I'd heard about the Jefferson Bible repeatedly over the past 10 years but never got around to actually checking it out. I'm glad I did. It was pretty interesting.
It's not exactly new content, of course. It's just Jefferson's copy/paste of what he thought Jesus actually said and did. There's some repetition in what he chose. It's been a good long while since I read the New Testament so I'd have to double-check to be sure, but I think he pulled bits and pieces from Mathew, Mark, Luke, and John to form his own more coherent and more consistent narrative.
I forget where I read it, but I read that many Christians somehow put all four narratives together into one narrative in their head and just even out the rough spots and contradictions subconsciously. It becomes one story. That's probably what Jefferson is doing here, but some of what he …
I'd heard about the Jefferson Bible repeatedly over the past 10 years but never got around to actually checking it out. I'm glad I did. It was pretty interesting.
It's not exactly new content, of course. It's just Jefferson's copy/paste of what he thought Jesus actually said and did. There's some repetition in what he chose. It's been a good long while since I read the New Testament so I'd have to double-check to be sure, but I think he pulled bits and pieces from Mathew, Mark, Luke, and John to form his own more coherent and more consistent narrative.
I forget where I read it, but I read that many Christians somehow put all four narratives together into one narrative in their head and just even out the rough spots and contradictions subconsciously. It becomes one story. That's probably what Jefferson is doing here, but some of what he has in there doesn't even look familiar.
I wonder if it's because, with so much time having passed since I last read the NT, that I'm coming at it from such a different perspective now.
Anyway, it was a short read and worthwhile for the novelty and the religious and historical significance.
Relax and find happiness amid the swirl of the modern world with this internationally bestselling …
Something I could read repeatedly
4 stars
This book contains practices and ideas that you can use to improve your life. It's the kind of book that I could read and listen to repeatedly as a way to get my brain started in positive way in the morning.
I think I'll actually buy a copy of this. My copy was from the NYPL.
In this haunting work of journalistic investigation, Haruki Murakami tells the story of the horrific …
Interesting insights into the victims' perspectives and Aum Shinrikyo
4 stars
This book is two sets of interviews with a bit of analysis and explanation sandwiched in between, followed by a very brief essay that tries to draw conclusions based on the Aum Shinrikyo interviews.
What I appreciated most about the book was how well Murakami captured the individual perspectives of people who were involved. It makes the situation real and immediate and lets the reader get into the heads of both the victims and members of Aum Shinrikyo.
I really empathized with the feelings of the victims who spoke about how people were dropping to the ground and foaming at the mouth while people kept passing by and going on with their day as if they didn't see what was happening. Also, with the people who felt that if they didn't make it to work or weren't noticed by someone they worked with in the street, then they would not …
This book is two sets of interviews with a bit of analysis and explanation sandwiched in between, followed by a very brief essay that tries to draw conclusions based on the Aum Shinrikyo interviews.
What I appreciated most about the book was how well Murakami captured the individual perspectives of people who were involved. It makes the situation real and immediate and lets the reader get into the heads of both the victims and members of Aum Shinrikyo.
I really empathized with the feelings of the victims who spoke about how people were dropping to the ground and foaming at the mouth while people kept passing by and going on with their day as if they didn't see what was happening. Also, with the people who felt that if they didn't make it to work or weren't noticed by someone they worked with in the street, then they would not have been helped. What an amazing view into Japanese society and the Japanese psyche in the late 90s!
The Aum Shinrikyo members that were interviewed were so plain and unassuming. It seems like most of them were looking for some kind of purpose or greater meaning in life, and I can empathize with that, but they fell victim to a charismatic, manipulative fraud, and even after the fact, some of them refused to believe it.
I got the impression that some of the Aum members didn't really know what was going on, but others seemed to be telling an invented story that reduced or covered up their culpability, I suppose with the expectation that there would be no way to contradict it.
I wonder if the general persecution of former Aum members is still common in Japan today?
"The China Study" revealed what we should eat and provided the powerful empirical support for …
I really tried to power through this one, but its intended audience seems to be people who already have a background in nutrition and while I could have figured it out I didn't feel like putting in the effort.
I know why it's not (lingering influence of Christianity on local governments and teaching for standardized tests instead of to create educated people), but this book should be required reading for every 11th grade student in the United States.
"The Age of Reason" challenges a lot of the misconceptions that people have about the Bible and Christianity that have developed over the centuries and that somehow still persist today. It was really hard for me to read this and realize that it was published 200 years ago, but I still grew up with a distorted idea of what the Bible is.
To sum this book up, I would say that Paine clearly shows what other academics have shown: the Bible is a conglomeration of texts of dubious origin that contradict each other and don't paint a clear, coherent, or even positive light on Judaism, Christianity, or God. Paine argues that …
I know why it's not (lingering influence of Christianity on local governments and teaching for standardized tests instead of to create educated people), but this book should be required reading for every 11th grade student in the United States.
"The Age of Reason" challenges a lot of the misconceptions that people have about the Bible and Christianity that have developed over the centuries and that somehow still persist today. It was really hard for me to read this and realize that it was published 200 years ago, but I still grew up with a distorted idea of what the Bible is.
To sum this book up, I would say that Paine clearly shows what other academics have shown: the Bible is a conglomeration of texts of dubious origin that contradict each other and don't paint a clear, coherent, or even positive light on Judaism, Christianity, or God. Paine argues that the real expression of God is creation itself and that educating ourselves in mathematics and the sciences are the only way we can commune with and show devotion to the driving force behind existence.
That's a pretty interesting idea. I like it, and it's something that's going to influence how I look at the world from now on.