登入
選單
返回
Google圖書搜尋
The Many Faces of Christ
Philip Jenkins
其他書名
The Thousand-Year Story of the Survival and Influence of the Lost Gospels
出版
Basic Books
, 2015-10-13
主題
Religion / Christian Church / History
Religion / Christian Theology / History
Religion / Blasphemy, Heresy & Apostasy
ISBN
0465061613
9780465061617
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=f2jKBwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The standard account of early Christianity tells us that the first centuries after Jesus' death witnessed an efflorescence of Christian sects, each with its own gospel. We are taught that these alternative scriptures, which represented intoxicating, daring, and often bizarre ideas, were suppressed in the fourth and fifth centuries, when the Church canonized the gospels we know today: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The rest were lost, destroyed, or hidden.
In
The Many Faces of Christ
, the renowned religious historian Philip Jenkins thoroughly refutes our most basic assumptions about the Lost Gospels. He reveals that dozens of alternative gospels not only survived the canonization process but in many cases remained influential texts within the official Church. Whole new gospels continued to be written and accepted. For a thousand years, these strange stories about the life and death of Jesus were freely admitted onto church premises, approved for liturgical reading, read by ordinary laypeople for instruction and pleasure, and cited as authoritative by scholars and theologians.
The Lost Gospels spread far and wide, crossing geographic and religious borders. The ancient Gospel of Nicodemus penetrated into Southern and Central Asia, while both Muslims and Jews wrote and propagated gospels of their own. In Europe, meanwhile, it was not until the Reformation and Counter-Reformation that the Lost Gospels were effectively driven from churches. But still, many survived, and some continue to shape Christian practice and belief in our own day.
Offering a revelatory new perspective on the formation of the biblical canon, the nature of the early Church, and the evolution of Christianity,
The Many Faces of Christ
restores these Lost Gospels to their central place in Christian history.