sometimes controversial historical evidence and interviews with the nation's leading New Testament scholars, the series transports the viewer back two thousand years to the time and place where Jesus once lived and preached. The film traces Jesus' life, focusing on the events that occurred after he died and on his first followers, the men and women whose belief, conviction, and martyrdom created a major movement that transformed the Roman Empire in the space of only three hundred years.
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St-Johns-Episcopal | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 17, 2017 |
Zeige 11 von 11