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Joseph is Dead : The Untold Story of Jesus' Family - D. Paul Schulz

Joseph is Dead

The Untold Story of Jesus' Family

By: D. Paul Schulz

eBook | 22 March 2017 | Edition Number 1

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Family was more important to Jesus than you think. Discover the hidden narrative throughout the Gospels that was lost in translation… until now.

“A sweeping story of family, political and social struggle, and death and redemption that embodies the very message of Christian faith.” (Midwest Book Review)

Jesus’ family played an important role in his ministry, death, and resurrection. This narrative is often missed because of translation misunderstandings from the original Greek. Let D. Paul Schulz fill in these critical gaps to broaden your understanding of Jesus’ life.

While many Christians think they know about the life of Jesus, few realize the less obvious—and rarely discussed—family ties woven throughout his ministry. For example, Mary didn't plan on having baby Jesus in a stable but with family living close by. When you learn the meaning and context of these family connections and how they motivated Jesus, you’ll add new depth and vibrancy to your understanding of the Gospels.

In Joseph is Dead, you’ll discover:

- The true sequence of events between Jesus’ birth and the arrival of the Wise Men

- The role that Joseph and his family played in the unrecorded “silent years”

- What could have motivated Judas to betray Jesus in the way he did

- New meaning behind Jesus’ appearance to Mary Magdalene and the Apostle Peter that provides greater comprehension of the Easter story

- Why Jesus was rejected by his hometown of Nazareth, and much, much more!

Joseph is Dead uses biblical scholarship and insightful psychoanalysis to help draw conclusions about how Jesus’ life relates to ours today. If you like boldly written Christian scholarship that’s deeply insightful and accessible to the armchair reader, then you’ll love D. Paul Schulz’s revolutionary new book.

Buy Joseph is Dead today to experience Jesus in a whole new light.

Industry Reviews

With Easter and the special importance of this date to Christian believers there is no better book to turn to than Joseph is Dead, a sweeping story of family, political and social struggle, and death and redemption that embodies the very message of Christian faith as it surveys pieces of the Scripture that create a very different story line. It's surprising to note a rather large omission in the literature surrounding Jesus: his family. It seems no one has noticed that one side of His family embraced Him and the other branch rejected Him. Jesus had twelve apostles, including three sets of brothers, Yet, His own brothers were not among them.

A Scholarly tone with insights designed to directly link Biblical passages and Jesus family and their appearances throughout the Gospels. Follows a different story line than what has been customarily believed demonstrates one branch of the family embraces Jesus and the other rejects him...

...The book is scholarly in tone and uses scripture to point out critical relationships that have been ignored because of the religious preoccupation with dogma. Most of Jesus apostles were cousins and Judas, who betrayed him, had a father who had ample reasons to induce his treachery. Joseph is Dead gives interesting details that all Christians should know such as who Judas father was and why Judas kissed Jesus on the eve of his betrayal.

(Midwest Book Review) 

 

A radical reappraisal of the story of Jesus’ family before his ministry began.

The tree of Christianity has branched into many different denominational directions throughout history. Debut author Schulz contends that these myriad divisions are the result of faulty biblical scholarship; there are translation-related problems with various texts, he says, and the back stories of some important figures have been lost. In this book, he excavates Jesus’ complex family relations, leading up to the beginning of his ministry in his 30s. When Mary announced her immaculate pregnancy, he notes, Joseph was at first understandably skeptical, although he prudently chose not to publicly challenge her claim; Jesus’ brothers, however, rebuked the child and chose not to be among his disciples when he later began his ministry. However, Schulz writes, the family members on Mary’s side did believe her, partly because of the miraculous birth of Jesus’ first cousin, John, from an elderly mother. Jesus chose some of his apostles from that group, says Schulz; John, in particular, was exceedingly close to Jesus because he grew up with him. The author also emphasizes Jesus’ devotion to his kin; after Joseph died, he says, Jesus delayed his divine mission in order to take care of them. Overall, Schulz meticulously argues his main point: that the centrality of family to Jesus’ life should also be a central Christian teaching: “As a believer, if I can’t see the love in the Gospel, what do I have to share with non-believers?” His study is rich in iconoclastic interpretations, boldly but carefully delineated by his scholarship. At one point, for example, he asserts that Judas was influenced by his Pharisee father to betray Jesus. Sometimes the prose can be uneven, though; for instance, the final chapter, which uses a mathematical metaphor to explain humanity’s relation to Christ, is more confusing than instructive. By and large, though, this is a provocative, original contribution to biblical studies.

A brief but powerful revisionist look at Jesus’ early life and times.

(Kirkus Review)

 

 

 

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