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In "Jesus, Gnosis and Dogma" Roukema investigates and assesses the
various views of Jesus in early Christianity, basing his approach
on a distinction between historical and theological statements
about Jesus. Historical statements can be arrived at through a
critical study of the earliest records, although Roukema recognizes
that scholars differ widely here. Theological statements about
Jesus are to do with what has been and is believed about him.
Roukema demonstrates that Gnostic traditions about Jesus mostly
derive from the earlier traditions preserved in the New Testament
writings and do not give a more accurate view of the historical
Jesus. He shows that the view of Jesus as the divine Lord (Yahweh)
and Son of God is inspired by an early Jewish pattern that was
exploited by the very first Christians. In spite of some later
dogmatic precisions, there is more continuity between the New
Testament picture of Jesus and the Nicene creed than between the
historical Jesus and the Jesus of early Gnosticism. Even the
essence of the Trinitarian dogma appears to have Jewish roots.
In "Jesus, Gnosis and Dogma" Roukema investigates and assesses the
various views of Jesus in early Christianity, basing his approach
on a distinction between historical and theological statements
about Jesus. Historical statements can be arrived at through a
critical study of the earliest records, although Roukema recognizes
that scholars differ widely here. Theological statements about
Jesus are to do with what has been and is believed about him.
Roukema demonstrates that Gnostic traditions about Jesus mostly
derive from the earlier traditions preserved in the New Testament
writings and do not give a more accurate view of the historical
Jesus. He shows that the view of Jesus as the divine Lord (Yahweh)
and Son of God is inspired by an early Jewish pattern that was
exploited by the very first Christians. In spite of some later
dogmatic precisions, there is more continuity between the New
Testament picture of Jesus and the Nicene creed than between the
historical Jesus and the Jesus of early Gnosticism. Even the
essence of the Trinitarian dogma appears to have Jewish roots.
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