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"McDowell and Lewis seem like odd comparisons to me, since I don't think the study of the historical Jesus was their research specialty. I'm more curious about how this book builds on (or disagrees with) books written by other scholars who study Jesus. I'm thinking, for example, of NT Wright and Marcus Borg, both of whom have written books about the historical Jesus within the last 30 years; or the work of the Jesus Seminar; or, farther back in history, Schweitzer's classic book; or various other scholars in the field. Which scholars do you agree with, or disagree with, and why?"
Thanks for the question about 'the book' (the mods deleted the thread). Actually I have reviewed McDowell, Lewis, Wright, Borg, Seminar and Schweitzer in writing the book. I cite them and many others in the bibliography. I picked the first two as they are very popular (but flawed) in the Christian community, ones that are handed out to new Christians. I disagree with apologetic works on principle; they are not interested in a hard-headed discussion. My book starts out by reviewing ALL of the early Christian Sources (over 250) that we do have for information on Jesus, something I have not seen done anywhere. Then I lay out what we can and can't say about Jesus. One of my major disagreements with traditional scholarship is the placing of the Gospels "late", I show that they are quite "early" (eg I date Mark to late 40 CE) which has major implications for understanding of Jesus.
Thanks for the question about 'the book' (the mods deleted the thread). Actually I have reviewed McDowell, Lewis, Wright, Borg, Seminar and Schweitzer in writing the book. I cite them and many others in the bibliography. I picked the first two as they are very popular (but flawed) in the Christian community, ones that are handed out to new Christians. I disagree with apologetic works on principle; they are not interested in a hard-headed discussion. My book starts out by reviewing ALL of the early Christian Sources (over 250) that we do have for information on Jesus, something I have not seen done anywhere. Then I lay out what we can and can't say about Jesus. One of my major disagreements with traditional scholarship is the placing of the Gospels "late", I show that they are quite "early" (eg I date Mark to late 40 CE) which has major implications for understanding of Jesus.