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Putting Away Childish Things: The Virgin Birth, the Empty Tomb, and Other Fairy Tales You Dont't Need to Believe to Have a Living Faith

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A religious scholar argues that the Immaculate Conception, Hell, and other elements of Christianity are mere childish, sexist conventions hindering a true encounter with the Gospel. By the author of Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven. $30,000 ad/promo. Tour.

306 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1992

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About the author

Uta Ranke-Heinemann

15 books12 followers
Uta Ranke-Heinemann was a German formerly christian theologian, academic and author. She holds the (nondenominational) chair of History of Religion at University of Essen in Essen, her birthplace. She was also the daughter of the former president of Germany, Gustav Heinemann.
Having started as a Catholic theologian, she became the first female professor of Catholic theology in 1970. In 1987 she lost her missio canonica over her rejection of aspects of Catholic dogma, and in 2001 she left the Catholic Church (and Christianity) entirely by publicly rejecting the divine nature of both the Bible and Jesus.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Trey Mustian.
109 reviews2 followers
May 6, 2016
If your faith in Jesus Christ depends upon the Bible being inerrant and literally true in every respect, this book will either completely anger you or shake you to your core. I have not believed the Bible to be inerrant or completely accurate for a long time. I have read too much about how it came to be compiled to believe that.Yet I believe very strongly in God and remain a very imperfect follower of Jesus. This book examines in exquisite detail the inaccuracies , inconsistencies and improbability that are found in the Bible. Its central thesis is that excessive adherence to the Bible as accurate in all respects can actually serve to obscure rather than spotlight the real message Jesus has for us.
Profile Image for Ellen Snyder.
102 reviews11 followers
April 17, 2012
Origins of many Christian beliefs and where they came from. The author claims they are not essential to the real meaning of Jesus message.
Profile Image for Steve Dustcircle.
Author 27 books157 followers
January 20, 2014
While it comes from a Germanic, Catholic point of view, the research and scholarship is pretty dead on. I'm well-versed in most of the topics covered, and only came across a couple of explicit errors, easily fixable with a general Wikipedia check. This aside, most of the book should be scary to the novel Christian/Catholic who takes for granted simple theology, as this book takes each subject and tears it apart, using both historical and scientific findings, or by mere common sense deducing. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to know if most of the spectacular tales, legends and miracles of the Bible really stand up to scrutiny, even if it's standing up against the Bible itself.
283 reviews2 followers
October 27, 2019
Professor Ranke-Heinemann offers a book that makes the readers think. She boarded in R. Bultmann's home and sat at his supper table discussing theology. What the Protestant church was at the time was less attractive than the Roman Catholic Church Ranke-Heinemann she joined.
The various explorations that Ranke-Heinemann follows in her book reveal her intimate knowledge of the Early Church Fathers, current Roman Catholic theologians and Protestant thinkers. The matters that Ranke-Heinemann exposes puts her in conflict with her church; however, her findings and speculations (she is a good detective) make a valuable contribution to uncovering the beginnings of Christianity and how over the years the story of Jesus was distorted.
Profile Image for Emma.
113 reviews16 followers
November 11, 2014
This is an extremely important book. Everyone, especially those who grew up in a religious house, should read this. Gave me a completely different perspective on the formation of Christianity.
Profile Image for Paul Gibson.
Author 5 books17 followers
July 3, 2019
This is a reread from my first in about 1998.
I'm not generally interested in "shooting fish in a barrel" books but this book is far more. It is written by a doubter who understands and says "amen" to faith.
I'll not do a summary here but will implore that if you just want to read one of the best chapters ever written concerning the subject, don't miss her chapter on Hell. While reading it, if you're not enlightened, stunned and amazed, you don't know what you're missing and I don't know how to help you.
My only disappointment is that she does
Profile Image for Steve.
124 reviews2 followers
May 27, 2009
Interesting enough but better yet is James Tabor's, The Jesus Dynasty.
Profile Image for Samuel Boitar.
21 reviews1 follower
June 19, 2023
o problema da uta é o ressentimento com que ela escreve. já era algo palpável no livro dos eunucos, mas pelo menos lá os tópicos eram mais interessantes e a escrita não era tão envenenada. aqui ela chuta o cachorro morto com tanta raiva e ódio que a leitura se torna constrangedora.

Profile Image for Hartmut Hering.
2 reviews
January 15, 2016
Ein Buch das sehr zum Nachdenken anregt und - auch aus theologischer Sicht - mit den Widersprüchen und Unwahrheiten der Glaubensgrundsätze aufräumt, ohne den christlichen Glauben an sich anzugreifen.
Profile Image for Artur Nowrot.
Author 9 books57 followers
August 3, 2014
Mocne wypunktowanie biblijnych przeinaczeń i dodatków, które niestety ukształtowały dzisiejsze chrześcijaństwo, a przy okazji radykalna wypowiedź na temat tego, czym chrześcijaństwo być powinno.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews