Craig A. Evans "Fabricating Jesus" - 04/10/07 06:47 PM
Craig A. Evans
"Fabricating Jesus: How Modern Scholars Distort the Gospels"
A response to those who have accepted the Thomas, Mary Magdalen, and Judas Gospels in place of the Gospels according to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
From Amazon.com----Evans begins by discussing his own religious background and how it was affected by the critical study of the New Testament and historical Jesus. He uses this personal reflection to try and understand why some respected scholars have embraced such far-fetched theories. One of his explanations is that some of these scholars came from strict, fundamentalist backgrounds. When exposed to the critical studies, they were not flexible enough to accomodate the new information in their existing religious mind set. As a result, their faith was shattered instead of modified. They see little middle ground betweeen strict fundamentalism and utter rejection of traditional positions. Evans points to himself as evidence of a middle ground that actually bases its opinions on better historical evidences.
Eddie H.
"Fabricating Jesus: How Modern Scholars Distort the Gospels"
A response to those who have accepted the Thomas, Mary Magdalen, and Judas Gospels in place of the Gospels according to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
From Amazon.com----Evans begins by discussing his own religious background and how it was affected by the critical study of the New Testament and historical Jesus. He uses this personal reflection to try and understand why some respected scholars have embraced such far-fetched theories. One of his explanations is that some of these scholars came from strict, fundamentalist backgrounds. When exposed to the critical studies, they were not flexible enough to accomodate the new information in their existing religious mind set. As a result, their faith was shattered instead of modified. They see little middle ground betweeen strict fundamentalism and utter rejection of traditional positions. Evans points to himself as evidence of a middle ground that actually bases its opinions on better historical evidences.
Eddie H.