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1 The Gospels According to Christ? Combining the Study of the Historical Jesus with Modern Mysticism By Daniel Klimek With so many books dealing with Me and which, after so many revisions, changes and fineries have become unreal, I want to give those who believe in Me a vision brought back to the truth of My mortal days. – Jesus Christ, as revealed to Maria Valtorta1

The scholarly study of the historical Jesus, an attempt to reconstruct the life of Jesus through historical, anthropological, and sociological methodology utilizing material from first century Palestine and the early centuries of Jewish-Christian history, tends to (too frequently) wander astray from the path of objective observation and enter into the realm of subjective interpretation. Such subjectivism is usually based on both the limitations of sources and knowledge available to scholars of the historical Jesus and, perhaps more often, the personal biases and prejudices espoused by individual thinkers partaking in the study of this important subject. Frequently, by subscribing to a strict rationalist, naturalist, or deist ideology, for instance, many scholars of the historical Jesus have attempted their best to deprive the subject of his recorded miracles and supernatural quality. In the past few centuries, since the study of the historical Jesus developed strong interest in eighteenth century Enlightenment Europe, Jesus has been diversely portrayed by scholars in a multiplicity of identities: as a con man, a magician, a political revolutionary, a medical physician, a healer, a prophet, a socialistic egalitarian, or an apocalyptic enthusiast, to name a few popular labels.2 Research on the life of Jesus has been expansively ubiquitous, ranging from the reasonable to the absolutely absurd, with the latter direction overshadowing the former. Prominent scholar John Dominic Crossan once observed: “Historical Jesus research is becoming something of a scholarly bad joke.�3 Likewise, John P. Meier, whose multi-volume


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