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Fabricating Jesus: How Modern Scholars Distort the Gospels (Hardcover)

by Craig A. Evans (Author)
Key Phrases: wicked vineyard tenants, bogus findings, ruling priests, Gospel of Thomas, New Testament Gospels, Gospel of Peter (more...)
4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review
"Fabricating...is simply the best and most well informed popular-level book ever written on the Gnostic and apocryphal Gospels..." -- —Ben Witherington III, Professor of New Testament, Asbury Theological Seminary, and author of The Jesus Quest and What Have They Done with Jesus?

"I strongly recommend this outstanding resource to both Christians and spiritual seekers." -- —Lee Strobel, author of The Case for Christ

"This book is a necessary exposé of many recent works, taking us from the hype to the historical Jesus." -- —Darrell Bock, Research Professor of New Testament Studies, Dallas Theological Seminary, and author of The Missing Gospels

"This book will clarify matters for ordinary readers, yet satisfy scholars too." -- Scott Hahn, Professor of Theology and Scripture, Franciscan University of Steubenville

"[Evans] exposes the misguided assumptions and dubious sources that lie behind the wild theories that have plagued the public." -- James H. Charlesworth, George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language and Literature, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Director and Editor of the PTS Dead Sea Scrolls Project; author of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls and The Beloved Disciple

Review
"Fabricating Jesus exposes the misinformed nonsense that has confused the reading public over the past few years. Craig Evans is a well-read and thoughtful scholar who knows all the ancient texts. In this well-written book, he exposes the misguided assumptions and dubious sources that lie behind the wild theories that have plagued the public. He has also presented Jesus and the Gospels in their proper historical context. With enthusiasm, I recommend this book for scholars and all interested in Jesus and Christian origins." --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 290 pages
  • Publisher: IVP Books (December 6, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0830833188
  • ISBN-13: 978-0830833184
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.9 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (30 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #439,440 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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142 of 158 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Taking Aim at Sensational Claims by Other Scholars, January 8, 2007
By C. Price "Layman, Lawyer, Blogger" (Southern California) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Craig Evans is a very well-respected New Testament scholar with a background in historical studies. Although Fabricating Jesus includes brief though able refutations of claims made by The Da Vinci Code, The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, The Dead Sea Scrolls Deception, The Jesus Papers, and The Pagan Christ, the bulk of material addresses popularized claims made by more reputable commentators, such as J.D. Crossan, Bart Ehrman, James Robinson, the Jesus Seminar, and James Tabor.

Evans begins by discussing his own religious background and how it was affected by the critical study of the New Testament and historical Jesus. He uses this personal reflection to try and understand why some respected scholars have embraced such far-fetched theories. One of his explanations is that some of these scholars came from strict, fundamentalist backgrounds. When exposed to the critical studies, they were not flexible enough to accomodate the new information in their existing religious mind set. As a result, their faith was shattered instead of modified. They see little middle ground betweeen strict fundamentalism and utter rejection of traditional positions. Evans points to himself as evidence of a middle ground that actually bases its opinions on better historical evidences.

The next few chapters demonstrate Evans' knowledge of the material, including especially the Jewish context of Jesus' ministry and the early Church, and ability to engage in dispassionate historical inquiry. Taking up some of the more unfounded scholarly conclusions about Jesus, Evans shows that Jesus likely was literate, interested in eschatology, and understood himself to be Israel's messiah. He then proceeds to discuss the criteria of authenticity often used by New Testament scholars, falling back on his background in history to evaluate their strengths and weaknesses. As others have done, Evans demonstrates the limitations of the "criteria of dissimilarity."

Evans also provides sound refutations of two ideas advocated by more liberal New Testament scholars. First, he provides one of the best popularized discussions of the Gospel of Thomas I have read. He moves through the evidence methodically, leaving little doubt that the Gospel of Thomas is a late second century writing that is dependent on the canonical gospels. Thereafter, he provides effective though less thorough discussions of the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel of Mary, and Secret Gospel of Mark. Second, Evans devotes a chapter to the idea that Jesus was a kind of Greek cynic philosopher. His analysis demonstrates just how unfounded are such theories.

Additional chapters address the treatment of Jesus' miracle accounts by some modern scholars and how Josephus' accounts of Pilate and John the Baptist have been misused to create unnecessary tension with the Gospel accounts. Evans closes out with chapters reconstructing the early beliefs of the Church and how they are in line with traditional conceptions of Jesus. He then adds two useful appendices; one on the agrapha (non-gospel sayings of Jesus) and the Gospel of Judas.

Having found a used copy of Fabricating Jesus for only $10, I think I got a bargain. Evans again and again uses sober historical inquiry and a wealth of knowledge about Jesus' and the New Testament's backgrounds and contexts to counter those theories we hear are advanced by those in the know, but which are revealed to be worthy of our initial suspiciouns.
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98 of 120 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Taking on the skeptics, January 11, 2007
By William Muehlenberg (Melbourne Australia) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
At the very heart of Christianity is Christ. Remove Christ, and you no longer have Christianity. Thus those wanting to attack Christianity concentrate their heaviest firepower on Christ. And we have seen plenty of examples of that recently.

One way to attack Jesus is to attack the four canonical Gospels in which he appears. Parts of modern scholarship have been quite busy in distorting and misrepresenting the Gospels. They do this by questioning the Gospel accounts themselves, by speaking of other gospel traditions, by claiming there were alternative Christianities at the time, and so on.

In its more popular form this assault on Jesus comes out in such works of fiction as The Da Vinci Code. But it also comes out in more scholarly avenues, such as the Jesus Seminar. This volume examines all of these approaches, and finds them wanting. Indeed, Evans says the scepticism about Jesus and the Gospels betrays a "misplaced faith and misguided suspicions".

Craig Evans is well placed to undertake this task. He is a leading New Testament scholar, specialising in the historical Jesus and the Jewish background of the New Testament era. Here he takes head on the various challenges to the Jesus of history and the Gospel accounts.

Consider the reliability of the Gospels. As with all ancient documents, they need to be assessed. We need to know how trustworthy they are as sources for learning about the historical events surrounding the life and teachings of Jesus. Over the years such tests have been developed. We refer to them as the "criteria of authenticity". These are historical and literary criteria for assessing biblical literature.

One such criterion is that of multiple attestation. If we find a saying or teaching of Jesus that appears in two or more independent sources, that makes it more likely that they were circulated widely and early, and were not the invention of a single writer. And such is what we find in the New Testament documents.

Another is the criterion of embarrassment. This states that material that is potentially embarrassing or awkward for the early church is less likely to have been invented by believers after the Easter event. For example, given what a low view of women first century Judaism had, it seems strange indeed that the first people to report the resurrection of Jesus were women. Someone making up this story would surely not have chosen women, whose testimony was considered to be almost nil.

The various criteria taken together show that the four Gospels indeed have a high degree of authenticity and reliability. Says Evans, "Criteria of authenticity, which are remarkably vigorous in their application to the Gospels, confirm the essential core of Jesus' teaching".

Evans next looks at some of the other so-called gospels, the alternative gospels to the four canonical ones. Evans notes how the critics apply overly harsh and stringent tests for the reliability of the four Gospels, but when it comes to these alternative gospels, they approach them with kid gloves, giving them almost a free ride. Moreover, while they try to push the canonical Gospels to late dates, they are happy to give early authorship dates for these extracanonical writings.

Evans says the critics should show some consistency here, and apply the same standards to these new gospels as they do to the more traditional ones. Take for example the Gospel of Thomas. Liberal scholars tend to uncritically accept this as an early and legitimate gospel. But the evidence suggests otherwise.

As to dating, the four Gospels were all written within decades of the life of Jesus. Mark was penned in the 60s, Matthew and Luke in the late 70s, and John in the mid-90s. All of the alternative gospels however are dated to the second century and into the third. Thomas for example was written around A.D.180, perhaps later.

Moreover, it reads completely different from the four canonical Gospels. It is not really a gospel or biography at all, but a collection of sayings, reflecting a Gnostic, esoteric worldview. Says Evans, it clearly does not offer us "independent material that can be used for critical research into the life and teaching of Jesus".

After examining other pseudo-gospels, he moves on to various aspects of theological revisionism about the life of Christ. For example, was Jesus - as some claim - in fact a Mediterranean Cynic? Did he really view himself as the Messiah? What about his healings and miracles? How did he view the Judaism of his day? In all these areas, Evans argues that the traditional (biblical) understanding of Jesus is to be preferred to the new, more radical and speculative accounts.

He concludes by arguing that the traditional Gospel accounts of Jesus may be old, but they are reliable. In contradistinction to the "newer, radical, minimalist, revisionist, obscurantist and faddish versions of the Jesus story," the traditional one is both more convincing and more in tune with the historical and literary evidence.
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34 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Context is Key, December 30, 2006
Craig A. Evans is a moderately conservative New Testament scholar with an impressive list of publications, particularly in the area of the historical Jesus.

In this popularly written book, Prof. Evans shows how archeology, history, textual and other studies support a traditional reading of the New Testament. Take the claim that Jesus was a Cynic philosopher, advanced by Crossan and some others. Such a claim presumes a fair amount of Hellenization in Galilee. In fact, archeological studies cast doubt on even moderate Hellenization. Indeed, Galilee at the time of Jesus appears to have been quite religiously conservative, although not the economic backwater it has often been portrayed as. There is no evidence of a single Cynic in Galilee during the time of Jesus.

Prof. Evans' discussion of the apocryphal Gospel of Thomas is the best I've seen. Although Crossan and a few others argue for an early date (perhaps even c. 50 A.D.) the evidence for a later date is overwhelming. In particular, the evidence is strong that Thomas draws on the four canonical Gospels in general and the Syrian harmonization called the Diatessaron in particular.

There are also good sections concerning Josephus, the trial of Jesus, and Jesus' conception of himself in light of certain Old Testament and intertestamental themes. Prof. Evans also includes brief studies of some of the more eccentric recent constructions of Jesus including Barbra Thiering, Dan Brown, and Thomas Harpur.

I'd also recommend a collection edited by Prof. Evans and Stanley Porter entitled DICTIONARY OF NEW TESTAMENT BACKGROUND.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Very good!
I think Craig Evans has given a good rebuttal to some of the current more popular secular beliefs that have been advanced about Jesus. Read more
Published 17 days ago by Bill F. Evans

5.0 out of 5 stars Seekers of the Truth Should Not Ignore This!
This is an excellent book!

I disagree with reviewers who say this is mere "propaganda" that exposes the writer's "bias. Read more
Published 1 month ago by T. Mitchell

5.0 out of 5 stars A scholarly destruction of silly theories about Jesus
Professor Evans systematically destructs the modern theories about who Jesus is. After the Da Vinci Code, there have been other books published concerning the gnostic gospels... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Robert Veale

5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Treatment of Silly Theories about Jesus
There are lots of silly ideas about Jesus going around these days. While fringe scholars have always offered their crackpot theories, we live in a day and age where these authors... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Kyle Demming

5.0 out of 5 stars Evangelical Scholarship is underrated in Catholic circles
This is a great rebuttal of some of the more esoteric attacks on Jesus, like the writings of the Jesus Seminar, or Michael Baigant, and other weirdos. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Bobby Bambino

2.0 out of 5 stars Propaganda?
This attempt to debunk was as biased as the scholars debunked! Plus, very superficial review of the theories of those who question Jesus' presentation by the Church and as a... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Vance

5.0 out of 5 stars Good Popular Level Discussion of Theories on Jesus.
Craig Evans is a reputable scholar with endorsements from both conservatives and liberals alike. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Kyle Richie

1.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
Although purportedly a book of scholarship, it is not. The author criticizes alternative theories of Jesus from the presupposition that his own understanding of Jesus is the only... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Mark Gibbs

5.0 out of 5 stars Fabricating Jesus
One of the best researched,well written,profound,enlightening, timely and relevant books that I have read on this subject. Read more
Published 19 months ago by David Crofton

5.0 out of 5 stars Against the Jesus Seminar
I'm a student at the Univ. of Minnesota and one of my professors is a fellow of the Jesus Seminar. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Aaron R. Hopper

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