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Unknown years of Jesus

The unknown years of Jesus (also called his silent years, lost years, or missing years) generally refers to the period of Jesus's life between his childhood and the beginning of his ministry, a period not described in the New Testament.[1][2]

The "lost years of Jesus" concept is usually encountered in esoteric literature (where it at times also refers to his possible post-crucifixion activities) but is not commonly used in scholarly literature since it is assumed that Jesus was probably working as a carpenter in Galilee, at least some of the time with Joseph, from the age of 12 to 29.[2][3][4]

In the 19th and 20th centuries theories began to emerge that between the ages of 12 and 29 Jesus had visited India and Nepal for Spiritual enlightenment inspiring from Hinduism, or had studied with the Essenes in the Judaean Desert.[4][5] Modern mainstream Christian scholarship has generally rejected these theories and holds that nothing is known about this time period in the life of Jesus.[4][6][7][8]

The use of the "lost years" in the "swoon hypothesis", suggests that Jesus survived his crucifixion and continued his life, instead of what was stated in the New Testament that he ascended into Heaven with two angels.[9] This, and the related view that he avoided crucifixion altogether, has given rise to several speculations about what happened to him in the supposed remaining years of his life, but these are not accepted by mainstream scholars either.[9][10][11]

The 18 unknown years edit

 
Jesus Discourse with His Disciples, James Tissot, c. 1890

New Testament gap edit

 
James Tissot's depiction of a young Jesus at the Temple (Luke 2:46), c. 1890. Brooklyn Museum

Following the accounts of Jesus' young life, there is a gap of about 18 years in his story in the New Testament.[4][6][12] Other than the statement that after he was 12 years old (Luke 2:42) Jesus "advanced in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and men" (Luke 2:52), the New Testament has no other details regarding the gap.[4] Christian tradition suggests that Jesus simply lived in Galilee during that period.[13] Modern scholarship holds that there is little historical information to determine what happened during those years.[4]

The ages of 12 and 29, the approximate ages at either end of the unknown years, have some significance in Judaism of the Second Temple period: 13 is the age of the bar mitzvah, the age of secular maturity,[2] and 30 the age of readiness for the priesthood, although Jesus was not of the tribe of Levi.[14]

Christians have generally taken the statement in Mark 6:3 referring to Jesus as "Is not this the carpenter...?" (Greek: οὐχ οὗτός ἐστιν ὁ τέκτων, romanizedouch outos estin ho tektōn) as an indication that before the age of 30 Jesus had been working as a carpenter.[15] The tone of the passage leading to the question "Is not this the carpenter?" suggests familiarity with Jesus in the area, reinforcing that he had been generally seen as a carpenter in the gospel account before the start of his ministry.[15] Matthew 13:55 poses the question as "Is not this the carpenter's son?" suggesting that the profession tektōn had been a family business and Jesus was engaged in it before starting his preaching and ministry in the gospel accounts.[16][17]

Background of Galilee and Judea edit

The historical record of the large number of workmen employed in the rebuilding of Sepphoris has led Batey (1984) and others to suggest that when Jesus was in his teens and twenties carpenters would have found more employment at Sepphoris rather than at the small town of Nazareth.[18]

Aside from secular employment some attempts have been made to reconstruct the theological and rabbinical circumstances of the "unknown years", e.g., soon after the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls novelist Edmund Wilson (1955) suggested Jesus may have studied with the Essenes,[19] followed by the Unitarian Charles F. Potter (1958) and others.[20] Other writers have taken the view that the predominance of Pharisees in Judea during that period, and Jesus' own later recorded interaction with the Pharisees, makes a Pharisee background more likely, as in the recorded case of another Galilean, Josephus studied with all three groups: Pharisees, Sadducees and Essenes.[21]

Other sources edit

The New Testament apocrypha and early Christian pseudepigrapha preserve various pious legends filling the "gaps" in Christ's youth. Charlesworth (2008) explains this as due to the canonical Gospels having left "a narrative vacuum" that many have attempted to fill.[22]

Jesus' childhood is described in the Infancy Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, and the Syriac Infancy Gospel, among other sources.[23]

Claims of young Jesus in Britain edit

During the late 12th century, Joseph of Arimathea became connected with Arthurian legend, appearing in them as the first keeper of the Holy Grail.[24] This idea first appears in Robert de Boron's Joseph d'Arimathie [fr], in which Joseph receives the Grail from an apparition of Jesus and sends it with his followers to Britain. This theme is elaborated upon in Boron's sequels and in subsequent Arthurian works penned by others.[24]

Some Arthurian legends hold that Jesus travelled to Britain as a boy, lived at Priddy in the Mendips, and built the first wattle cabin at Glastonbury.[25] William Blake's early 19th-century poem "And did those feet in ancient time" was inspired by the story of Jesus travelling to Britain. In some versions, Joseph was supposedly a tin merchant and took Jesus under his care when his mother Mary was widowed.[26][27] Gordon Strachan wrote Jesus the Master Builder: Druid Mysteries and the Dawn of Christianity (1998), which was the basis of the documentary titled And Did Those Feet (2009). Strachan believed Jesus may have travelled to Britain to study with the Druids.[28]

Claims of young Jesus in India and/or Tibet edit

Nicolas Notovich, 1887 edit

 
Nicolas Notovitch

In 1887, Russian war correspondent Nicolas Notovitch claimed that while at the Hemis Monastery in Ladakh, he had learned of a document called the "Life of Saint Issa, Best of the Sons of Men" – Isa being the Arabic name of Jesus in Islam.[29][30][31] Notovitch's story, with a translated text of the "Life of Saint Issa", was published in French in 1894 as La vie inconnue de Jesus Christ (Unknown Life of Jesus Christ).[5][31]

According to the scrolls, Jesus abandoned Jerusalem at the age of 13 and set out towards Sindh, “intending to improve and perfect himself in the divine understanding and to studying the laws of the great Buddha”. He crossed Punjab and reached Puri Jagannath where he studied the Vedas under Brahmin priests. He spent six years in Puri and Rajgirh, near Nalanda, the ancient seat of Hindu learning. Then he went to the Himalayas, and spent time in Tibetan monasteries, studying Buddhism,[29] and through Persia, returned to Jerusalem at the age of 29.

Notovitch's writings were immediately controversial and Max Müller stated that either the monks at the monastery had deceived Notovitch (or played a joke on him), or he had fabricated the evidence.[29][32][33] Müller then wrote to the monastery at Hemis and the head lama replied that there had been no Western visitor at the monastery in the past fifteen years and there were no documents related to Notovitch's story.[34] J. Archibald Douglas then visited Hemis monastery and interviewed the head lama who stated that Notovitch had never been there.[34] Indologist Leopold von Schroeder called Notovitch's story a "big fat lie".[35] Wilhelm Schneemelcher states that Notovich's accounts were soon exposed as fabrications, and that to date no one has even had a glimpse at the manuscripts Notovitch claims to have had.[5]

Notovich responded to claims to defend himself.[36] But once his story had been re-examined by historians – some even questioning his existence – it is claimed that Notovitch confessed to having fabricated the evidence.[35] Bart D. Ehrman states that "Today there is not a single recognized scholar on the planet who has any doubts about the matter. The entire story was invented by Notovitch, who earned a good deal of money and a substantial amount of notoriety for his hoax".[37] However, others deny that Notovich ever accepted the accusations against him – that his account was a forgery, etc. Although he was not impressed with his story, Sir Francis Younghusband recalls meeting Nicolas Notovitch near Skardu, not long before Notovitch had visited Hemis monastery.[38]

In 1922, Swami Abhedananda, the president of the Vedanta Society of New York between 1897 and 1921 and the author of several books, went to the Himalayas on foot and reached Tibet, where he studied Buddhist philosophy and Tibetan Buddhism. He went to the Hemis Monastery, and allegedly found the manuscript translated by Notovitch, which was a Tibetan translation of the original scrolls written in Pali. The lama said that it was a copy and that the original was in a monastery at Marbour near Lhasa. After Abhedananda's death in 1939, one of his disciples inquired about the documents at the Hemis monastery, but was told that they had disappeared.[39][40]

Levi H. Dowling, 1908 edit

In 1908, Levi H. Dowling published the Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ which he claimed was channeled to him from the "Akashic Records" as the true story of the life of Jesus, including "the 'lost' eighteen years silent in the New Testament." The narrative follows the young Jesus across India, Tibet, Persia, Assyria, Greece and Egypt.[41] Dowling's work was later used by Holger Kersten who combined it with elements derived from other sources such as the Ahmadiyya beliefs.[10]

Nicholas Roerich, 1925 edit

In 1925, Nicholas Roerich recorded his travels through Ladakh in India. This portion of his journal was published in 1933 as part of Altai Himalaya. He recounts legends of Issa shared with him by the Ladakhi people and lamas, including that Issa (Jesus) traveled from Palestine to India with merchants and taught the people. An extended section of this text parallels sections of Notovitch's book, and Roerich comments on the remarkable similarity of the accounts of the Ladakhis to these passages, despite the Ladakhis having no knowledge of Notovitch's book. He also recounts that the stories of others on his travel refer to various manuscripts and legends regarding Jesus (Issa) and that he personally visited the "abbot" of Hemis.[42]

 
Jesus in the workshop of Joseph the Carpenter, by Georges de La Tour, 1640s

Rejection by modern mainstream New Testament scholarship edit

Modern mainstream Christian scholarship has generally rejected any travels by Jesus to India, Tibet or surrounding areas as without historical basis:

  • Robert Van Voorst states that modern scholarship has "almost unanimously agreed" that claims of the travels of Jesus to Tibet, Kashmir or rest of India contain "nothing of value".[7]
  • Marcus Borg states that the suggestions that an adult Jesus traveled to Egypt or India and came into contact with Buddhism are "without historical foundation".[8]
  • John Dominic Crossan states that none of the theories presented about the travels of Jesus to fill the gap between his early life and the start of his ministry have been supported by modern scholarship.[6]
  • Leslie Houlden states that although modern parallels between the teachings of Jesus and Buddha have been drawn, these comparisons emerged after missionary contacts in the 19th century and there is no historically reliable evidence of contacts between Buddhism and Jesus.[43]
  • Paula Fredriksen states that no serious scholarly work places Jesus outside the backdrop of 1st century Palestinian Judaism.[44]

Other claims edit

Japan edit

 
The burial ground to what some claim is Jesus' final resting place, in Shingō, Aomori.

Some people in Japan have believed that Jesus visited them during the lost years and possibly survived the crucifixion to remain in Japan for the rest of his life. The legend exists in a village named Shingō, Aomori.[45]

Artistic and literary renditions edit

 
The boy Jesus represented as the Good Shepherd; image above the North door of the Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania)

In 1996, the documentary Mysteries of the Bible presented an overview of the theories related to the travels of Jesus to India and interviewed a number of scholars on the subject.[46]

Edward T. Martin's book King of Travelers: Jesus' Lost Years in India (2008) was used as the basis for Paul Davids' film Jesus in India (2008) shown on the Sundance Channel. The book and film cover Martin's search for Notovitch's claimed "Life of Issa."[47]

The book Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal, by Christopher Moore, is a fictional comedy which tells the story of Jesus's adolescence and his travels to India and China from the point of view of Jesus's best friend Biff.[48]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ E.g., see Emil Bock The Childhood of Jesus: The Unknown Years ISBN 0863156193
  2. ^ a b c James H. Charlesworth The Historical Jesus: An Essential Guide 2008 ISBN 0687021677 "From twelve to thirty then are "Jesus' silent years," which does not denote he was silent. It means the Evangelists remain silent about what Jesus did." ... "Only Luke reports that Jesus was in the Temple when he was twelve, apparently for his bar mitzvah (2:42), and that he began his public ministry when he was "about thirty years of age" (3:23). What did Jesus do from age twelve to thirty?".
  3. ^ E.g., see Lost Years of Jesus Revealed by Charles F. Potter ISBN 0449130398
  4. ^ a b c d e f All the People in the Bible by Richard R. Losch (May 1, 2008) Eerdsmans Press ISBN 0802824544 209: "Nothing is known of the life of Jesus during the seventeen years from the time of the incident in the temple until his baptism by John the Baptist when he was about thirty. Countless theories have been proposed, among them that he studied in Alexandria in the Jewish centers there and that he lived among the Essenes in the Judean desert...there is no evidence to substantiate any of these claims and we have to accept that we simply don't know.... The most likely thing is that he continued to live in Nazareth and ply his trade there..."
  5. ^ a b c New Testament Apocrypha, Vol. 1: Gospels and Related Writings by Wilhelm Schneemelcher and R. Mcl. Wilson (Dec 1, 1990) ISBN 066422721X page 84 "a particular book by Nicolas Notovich (Di Lucke im Leben Jesus 1894) ... shortly after the publication of the book, the reports of travel experiences were already unmasked as lies. The fantasies about Jesus in India were also soon recognized as invention... down to today, nobody has had a glimpse of the manuscripts with the alleged narratives about Jesus"
  6. ^ a b c Crossan, John Dominic; Richard G. Watts (1999). Who is Jesus? : answers to your questions about the historical Jesus. Louisville, Ky: Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 0664258425.
  7. ^ a b Voorst, Robert E. Van (2000). Jesus Outside the New Testament : an introduction to the ancient evidence. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans. p. 17. ISBN 0-8028-4368-9. ... Jesus' putative travels to India and Tibet, his grave in Srinagar, Kashmir, and so forth. Scholarship has almost unanimously agreed that these references to Jesus are so late and tendentious as to contain virtually nothing of value for understanding the Historical Jesus.
  8. ^ a b Borg, Marcus J. (2005). "The Spirit-Filled Experience of Jesus". In Dunn, James D. G. (ed.). The Historical Jesus in Recent Research. Winona Lake, [IN]: Eisenbrauns. p. 303. ISBN 1-57506-100-7.
  9. ^ a b Voorst, Robert E. Van (2000). Jesus Outside the New Testament. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans. pp. 78–79. ISBN 0-8028-4368-9.
  10. ^ a b New Testament Apocrypha, Vol. 1: Gospels and Related Writings by Wilhelm Schneemelcher and R. Mcl. Wilson (Dec 1, 1990) ISBN 066422721X page 84. Schneemelcher states that Kersten's work is based on "fantasy, untruth and ignorance (above all in the linguistic area)" Schneemelcher states that ""Kersten for example attempted to work up Notovitch and Ahmadiyya legends with many other alleged witnesses into a complete picture. Thus Levi's Aquarian Gospel is pressed into service, along with the Turin shroud and the Qumran texts."
  11. ^ Focus on Jesus by Gerald O'Collins and Daniel Kendall (Sep 1, 1998) ISBN 0852443609 Mercer Univ Press pages 169-171
  12. ^ Maier, Paul L.; Yamauchi, Edwin M. (1989). "The Date of the Nativity and Chronology of Jesus". In Vardaman, Jerry (ed.). Chronos, kairos, Christos : nativity and chronological studies presented to Jack Finegan. Winona Lake, [IN]: Eisenbrauns. pp. 113–129. ISBN 0-931464-50-1.
  13. ^ Lloyd Kenyon Jones The Eighteen Absent Years of Jesus Christ "as a skilled and dutiful artisan and as a loving son and neighbor, Jesus was using those qualities which were to flame forth...was the work which He was to do that He did not leave that home and that preparation until the mature age of thirty."
  14. ^ :Reiner, Edwin W. (1971). The Atonement. Nashville: Southern Pub. Association. ISBN 0812700511. OCLC 134392. Page 140 ""And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age, being (as was supposed) the son of Joseph." Luke 3:23. But Christ, of course, did not belong to the Levitical priesthood. He had descended neither from Aaron nor from the tribe of Levi."
  15. ^ a b The Gospel According to Mark: Meaning and Message by George Martin (Sep 2005) ISBN 0829419705 Loyola Univ Press pages 128-129
  16. ^ The Gospel of Matthew (Sacra Pagina Series, Vol 1) by Daniel J. Harrington, Donald P. Senior (Sep 1, 1991) ISBN 0814658032 Liturgical Press page 211
  17. ^ The Gospel of Matthew by R.T. France (Jul 27, 2007) ISBN 080282501X page 549
  18. ^ W. D. Davies, Dale Allison, Jr. Matthew 8-18 2004 ISBN 0567083659 T&T Clarke Page 456 "For the suggestion that Jesus worked not only in a wood-worker's shop in Nazareth but perhaps also in Sepphoris, helping to construct Herod's capital, see R. A. Batey, 'Is not this the Carpenter?', NTS 30 (1984), pp. 249-58. Batey also calls ..."
  19. ^ Menahem Mansoor The Dead Sea Scrolls: A College Textbook and a Study Guide Brill Publishers; 1964, Page 156 "Edmund Wilson suggests that the unknown years in the life of Jesus (ages 12-29) might have been spent with the sect, but there is no reference to this in the texts."
  20. ^ Charles F. Potter The Lost Years of Jesus Revealed Random House 1958 "For centuries Christian students of the Bible have wondered where Jesus was and what he did during the so-called "eighteen silent years" between the ages of twelve and thirty. The amazing and dramatic scrolls of the great Essene library found in cave after cave near the Dead Sea have given us the answer at last. That during those "lost years" Jesus was a student at this Essene school is becoming increasingly apparent. .."
  21. ^ Brennan Hill Jesus, the Christ: contemporary perspectives 1991 ISBN 1585953032 Page 6 "than about the people with whom Jesus lived. Josephus (d. 100 C.E.) was born just after the time of Jesus. He claims to have studied with the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes as a young man"
  22. ^ James H. Charlesworth The Historical Jesus: An Essential Guide 2008 ISBN 0687021677 The New Testament apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha preserve many legends concocted to explain Jesus' youth. Tales have him ... The Evangelists have left "a narrative vacuum," and many have attempted to fill it. Only Luke reports that Jesus ...
  23. ^ Roten, J.; Janssen, T. "Childhood of Jesus". University of Dayton. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  24. ^ a b The Cambridge Companion to the Arthurian Legend by Elizabeth Archibald and Ad Putter (10 Sep 2009) ISBN 0521677882 page 50
  25. ^ Camelot and the vision of Albion by Geoffrey Ashe 1971 ISBN 0434034010 Page 157 "Blake may be referring to one of the odder offshoots of the Arthur-Grail imbroglio, the belief that Jesus visited Britain as a boy, lived at Priddy in the Mendips, and built the first wattle cabin at Glastonbury. This tale seems to have arisen quite ..."
  26. ^ Milton, A Poem (The Illuminated Books of William Blake, Volume 5) by William Blake, Robert N. Essick and Joseph Viscomi (Sep 4, 1998) ISBN 0691001480 Princeton Univ Press Page 214 "The notion that Jesus visited Britain may have been reinforced for Blake by the name 'Lambeth' (house of the lamb - see 4:14-15 note). Compare Isaiah 52.7 ('How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that ..."
  27. ^ Jesus: A Life by A. N. Wilson 1993 ISBN 0393326330 page 87 "One such legend, which haunted the imagination of William Blake and, through Blake's lyric 'Jerusalem', has passed into British national legend, is the story that Jesus visited Britain as a boy. Though written sources for this folk-tale are ..."
  28. ^ "Jesus 'may have visited England', says Scottish academic". (Film review) "And Did Those Feet". BBC News. 26 November 2009. Retrieved 4 March 2013. St Augustine wrote to the Pope to say he'd discovered a church in Glastonbury built by followers of Jesus. But St Gildas (a 6th-Century British cleric) said it was built by Jesus himself. It's a very very ancient church which went back perhaps to AD37
  29. ^ a b c Korbel, Jonathan; Preckel, Claudia (2016). "Ghulām Aḥmad al-Qādiyānī: The Messiah of the Christians—Peace upon Him—in India (India, 1908)". In Bentlage, Björn; Eggert, Marion; Krämer, Hans-Martin; Reichmuth, Stefan (eds.). Religious Dynamics under the Impact of Imperialism and Colonialism. Numen Book Series. Vol. 154. Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 426–442. doi:10.1163/9789004329003_034. ISBN 978-90-04-32511-1. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  30. ^ The Unknown Life Of Jesus Christ: By The Discoverer Of The Manuscript by Nicolas Notovitch (Oct 15, 2007) ISBN 1434812839
  31. ^ a b Forged: Writing in the Name of God--Why the Bible's Authors Are Not Who We Think They Are by Bart D. Ehrman (Mar 6, 2012) ISBN 0062012622 page 252 "one of the most widely disseminated modern forgeries is called The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ"
  32. ^ Simon J. Joseph, "Jesus in India?" Journal of the American Academy of Religion Volume 80, Issue 1 pp. 161-199 "Max Müller suggested that either the Hemis monks had deceived Notovitch or that Notovitch himself was the author of these passages"
  33. ^ Last Essays by Friedrich M. Mueller 1901 (republished in Jun 1973) ISBN 0404114393 page 181: "it is pleasanter to believe that Buddhist monks can at times be wags, than that M. Notovitch is a rogue."
  34. ^ a b Bradley Malkovsky, "Some Recent Developments in Hindu Understandings of Jesus" in the Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies (2010) Vol. 23, Article 5.:"Müller then wrote to the chief lama st Hemis and received the reply that no Westerner had visited there in the past fifteen years nor was the monastery in possession of any documents having to do with the story Notovitch had made public in his famous book" ... "J. Archibald Douglas took it upon himself to make the journey to the Hemis monistry to conduct a personal interview with the same head monk with whom Müller had corresponded. What Douglas learned there completely concurred with what Müller had learned: Notovitch had never been there."
  35. ^ a b Indology, Indomania, and Orientalism by Douglas T. McGetchin (Jan 1, 2010) Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 083864208X page 133 "Faced with this cross-examination, Notovich confessed to fabricating his evidence."
  36. ^ D.L. Snellgrove and T. Skorupski (1977) The Cultural Heritage of Ladakh, p. 127, Prajna Press ISBN 0-87773-700-2
  37. ^ Ehrman, Bart D. (February 2011). "8. Forgeries, Lies, Deceptions, and the Writings of the New Testament. Modern Forgeries, Lies, and Deceptions". Forged: Writing in the Name of God—Why the Bible's Authors Are Not Who We Think They Are (First Edition. EPub ed.). New York: HarperCollins e-books. pp. 282–283. ISBN 978-0-06-207863-6.
  38. ^ The Heart of a Continent, a Narrative of Travels in Manchuria, Across the Gobi Desert, Through the Himalayas, the Pamirs, and Hunza (1884-1894), 1904, pp. 180-181.
  39. ^ Chaitanya, Brahmachari Bhairab; Swami Abhedananda's Journey into Kashmir and Tibet; Ramakrishna Vedanta Math, Calcutta, 1987 (first published in Bengali in 1929) pp.119-121, 164-166; ISBN 0874816432
  40. ^ Richard, Hooper; Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, and Lao Tzu; 2012 p. 176 ISBN 1571746803
  41. ^ The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ by Levi H. Dowling by Levi H. Dowling (original publication 1908) ISBN 1602062242 pages 12 and 65
  42. ^ "Altai-Himalaya by Nicholas Roerich". www.roerich.org. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  43. ^ Jesus: The Complete Guide 2006 by Leslie Houlden ISBN 082648011X page 140
  44. ^ Fredriksen, Paula. From Jesus to Christ. ISBN 0300084579 Yale University Press, 2000, p. xxvi.
  45. ^ Lidz, Franz (January 2013). "The Little-Known Legend of Jesus in Japan". Smithsonian. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  46. ^ National Geographic Channel (25 May 1996) Mysteries of the Bible, "The Lost Years of Jesus".
  47. ^ W. Barnes Tatum Jesus: A Brief History 2009 Page 237 "On the site, there appears the title in English with eye-catching flourishes: Jesus in India.50 Instead of a narrative retelling of the Jesus story, Jesus in India follows the American adventurer Edward T. Martin, from Lampasas, Texas, as he ..."
  48. ^ Maass, Donald (Mar 14, 2011). The Breakout Novelist: Craft and Strategies for Career Fiction Writers. p. 222. ISBN 978-1582979908.

Further reading edit

unknown, years, jesus, jesus, india, redirects, here, book, jesus, india, book, film, jesus, india, movie, unknown, years, jesus, also, called, silent, years, lost, years, ormissing, years, generally, refers, period, jesus, life, between, childhood, beginning,. Jesus in India redirects here For the book see Jesus in India book For the film see Jesus in India The Movie The unknown years of Jesus also called his silent years lost years ormissing years generally refers to the period of Jesus s life between his childhood and the beginning of his ministry a period not described in the New Testament 1 2 The lost years of Jesus concept is usually encountered in esoteric literature where it at times also refers to his possible post crucifixion activities but is not commonly used in scholarly literature since it is assumed that Jesus was probably working as a carpenter in Galilee at least some of the time with Joseph from the age of 12 to 29 2 3 4 In the 19th and 20th centuries theories began to emerge that between the ages of 12 and 29 Jesus had visited India and Nepal for Spiritual enlightenment inspiring from Hinduism or had studied with the Essenes in the Judaean Desert 4 5 Modern mainstream Christian scholarship has generally rejected these theories and holds that nothing is known about this time period in the life of Jesus 4 6 7 8 The use of the lost years in the swoon hypothesis suggests that Jesus survived his crucifixion and continued his life instead of what was stated in the New Testament that he ascended into Heaven with two angels 9 This and the related view that he avoided crucifixion altogether has given rise to several speculations about what happened to him in the supposed remaining years of his life but these are not accepted by mainstream scholars either 9 10 11 Contents 1 The 18 unknown years 1 1 New Testament gap 1 2 Background of Galilee and Judea 1 3 Other sources 2 Claims of young Jesus in Britain 3 Claims of young Jesus in India and or Tibet 3 1 Nicolas Notovich 1887 3 2 Levi H Dowling 1908 3 3 Nicholas Roerich 1925 3 4 Rejection by modern mainstream New Testament scholarship 4 Other claims 4 1 Japan 5 Artistic and literary renditions 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingThe 18 unknown years edit nbsp Jesus Discourse with His Disciples James Tissot c 1890New Testament gap edit nbsp James Tissot s depiction of a young Jesus at the Temple Luke 2 46 c 1890 Brooklyn MuseumFollowing the accounts of Jesus young life there is a gap of about 18 years in his story in the New Testament 4 6 12 Other than the statement that after he was 12 years old Luke 2 42 Jesus advanced in wisdom and stature and in favour with God and men Luke 2 52 the New Testament has no other details regarding the gap 4 Christian tradition suggests that Jesus simply lived in Galilee during that period 13 Modern scholarship holds that there is little historical information to determine what happened during those years 4 The ages of 12 and 29 the approximate ages at either end of the unknown years have some significance in Judaism of the Second Temple period 13 is the age of the bar mitzvah the age of secular maturity 2 and 30 the age of readiness for the priesthood although Jesus was not of the tribe of Levi 14 Christians have generally taken the statement in Mark 6 3 referring to Jesus as Is not this the carpenter Greek oὐx oὗtos ἐstin ὁ tektwn romanized ouch outos estin ho tektōn as an indication that before the age of 30 Jesus had been working as a carpenter 15 The tone of the passage leading to the question Is not this the carpenter suggests familiarity with Jesus in the area reinforcing that he had been generally seen as a carpenter in the gospel account before the start of his ministry 15 Matthew 13 55 poses the question as Is not this the carpenter s son suggesting that the profession tektōn had been a family business and Jesus was engaged in it before starting his preaching and ministry in the gospel accounts 16 17 Background of Galilee and Judea edit See also Cultural and historical background of Jesus The historical record of the large number of workmen employed in the rebuilding of Sepphoris has led Batey 1984 and others to suggest that when Jesus was in his teens and twenties carpenters would have found more employment at Sepphoris rather than at the small town of Nazareth 18 Aside from secular employment some attempts have been made to reconstruct the theological and rabbinical circumstances of the unknown years e g soon after the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls novelist Edmund Wilson 1955 suggested Jesus may have studied with the Essenes 19 followed by the Unitarian Charles F Potter 1958 and others 20 Other writers have taken the view that the predominance of Pharisees in Judea during that period and Jesus own later recorded interaction with the Pharisees makes a Pharisee background more likely as in the recorded case of another Galilean Josephus studied with all three groups Pharisees Sadducees and Essenes 21 Other sources edit See also Infancy gospels and Pseudepigrapha The New Testament apocrypha and early Christian pseudepigrapha preserve various pious legends filling the gaps in Christ s youth Charlesworth 2008 explains this as due to the canonical Gospels having left a narrative vacuum that many have attempted to fill 22 Jesus childhood is described in the Infancy Gospel of Thomas the Gospel of Pseudo Matthew and the Syriac Infancy Gospel among other sources 23 Claims of young Jesus in Britain editDuring the late 12th century Joseph of Arimathea became connected with Arthurian legend appearing in them as the first keeper of the Holy Grail 24 This idea first appears in Robert de Boron s Joseph d Arimathie fr in which Joseph receives the Grail from an apparition of Jesus and sends it with his followers to Britain This theme is elaborated upon in Boron s sequels and in subsequent Arthurian works penned by others 24 Some Arthurian legends hold that Jesus travelled to Britain as a boy lived at Priddy in the Mendips and built the first wattle cabin at Glastonbury 25 William Blake s early 19th century poem And did those feet in ancient time was inspired by the story of Jesus travelling to Britain In some versions Joseph was supposedly a tin merchant and took Jesus under his care when his mother Mary was widowed 26 27 Gordon Strachan wrote Jesus the Master Builder Druid Mysteries and the Dawn of Christianity 1998 which was the basis of the documentary titled And Did Those Feet 2009 Strachan believed Jesus may have travelled to Britain to study with the Druids 28 Claims of young Jesus in India and or Tibet editNicolas Notovich 1887 edit Main article Nicolas Notovitch nbsp Nicolas NotovitchIn 1887 Russian war correspondent Nicolas Notovitch claimed that while at the Hemis Monastery in Ladakh he had learned of a document called the Life of Saint Issa Best of the Sons of Men Isa being the Arabic name of Jesus in Islam 29 30 31 Notovitch s story with a translated text of the Life of Saint Issa was published in French in 1894 as La vie inconnue de Jesus Christ Unknown Life of Jesus Christ 5 31 According to the scrolls Jesus abandoned Jerusalem at the age of 13 and set out towards Sindh intending to improve and perfect himself in the divine understanding and to studying the laws of the great Buddha He crossed Punjab and reached Puri Jagannath where he studied the Vedas under Brahmin priests He spent six years in Puri and Rajgirh near Nalanda the ancient seat of Hindu learning Then he went to the Himalayas and spent time in Tibetan monasteries studying Buddhism 29 and through Persia returned to Jerusalem at the age of 29 Notovitch s writings were immediately controversial and Max Muller stated that either the monks at the monastery had deceived Notovitch or played a joke on him or he had fabricated the evidence 29 32 33 Muller then wrote to the monastery at Hemis and the head lama replied that there had been no Western visitor at the monastery in the past fifteen years and there were no documents related to Notovitch s story 34 J Archibald Douglas then visited Hemis monastery and interviewed the head lama who stated that Notovitch had never been there 34 Indologist Leopold von Schroeder called Notovitch s story a big fat lie 35 Wilhelm Schneemelcher states that Notovich s accounts were soon exposed as fabrications and that to date no one has even had a glimpse at the manuscripts Notovitch claims to have had 5 Notovich responded to claims to defend himself 36 But once his story had been re examined by historians some even questioning his existence it is claimed that Notovitch confessed to having fabricated the evidence 35 Bart D Ehrman states that Today there is not a single recognized scholar on the planet who has any doubts about the matter The entire story was invented by Notovitch who earned a good deal of money and a substantial amount of notoriety for his hoax 37 However others deny that Notovich ever accepted the accusations against him that his account was a forgery etc Although he was not impressed with his story Sir Francis Younghusband recalls meeting Nicolas Notovitch near Skardu not long before Notovitch had visited Hemis monastery 38 In 1922 Swami Abhedananda the president of the Vedanta Society of New York between 1897 and 1921 and the author of several books went to the Himalayas on foot and reached Tibet where he studied Buddhist philosophy and Tibetan Buddhism He went to the Hemis Monastery and allegedly found the manuscript translated by Notovitch which was a Tibetan translation of the original scrolls written in Pali The lama said that it was a copy and that the original was in a monastery at Marbour near Lhasa After Abhedananda s death in 1939 one of his disciples inquired about the documents at the Hemis monastery but was told that they had disappeared 39 40 Levi H Dowling 1908 edit Main article The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ In 1908 Levi H Dowling published the Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ which he claimed was channeled to him from the Akashic Records as the true story of the life of Jesus including the lost eighteen years silent in the New Testament The narrative follows the young Jesus across India Tibet Persia Assyria Greece and Egypt 41 Dowling s work was later used by Holger Kersten who combined it with elements derived from other sources such as the Ahmadiyya beliefs 10 Nicholas Roerich 1925 edit Main article Nicholas RoerichIn 1925 Nicholas Roerich recorded his travels through Ladakh in India This portion of his journal was published in 1933 as part of Altai Himalaya He recounts legends of Issa shared with him by the Ladakhi people and lamas including that Issa Jesus traveled from Palestine to India with merchants and taught the people An extended section of this text parallels sections of Notovitch s book and Roerich comments on the remarkable similarity of the accounts of the Ladakhis to these passages despite the Ladakhis having no knowledge of Notovitch s book He also recounts that the stories of others on his travel refer to various manuscripts and legends regarding Jesus Issa and that he personally visited the abbot of Hemis 42 nbsp Jesus in the workshop of Joseph the Carpenter by Georges de La Tour 1640sRejection by modern mainstream New Testament scholarship edit Modern mainstream Christian scholarship has generally rejected any travels by Jesus to India Tibet or surrounding areas as without historical basis Robert Van Voorst states that modern scholarship has almost unanimously agreed that claims of the travels of Jesus to Tibet Kashmir or rest of India contain nothing of value 7 Marcus Borg states that the suggestions that an adult Jesus traveled to Egypt or India and came into contact with Buddhism are without historical foundation 8 John Dominic Crossan states that none of the theories presented about the travels of Jesus to fill the gap between his early life and the start of his ministry have been supported by modern scholarship 6 Leslie Houlden states that although modern parallels between the teachings of Jesus and Buddha have been drawn these comparisons emerged after missionary contacts in the 19th century and there is no historically reliable evidence of contacts between Buddhism and Jesus 43 Paula Fredriksen states that no serious scholarly work places Jesus outside the backdrop of 1st century Palestinian Judaism 44 Other claims editJapan edit nbsp The burial ground to what some claim is Jesus final resting place in Shingō Aomori Some people in Japan have believed that Jesus visited them during the lost years and possibly survived the crucifixion to remain in Japan for the rest of his life The legend exists in a village named Shingō Aomori 45 Artistic and literary renditions edit nbsp The boy Jesus represented as the Good Shepherd image above the North door of the Church of the Good Shepherd Rosemont Pennsylvania In 1996 the documentary Mysteries of the Bible presented an overview of the theories related to the travels of Jesus to India and interviewed a number of scholars on the subject 46 Edward T Martin s book King of Travelers Jesus Lost Years in India 2008 was used as the basis for Paul Davids film Jesus in India 2008 shown on the Sundance Channel The book and film cover Martin s search for Notovitch s claimed Life of Issa 47 The book Lamb The Gospel According to Biff Christ s Childhood Pal by Christopher Moore is a fictional comedy which tells the story of Jesus s adolescence and his travels to India and China from the point of view of Jesus s best friend Biff 48 See also editBasilideans Gospel of Barnabas Gospel of Basilides Gospel of James Life of Jesus in the New Testament The Life and Teachings of Jesus in The Urantia BookReferences edit E g see Emil Bock The Childhood of Jesus The Unknown Years ISBN 0863156193 a b c James H Charlesworth The Historical Jesus An Essential Guide 2008 ISBN 0687021677 From twelve to thirty then are Jesus silent years which does not denote he was silent It means the Evangelists remain silent about what Jesus did Only Luke reports that Jesus was in the Temple when he was twelve apparently for his bar mitzvah 2 42 and that he began his public ministry when he was about thirty years of age 3 23 What did Jesus do from age twelve to thirty E g see Lost Years of Jesus Revealed by Charles F Potter ISBN 0449130398 a b c d e f All the People in the Bible by Richard R Losch May 1 2008 Eerdsmans Press ISBN 0802824544 209 Nothing is known of the life of Jesus during the seventeen years from the time of the incident in the temple until his baptism by John the Baptist when he was about thirty Countless theories have been proposed among them that he studied in Alexandria in the Jewish centers there and that he lived among the Essenes in the Judean desert there is no evidence to substantiate any of these claims and we have to accept that we simply don t know The most likely thing is that he continued to live in Nazareth and ply his trade there a b c New Testament Apocrypha Vol 1 Gospels and Related Writings by Wilhelm Schneemelcher and R Mcl Wilson Dec 1 1990 ISBN 066422721X page 84 a particular book by Nicolas Notovich Di Lucke im Leben Jesus 1894 shortly after the publication of the book the reports of travel experiences were already unmasked as lies The fantasies about Jesus in India were also soon recognized as invention down to today nobody has had a glimpse of the manuscripts with the alleged narratives about Jesus a b c Crossan John Dominic Richard G Watts 1999 Who is Jesus answers to your questions about the historical Jesus Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Press pp 28 29 ISBN 0664258425 a b Voorst Robert E Van 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament an introduction to the ancient evidence Grand Rapids Mich Eerdmans p 17 ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 Jesus putative travels to India and Tibet his grave in Srinagar Kashmir and so forth Scholarship has almost unanimously agreed that these references to Jesus are so late and tendentious as to contain virtually nothing of value for understanding the Historical Jesus a b Borg Marcus J 2005 The Spirit Filled Experience of Jesus In Dunn James D G ed The Historical Jesus in Recent Research Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns p 303 ISBN 1 57506 100 7 a b Voorst Robert E Van 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament Grand Rapids Mich Eerdmans pp 78 79 ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 a b New Testament Apocrypha Vol 1 Gospels and Related Writings by Wilhelm Schneemelcher and R Mcl Wilson Dec 1 1990 ISBN 066422721X page 84 Schneemelcher states that Kersten s work is based on fantasy untruth and ignorance above all in the linguistic area Schneemelcher states that Kersten for example attempted to work up Notovitch and Ahmadiyya legends with many other alleged witnesses into a complete picture Thus Levi s Aquarian Gospel is pressed into service along with the Turin shroud and the Qumran texts Focus on Jesus by Gerald O Collins and Daniel Kendall Sep 1 1998 ISBN 0852443609 Mercer Univ Press pages 169 171 Maier Paul L Yamauchi Edwin M 1989 The Date of the Nativity and Chronology of Jesus In Vardaman Jerry ed Chronos kairos Christos nativity and chronological studies presented to Jack Finegan Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns pp 113 129 ISBN 0 931464 50 1 Lloyd Kenyon Jones The Eighteen Absent Years of Jesus Christ as a skilled and dutiful artisan and as a loving son and neighbor Jesus was using those qualities which were to flame forth was the work which He was to do that He did not leave that home and that preparation until the mature age of thirty Reiner Edwin W 1971 The Atonement Nashville Southern Pub Association ISBN 0812700511 OCLC 134392 Page 140 And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age being as was supposed the son of Joseph Luke 3 23 But Christ of course did not belong to the Levitical priesthood He had descended neither from Aaron nor from the tribe of Levi a b The Gospel According to Mark Meaning and Message by George Martin Sep 2005 ISBN 0829419705 Loyola Univ Press pages 128 129 The Gospel of Matthew Sacra Pagina Series Vol 1 by Daniel J Harrington Donald P Senior Sep 1 1991 ISBN 0814658032 Liturgical Press page 211 The Gospel of Matthew by R T France Jul 27 2007 ISBN 080282501X page 549 W D Davies Dale Allison Jr Matthew 8 18 2004 ISBN 0567083659 T amp T Clarke Page 456 For the suggestion that Jesus worked not only in a wood worker s shop in Nazareth but perhaps also in Sepphoris helping to construct Herod s capital see R A Batey Is not this the Carpenter NTS 30 1984 pp 249 58 Batey also calls Menahem Mansoor The Dead Sea Scrolls A College Textbook and a Study Guide Brill Publishers 1964 Page 156 Edmund Wilson suggests that the unknown years in the life of Jesus ages 12 29 might have been spent with the sect but there is no reference to this in the texts Charles F Potter The Lost Years of Jesus Revealed Random House 1958 For centuries Christian students of the Bible have wondered where Jesus was and what he did during the so called eighteen silent years between the ages of twelve and thirty The amazing and dramatic scrolls of the great Essene library found in cave after cave near the Dead Sea have given us the answer at last That during those lost years Jesus was a student at this Essene school is becoming increasingly apparent Brennan Hill Jesus the Christ contemporary perspectives 1991 ISBN 1585953032 Page 6 than about the people with whom Jesus lived Josephus d 100 C E was born just after the time of Jesus He claims to have studied with the Pharisees Sadducees and Essenes as a young man James H Charlesworth The Historical Jesus An Essential Guide 2008 ISBN 0687021677 The New Testament apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha preserve many legends concocted to explain Jesus youth Tales have him The Evangelists have left a narrative vacuum and many have attempted to fill it Only Luke reports that Jesus Roten J Janssen T Childhood of Jesus University of Dayton Retrieved 1 April 2021 a b The Cambridge Companion to the Arthurian Legend by Elizabeth Archibald and Ad Putter 10 Sep 2009 ISBN 0521677882 page 50 Camelot and the vision of Albion by Geoffrey Ashe 1971 ISBN 0434034010 Page 157 Blake may be referring to one of the odder offshoots of the Arthur Grail imbroglio the belief that Jesus visited Britain as a boy lived at Priddy in the Mendips and built the first wattle cabin at Glastonbury This tale seems to have arisen quite Milton A Poem The Illuminated Books of William Blake Volume 5 by William Blake Robert N Essick and Joseph Viscomi Sep 4 1998 ISBN 0691001480 Princeton Univ Press Page 214 The notion that Jesus visited Britain may have been reinforced for Blake by the name Lambeth house of the lamb see 4 14 15 note Compare Isaiah 52 7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings that Jesus A Life by A N Wilson 1993 ISBN 0393326330 page 87 One such legend which haunted the imagination of William Blake and through Blake s lyric Jerusalem has passed into British national legend is the story that Jesus visited Britain as a boy Though written sources for this folk tale are Jesus may have visited England says Scottish academic Film review And Did Those Feet BBC News 26 November 2009 Retrieved 4 March 2013 St Augustine wrote to the Pope to say he d discovered a church in Glastonbury built by followers of Jesus But St Gildas a 6th Century British cleric said it was built by Jesus himself It s a very very ancient church which went back perhaps to AD37 a b c Korbel Jonathan Preckel Claudia 2016 Ghulam Aḥmad al Qadiyani The Messiah of the Christians Peace upon Him in India India 1908 In Bentlage Bjorn Eggert Marion Kramer Hans Martin Reichmuth Stefan eds Religious Dynamics under the Impact of Imperialism and Colonialism Numen Book Series Vol 154 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 426 442 doi 10 1163 9789004329003 034 ISBN 978 90 04 32511 1 Retrieved 25 October 2020 The Unknown Life Of Jesus Christ By The Discoverer Of The Manuscript by Nicolas Notovitch Oct 15 2007 ISBN 1434812839 a b Forged Writing in the Name of God Why the Bible s Authors Are Not Who We Think They Are by Bart D Ehrman Mar 6 2012 ISBN 0062012622 page 252 one of the most widely disseminated modern forgeries is called The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ Simon J Joseph Jesus in India Journal of the American Academy of Religion Volume 80 Issue 1 pp 161 199 Max Muller suggested that either the Hemis monks had deceived Notovitch or that Notovitch himself was the author of these passages Last Essays by Friedrich M Mueller 1901 republished in Jun 1973 ISBN 0404114393 page 181 it is pleasanter to believe that Buddhist monks can at times be wags than that M Notovitch is a rogue a b Bradley Malkovsky Some Recent Developments in Hindu Understandings of Jesus in the Journal of Hindu Christian Studies 2010 Vol 23 Article 5 Muller then wrote to the chief lama st Hemis and received the reply that no Westerner had visited there in the past fifteen years nor was the monastery in possession of any documents having to do with the story Notovitch had made public in his famous book J Archibald Douglas took it upon himself to make the journey to the Hemis monistry to conduct a personal interview with the same head monk with whom Muller had corresponded What Douglas learned there completely concurred with what Muller had learned Notovitch had never been there a b Indology Indomania and Orientalism by Douglas T McGetchin Jan 1 2010 Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 083864208X page 133 Faced with this cross examination Notovich confessed to fabricating his evidence D L Snellgrove and T Skorupski 1977 The Cultural Heritage of Ladakh p 127 Prajna Press ISBN 0 87773 700 2 Ehrman Bart D February 2011 8 Forgeries Lies Deceptions and the Writings of the New Testament Modern Forgeries Lies and Deceptions Forged Writing in the Name of God Why the Bible s Authors Are Not Who We Think They Are First Edition EPub ed New York HarperCollins e books pp 282 283 ISBN 978 0 06 207863 6 The Heart of a Continent a Narrative of Travels in Manchuria Across the Gobi Desert Through the Himalayas the Pamirs and Hunza 1884 1894 1904 pp 180 181 Chaitanya Brahmachari Bhairab Swami Abhedananda s Journey into Kashmir and Tibet Ramakrishna Vedanta Math Calcutta 1987 first published in Bengali in 1929 pp 119 121 164 166 ISBN 0874816432 Richard Hooper Jesus Buddha Krishna and Lao Tzu 2012 p 176 ISBN 1571746803 The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ by Levi H Dowling by Levi H Dowling original publication 1908 ISBN 1602062242 pages 12 and 65 Altai Himalaya by Nicholas Roerich www roerich org Retrieved 2020 04 15 Jesus The Complete Guide 2006 by Leslie Houlden ISBN 082648011X page 140 Fredriksen Paula From Jesus to Christ ISBN 0300084579 Yale University Press 2000 p xxvi Lidz Franz January 2013 The Little Known Legend of Jesus in Japan Smithsonian Retrieved 16 April 2021 National Geographic Channel 25 May 1996 Mysteries of the Bible The Lost Years of Jesus W Barnes Tatum Jesus A Brief History 2009 Page 237 On the site there appears the title in English with eye catching flourishes Jesus in India 50 Instead of a narrative retelling of the Jesus story Jesus in India follows the American adventurer Edward T Martin from Lampasas Texas as he Maass Donald Mar 14 2011 The Breakout Novelist Craft and Strategies for Career Fiction Writers p 222 ISBN 978 1582979908 Further reading editFida Hassnain Search For The Historical Jesus Down to Earth Books 2006 ISBN 1 878115 17 0 Tricia McCannon Jesus The Explosive Story of the 30 Lost Years and the Ancient Mystery Religions Charlottesville VA Hampton Roads Publishing Company Inc 2010 ISBN 978 1 57174 607 8 Charles Potter Lost Years of Jesus Revealed Fawcett 1985 ISBN 0 449 13039 8 Elizabeth Clare Prophet The Lost Years of Jesus Life Documentary Evidence of Jesus s 17 Year Journey to the East Gardiner Mont Summit University Press 1987 ISBN 978 0 916766 87 0 Paramahansa Yogananda The Unknown Years of Jesus Sojourn in India Discourse 5 in The Second Coming of Christ The Resurrection of the Christ Within You A Revelatory Commentary on the Original Teachings of Jesus 2 vol Los Angeles CA Self Realization Fellowship 2004 ISBN 0 87612 555 0 Travel Sanga Was Jesus In India The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ https www travelsanga com post was jesus in india the unknown life of jesus christ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unknown years of Jesus amp oldid 1181080034 Claims of young Jesus in India and or Tibet, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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