Friday, November 01, 2019

Zealot

"The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth" by Reza Aslan
Who was Jesus of Nazareth and when did he become Jesus Christ the son of God?
When was he born? When did he start preaching? When did he die? When was it first told he was resurrected? What was the Jewish Temple-state centered in Jerusalem and what happened in 70 AD? Who was King David and the Kingdom of God? What are the Laws of Moses, the Sanhedrin, and the Roman occupation of Palestine? What is the difference between crucifixion and stoning? Who was John the Baptist? Who were the 12 disciples? Were they poor and illiterate and who wrote the New Testament? Did Jesus have a younger brother James and what about the Virgin Mary? Who was James, Paul/Saul, Peter? What happened to the disciples? How did Christianity survive the Roman occupation? What is a Gentile, Philistine, Hellenist, Hebrews? Where is the Diaspora, what are epistles, gospels, letters, the Q?
Aslan answers these questions and many more while addressing the big question, was Jesus just a man, the messiah, or the son of God? The author is an Iranian that accepted Jesus Christ when he was 16 at Summer camp. He went on the extensive religious studies and concludes at the end of the book the "Jesus of Nazareth - Jesus the man - is every bit as compelling, charismatic, and praiseworthy as Jesus the Christ. He is worth believing in." He gives respect and praise to James the Just for his devout faith and dedication to serving the poor. He was critical of Paul/Saul/disciple 13 for his self-serving promotion.
I don't know about you guys, but I feel that I leaned a lot more than I thought I knew from Bible class.

Dr Jones comments... I enjoyed “Zealot,” and it reminded me of facts I learned back at Princeton Seminary.  At the time, it caused me to question a lot of things about the Christian mythology. Apparently, at the Jesus period, anyone of importance, such as a Persian prince, or a messiah, was said to be born of a virgin. Hence, the Gospel writers needed to honor Jesus the Christ accordingly.  (Too bad, Mary!)

If you liked Zealot, be sure to read Aslan's book "God - A Human History."
Aslan is able to explain complex religious beliefs in a way that is easy to follow and understand. "God" starts with ancient humans with their painted caves and multiple gods related to their hunter-gatherer natural world. He moves on the the humanized gods starting approximately 3,000 years ago including the pantheon of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Babylonian gods. He describes the evolution of the Jewish top god El to the one god Yahweh, the existence of two gods (good/evil) of the Zoroastrians, and the trinity (father/son/holy spirit) of Christianity. Then he takes the reader to the non-human form of the one god Allah in Islam to ultimately (in his belief) to the Sufi concept that god is in everything.
I found the book fairly easy to follow, both historically and logically. The book reminded me of Bryson's book "A Short History of Nearly Everything"...everything religious that is.  The book "God" ends with the following: "Believe in God or not. Define God how you will. Either way, take a lesson from our mythological ancestors Adam and Eve and eat from the fruit. You need not fear God. You are God."