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Jesus and After: The First Eighty Years

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Jesus and After uses extracts from Biblical and other writings to outline the birth and early development of the Jesus sect of Judaism - its early simplicity, its later growth, and its separation from its Jewish parent. Besides its focus on the past, this book offers suggestions for the future of both religions. The book shows how these writings fit together chronologically, and how, together, they give a sense of the evolution of Christian thinking, from the death of Jesus in the year 30 to the trials of Christians under Pliny in 110. It has the scholar in view, but it also speaks to the concerns of moden Christians who are uncertain about some traditional church doctrines, and who may be interested to find that those doctrines are not original to Christianity, but are instead part of its later development.

192 pages, Hardcover

Published January 9, 2018

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About the author

E. Bruce Brooks

10 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Dan Downing.
1,392 reviews18 followers
October 15, 2019
For the everyday practitioner of religion, the Bible remains the holy text for billions. Relatively few have read the Good Book cover to cover, fewer still are familiar with or even aware of other documents discussing/creating the Jewish tradition or the new path founded by Jesus. Professor Brooks provides a fine guide for beginning an analysis of those biblical stories from the First Century of the common era. For those who have read the Bible, whole or in part, particularly the New Testament, many of the head-scratchers one encounters are laid out here, along with the analytical methods used to suss out what was original and what later scribes and writers decided to add.
The central idea here is that the early church, composed of believers termed 'Alphas', morphed into a 'Beta' version, largely under the force of Paul's personality and ideas. We often lose sight of how early Christian belief was taken under the wing of the Jewish establishment: alter all, Jesus and his followers were mostly, if not entirely, Jews. Ideas and beliefs started to change even before Jesus met his demise, and the Jewish power base eventually tossed out the new sect.
To give "Jesus and After" a full reading one needs a Bible close at hand. A computer with a good search engine is a help. Plenty of questions may be asked of Brooks' assumptions, and no definitive answers are available. Never-the-less, this is an illuminating exercise, redolent of deep scholarship. And it is organized and written beautifully.
Recommended (for the general reader. For the religiously inclined, Highly Recommended.)
Profile Image for Hands.
13 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2018
Gave me a better insight into the original teachings of Jesus of Nazareth
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kate McCullough.
7 reviews
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November 4, 2018
The facts for this history are different then I've studied in the past. Most biblical scholars say that Mark came about 30 years after Jesus's death and was not a contemporary. The first books of the bible (chronologically) according to Bart Erhman a new testament biblical scholar at Chapel Hill, are actually Paul's letters.
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