Synopses & Reviews
esurrection is the rock of faith on which Christianity is founded. But on what evidence is the most miraculous phenomenon in religious history based?
World-famous biblical scholar Geza Vermes has studied all the evidence that still remains, over two thousand years after Jesus Christ was reported to have risen from the dead. Examining the Jewish Bible, the New Testament, and other accounts left to us, as well as contemporary attitudes toward the afterlife, he takes us through each episode with a historians focus: the Crucifixion, the treatment of the body, the statements of the women who found the empty tomb, and the visions of Christ by his disciples. Unraveling the true meaning conveyed in the Gospels, the Acts, and Saint Paul, Vermes shines new light on the developing faith in the risen Christ among the first followers of Jesus.
Synopsis
The Resurrection is one of the central events in Christian history. It was by coming back to earth after being crucified that Jesus finally proved once and for all that he was God made man. But while the Resurrection is celebrated every Easter, many Christians view it more as a fairy tale than as a profound event with vast spiritual and historical consequences. In THE RESURRECTION, a work of remarkable scholarship, world-renowned Bible scholar Geza Vermes explores this miraculous event in language accessible to the general reader, teasing out the many spiritual lessons of the Resurrection and providing an even deeper understanding of this turning point in history.
About the Author
GEZA VERMES is one of the worlds leading authorities on Judaism in the age of Jesus. His pioneering work on the Dead Sea Scrolls and the historical Jesus led to his appointment as the first Professor of Jewish Studies at Oxford, where he is now Professor Emeritus. His Complete Dead Sea Scrollsfirst published in 1962, since revised and edited, and now in its sixth printingis widely considered a classic and foundational text. Since 1991, he has been the director of the Forum for Qumran Research at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, and he was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 1985 and of the European Academy in 2001.