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The Fourth Gospel: Tales of a Jewish Mystic…
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The Fourth Gospel: Tales of a Jewish Mystic (edição: 2014)

de John Shelby Spong (Autor)

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1484184,369 (4.27)1
John Shelby Spong, bestselling author and popular proponent of a modern, scholarly and authentic Christianity, argues that this last gospel to be written was misinterpreted by the framers of the fourth-century creeds to be a literal account of the life of Jesus when in fact it is a literary, interpretive retelling of the events in Jesus' life through the medium of fictional characters, from Nicodemus and Lazarus to the "Beloved Disciple." The Fourth Gospel was designed first to place Jesus into the context of the Jewish scriptures, then to place him into the worship patterns of the synagogue and finally to allow him to be viewed through the lens of a popular form of first-century Jewish mysticism. The result of this intriguing study is not only to recapture the original message of this gospel, but also to provide us today with a radical new dimension to the claim that in the humanity of Jesus the reality of God has been met and engaged.… (mais)
Membro:RiverLaneLibrary
Título:The Fourth Gospel: Tales of a Jewish Mystic
Autores:John Shelby Spong (Autor)
Informação:HarperOne (2014), Edition: Reprint, 368 pages
Coleções:Sua biblioteca
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Etiquetas:biblical studies

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The Fourth Gospel: Tales of a Jewish Mystic de John Shelby Spong

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The book is a hybrid - part Biblical criticism and part devotional. Spong goes through the Gospel in the order it was written. He pauses at the beginning of each episode to briefly summarize current scholarship as to its historicity and context. He goes on to explain why he believes it was written, and how we can learn from the Gospel today.

Bishop Spong describes how Biblical criticism made it tough for him to embrace the Gospel of John. Because it describes things that did not literally happen, he kept his distance from it; preferring Mark, as many scholars do. He wrote this book after re-examining his own attitudes, and came to love the work as a mystical telling of Jesus and the sacred experiences he and his movement created.

My criticism of this book is that Spong's frequent reminders (averaging about one per page) about the Gospel's non-literal nature become tedious and distracting. Few fundamentalists are going to buy a book written by him - and those that do will understand his perspective after the first chapter. ( )
  poirotketchup | Mar 18, 2021 |
Thoroughly enjoyed this study of the Gospel according to John by a writer who has been hugely influential in how I approach the Christian and Jewish Scriptures ever since I read Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism many years ago. His introduction explains all of the reasons that I've shied away from studying John much, and then he proceeds to walk the reader through his speculation/interpretation of what John is really about. John's Jesus is very unlike the Jesus found in the other Gospels. He doesn't use parables. He speaks in long, self-referential speeches. "I am the Way, the Truth and the Life." Spong reminds me that "I" has a very different connotation in mysticism than in everyday usage.
Great stuff. I'm only sorry that this could be Spong's last book. ( )
  bibleblaster | Jan 23, 2016 |
Spong has never warmed to the historicity of the Fourth Gospel. In fact, he never warmed to that gospel much at all, until the last few years, when he decide to make a study of it. I’m glad he finally did; I thoroughly enjoyed reading Spong’s analysis.

He begins his book by admitting that the older he gets, the more he believes, but the fewer beliefs he holds. I quoted Spong in my own book about John’s Gospel (published just three months ago) as saying “I do not believe I can make a case for a single word attributed to Jesus in the Fourth Gospel to be a literal word actually spoken by the historic Jesus.” Knowing that we were researching our projects simultaneously, I contacted him to make sure he hadn’t developed a new “belief” about the Gospel before I printed that. Nope, he still doesn’t believe Jesus said any of the words in John’s Gospel, and more than that: Spong believes none of the miracle stories are real, few of the characters are historical people, and certainly the author wasn’t an original apostle of Jesus. Nicodemus, Nathanial, the woman at the well, the beloved disciple, the mother of Jesus (who remains unnamed in this Gospel)—all purely symbolic. The Gospel is a late-first-century mystical work, allegorically telling the history of the Johannine Community and the development of the Jesus movement, and it was never meant to be read like a history book.

I can’t go quite that far, yet it’s fascinating to read the Gospel as a mystical lesson book. The “mother of Jesus” in John’s Gospel, for example, was never a woman named Mary, but a symbol of Israel. The wedding of Cana was Jesus’ own wedding. Not literally, of course, but symbolically. The incarnation was never about a foreign visitor from heaven, but about a new and mystical way of experiencing life in abundance. I reach similar conclusions in my own book, but if this is the correct way to read John’s Gospel, then there remains one miracle Spong doesn’t explain: how did a book with so many contributing authors, going through so many stages, wind up coherently spiritual? Were none of these contributors literalists?

Yet Spong’s book just gets better as it goes along. I would venture a guess that he finds the most poignant moment in the Gospel of John to be at the foot of the cross, where the beloved disciple is joined to mother of Jesus. Spong’s parabolic understanding of the Gospel climaxes in symbolic meaning here, and I think it would be a spoiler to explain exactly what the moment describes.

Perhaps my favorite part of the book was Spong’s treatment of the final chapter in John. Written by an unknown author, it is often referred to as the appendix of the Gospel. So contrary is the “appendix” to the rest of the Gospel that I pretty much left it out of my own book. Spong, however, while recognizing that it doesn’t fit with the rest, still has a great appreciation for this story of Jesus appearing to the disciples in Galilee. He considers it probably founded on an earlier tradition than the rest of the gospel … indeed, possibly earlier than any of the gospels’ resurrection stories! Still treating even the appendix as a mystical writing, Spong brings this final chapter alive in a way that made me, for the first time, appreciate it.

Fascinating and fresh, this is John’s Gospel the way nobody has read it for 1900 years. ( )
3 vote DubiousDisciple | Jun 22, 2013 |
Well researched and compelling arguments written in a conversational style make this an enjoyable read. Some ideas appear to be highly inflammable, but are mostly well supported . The conclusion was somewhat weak, but overall was a fascinating and eye-opening read. ( )
  omphalos02 | May 19, 2013 |
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John Shelby Spong, bestselling author and popular proponent of a modern, scholarly and authentic Christianity, argues that this last gospel to be written was misinterpreted by the framers of the fourth-century creeds to be a literal account of the life of Jesus when in fact it is a literary, interpretive retelling of the events in Jesus' life through the medium of fictional characters, from Nicodemus and Lazarus to the "Beloved Disciple." The Fourth Gospel was designed first to place Jesus into the context of the Jewish scriptures, then to place him into the worship patterns of the synagogue and finally to allow him to be viewed through the lens of a popular form of first-century Jewish mysticism. The result of this intriguing study is not only to recapture the original message of this gospel, but also to provide us today with a radical new dimension to the claim that in the humanity of Jesus the reality of God has been met and engaged.

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