
The Jesus We Never Knew
The October 2000 issue of The Atlantic Monthly featured a perceptive, and, to many, a surprising essay on the renewal of evangelical…
Related resources for The Sweet Words of an Enemy
The October 2000 issue of The Atlantic Monthly featured a perceptive, and, to many, a surprising essay on the renewal of evangelical…
In this academically robust but accessible book, Peter J Williams addresses the trustworthiness of the Gospels.
Why the so-called "Gospel of Jesus' Wife" is a modern forgery.
Advice for Christians in academic life and the workplace.
This talk explains why the claim that Jesus was no more than a moral teacher doesn't account for the evidence about him.
Are the Gospels full of contradictions? What would have been seen as normal standards of trustworthy historical writing at that time?
Did the early Christian communities apply Jesus's teaching to the problems they faced or alter the facts to fit their agendas?
Were the Gospel accounts based on the testimony of eyewitnesses who were still alive when the Gospels were written?
The way the Gospel accounts use the right names for people shows that they were about real people, based on reliable information.