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Book reviews for "Chilton,_Bruce" sorted by average review score:

Judaism in the New Testament: Practices and Beliefs
Published in Paperback by Routledge (1995)
Authors: Bruce Chilton and Jacob Neusner
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Must reading for Jewish Roots of Christianity
This book is the finest, most balanced book I have read on the common roots of Judaism and Christianity. The notion that Christianity was A Judaism was counter to my thinking, but they make the case. It stresses the similarities and differences between Judaism and Christianity, showing that the differences are within the Judaic context. I didn't agree with everything they said, but any serious discussion and debate on this subject MUST include the points raised here.

This is a great devotional book!
This is the first book of either author I have read and I enjoyed it completely. The idea that the New Testament is another form of Judaism at first went against what I was taught even though I had always recognized the jewishness of Jesus. This book focuses on the important issue of God fulfilling the Talmud through the person of Jesus Christ


Pure Kingdom: Jesus' Vision of God (Studying the Historical Jesus)
Published in Paperback by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (1996)
Author: Bruce Chilton
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New perspective for a reader on historical Jesus
I re-read the professional reviews, and I think they fairly present the author's approach. To these good reviews I will merely add my few minor thoughts.

1) This book is not devotional reading for Christians who are mostly focused on living a godly life. It requires some thought and a genuine interest in Jesus history.

2) Bruce Chilton says he is associated with the Jesus Seminar. I've read a little from others associated with the Jesus seminar, like Crossan and Funk. This is NOTHING like the other Jesus Seminar writers. He clearly places Jesus within (the variegated) Second Temple Judaism, and credits him with thorough knowledge of Hebrew Scripture.

3) I was impressed with how carefully Chilton develops his arguments throughout the book, along the way making some very enlightening observations.

4) His book changed my understanding of the Kingdom of God, and how Jesus delivered it to those to whom he ministered.

5) I'm not good enough a reader or well trained enough in history or theology to know whether I truly agree with everything Chilton wrote, but he wrote many things in this book that I found worthy to ponder and to recommend to others.

6) I have now purchased other books of his because I liked this one so well.

An excellent start to an excellent series
This book is Volume I in an ongoing series called "Studying the Historical Jesus", edited by Bruce Chilton and Craig Evans. Chilton himself is the author of this fine analysis of what Jesus meant by the term "Kingdom of God". He maps the Kingdom along five coordinates. (1) Eschatological -- The Kingdom is near and final, to be prayed for, pointing toward the future while resisting any calendrical predictions. (2) Transcendence -- The Kingdom is all-powerful and immanent, able to touch the world as we know it and thus, in one sense, present on earth now. (3) Judgment -- The Kingdom is demanding and faultless, encompassing questions about ethics and worldly possessions. (4) Purity -- The Kingdom is pure and holy, but in a revisionist way that provides for outcasts and pariah. (5) Radiance -- The Kingdom is associated with Zion in particular, yet spreads outward to be an inclusive worldy reality. Unlike many historical-Jesus specialists these days, Chilton shies from pigeon-holing the Kingdom into a single narrow framework. Some of the finer details are debatable, but there are no one-sided agendas here. The Kingdom of God is described for what it clearly is -- an outright scandal to our modern way of thinking, "eschatological in respect of time, transendent in respect of place, perfect in respect of action, sacred in respect of purity, and all-embracing in respect of Israel and the world". Chilton then discusses Jesus' activity for the Kingdom, focusing on the last days spent in Jerusalem when he demonstrated in the temple and subsequently celebated the eucharist with his disciples. Building on his previous work, Chilton argues that at the last supper Jesus made his meals of bread and wine into a rival altar. "This is my flesh, and this is my blood", meant "this is my 'flesh' of sacrifice, and this is my 'blood' of sacrifice", meaning that bread and wine were Jesus' offerings to God, in place of the flesh and blood of animals sacrificed on the temple altar. Bread was better "flesh", and wine was better "blood", than any of the sacrifices associated with the corrupt temple regime.

A book which focuses on the Kingdom of God is a great way to launch a fresh series on the historical Jesus. To date, the subsequent volumes are: "The Immerser" by Joan Taylor, "God's Final Envoy" by Marinus de Jonge, and "Jesus Outside the New Testament" by Robert Van Voorst.


The Christian Moral Life: Practices of Piety
Published in Paperback by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (1999)
Authors: Bruce Chilton and Timothy F. Sedgwick
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Christian Ethics in Every Day Language
In "The Christian Moral Life: Practices of Piety," Timothy Sedgwick provides the reader with historical practices of the Christian faith such as hospitality, worship and table fellowship in language that is easy to understand. Basic principles of Christian Ethics are presented in this same manner. He accomplishes this by using not only historical information on early Christian communities, but also by relating issues and ideas to his own life. As he is an Episcopalian, the book does have an Anglican bias, but its basic ideas and principles are adaptable to virtually any Christian denomination. For an intriguing, understandable discussion of Christian Ethics and Christain practices, I highly recommend Sedgwick's "The Christian Moral Life: Practices of Piety."


Jesus Outside the New Testament: An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence (Studying the Historical Jesus)
Published in Paperback by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (2000)
Authors: Robert E. Van Voorst and Bruce Chilton
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Turned off by the 1st chapter's weak arguments
As a nontheist who thinks there was a historical Jesus, I often find myself caught between two extremes. On the one hand, I don't believe that Jesus rose from the dead, was the son of God, etc. But on the other hand, I simply am not convinced by mythicist arguments that there was no historical Jesus. Central to the debate between these two competing positions is the issue of alleged extra-biblical references to the historicity of Jesus. That issue is the subject of Van Voorst's book, which he deals with in great detail. Van Voorst discusses alleged references to Jesus in virtually all of the non-Christian sources, as well as various Christian sources about Jesus outside of the New Testament. All of this combined makes the book the most comprehensive English lenguage review of alleged extra-Biblical references to Jesus written in recent memory.

With that said, I was frankly disappointed with the first chapter of the book, in which Van Voorst spends ten pages refuting the Christ-myth hypothesis. To his credit, Van Voorst is very familiar with the various books and essays which deny the existence of Jesus. He writes, "Some readers may be surprised or shocked that many books and essays--by my count, over one hundred--in the past two hundred years have fervently denied the very existence of Jesus" (p. 6). Nevertheless, he says, the Christ-myth hypothesis is not only rejected by virtually all New Testament scholars, but that the hypothesis has been almost completely ignored within the guild of New Testament scholarship since the 1940s. However, Van Voorst acknowledges that there is tremendous interest in the historicity of Jesus.

He has a very interesting and educational history of the Christ-myth movement. However, he apparently does not know that G.A. Wells, in his latest book THE JESUS MYTH, in which Wells *accepts* the historicity of Jesus based on the arguments of Burton Mack concerning Q. Van Voorst then, briefly, has occasion to criticize Michael Martin's defense of the mythicist hypothesis, given Martin's reliance on Wells.

Van Voorst then summarizes seven objections against Wells's (former) position that Jesus never existed. Many of these objections are downright comical.

1. "Wells misinterprets Paul's relative silence about some details in the life of Jesus: the exact time of his life; the exact places of his ministry, that Pontius Pilate condemned him, and so forth. As every good student of history knows, it is wrong to suppose that what is unmentioned or undetailed did not exist. Arguments from silence about ancient times, here about the supposed lack of biblical or extrabiblical references to Jesus, are especially perilous."

Lowder's comment: it seems to me there is a double-standard on the part of conservative Christians. When discussing the historicity of Jesus, Christians will tell us that no historian takes arguments from silence seriously. But when defending the empty tomb, Christians will conveniently engage in arguments from silence (e.g., "The tomb was empty because there is no evidence of the Jewish authorities denying it.") Yet the same facts appealed to by Christians in their arguments from silence for the empty tomb--like the lame argument that the Jews never denied the empty tomb--can itself be dismissed on the grounds that 'first-century Jews typically viewed the empty tomb story as so weak or bizarre that they ignored it completely." What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

2. Wells dates the gospels around 100, which is too late. Mark was written around 70 while Matthew and Luke were probably written in the 80s. Van Voorst may well be right about his dating. But so, too, might Wells. What I find objectionable about Van Voorst's objection is that he gives no argument for it. *Why* should we accept Van Voorst's dating scheme for the gospels? Van Voorst never says.

3. The development of the Gospel traditions and the historical difficulties within them "do not necessarily mean wholesale invention, and difficulties do not prove nonexistence." But, to the best of my knowledge, Wells never argues that development of traditions and historical difficulties *necessarily proves* the mythicist hypothesis.

4. This one is a real howler: "Wells cannot explain to the satisfaction of historians why, if Christians invented the historical Jesus around the year 100, no pagans and Jews who opposed Christianity denied Jesus' historicity or even questioned it." This is an argument from silence! I agree that there is no evidence that the historicity of Jesus was questioned in the first century. But that fact does not, by itself, make it probable that Jesus existed. Even on the assumption that Jesus never existed, Christianity was a minority religion viewed as a cult by outsiders. Had Jesus never existed, there is no reason to suppose that anyone would have made an effort to show that. Indeed, I think it is even doubtful that it would have occurred to anyone to question the historicity of Jesus!

5. Despite Wells' objections to the contrary, non-Christian witnesses to Jesus, especially Tacitus and Josephus, are basically trustworthy because there is a "strong consensus" saying so. Does this mean that from now on that evolutionists can argue that evolution is true simply because a "strong consensus" of biologists says it's true? This is a really lame argument.

6. Another howler: "Wells and others seem to have advanced the nonhistoricity hypothesis not for objective reasons, but for highly tendentious, antireligious purposes."

7. "Wells and his predecessors have failed to advance other, credible hypotheses to account for the birth of Christianity and the fashioning of a historical Christ." I think this objection has some force.

In conclusion, while I think Van Voorst's book is useful as a comprehensive overview of extra-Biblical references to Jesus, his direct attacks on the mythicist hypothesis are mainly ineffective. His best objection to the mythicist hypothesis is that some of the extra-Biblical sources *do* provide independent confirmation of Jesus, an issue which he deals with ably in the remainder of the book.

A good introduction to a wealth of mostly unknown literature
This book is a great start into the research of all the writings about Jesus outside the New Testament Canon we all know. The book is written well, and is researched thoroughly. The footnotes alone are worth the read, but be prepared to want to buy several more books as a result of the excellent research.

The author starts with an overview of some classical writings including "Pliny the Younger", "Celsus", and "Tacitus". The second chapter goes into some of the classic Jewish literature that also refers to Jesus including the well-known Josephus passages. While some of this was new material for me, there were no real surprises. The information is presented well, with several commentary opinions regarding the passages. The author presents the information in a mostly neutral fashion and will often present both supporting and opposing views on the writings and their significance.

The sections on the Canonical Gospels were excellent. The focus is on the missing "source material" for the core Gospels. The Luke source, identified as "L", the "M" source which is reasoned to be part of the source for the unique material in the Gospel of Matthew, and the "Q" source for the sayings in Matthew and Luke. In Luke this source material is referred to directly in the first chapter of the Gospel of Luke: "Since many have undertaken to set down an orderly account of the things that have been fulfilled among us...I too decided, after investing carefully from the first, to write an orderly account for you...". This implies that there were "many" others who wrote down information about the life of Jesus and the Gospel message. The other sources. "M" and "Q" are not as directly implied in the Gospels. The chapter is well done, and is mostly speculative, as the alleged source materials obviously are not available to us. Again, the information is presented well, and arguments and theories are postulated on both sides of the debate about their authenticity and relevance.

The last chapter focuses on the writings of mostly Gnostic origin, including the discovery of the Nag Hammadi writings. The book examines the authenticity and relevance of these writings and compares and contrasts them to the Gospels. The Gospel of Thomas is reprinted in full which is fascinating, as are parts of the Gospel of Peter, Secret Mark, the Ascent of James. A writing conspicuously absent from the book is the Barnabas text, although this writing is widely regarded as a fraud in most Biblical scholarly circles.

Overall, a very interesting read. The material was presented well, and was not dry but moved quickly and kept my attention throughout. A great start to this study of the wealth of information and writings about Jesus outside the New Testament.

Finding Jesus in places unknown to many
Much to the dismay of those who'd prefer otherwise, Jesus is mentioned in several sources outside of the biblical New Testament. Robert Van Voorst does a top-notch job of evaluating each non-biblical reference on its own merits. Before assuming Van Voorst is another Christian apologist bent on finding things where none are to be found, it should be made known that he critically examines each writing to determine whether or not it has any historical worth.

Van Voorst covers the famous Testimonium Flavianum found in the work of Josephus (and the lesser known "James, the brother of Jesus" reference) and concludes that there is a core statement originally written by Josephus in the Testimonium Flavianum which has been tampered with by Christian scribes. This is the predominant view in scholarly circles today and Van Voorst does a fine job of giving the reasoning behind such a conclusion. The references to Jesus in other non-Christian writers such as Pliny, Suetonius, Tacitus, Mara Bar Serapion, Lucian of Samosata, the Talmud, and others are covered on an individual basis to determine the background behind each one. Van Voorst makes an attempt to examine the intent of the writer and possible sources utilized by them to gather their information.

The book also covers mentions of Jesus made in the Gospel of Thomas and various sayings attributed to Jesus by the early church fathers that are not found in the New Testament. Van Voorst gives a good, basic overview of Q and its contents which a beginner would find very helpful.

Overall, this book is highly recommended to those seeking information on the references to Jesus found outside the New Testament in non-Christian writings. At the very least, this book demonstrates far beyond a reasonable doubt that Jesus of Nazareth truly existed and that he was simply not some sort of mythical figure created by early Christians. It doesn't prove Christianity is true, but it lays the foundation for further investigation into who this Jesus of Nazareth was.


The Brother of Jesus: James the Just and His Mission
Published in Paperback by Westminster John Knox Press (2001)
Authors: Bruce Chilton and Jacob Neusner
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The historical James
Like many books with multiple contributors, this one finds a mixed bag of results. This publication attempts to provide a synopsis of the work of the Consultation on James, a group of scholars who have been meeting on a periodic basis to discuss various facets of James, the alleged "brother" of Jesus.

Jacob Neusner opens with a discussion of the different types of 1st century Judaisms. His findings lead him to conclude that there are four traits foundational to all types of Judaism: the privileged status of ancient Israelite Scripture, an identification with the "Israel" of which Scripture speaks, an insistence upon the priority of that system over all competing accounts of an "Israel" in context, and the certainty that all who live by that system constitute "Israelites".

John Painter provides the longest chapter of the book and he gives an overview of the primary historical questions surrounding James. These include: the meaning of the title "brother of the Lord", the question of whether he was an "unbeliever" during the ministry of Jesus, his alleged conversion following the resurrection of Jesus, his status as leader of the Jerusalem church, his martyrdom, and his view of the Law.

Peter Davids discusses the message of the letter of James, but leaves the question of authorship open. Wiard Popkes follows with a closely related piece on the mission of the author of James, again leaving unanswered the question of authorship.

Richard Bauckham does argue for James, the brother of Jesus, as the actual author of the letter. He then proceeds to compare and contrast the wisdom sayings of Jesus with those found in James. He argues that both saw themselves as following in the tradition of Jewish wisdom teachers such as Ben Sira, etc.

Bruce Chilton addresses the question of James' relationship to Peter and Paul. His methodology is curious at times, as he seems inconsistent in his handling of issues of historicity. For example, he often treats Acts as being historically reliable, but then he will dismiss evidence from it when it does not suit his thesis. This would be understandable if he were to provide reasons for rejecting these items, but he does not do so.

Craig Evans closes with a chapter in which he compares Qumranic, Rabbinic, and Jacobean (that of James) Judaisms. He uses Chilton's four distinguishing traits as the framework for his discussion.

The appendix consists of a review of Robert Eisenman's, "James, the Brother of Jesus" written by Robert Price. This review seemed out of place in this work due to the fact that both Eisenman and Price are on the fringe of NT scholarship and prone to highly speculative theses. Needless to say, Price raves about Eisenman's work with comments like, "Eisenman is like the Renaissance scientists who had to handcraft all the intricate parts of a planned invention." What is most ironic is that nearly the entire scholarly community views Eisenman's work as just that: a handcrafted fabrication lacking a basis in historical reality. Unfortunately, neither Price nor Eisenman recognize it as such.

Buy this book if you want to learn more about James and early Christianity. The scholars are not monolithic in their views, which means you'll find some with whom you'll agree and others with whom you'll be challenged.


Rabbi Jesus: An Intimate Biography
Published in Paperback by Image Books (26 February, 2002)
Author: Bruce Chilton
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An Epiphany
I consider this to be an excellent book about a difficult subject. The focus is on Jesus as a flesh and blood human being, which is difficult for those of us who have always thought of him only as divine. And while it is true that the author engages in suppositions throughout, the central themes and opinions set out do seem to have historical/archeological bases. More importantly, they make a good deal of sense.

As an example, Mr. Chilton points out that, whatever our beliefs about the virgin birth, it is highly unlikely that the villagers he grew up amongst believed any such thing. They would have thought of him as a "mamzer" - a person conceived out of wedlock. That status would have placed him in the status of outsider in many activities of village life, including the synagogue. Viewed in that context, his concern for the oppressed and weak throughout his ministry are clearly rooted in his own, human, childhood experiences.

This single small concept alone has profoundly deepened my understanding of Jesus and his teachings. There are many other such "epiphanies" in this book. Read it and grow.

Deserves 5 stars
I was shocked to see that this amazing book only has 3 out of 5 stars. I'm glad I bought this book before reading the reviews here. I read many of the reviews, and there seems to be 2 groups of people that are giving the low rating: those that want a pure scholarly work, and those that want a book that takes the bible very literally and without error. Bruce Chilton does a wonderful job in offer explanations on how the miracles of Jesus could have happened, and how the NT we have today may contain exact phrases used by Jesus. In addition, you'll come to better understand the Messiah, who was refered to by his followers as Rabbi Jesus.

A Great Book.
Bruce Chilton approaches the life of Jesus as a historian, looking beyond the bible to all relevant sources on the man, his society, and the times he lived in, examining and rationally ironing out all apparent contradictions that emerge, giving no source favor over the other. The story that emerges is a little different, a lot more believable, and, frankly, a lot more enjoyable. Chilton's Jesus is very much a man, with all of the insecurities, envies, misjudgments, and sadness that go along with the human condition. And yet, for all of this, he resonates with a deep sense of the divine, and an intense recognition of its presence and power within himself. These qualities make Chilton's Jesus a very appealing personality. Chilton's portrait, painted in vivid detail, is drawn from a deep well of knowledge of his subject matter, a knowledge that makes itself apparent in almost every word. Fundamentalists will hate it, but for open minded people who accept the presence of myth in the Bible, this book is a gem. I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It gave me the first really believable picture of the Jesus that I always knew I believed in.


The Aramaic Bible: The Isaiah Targum: Introduction, Translation, Apparatus and Notes
Published in Hardcover by Liturgical Press (1999)
Author: Bruce Chilton
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One caveat: THIS IS ONLY A TRANSLATION.

This work is fine, for what it is... What it is NOT (and I assume the entire series is not), is an Aramaic Bible.

Note the category "Religion and Spirituality": Unlike the misleading series _title_, the ... _category_ doesn't say anything about the Aramaic language. When I bought this book, I was looking for an actual Aramaic Targum of Isaiah. Not here, folks.

I may eventually find a use for this volume anyway -- Chilton is a first-rate scholar -- but I was VERY disappointed to find that there was NO ARAMAIC TEXT OF THE ISAIAH TARGUM in it; it is ONLY a translation and notes. If you're looking for the genuine article, you're going to pay hundreds of dollars for it (probably directly to the publisher).


Applications Programming in IBM Basic (Chilton's Computing Series)
Published in Paperback by Chilton/Haynes (1985)
Author: Bruce Powel Douglass
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Authenticating the Activities of Jesus
Published in Paperback by Brill Academic Publishers (2002)
Authors: Bruce Chilton, Craig A. Evans, and Brill Academic
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Beginning New Testament Study
Published in Paperback by Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (1986)
Author: Bruce Chilton
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