Brother of Jesus and the Lost Teachings of Christianity by Jeffrey J. Butz, Jeffery J. Butz, Jeffrey J. BŁtz

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: March 2005
  • 240pp
  • Sales Rank: 413,984
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2005
    • Publisher: Inner Traditions International, Limited
    • Format: Paperback, 240pp
    • Sales Rank: 413,984

    Synopsis

    While Peter is traditionally thought of as the leader of the apostles, it was James who led the disciples after the crucifixion. Jeffrey Bütz offers a vision that is sometimes at odds with Christian doctrine and concludes that James links Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, and can serve to heal centuries of enmity.

    Publishers Weekly

    Butz, adjunct professor of world religions at Penn State University and an ordained Lutheran minister, explores the place of James, the brother of Jesus, in the tradition and teaching of the church. He suggests that ecclesiastical authorities have deliberately suppressed the role of James in order to minimize the Jewishness of Christianity while emphasizing the theology of Paul. Butz sees the theologies of James and Paul as contradictory in many points, with Paul distancing himself from his Jewish roots and thus creating a religion that Butz contends was not envisioned by Jesus. Paul, Butz asserts, relegated good works to a secondary position, contrary to the teachings of Jesus. In calling attention to this dichotomy, Butz raises a major question: "In other words, if the first followers of Jesus-including the apostles and Jesus' own family-were thoroughly Jewish in their belief and practice and opposed to Paul's interpretation of the gospel, then just what is `orthodoxy' and what is `heresy'?" This volume is eminently readable and accessible to nonscholars while being thorough in its research. It raises the specter of a revisioned Christianity and challenges readers to rethink the nature of both orthodoxy and heresy. (Mar.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Jeffrey J. Bütz is an ordained Lutheran minister and adjunct professor of world religions at Penn State University's Berks-Lehigh Valley campus. He lives in Catasauqua, Pennsylvania.

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    Brother of Jesus and the Lost Teachings of Christianityby Anonymous

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    June 20, 2005: The Brother of Jesus and the Lost Teachings of Christianity by Jeffrey J. Butz. Reviewed by Peter Senese, author of Cloning Christ. I want to begin my review by saying that I am a layman who continues to seek knowledge of the historical Jesus. I am by no means a scholar, but simply a man seeking a deeper relationship with Christ. I would consider my faith in Christ strong. This provides me with the strength and courage needed to explore historically the actual life of Jesus during his physical life. From what I have discovered thus far in my own quest, it has become important for me in my desire to become closer to Christ to understand the social structures, political agendas, and personal interactions of Jesus. This is by no means an easy task as many theological scholars today have claimed. Nevertheless, I think it is imperative that theological scholars continue to explore the various writings that share the life of Christ, and place this text (and the many revisions that have occurred over time) in the social, political, and personal intent of Jesus? life. In James, The Brother of Jesus, Lutheran minister Jeffrey J. Butz does a phenomenal job in presenting his research and cross references of various writings in order to portray a very understandable and credible set of scenarios of the early Church and its leadership, specifically, what was the true role of James, the brother of Jesus. In doing so Jeffrey J. Butz provides to the reader the opportunity to think through, by understanding James and his true role as one of if not the true leader of the Christ movement, what actually was occurring during the time immediately after the death of Christ, and, what Jesus was actually trying to share with the world. Over the years in particular scholars have extended the divisionary arguments of the division between James and Paul, and the initial roots that have led to the direction of the present Christ following. In order to realize the differentiation between the immediate followings of Jesus, and how they changed over a rather short period of time, it is critical that we understand what was actually occurring socially and politically during the historical period immediately after Christ sacrifice. Carefully using canonical and Gnostic gospels, not to mention a wide assortment of writings by historians, Butz does a wonderful job clarifying a present void that is a part of the `Early Christ Movement?. In doing so, readers are forced to think through the wonderment of the life of Christ. Overall, this is a must read for anyone who seeks a closer relationship with Christ. In understanding the historical movements of the early Church, I believe we can all develop a closer relationship with Christ. I would also like to add that I believe it took a great deal of courage to write this book since there are contradictions to the present structures that comprise organized Christendom. I would like to thank the author for showing the courage and the stamina required to write and share with the world what I believe to be a historically accurate story of James, and in doing so, sharing a new dimension to the life of Jesus Christ.