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Lost Christianities
- The Battles of Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew
- Narrated by: Matthew Kugler
- Length: 13 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: History, World
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Summary
The early Christian Church was a chaos of contending beliefs. Some groups of Christians claimed that there was not one God but two or twelve or thirty. Some believed that the world had not been created by God but by a lesser, ignorant deity. Certain sects maintained that Jesus was human but not divine, while others said he was divine but not human. In Lost Christianities, Bart D. Ehrman offers a fascinating look at these early forms of Christianity and shows how they came to be suppressed, reformed, or forgotten. All of these groups insisted that they upheld the teachings of Jesus and his apostles, and they all possessed writings that bore out their claims, books reputedly produced by Jesus's own followers. Modern archaeological work has recovered a number of key texts, and as Ehrman shows, these spectacular discoveries reveal religious diversity that says much about the ways in which history gets written by the winners.
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What listeners say about Lost Christianities
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Lou
- 08-03-21
fascinating
The book created lots of questions in my mind but it is a fascinating exploration of the subject
1 person found this helpful
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- L. McCulloch
- 27-05-22
Academic but fascinating
Quite a difficult read with all the ancient names and sects but very interesting and worth staying with it.
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- Wael
- 19-11-20
Thoroughly enjoyable
Entertaining, erudite, patient and conscientious. The depth of thought, motives and temperament of the ancients, and the scholarly means of waging their battles, forgeries, slander and all, is masterfully elucidated. The many citations, the stories and works of authorities in the field, with the commentary of modern scholarship and the reflection of the author on their conclusions are smoothly inserted and steady the narrative. The total effect I got was the satisfaction of both a good story and an enlarged perspective.
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- Adrian Chan-Wyles Ph.D
- 31-08-20
Superb and Engaging Scholarship!
This outstanding academic reseacher provides a lucid and highly convincing foundation in the study of the historical development (and functionality) of Judeo-Christian religion within society. As an objective study, the reality of the history of Early Christianity is clearly defined and explained. Christianity was diverse and consisted of many schools, all of which were eventually destroyed by the Roman Catholic variant which had developed in Rome, and which was chosen by the Roman State as its specially empowered State Religion. Although all these schools had an equal claim to orthodoxy, the Roman Catholics possessed the political and military power to declare them 'heretical' and physically destroy their communities and suppress their scriptures. An excellent and important work!
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- VPapachR
- 11-08-19
amazing book with facts
Anyone with real interest in searching for an inner understanding of the religions, especial in christianity, this is the book with facts. This book doesn't tell you what you should believe nor to change your mind on your beliefs. It is simple a book that you have to read as to see what might be happening behind your back for ages...
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- Anonymous User
- 13-04-19
Great book
Enjoyed this very much.
I may need to relisten to it over a longer period of time and do my own studying along the way.
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- dr_biomorph
- 11-03-17
fascinating stuff
minor quible: the reader does not seem to pronounce some of the names in the standard way, no fault of the author though
1 person found this helpful
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- NM to NY
- 29-02-20
Excellent book, reader made some mistakes
Excellent book for the intellectually curious, believers or non-believers, who want to know more about Christianity in its first three centuries.
The reader's pace and tone were fine, but shouldn't a professional reader look up words he doesn't know? is it understandable to repeatedly mispronounce Athanasius? Maybe, but like, he's a major figure and you said his name at least 30 times...maybe check to make sure you know it. But how can a professional reader not know the pronunciation of prophesy? Of confidant? Of theologian, for God's sake? Can I get this job? Would it matter to Audible that I would look things up and say them correctly?
11 people found this helpful
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- J'oli
- 31-12-19
“Infallible word of god” Not so much.
A must read for anyone who believes their Holy Book is the “infallible word of god.” A lot of people, a previous version of my self included, were and have been taught to believe the Bible was the literal word of god, passed on from generation to the next, unadulterated and uncut. That’s simply a bald faced lie.
People have based their whole lives and have killed others because of the (poor) writings of uneducated sheep herders and primitive backwoodsmen. And not even the original works of said primitives, but copies of copies! Insane.
It was very interesting to read about what got taken out and how we came to have the New Testament we have today. The story about James commanding was laughable but then no more laughable than a lot of the crazy stuff that’s STILL in the Bible. The section on Gnostics was very interesting and who knew there was another female apostle (I don’t recall her name) who men deleted from the Bible because she was emboldening women. Figures. I also enjoyed the chapter about The Gnostics. Almost wish they would’ve taken off just to see what sort of world we would have now. Although perhaps there’s a parallel universe out there where Gnosticism became the dominant form of Christianity. That’s fun to think about.
Anyway, great, objective presentation. Would recommend.
7 people found this helpful
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- Frankie Marie
- 31-10-19
Exceptional!
Like everything of Bart Ehrman's, informative and fascinating. Easy for a layperson but focuses on a different aspect than his other works.
4 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 14-03-16
Conclusions matter
I thought this book was quite good. I, as a person who believes in Christianity intellectually, found myself agreeing with him on many points; however, his conclusions were the parts of this particular book that I found myself to be at ods with. I learned a great deal from this book and recommend it to those who are interested in studying early Christianities. His description of the gnostics helped me gain a deeper understanding and appreciation for them that I did not even close to have before reading this book.
8 people found this helpful
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- Margaret
- 06-01-14
The Early Church(es)
While I enjoyed Bart Ehrman's Misquoting Jesus, I think I like this one was even better.
Here we are taken through a tour of the first generations following the death of Jesus and the many forms of Christianity that they practiced. He discusses why some flourished (able to claim ties to the antiquity of the Hebrew scriptures) and why some sects floundered (disagreements over the role of women.) It was very easy to follow along and see how each event contributed to the scripture and the forms of Christianity that have been handed down to us today.
I was just as fascinated with the stuff that almost made it into the New Testament (letters from Clement, Titus for example) as those that did.
Ehrman goes on to provide a clear context to understand the books of the Apocrypha as well. A lot of verses I never understood before suddenly made perfect sense when I was oriented in the right cultural beliefs. For example, in the Gospel of Thomas (alleged to have been written by Didamus Judas Thomas, Jesus's twin, but debunked by scholars) it says that women must become men to reach the Kingdom of God, Ehrman explains that Neo Platonists did not see the human race as having two genders, but only one. Ancients believed that women were males who never developed properly! Needless to say, that had never occurred to me. Suddenly, all became clear.
While this book may be too introductory for experts, it was fascinating to a lay person like me. Recommend.
26 people found this helpful
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- Drldreeves
- 17-02-20
Not theology but history
If you are looking for theology Bart Ehrman is not your cup of tea. If you want to know the history behind Christianity he is the expert I turn to. Having read several of his books, Bart Ehrman continues to amaze me with his wit and wisdom.
2 people found this helpful
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- DavidSanFran
- 24-08-15
A hard slog but worth the effort
A great reader, subject matter is interesting, at times a bit boring, still a worthwhile listen.
7 people found this helpful
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- Ian Huntington
- 09-06-19
Scholarly not overly sensationalist.
As a seminarian I knew there was diversity in the early church and I appreciate this studious explanation.
1 person found this helpful
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- Laufer Laszlo
- 26-11-15
Essential book to understand the formation of Christianity from Judaism
This book helps a lot to reveal tge evolufion of the Christian religion from the time of Jesus till tge Nicene Creed. A bit to extensively, but in a good style :)
4 people found this helpful
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- Tim Presley
- 27-01-18
awesome learning experience as always
we forget that Christianity has changed considerably over time. some ideas come back into style after an era.
2 people found this helpful