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Jesus

From dKosopedia

Jesus, the Greek form of the Hebrew name Yeshua ("He will save"), called the "Christ" or "Messiah" (from the Hebrew moshiach anointed one). Born in Bethlehem c. 6 BC/E, crucified by Roman soldiers c. 30 AD.

There is a mention of Christ's execution in a Roman historical document (By Tacitus) which while not written in the same decade of his execusion was also not written by a supporter thus proving he did exist. As for those who desire earlier records Rome burned multiple times between the rough date of Christs crucifiction and Tacitus's writing.

Jesus was a carpenter turned wandering preacher and teacher, and is often depicted in those terms in the four gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John), declarations of "good news" brought about by his ministry and presence.

Christians claim that Jesus was indeed the messiah promised to the Jewish people, and that he did indeed rise from the grave three days after his death.

Care should be taken to separate Jesus, the earthly teacher from the resurrected Christ. Christians worship the risen Christ, according to Karl Barth, but do not have available to them the historical person of Jesus, about whom we know little, even from the works of the New Testament. Barth issued a sharp critique of the liberal Christianity of the early 20th century, charging that the church had filled in the blanks in its knowledge of the historical Jesus with a distorted and culture-bound reflection of its own aspirations. Against this self-worship, Barth posed the unknowable and culture-transcending nature of Christ, which stood in judgment of all human pretension and error.

Though Barth's wrath was directed at the Christian establishment that led Europe into the First World War, his critique stands as a constant reminder to believers of all varieties. The ways of God are not our ways, and it is never safe to claim to have God on our side.

The chapter titles of Jaroslav Pelikan's Jesus through the Centuries demonstrates the diversity of images of Jesus present in the Christian church:

It is particularly important to remember this diversity when confronted with the seemingly vast popularity of the depiction of Jesus in Mel Gibson's movie The Passion of the Christ. Attempts to reduce the life and work of Jesus to the suffering of his last hours often serves as cover for other agendas:

"Every era gets the Jesus it wants," claims Susannah Heschel. Commenting on The Passion of the Christ, the Dartmouth religion professor says that Mel Gibson's Jesus, "is not simply the product of his religious imagination; it is an effort to shape the American cultural moment," as it attempts to sanctify "the right-wing memory of the horrific events of September 11--the Passion of America." Gibson's Jesus resembles the fascist myth of the "Aryan Jesus," a Jesus marked by three myths: he was no lamb of God but rather a macho man; he was racially Aryan, not Jewish; and he liberated himself from the constraints of the Jewish religion. Like the Aryan Jesus, Gibson's Jesus "withstands a barrage of physical abuse," and the film challenges viewers: "Are you macho enough to watch this film, man enough to be a Christian?" Ultimately, the question The Passion poses for Heschel is whether we will see in it an expression of our own suffering as Americans, or regard Jesus' suffering as representative of the suffering of those who are casualties of American bombs. Christian Century, June 15, 2004

Quotes about Jesus

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Retrieved from "http://localhost../../../j/e/s/Jesus.html"

This page was last modified 02:29, 13 June 2009 by roger. Based on work by joshuamichaelsanders@hotmail.com, CD and Andrew Oh-Willeke and dKosopedia user(s) Kaderi, BartFraden, Centerfielder, Allamakee Democrat, PatriotismOverProfits, Lestatdelc, One of the people, Pastordan and Lynn S.. Content is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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