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Pagan Resurrection Myths and the Resurrection of Jesus, based on a
postmodern critique of the dark side of the Enlightenment, argues
effectively that the human imagination-and particularly the
religious imagination-has been diminished by some of the fallacies
of the previous 300 years of intellectual history and unjustified
hostility toward religion. This is particularly true in regard to
the Christian belief in the resurrection of Jesus. For many
followers of Enlightenment values, the resurrection of Jesus is
foolishness and "nothing but" another myth. This "nothing but"
fallacy is shattered by the book's thesis. McKenzie argues against
the trivialization of Christian belief on the part of many extreme
liberal Christians (Protestant and Roman Catholic); it is notable
because it is argumentative without belligerence, and sympathetic
to different views without falling prey to the easy relativism so
common among religious people today. The resurrection of Jesus was
"forth-told" not only by the prophets. It is not the pagan myths
that explain the resurrection of Jesus; the resurrection of Jesus
validates the core of pagan myths, the resurrection archetype, and
universal human experience of the resurrection theme. This
interpretation, it is suggested, will help in the rehabilitation of
the Christian imagination.
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