Have you ever heard that Joseph was an elderly widower, and that Jesus’ siblings were actually half-brothers and sisters that were children of Joseph and his first wife? Did you know that Mary’s parents’ names were Joachim and Anna? Have you seen pictures of the nativity taking place at a stable housed inside a cave? Have you heard that after Mary gave birth to Jesus, her midwife affirmed that she was still a virgin? None of these details is in the Bible, which gives us two different (and contradictory) nativity stories in Matthew and Luke’s gospels. Instead significant sources of Christian tradition regarding Jesus’ birth along with the life of his mother Mary come from a pseudepigraphic text that ancient Christians excluded from the New Testament. During this Christmas season, John Hamer of Toronto Centre Place will look that this non-canonical gospel, usually known as the “Protoevangelium of James” (or Pseudo-James), its contents, authorship, and influence.
Join the livestream to participate in the discussion and to ask questions to our lecturer during the Q&A.
📚 Browse our catalogue of free lectures at [ Ссылка ]
Your generous support allows us to offer these lectures at no cost. Please consider a making donation (tax deductible in the US and Canada):
❤️ [ Ссылка ] ️
#lecture #christianity #judaism #gaza #westbank #middleeast #palestine
How a Non-Canonical Gospel Shaped Christmas
Теги
christianity lecturechristianityancient historyhistory of christianitynew testamenttheologyliterary criticismancient textsbible scholarreligious studiesreligious educationmithologybible mythmiddle eastern politicsisrael politicsjudaismbiblical archaeologyreligion and politicsGazaPalestinian territorieshistory of Palestinehistory of GazaHistory of the West Bank