Table of Contents
Introduction: The Case for the Legendary Jesus Part 1: Historical Method and the Jesus Tradition: Miracles, Parallels, and First-Century Palestine1. Miracles and Method: The Historical-Critical Method and the Supernatural 2. A Jewish Legend of "Yahweh Embodied"? How "Pagan" Was First-Century Judaism? 3. One Among Many Legends? Do "Parallels" Relativize the Jesus of History?Part 2: Other Witnesses: Ancient Historians and the Apostle Paul4. A Conspiracy of Silence? What Ancient Non-Christian Sources Say, and Do Not Say, About Jesus 5. The "Silence" of Paul? What, if Anything, Did Paul Know about the Jesus of History?Part 3: Between Jesus and the Gospels: The Early Oral Jesus Tradition6. Ancient Literacy and Oral Tradition: Assessing the Early Oral Jesus Tradition 7. Historical Remembrance or Prophetic Imagination? Memory, History, and Eyewitness Testimony in the Early Oral Jesus TraditionPart 4: The Synoptic Gospels as Historical Sources for Jesus: Assessing the Evidence8. The Genre and Nature of the Canonical Gospels: Did the Gospel Authors Intend to Write Historically Reliable Accounts? 9. Evaluating the Synoptic Gospels as Historical Sources: Methodological Issues and Preliminary Considerations 10. The Synoptic Tradition and the Jesus of History: A Cumulative Case for the Reliability of the Synoptic Portrait(s) of Jesus Author Index Subject Index