The Life of Jesus Critically Examined
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- discussed in biography
- In David Friedrich Strauss
(1835–36; The Life of Jesus Critically Examined), in which he denied the historical value of the Gospels and rejected their supernatural claims, describing them as “historical myth,” or the unintentionally created, legendary embodiment by 2nd-century writers of the primitive Christian community’s popular hopes.
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- In David Friedrich Strauss
- influence on Hegelianism
- In Hegelian school: Hegelian left and right
His Das Leben Jesu kritisch bearbeitet, 2 vol. (1835–36; The Life of Jesus Critically Examined) contended that the essential Christian message is the unity of the human and the divine but that the Gospels had presented philosophical truth in the form of a myth about the…
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- In Hegelian school: Hegelian left and right
- translation by Eliot
- In George Eliot: Early years
…which was published anonymously as The Life of Jesus Critically Examined, 3 vol. (1846), and had a profound influence on English rationalism. After the wedding Mrs. Hennell’s father, R.H. Brabant, invited Evans to visit at Devizes. A rather silly man, he had worked for years on a book (never completed),…
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- In George Eliot: Early years
contribution to
- Christology
- In Jesus: The 19th century
…orthodox Christology: one was the Life of Jesus, first published in 1835 by David Friedrich Strauss, and the other, bearing the same title, was first published by Ernest Renan in 1863. Strauss’s work paid more attention to the growth of Christian ideas—he called them “myths”—about Jesus as the basis for…
Read More - In Christology: Post-Enlightenment Christology
>Life of Jesus Critically Examined (1835) rejects both the supernatural and the natural interpretations of Jesus in favour of a “mythical” interpretation, according to which the story of Jesus illustrates timeless truths (“myths”) but not historical facts. In a brilliant study, The Quest for the…
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- In Jesus: The 19th century
- religious rationalism
- In rationalism: Four waves of religious rationalism
…work, Das Leben Jesu (The Life of Jesus, Critically Examined, 1846). Relying largely on internal inconsistencies in the Synoptic Gospels, Strauss undertook to prove these books to be unacceptable as revelation and unsatisfactory as history. He then sought to show how an imaginative people innocent of either history or…
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- In rationalism: Four waves of religious rationalism
- study of religion
- In study of religion: Historical-critical studies
Strauss (1808–74), whose controversial Life of Jesus (published in German, 1835–36) was an attempt to sift out the historical Jesus from the overlay of myth created by the poetic imagination of the early church. Similarly, the German church historian Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930), influenced by Albrecht Ritschl, intended to…
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- In study of religion: Historical-critical studies