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Historical Jesus

The term "historical Jesus" refers to the life and teachings of Jesus as interpreted through critical historical methods, in contrast to what are traditionally religious interpretations.[1][2] It also considers the historical and cultural contexts in which Jesus lived.[3][4][5][6] Virtually all scholars of antiquity accept that Jesus was a historical figure, and the idea that Jesus was a mythical figure has been consistently rejected by the scholarly consensus as a fringe theory.[7][8][9][10][11] Scholars differ about the beliefs and teachings of Jesus as well as the accuracy of the biblical accounts, with only two events being supported by nearly universal scholarly consensus: Jesus was baptized and Jesus was crucified.[12][13][14][15]

Reconstructions of the historical Jesus are based on the Pauline epistles and the gospels, while several non-biblical sources also support his historical existence.[16][17][18] Since the 18th century, three separate scholarly quests for the historical Jesus have taken place, each with distinct characteristics and developing new and different research criteria.[19][20] Historical Jesus scholars typically contend that he was a Galilean Jew and living in a time of messianic and apocalyptic expectations.[21] Some scholars credit the apocalyptic declarations of the gospels to him, while others portray his "Kingdom of God" as a moral one, and not apocalyptic in nature.[22]

The portraits of Jesus that have been constructed through history using these processes have often differed from each other, and from the image portrayed in the gospel accounts.[23] Such portraits include that of Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet, charismatic healer, Cynic philosopher, Jewish messiah, prophet of social change,[24][25][6] and rabbi.[26][27] There is little scholarly agreement on a single portrait, nor the methods needed to construct it,[23][28][29][3] but there are overlapping attributes among the various portraits, and scholars who differ on some attributes may agree on others.[24][25][30]

Historical existence edit

Virtually all scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed.[8][9][31] Historian Michael Grant asserts that if conventional standards of historical criticism are applied to the New Testament, "we can no more reject Jesus' existence than we can reject the existence of a mass of pagan personages whose reality as historical figures is never questioned."[32] There is no indication that writers in antiquity who opposed Christianity questioned the existence of Jesus.[33][34]

Since the 1970s, various scholars such as Joachim Jeremias, E. P. Sanders and Gerd Theissen have traced elements of Christianity to currents in first-century Judaism and have discarded nineteenth-century minority views that Jesus was based on previous pagan deities.[35] Mentions of Jesus in extra-biblical texts exist and are supported as genuine by the majority of historians.[8] Differences between the content of the Jewish Messianic prophecies and the life of Jesus undermine the idea that Jesus was invented as a Jewish Midrash or Peshar.[36]: 344–351  The presence of details of Jesus' life in Paul, and the differences between letters and Gospels, are sufficient for most scholars to dismiss mythicist claims concerning Paul.[36]: 208–233 [37] Theissen says "there is broad scholarly consensus that we can best find access to the historical Jesus through the Synoptic tradition."[38] Bart D. Ehrman adds: "To dismiss the Gospels from the historical record is neither fair nor scholarly."[8]: 73  One book argues that if Jesus did not exist, "the origin of the faith of the early Christians remains a perplexing mystery."[36]: 233  Eddy and Boyd say the best history can assert is probability, yet the probability of Jesus having existed is so high, Ehrman says "virtually all historians and scholars have concluded Jesus did exist as a historical figure."[39]: 12, 21 [40] Historian James Dunn writes: "Today nearly all historians, whether Christians or not, accept that Jesus existed".[41] In a 2011 review of the state of modern scholarship, Ehrman wrote: "He certainly existed, as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity, Christian or non-Christian, agrees."[42]: 15–22 

The Christ myth theory is the proposition that Jesus of Nazareth never existed, or if he did, he had virtually nothing to do with the founding of Christianity and the accounts in the gospels.[43] In the 21st century, there have been a number of books and documentaries on this subject. For example, Earl Doherty has written that Jesus may have been a real person, but that the biblical accounts of him are almost entirely fictional.[39]: 12 [44][45][46] Many proponents use a three-fold argument first developed in the 19th century: that the New Testament has no historical value with respect to Jesus's existence, that there are no non-Christian references to Jesus from the first century, and that Christianity had pagan and/or mythical roots.[47][48]

Contemporary scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed, and biblical scholars and classical historians view the theories of his nonexistence as effectively refuted.[8][10][49][50][51] Robert M. Price, an atheist who denies the existence of Jesus, agrees that his perspective runs against the views of the majority of scholars.[52] Michael Grant (a classicist and historian) states that "In recent years, no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non-historicity of Jesus, or at any rate very few have, and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger, indeed very abundant, evidence to the contrary."[10] Richard A. Burridge states, "There are those who argue that Jesus is a figment of the Church's imagination, that there never was a Jesus at all. I have to say that I do not know any respectable critical scholar who says that anymore."[49][36]: 24–26 

Sources edit

 
Judea Province during the 1st century

The New Testament represents sources that have become canonical for Christianity, and there are many apocryphal texts that are examples of the wide variety of writings in the first centuries AD that are related to Jesus.[53]

Non-Christian sources that are used to study and establish the historicity of Jesus include Jewish sources such as Josephus, and Roman sources such as Tacitus.[17][18]

New Testament sources edit

Synoptic Gospels edit

 
An 11th-century Byzantine manuscript containing the opening of the Gospel of Luke

The Synoptic Gospels are the primary sources of historical information about Jesus and of the religious movement he founded.[21][54][55][note 1] These religious gospels – the Gospel of Matthew, the Gospel of Mark, and the Gospel of Luke – recount the life, ministry, crucifixion and resurrection of a Jew named Jesus who spoke Aramaic and wore tzitzit.[56][57] There are different hypotheses regarding the origin of the texts because the gospels of the New Testament were written in Greek for Greek-speaking communities,[58] and were later translated into Syriac, Latin, and Coptic.[59]

The fourth gospel, the Gospel of John, differs greatly from the Synoptic Gospels and scholars generally consider it to be less historical than the Synoptic Gospels. As James Crossley and Robert J. Myles explain, John "is of limited use for reconstructing the life of the historical Jesus."[60] However, scholars usually agree that John is not entirely without historical value: certain sayings in John are as old as or older than their synoptic counterparts, his representation of the topography around Jerusalem is often superior to that of the synoptics, his testimony that Jesus was executed before, rather than on, Passover, might well be more accurate, and his presentation of Jesus in the garden and the prior meeting held by the Jewish authorities are more historically plausible than their synoptic parallels.[61]

Historians often study the historical reliability of the Acts of the Apostles when studying the reliability of the gospels, as the Book of Acts was seemingly written by the same author as the Gospel of Luke.[62]

Pauline epistles edit

The Pauline epistles are dated to between AD 50 and 60 (i.e., approximately twenty to thirty years after the generally accepted time period for the death of Jesus), and are the earliest surviving Christian texts that include information about Jesus.[63]

Although Paul the Apostle provides little biographical information about Jesus[64] and states that he never knew Jesus, he does make it clear that he considers Jesus to have been a real person[note 2] and a Jew.[65][66][67][68][note 3] Moreover, he claims to have met with James, the brother of Jesus.[69][note 4]

Non-biblical sources edit

In addition to biblical sources, there are a number of mentions of Jesus in non-Christian sources that have been used in the historical analyses of the existence of Jesus.[71][16]

Thallos edit

Biblical scholar Frederick Fyvie Bruce says the earliest mention of Jesus outside the New Testament occurs c. 55 CE from a historian named Thallos. Thallos' history, like the vast majority of ancient literature, has been lost but not before it was quoted by Sextus Julius Africanus (c. 160 – c. 240 CE), a Christian writer, in his History of the World (c. 220). This book likewise was lost, but not before one of its citations of Thallos was taken up by the Byzantine historian George Syncellus in his Chronicle (c. 800). There is no means by which certainty can be established concerning this or any of the other lost references, partial references, and questionable references that mention some aspect of Jesus' life or death, but in evaluating evidence, it is appropriate to note they exist.[72]: 29–33 [73]: 20–23 

Josephus and Tacitus edit

There are two passages in the writings of the Jewish historian Josephus, and one from the Roman historian Tacitus, that are generally considered good evidence.[71][73]

Josephus' Antiquities of the Jews, written around AD 93–94, includes two references to the biblical Jesus in Books 18 and 20. The general scholarly view is that while the longer passage, known as the Testimonium Flavianum, is most likely not authentic in its entirety, it is broadly agreed upon that it originally consisted of an authentic nucleus, which was then subject to Christian interpolation.[74][75] Of the other mention in Josephus, Josephus scholar Louis H. Feldman has stated that "few have doubted the genuineness" of Josephus' reference to Jesus in Antiquities 20, 9, 1 ("the brother of Jesus, who was called Christ, whose name was James"). Paul references meeting and interacting with James, Jesus' brother, and since this agreement between the different sources supports Josephus' statement, the statement is only disputed by a small number of scholars.[76][77][78][79]

Roman historian Tacitus referred to "Christus" and his execution by Pontius Pilate in his Annals (written c. AD 116), book 15, chapter 44.[80] Robert E. Van Voorst states that the very negative tone of Tacitus' comments on Christians makes the passage extremely unlikely to have been forged by a Christian scribe[73] and the Tacitus reference is now widely accepted as an independent confirmation of Jesus's crucifixion.[81][82]

Talmud edit

Other considerations outside Christendom include the possible mentions of Jesus in the Talmud. The Talmud speaks in some detail of the conduct of criminal cases of Israel whose texts were gathered together from 200 to 500 CE. Johann Maier and Bart D. Ehrman argue this material is too late to be of much use. Ehrman explains that "Jesus is never mentioned in the oldest part of the Talmud, the Mishnah, but appears only in the later commentaries of the Gemara."[83][42]: 67–69  Jesus is not mentioned by name, but there is a subtle attack on the virgin birth that refers to the illegitimate son of a Roman soldier Pantera (Ehrman says, "In Greek the word for virgin is parthenos"), and a reference to Jesus' miracles as "black magic" learned when he lived in Egypt (as a toddler). Ehrman writes that few contemporary scholars treat this as historical.[42]: 67 [84]

Mara bar Serapion edit

There is only one classical writer who refers positively to Jesus and that is Mara bar Serapion, a Syriac Stoic, who wrote a letter to his son, who was also named Serapion, from a Roman prison. He speaks of the execution of 'the wise king of the Jews' and compares his death to that of Socrates at the hands of the Athenians. He links the death of the 'wise king' to the Jews being driven from their kingdom. He also states that the 'wise king' lives on because of the "new laws he laid down". The dating of the letter is disputed but was probably soon after 73 AD.[85]

Scholars such as Robert Van Voorst see little doubt that the reference to the execution of the "king of the Jews" is about the death of Jesus.[86] Others such as Craig A. Evans see less value in the letter, given its uncertain date, and the ambiguity in the reference.[87]

Critical-historical research edit

Historical criticism, also known as the historical-critical method or higher criticism, is a branch of criticism that investigates the origins of ancient texts in order to understand "the world behind the text".[88] The primary goal of historical criticism is to discover the text's primitive or original meaning in its original historical context and its literal sense. Historical criticism began in the 17th century and gained popular recognition in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Historical reliability of the Gospels edit

The historical reliability of the gospels refers to the reliability and historic character of the four New Testament gospels as historical documents. Historical reliability is not dependent on a source being inerrant or void of agendas since there are sources that are considered generally reliable despite having such traits (e.g. Josephus).[89] The question of reliability is a matter of ongoing debate.[90][91][92][93][94][95]

Historians subject the gospels to critical analysis by differentiating authentic, reliable information from possible inventions, exaggerations, and alterations.[21] Since there are more textual variants (200,000–400,000) than words in the New Testament,[96] scholars use textual criticism to determine which gospel variants could theoretically be taken as 'original'. To answer this question, scholars have to ask who wrote the gospels, when they wrote them, what was their objective in writing them,[97] what sources the authors used, how reliable these sources were, and how far removed in time the sources were from the stories they narrate, or if they were altered later. Scholars may also look into the internal evidence of the documents, to see if, for example, a document has misquoted texts from the Hebrew Tanakh, has made incorrect claims about geography, if the author appears to have hidden information, or if the author has fabricated a prophecy. Finally, scholars turn to external sources, including the testimony of early church leaders, to writers outside the church, primarily Jewish and Greco-Roman historians, who would have been more likely to have criticized the church, and to archaeological evidence.

Quest for the historical Jesus edit

 
Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694–1768) studied the historical Jesus.

Since the 18th century, three scholarly quests for the historical Jesus have taken place, each with distinct characteristics and based on different research criteria, which were often developed during each specific phase.[19][98][20] These quests are distinguished from pre-Enlightenment approaches because they rely on the historical-critical method to study biblical narratives. While textual analysis of biblical sources had taken place for centuries, these quests introduced new methods and specific techniques in the attempt to establish the historical validity of their conclusions.[99]

First quest edit

The scholarly effort to reconstruct an "authentic" historical picture of Jesus was a product of the Enlightenment skepticism of the late eighteenth century.[100] Bible scholar Gerd Theissen explains that "It was concerned with presenting a historically true life of Jesus that functioned theologically as a critical force over against [established Roman Catholic] Christology."[100] The first scholar to separate the historical Jesus from the theological Jesus in this way was philosopher, writer, classicist, Hebraist and Enlightenment free thinker Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694–1768).[101] Copies of Reimarus' writings were discovered by G. E. Lessing (1729–1781) in the library at Wolfenbüttel where Lessing was the librarian. Reimarus had left permission for his work to be published after his death, and Lessing did so between 1774 and 1778, publishing them as Die Fragmente eines unbekannten Autors (The Fragments of an Unknown Author). Over time, they came to be known as the Wolfenbüttel Fragments after the library where Lessing worked. Reimarus distinguished between what Jesus taught and how he is portrayed in the New Testament. According to Reimarus, Jesus was a political messiah who failed at creating political change and was executed. His disciples then stole the body and invented the story of the resurrection for personal gain.[101][102]: 46–48  Reimarus' controversial work prompted a response from "the father of historical critical research" Johann Semler in 1779, Beantwortung der Fragmente eines Ungenannten (Answering the Fragments of an Unknown).[103] Semler refuted Reimarus' arguments, but it was of little consequence. Reimarus' writings had already made lasting changes by making it clear criticism could exist independently of theology and faith, and by founding historical Jesus studies within that non-sectarian view.[104][102]: 48 

According to Homer W. Smith, the work of Lessing and others culminated in the Protestant theologian David Strauss's Das Leben Jesu ('The Life of Jesus', 1835), in which Strauss expresses his conclusion that Jesus existed, but that his godship is the result of "a historic nucleus [being] worked over and reshaped into an ideal form by the first Christians under the influence of Old Testament models and the idea of the messiah found in Daniel."[105]

 
Albert Schweitzer, whose book coined the phrase Quest [for] the Historical Jesus

The enthusiasm shown during the first quest diminished after Albert Schweitzer's critique of 1906 in which he pointed out various shortcomings in the approaches used at the time. After Schweitzer's Von Reimarus zu Wrede was translated and published in English as The Quest of the Historical Jesus in 1910, the book's title provided the label for the field of study for eighty years.[106]: 779– 

Second quest edit

The second quest began in 1953 and introduced a number of new techniques, but faded away in the 1970s.[107]

Third quest edit

In the 1980s a number of scholars gradually began to introduce new research ideas,[19][108] initiating a third quest characterized by the latest research approaches.[107][109] One of the modern aspects of the third quest has been the role of archaeology; James Charlesworth states that modern scholars now want to use archaeological discoveries that clarify the nature of life in Galilee and Judea during the time of Jesus.[110] A further characteristic of the third quest has been the interdisciplinary and global nature of its scholarship.[111] While the first two quests were mostly carried out by European Protestant theologians, a modern aspect of the third quest is the worldwide influx of scholars from multiple disciplines.[111] More recently, historicists have focused their attention on the historical writings associated with the era in which Jesus lived[112][113] or on the evidence concerning his family.[114][115][116][117]

By the end of the twentieth century, scholar Tom Holmén writes that Enlightenment skepticism had given way to a more "trustful attitude toward the historical reliability of the sources ... [Currently] the conviction of Sanders, (we know quite a lot about Jesus) characterizes the majority of contemporary studies."[118]: 43  Reflecting this shift, the phrase "quest for the historical Jesus" has largely been replaced by life of Jesus research.[119]: 33 

Demise of authenticity and the "Next Quest" edit

Since the late 1900s, concerns have been growing about the usefulness of the criteria of authenticity.[120] According to Le Donne, the usage of such criteria is a form of "positivist historiography."[121] According to Chris Keith, a historical Jesus is "ultimately unattainable, but can be hypothesized on the basis of the interpretations of the early Christians, and as part of a larger process of accounting for how and why early Christians came to view Jesus in the ways that they did." According to Keith, "these two models are methodologically and epistemologically incompatible," calling into question the methods and aim of the first model.[122]

In 2021, James Crossley (editor of the Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus) announced that historical Jesus scholarship now had moved to the era of the Next Quest. The Next Quest has moved on from the criteria, obsessions with the uniqueness of Jesus, and the supersessionism still implicit in scholarly questions of the Jewishness of Jesus. Instead, sober scholarship now focuses on treating the subject matter as part of the wider human phenomenon of religion, cultural comparison, class relations, slave culture and economy, and the social history of historical Jesus scholarship and wider reception histories of the historical Jesus.[123] The book by Crossley and Robert J. Myles, Jesus: A Life in Class Conflict, is indicative of this new tendency.[124]

Methods edit

Textual, source and form-criticism edit

The first quest, which started in 1778, was almost entirely based on biblical criticism. This took the form of textual and source criticism originally, which were supplemented with form criticism in 1919, and redaction criticism in 1948.[99] Form criticism began as an attempt to trace the history of the biblical material during the oral period before it was written in its current form, and may be seen as starting where textual criticism ends.[125] Form criticism views Gospel writers as editors, not authors. Redaction criticism may be viewed as the child of source criticism and form criticism.[126] and views the Gospel writers as authors and early theologians and tries to understand how the redactor(s) has (have) molded the narrative to express their own perspectives.[126]

Criteria of authenticity edit

When form criticism questioned the historical reliability of the Gospels, scholars began looking for other criteria. Taken from other areas of study such as source criticism, the "criteria of authenticity" emerged gradually, becoming a distinct branch of methodology associated with life of Jesus research.[118]: 43–54  The criteria are a variety of rules used to determine if some event or person is more or less likely to be historical. These criteria are primarily, though not exclusively, used to assess the sayings and actions of Jesus.[127]: 193–199 [128]: 3–33 

In view of the skepticism produced in the mid-twentieth century by form criticism concerning the historical reliability of the gospels, the burden shifted in historical Jesus studies from attempting to identify an authentic life of Jesus to attempting to prove authenticity. The criteria developed within this framework, therefore, are tools that provide arguments solely for authenticity, not inauthenticity.[118]: 43  In 1901, the application of criteria of authenticity began with dissimilarity. It was often applied unevenly with a preconceived goal.[100][118]: 40–45  In the early decades of the twentieth century, F. C. Burkitt and B. H. Streeter provided the foundation for multiple attestation. The Second Quest introduced the criterion of embarrassment.[99] By the 1950s, coherence was also included. By 1987, D. Polkow lists 25 separate criteria being used by scholars to test for historical authenticity including the criterion of "historical plausibility".[99][127]: 193–199 

Criticism edit

A number of scholars have criticized the various approaches used in the study of the historical Jesus—on one hand, for the lack of rigor in research methods; on the other, for being driven by "specific agendas" that interpret ancient sources to fit specific goals.[129][130][131] By the 21st century, the "maximalist" approaches of the 19th century, which accepted all the gospels, and the "minimalist" trends of the early 20th century, which totally rejected them, were abandoned and scholars began to focus on what is historically probable and plausible about Jesus.[132][133][134]

Baptism and crucifixion edit

 
The Pilate Stone from Caesarea Maritima, now at the Israel Museum

There is widespread disagreement among scholars on the details of the life of Jesus mentioned in the gospel narratives, and on the meaning of his teachings.[15] Scholars differ on the historicity of specific episodes described in the biblical accounts of Jesus,[15][23] but almost all modern scholars consider his baptism and crucifixion to be historical facts.[12][135]

Baptism edit

The existence of John the Baptist within the same time frame as Jesus, and his eventual execution by Herod Antipas is attested to by 1st-century Roman-Jewish historian Josephus and the overwhelming majority of modern scholars view Josephus' accounts of the activities of John the Baptist as authentic.[136][137] One of the arguments in favor of the historicity of the Baptism of Jesus by John is the criterion of embarrassment, i.e. that it is a story which the early Christian Church would have never wanted to invent, as it implies that Jesus was subservient to John.[138][139][140] Another argument used in favour of the historicity of the baptism is that multiple accounts refer to it, usually called the criterion of multiple attestation.[141] Technically, multiple attestation does not guarantee authenticity, but only determines antiquity.[142] However, for most scholars, together with the criterion of embarrassment it lends credibility to the baptism of Jesus by John being a historical event.[141][143][144][145]

Crucifixion edit

John P. Meier views the crucifixion of Jesus as a historical fact and states that based on the criterion of embarrassment, Christians would not have invented the painful death of their leader.[146] Meier states that a number of other criteria – the criterion of multiple attestation (i.e., confirmation by more than one source), the criterion of coherence (i.e., that it fits with other historical elements) and the criterion of rejection (i.e., that it is not disputed by ancient sources) – help establish the crucifixion of Jesus as a historical event.[146] Eddy and Boyd state that it is now firmly established that there is non-Christian confirmation of the crucifixion of Jesus – referring to the mentions in Josephus and Tacitus.[82]

Most scholars in the third quest for the historical Jesus consider the crucifixion indisputable,[14][146][147][148] as do Bart Ehrman,[148] John Dominic Crossan[14] and James Dunn.[12] Although scholars agree on the historicity of the crucifixion, they differ on the reason and context for it, e.g. both E. P. Sanders and Paula Fredriksen support the historicity of the crucifixion, but contend that Jesus did not foretell his own crucifixion, and that his prediction of the crucifixion is a Christian story.[149] Géza Vermes also views the crucifixion as a historical event but believes this was due to Jesus’ challenging of Roman authority.[149] On the other hand, Maurice Casey and John P. Meier state that Jesus did predict his death, and this actually strengthened his followers' belief in his Resurrection.[150][151]

Other possibly historical elements edit

In addition to the two historical elements of baptism and crucifixion, scholars attribute varying levels of certainty to various other aspects of the life of Jesus, although there is no universal agreement among scholars on these items:[152][note 5]

  • Jesus was a Galilean Jew who was born between 7 and 2 BC and died 30–36 AD.[156][157][158]
  • Jesus lived only in Galilee and Judea:[159] Most scholars reject that there is any evidence that an adult Jesus traveled or studied outside Galilee and Judea. Marcus Borg states that the suggestions that an adult Jesus traveled to Egypt or India are "without historical foundation".[160] John Dominic Crossan states that none of the theories presented to fill the 15–18-year gap between the early life of Jesus and the start of his ministry have been supported by modern scholarship.[161][162] The Talmud refers to "Jesus the Nazarene" several times and scholars such as Andreas Kostenberger and Robert Van Voorst hold that some of these references are to Jesus.[163][162] Nazareth is not mentioned in the Hebrew Bible and the Christian gospels portray it as an insignificant village, John 1:46 asking "Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?"[164] Craig S. Keener states that it is rarely disputed that Jesus was from Nazareth, an obscure small village not worthy of invention.[164][165] Gerd Theissen concurs with that conclusion.[166]
  • Jesus spoke Aramaic and may have also spoken Hebrew and Greek.[167][168][169][170] The languages spoken in Galilee and Judea during the 1st century include the Semitic Aramaic and Hebrew languages as well as Greek, with Aramaic being the predominant language.[167][168]
  • Jesus called disciples: John P. Meier sees the calling of disciples a natural consequence of the information available about Jesus.[152][13][171] N. T. Wright accepts that there were twelve disciples, but holds that the list of their names cannot be determined with certainty. John Dominic Crossan disagrees, stating that Jesus did not call disciples and had an "open to all" egalitarian approach, imposed no hierarchy and preached to all in equal terms.[13] However, James Crossley and Robert J. Myles and the emerging consensus disagree with Crossan, arguing that "we should dispel romantic notions that this movement was proudly egalitarian and progressive in the sense of the 'radical liberalism' of today" and instead point out that the core Twelve may have been "a central committee or politburo with membership sometimes changing."[172]
  • Jesus caused a controversy at the Temple.[152][13][171]
  • After his death his disciples continued, and some of his disciples were persecuted.[152][13]
  • Jesus had a Burial.[173]

Some scholars have proposed further additional historical possibilities such as:

  • An approximate chronology of Jesus can be estimated from non-Christian sources, and confirmed by correlating them with New Testament accounts.[156][174]
  • Claims about the appearance or ethnicity of Jesus are mostly subjective, based on cultural stereotypes and societal trends rather than on scientific analysis.[175][176][177]
  • The baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist can be dated approximately from Josephus' references (Antiquities 18.5.2) to a date before AD 28–35.[136][178][179][180][181]
  • The main topic of his teaching was the Kingdom of God, and he presented this teaching in parables that were surprising and sometimes confounding.[182]
  • Jesus taught an ethic of forgiveness, as expressed in aphorisms such as "turn the other cheek" or "go the extra mile."[182] Within the traditional ethic of "Christian forgiveness" there are some significantly differing views about exactly what type of forgiveness Jesus taught.[183]
  • An emerging scholarly consensus suggests Jesus and his inner-circle claimed "a degree of hardened 'servant' masculinity for themselves as an example to the world."[184]
  • The date of the crucifixion of Jesus was earlier than 36 AD, based on the dates of the prefecture of Pontius Pilate who was governor of Roman Judea from 26 AD until 36 AD.[185][186][187]

Portraits of the historical Jesus edit

Scholars involved in the third and next quests for the historical Jesus have constructed a variety of portraits and profiles for Jesus.[24][25][188] However, there is little scholarly agreement on the portraits, or the methods used in constructing them.[23][28][29][189] The portraits of Jesus that have been constructed in the quest for the historical Jesus have often differed from each other, and from the image portrayed in the gospel accounts.[23] These portraits include that of Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet, charismatic healer, Cynic philosopher, Jewish Messiah and prophet of social change,[24][25] but there is little scholarly agreement on a single portrait, or the methods needed to construct it.[23][28][29] There are, however, overlapping attributes among the various portraits, and scholars who differ on some attributes may agree on others.[24][25][30] The conception of a "Historical Jesus" is limited to the abductions from modern scholars on the sources and the results can only produce fragments of what the "real Jesus" or "Jesus of history" may have been.[190] Such conceptions are merely a sketch or model which may inform about but never will be the real Jesus of history; similar to how models exist in the natural sciences that inform about phenomena without specifying a particular object.[191] W.R. Herzog has stated that: "What we call the historical Jesus is the composite of the recoverable bits and pieces of historical information and speculation about him that we assemble, construct, and reconstruct. For this reason, the historical Jesus is, in Meier's words, 'a modern abstraction and construct.'"[192]

Contemporary scholarship, representing the "third quest" and the "next quest" places Jesus firmly in the Jewish tradition. Jesus was a Jewish preacher who taught that he was the path to salvation, everlasting life, and the Kingdom of God.[22] A primary criterion used to discern historical details in the "third quest" is that of plausibility, relative to Jesus' Jewish context and to his influence on Christianity. Contemporary scholars of the "third quest" include E. P. Sanders, Géza Vermes, Gerd Theissen, Christoph Burchard, and John Dominic Crossan. In contrast to the Schweitzerian view, certain North American scholars, such as Burton Mack, advocate for a non-eschatological Jesus, one who is more of a Cynic sage than an apocalyptic preacher.[193]

Given that Jesus was poor, long-established historiographical approaches associated with the study of the poor in the past, such as microhistory, are relevant to the study of his life.[194]

Mainstream views edit

Despite the significant differences among scholars on what constitutes a suitable portrait for Jesus, the mainstream views supported by a number of scholars may be grouped together based on certain distinct, primary themes.[24][25] These portraits often include overlapping elements, and there are also differences among the followers of each portrait. The subsections below present the main portraits that are supported by multiple mainstream scholars.[24][25]

Apocalyptic prophet edit

 
Bart Ehrman

The apocalyptic prophet view primarily emphasizes Jesus preparing his fellow Jews for the End Times. The first proponent of this hypothesis was Albert Schweitzer in his 1906 book The Quest of the Historical Jesus.[195]

The works of E. P. Sanders and Maurice Casey place Jesus within the context of Jewish eschatological tradition.[196][197]: 169–204 [198]: 199–235  Bart D. Ehrman aligns himself with Schweitzer's view that Jesus expected an apocalypse during his own generation, and he bases some of his views on the argument that the earliest gospel sources (for which he assumes Markan priority) and the First Epistle to the Thessalonians, chapters 4 and 5, probably written by the end of AD 52, present Jesus as far more apocalyptic than other Christian sources produced towards the end of the 1st century, contending that the apocalyptic messages were progressively toned down.[199] Dale C. Allison Jr. does not see Jesus as advocating specific timetables for the End Times, but sees him as preaching his own doctrine of "apocalyptic eschatology" derived from post-exilitic Jewish teachings,[200] and views the apocalyptic teachings of Jesus as a form of asceticism.[30]

The characterization of Jesus as an apocalyptic or millenarian prophet can also be combined with other categories, such as in the work of James Crossley and Robert J. Myles (see below) who regard the end-time teaching of Jesus as a culturally credible way of responding to social and material upheaval in Galilee and Judea.[2]

Charismatic healer edit

 
Marcus Borg

The charismatic healer portrait positions Jesus as a pious and holy man in the view of Géza Vermes, whose profile draws on the Talmudic representations of Jewish figures such as Hanina ben Dosa and Honi the Circle Drawer and presents Jesus as a Hasid.[201][202] Marcus Borg views Jesus as a charismatic "man of the spirit", a mystic or visionary who acts as a conduit for the "Spirit of God". Borg sees this as a well-defined religious personality type, whose actions often involve healing.[203] Borg sees Jesus as a non-eschatological figure who did not intend to start a new religion, but his message set him at odds with the Jewish powers of his time based on the "politics of holiness".[30] Both Sanders and Casey agree that Jesus was also a charismatic healer in addition to an apocalyptic prophet.[197]: 132–168 [198]: 237–279 

Cynic philosopher edit

 
John Dominic Crossan

In the Cynic philosopher profile, Jesus is presented as a Cynic, a traveling sage and philosopher preaching a cynical and radical message of change to abolish the existing hierarchical structure of the society of his time.[30][204] In John Dominic Crossan's view Jesus was crucified not for religious reasons but because his social teachings challenged the seat of power held by the Jewish authorities.[204] Crossan believes Galilee was a place where Greek and Jewish culture heavily interacted,[205] with Gadara, a day's walk from Nazareth, being a center of Cynic philosophy.[206][207] Burton Mack also holds that Jesus was a Cynic whose teachings were so different from those of his time that they shocked the audience and forced them to think, but Mack views his death as accidental and not due to his challenge to Jewish authority.[30]

Jewish Messiah edit

The Jewish Messiah portrait of N. T. Wright places Jesus within the Jewish context of "exile and return", a notion he uses to build on his view of the 1st-century concept of hope.[30] Wright believes that Jesus was the Messiah and argues that the Resurrection of Jesus was a physical and historical event.[204] Wright's portrait of Jesus is closer to the traditional Christian views than many other scholars, and when he departs from the Christian tradition, his views are still close to them.[204] Like Wright, Markus Bockmuehl, Peter Stuhlmacher and Brant J. Pitre support the view that Jesus came to announce the end of the Jewish spiritual exile and usher in a new messianic era in which God would improve this world through the faith of his people.[208][209]

Prophet of social change edit

The prophet of social change portrait positions Jesus primarily as someone who challenged the traditional social structures of his time.[210] Gerd Theissen sees three main elements to the activities of Jesus as he effected social change: his positioning as the Son of man, the core group of disciples that followed him, and his localized supporters as he journeyed through Galilee and Judea. Richard A. Horsley goes further and presents Jesus as a more radical reformer who initiated a grassroots movement.[211] David Kaylor's ideas are close to those of Horsley, but have a more religious focus and base the actions of Jesus on covenant theology and his desire for justice.[211] Elisabeth Fiorenza has presented a feminist perspective which sees Jesus as a social reformer whose actions such as the acceptance of women followers resulted in the liberation of some women of his time.[204][212] James Crossley and Robert J. Myles advocate a nuanced historical materialist perspective of Jesus as a religious organizer who responded to the intersecting material conditions of Galilee and Judea in culturally credible ways such as through intra-Jewish legal debate and a revolutionary millenarian proclamation.[2]

S. G. F. Brandon, Fernando Bermejo Rubio, and Reza Aslan argue that Jesus was an anti-Roman revolutionary that tried to overthrow Roman rule in Palestine and re-establish the Kingdom of Israel.[213][214][215]

Rabbi edit

The rabbi portrait advances the idea that Jesus was simply a rabbi who sought to reform certain ideas within Judaism. This idea can be traced to the late nineteenth century, when various liberal Jews sought to emphasize the Jewish nature of Jesus, and saw him as something of a proto-Reform Jew.[216] Perhaps the most prominent of these was Rabbi Emil G. Hirsch, who in The Doctrine of Jesus wrote:

We quote the rabbis of the Talmud; shall we then, not also quote the rabbi of Bethlehem? Shall not he in whom there burned, if it burned in anyone, the spirit and the light of Judaism, be reclaimed by the synagogue?[217]

Bruce Chilton, in his book Rabbi Jesus: An Intimate Biography, painted Jesus as a devout student of John the Baptist who came to see it as his mission to restore the Temple to purity, and purge the Romans and the corrupt priests from its midst.[218] Jaroslav Pelikan, in The Illustrated Jesus Through the Centuries stated:

Alongside Immanuel, "God with us" – the Hebrew title given to the child in the prophecy of Isaiah (7:14) and applied by Matthew (1:23) to Jesus, but not used to address him except in such apostrophes as the medieval antiphon Veni, Veni, Immanuel that forms the epigraph to this chapter – four Aramaic words appear as titles for Jesus: Rabbi, or teacher; Amen, or prophet; Messias, or Christ; and Mar, or Lord.

The most neutral and least controversial of these words is probably Rabbi, along with the related Rabbouni. Except for two passages, the Gospels apply the Aramaic word only to Jesus; and if we conclude that the title "teacher" or "master" (didaskalos in Greek) was intended as a translation of that Aramaic name, it seems safe to say that it was as Rabbi that Jesus was known and addressed.[26]

The conservative evangelical scholar Andreas J. Köstenberger in Jesus as Rabbi in the Fourth Gospel also reached the conclusion that Jesus was seen by his contemporaries as a rabbi.[27]

In 2012, the book Kosher Jesus by Orthodox Rabbi Shmuley Boteach was published in which Boteach takes the position that Jesus was a wise and learned Torah-observant Jewish rabbi. Boteach says he was a beloved member of the Jewish community. At the same time, Jesus is said to have despised the Romans for their cruelty, and to have fought them courageously. The book states that the Jews had nothing whatsoever to do with the murder of Jesus, but rather that the blame for his trial and killing lies with the Romans and Pontius Pilate. Boteach states clearly that he does not believe in Jesus as the Jewish Messiah. At the same time, Boteach argues that "Jews have much to learn from Jesus – and from Christianity as a whole – without accepting Jesus' divinity. There are many reasons for accepting Jesus as a man of great wisdom, beautiful ethical teachings, and profound Jewish patriotism."[219] He concludes by writing, as to Judeo-Christian values, that "the hyphen between Jewish and Christian values is Jesus himself."[220]

Non-mainstream views edit

Other portraits have been presented by individual scholars:

  • Ben Witherington supports the "Wisdom Sage" view and states that Jesus is best understood as a teacher of wisdom who saw himself as the embodiment or incarnation of God's Wisdom.[204][212]
  • John P. Meier's portrait of Jesus as the Marginal Jew is built on the view that Jesus knowingly marginalized himself in a number of ways, first by abandoning his profession as a carpenter and becoming a preacher with no means of support, then arguing against the teachings and traditions of the time while he had no formal rabbinic training.[30][204]
 
Two Dead Sea Scrolls in the cave they were found, before being removed by archaeologists

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ehrman says, "There is historical information about Jesus in the Gospels."[42]: 14 
  2. ^ In Galatians 4:4, Paul states that Jesus was "born of a woman."
  3. ^ In Romans 1:3, Paul states that Jesus was "born under the law."
  4. ^ That Jesus had a brother named James is corroborated by Josephus.[70]
  5. ^ Additional elements:
    * Bible scholars James Beilby and Paul Eddy write that consensus is "elusive but not entirely absent".[153] According to Beilby and Eddy, "Jesus was a first-century Jew, who was baptized by John, went about teaching and preaching, had followers, was believed to be a miracle worker and exorcist, went to Jerusalem where there was an "incident", was subsequently arrested, convicted and crucified."[154]
    * Amy-Jill Levine has stated that "there is a consensus of sorts on the basic outline of Jesus' life. Most scholars agree that Jesus was baptized by John, debated with fellow Jews on how best to live according to God’s will, engaged in healings and exorcisms, taught in parables, gathered male and female followers in Galilee, went to Jerusalem, and was crucified by Roman soldiers during the governorship of Pontius Pilate (26–36 CE)."[155]

References edit

  1. ^ Cross, Frank Leslie; Livingstone, Elizabeth A. (2005). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. pp. 779–. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3.
  2. ^ a b c Crossley, James and Robert J. Myles (2023). Jesus: A Life in Class Conflict. Zer0 Books. ISBN 978-1-80341-082-1.
  3. ^ a b Amy-Jill Levine in The Historical Jesus in Context edited by Amy-Jill Levine et al. 2006 Princeton Univ Press ISBN 978-0-691-00992-6 pp. 1–2
  4. ^ Ehrman, Bart D. (1999), Jesus: Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium ISBN 0195124731 Oxford University Press pp. ix–xi
  5. ^ Ehrman, Bart (2003). The New Testament: A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515462-2, chapters 13, 15
  6. ^ a b Webb, Robert; Bock, Darrell, eds. (13 March 2024). Key Events in the Life of the Hstorical Jesus: A Collaborative Exploration of Context and Coherence. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. pp. 1–3. ISBN 9783161501449.
  7. ^ Law, Stephen (2011). "Evidence, Miracles, and the Existence of Jesus". Faith and Philosophy. 28 (2): 129. doi:10.5840/faithphil20112821.
  8. ^ a b c d e In a 2011 review of the state of modern scholarship, Bart Ehrman (a secular agnostic) wrote: "He certainly existed, as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity, Christian or non-Christian, agrees, based on certain and clear evidence." B. Ehrman, 2011 Forged: writing in the name of God ISBN 978-0-06-207863-6. pp. 256–257
  9. ^ a b Robert M. Price (an atheist who denies the existence of Jesus) agrees that this perspective runs against the views of the majority of scholars: Robert M. Price "Jesus at the Vanishing Point" in The Historical Jesus: Five Views edited by James K. Beilby & Paul Rhodes Eddy, 2009 InterVarsity, ISBN 028106329X p. 61
  10. ^ a b c Michael Grant (a classicist) states that "In recent years, 'no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non-historicity of Jesus' or at any rate very few, and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger, indeed very abundant, evidence to the contrary." in Jesus: An Historian's Review of the Gospels by Michael Grant (2004) ISBN 1898799881 p. 200
  11. ^ Burridge & Gould 2004, p. 34. "There are those who argue that Jesus is a figment of the Church’s imagination, that there never was a Jesus at all. I have to say that I do not know any respectable critical scholar who says that anymore."
  12. ^ a b c Jesus Remembered by James D. G. Dunn 2003 ISBN 0-8028-3931-2 p. 339 states of baptism and crucifixion that these "two facts in the life of Jesus command almost universal assent".
  13. ^ a b c d e Prophet and Teacher: An Introduction to the Historical Jesus by William R. Herzog (2005) ISBN 0664225284 pp. 1–6
  14. ^ a b c Crossan, John Dominic (1995). Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography. HarperOne. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-06-061662-5. That he was crucified is as sure as anything historical can ever be, since both Josephus and Tacitus ... agree with the Christian accounts on at least that basic fact.
  15. ^ a b c Jesus as a Figure in History: How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell 1998 ISBN 0-664-25703-8 pp. 168–173
  16. ^ a b Van Voorst, Robert E. (2000). Jesus Outside the New Testament: An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence ISBN 0-8028-4368-9.
  17. ^ a b Bockmuehl, Markus N. A. (2001). The Cambridge Companion to Jesus. Cambridge University Press. pp. 121–125. ISBN 978-0521796781.
  18. ^ a b Chilton, Bruce; Evans, Craig A. (1998). Studying the Historical Jesus: Evaluations of the State of Current Research. BRILL. pp. 460–470. ISBN 978-9004111424.
  19. ^ a b c Witherington III 1997, pp. 9–13.
  20. ^ a b Jesus as a Figure in History: How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell, Westminster John Knox Press (1999) ISBN 0664257038 pp. 19–23
  21. ^ a b c Sanders, E. P. The historical figure of Jesus. Penguin, 1993.
  22. ^ a b Theissen & Merz 1998.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Theissen & Winter 2002, p. 5.
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  25. ^ a b c d e f g The Cambridge History of Christianity, Volume 1 by Margaret M. Mitchell and Frances M. Young (2006) ISBN 0521812399 p. 23
  26. ^ a b "Jesus as Rabbi". PBS. Retrieved 3 March 2020. four Aramaic words appear as titles for Jesus: Rabbi, or teacher; Amen, or prophet; Messias, or Christ; and Mar, or Lord
  27. ^ a b Köstenberger, Andreas (1998). "Jesus as Rabbi in the Fourth Gospel". Bulletin for Biblical Research. 8: 97–128. doi:10.5325/bullbiblrese.8.1.0097. JSTOR 26422158. S2CID 203287514.
  28. ^ a b c Jesus Research: An International Perspective (Princeton–Prague Symposia Series on the Historical Jesus) by James H. Charlesworth and Petr Pokorny (2009) ISBN 0802863531 pp. 1–2
  29. ^ a b c Images of Christ (Academic Paperback) by Stanley E. Porter, Michael A. Hayes and David Tombs (2004) ISBN 0567044602 T&T Clark p. 74
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  31. ^ Jesus Now and Then by Richard A. Burridge and Graham Gould (2004) ISBN 0802809774 p. 34
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  37. ^ Sykes, Stephen W. (2007). "Paul's understanding of the death of Jesus". Sacrifice and Redemption. Cambridge University Press. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-0521044608.
  38. ^ Theissen, Gerd; Merz, Annette (1996). The Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Fortress Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0800631222.
  39. ^ a b Did Jesus exist?, Bart Ehrman, 2012, Chapter 1
  40. ^ Van Voorst 2000, p. 16
  41. ^ The Gospels and Jesus by Graham Stanton, 1989 ISBN 0192132415 Oxford University Press, p. 145:
  42. ^ a b c d Ehrman, Bart (2012). Did Jesus Exist?: The Historical Argument for Jesus of Nazareth. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0062206442.
  43. ^ Bart Ehrman, Did Jesus Exist? Harper Collins, 2012, p. 12, "Earl Doherty defines the view...In simpler terms, the historical Jesus did not exist. Or if he did, he had virtually nothing to do with the founding of Christianity." Further quoting as representative the fuller definition provided by Doherty in Jesus: Neither God Nor Man. Age of Reason, 2009, pp. vii–viii: it is "the theory that no historical Jesus worthy of the name existed, that Christianity began with a belief in a spiritual, mythical figure, that the gospels are essentially allegory and fiction, and that no single identifiable person lay at the root of the Galilean preaching tradition."
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  60. ^ Crossley & Myles 2023, p. 15
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  66. ^ Jesus Remembered: Christianity in the Making by James D. G. Dunn (2003) ISBN 0802839312 p. 143
  67. ^ Jesus Christ in History and Scripture by Edgar V. McKnight 1999 ISBN 0865546770 p. 38
  68. ^ Jesus according to Paul by Victor Paul Furnish 1994 ISBN 0521458242 pp. 19–20
  69. ^ Galatians 1:19
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Sources edit

External links edit

  • "Jesus Christ". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2009. The first section, on Jesus' life and ministry

historical, jesus, term, historical, jesus, refers, life, teachings, jesus, interpreted, through, critical, historical, methods, contrast, what, traditionally, religious, interpretations, also, considers, historical, cultural, contexts, which, jesus, lived, vi. The term historical Jesus refers to the life and teachings of Jesus as interpreted through critical historical methods in contrast to what are traditionally religious interpretations 1 2 It also considers the historical and cultural contexts in which Jesus lived 3 4 5 6 Virtually all scholars of antiquity accept that Jesus was a historical figure and the idea that Jesus was a mythical figure has been consistently rejected by the scholarly consensus as a fringe theory 7 8 9 10 11 Scholars differ about the beliefs and teachings of Jesus as well as the accuracy of the biblical accounts with only two events being supported by nearly universal scholarly consensus Jesus was baptized and Jesus was crucified 12 13 14 15 Reconstructions of the historical Jesus are based on the Pauline epistles and the gospels while several non biblical sources also support his historical existence 16 17 18 Since the 18th century three separate scholarly quests for the historical Jesus have taken place each with distinct characteristics and developing new and different research criteria 19 20 Historical Jesus scholars typically contend that he was a Galilean Jew and living in a time of messianic and apocalyptic expectations 21 Some scholars credit the apocalyptic declarations of the gospels to him while others portray his Kingdom of God as a moral one and not apocalyptic in nature 22 The portraits of Jesus that have been constructed through history using these processes have often differed from each other and from the image portrayed in the gospel accounts 23 Such portraits include that of Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet charismatic healer Cynic philosopher Jewish messiah prophet of social change 24 25 6 and rabbi 26 27 There is little scholarly agreement on a single portrait nor the methods needed to construct it 23 28 29 3 but there are overlapping attributes among the various portraits and scholars who differ on some attributes may agree on others 24 25 30 Contents 1 Historical existence 2 Sources 2 1 New Testament sources 2 1 1 Synoptic Gospels 2 1 2 Pauline epistles 2 2 Non biblical sources 2 2 1 Thallos 2 2 2 Josephus and Tacitus 2 2 3 Talmud 2 2 4 Mara bar Serapion 3 Critical historical research 3 1 Historical reliability of the Gospels 3 2 Quest for the historical Jesus 3 2 1 First quest 3 2 2 Second quest 3 2 3 Third quest 3 2 4 Demise of authenticity and the Next Quest 4 Methods 4 1 Textual source and form criticism 4 2 Criteria of authenticity 4 3 Criticism 5 Baptism and crucifixion 5 1 Baptism 5 2 Crucifixion 5 3 Other possibly historical elements 6 Portraits of the historical Jesus 6 1 Mainstream views 6 1 1 Apocalyptic prophet 6 1 2 Charismatic healer 6 1 3 Cynic philosopher 6 1 4 Jewish Messiah 6 1 5 Prophet of social change 6 1 6 Rabbi 6 2 Non mainstream views 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 External linksHistorical existence editMain article Historicity of Jesus Virtually all scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed 8 9 31 Historian Michael Grant asserts that if conventional standards of historical criticism are applied to the New Testament we can no more reject Jesus existence than we can reject the existence of a mass of pagan personages whose reality as historical figures is never questioned 32 There is no indication that writers in antiquity who opposed Christianity questioned the existence of Jesus 33 34 Since the 1970s various scholars such as Joachim Jeremias E P Sanders and Gerd Theissen have traced elements of Christianity to currents in first century Judaism and have discarded nineteenth century minority views that Jesus was based on previous pagan deities 35 Mentions of Jesus in extra biblical texts exist and are supported as genuine by the majority of historians 8 Differences between the content of the Jewish Messianic prophecies and the life of Jesus undermine the idea that Jesus was invented as a Jewish Midrash or Peshar 36 344 351 The presence of details of Jesus life in Paul and the differences between letters and Gospels are sufficient for most scholars to dismiss mythicist claims concerning Paul 36 208 233 37 Theissen says there is broad scholarly consensus that we can best find access to the historical Jesus through the Synoptic tradition 38 Bart D Ehrman adds To dismiss the Gospels from the historical record is neither fair nor scholarly 8 73 One book argues that if Jesus did not exist the origin of the faith of the early Christians remains a perplexing mystery 36 233 Eddy and Boyd say the best history can assert is probability yet the probability of Jesus having existed is so high Ehrman says virtually all historians and scholars have concluded Jesus did exist as a historical figure 39 12 21 40 Historian James Dunn writes Today nearly all historians whether Christians or not accept that Jesus existed 41 In a 2011 review of the state of modern scholarship Ehrman wrote He certainly existed as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity Christian or non Christian agrees 42 15 22 The Christ myth theory is the proposition that Jesus of Nazareth never existed or if he did he had virtually nothing to do with the founding of Christianity and the accounts in the gospels 43 In the 21st century there have been a number of books and documentaries on this subject For example Earl Doherty has written that Jesus may have been a real person but that the biblical accounts of him are almost entirely fictional 39 12 44 45 46 Many proponents use a three fold argument first developed in the 19th century that the New Testament has no historical value with respect to Jesus s existence that there are no non Christian references to Jesus from the first century and that Christianity had pagan and or mythical roots 47 48 Contemporary scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed and biblical scholars and classical historians view the theories of his nonexistence as effectively refuted 8 10 49 50 51 Robert M Price an atheist who denies the existence of Jesus agrees that his perspective runs against the views of the majority of scholars 52 Michael Grant a classicist and historian states that In recent years no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non historicity of Jesus or at any rate very few have and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger indeed very abundant evidence to the contrary 10 Richard A Burridge states There are those who argue that Jesus is a figment of the Church s imagination that there never was a Jesus at all I have to say that I do not know any respectable critical scholar who says that anymore 49 36 24 26 Sources edit nbsp Judea Province during the 1st century Main articles Sources for the historicity of Jesus and Historical reliability of the Gospels The New Testament represents sources that have become canonical for Christianity and there are many apocryphal texts that are examples of the wide variety of writings in the first centuries AD that are related to Jesus 53 Non Christian sources that are used to study and establish the historicity of Jesus include Jewish sources such as Josephus and Roman sources such as Tacitus 17 18 New Testament sources edit Synoptic Gospels edit nbsp An 11th century Byzantine manuscript containing the opening of the Gospel of Luke Main article Synoptic Gospels The Synoptic Gospels are the primary sources of historical information about Jesus and of the religious movement he founded 21 54 55 note 1 These religious gospels the Gospel of Matthew the Gospel of Mark and the Gospel of Luke recount the life ministry crucifixion and resurrection of a Jew named Jesus who spoke Aramaic and wore tzitzit 56 57 There are different hypotheses regarding the origin of the texts because the gospels of the New Testament were written in Greek for Greek speaking communities 58 and were later translated into Syriac Latin and Coptic 59 The fourth gospel the Gospel of John differs greatly from the Synoptic Gospels and scholars generally consider it to be less historical than the Synoptic Gospels As James Crossley and Robert J Myles explain John is of limited use for reconstructing the life of the historical Jesus 60 However scholars usually agree that John is not entirely without historical value certain sayings in John are as old as or older than their synoptic counterparts his representation of the topography around Jerusalem is often superior to that of the synoptics his testimony that Jesus was executed before rather than on Passover might well be more accurate and his presentation of Jesus in the garden and the prior meeting held by the Jewish authorities are more historically plausible than their synoptic parallels 61 Historians often study the historical reliability of the Acts of the Apostles when studying the reliability of the gospels as the Book of Acts was seemingly written by the same author as the Gospel of Luke 62 Pauline epistles edit Further information Pauline epistles The Pauline epistles are dated to between AD 50 and 60 i e approximately twenty to thirty years after the generally accepted time period for the death of Jesus and are the earliest surviving Christian texts that include information about Jesus 63 Although Paul the Apostle provides little biographical information about Jesus 64 and states that he never knew Jesus he does make it clear that he considers Jesus to have been a real person note 2 and a Jew 65 66 67 68 note 3 Moreover he claims to have met with James the brother of Jesus 69 note 4 Non biblical sources edit In addition to biblical sources there are a number of mentions of Jesus in non Christian sources that have been used in the historical analyses of the existence of Jesus 71 16 Thallos edit Biblical scholar Frederick Fyvie Bruce says the earliest mention of Jesus outside the New Testament occurs c 55 CE from a historian named Thallos Thallos history like the vast majority of ancient literature has been lost but not before it was quoted by Sextus Julius Africanus c 160 c 240 CE a Christian writer in his History of the World c 220 This book likewise was lost but not before one of its citations of Thallos was taken up by the Byzantine historian George Syncellus in his Chronicle c 800 There is no means by which certainty can be established concerning this or any of the other lost references partial references and questionable references that mention some aspect of Jesus life or death but in evaluating evidence it is appropriate to note they exist 72 29 33 73 20 23 Josephus and Tacitus edit Main articles Josephus on Jesus and Tacitus on Christ There are two passages in the writings of the Jewish historian Josephus and one from the Roman historian Tacitus that are generally considered good evidence 71 73 Josephus Antiquities of the Jews written around AD 93 94 includes two references to the biblical Jesus in Books 18 and 20 The general scholarly view is that while the longer passage known as the Testimonium Flavianum is most likely not authentic in its entirety it is broadly agreed upon that it originally consisted of an authentic nucleus which was then subject to Christian interpolation 74 75 Of the other mention in Josephus Josephus scholar Louis H Feldman has stated that few have doubted the genuineness of Josephus reference to Jesus in Antiquities 20 9 1 the brother of Jesus who was called Christ whose name was James Paul references meeting and interacting with James Jesus brother and since this agreement between the different sources supports Josephus statement the statement is only disputed by a small number of scholars 76 77 78 79 Roman historian Tacitus referred to Christus and his execution by Pontius Pilate in his Annals written c AD 116 book 15 chapter 44 80 Robert E Van Voorst states that the very negative tone of Tacitus comments on Christians makes the passage extremely unlikely to have been forged by a Christian scribe 73 and the Tacitus reference is now widely accepted as an independent confirmation of Jesus s crucifixion 81 82 Talmud edit Main article Jesus in the Talmud Other considerations outside Christendom include the possible mentions of Jesus in the Talmud The Talmud speaks in some detail of the conduct of criminal cases of Israel whose texts were gathered together from 200 to 500 CE Johann Maier and Bart D Ehrman argue this material is too late to be of much use Ehrman explains that Jesus is never mentioned in the oldest part of the Talmud the Mishnah but appears only in the later commentaries of the Gemara 83 42 67 69 Jesus is not mentioned by name but there is a subtle attack on the virgin birth that refers to the illegitimate son of a Roman soldier Pantera Ehrman says In Greek the word for virgin is parthenos and a reference to Jesus miracles as black magic learned when he lived in Egypt as a toddler Ehrman writes that few contemporary scholars treat this as historical 42 67 84 Mara bar Serapion edit Main article Mara bar Serapion on Jesus There is only one classical writer who refers positively to Jesus and that is Mara bar Serapion a Syriac Stoic who wrote a letter to his son who was also named Serapion from a Roman prison He speaks of the execution of the wise king of the Jews and compares his death to that of Socrates at the hands of the Athenians He links the death of the wise king to the Jews being driven from their kingdom He also states that the wise king lives on because of the new laws he laid down The dating of the letter is disputed but was probably soon after 73 AD 85 Scholars such as Robert Van Voorst see little doubt that the reference to the execution of the king of the Jews is about the death of Jesus 86 Others such as Craig A Evans see less value in the letter given its uncertain date and the ambiguity in the reference 87 Critical historical research editMain articles Historical criticism Textual criticism and Biblical hermeneutics Historical criticism also known as the historical critical method or higher criticism is a branch of criticism that investigates the origins of ancient texts in order to understand the world behind the text 88 The primary goal of historical criticism is to discover the text s primitive or original meaning in its original historical context and its literal sense Historical criticism began in the 17th century and gained popular recognition in the 19th and 20th centuries Historical reliability of the Gospels edit Main article Historical reliability of the Gospels The historical reliability of the gospels refers to the reliability and historic character of the four New Testament gospels as historical documents Historical reliability is not dependent on a source being inerrant or void of agendas since there are sources that are considered generally reliable despite having such traits e g Josephus 89 The question of reliability is a matter of ongoing debate 90 91 92 93 94 95 Historians subject the gospels to critical analysis by differentiating authentic reliable information from possible inventions exaggerations and alterations 21 Since there are more textual variants 200 000 400 000 than words in the New Testament 96 scholars use textual criticism to determine which gospel variants could theoretically be taken as original To answer this question scholars have to ask who wrote the gospels when they wrote them what was their objective in writing them 97 what sources the authors used how reliable these sources were and how far removed in time the sources were from the stories they narrate or if they were altered later Scholars may also look into the internal evidence of the documents to see if for example a document has misquoted texts from the Hebrew Tanakh has made incorrect claims about geography if the author appears to have hidden information or if the author has fabricated a prophecy Finally scholars turn to external sources including the testimony of early church leaders to writers outside the church primarily Jewish and Greco Roman historians who would have been more likely to have criticized the church and to archaeological evidence Quest for the historical Jesus edit nbsp Hermann Samuel Reimarus 1694 1768 studied the historical Jesus Main article Quest for the historical Jesus Since the 18th century three scholarly quests for the historical Jesus have taken place each with distinct characteristics and based on different research criteria which were often developed during each specific phase 19 98 20 These quests are distinguished from pre Enlightenment approaches because they rely on the historical critical method to study biblical narratives While textual analysis of biblical sources had taken place for centuries these quests introduced new methods and specific techniques in the attempt to establish the historical validity of their conclusions 99 First quest edit The scholarly effort to reconstruct an authentic historical picture of Jesus was a product of the Enlightenment skepticism of the late eighteenth century 100 Bible scholar Gerd Theissen explains that It was concerned with presenting a historically true life of Jesus that functioned theologically as a critical force over against established Roman Catholic Christology 100 The first scholar to separate the historical Jesus from the theological Jesus in this way was philosopher writer classicist Hebraist and Enlightenment free thinker Hermann Samuel Reimarus 1694 1768 101 Copies of Reimarus writings were discovered by G E Lessing 1729 1781 in the library at Wolfenbuttel where Lessing was the librarian Reimarus had left permission for his work to be published after his death and Lessing did so between 1774 and 1778 publishing them as Die Fragmente eines unbekannten Autors The Fragments of an Unknown Author Over time they came to be known as the Wolfenbuttel Fragments after the library where Lessing worked Reimarus distinguished between what Jesus taught and how he is portrayed in the New Testament According to Reimarus Jesus was a political messiah who failed at creating political change and was executed His disciples then stole the body and invented the story of the resurrection for personal gain 101 102 46 48 Reimarus controversial work prompted a response from the father of historical critical research Johann Semler in 1779 Beantwortung der Fragmente eines Ungenannten Answering the Fragments of an Unknown 103 Semler refuted Reimarus arguments but it was of little consequence Reimarus writings had already made lasting changes by making it clear criticism could exist independently of theology and faith and by founding historical Jesus studies within that non sectarian view 104 102 48 According to Homer W Smith the work of Lessing and others culminated in the Protestant theologian David Strauss s Das Leben Jesu The Life of Jesus 1835 in which Strauss expresses his conclusion that Jesus existed but that his godship is the result of a historic nucleus being worked over and reshaped into an ideal form by the first Christians under the influence of Old Testament models and the idea of the messiah found in Daniel 105 nbsp Albert Schweitzer whose book coined the phrase Quest for the Historical Jesus The enthusiasm shown during the first quest diminished after Albert Schweitzer s critique of 1906 in which he pointed out various shortcomings in the approaches used at the time After Schweitzer s Von Reimarus zu Wrede was translated and published in English as The Quest of the Historical Jesus in 1910 the book s title provided the label for the field of study for eighty years 106 779 Second quest edit The second quest began in 1953 and introduced a number of new techniques but faded away in the 1970s 107 Third quest edit In the 1980s a number of scholars gradually began to introduce new research ideas 19 108 initiating a third quest characterized by the latest research approaches 107 109 One of the modern aspects of the third quest has been the role of archaeology James Charlesworth states that modern scholars now want to use archaeological discoveries that clarify the nature of life in Galilee and Judea during the time of Jesus 110 A further characteristic of the third quest has been the interdisciplinary and global nature of its scholarship 111 While the first two quests were mostly carried out by European Protestant theologians a modern aspect of the third quest is the worldwide influx of scholars from multiple disciplines 111 More recently historicists have focused their attention on the historical writings associated with the era in which Jesus lived 112 113 or on the evidence concerning his family 114 115 116 117 By the end of the twentieth century scholar Tom Holmen writes that Enlightenment skepticism had given way to a more trustful attitude toward the historical reliability of the sources Currently the conviction of Sanders we know quite a lot about Jesus characterizes the majority of contemporary studies 118 43 Reflecting this shift the phrase quest for the historical Jesus has largely been replaced by life of Jesus research 119 33 Demise of authenticity and the Next Quest edit Since the late 1900s concerns have been growing about the usefulness of the criteria of authenticity 120 According to Le Donne the usage of such criteria is a form of positivist historiography 121 According to Chris Keith a historical Jesus is ultimately unattainable but can be hypothesized on the basis of the interpretations of the early Christians and as part of a larger process of accounting for how and why early Christians came to view Jesus in the ways that they did According to Keith these two models are methodologically and epistemologically incompatible calling into question the methods and aim of the first model 122 In 2021 James Crossley editor of the Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus announced that historical Jesus scholarship now had moved to the era of the Next Quest The Next Quest has moved on from the criteria obsessions with the uniqueness of Jesus and the supersessionism still implicit in scholarly questions of the Jewishness of Jesus Instead sober scholarship now focuses on treating the subject matter as part of the wider human phenomenon of religion cultural comparison class relations slave culture and economy and the social history of historical Jesus scholarship and wider reception histories of the historical Jesus 123 The book by Crossley and Robert J Myles Jesus A Life in Class Conflict is indicative of this new tendency 124 Methods editMain articles Criterion of multiple attestation Criterion of embarrassment Criterion of dissimilarity and Koine Greek Textual source and form criticism edit The first quest which started in 1778 was almost entirely based on biblical criticism This took the form of textual and source criticism originally which were supplemented with form criticism in 1919 and redaction criticism in 1948 99 Form criticism began as an attempt to trace the history of the biblical material during the oral period before it was written in its current form and may be seen as starting where textual criticism ends 125 Form criticism views Gospel writers as editors not authors Redaction criticism may be viewed as the child of source criticism and form criticism 126 and views the Gospel writers as authors and early theologians and tries to understand how the redactor s has have molded the narrative to express their own perspectives 126 Criteria of authenticity edit When form criticism questioned the historical reliability of the Gospels scholars began looking for other criteria Taken from other areas of study such as source criticism the criteria of authenticity emerged gradually becoming a distinct branch of methodology associated with life of Jesus research 118 43 54 The criteria are a variety of rules used to determine if some event or person is more or less likely to be historical These criteria are primarily though not exclusively used to assess the sayings and actions of Jesus 127 193 199 128 3 33 In view of the skepticism produced in the mid twentieth century by form criticism concerning the historical reliability of the gospels the burden shifted in historical Jesus studies from attempting to identify an authentic life of Jesus to attempting to prove authenticity The criteria developed within this framework therefore are tools that provide arguments solely for authenticity not inauthenticity 118 43 In 1901 the application of criteria of authenticity began with dissimilarity It was often applied unevenly with a preconceived goal 100 118 40 45 In the early decades of the twentieth century F C Burkitt and B H Streeter provided the foundation for multiple attestation The Second Quest introduced the criterion of embarrassment 99 By the 1950s coherence was also included By 1987 D Polkow lists 25 separate criteria being used by scholars to test for historical authenticity including the criterion of historical plausibility 99 127 193 199 Criticism edit Main articles Quest for the historical Jesus Criticism and Criticism A number of scholars have criticized the various approaches used in the study of the historical Jesus on one hand for the lack of rigor in research methods on the other for being driven by specific agendas that interpret ancient sources to fit specific goals 129 130 131 By the 21st century the maximalist approaches of the 19th century which accepted all the gospels and the minimalist trends of the early 20th century which totally rejected them were abandoned and scholars began to focus on what is historically probable and plausible about Jesus 132 133 134 Baptism and crucifixion edit nbsp The Pilate Stone from Caesarea Maritima now at the Israel Museum There is widespread disagreement among scholars on the details of the life of Jesus mentioned in the gospel narratives and on the meaning of his teachings 15 Scholars differ on the historicity of specific episodes described in the biblical accounts of Jesus 15 23 but almost all modern scholars consider his baptism and crucifixion to be historical facts 12 135 Baptism edit Further information Baptism of Jesus The existence of John the Baptist within the same time frame as Jesus and his eventual execution by Herod Antipas is attested to by 1st century Roman Jewish historian Josephus and the overwhelming majority of modern scholars view Josephus accounts of the activities of John the Baptist as authentic 136 137 One of the arguments in favor of the historicity of the Baptism of Jesus by John is the criterion of embarrassment i e that it is a story which the early Christian Church would have never wanted to invent as it implies that Jesus was subservient to John 138 139 140 Another argument used in favour of the historicity of the baptism is that multiple accounts refer to it usually called the criterion of multiple attestation 141 Technically multiple attestation does not guarantee authenticity but only determines antiquity 142 However for most scholars together with the criterion of embarrassment it lends credibility to the baptism of Jesus by John being a historical event 141 143 144 145 Crucifixion edit Further information Crucifixion of Jesus John P Meier views the crucifixion of Jesus as a historical fact and states that based on the criterion of embarrassment Christians would not have invented the painful death of their leader 146 Meier states that a number of other criteria the criterion of multiple attestation i e confirmation by more than one source the criterion of coherence i e that it fits with other historical elements and the criterion of rejection i e that it is not disputed by ancient sources help establish the crucifixion of Jesus as a historical event 146 Eddy and Boyd state that it is now firmly established that there is non Christian confirmation of the crucifixion of Jesus referring to the mentions in Josephus and Tacitus 82 Most scholars in the third quest for the historical Jesus consider the crucifixion indisputable 14 146 147 148 as do Bart Ehrman 148 John Dominic Crossan 14 and James Dunn 12 Although scholars agree on the historicity of the crucifixion they differ on the reason and context for it e g both E P Sanders and Paula Fredriksen support the historicity of the crucifixion but contend that Jesus did not foretell his own crucifixion and that his prediction of the crucifixion is a Christian story 149 Geza Vermes also views the crucifixion as a historical event but believes this was due to Jesus challenging of Roman authority 149 On the other hand Maurice Casey and John P Meier state that Jesus did predict his death and this actually strengthened his followers belief in his Resurrection 150 151 Other possibly historical elements edit See also Scholarly interpretation of Gospel elements In addition to the two historical elements of baptism and crucifixion scholars attribute varying levels of certainty to various other aspects of the life of Jesus although there is no universal agreement among scholars on these items 152 note 5 Jesus was a Galilean Jew who was born between 7 and 2 BC and died 30 36 AD 156 157 158 Jesus lived only in Galilee and Judea 159 Most scholars reject that there is any evidence that an adult Jesus traveled or studied outside Galilee and Judea Marcus Borg states that the suggestions that an adult Jesus traveled to Egypt or India are without historical foundation 160 John Dominic Crossan states that none of the theories presented to fill the 15 18 year gap between the early life of Jesus and the start of his ministry have been supported by modern scholarship 161 162 The Talmud refers to Jesus the Nazarene several times and scholars such as Andreas Kostenberger and Robert Van Voorst hold that some of these references are to Jesus 163 162 Nazareth is not mentioned in the Hebrew Bible and the Christian gospels portray it as an insignificant village John 1 46 asking Can any good thing come out of Nazareth 164 Craig S Keener states that it is rarely disputed that Jesus was from Nazareth an obscure small village not worthy of invention 164 165 Gerd Theissen concurs with that conclusion 166 Jesus spoke Aramaic and may have also spoken Hebrew and Greek 167 168 169 170 The languages spoken in Galilee and Judea during the 1st century include the Semitic Aramaic and Hebrew languages as well as Greek with Aramaic being the predominant language 167 168 Jesus called disciples John P Meier sees the calling of disciples a natural consequence of the information available about Jesus 152 13 171 N T Wright accepts that there were twelve disciples but holds that the list of their names cannot be determined with certainty John Dominic Crossan disagrees stating that Jesus did not call disciples and had an open to all egalitarian approach imposed no hierarchy and preached to all in equal terms 13 However James Crossley and Robert J Myles and the emerging consensus disagree with Crossan arguing that we should dispel romantic notions that this movement was proudly egalitarian and progressive in the sense of the radical liberalism of today and instead point out that the core Twelve may have been a central committee or politburo with membership sometimes changing 172 Jesus caused a controversy at the Temple 152 13 171 After his death his disciples continued and some of his disciples were persecuted 152 13 Jesus had a Burial 173 Some scholars have proposed further additional historical possibilities such as An approximate chronology of Jesus can be estimated from non Christian sources and confirmed by correlating them with New Testament accounts 156 174 Claims about the appearance or ethnicity of Jesus are mostly subjective based on cultural stereotypes and societal trends rather than on scientific analysis 175 176 177 The baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist can be dated approximately from Josephus references Antiquities 18 5 2 to a date before AD 28 35 136 178 179 180 181 The main topic of his teaching was the Kingdom of God and he presented this teaching in parables that were surprising and sometimes confounding 182 Jesus taught an ethic of forgiveness as expressed in aphorisms such as turn the other cheek or go the extra mile 182 Within the traditional ethic of Christian forgiveness there are some significantly differing views about exactly what type of forgiveness Jesus taught 183 An emerging scholarly consensus suggests Jesus and his inner circle claimed a degree of hardened servant masculinity for themselves as an example to the world 184 The date of the crucifixion of Jesus was earlier than 36 AD based on the dates of the prefecture of Pontius Pilate who was governor of Roman Judea from 26 AD until 36 AD 185 186 187 Portraits of the historical Jesus editScholars involved in the third and next quests for the historical Jesus have constructed a variety of portraits and profiles for Jesus 24 25 188 However there is little scholarly agreement on the portraits or the methods used in constructing them 23 28 29 189 The portraits of Jesus that have been constructed in the quest for the historical Jesus have often differed from each other and from the image portrayed in the gospel accounts 23 These portraits include that of Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet charismatic healer Cynic philosopher Jewish Messiah and prophet of social change 24 25 but there is little scholarly agreement on a single portrait or the methods needed to construct it 23 28 29 There are however overlapping attributes among the various portraits and scholars who differ on some attributes may agree on others 24 25 30 The conception of a Historical Jesus is limited to the abductions from modern scholars on the sources and the results can only produce fragments of what the real Jesus or Jesus of history may have been 190 Such conceptions are merely a sketch or model which may inform about but never will be the real Jesus of history similar to how models exist in the natural sciences that inform about phenomena without specifying a particular object 191 W R Herzog has stated that What we call the historical Jesus is the composite of the recoverable bits and pieces of historical information and speculation about him that we assemble construct and reconstruct For this reason the historical Jesus is in Meier s words a modern abstraction and construct 192 Contemporary scholarship representing the third quest and the next quest places Jesus firmly in the Jewish tradition Jesus was a Jewish preacher who taught that he was the path to salvation everlasting life and the Kingdom of God 22 A primary criterion used to discern historical details in the third quest is that of plausibility relative to Jesus Jewish context and to his influence on Christianity Contemporary scholars of the third quest include E P Sanders Geza Vermes Gerd Theissen Christoph Burchard and John Dominic Crossan In contrast to the Schweitzerian view certain North American scholars such as Burton Mack advocate for a non eschatological Jesus one who is more of a Cynic sage than an apocalyptic preacher 193 Given that Jesus was poor long established historiographical approaches associated with the study of the poor in the past such as microhistory are relevant to the study of his life 194 Mainstream views edit Despite the significant differences among scholars on what constitutes a suitable portrait for Jesus the mainstream views supported by a number of scholars may be grouped together based on certain distinct primary themes 24 25 These portraits often include overlapping elements and there are also differences among the followers of each portrait The subsections below present the main portraits that are supported by multiple mainstream scholars 24 25 Apocalyptic prophet edit See also Apocalypticism and Jewish eschatology nbsp Bart Ehrman The apocalyptic prophet view primarily emphasizes Jesus preparing his fellow Jews for the End Times The first proponent of this hypothesis was Albert Schweitzer in his 1906 book The Quest of the Historical Jesus 195 The works of E P Sanders and Maurice Casey place Jesus within the context of Jewish eschatological tradition 196 197 169 204 198 199 235 Bart D Ehrman aligns himself with Schweitzer s view that Jesus expected an apocalypse during his own generation and he bases some of his views on the argument that the earliest gospel sources for which he assumes Markan priority and the First Epistle to the Thessalonians chapters 4 and 5 probably written by the end of AD 52 present Jesus as far more apocalyptic than other Christian sources produced towards the end of the 1st century contending that the apocalyptic messages were progressively toned down 199 Dale C Allison Jr does not see Jesus as advocating specific timetables for the End Times but sees him as preaching his own doctrine of apocalyptic eschatology derived from post exilitic Jewish teachings 200 and views the apocalyptic teachings of Jesus as a form of asceticism 30 The characterization of Jesus as an apocalyptic or millenarian prophet can also be combined with other categories such as in the work of James Crossley and Robert J Myles see below who regard the end time teaching of Jesus as a culturally credible way of responding to social and material upheaval in Galilee and Judea 2 Charismatic healer edit nbsp Marcus Borg The charismatic healer portrait positions Jesus as a pious and holy man in the view of Geza Vermes whose profile draws on the Talmudic representations of Jewish figures such as Hanina ben Dosa and Honi the Circle Drawer and presents Jesus as a Hasid 201 202 Marcus Borg views Jesus as a charismatic man of the spirit a mystic or visionary who acts as a conduit for the Spirit of God Borg sees this as a well defined religious personality type whose actions often involve healing 203 Borg sees Jesus as a non eschatological figure who did not intend to start a new religion but his message set him at odds with the Jewish powers of his time based on the politics of holiness 30 Both Sanders and Casey agree that Jesus was also a charismatic healer in addition to an apocalyptic prophet 197 132 168 198 237 279 Cynic philosopher edit See also Cynicism philosophy nbsp John Dominic Crossan In the Cynic philosopher profile Jesus is presented as a Cynic a traveling sage and philosopher preaching a cynical and radical message of change to abolish the existing hierarchical structure of the society of his time 30 204 In John Dominic Crossan s view Jesus was crucified not for religious reasons but because his social teachings challenged the seat of power held by the Jewish authorities 204 Crossan believes Galilee was a place where Greek and Jewish culture heavily interacted 205 with Gadara a day s walk from Nazareth being a center of Cynic philosophy 206 207 Burton Mack also holds that Jesus was a Cynic whose teachings were so different from those of his time that they shocked the audience and forced them to think but Mack views his death as accidental and not due to his challenge to Jewish authority 30 Jewish Messiah edit See also Messiah in Judaism The Jewish Messiah portrait of N T Wright places Jesus within the Jewish context of exile and return a notion he uses to build on his view of the 1st century concept of hope 30 Wright believes that Jesus was the Messiah and argues that the Resurrection of Jesus was a physical and historical event 204 Wright s portrait of Jesus is closer to the traditional Christian views than many other scholars and when he departs from the Christian tradition his views are still close to them 204 Like Wright Markus Bockmuehl Peter Stuhlmacher and Brant J Pitre support the view that Jesus came to announce the end of the Jewish spiritual exile and usher in a new messianic era in which God would improve this world through the faith of his people 208 209 Prophet of social change edit The prophet of social change portrait positions Jesus primarily as someone who challenged the traditional social structures of his time 210 Gerd Theissen sees three main elements to the activities of Jesus as he effected social change his positioning as the Son of man the core group of disciples that followed him and his localized supporters as he journeyed through Galilee and Judea Richard A Horsley goes further and presents Jesus as a more radical reformer who initiated a grassroots movement 211 David Kaylor s ideas are close to those of Horsley but have a more religious focus and base the actions of Jesus on covenant theology and his desire for justice 211 Elisabeth Fiorenza has presented a feminist perspective which sees Jesus as a social reformer whose actions such as the acceptance of women followers resulted in the liberation of some women of his time 204 212 James Crossley and Robert J Myles advocate a nuanced historical materialist perspective of Jesus as a religious organizer who responded to the intersecting material conditions of Galilee and Judea in culturally credible ways such as through intra Jewish legal debate and a revolutionary millenarian proclamation 2 S G F Brandon Fernando Bermejo Rubio and Reza Aslan argue that Jesus was an anti Roman revolutionary that tried to overthrow Roman rule in Palestine and re establish the Kingdom of Israel 213 214 215 Rabbi edit The rabbi portrait advances the idea that Jesus was simply a rabbi who sought to reform certain ideas within Judaism This idea can be traced to the late nineteenth century when various liberal Jews sought to emphasize the Jewish nature of Jesus and saw him as something of a proto Reform Jew 216 Perhaps the most prominent of these was Rabbi Emil G Hirsch who in The Doctrine of Jesus wrote We quote the rabbis of the Talmud shall we then not also quote the rabbi of Bethlehem Shall not he in whom there burned if it burned in anyone the spirit and the light of Judaism be reclaimed by the synagogue 217 Bruce Chilton in his book Rabbi Jesus An Intimate Biography painted Jesus as a devout student of John the Baptist who came to see it as his mission to restore the Temple to purity and purge the Romans and the corrupt priests from its midst 218 Jaroslav Pelikan in The Illustrated Jesus Through the Centuries stated Alongside Immanuel God with us the Hebrew title given to the child in the prophecy of Isaiah 7 14 and applied by Matthew 1 23 to Jesus but not used to address him except in such apostrophes as the medieval antiphon Veni Veni Immanuel that forms the epigraph to this chapter four Aramaic words appear as titles for Jesus Rabbi or teacher Amen or prophet Messias or Christ and Mar or Lord The most neutral and least controversial of these words is probably Rabbi along with the related Rabbouni Except for two passages the Gospels apply the Aramaic word only to Jesus and if we conclude that the title teacher or master didaskalos in Greek was intended as a translation of that Aramaic name it seems safe to say that it was as Rabbi that Jesus was known and addressed 26 The conservative evangelical scholar Andreas J Kostenberger in Jesus as Rabbi in the Fourth Gospel also reached the conclusion that Jesus was seen by his contemporaries as a rabbi 27 In 2012 the book Kosher Jesus by Orthodox Rabbi Shmuley Boteach was published in which Boteach takes the position that Jesus was a wise and learned Torah observant Jewish rabbi Boteach says he was a beloved member of the Jewish community At the same time Jesus is said to have despised the Romans for their cruelty and to have fought them courageously The book states that the Jews had nothing whatsoever to do with the murder of Jesus but rather that the blame for his trial and killing lies with the Romans and Pontius Pilate Boteach states clearly that he does not believe in Jesus as the Jewish Messiah At the same time Boteach argues that Jews have much to learn from Jesus and from Christianity as a whole without accepting Jesus divinity There are many reasons for accepting Jesus as a man of great wisdom beautiful ethical teachings and profound Jewish patriotism 219 He concludes by writing as to Judeo Christian values that the hyphen between Jewish and Christian values is Jesus himself 220 Non mainstream views edit Other portraits have been presented by individual scholars Ben Witherington supports the Wisdom Sage view and states that Jesus is best understood as a teacher of wisdom who saw himself as the embodiment or incarnation of God s Wisdom 204 212 John P Meier s portrait of Jesus as the Marginal Jew is built on the view that Jesus knowingly marginalized himself in a number of ways first by abandoning his profession as a carpenter and becoming a preacher with no means of support then arguing against the teachings and traditions of the time while he had no formal rabbinic training 30 204 nbsp Two Dead Sea Scrolls in the cave they were found before being removed by archaeologists Robert Eisenman proposed that James the Just was the Teacher of Righteousness mentioned in the Dead Sea Scrolls and that the image of Jesus of the gospels was constructed by the Apostle Paul as pro Roman propaganda 221 Hyam Maccoby proposed that Jesus was a Pharisee that the positions ascribed to the Pharisees in the Gospels are very different from what we know of them and in fact their opinions were very similar to those ascribed to Jesus 222 Harvey Falk also sees Jesus as proto Pharisee or Essene 223 Morton Smith views Jesus as a magician a view based on the presentation of Jesus in later Jewish sources and on dubious apocryphal writings such as the Secret Gospel of Mark 224 Leo Tolstoy saw Jesus as championing Christian anarchism although Tolstoy never actually used the term Christian anarchism reviews of his book following its publication in 1894 coined the term 225 It has been suggested by psychiatrists Oskar Panizza 226 227 228 George de Loosten 229 William Hirsch 230 William Sargant 231 Anthony Storr 232 233 234 Raj Persaud 235 psychologist Charles Binet Sangle 236 and others that Jesus had a mental disorder or psychiatric condition 237 This theory is based on the fact that the Gospel of Mark Mark 3 21 reports that When his family heard this they went out to restrain him for they said He is out of his mind 238 Psychologist Wladyslaw Witwicki states that Jesus had difficulties communicating with the outside world and suffered from dissociative identity disorder formerly known as multiple personality disorder which made him a schizothymic or even schizophrenic type 239 240 In 1998 2000 Polish author Leszek Nowak born 1962 from Poznan authored a study in which based on his own history of delusions of mission and overvalued ideas and information communicated in the Gospels made an attempt at reconstructing Jesus psyche 241 with the view of the apocalyptic prophet 242 See also editBiblical archaeology Biblical manuscript Census of Quirinius a census of Judaea which was taken by Publius Sulpicius Quirinius Roman governor of Syria upon the imposition of direct Roman rule in AD 6 Christ myth theory Criterion of dissimilarity Criticism of the Bible Chronology of Jesus Gospel harmony Historical background of the New Testament Historicity of the Bible Jesus in comparative mythology Jesus Seminar Life of Jesus in the New Testament Mental health of Jesus New Testament places associated with Jesus Race and appearance of Jesus Sexuality of Jesus Scholarly interpretation of Gospel elements Timeline of Christianity The World s Sixteen Crucified SaviorsNotes edit Ehrman says There is historical information about Jesus in the Gospels 42 14 In Galatians 4 4 Paul states that Jesus was born of a woman In Romans 1 3 Paul states that Jesus was born under the law That Jesus had a brother named James is corroborated by Josephus 70 Additional elements Bible scholars James Beilby and Paul Eddy write that consensus is elusive but not entirely absent 153 According to Beilby and Eddy Jesus was a first century Jew who was baptized by John went about teaching and preaching had followers was believed to be a miracle worker and exorcist went to Jerusalem where there was an incident was subsequently arrested convicted and crucified 154 Amy Jill Levine has stated that there is a consensus of sorts on the basic outline of Jesus life Most scholars agree that Jesus was baptized by John debated with fellow Jews on how best to live according to God s will engaged in healings and exorcisms taught in parables gathered male and female followers in Galilee went to Jerusalem and was crucified by Roman soldiers during the governorship of Pontius Pilate 26 36 CE 155 References edit Cross Frank Leslie Livingstone Elizabeth A 2005 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press pp 779 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 a b c Crossley James and Robert J Myles 2023 Jesus A Life in Class Conflict Zer0 Books ISBN 978 1 80341 082 1 a b Amy Jill Levine in The Historical Jesus in Context edited by Amy Jill Levine et al 2006 Princeton Univ Press ISBN 978 0 691 00992 6 pp 1 2 Ehrman Bart D 1999 Jesus Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium ISBN 0195124731 Oxford University Press pp ix xi Ehrman Bart 2003 The New Testament A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515462 2 chapters 13 15 a b Webb Robert Bock Darrell eds 13 March 2024 Key Events in the Life of the Hstorical Jesus A Collaborative Exploration of Context and Coherence Tubingen Mohr Siebeck pp 1 3 ISBN 9783161501449 Law Stephen 2011 Evidence Miracles and the Existence of Jesus Faith and Philosophy 28 2 129 doi 10 5840 faithphil20112821 a b c d e In a 2011 review of the state of modern scholarship Bart Ehrman a secular agnostic wrote He certainly existed as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity Christian or non Christian agrees based on certain and clear evidence B Ehrman 2011 Forged writing in the name of God ISBN 978 0 06 207863 6 pp 256 257 a b Robert M Price an atheist who denies the existence of Jesus agrees that this perspective runs against the views of the majority of scholars Robert M Price Jesus at the Vanishing Point in The Historical Jesus Five Views edited by James K Beilby amp Paul Rhodes Eddy 2009 InterVarsity ISBN 028106329X p 61 a b c Michael Grant a classicist states that In recent years no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non historicity of Jesus or at any rate very few and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger indeed very abundant evidence to the contrary in Jesus An Historian s Review of the Gospels by Michael Grant 2004 ISBN 1898799881 p 200 Burridge amp Gould 2004 p 34 There are those who argue that Jesus is a figment of the Church s imagination that there never was a Jesus at all I have to say that I do not know any respectable critical scholar who says that anymore a b c Jesus Remembered by James D G Dunn 2003 ISBN 0 8028 3931 2 p 339 states of baptism and crucifixion that these two facts in the life of Jesus command almost universal assent a b c d e Prophet and Teacher An Introduction to the Historical Jesus by William R Herzog 2005 ISBN 0664225284 pp 1 6 a b c Crossan John Dominic 1995 Jesus A Revolutionary Biography HarperOne p 145 ISBN 978 0 06 061662 5 That he was crucified is as sure as anything historical can ever be since both Josephus and Tacitus agree with the Christian accounts on at least that basic fact a b c Jesus as a Figure in History How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell 1998 ISBN 0 664 25703 8 pp 168 173 a b Van Voorst Robert E 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 a b Bockmuehl Markus N A 2001 The Cambridge Companion to Jesus Cambridge University Press pp 121 125 ISBN 978 0521796781 a b Chilton Bruce Evans Craig A 1998 Studying the Historical Jesus Evaluations of the State of Current Research BRILL pp 460 470 ISBN 978 9004111424 a b c Witherington III 1997 pp 9 13 a b Jesus as a Figure in History How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell Westminster John Knox Press 1999 ISBN 0664257038 pp 19 23 a b c Sanders E P The historical figure of Jesus Penguin 1993 a b Theissen amp Merz 1998 a b c d e f Theissen amp Winter 2002 p 5 a b c d e f g The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 pp 124 125 a b c d e f g The Cambridge History of Christianity Volume 1 by Margaret M Mitchell and Frances M Young 2006 ISBN 0521812399 p 23 a b Jesus as Rabbi PBS Retrieved 3 March 2020 four Aramaic words appear as titles for Jesus Rabbi or teacher Amen or prophet Messias or Christ and Mar or Lord a b Kostenberger Andreas 1998 Jesus as Rabbi in the Fourth Gospel Bulletin for Biblical Research 8 97 128 doi 10 5325 bullbiblrese 8 1 0097 JSTOR 26422158 S2CID 203287514 a b c Jesus Research An International Perspective Princeton Prague Symposia Series on the Historical Jesus by James H Charlesworth and Petr Pokorny 2009 ISBN 0802863531 pp 1 2 a b c Images of Christ Academic Paperback by Stanley E Porter Michael A Hayes and David Tombs 2004 ISBN 0567044602 T amp T Clark p 74 a b c d e f g h Familiar Stranger An Introduction to Jesus of Nazareth by Michael James McClymond 2004 ISBN 0802826806 pp 16 22 Jesus Now and Then by Richard A Burridge and Graham Gould 2004 ISBN 0802809774 p 34 Grant Michael 1992 1977 Jesus An Historian s Review of the Gospels 1st Collier Books ed New York Collier Books p 208 ISBN 0020852517 OCLC 25833417 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi by Karl Rahner 2004 ISBN 0860120066 pp 730 731 Van Voorst Robert E 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 0802843689 p 15 James F McGrath James F McGrath Fringe view The world of Jesus mythicism The Christian Century Christian Century Retrieved 21 September 2018 a b c d Eddy Paul Rhodes Boyd Gregory A 2007 The Jesus Legend A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Grand Rapids Michigan Baker Academic ISBN 978 0801031144 Sykes Stephen W 2007 Paul s understanding of the death of Jesus Sacrifice and Redemption Cambridge University Press pp 35 36 ISBN 978 0521044608 Theissen Gerd Merz Annette 1996 The Historical Jesus A Comprehensive Guide Minneapolis Minnesota Fortress Press p 25 ISBN 978 0800631222 a b Did Jesus exist Bart Ehrman 2012 Chapter 1 Van Voorst 2000 p 16 The Gospels and Jesus by Graham Stanton 1989 ISBN 0192132415 Oxford University Press p 145 a b c d Ehrman Bart 2012 Did Jesus Exist The Historical Argument for Jesus of Nazareth New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0062206442 Bart Ehrman Did Jesus Exist Harper Collins 2012 p 12 Earl Doherty defines the view In simpler terms the historical Jesus did not exist Or if he did he had virtually nothing to do with the founding of Christianity Further quoting as representative the fuller definition provided by Doherty in Jesus Neither God Nor Man Age of Reason 2009 pp vii viii it is the theory that no historical Jesus worthy of the name existed that Christianity began with a belief in a spiritual mythical figure that the gospels are essentially allegory and fiction and that no single identifiable person lay at the root of the Galilean preaching tradition Richard Dawkins 2007 The God Delusion Lulu com p 122 ISBN 978 1430312307 God is Not Great Christopher Hitchens 2007 Chapter 8 The Messiah Myth The Near Eastern Roots of Jesus and David Thomas L Thompson Basic Book Perseus Books 2005 Jesus Outside the New Testament Robert E Van Voorst 2000 pp 8 9 Price Robert M 2009 Jesus at the Vanishing Point In Beilby James K Eddy Paul R eds The Historical Jesus Five Views InterVarsity Press pp 55 83 ISBN 978 0 8308 3868 4 a b Burridge amp Gould 2004 p 34 Robert E Van Voorst Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence Eerdmans Publishing 2000 ISBN 0802843689 p 16 states biblical scholars and classical historians regard theories of non existence of Jesus as effectively refuted James D G Dunn Paul s understanding of the death of Jesus in Sacrifice and Redemption edited by S W Sykes 2007 Cambridge University Press ISBN 052104460X pp 35 36 states that the theories of the non existence of Jesus are a thoroughly dead thesis Robert M Price Jesus at the Vanishing Point in The Historical Jesus Five Views edited by James K Beilby amp Paul Rhodes Eddy 2009 InterVarsity ISBN 028106329X p 61 Theissen Gerd Merz Annette 1996 The Historical Jesus Minneapolis MN Fortress Press pp 17 62 ISBN 978 0 8006 3122 2 Jesus Christ Encyclopaedia Britannica 2010 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 27 November 2010 The Synoptic Gospels then are the primary sources for knowledge of the historical Jesus Vermes Geza The authentic gospel of Jesus London Penguin Books 2004 Luke Chapter 8 USCCB bible usccb org Matthew Chapter 14 USCCB bible usccb org Mark Allan Powell editor The New Testament Today p 50 Westminster John Knox Press 1999 ISBN 0 664 25824 7 Stanley E Porter editor Handbook to Exegesis of the New Testament p 68 Leiden 1997 ISBN 90 04 09921 2 Crossley amp Myles 2023 p 15 Theissen Gerd Merz Annette The Historical Jesus A Comprehensive Guide Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 0863 8 Green Joel B 2013 Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels 2nd ed IVP Academic p 541 ISBN 978 0830824564 Edward Adams in The Cambridge Companion to Jesus by Markus N A Bockmuehl 2001 ISBN 0521796784 pp 94 96 Eddy Paul Rhodes Boyd Gregory A 2007 The Jesus Legend A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Jesus Tradition Baker Academic p 202 ISBN 978 0 8010 3114 4 Tuckett Christopher M 2001 Markus N A Bockmuehl ed The Cambridge Companion to Jesus Cambridge University Press pp 122 126 ISBN 978 0521796781 Jesus Remembered Christianity in the Making by James D G Dunn 2003 ISBN 0802839312 p 143 Jesus Christ in History and Scripture by Edgar V McKnight 1999 ISBN 0865546770 p 38 Jesus according to Paul by Victor Paul Furnish 1994 ISBN 0521458242 pp 19 20 Galatians 1 19 Murphy Caherine M 2007 The Historical Jesus For Dummies For Dummies p 140 ISBN 978 0470167854 a b Jesus and the Gospels An Introduction and Survey by Craig L Blomberg 2009 ISBN 0 8054 4482 3 pp 431 436 Bruce Frederick Fyvie 1974 Jesus and Christian Origins Outside the New Testament London Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 978 0 80281 575 0 a b c Robert E Van Voorst Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence Wm B Eerdmans 2000 pp 39 53 Schreckenberg Heinz Kurt Schubert 1992 Jewish Traditions in Early Christian Literature ISBN 978 90 232 2653 6 Kostenberger Andreas J L Scott Kellum Charles L Quarles 2009 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament B amp H Publishing ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 The new complete works of Josephus by Flavius Josephus William Whiston Paul L Maier ISBN 0 8254 2924 2 pp 662 663 Josephus XX by Louis H Feldman 1965 ISBN 0674995023 p 496 Van Voorst Robert E 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 p 83 Flavius Josephus Maier Paul L December 1995 Josephus the essential works a condensation of Jewish antiquities and The Jewish war ISBN 978 0 8254 3260 6 pp 284 285 P E Easterling E J Kenney general editors The Cambridge History of Latin Literature p 892 Cambridge University Press 1982 reprinted 1996 ISBN 0 521 21043 7 Tuckett Christopher 2001 8 Sources and Methods The Cambridge Companion to Jesus Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 123 ISBN 978 0521796781 Tacitus reference to Jesus is extremely brief but it shows no evidence of later Christian influence and hence is widely accepted as genuine It does then provide independent non Christian evidence at least for Jesus existence and his execution under Pilate a b Eddy Boyd 2007 The Jesus Legend A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Jesus Tradition Baker Academic p 127 ISBN 978 0 8010 3114 4 Maier Johann 1978 Jesus von Nazareth in der talmudischen Uberlieferung in German Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Abt Verlag ISBN 978 3 534 04901 1 Davidson William Sanhedrin 43a sefaria org Sefaria Retrieved 17 May 2019 Theissen amp Merz 1998 p 76 Jesus outside the New Testament an introduction to the ancient evidence by Robert E Van Voorst 2000 ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 pp 53 55 Jesus and His Contemporaries Comparative Studies by Craig A Evans 2001 ISBN 978 0 391 04118 9 p 41 Soulen Richard N Soulen R Kendall 2001 Handbook of biblical criticism 3rd rev and expanded ed Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Press p 78 ISBN 978 0 664 22314 4 Ehrman Bart D Evans Craig A Stewart Robert B 2020 Can we trust the Bible on the Historical Jesus Westminster John Knox Press pp 12 18 ISBN 9780664265854 Ehrman Bart D Evans Craig A Stewart Robert B 2020 Can we trust the Bible on the Historical Jesus Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664265854 Craig Evans Life of Jesus Research and the Eclipse of Mythology Theological Studies 54 1993 p 13 14 First the New Testament Gospels are now viewed as useful if not essentially reliable historical sources Gone is the extreme skepticism that for so many years dominated gospel research Representative of many is the position of E P Sanders and Marcus Borg who have concluded that it is possible to recover a fairly reliable picture of the historical Jesus The Historical Figure of Jesus Sanders E P Penguin Books London 1995 p 3 Fire of Mercy Heart of the Word Vol II Meditations on the Gospel According to St Matthew Dr Erasmo Leiva Merikakis Ignatius Press Introduction Grant Robert M A Historical Introduction to the New Testament Harper and Row 1963 Religion Online org Archived from the original on 21 June 2010 Blomberg Craig L 2007 The Historical Reliability of the Gospels 2 ed IVP Academic ISBN 9780830828074 Ehrman Bart D 2005 Misquoting Jesus The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why Harper San Francisco pp 89 90 Paul Rhodes Eddy amp Gregory A Boyd The Jesus Legend A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Jesus Tradition 2008 Baker Academic 309 262 page needed Theissen amp Winter 2002 pp 1 6 a b c d Criteria for Authenticity in Historical Jesus Research by Stanley E Porter 2004 ISBN 0567043606 pp 100 120 a b c Theissen amp Winter 2002 p 1 a b Groetsch Ulrich 2015 Hermann Samuel Reimarus 1694 1768 Classicist Hebraist Enlightenment Radical in Disguise Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 27299 6 a b Law David R 2012 A Brief history of Historical criticism the nineteenth century to the mid twentieth century The Historical Critical Method A Guide for the Perplexed New York T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 56740 012 3 Rollman H 1998 Johann Salomo Semler In McKim Donald K ed Handbook of Major Bible Interpreters Downers Grove InterVarsity Press pp 43 45 355 359 ISBN 978 0 83081 452 7 Brown Colin 1998 Reimarus Hermann Samuel In McKim Donald K ed Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters Downer s Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press pp 346 350 ISBN 978 0 8308 1452 7 Smith Homer W 1952 Man and His Gods New York Grosset amp Dunlap p 385 Cross Frank Leslie Livingstone Elizabeth A 2005 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 a b Robert E Van Voorst Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence Eerdmans Publishing 2000 ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 pp 2 6 The Symbolic Jesus Historical Scholarship Judaism and the Construction of Contemporary Identity by William Arnal Routledge 2005 ISBN 1845530071 pp 41 43 Criteria for Authenticity in Historical Jesus Research by Stanley E Porter Bloomsbury 2004 ISBN 0567043606 pp 28 29 Jesus Research and Archaeology A New Perspective by James H Charlesworth in Jesus and archaeology edited by James H Charlesworth 2006 ISBN 0 8028 4880 X pp 11 15 a b Soundings in the Religion of Jesus Perspectives and Methods in Jewish and Christian Scholarship by Bruce Chilton Anthony Le Donne and Jacob Neusner 2012 ISBN 0800698010 p 132 Mason Steve 2002 Josephus and the New Testament Baker Academic Tabor James 2012 Paul and Jesus How the Apostle Transformed Christianity Simon amp Schuster Eisenman Robert 1998 James the Brother of Jesus The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of Early Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls Watkins Butz Jeffrey The Brother of Jesus and the Lost Teachings of Christianity Inner Traditions Tabor James 2007 The Jesus Dynasty The Hidden History of Jesus His Royal Family and the Birth of Christianity Price Robert M 14 September 2007 The New Testament Code The Cup of the Lord The Damascus Covenant and the Blood of Christ By Robert Eisenman Religious Studies Review 33 2 153 doi 10 1111 j 1748 0922 2007 00176 38 x ISSN 0319 485X a b c d Holmen Tom 2008 Evans Craig A ed The Routledge Encyclopedia of the Historical Jesus New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 97569 8 Telford William R 1998 Major trends and interpretive issues in the study of Jesus In Chilton Bruce David Evans Craig Alan eds Studying the Historical Jesus Evaluations of the State of Current Research Boston Massachusetts Brill ISBN 90 04 11142 5 Keith Chris Le Donne Anthony eds 2012 Jesus Criteria and the Demise of Authenticity Bloomsbury Publishing Thinkapologtics com Book Review Jesus Criteria and the Demise of Authenticity by Chris Keith and Anthony Le Donne Archived 2019 04 19 at the Wayback Machine Chris Keith 2016 The Narratives of the Gospels and the Historical Jesus Current Debates Prior Debates and the Goal of Historical Jesus Research Archived 2021 08 24 at the Wayback Machine Journal for the Study of the New Testament James Crossley 2021 https web archive org web 20220607111843 https brill com view journals jshj 19 3 article p261 261 xml Archived 2022 06 07 at the Wayback Machine The Next Quest for the Historical Jesus Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus Crossley amp Myles 2023 The Westminster Dictionary of Christian Theology by Alan Richardson 1983 ISBN 0664227481 pp 215 216 a b Interpreting the New Testament by Daniel J Harrington 1990 ISBN 0814651240 pp 96 98 a b Denton Donald L Jr 2004 Appendix 1 Historiography and Hermeneutics in Jesus Studies An Examination of the Work of John Dominic Crossan and Ben F Meyer New York T amp T Clark Int ISBN 978 0 56708 203 9 Hagerland Tobias ed 2016 Problems of Method for studying Jesus and the scriptures Jesus and the Scriptures Problems Passages and Patterns New York Bloomsbury T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 56766 502 7 Allison Dale 2009 The Historical Christ and the Theological Jesus Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 59 ISBN 978 0 8028 6262 4 Retrieved 9 January 2011 We wield our criteria to get what we want John P Meier 2009 A Marginal Jew Rethinking the Historical Jesus Law and Love Yale University Press pp 6 ISBN 978 0 300 14096 5 Retrieved 27 August 2010 Clive Marsh Diverse Agendas at Work in the Jesus Quest in Handbook for the Study of the Historical Jesus by Tom Holmen and Stanley E Porter 2011 ISBN 9004163727 pp 986 1002 John P Meier Criteria How do we decide what comes from Jesus in The Historical Jesus in Recent Research by James D G Dunn and Scot McKnight 2006 ISBN 1575061007 p 124 Since in the quest for the historical Jesus almost anything is possible the function of the criteria is to pass from the merely possible to the really probable to inspect various probabilities and to decide which candidate is most probable Ordinarily the criteria can not hope to do more The Historical Jesus of the Gospels by Craig S Keener 2012 ISBN 0802868886 p 163 Jesus in Contemporary Scholarship by Marcus J Borg 1994 ISBN 1563380943 pp 4 6 Jesus of Nazareth by Paul Verhoeven 2010 ISBN 1583229051 p 39 a b Craig Evans 2006 Josephus on John the Baptist in The Historical Jesus in Context edited by Amy Jill Levine et al Princeton Univ Press ISBN 978 0 691 00992 6 pp 55 58 The new complete works of Josephus by Flavius Josephus William Whiston Paul L Maier ISBN 0 8254 2924 2 pp 662 663 Jesus as a figure in history how modern historians view the man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell 1998 ISBN 0 664 25703 8 p 47 Who Is Jesus by John Dominic Crossan Richard G Watts 1999 ISBN 0664258425 pp 31 32 Jesus of Nazareth An Independent Historian s Account of His Life and Teaching by Maurice Casey 2010 ISBN 0 567 64517 7 p 35 a b John the Baptist prophet of purity for a new age by Catherine M Murphy 2003 ISBN 0 8146 5933 0 pp 29 30 Jesus and His Contemporaries Comparative Studies by Craig A Evans 2001 ISBN 0 391 04118 5 p 15 An introduction to the New Testament and the origins of Christianity by Delbert Royce Burkett 2002 ISBN 0 521 00720 8 pp 247 248 Who is Jesus by Thomas P Rausch 2003 ISBN 978 0 8146 5078 3 p 36 The relationship between John the Baptist and Jesus of Nazareth A Critical Study by Daniel S Dapaah 2005 ISBN 0 7618 3109 6 p 91 a b c John P Meier How do we decide what comes from Jesus in The Historical Jesus in Recent Research by James D G Dunn and Scot McKnight 2006 ISBN 1 57506 100 7 pp 126 128 132 136 Blomberg Craig L 2009 Jesus and the Gospels An Introduction and Survey ISBN 0 8054 4482 3 pp 211 214 a b Ehrman Bart D 2008 A Brief Introduction to the New Testament ISBN 0 19 536934 3 p 136 a b A Century of Theological and Religious Studies in Britain 1902 2002 by Ernest Nicholson 2004 ISBN 0 19 726305 4 pp 125 126 Casey Maurice 2010 Jesus of Nazareth An Independent Historian s Account of His Life and Teaching A amp C Black p 507 ISBN 978 0 567 64517 3 Meier John P 1991 A Marginal Jew The roots of the problem and the person Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 26425 9 a b c d Authenticating the Activities of Jesus by Bruce Chilton and Craig A Evans 2002 ISBN 0391041649 pp 3 7 Beilby amp Eddy 2009 p 47 Beilby amp Eddy 2009 pp 48 49 Amy Jill Levine in The Historical Jesus in Context edited by Amy Jill Levine et al 2006 Princeton Univ Press ISBN 978 0 691 00992 6 p 4 a b Paul L Maier The Date of the Nativity and Chronology of Jesus in Chronos kairos Christos by Jerry Vardaman Edwin M Yamauchi 1989 ISBN 0 931464 50 1 pp 113 129 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 p 114 Geoffrey Blainey A Short History of Christianity Viking 2011 p 3 Green Joel B McKnight Scot Marshall I Howard 1992 Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels InterVarsity Press p 442 The Historical Jesus in Recent Research edited by James D G Dunn and Scot McKnight 2006 ISBN 1 57506 100 7 p 303 Crossan John Dominic Watts Richard G 1999 Who Is Jesus ISBN 0664258425 pp 28 29 a b Van Voorst Robert E 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Co ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 pp 177 118 Kostenberger Andreas J Kellum L Scott Quarles Charles L 2009 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament ISBN 0 8054 4365 7 pp 107 109 a b The Life and Ministry of Jesus by Douglas Redford 2007 ISBN 0 7847 1900 4 p 32 The Historical Jesus of the Gospels by Craig S Keener 2012 ISBN 0802868886 p 182 Theissen amp Merz 1998 p 165 Our conclusion must be that Jesus came from Nazareth a b James Barr Which language did Jesus speak Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 1970 53 1 pp 9 29 1 Archived 2018 12 03 at the Wayback Machine a b Handbook to exegesis of the New Testament by Stanley E Porter 1997 ISBN 90 04 09921 2 pp 110 112 Hoffmann R Joseph 1986 Jesus in history and myth ISBN 0 87975 332 3 p 98 James Barr s review article Which language did Jesus speak referenced above states that Aramaic has the widest support among scholars a b Jesus as a Figure in History How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell Nov 1 1998 ISBN 0664257038 p 117 Crossley amp Myles 2023 p 75 Craig A Evans 2003 Jesus and the Ossuaries ISBN 0918954886 Parameter error in ISBN invalid character Baylor University Press The Lion and the Lamb by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum and Charles L Quarles 2012 ISBN 1433677083 p 40 The forging of races race and scripture in the Protestant Atlantic world by Colin Kidd 2006 ISBN 0 521 79324 6 p 18 Jesus the complete guide by Leslie Houlden 2006 082648011X pp 63 100 The likeness of the king a prehistory of portraiture in late medieval France by Stephen Perkinson 2009 ISBN 0 226 65879 1 p 30 Herodias at home in that fox s den by Florence Morgan Gillman 2003 ISBN 0 8146 5108 9 pp 25 30 Herod Antipas by Harold W Hoehner 1983 ISBN 0 310 42251 5 pp 125 127 Novak Ralph Martin 2001 Christianity and the Roman Empire background texts ISBN 1 56338 347 0 pp 302 303 Hoehner Harold W 1978 Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ Zondervan pp 29 37 ISBN 978 0 310 26211 4 a b Funk Robert W Roy W Hoover and the Jesus Seminar 1993 The Five Gospels HarperSanFrancisco pp 1 30 VIEWS ON FORGIVENESS South Seminole Church Of Christ April 20 2003 Accessed January 21 2024 Crossley James and Robert J Myles 2023 Jesus A Life in Class Conflict Zer0 Books ISBN 978 1 80341 082 1 page 156 Pontius Pilate portraits of a Roman governor by Warren Carter 2003 ISBN 0 8146 5113 5 pp 44 45 The history of the Jews in the Greco Roman world by Peter Schafer 2003 ISBN 0 415 30585 3 p 108 Backgrounds of early Christianity by Everett Ferguson 2003 ISBN 0 8028 2221 5 p 416 Prophet and Teacher An Introduction to the Historical Jesus by William R Herzog Jul 4 2005 ISBN 0664225284 p 8 Witherington III 1997 p 197 Moore Daniel 2014 Jesus An Emerging Jewish Mosaic In Charlesworth James Rhea Brian Pokorny Petr eds Jesus Research New Methodologies and Perceptions The Second Princeton Prague Symposium on Jesus Research Wm B Eerdmans pp 76 78 ISBN 9780802867285 Ehrman Bart D Evans Craig A Stewart Robert B 2020 Can we trust the Bible on the Historical Jesus First ed Westminster John Knox Press pp 6 8 ISBN 9780664265854 Herzog W R 2005 Prophet and teacher An introduction to the historical Jesus Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Press p 6 Theissen amp Merz 1998 pp 1 15 Meggitt Justin J October 2019 More Ingenious than Learned Examining the Quest for the Non Historical Jesus New Testament Studies 65 4 458 459 doi 10 1017 S0028688519000213 S2CID 203247861 Schweitzer Albert 1906 The Quest of the Historical Jesus A Critical Study of Its Progress from Reimarus to Wrede Lulu com ISBN 978 0 557 36048 2 Witherington III 1997 p 136 a b Sanders E P 1993 The Historical Figure of Jesus London New York Ringwood Australia Toronto Ontario and Auckland New Zealand Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 014499 4 a b Casey Maurice 2010 Jesus of Nazareth An Independent Historian s Account of His Life and Teaching New York and London T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 64517 3 Jesus Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium by Bart D Ehrman 1999 ISBN 0195124731 Oxford University Press pp Dale Allison Constructing Jesus Memory Imagination and History 2010 ISBN 0801035856 p 32 Witherington III 1997 p 108 Vermes Geza Jesus the Jew A Historian s Reading of the Gospels Minneapolis Fortress Press 1973 Witherington III 1997 p 98 a b c d e f g The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 pp 117 125 Isaac 2017 p 127 156 In particular Menippus 3rd century BC Meleager 1st century BC and Oenomaus 2nd century CE all came from Gadara John Dominic Crossan 1991 The Historical Jesus The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant ISBN 0 06 061629 6 Jesus and the Gospels An Introduction and Survey by Dr Craig L Blomberg 2009 ISBN 0805444823 p 213 Pitre Brant James 2005 Jesus the Tribulation and the End of the Exile Restoration Eschatology and the Origin of the Atonement Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 16 148751 4 Witherington III 1997 pp 137 38 a b Witherington III 1997 pp 137 138 a b Witherington III 1997 pp 161 163 Brandon Samuel George Frederick 1967 Jesus and the Zealots A Study of the Political Factor in Primitive Christianity Manchester University Press Rubio Fernando Bermejo 2018 La invencion de Jesus de Nazaret Historia ficcion historiografia in Spanish Siglo XXI de Espana Editores ISBN 978 84 323 1921 1 Aslan Reza 2013 Zealot The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 679 60353 5 Moffic Evan 3 March 2016 Was Jesus a Reform Rabbi Huffington Post Retrieved 4 March 2020 Hoffman Matthew 2007 From Rebel to Rabbi Reclaiming Jesus and the Making of Modern Jewish Culture Stanford University Press p 57 Chilton Bruce 2002 Rabbi Jesus An Intimate Biography Richard Allen Greene 5 April 2012 Jews reclaim Jesus as one of their own CNN Archived from the original on 26 February 2021 Retrieved 26 February 2021 Paul de Vries 23 March 2012 Koshering Jesus More An Evangelical Review of Shmuley Boteach s Kosher Jesus Christian Post James the Brother of Jesus Penguin 1997 98 pp 51 153 and 647 816 Review Hyam Maccoby Jesus the Pharisee reviewed by Robert M Price www robertmprice mindvendor com Falk Harvey 2003 Jesus the Pharisee A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus Mark Allan Powell Jesus as a figure in history how modern historians view the man from Galilee p 56 Morton Smith Jesus the magician charlatan or Son of God William Thomas Stead ed 1894 The review of reviews Volume 9 1894 p 306 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Panizza Oskar 1898 Christus in psicho patologischer Beleuchtung Zurcher Diskuszjonen in German 5 1 1 8 OCLC 782007054 Dusterberg Rolf 1988 Die gedrukte Freiheit Oskar Panizza und die Zurcher Diskussjonen Europaische Hochschulschriften Reihe 1 Deutsche Sprache und Literatur 1098 in German Frankfurt am Main P Lang pp 40 91 ISBN 3 8204 0288 8 Muller Jurgen 1990 Oskar Panizza Versuch einer immamenten Interpretation in German Wurzburg pp 248 256 OCLC 923572143 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link de Loosten George 1905 Jesus Christus vom Standpunkte des Psychiaters Jesus Christ from the Standpoint of a Psychiatrist in German Bamberg Handels Druckerei OCLC 31247627 Hirsch William 1912 Religion and civilization the conclusions of a psychiatrist New York Truth Seeker LCCN 12002696 OCLC 39864035 Sargant William 22 August 1974 The movement in psychiatry away from the philosophical The Times 14 ISSN 0140 0460 Perhaps even earlier Jesus Christ might simply have returned to his carpentry following the use of modern psychiatric treatments Storr Anthony 1997 Feet of Clay Saints Sinners and Madmen A Study of Gurus New York Free Press Paperbacks pp 141 147 ISBN 978 0 6848 3495 5 Obituary Anthony Storr The Telegraph 21 March 2001 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 6 September 2019 Storr Anthony 19 May 2015 Feet Of Clay The Power and Charisma of Gurus Simon and Schuster ISBN 9781501122088 Archived from the original on 13 August 2019 Retrieved 6 September 2019 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Persaud Raj 27 April 1993 Health A madman can look a lot like a messiah There is no easy way for cult followers to tell if their leader is sane says Raj Persaud The Independent Retrieved 25 October 2018 Two thousand years ago Jesus received a crown of thorns Today the Messianic have electro convulsive therapy Binet Sangle Charles 1908 1915 La folie de Jesus The Madness of Jesus in French Vol 1 4 Paris A Maloine LCCN 08019439 OCLC 4560820 Murray Evan D Cunningham Miles G Price Bruce H September 2011 The Role of Psychotic Disorders in Religious History Considered Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences 24 4 410 426 doi 10 1176 appi neuropsych 11090214 ISSN 1545 7222 OCLC 823065628 PMID 23224447 New English Translation Citlak Amadeusz 2015 Psychobiography of Jesus Christ in view of Wladyslaw Witwicki s theory of cratism Journal for Perspectives of Economic Political and Social Integration 21 1 2 155 184 doi 10 2478 pepsi 2015 0007 ISSN 2300 0945 S2CID 151801662 Retrieved 21 September 2022 Karina Jarzynska racjonalista pl Jezus jako egocentryczny schizotymik Archived 2019 03 22 at the Wayback Machine Polish Nowak Leszek Prywatna Witryna Internetowa Leszka Nowaka Private Website of Leszek Nowak opracowanie eu in Polish Archived from the original on 19 January 2016 Nowak Leszek Wielka pomylka i rozczarowanie wczesnego chrzescijanstwa A great mistake and disappointment of early Christianity opracowanie eu in Polish Archived from the original on 1 February 2016 Sources edit Barnett Paul W 1997 Jesus and the Logic of History New Studies in Biblical Theology 3 Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 85111 512 2 Bauckham Richard 2011 Jesus A Very Short Introduction Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 957527 5 Beilby James K Eddy Paul Rhodes 2009 The Quest for the Historical Jesus An Introduction in Beilby James K Eddy Paul Rhodes eds The Historical Jesus Five Views Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 83083 868 4 Boyarin Daniel 2012 The Jewish Gospels the Story of the Jewish Christ The New Press ISBN 978 1 59558 878 4 Brown Raymond E 1993 The Death of the Messiah from Gethsemane to the Grave New York Anchor Bible ISBN 978 0 385 49449 6 Brown Raymond E et al The New Jerome Biblical Commentary Prentice Hall 1990 ISBN 0 13 614934 0 Burridge Richard A Gould Graham 2004 Jesus Now and Then Wm B Eerdmans ISBN 978 0802809773 Craffert Pieter F and Botha Pieter J J Why Jesus Could Walk On The Sea But He Could Not Read And Write Neotestamenica 39 1 2005 Bock Darrell L Studying the Historical Jesus A Guide to Sources and Methods Baker Academic 2002 ISBN 978 0 8010 2451 1 Crossan John Dominic Jesus A Revolutionary Biography Harpercollins 1994 ISBN 0 06 061661 X Crossley James Myles Robert J 2023 Jesus A Life in Class Conflict Washington USA and Winchester UK Zer0 ISBN 978 1 80341 082 1 Dunn James D G 2005 The Tradition in Dunn James D G McKnight Scot eds The Historical Jesus in Recent Research Eisenbrauns Ehrman Bart D 1999 Jesus Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium New York Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 512473 6 Fiensy David A Jesus the Galilean soundings in a first century life Gorgias Press LLC 2007 ISBN 1 59333 313 7 ISBN 978 1 59333 313 3 Google books Fredriksen Paula 2000 Jesus of Nazareth King of the Jews A Jewish Life and the Emergence of Christianity New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 76746 6 Gnilka Joachim Jesus of Nazareth Message and History Hendrickson Publishers 1997 Gowler David B What Are They Saying About the Historical Jesus Paulist Press 2007 Loke Andrew Ter Ern The Origin of Divine Christology Cambridge University Press 2017 Grant Michael Jesus A Historian s Review of the Gospels Scribner s 1977 ISBN 0 684 14889 7 Funk Robert W 1998 The Acts of Jesus The Search for the Authentic Deeds of Jesus HarperSanFrancisco ISBN 978 0 06 062978 6 Harris William V Ancient Literacy Harvard University Press 1989 ISBN 0 674 03380 9 Isaac Benjamin 2017 Empire and Ideology in the Graeco Roman World Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 13589 5 Retrieved 3 June 2020 Meier John P A Marginal Jew Rethinking the Historical Jesus Doubleday v 1 The Roots of the Problem and the Person 1991 ISBN 0 385 26425 9 v 2 Mentor Message and Miracles 1994 ISBN 0 385 46992 6 v 3 Companions and Competitors 2001 ISBN 0 385 46993 4 v 4 Law and Love 2009 ISBN 978 0 300 14096 5 v 5 Probing the Authenticity of the Parables 2016 ISBN 978 0 300 21190 0 O Collins G Jesus A Portrait Darton Longman and Todd 2008 ISBN 978 0232527193 O Collins G Christology A Biblical Historical and Systematic Study of Jesus OUP 2009 ISBN 978 0199557875 Sanders E P Jesus and Judaism Augsburg Fortress Publishers 1987 Sanders E P The Historical Figure of Jesus Lane The Penguin Press 1993 Schweitzer Albert 1910 The Quest of the Historical Jesus London Adam and Charles Black Theissen Gerd Winter Dagmar 2002 The Quest for the Plausible Jesus The Question of Criteria 1st American ed Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 0 664 22537 3 OCLC 49805829 Theissen Gerd Merz Annette 1998 The Historical Jesus A Comprehensive Guide SCM Press ISBN 9780334026969 OCLC 38590348 Van Voorst Robert E Jesus Outside the New Testament 2000 Eerdmans google books Archived 2022 12 25 at the Wayback Machine Vermes Geza Jesus the Jew A Historian s Reading of the Gospels SCM Classics 2001 ISBN 0 334 02839 6 Witherington III Ben 1997 1995 The Jesus Quest The Third Search for the Jew of Nazareth 2nd ed InterVarsity Press ISBN 0830815449 OCLC 33244038 Wright N T Christian Origins and the Question of God a projected six volume series of which three have been published under v 1 The New Testament and the People of God Augsburg Fortress Publishers 1992 v 2 Jesus and the Victory of God Augsburg Fortress Publishers 1997 v 3 The Resurrection of the Son of God Augsburg Fortress Publishers 2003 Wright N T The Challenge of Jesus Rediscovering who Jesus was and is IVP 1996 Yaghjian Lucretia Ancient Reading in Richard Rohrbaugh ed The Social Sciences in New Testament Interpretation Hendrickson Publishers 2004 ISBN 1 56563 410 1 External links edit Jesus Christ Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2009 The first section on Jesus life and ministry Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Historical Jesus amp oldid 1220946726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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