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The Changing Faces of Jesus by Géza Vermes
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The Changing Faces of Jesus

by Geza Vermes

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105None59,230 (3.39)4
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Penguin (Non-Classics) (2002), Paperback, 336 pages

Member:PaxChristi
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:Jesus Christ, Historical Jesus
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Géza Vermes

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0142196029, Paperback)

The Changing Faces of Jesus is a reflection on the ways that translations of Scripture have transformed believers' understandings of Jesus. Author Geza Vermes, a biblical scholar perhaps best known for his English translation of the Dead Sea Scrolls, reviews the varying portraits of Jesus in Scripture, particularly focusing on the letters of Paul and the Gospel of John. The author contends that, "by the end of the first century Christianity had lost sight of the real Jesus and of the original meaning of his message." The real Jesus, a "religious man with an irresistible charismatic charm," was replaced by "Jesus the Christ, the transcendent object of the Christian religion." Vermes avoids the polemic tone often adopted by scholars who make similar arguments. Here is an example of the modest style in which this author makes his momentous claims:
As a historian I consider Jesus, the primitive church and the New Testament as part and parcel of first-century Judaism and seek to read them as such rather than through the eyes of a theologian who may often be conditioned, and subconsciously influenced, by two millennia of Christian belief and church directives.
This tone will help readers--even those predisposed to disagree with Vermes--to understand his argument that religious belief has skewed understanding of the central figure of the Christian religion. --Michael Joseph Gross

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 07 Jan 2010 19:57:45 -0500)

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