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Lies, Lies, Lies

Exposing Myths About The Real Jesus

Michael Green

9781844743919
192 pages
SPCK Group
Overview

The public are inundated with untruths about Jesus of Nazareth, the greatest figure in human history and the one by whom we date everything. Sometimes these truths emerge from the media and sometimes from specific assaults on Jesus by special interest groups and writers.
Michael Green thoughtfully and robustly takes on the most important of these untruths.
Was Jesus just a mythical figure who never lived?
Were the Gospel accounts of him corrupt and written long after he lived?
Can we trust the text of the New Testament?
Was Mary Magdalene Jesus's lover?
Were the Gnostic Gospels just as good evidence as the four Gospels which Christians read today?
Did Jesus really die on the cross?
And surely nobody these days believes in the resurrection? After all, hasn't the tomb of Jesus and his family been discovered?
These are some of the issues addressed in this book. The author is an ancient historian as well as a New Testament scholar. He is not ashamed to call the misrepresentations about Jesus what they are - lies, lies, lies!

Author Bio
Michael Green ============= Michael Green (born 1930) was a British theologian, Anglican priest, Christian apologist and author of more than 50 books. He was Principal of St John's College, Nottingham (1969-75) and Rector of St Aldate's Church,Oxford and chaplain of the Oxford Pastorate (1975-86). He had additionally been an honorary canon of Coventry Cathedral from 1970 to 1978. He then moved to Canada where he was Professor of Evangelism at Regent College, Vancouver from 1987 to 1992. He returned to England to take up the position of advisor to the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Archbishop ofYork for the Springboard Decade of Evangelism. In 1993 he was appointedthe Six Preacher of Canterbury Cathedral. Despite having officially retired in 1996, he became a Senior Research Fellow and Head of Evangelismand Apologetics at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford in 1997 and lived in the town of Abingdon near Oxford.