The Passover Plot

Front Cover
Texianer Verlag, Dec 16, 2021 - Religion - 324 pages

This is the new official Schonfield Trust edition of the Passover Plot which is probably one of the most controversial books on the role of Jesus the Messiah. Yet to say that, might detract from its scholarly attention to detail and its furnishing of new insights into the character of the Man who changed the world so radically. Thus it is a ‘must read’ for who are seeking a better understanding. Schonfield’s aim in life was to build a bridge between peoples and he hoped that by digging into the facts behind the origins of Christianity, he would be able to uncover the real Messiah, misrepresented since time immemorial.

His sincere desire was that this understanding would bring together those who had so long been divided. Whilst his thesis that Jesus plotted his own crucifixion may seem far-fetched or even offensive at first, seen in the light of John’s Gospel and the thinking of the times it provides food for thought to those with an open mind.

From inside the book

Contents

Title Page Copyright Introduction
Part
The Last Times
He that should Come
A Child is Born
The Formative Years
The Anointing
Attempt and Failure
Thou wilt show me the Path of Life
He is not Here
Faith and Deeds
Part
Messianism and the Development of Christianity
North Palestinian Sectarians and Christian Origins
The Suffering Just One and the Son of
Gospels in the Making

The Disclosure
Setting the Stage
The King Comes
The Plot Matures
It is Finished
The Second Phase
Some Gospel Mysteries
Bibliography
Copyright

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About the author (2021)

Once described as the "second Albert Schweitzer", Schonfield was a liberal Hebrew Christian. In 1937 Schonfield was expelled from the Executive Committee of International Hebrew Christian Alliance (IHCA), of which he had been a member since 1925, (this organisation is now the International Messianic Jewish Alliance or IMJA). He later associated with Messianic Judaism for a while, but was bitterly disillusioned by the experience. Schonfield was one of the original Dead Sea Scrolls team members. Schonfield wrote over 40 books including commercially successful books in the fields of history and biography as well as religion. In 1958 his non-ecclesiastical historical translation of the New Testament was published in the UK and the US, titled The Authentic New Testament. This aimed to show without idealised interpretation the meaning intended by the writers while maintaining the original structures. A revised version appeared in 1985 titled The Original New Testament. In 1965 he published the controversial The Passover Plot, a book the thesis of which is that the Crucifixion was part of a larger, conscious attempt by Jesus to fulfil the Messianic expectations rampant in his time, and that the plan went unexpectedly wrong. Schonfield followed The Passover Plot with a sequel in 1968, Those Incredible Christians. This was also described as controversial, but had less impact than the earlier book. An additional aspect of his work was the revision of the Hebrew writing system. In The New Hebrew Typography, published in 1932, he argued for a significantly revised version of the Hebrew alphabet modelled after the Latin alphabet, including a capital-lowercase distinction, no final forms, a vertical emphasis, and serifs. This alphabet has not been adopted. Apart from all this he founded the Mondcivitan Republic (Commonwealth of World Citizens) aiming at a Servant-Nation as a means of bringing peace and prosperity in the world. Many of his works published here pertain to the philosophy of this great thinker. The Mondcivitan archives are now housed in the Bishopsgate Institute in London which uses the material for cultural and educational purposes.

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