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The Other Bible by Sandra Barnstone
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The Other Bible (original 1984; edition 1994)

by Sandra Barnstone (Author)

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1,068619,332 (4.02)5
A collection of ancient, esteric texts from Judeo-Christian traditions, excluded from the official canon of the Old and New Testaments.
Member:WierdCollarGuy
Title:The Other Bible
Authors:Sandra Barnstone (Author)
Info:HarperSanFrancisco (1994), 208 pages
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The Other Bible by Willis Barnstone (Editor) (1984)

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A collection of ancient esoteric texts
  MichaelLibrary | Jan 29, 2024 |
A good and clear translation of a great variety of texts from different times, religious movements, and places and the best sampler of what an alternate history Bible might have looked like (if Christianity had never existed, or a more Jewish form had won out, or a more Gnostic one etc.) Contains Dead Sea Scrolls, Jewish mysticism, Christian literature, Gnostic works, poems and much more.

Full of a splendid assortment of wonders (and a helpful selection of rarities like the Odes of Solomon) grouped by type of book. (Read the Acts of the Apostles and wondering what the deed-books of other disciples read like? Read on. Read the Book of Revelation and wondering what other books of its ilk read like -- they were a genre. Read on.) Nearly every work I would wish to give a reader to show the variety and splendor of non-Biblical literature is here, a thoughtfully chosen anthology.

Best read in small doses for its sheer strangeness and variety, but warmly recommended.

-Kushana ( )
4 vote Kushana | Dec 27, 2010 |
Excellent book to use to teach how the canon was formed. However, even they leave out texts like the Gospel of Mary. ( )
  medievalmama | Jan 28, 2008 |
Excellent collection of Early Christian era texts. Contains Gnostic, Dead Sea Scroll, Apocrypha and Jewish texts. Pretty obvious why most of these didn't make it into the Christian Bible. But these are valuable texts that rival the bible in importance when we consider the evolution of religious thought in the formative period of the Christian Church. The Gnostics are the most heavily represented. Several branchs of Gnostic texts are included here. It would be nice to see the Nag Hammadi books represented a little better however. While the texts of the christian authors are interesting, the introductory matter to each of the individual texts makes this Bible well worth buying. Barnstones introductions help bring this disparate group of Christian thinkers into perspective. ( )
1 vote ahystorian | Feb 25, 2007 |
07/14/2009: read 'THE GOSPEL OF NICODEMUS,' a text once considered part of the canon and wildly popular during Medieval times. '...a passion gospel purporting to be an official report of the trial, crucifixion, and resurrection of Jesus.... one of the most dramatic and moving documents of early Christianity. Argumentative rather than spiritual, it reads like an exciting eyewitness report of murder, miracle, and resurrection.... a fabricated record of the third or fourth century written specifically as a pious counterblast to Pagan statements concerning Jesus.... Faith or disbelief makes one person's miracles another's sorcery.... In keeping with other works of the period, the Gospel is virulently anti-Jewish. It attempts editorially to dissociate Jesus as well as early biblical figures from Jewish identity.... the term 'Jews' becomes a stereotyping device to condemn a rival alien people.' (359-360)

From the first part, 'Acts of Pilate': Medieval romance writers invented the Holy Grail from legends about Joseph of Arimathaea, who claimed the body of Jesus and placed it in the tomb. Before that happened, though, Jewish leaders advocating for Jesus' death imprisoned Joseph. He is rescued by divine intervention. Joseph describes how, 'at midnight as I stood and prayed, the house where you shut me in was raised up the four corners, and I saw as it were a lightning flash in my eyes. Full of fear, I fell to the ground. And someone took me by the hand and raised me up from the place where I had fallen, and something moist like water flowed from my head to my feet, and the smell of fragrant oil reached my nostrils.' (372)

From the second part, 'Christ's Descent into Hell': Hades is the personification of death, a being who devours the dead and holds them in his gut. He and Satan are fearful that Jesus will steal all the dead from them and bring the dead up to heaven.
'Then Hades said to his demons: 'Make fast well and strongly the gates of brass and the bars of iron, and hold my locks, and stand upright and watch every point. For if he [the crucified Jesus] comes in, woe will seize us.'' (376)
Of course, Jesus breaks through all the brass and iron and redeems those lost souls who died before His coming. Then Hades and Satan squabble about who is to blame.
'And Hades took Satan and said to him: 'O Beelzebub, heir of fire and torment, enemy of the saints, through what necessity did you contrive that the King of glory should be crucified, so that he should come here and strip us naked? Turn and see that not one dead man is left in me, but that all which you gained through the Tree of Knowledge you have lost through the tree of the cross.' (377)

10/14/2008: read the 'Infancy Gospels' -- of James, Matthew, Thomas, as well as the Latin & Arabic ones -- researching Mariology; also dipped into the 'Apocalypses.'
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  Mary_Overton | Jul 15, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Had Alexandria triumphed and not Rome,

the extravagant and muddled stories that I have summarized here would be coherent, majestic, and perfectly ordinary.

—Jorge Luis Borges (on the Gnostics)
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For Marija Dionisia Maddock
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INTRODUCTION
William Blake's wife, Catherine Boucher, once complained that she had little of Mr. Blake's company for he was always in Paradise.
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A collection of ancient, esteric texts from Judeo-Christian traditions, excluded from the official canon of the Old and New Testaments.

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