Sabtu, 09 Januari 2016

## PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels

PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels

Book enthusiasts, when you need an extra book to check out, find the book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels right here. Never worry not to locate exactly what you need. Is the Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels your required book now? That's true; you are really a great user. This is an ideal book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels that comes from great writer to show you. Guide Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels provides the very best experience and lesson to take, not just take, yet additionally learn.

Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels

Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels



Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels

PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels

Exactly how an idea can be obtained? By staring at the stars? By visiting the sea as well as checking out the sea weaves? Or by checking out a publication Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels Everyone will have particular unique to gain the inspiration. For you that are passing away of books and also consistently obtain the inspirations from books, it is really terrific to be here. We will show you hundreds compilations of the book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels to check out. If you similar to this Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels, you can likewise take it as your own.

Why must be this publication Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels to read? You will certainly never obtain the understanding as well as experience without managing on your own there or trying by on your own to do it. For this reason, reviewing this e-book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels is needed. You can be fine and proper enough to obtain exactly how essential is reviewing this Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels Even you constantly check out by responsibility, you could assist yourself to have reading e-book routine. It will certainly be so helpful and also fun then.

Yet, how is the method to obtain this e-book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels Still perplexed? It does not matter. You can delight in reading this publication Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels by online or soft file. Merely download the publication Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels in the link supplied to visit. You will certainly obtain this Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels by online. After downloading and install, you could save the soft data in your computer or device. So, it will alleviate you to review this publication Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels in particular time or place. It could be not certain to enjoy reading this e-book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels, due to the fact that you have bunches of task. However, with this soft file, you could enjoy reviewing in the extra time even in the gaps of your tasks in office.

As soon as a lot more, reading behavior will certainly consistently offer beneficial advantages for you. You may not have to invest sometimes to read guide Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels Merely reserved a number of times in our extra or totally free times while having meal or in your workplace to review. This Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels will reveal you new point that you could do now. It will certainly help you to boost the quality of your life. Occasion it is merely an enjoyable e-book Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel Of Thomas, By Elaine Pagels, you could be healthier as well as much more fun to enjoy reading.

Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels

When her infant son was diagnosed with fatal pulmonary hypertension, award-winning author Elaine Pagels was moved to explore her faith. In Beyond Belief, her spiritual journey becomes a springboard for an intellectual and professional re-examination of early Christian faith. Controversial and thought-provoking, this international bestseller investigates the politics of Christianity and how the church crafted a Bible and a faith far more stringent than previously thought. In her search for meaning, Elaine Pagels discovers that the history of the Church and therefore the history of the Western world could have been significantly different. This moving testament to history, faith and humanity, Pagels will challenge and transform everything you know of Christianity. 'Those who are moved by religion but who find that they can no longer accept the official doctrines of their church will find this marvellous book a source of inspiration and hope' Karen Armstrong 'This is writing about religion of the first order: enlightening, intelligent, inclusive and humane' Peter Stanford, Independent

  • Sales Rank: #1057983 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-05-25
  • Ingredients: Example Ingredients
  • Formats: Audiobook, Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Audio CD

Amazon.com Review
Shortly after Elaine Pagels’ two-and-half-year-old son was diagnosed with a rare lung disease, the religion professor found herself drawn to a Christian church again for the first time in many years. In Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas Pagels, best know for her National Book Award-winning The Gnostic Gospels, wrestles with her own faith as she struggles to understand when--and why--Christianity became associated almost exclusively with the ideas codified in the fourth-century Nicene Creed and in the canonical texts of the New Testament. In her exploration, she uncovers the richness and diversity of Christian philosophy that has only become available since the discovery of the Nag Hammadi texts.

At the center of Beyond Belief is what Pagels identifies as a textual battle between The Gospel of Thomas (rediscovered in Egypt in 1945) and The Gospel of John. While these gospels have many superficial similarities, Pagels demonstrates that John, unlike Thomas, declares that Jesus is equivalent to "God the Father" as identified in the Old Testament. Thomas, in contrast, shares with other supposed secret teachings a belief that Jesus is not God but, rather, is a teacher who seeks to uncover the divine light in all human beings. Pagels then shows how the Gospel of John was used by Bishop Irenaeus of Lyon and others to define orthodoxy during the second and third centuries. The secret teachings were literally driven underground, disappearing until the Twentieth Century. As Pagels argues this process "not only impoverished the churches that remained but also impoverished those [Irenaeus] expelled."

Beyond Belief offers a profound framework with which to examine Christian history and contemporary Christian faith, and Pagels renders her scholarship in a highly readable narrative. The one deficiency in Pagels’ examination of Thomas, if there is one, is that she never fully returns in the end to her own struggles with religion that so poignantly open the book. How has the mysticism of the Gnostic Gospels affected her? While she hints that she and others have found new pathways to faith through Thomas, the impact of Pagels’ work on contemporary Christianity may not be understood for years to come. --Patrick O’Kelley

From Publishers Weekly
In this majestic new book, Pagels (The Gnostic Gospels) ranges panoramically over the history of early Christianity, demonstrating the religion's initial tremendous diversity and its narrowing to include only certain texts supporting certain beliefs. At the center of her book is the conflict between the gospels of John and Thomas. Reading these gospels closely, she shows that Thomas offered readers a message of spiritual enlightenment. Rather than promoting Jesus as the only light of the world, Thomas taught individuals that "there is a light within each person, and it lights up the whole universe. If it does not shine, there is darkness." As she eloquently and provocatively argues, the author of John wrote his gospel as a refutation of Thomas, portraying the disciple Thomas as a fool when he doubts Jesus, and Jesus as the only true light of the world. Pagels goes on to demonstrate that the early Christian writer Irenaeus promoted John as the true gospel while he excluded Thomas, and a host of other early gospels, from the list of those texts that he considered authoritative. His list became the basis for the New Testament canon when it was fixed in 357. Pagels suggests that we recover Thomas as a way of embracing the glorious diversity of religious tradition. As she elegantly contends, religion is not merely an assent to a set of beliefs, but a rich, multifaceted fabric of teachings and experiences that connect us with the divine. Exhilarating reading, Pagels's book offers a model of careful and thoughtful scholarship in the lively and exciting prose of a good mystery writer.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* In 1979, Pagels explored the Nag Hammadi scrolls in The Gnostic Gospels, a book she calls a "rough, charcoal sketch of the history of Christianity." The scrolls reveal a startling diversity in early Christian thought, and more than 20 years after her earlier book, Pagels remains captivated by them. This time, though, they have prompted her most personal book. She begins with the news that her son has been diagnosed with a terminal illness. She links this shocking revelation to a reexamination of the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas, which she contrasts with the gospel of John. Both gospels center their themes on a higher knowledge available in Jesus' words and message, but John wants readers to understand that the light of God is in Jesus alone. Thomas is equally insistent the light is in everyone. Pagels also focuses on how some Christian leaders, especially Irenaeus, despising the esoteric gospels, made sure that the New Testament canon was limited to the four gospels and other approved writings. Pagels' writing, spare, elegant and provocative, leads readers step-by-step down a spiritual path to one's inner self. Even those who possess only a nodding acquaintance with Gnostic writings will find themselves stimulated by her arguments and perhaps transformed by her conclusions. A fresh and exciting work of theology and spirituality. Ilene Cooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Most helpful customer reviews

144 of 155 people found the following review helpful.
Fascinating look at the early Christian writings and history
By Kindle Customer
Elaine Pagels is an exceptionally engaging writer with a talent for locating and explaining hidden wisdom. She wrote an earlier book, "The Gnostic Gospels: A New Account of the Origins of Christianity," that brilliantly summarized the ancient and rambling Nag Hammadi texts, which describe the teachings of Jesus as captured by early Christian writers. In "Beyond Belief," a title that addresses the audience she wishes to reach, Pagels examines more closely these ancient texts and how they compare to the four gospels. She focus on the "Gospel of Thomas" (90 ce) comparing it to the Gospel of John (100 ce) and current christian beliefs about the teachings of Jesus.
"Beyond Belief" is intensely interesting to the right audience. It is part gospel analysis, which she translates from ancient Greek, part early Christian history and part personal story meant to provide context in understanding the beauty of modern Christianity. One audience for this book is those seeking to understand factually what Jesus taught and what happened to Christianity in the early centuries following his death (30 ce) and how the Gospel of Thomas can shed light on that understanding.
But another audience, the one for whom this book will resonate most deeply, are readers with an intuitive grasp of "transcendence" and the teachings of Jesus that verify the union that can be experienced between God and man. This is what Saint John of the Cross referred to when he wrote "All and Nothing." ("Here I stand alone transcending all knowledge"). Pagels points out that this experience is taught by Jesus in the Gospel of Thomas and expressed in the Vedic literature of India. ("I am That"). It is found in the writings from many religious traditions. One Catholic University scholar has compared the description of the higher states of consciousness from the Upanishads to the rooms described by Saint Theresa of Avila in her "Interior Castle"(Seven states of consciousness; seven rooms in the castle).
There is no doubt that saints the world over have written of union with God. The Christian tradition is no exception (read Alan Watts, "The Supreme Identity."): "It seemed to me, as if [my soul] was wholly and altogether passed into its God, to make but one and the same thing with Him; even as a little drop of water, cast into the sea, receives the qualities of the sea. Oh, union of unity, demanded of God by Jesus Christ for men and merited by him!" -Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de la Motte-Guyon. Or "Blessedness consists primarily in the fact that the soul sees God in herself. Only in God's knowledge does she become wholly still. Therefore it is in Oneness that God is found and they who would find God must themselves become One." And the famous "My eye and God's eye are one eye, one seeing, one knowing, one love." -Meister Eckhart.
I wonder sometimes how we got from these sublime expressions to the crap that is dispensed by our Churches. Nobody explains this better than Pagels. She attempts to explain why, if the experience of union with God is universal, it is not prominently recognized in the four gospels and most Christian teaching.
The problem, Pagels explains as she accounts for the development of early church othodoxy, is that the apostles and the early Christian writers built Church teaching upon revelation and visions. "Without visions and revelations, the Christian movement would not have begun. But who can tell the holy spirit when to stop?..."And when so many people--some of them rivals and even antagonists--all claim to to be divinely inspired, who knows who has the spirit and who does not? She claims that Irenaeus, the promoter of the four gospels, and only those four, was confronted not by "a lack of spiritual revelation but an overwhelming surplus. 'How' he asked 'can we tell the difference between the word of God and mere human words?'" It is in this climate the first attempt to unify Christian believers began.
Hericlitus, the great Greek philosopher, said "All is One." If you recognize the wisdom of this ancient expression and you understand that, consciousness, the source of thought, is divine and that the inner experience of Jesus is available to all, you will enjoy this book. Jesus says in Thomas "I am all: From me all came forth, and to me all attained. Split a piece of wood; I am there. Lift up the stone, and you will find me there.". Or in the words of the Vedas "I am That, Thou art That, All this is That."
Understanding the Transcendent may be the key to appreciating this book. I had been practicing meditation for only about seven years when I discovered Pagels' first book over twenty years ago. The Gospel of Thomas and these gnostic writings from the earliest christians resonated immediately for I could validate it by my experience. Pagels quotes the gospel of Mary Magdalene, "The Son of Man is within you."
In the end, the orthodox view, the Church view, prevailed and the Gnostic writings were suppressed. Perhaps for this reason Hericlitus had another saying for which he was known: "People who follow religions are like cattle."

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Sort of about the Gospel of Thomas
By Christopher Nelson
A pretty good, but light and unfocused introduction to the Gospel of Thomas (which hardly achieves the right to the book's subtitle). Pagels never seems to commit to her declared topic, and comes off "too unbiased" in my opinion. Her research contributes to gnostic studies in almost revolutionary ways, but she never seems to realize the magnitude of her subject matter, and takes an irritatingly bland middle-ground throughout. Is she a modern gnostic or not?
I liked Pagel's earlier book on "The Gnostic Gospels" better, and was expecting a more detailed, in-depth discussion of the Thomas gospel in this brief tome. For the lay-reader and simply curious, this is a decent starting point. If you're looking for more details about gnosticism, she has contemporary recommendations of more recent publications in her bibliography. Personally, I'd highly recommend the following: "Gnosis", by Kurt Rudolph; "The Gnostic Religion," by Hans Jonas, & the older, more obscure "Fragments of a Faith Forgotten," by GRS Mead. And, of course, the actual Nag Hammadi Library printed & edited by James Robinson is "the source" (along with the syntopic Bible).
As for "Beyond Belief", I have to agree with the reviewer responding to "Peculiar Reviewers" in that there are a handful of seemingly offended people out there who just don't get it when it comes to what gnosticism represents. It's very much alive and growing world-wide, and many would argue that it's never really disappeared, only taken on new forms. Pagels illustrates more specifically where and how Catholicism as we know it today came to be, and on what foundations (by ignoring discrepencies between many so-called "gnostic" texts in favor of the gospel of John, Matthew, Mark and Luke). She focuses more on John and its similarities and differences with the discarded Thomas gospel, which didn't jibe with the political direction the early church fathers such as Irenaeus were pushing so hard for.
"Beyond Belief" seems to really be a blend of biblical history, and Pagel's personal philosophy of "practicing" faith instead of simply "believing"; or reading about it. Jesus would be proud.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
She is a fine and lucid writer
By Andrew Dickos
Elaine Pagels is one of the true guideposts for spirtitual Christian exploration. As an accomplished religion scholar, her examination of early church history has been cogently applied to the personal experiences that have shaped her life and approach to faith. She is a fine and lucid writer, and I've learned much from her.

See all 298 customer reviews...

Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels PDF
Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels EPub
Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Doc
Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels iBooks
Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels rtf
Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Mobipocket
Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Kindle

## PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Doc

## PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Doc

## PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Doc
## PDF Download Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas, by Elaine Pagels Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar