Jesus Without Fabrication
George Wesley Buchanan
Paperback Edition: ISBN 978-0979793530
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In contrast to all
of the fanciful fabrications that have appeared in print recently,
Buchanan’s compelling portrait of Jesus as a master diplomat,
organizer, chief executive, and statesman is refreshing. Other
authors have been led astray by some of the following nineteenth
century invalid assumptions, presuming:
-
that the later
church composed the gospel reports unreliably,
-
that all of the
political terms in the gospels must be understood non-politically,
-
that any
expression of “the end” always means the end of the world,
regardless of its context,
-
that Jesus and his
followers were illiterate, so the gospels were not written down
until much later than the time when Jesus lived,
-
that Jesus did not
speak to his own age but to ours,
-
what Jesus said
and meant in his own day is not the most important scholarly
concern. What is important is how reading the gospels makes readers
think and feel today.
With all of these
potential eliminations of selected historical facts about Jesus,
twentieth and twenty-first century authors have moved freely to invent
a Jesus to fit their own time and location, treating the gospels as if
they were inkblot tests to be used to reflect the readers’ own
feelings and opinions. Authors have disagreed about the details,
because they had different needs. Some scholars think Jesus was a
peasant, a Cynic, or a magician.
For others he was probably illiterate. Some thought the
gospel reports were inaccurately preserved from only an oral tradition. There has been a strong tendency to use some or all of
these hypotheses as if they were computer default settings, or NO
TRESPASSING territorial signs. These prevalent, invalid, restrictive
assumptions have affected the way that scholars have approached the
gospels and at least partially account for the many strange
misconceptions given as solutions by westerners during the past
century.
The historian
Buchanan, however, has examined and rejected the assumptions that have
functioned as default settings. He realized that the nineteenth
century scholars who put up the NO TRESPASSING signs and established
the default settings do not own the land or control the computers, so,
without the inhibitions of the consensus, Buchanan has evaluated the
texts for himself and found them reliable. This allowed Buchanan to
write about the real Jesus, as he existed in his own country and in
his own time. After Buchanan had tested a large portion of Jesus’
teachings and had shown that they were valid, he then introduced the
readers to the coded messages and Jewish thought forms necessary to
understand the meaning of this large body of material.
The gospels are not
fairy tales or comic strips, and Jesus was not a fairy godmother who
could wave a wand and change pumpkins into chariots and then back into
pumpkins again. He was not the superman of comic strips who could fly
like a bird and then return to be like an ordinary businessman, as he
chose. Jesus was a real human being who sacrificed for his people,
wrestled with difficult decisions and then made them wisely. He was
never an illiterate peasant who told interesting stories only to the
poor. He was not an antitype of Mahatma Ghandi, Abraham Lincoln, or
St. Francis of Assisi. He was never married. He was not a labor leader
or an advocate of women’s rights. He lived in the Near East 2,000
years ago during a very tense period in Jewish history. He was very
wealthy, but gave up all of his wealth and took monastic vows of
poverty, celibacy, and obedience. He recruited a cabinet of some of
the best leaders in Palestine, who also gave up all of their wealth to
follow his lead. Buchanan’s careful history skills have checked all of
the sources and have revealed that Jesus was a very religious,
talented, well-educated upper class leader. He authorized his cabinet
members to be his legal agents, and he organized a church as a legal
corporation that could continue without his immediate physical
presence. He addressed his message to the upper class who had money to
give and talents to share. The church has reliably preserved in the
New Testament the most important data that we have about Jesus. The
real, Near Eastern Jesus is better than any of the western
fabrications about him. The church he created is at its best when it
follows his judgments and decisions.
The result of
Buchanan’s research is a fascinating introduction to a brilliant
leader that most of us hardly know. Jesus was not a simple peasant.
This book is written so that people who can read newspapers will be
able to understand it. Everyone who is interested in history,
archaeology, or civil law will love this book. Others will also find
it refreshing and insightful.
Professor George
Wesley Buchanan has succeeded in tracking the historical Jesus, where
others have failed. He has persisted like a bloodhound on the trail of
a fugitive in flight. He tracks Jesus through the Holy Land and the
greater Roman Empire using several forms and modes of analysis. He
makes a good case. This book should prove ideal for Sunday School
discussion groups. It opens new vistas for laymen and scholars alike.
Professional scholars and historians ignore it at their peril.
-Dr. Charles Shields,
Esq., Attorney-at-law
Many know George
Wesley Buchanan as a scholar who probes areas that other scholars dare
not touch, but many will not know George Wesley Buchanan the pastor
intent on addressing issues of relevance to the Church. In vintage
Buchanan style, he draws on his extensive knowledge of the ancient
world and its literatures, archaeology, and legal studies to prove the
words and actions of the historical Jesus. The result is a provocative
book that forces the reader to look at old data through new lenses-
with surprisingly fresh, challenging, and insightful results.
-Stanley E.
Porter, PhD. McMaster Divinity
College
George Buchanan gives
us a provocative and compelling portrait of Jesus we hardly know: a
master diplomat, organizer, chief executive, and statesman. This is a
story that will open our eyes to new possibilities in understanding
the life of the Good Shepherd. Buchanan’s Jesus is someone that every
lay person will want to meet anew.
-Mike
McCurry,
White House Press Secretary (1995-98)
About the Author:
George
Wesley Buchanan
is third in a family of ten children. He has spent fourteen happy
years as a pastor before teaching thirty-one years in a Theological
Seminary.
The author has
worked extensively in the Near East, published many sermons, church
school materials, poems, seventeen books, and more than sixty articles
in academic journals. Some of his research has taken place in
libraries in Germany, Israel, and many universities in USA.
The author has been
recognized in academic circles for being the first for the following:
1. The use of
insights from the Dead Sea Scrolls to solve biblical problems.
2. The discovery of
midrash (commentary on Scripture) in the First Testament.
3. The
publication of intertextual commentaries both in the First Testament
and in the New Testament.
4. The
discovery of the northern boundaries of the Promised Land.
5. One
of two scholars who independently discovered the true location of the
temple at Zion.
6. The
discovery of a method for distinguishing the teachings of Jesus from
the additions of the later church. Other scholars have followed
Schweitzer in declaring that this could not be done.
7. The
discovery of the Samaritan origin of the Gospel of John, showing that
this gospel is not anti-Semitic, but rather Semitic.
8. The
discovery that Hebrews 1-12 is a sermon based on Ps. 110 and was
preached for the first time at Zion shortly before A.D. 70.
The author has now
turned his attention to the historical Jesus, demonstrating the
validity of the gospels and showing much historical data that has been
overlooked by other scholars. As a pastor he has answered here the
many questions parishioners have asked him about Jesus. As a historian
he has searched diligently for new sources to learn about Jesus.
Buchanan has written this book for the general public. People who
read newspapers will be able to understand it.