Where are you on the “Jesus
Story”?
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
April 14, 2015
First
of all, I don't have any "drop dead" due date. Thank you for your interest in my progress.
As
I answered Henry recently, I read and read and read and let what I read settle
in based upon where my mind is at the moment and governed by my experience,
knowledge base, biases and limitations.
Remember,
although a lifelong reader of matters religious, especially Roman Catholic, as
well as the Bible and countless studies of Jesus and Paul, especially, but also
Peter, James, Thomas, Judas and others, it is my "Jesus Story" and
may not be relevant to anyone else.
Like
all my writing, it grows out of my own curiosity, which currently is about God,
about the place of the Bible, especially the New Testament, in my mindset and
belief system.
For
me, a person who has lived in his mind perhaps more than in life most of his
existence, none of the sources -- from my point of view -- have been honest
with me.
I
know little to nothing about Islam, and a little more about Eastern religions,
thanks to Joseph Campbell, but at this point in my life I am kind of amazed
that Christianity, which is essentially a made up religion, as is Rabbinical
Judaism is unable or unwilling to share with the faithful what I have learned
in this odyssey.
Only
Paul's work, which was mainly a number of letters to the Gentiles, based upon
two essentials of his belief system: that Jesus died on the cross and rose from
the dead. These two events turned Jesus
from a great teacher to Jesus-the-Christ.
In
70 C.E. (Christian Era, or Common Era whatever you prefer, no longer written as
AD, or Adonis Domino), the equivalent of a nuclear explosion fell upon
Jerusalem, completely destroying the entire province, all its records and the
Second Jewish Temple, the seat of Judaism, and the seat of Jesus sect.
The
holocaust was the end of Jewish-Roman War in which Rome totally destroyed
everything that was Jewish before.
The
Rabbinical Judaism that was invented after that war was totally different than
the Judaism that existed before the war.
Nothing at all survives that was written about or concerning Jesus
before 70 C.E. In fact, most of what was
to be written about him and the "new religion" was written in the
late first century or early in the second century about Jesus, and the new
religion called Christianity.
Only Paul's "epistles" survived. Paul is believed to have died in prison or
martyred in Rome in around 67 C.E.
Luke in the "Acts of the Apostles" uses an "air
brush" to give the Paul experience the right twist, having prepared it for
the Roman patron, Theophilus.
Luke', writing about 90 C.E. portrays the struggling church as
united in purpose to spread the gospel from Jerusalem to the Greco Roman world.
But acts as well as the gospels about Jesus were written decades
after that mission (Jesus died on the cross about 30 C.E.), and after the
catastrophic destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 C.E.
In fact, it is the earliest letters of Paul written between 50-60
C.E. that provide the story or the firsthand account of the Jesus' first
followers, whom Paul had met with and wrote about.
Before there was a religion called "Christianity," Paul
also portrays a very different story of how the Jesus movement took root beyond
the Jewish World, which is accepted as "gospel" or truth personified
by the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, yet the names attached to the
four gospels writers are not at all authentic.
Moreover, not a single word of these gospels can be authenticated.
Alas, its far less than harmonious beginning for the Christian faith
which belies the gospels attempts to suggest otherwise.
After
reading A. N. Wilson’s JESUS: A LIFE
(1992) and Donald Harman Akenson's SURPASSING
WONDER: The Invention of The Bible and The Talmud (1998), which
incidentally details how Christianity and Judaism separated and reinvented
themselves after 70 C.E., I continued my reading, and rereading many books of the
past.
This
is especially true of books on or about St. Paul, the quintessential outsider,
the apostle so unique he defies invention.
Listed
are the current reads to give me the broadest possible picture of the man and
his work. I know there are many other
works on Apostle Paul, but these are works that have formed my views of the
man:
Hyam
Maccoby, THE MYTHMAKER, Paul and the
Invention of Christianity (1986)
Sarah
Ruden, PAUL AMONG THE PEOPLE: The Apostle
Reinterpreted and Reimagined in His Own Time ((2010)
Henry
Burton Sharman, PAUL AS EXPERIENT
(1945)
A.
N. Wilson, THE MIND OF THE APOSTLE
(1997)
Bart
D. Ehrman, PETER, PAUL & MARY
MAGDALENE: The Followers of Jesus in the History and Legend (2006)
Michael
Grant, SAINT PAUL (1976)
Donald
Harman Akenson, SAINT SAUL: A Skeleton
Key to the Historical Jesus (2000)
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