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After Jesus Before Christianity: New Discoveries
Rating: 4.5 out of 5(7 ratings)
10 students

After Jesus Before Christianity: New Discoveries

Findings from the Westar Institute's Christianity Seminar
Created byShirley Paulson
Last updated 12/2022
English

What you'll learn

  • Find thought-provoking insights regarding the earliest years following Jesus before the formal Church was established
  • A new understanding of the way the contemporary world influenced the followers of Jesus
  • How this deep dive into the first two centuries helps us understand the Bible better
  • Taking the opportunity to ponder our own relationship to antiquity in general and the Jesus movement specifically

Course content

6 sections38 lectures3h 28m total length
  • Inspirational for Section 1: Re-thinking Our Assumptions4:13
  • Re-thinking: History and the Early Jesus Followers2:32
  • Re-thinking: The Meaning of the Missing Hands5:17
  • Re-thinking: BELIEVE2:26
  • Re-thinking: True or False?2:44
  • Key Questions1:01

Requirements

  • Students with some familiarity with the New Testament will find that experience useful, but it is not necessary.
  • Students with some knowledge of the history of Christianity will find that information useful, but only by comparison with the new and earlier material we will cover. The knowledge of Christian history is not a prerequisite for this course.

Description

Shirley Paulson and Deborah Saxon were active participants in Westar Institute’s Christianity Seminar that led to the production of the book, After Jesus Before Christianity. They bring insider knowledge of the work of the seminar over its eight years and the conclusions that have now come together in book form. This course highlights the most important of these findings—new discoveries regarding the followers of Jesus in the first two centuries C.E. These breakthroughs in understanding have implications for our thinking and practice today. To be forewarned, some of these realizations challenge traditional views, but they also liberate us from outgrown practices that probably never even started with Jesus or his apostles.


The course begins with a recognition of assumptions of those earliest years after Jesus and which ones we ought to question. The main topics we plan include examples of women in leadership roles, ancient understandings of gender, the painful reality of living with Roman violence; diverse ideas regarding self-identity, suffering, and death among Jesus’s followers; wide-ranging views of Jesus, Paul, and Mary, the Magdalene; the variety of texts available before there was any such thing as a New Testament, and new perspectives on so-called “Gnosticism” and “heresy.”


The content is divided into six sections which include inspirational introductions, lectures, and resources for further study. Throughout the course, there will also be opportunities for reflection and making connections with the world today.

Who this course is for:

  • People who want to understand the origins of Christianity more fully
  • People who are comfortable with a challenge to traditional assumptions
  • Enthusiastic but untrained Bible readers
  • Historians who especially enjoy the Christian element of antiquity
  • Spiritual seekers