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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Explanatory notes and extensive information, February 4, 2005
This review is from: The Unknown Life of Jesus: The Original Text of Nicolas Notovich's 1887 Discovery (Paperback)
A controversial manuscript since its first publication in 1890, The Unknown Life of Jesus is the original text of Nicolas Notovitch's efforts to learn of the years of Jesus' life unaccounted for in the Bible - when he was between the ages of 13 and 29. During Notovitch's travels through India, he learned of ancient manuscripts allegedly documenting Jesus' visit to Buddhist monasteries. Notovitch eventually persuaded a monk to read from these documents, and as an interpreter translated, Notovitch transcribed. The resulting text resembles the Gnostic Gospels, and offer remarkable insights - they portray Jesus as angering the priests of Brahma due to his teachings that all humans are equal regardless of caste, and as one who claimed that within each person resides "a part of the spirit of the Most High". Originally disdained as a hoax by scholars and theologians, The Unknown Life of Jesus has since acquired some credibility as corroborating information surfaced. The Unknown Life of Jesus features explanatory notes and extensive information about Notovitch's journey as well as the original text itself, and is especially recommended for theological and spiritual studies shelves.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Incredibly interesting account of the missing years of Jesus...., November 15, 2006
This review is from: The Unknown Life of Jesus: The Original Text of Nicolas Notovich's 1887 Discovery (Paperback)
Notovich recounts his journey to Ladakh near the Tibetan and Indian borders, where he viewed manuscripts that described the travels of Issa (Jesus) in India during the "missing" or undetailed years of his life. Evidently, Jesus studied Buddhist wisdom and also preached there also. The teachings that Notovich relates concerning Jesus ring true in terms of their profundity. His account of the trial and the crucifixion of Jesus are quite interesting also. In this version, an exact about face from the accepted version in the gospels, the Jewish priests respected Jesus and wanted him acquitted. Pontius Pilate wanted Jesus put to death, because he feared a political insurrection from the Jews led by Jesus, since Jesus was a descendant of King David. The Jewish priests, on the other hand, viewed Jesus as a great teacher and prophet. They washed their hands of the situation when Pilate decided to condemn Jesus to death. This, to me, makes more sense. A lot of anti-semitism has arisen from the official gospel versions. It makes more sense that a powerful and fearful government official would condemn Jesus to death, not the leaders of his own religion. Jesus, was after all, a Jewish reformer and did not come to destroy the Law but to fulfill it. I like this book. Buy it and read it with an open mind and open heart.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting, but it's not evidence of anything, February 22, 2007
This review is from: The Unknown Life of Jesus: The Original Text of Nicolas Notovich's 1887 Discovery (Paperback)
This book is interesting since it presents the possibility that the lost years of Jesus were spent in India, where he studied Eastern religions and acquired the ability to perform miracles, which he brought back with him on his return to Jerusalem. This is a nice idea, and I really,really want to believe it, however this book and the "Life of Saint Issa" manuscript presents no evidence of this. Instead of documenting his supposed time spent in India, it is actually just an alternate retelling of the New Testament in a brief 28 pages. It mentions his birth and early life, leaving his family and traveling to India at age 13, studying the Vedas and Buddhism, preaching to the commoners and thus angering the Brahmans who want him killed. Eventually he returns to Israel at age 29 where he is put on trial and in this version it is Pilate who wants him killed and the Jews who want to spare him. He's then crucified but does not return from the dead as in the Bible. My question is this: if this supposedly documents Jesus' time spent in India, how could the authors of this manuscript have possibly known the details of his birth and death? Shouldn't it focus exclusively on his time spent in India, since that's the only thing the original authors of the manuscript could have known about? Also, of the 122 pages of the book, only 28 are the "Life of Saint Issa", the rest is describing how Notovich came across it. In the 28 pages, there is surprisingly little detail of Jesus' time in India (maybe a few pages), and the rest is spent describing what had already been said in the Bible about Jesus' early life and death.
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