31 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Much more than I expected, actually., July 19, 2000
Having read Crossan's "big" books, I picked this one up on a whim (hey, it was cheap). I figured it would be predominantly redundant, given that highly popular model of "publish scholarly work, follow with a couple spin-offs for lay audiences" that's making the rounds these days.
Not so -- this is much more than a Jesus Seminar pamphlet of "authentic sayings of Jesus." As a previous reader mentioned, there's one quote per page, but there are endnotes with a couple paragraphs of commentary per quote, plus a decent forward on the Kingdom movement vs. the Jesus Movement. More on the art at the end.
I found the vast majority of the quotes to be aptly chosen and thought provoking. I think it is a mistake to consider them "light." I sat there with a couple bibles and a couple different volumes of commentary dissecting each one. It's great for people like me who got wrapped up in theological niceties and historical circumstance, only to find ourselves losing touch with what Jesus _said_. It brings us back to the word whilst still humoring us with wholesome academic goodness.
Assuming my situation is not a singular phenomenon, of course.
The plates are indeed reletively poor reproductions, but such is the nature of inexpensive mass production. There are also even more lengthy endnotes on the 25 plates reproduced in the book, plus descriptions, locations, context, etc. of a good 40 more that do NOT appear in the book. It's certainly a good starting point for doing further research on early Christian art -- for the price, having that reference alone is worth it.
Taking price/performance into account, it's a five starer. Granted, I would have liked a little more commentary on each quote (which raises more questions than it answers, though assumably this is the point in the process of provoking thought), but we can't have it all, now can we?
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent light reading, January 26, 2000
This book is simply an extremely basic view of Crossans much larger book "The Historical Jesus". For those out there who don't have the time, patience, or just plain level of understanding to read four hundred and fifty pages of scholarly language can find this an excellent introduction to the works of Crossan. It is also very useful for the Christian without a lot of time or attention span. I gave this to a Christian friend of mine who is severely dislexic and cannot read the bible easily. Crossan breaks everything into well spaced easily readable texts. This book is great for people who have difficulty reading for any reason and does not require a great attention span. The book can be set down and picked back up at the drop of a hat and the reader will miss nothing. I found this especially useful reading for when I was travelling as I would often break from it to look out the window or talk to the driver. Of course, it lacks the depth of Crossan's "Historical Jesus" upon which this book is mostly based; but not everyone wants that much depth.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Placing Jesus in the Context of the 1st Century A.D., July 9, 1997
By A Customer
Without a doubt, the most learned scholar on the
topic of Jesus Christ. What Crossan does in this
book is interpret the sayings attributed to Jesus
through the eyes of the 1st century A.D., not
through 20th century eyes.
He puts the meaning of the Gospels in the context
of the 1st centruy. Social: Jesus and most everyone
else with the exception of the ruling class were
peasants - illiterate and uneducated. Political:
Judea was a Roman province and many resented their
occupation of the Holy Land. Economic: in the split
between the "Have's" and "Have Not's", Jesus and
his followers were the Have Not's.
Many of Jesus's parables don't seem to make much
sense, are contradictory or seem not relevant to
today. But once you read them armed with the
Socio-Politico-Economic underpinnings of the 1st
century A.D., you get a much clearer and deeper
understanding of his teachings.
Although many Catholics that feel threatened by
Crossan's (a former priest) academic work on Jesus,
Crossan devotes the forward of the book explaining
how he can reconcile his Catholic faith with 20th
century secular study.
At the time of Christ
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