மூலகிரேக்கச்சொல்மோனோகெனஸ்-MONOGENUSGREEK IS 'MONOGENUS'. MONO MEANS 'ONE' AND GENUS MEANS 'SPECIES' OR 'TYPE' OR 'KIND'. IT IS WORTH NOTING THAT THE WORD IS MONOGENUS, NOTMONOGENESIS (WHICH WOULD MEAN CAME FROM ONE SOURCE, RATHER THAN OF A UNIQUE KIND).
T//There seems to be no doubt that the Infancy Narratives of Matthhew & Luke were later additions to the original body of the Apostolic Catechesis, the content of which –began with the advent of John the Baptist and ended with the Ascension.// Page-695, Vol-14, New Catholic Encyclopedia
The Greek word in Mark 6:3 for the relationship between that are used to designate meaning of full blood brothers and sisters in the Greek speaking world of the Evangeslist’s time and would naturally be taken by his Greek readers in this sense.Page-3375, Vol-9, New Catholic Encyclopedia
Prof: A.C.Bouquet-Cambridge Professor of History and comparitive Religions in his book -"Comparitive Religion"
"It is now plain from the analysis of the documents that even during his life-time there was never a point when it could be said with certainity that the Gospel was purely announcement made by Jesus, and not also announcement about Jesus."- page 233.
The development of a malicious Jewish report that Jesus was the illegitimate son of Mary and a Roman Soldier appears about at the same time.... there may be covert reference to it in the fourth gospel (8:41) which is a debate about A.D.100. page- 237
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Now Available in Paperback with a New Epilogue and Update on the "Jesus Family Tomb"
Based on a careful analysis of the earliest Christian documents and recent archeological discoveries, The Jesus Dynasty offers a bold new interpretation of the life of Jesus and the origins of Christianity.
In The Jesus Dynasty biblical scholar James Tabor brings us closer than ever to the historical Jesus. Jesus, as we know, was the son of Mary, a young woman who became pregnant before her marriage to a man named Joseph. The gospels tell us that Jesus had four brothers and two sisters, all of whom probably had a different father from him. He joined a messianic movement begun by his relative John the Baptizer, whom he regarded as his teacher and as a great prophet. John and Jesus together filled the roles of the Two Messiahs who were expected at the time, John as a priestly descendant of Aaron and Jesus as a royal descendant of David. Together they preached the coming of the Kingdom of God. Theirs was an apocalyptic movement that expected God to establish his kingdom on earth, as described by the prophets. The two messiahs lived in a time of turmoil as the historical land of Israel was dominated by the powerful Roman empire. Fierce Jewish rebellions against Rome occurred during Jesus's lifetime.
John and Jesus preached adherence to the Torah, or the Jewish Law. But their mission was changed dramatically when John was arrested and then killed. After a period of uncertainty, Jesus began preaching anew in Galilee and challenged the Roman authorities and their Jewish collaborators in Jerusalem. He appointed a Council of Twelve to rule over the twelve tribes of Israel, among whom he included his four brothers. After he was crucified by the Romans, his brother James – the “Beloved Disciple” – took over leadership of the Jesus Dynasty.
James, like John and Jesus before him, saw himself as a faithful Jew. None of them believed that their movement was a new religion. It was Paul who transformed Jesus and his message through his ministry to the gentiles, breaking with James and the followers of Jesus in Jerusalem, preaching a message based on his own revelations that would become Christianity. Jesus became a figure whose humanity was obscured; John became merely a forerunner of Jesus; and James and the others were all but forgotten.
James Tabor has studied the earliest surviving documents of Christianity for more than thirty years and has participated in important archeological excavations in Israel. Drawing on this background, Tabor reconstructs for us the movement that sought the spiritual, social, and political redemption of the Jews, a movement led by one family. The Jesus Dynasty offers an alternative version of Christian origins, one that takes us closer than ever to Jesus and his family and followers. The story is surprising and controversial, but exciting as only a long-lost history can be when it is at last recovered.
This is a book that will change our understanding of one of the most crucial moments in history.
James D. Tabor is chair of the department of religious studies at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He holds a Ph.D. in biblical studies from the University of Chicago and is an expert on the Dead Sea Scrolls and Christian origins. The author of several previous books, he is frequently consulted by the media on these topics and has appeared on numerous television and radio programs.
Visit Dr. James Tabor's personal website and blog at: JamesTabor.com