
- 224 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Jesus: A Beginner's Guide introduces Jesus, the man and his enduring legacy. Separating fact from fiction, Professor Le Donne places Jesus within the context of first-century Judaism, and explores the debate about his status as 'Son of God' among the early Christians.He then follows his legacy through medieval Europe, and compares the various cultural Jesuses in enlightenment and post-enlightenment thought.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weâve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere â even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youâre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Jesus by Anthony Le Donne in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & World History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Topic
Theology & ReligionSubtopic
World History1
Jesus the man
âIt seems clear that Jesus understood the anatomy of the relationship between his people and the Romans, and he interpreted that relationship against the background of the profoundest ethical insight of his own religious faith as he had found it in the heart of the prophets of Israel.â
Howard Thurman
Introduction: Drop the mike
When scholars talk about Jesus, one phrase always rises to the surface: the âJesus of history and the Christ of faith.â Itâs a favorite clichĂ© among academics because it allows us to avoid complexity. The basic idea is that Jesus (the man) was some vague or misunderstood philosophy teacher. But Christ (the god-man) is the invention of a new religion. The clichĂ© reduces an interesting personality into a boring binary. Worse still, this two-toned umbrella fails to explain how Jesus came to be known as âthe Christ.â This story requires us to appreciate the immediate and life-changing impact of Jesus. So to illustrate Jesusâs impact and evolution, letâs look at a modern analogy: Mike King.
In 1929, Michael King was born in Atlanta, Georgia. That year the most famous person from Georgia was baseball legend, Ty Cobb. The most famous person worldwide was film star, Charlie Chaplin. The biggest news of 1929 was the economic collapse that began with Wall Street investors and exploded into an international catastrophe. Needless to say, very few people took notice when Michael was born. His birth was only good news to the very few people who celebrated.
But within five years Michaelâs father would rename him, giving him a more symbolic, religious name. In thirty years he would become a famous religious leader. Within forty years he would become an internationally recognized political force. He would be murdered for the controversy he attracted and the politics he represented. Within fifty years he would be a symbolic persona, the ideal for a virtuous and courageous life. Within sixty years he would be one of the most venerated personalities of the modern era. His legacy now easily eclipses Cobb, Chaplin, or any of those Wall Street investors.
âMichaelâ of course was renamed âMartin Lutherâ: Martin Luther King, Jr. This was the name that would make headlines, create controversy, attract extreme hatred, and extravagant love.
It might be helpful to think of Jesusâs historical impact along these lines: born into obscurity; labeled by and conformed to a religious legacy; controversial in public persona; murdered before achieving transcendent status. Most importantly: both Jesus and King had their legacies expanded, transformed, and idealized within decades of their untimely deaths.
MEET THIS WORD: ATONEMENT
Atonement is the state of being reconciled and forgiven from wrongdoing. In theology it refers to a relational reconciliation between God and humankind.

Figure 1 Lamb of God (1635): An oil painting on canvas by Spanish artist Francisco de ZurbarĂĄn portrays a religious, symbolic subject. In ancient systems of worship, animal sacrifice was often used to appease the gods. In Israelite religion, such sacrifices were supposed to be free from any blemish. In portraying Jesus as a spotless lamb, the Christian imagination associated Jesusâs death with sacrifice and his life with perfection. Stylistically it reflects the realism of Amerighi da Caravaggioâs school.
I draw the comparison between King and Jesus because their lives, and what they became posthumously, seem all but impossible. And yet â rare as it might be â sometimes a historical figure embodies the unlikely, the legendary. For example, Jesus is sometimes depicted as a sacrificial lamb (an animal typically offered to God to atone for sin). Here we see Jesus turned into a zoomorphic symbol borrowed from Jewish ritual. Clearly, this sort of depiction is not interested in portraying Jesus, the man. Depicted as a lamb, Jesus represents collective atonement in the Christian imagination. Indeed, many symbols have been used for Jesus: a lamb, a shepherd, a king, a fish, a phoenix, a groom, a loaf of bread, a cup of wine, a gate, a vine, life-giving water, etc.
If Jesus had been born in America in 1929, he would have been depicted with different symbols. Consider the many refractions of Martin Luther King through a modern political prism: heroic underdog, reformer, malcontent, virtuous Christian, white Americaâs favorite symbol of non-violence, Moses, martyr, Americaâs conscience. Some of these symbols distort the manâs legacy falsely. And no single symbol captures the man entirely. The story of the transition from Michael to MLK must explain how a kid born in Georgia inspired so many differing opinions about him.
So too with Jesus.
This is why the clichĂ© the âJesus of history and the Christ of faithâ fails. It doesnât hold up any more than a distinction between the âMichael of historyâ vs. the âMLK of faithâ would. Indeed, the life of Jesus helped to shape what his legacy would become. The interested interpreter of history is then left with a puzzle: how do we explain the continuity between Jesus and the multiple portraits of him as Christ? Conversely, how do we account for the fictions that emerged alongside the facts?
It cannot be doubted that both Jesus and King have become idealized symbols. As I write this fifty years later, Martin Luther King is more idea than man. His private doubts and scandals are almost entirely eclipsed by his social impact. His rocky relationships with other African-American religious leaders are all but forgotten. The white America that once thought of him in largely derogatory terms now embraces him (at least a very selective memory of his legacy). In fact, both conservatives and liberals claim him for their side. So too, Jesus had been fictionalized, lionized, idealized, and claimed by multiple ideologies within fifty years of his crucifixion.
Is it possible to sketch a historical portrait while also accounting for these larger-than-life legacies? I believe so. The legacy of King illustrates how a public persona can dramatically evolve in about fifty years. With King, we can measure who he is to us now and critique it. If we are honest and careful we can analyze the legacy fifty years later and judge our own narratives. Scholars of Jesusâs life must do something similar with the portraits of Jesus that we find in Christian commemoration. In many ways, the texts of the New Testament represent Jesus Christ as he had developed twenty to seventy years after his death. Indeed, the gospels that give us the clearest view of Jesus are about fifty years removed from his death.
One key difference between the culture that lionized King and the one that lionized Jesus is that our world includes the invention of secular ideals. People in Jesusâs world were more likely to perceive things that we might label supernatural. Important histories were more likely to be wrapped in mythology. So did people see Jesus perform heavenly signs, or did they create myths about Jesus performing heavenly signs? The answer is âyesâ and âyes.â Jesus was a faith healer and a career exorcist. The followers of Jesus, therefore, had every reason to create a mythology around his personality. But the opposite is true of King. Modern-day methods of myth-making are more likely to remove divinity from the story than to add it. Martin Luther King, Jr., grew up the son of a Baptist preacher, was named after a religious founder, went to a seminary, became a preacher himself, was deeply influenced by Gandhi, and collaborated with his friend Rabbi Abraham Heschel. But fifty years after his death, Kingâs religious foundations rarely find expression in contemporary depictions of his life. And the more we remove religious elements from the King story, the less likely we are to find out who he really was.
Both King and Jesus must be understood as men who planted the seeds of a legacy. Most legacies contain clues of the personality from which it derives. The careful and honest student of history must account for the whole picture: both man and myth.
Now we arrive at the nexus of the problem: unless we were compelled by Jesusâs legacy, we wouldnât care about him as a man. Or, put another way, if Jesus were just a man like every other man, we wouldnât be interested. The âChrist of faithâ will always exist in relationship with the âJesus of history.â
God acts
The first and most important thing to know about Jesus is that he believed in a God of action. Jesus believed in a God who created the heavens and earth. This God would soon judge the wicked and bring justice to the righteous. In this, Jesus was different from most Greek philosophers, Roman intellectual elites, and common folk all over the Mediterranean. This is to say that Jesus â as a Jew of the first century â had a different understanding of God than most of his non-Jewish contemporaries. Jesus was Jewish in his orientation to the Jerusalem Temple and the customs related to this temple. As a Jew, Jesus was forced to negotiate a Greek-speaking world that had a different view of the gods and how they related to the world. The God of Jesus (whom he called âFatherâ) would act on behalf of Israel and all who sought pure worship in the Jerusalem Temple.
Jesus believed in a God of action.
Jesus, as a figure in history, cannot be understood without this simple fact. Like many Jews during this period, Jesus believed that God would soon rule earth in the same way that he ruled the stars. The God who acts would soon act in human political affairs.
MEET THIS WORD: MEDITERRANEAN
Mediterranean refers generally to the Mediterranean Sea or the lands, peoples, and cultures nearby, including North Africa, western Asia, and southern Europe. Jesus lived his entire life in the first-century Mediterranean world during its Roman occupation.
Jesusâs followers carried this belief after his death. They called themselves âthe Wayâ and then they called themselves âChristians.â But the thread that runs from Jesus to what his following became is the foundational belief that God acts. Jesusâs followers (although their beliefs varied) hoped to see God act through Jesus. Some continued to believe this after his execution. They continued to experience God through Jesus even after his death, and preached the good news of his resurrection. In this way, the message of the âgospelâ (which literally means âgood newsâ) hinged on the belief that during Jesusâs death God took action. God, who is first and foremost a Creator, performed a new act of creation in Jesusâs body to bring him back to life. Crucially, this divine action served as a sign for things to come.
Godâs action through Jesus signaled crucial changes in the cosmic order. Political powers would fall and a better government would rise. The disempowered and persecuted would be comforted and made whole. Social hierarchies would reverse. Any person who wanted to worship in Godâs presence and in perfect purity would be welcomed. Death was not the end.
This was similar to Jesusâs public preaching. Jesus preached that his followers must ârepent and believe the good news.â According to Jesus, âthe kingdom of God was at hand.â This is a cosmic-political message that God would soon be king â a perfectly righteous king who enacts justice and brings new life. But this good news took a new form once Jesus became a symbol of resurrection. Before his death, Jesus pointed to God as king. After his death, his followers pointed to Jesus as a way into Godâs kingdom. The central belief that God acts did not change, but this belief was refracted through the prism of Jesusâs resurrection.
This is where things get a bit tricky from a historianâs perspective. When did the resurrection of Jesus become part of the good news of Godâs kingdom?
Jesus believed in the coming of Godâs kingdom â a new world order wherein God would rule on earth as God rules in heaven. He preached about it. He told stories (parables) about it. He prayed about it. But did Jesus imagine that his own resurrection would represent Godâs primary action?

Figure 2 Christ Resurrected (circa 350 ce): In this engraving, Christ is depicted by two Greek letters X (chi) and P (rho) atop a crucifix. These are the first two letters in the Greek word for âChrist.â The two Roman soldiers sitting passively below suggest that the resurrected Christ is more powerful than the Roman Empire. Moreover, Christ has conquered Romeâs instrument for execution.
The dying and rising of one man seems an unexpected path to a new world order. Jesus might have anticipated his execution, but was resurrection central to his ideology? This question is warranted because Jesus does not talk much about resurrection. It just does not feature prominently (if at all) in his public preaching. Yes, he believed that God would act. But did he know how God would act?
Many historians suggest that the early Christians promoted the symbol of resurrection only after Jesus had died (in light of their own experience). Others suggest that Jesusâs original preaching was eclipsed by the message of resurrection (thus we donât know much about what Jesus believed). Still others suggest that Jesus understood the significance of his death and resurrection, but did not speak about it in public. If so, the Christians had to reconsider Jesusâs teachings in light of Godâs creative actions. As with any belief system that hinges on divine intervention, past events are seen through the lenses of new experiences.
Jesus and the spirit realm
Jesusâs public performances included exorcisms. In fact, he became so famous for them that certain theological titles emerged. And as...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Illustrations
- Introduction: A guidebook for a circuitous way
- 1. Jesus the man
- 2. Jesus in early literature
- 3. Jesus in the premodern imagination
- 4. Jesus in modern intelligentsia
- 5. Jesus in pop culture
- Concluding reflection
- Subject index
- References index
- Copyright