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Reply #40: interesting books for inquiring minds H Schonfeld's The Passover Plot [View All]

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bobbieinok Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Apr-05-06 07:35 PM
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40. interesting books for inquiring minds H Schonfeld's The Passover Plot
and Those Incredible Christians

http://www.disinfo.com/site/displayarticle8912.html

and from

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Passover_Plot

....

Based on scholarly research into the social and religious culture in which Jesus (Yeshua) was born, lived and died, into the source documents of the Gospels, and into other literature, Schonfield reached the following conclusions:

--That Jesus was a deeply religious Jewish man, probably well-versed in the teachings of the local northern sects such as the Nazarenes and Essenes.
--That growing up in Biblical Galilee he had a skeptical and somewhat rebellious relationship to the hierarchy and teachings mandated by the authorities (the Pharisees) of the Temple in Jerusalem.
--That Jewish Messianic expectation was extremely high in those times, matched to the despair caused by the Roman occupation of the land, and by their subjugation of the Jews.
--That he was in many ways both typical of his times, and yet extraordinary in his religious convictions and beliefs, in his scholarship of the Biblical literature, and in the fervancy in which he lived his religion out in his daily life.
--That he was convinced of his role as the expected Messiah based on the authority of his having been descendant from King David (the royal bloodline of David), and that he consciously and methodically, to the point of being calculating, attempted to fulfill that role, being imminently versed in the details of what that role entailed.
--That he was convinced of the importance of his fulfilling the role perfectly (after all prophesy and expectation), and that he could not allow himself to fail, as that would undoubtedly lead to his being declared a false Messiah.
--That he was perfectly aware of the consequences of his actions all along the way, and that he directed his closest supporters, the original twelve apostles, unknowingly to aid him in his plans.
--That he involved the least possible number of supporters in his plans ("need to know" basis), therefore very few knew of the details of his final plan, and even then only the least amount of information necessary.


more....

These books are fascinating. One of the reasons they can be so powerful is that most Christians know little or nothing about the events of the time Jesus was alive. So nearly everything the author (a noted Jewish scholar) discusses comes across as shockingly new.
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