The Third Jesus: The Christ We Cannot Ignore [NOOK Book]

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Overview

Who is Jesus Christ?

In The Third Jesus, bestselling author and spiritual leader Deepak Chopra provides an answer to this question that is both a challenge to current systems of belief and a fresh perspective on what Jesus can teach us all, regardless of our religious background. There is not one Jesus, Chopra writes, but three.

First, there is the historical Jesus, the man who lived more than two thousand years ago and whose teachings are the foundation of Christian theology and thought. Next there is Jesus the Son of God, who has come to embody an institutional religion with ...
See more details below

Overview

Who is Jesus Christ?

In The Third Jesus, bestselling author and spiritual leader Deepak Chopra provides an answer to this question that is both a challenge to current systems of belief and a fresh perspective on what Jesus can teach us all, regardless of our religious background. There is not one Jesus, Chopra writes, but three.

First, there is the historical Jesus, the man who lived more than two thousand years ago and whose teachings are the foundation of Christian theology and thought. Next there is Jesus the Son of God, who has come to embody an institutional religion with specific dogma, a priesthood, and devout believers. And finally, there is the third Jesus, the cosmic Christ, the spiritual guide whose teaching embraces all humanity, not just the church built in his name. He speaks to the individual who wants to find God as a personal experience, to attain what some might call grace, or God-consciousness, or enlightenment.

When we take Jesus literally, we are faced with the impossible. How can we truly “love thy neighbor as thyself”? But when we see the exhortations of Jesus as invitations to join him on a higher spiritual plane, his words suddenly make sense.

Ultimately, Chopra argues, Christianity needs to overcome its tendency to be exclusionary and refocus on being a religion of personal insight and spiritual growth. In this way Jesus can be seen for the universal teacher he truly is–someone whose teachings of compassion, tolerance, and understanding can embrace and be embraced by all of us.


From the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

From Barnes & Noble
Most Christians are familiar with the concept of the Trinity, the tripartite nature of God. To this orthodox belief, bestselling author Deepak Chopra adds a fresh triptych, a new sense of the three figures of Jesus: 1. The historical Nazarene rabbi; 2. The Son of God at the center of Christianity; 3. The spiritual guide whose teachings are universal. Chopra's ecumenical message will appeal to progressive Christians and people of other faiths.
Publishers Weekly

Chopra brings a familiar calm, contemplative speaking style to the audio version of his latest title, which places the life and teachings of Jesus Christ in a broader spiritual context that synthesizes Eastern and Western concepts. Chopra begins his journey by making a case against traditional Christian notions that emphasize the institutional and dogmatic aspects of the Jesus identity. He then ushers in the "Third Jesus" as a figure who points individuals from all spiritual paths toward an ultimate "God consciousness." He devotes a large chunk of the recording to outlining key statements and precepts of Jesus that provide invitations for connecting with deeper truths through meditation. Perhaps because of the abridgment process, some of the most salient points in Chopra's conclusion—especially his outsider's take on why liberal voices within established Christianity invariably find themselves losing the internal debate with more conservative elements—seem a little rushed. Yet audiences with eclectic religious interests will welcome Chopra's perspective as an opportunity for building further dialogue. Simultaneous release with the Harmony hardcover. (Feb.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780307407412
  • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 2/19/2008
  • Sold by: Random House
  • Format: eBook
  • Sales rank: 85,745
  • File size: 337 KB
  • Items ship to U.S, APO/FPO and U.S. Protectorate addresses.

Meet the Author

Deepak Chopra
Deepak Chopra
Bestselling author Deepak Chopra is widely recognized as one of the world’s leading authorities in the field of holistic medicine. His belief that the mind, body, and spirit are closely interknit has won him legions of followers.

Biography

The practice of holistic and mind-body medicine has long been a controversial subject among medical professionals. Some view it as a healthy and natural alternative to chemical pharmaceuticals. Others see it as a system of placebos and new-age chicanery. No matter where one stands on this issue, there is no denying the influence that mind, body, and spirit practitioner Deepak Chopra has had on the world of medicine.

Chopra's bestselling books on a variety of topics have been translated into 35 languages. His lectures, seminars, and learning materials are immensely popular, as are his television specials for PBS. In addition, he has founded his own medical center called the Chopra Center for Well Being and has won fans amongst celebrities ranging from Prince Charles to Mikhail Gorbachev to Demi Moore to David Lynch. When financier/philanthropist Michael Milken was diagnosed with prostate cancer, he claimed that Chopra's holistic methods shrunk his lymph nodes by 90%.

Chopra's interest in alternative medicine initially grew out of concern for his own health. After moving from India to set up a practice medicine in Boston some 25 years ago, Chopra succumbed to many of the stresses that plague medical professionals. As a result, he guzzled coffee, chain-smoked, and drank heavily. Once he began studying eastern philosophies by way of Krishnamurti and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, he became aware of medical practices outside of the sometimes limited western perspective. This awakening changed his life.

While Chopra is viewed as a major proponent of the role of Eastern philosophies in healing, he does not reject western medicine. In fact, what makes his approach so unique is the way he incorporates the best aspects of western medical research into his theories. This amalgamation of medical philosophies is at the root of self-help volumes like Restful Sleep, Perfect Weight, and Boundless Energy. Elsewhere, Chopra has addressed such diverse issues as reversing the aging process (Ageless Body, Timeless Mind), perfecting personal relationships (The Path to Love), and achieving capitalist goals via Eastern philosophies (The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success).

Chopra has also become concerned with the causes of war and violence and the principles of Eastern religions, especially Buddhism, and his books on these subjects have garnered praise from such major international figures as the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, and Boutros-Boutros Ghali. Consequently, Chopra continues to play a significant role in world health and world politics in spite of detractors and skeptics. With an immense body of work behind him and more volumes of wisdom sure to follow, he continues to preach the simple philosophy he is certain is the key to understanding ourselves, mentally and physically: "We're not human beings that have occasional spiritual experiences, it's the other way around: we're spiritual beings that have occasional human experiences."

Good To Know

In 1999, Time magazine named Chopra one of the Top 100 Icons and Heroes of the Century.

Chopra's father was a prominent cardiologist and an anglophile who distrusted Indian philosophies and alternative medical practices.

Despite his reputation as a serious-minded intellectual, Chopra describes himself as "playful" and "carefree."

    1. Also Known As:
      Deepak Chopra M.D.
    2. Hometown:
      La Jolla, California
    1. Date of Birth:
      October 22, 1946
    2. Place of Birth:
      New Delhi, India
    1. Education:
      All India Institute of Medical Sciences

Read an Excerpt

Redeeming the Redeemer

Jesus is in trouble. When people worship him today--or even speak his name--the object of their devotion is unlikely to be who they think he is. A mythical Jesus has grown up over time. He has served to divide peoples and nations. He has led to destructive wars in the name of religious fantasies. The legacy of love found in the New Testament has been tainted with the worst sort of intolerance and prejudice that would have appalled Jesus in life. Most troubling of all, his teachings have been hijacked by people who hate in the name of love.

"Sometimes I feel this social pressure to return to my faith," a lapsed Catholic told me recently, "but I'm too bitter. Can I love a religion that calls gays sinners but hides pedophiles in its clergy? Yesterday while I was driving to work, I heard a rock song that went, 'Jesus walked on water when he should have surfed,' and you know what? I burst out laughing. I would never have done that when I was younger. Now I feel only the smallest twinge of guilt."

No matter where you look, a cloud of confusion hangs over the message of Jesus. To cut through it we have to be specific about who we mean when we refer to Jesus. One Jesus is historical, and we know next to nothing about him. Another Jesus is the one appropriated by Christianity. He was created by the Church to fulfill its agenda. The third Jesus, the one this book is about, is as yet so unknown that even the most devout Christians don't suspect that he exists. Yet he is the Christ we cannot--and must not--ignore.

The first Jesus was a rabbi who wandered the shores of northern Galilee many centuries ago. This Jesus still feels close enough to touch. He appears in our mind's eye dressed in homespun but haloed in glory. He was kind, serene, peaceful, loving, and yet he was the keeper of deep mysteries.

This historical Jesus has been lost, however, swept away by history. He still lingers like a ghost, a projection of all the ideal qualities we wish for in ourselves but so painfully lack. Why couldn't there be one person who was perfectly loving, perfectly compassionate, and perfectly humble? There can be if we call him Jesus and remove him to a time thousands of years in the past. (If you live in the East, his name might be Buddha, but the man is equally mythical and equally a projection of our own lack.)

The first Jesus is less than consistent, as a closer reading of the gospels will show. If Jesus was perfectly peaceful, why did he declare, "Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword"? (Matthew 10:34) If he was perfectly loving, why did he say, "Throw out the unprofitable servant into the outer darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth"? (Matthew 25:30) (Sometimes the translation is even harsher, and Jesus commands "the worthless slave" to be consigned to hell.) If Jesus was humble, why did he claim to rule the earth beyond the power of any king? At the very least, the living Jesus was a man of baffling contradictions.

And yet the more contradictions we unearth, the less mythical this Jesus becomes. The flesh-and-blood man who is lost to history must have been extraordinarily human. To be divine, one must be rich in every human quality first. As one famous Indian spiritual teacher once said, "The measure of enlightenment is how comfortable you feel with your own contradictions."

Millions of people worship another Jesus, however, who never existed, who doesn't even lay claim to the fleeting substance of the first Jesus. This is the Jesus built up over thousands of years by theologians and other scholars. He is the Holy Ghost, the Three-in-One Christ, the source of sacraments and prayers that were unknown to the rabbi Jesus when he walked the earth. He is also the Prince of Peace over whom bloody wars have been fought. This second Jesus cannot be embraced without embracing theology first. Theology shifts with the tide of human affairs. Metaphysics itself is so complex that it contradicts the simplicity of Jesus's words. Would he have argued with learned divines over the meaning of the Eucharist? Would he have espoused a doctrine declaring that babies are damned until they are baptized?

The second Jesus leads us into the wilderness without a clear path out. He became the foundation of a religion that has proliferated into some twenty thousand sects. They argue endlessly over every thread in the garments of a ghost. But can any authority, however exalted, really inform us about what Jesus would have thought? Isn't it a direct contradiction to hold that Jesus was a unique creation--the one and only incarnation of God--while at the same time claiming to be able to read his mind on current events? Yet in his name Christianity pronounces on homosexuality, birth control, and abortion.

These two versions of Jesus--the sketchy historical figure and the abstract theological creation--hold a tragic aspect for me, because I blame them for stealing something precious: the Jesus who taught his followers how to reach God-consciousness. I want to offer the possibility that Jesus was truly, as he proclaimed, a savior. Not the savior, not the one and only Son of God. Rather, Jesus embodied the highest level of enlightenment. He spent his brief adult life describing it, teaching it, and passing it on to future generations.

Jesus intended to save the world by showing others the path to God-consciousness.

Such a reading of the New Testament doesn't diminish the first two Jesuses. Rather, they are brought into sharper focus. In place of lost history and complex theology, the third Jesus offers a direct relationship that is personal and present. Our task is to delve into scripture and prove that a map to enlightenment exists there. I think it does, undeniably; indeed, it's the living aspect of the gospels. We aren't talking about faith. Conventional faith is the same as belief in the impossible (such as Jesus walking on water), but there is another faith that gives us the ability to reach into the unknown and achieve transformation.

Jesus spoke of the necessity to believe in him as the road to salvation, but those words were put into his mouth by followers writing decades later. The New Testament is an interpretation of Jesus by people who felt reborn but also left behind. In orthodox Christianity they won't be left behind forever; at the Second Coming Jesus will return to reclaim the faithful. But the Second Coming has had twenty centuries to unfold, with the devout expecting it any day, and still it lies ahead. The idea of the Second Coming has been especially destructive to Jesus's intentions, because it postpones what needs to happen now. The Third Coming--finding God-consciousness through your own efforts--happens in the present. I'm using the term as a metaphor for a shift in consciousness that makes Jesus's teachings totally real and vital.

When Jesus Comes Again

Imagine for a moment that you are one of the poor Jewish farmers, fishermen, or other heavy laborers who have heard about a wandering rabbi who promises Heaven, not to the rich and powerful, but to your kind, society's humblest. On this day--we can surmise that it was hot and dry, with the desert sun beating down from overhead--you climb a hill north of the blue inland lake known as the Sea of Galilee.

At the top of the hill Jesus sits with his closest followers, waiting to preach until enough people have gathered. You wait, too, seeking the shade of the crooked olive trees that dot the parched landscape. Jesus (known to you in Hebrew as Yeshua, a fairly common name) delivers a sermon, and you are deeply struck, to the heart, in fact. He promises that God loves you, a statement he makes directly, without asking you to follow the duties of your sect or to respect the ancient, complex laws of the prophets. Further, he says that God loves you best. In the world to come, you and your kind will get the richest rewards, everything you have been denied in this world.

The words sound idealistic to the point of lunacy--if God loved you so much, why did he saddle you with cruel Roman conquerors? Why did he allow you to be enslaved and forced to toil until the day you die? The priests in Jerusalem have explained this many times: As the son of Adam, your sins have brought you a wretched existence, full of misery and endless toil. But Jesus doesn't mention sin. He expands God's love to unbelievable lengths. Did you really hear him right?

You are the light of the world. Let your light shine before all men.

He compares you to a city set upon a hill that can't be hidden because its lights are so bright. You've never been told anything remotely like this or ever seen yourself this way.

Don't judge others, so that you may not be judged. Before you try to take a mote out of your brother's eye, first remove the log from your own.

Do to others what you would have them do to you. This one rule sums up what the law and the prophets taught.

Ask, and it will be given to you. Seek, and you shall find. Knock, and the door will open.

How can you explain your reaction to this preacher--jumbled feelings of disbelief and hope, suspicion and an aching need to believe? You wanted to run away before he was finished, denying everything you heard. No sane man could walk the streets and judge not the thieves, pickpockets, and whores on every corner. It was absurd to claim that all you had to do, if you needed bread and clothes, was to ask God for them. And yet how beautifully Jesus wove the spell:

Consider the lilies, how they grow: They neither toil nor spin, but I tell you, not even Solomon in all his glory clothed himself like one of these. Consider the crows, for they neither sow nor reap, they have no storeroom or barn, and yet God feeds them. How much more valuable are you than the birds!

Despite years of hard experience that made a lie of Jesus's promises, you believed them while you were listening. You kept believing them as you walked back down the hill near sunset, and for a few days afterward they haunted you. Until they faded away.

Time hasn't altered this mixture of hope and puzzlement. I had an experience that centers around one of Jesus's most baffling teachings: "Whoever hits you on the cheek, offer him the other also." (Luke 6:29) These are words that our Jewish laborer could have heard that day on the hilltop, but time hasn't altered human nature enough to make this teaching any easier. If I let a bully hit me on one cheek only to turn the other, won't he beat the stuffing out of me? The same holds good, on a larger scale, for a threat like terrorism: If we allow evildoers to strike us without reprisal, won't they continue to do so, over and over?

On the surface my experience only vaguely fits this dilemma. Yet it leads to the heart of Christ's mission. I was in a crowded bookstore promoting a new book when a woman came up to me, saying, "Can I talk to you? I need three hours." She was a compact, forceful person (less politely, a pit bull), but as gently as I could I told her, pointing to the other people crowded around the table, that I didn't have three hours to spare.

A cloud passed over her face. "You have to. I came all the way from Mexico City," she said, insisting that she must have three hours alone with me. I asked if she had called my office in advance, and she had. What did they tell her? That I would be busy all day.

"But I came on my own anyway, because I've heard you say that anything is possible," she said. "If that's true, you should be able to see me."

The PR person in charge of the event was pulling at my elbow, so I told the woman that if she came back later, I might find a few minutes of personal time for her. She became enraged in front of everyone. She released a stream of invective, sparing no four-letter words, and stalked away, muttering darkly that I was a fraud. Later that night the incident wouldn't leave me in peace, so I considered an essential spiritual truth: People mirror back to us the reality of who we are. I sat down and wrote out a list of things I'd noticed about this woman. What had I disliked about her? She was angry, demanding, confrontational, and selfish. Then I called my wife and asked her if I was like that. There was a long silence at the other end of the phone. I was more than a little shaken.

I sat down to face what reality was asking me to face. I found a veneer of annoyance and irritation (after all, wasn't I the innocent victim? hadn't she embarrassed me in front of dozens of people?). Then I called a truce with the negative energies she had stirred up. Vague images of past injuries came to mind, which put me on the right trail. I moved as much of the stagnant energies of hurt as I could.

To put it bluntly, this was a Jesus moment. When he preached, "If anyone strikes you on the cheek, offer him the other also" (Luke 6:29), Jesus wasn't preaching masochism or martyrdom. He was speaking of a quality of consciousness that is known in Sanskrit as Ahimsa. The word is usually translated as "harmlessness" or "nonviolence," and in modern times it became the watchword of Gandhi's movement of peaceful resistance. Gandhi himself was often seen as Christlike, but Ahimsa has roots in India going back thousands of years.

In the Indian tradition several things are understood about nonviolence, and all of them apply to Jesus's version of turning the other cheek. First, the aim of nonviolence is ultimately to bring peace to yourself, to quell your own violence; the enemy outside serves only to mirror the enemy within. Second, your ability to be nonviolent depends on a shift in consciousness. Last, if you are successful in changing yourself, reality will mirror the change back to you.

Without these conditions, Ahimsa isn't spiritual or even effective. If someone full of desire for retaliation turns the other cheek to someone equally enraged, the only thing that will occur is more violence. Playing the part of a saint won't make a difference. But if a person in God-consciousness turns the other cheek, his enemy will be disarmed.


From the Hardcover edition.

Table of Contents

Introduction     1
The Third Jesus
Redeeming the Redeemer     7
"I Am the Light"     21
"The Kingdom of God Is Within"     36
The Gospel of Enlightenment
Reading What Jesus Said     49
Love and Grace     53
Faith     61
Revelation and Redemption     67
Jesus and the Self     74
Meditation     87
Contemplation     92
Prayer     99
Karma-Reaping and Sowing     105
The World as Illusion     113
Unity     120
Who Is the "Real" Jesus?     129
Taking Jesus as Your Teacher: A Guide for Seekers
The Search for Higher Reality     143
How the Path Opens     175
The Middle of the Journey     193
Where the Soul Never Dies     209
What Would Jesus Do?     220
Index     235
Customer Reviews
Average Rating 3
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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 2, 2008

    Actually A Very Anti-Christian Book

    I was disappointed in this book. First of all,the author misinterprets a lot of the verses he cites. He has a moderate knowledge of Christianity, but far from a fully developed understanding of it - especially the mystical aspect of Christianity. What he does want to advance is the Gnostic version of the scriptures. Anything that doesn't agree with or which doesn't fit with this agenda, he explains away by saying organized religion or misguided men added it later for their own purposes. He also leaves out any explanation at all of the Gnostic verses which grossly contradict one another and don't fit with his views. His anti- Christian agenda is well hidden in the early chapters. You don't really get the full flavor of his anti-Christian feelings until you get to the last chapter where he more fully voices his contempt for the traditional Christian viewpoint. He actually goes so far as to say Jesus would have been for abortion and if you can't accept that then you don't know the real Jesus. Sorry, but I don't believe anyone has cornered the market completely on what Jesus meant everytime he spoke. Chopra seems to think he has it all figured out, though. I would have to say, I found this book a great dissappointment for two main reasions 1' the negativity regarding the Christian religion he saves/hides for the last chapter - didn't expect that from someone supposed to be so 'enlightened' and 'tolerant' and 2' his assertion that he does actually understand Jesus, but nobody else does if they don't agree with his viewpoint. This is a hypocritical assertion, actually, because that is exactly the point of view he asserts is a flaw in others.

    8 out of 11 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 22, 2008

    Almost but not quite.

    I was really excited to read this book, but it left me feeling like I missed something. I grew up Christian, explored Vedic/Hindu meditation & philosophy for many years and am now a practicing Buddhist. I totally get where Deepak is coming from in general, and I was hoping this book might tie up some loose ends and help me bridge my 'old religion' with my current one. I felt like he made a lot of interesting points, but that he misinterpreted a lot of Biblical quotes - or that his interpretation wasn't backed up with anything of substance. He just makes points & leaves you hanging. Save your money and borrow it from someone or get it from the library.

    7 out of 8 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted March 7, 2009

    Disappointing

    I've always been a big Chopra fan but The Third Jesus was a big disappointment. First off, he misinterprets the versus in the New Testament. Second, the book Case for Christ totally contradicts his viewpoints and conclusions. I would not recommend this book to a real Christian.

    3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted July 16, 2009

    I Also Recommend:

    Deepak Chopra Found the TRUE Jesus

    After reading The Third Jesus I was struck by how much Dr. Chopra's words resonated with me. I've believed, as he does, that we have lost touch with the most basic teachings of Christ which simply ask us to love one another. However, because of religious dogma, we have instead created an us and them society where those who follow a prescribed method of worship tend to cast out anyone who doesn't follow their version of Christianity instead of following Christ's teachings which asked us to Judge not lest we be judged, and to do unto others as we would have others do unto us. Christ wasn't a Christian, he was Jewish. What we have turned him into is an unloving representative of our own personal biasis. Dr. Chopra clearly explains this with beautfy and clarity.

    2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 15, 2009

    The exercises are pretty good

    Trying to incorporate Eastern philosophy with teachings of Jesus. I'm pretty open minded but I found myself being skeptical of some of the lines of thought. His other books are better.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 17, 2009

    Good for those who need to SEE it PHYSICALLY

    For believers who need to physically SEE (the black or white) touchable evidence to believe something.Those who need to EXPERIENCE before they BELIEVE...Those who do not strong enough FAITH to TRUST it is so. Part 3 is the Direct approach to the whole mission of the book- POWERFUL!!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 7, 2008

    Love this Book!

    This as well as all of Deepak's books are fantastic!

    1 out of 5 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 20, 2011

    false teachings

    why is this book in the christian book section? this book of false teachings should belong in the new age or middle eaterns religions.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 27, 2010

    It Depends

    The quality of this read will likely be directly dependent upon your existing spiritual beliefs about Christ. If you believe that Christ is the risen son of God then you'll likely not appreciate Chopra's perspective. If you believe that Jesus was one of several spiritual teachers all teaching the same basic message then you'll see value in the book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 14, 2010

    Contradictions in Jesus's Sayings Resolved

    Very interesting to read Chopra's thoughts because of his Vedic background and knowledge of Indian tradition. I couldn't put this book down.

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  • Posted May 13, 2009

    Jesus in the House

    Jesus in the House is a very awe inspiring book written by Allan Wright. It is able to capture the true essence of Jesus and how all of his messages and teachings have correlated with the home. It brings into question, "Was Jesus born in a stable? Or was it really in a home itself?" It shows how most of Jesus' meals and miracles have used the home as major focal points in lessons learned. These book aides the reader in capturing a more full understanding of what Jesus' miracles meant not only to the crowds that gathered, but also those whom he healed and that persons family and friends. It is a great read for unveiling how each and every thing Jesus did brought joy to some home.
    If I were to recommend a book to a reader looking to capture who Jesus really was as a person and how he affected those around him, this would be the book. It not only enlightened the reader on the history of Jesus, but also was able to I've new and deeper meanings to what the reader felt is already known. This book was extremely insightful and a great read whether you are religious or not.

    0 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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