
Honestly with Bari Weiss The Birth of Christianity
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Dec 24, 2025 Paula Fredriksen, a distinguished historian of early Christianity, delves into the complex origins of Christianity. She reveals how the first followers of Jesus saw themselves not as founders of a new religion but as Jews awaiting a Messiah. Fredriksen discusses the interplay of cultural expectations, the evolution from intra-Jewish debates to anti-Judaism, and how early narratives contributed to modern antisemitism. She highlights the enduring significance of understanding Jesus' Jewish identity and explores the historical implications of these beliefs.
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Jesus Movement Was Deeply Jewish
- The first followers of Jesus were Jews who saw themselves as the last generation awaiting the eschaton.
- That Jewish apocalyptic context shaped early Christian claims and urgency.
Sources Distance Us From The Historical Jesus
- Gospel accounts are written in Greek and remove readers from Jesus's original Hebrew/Aramaic world.
- Paula Fredriksen uses Josephus and the gospels to peel back layers and locate a historical Jesus.
Apocalyptic Expectations Were Widespread
- First-century Judaism had strong apocalyptic and messianic expectations amid foreign domination.
- Jesus fit into a wide array of prophets and eschatological hopes in that era.

