Apocryphicity

A weblog devoted to the study of the Christian Apocrypha

About Apocryphicity []

Apocryphicity (ă-pok-rif-is-iti) n. 1. a recently coined term for describing the qualities of apocryphal literature. 2. a recently created weblog (or blog) dedicated to discussion of Christian apocrypha.

Welcome to Apocryphicity. This blog has two aims. The first is to report on developments in the study of Christian Apocrypha (a.k.a. non-canonical Christian literature) in the form of media excerpts, reviews of scholarly literature, and the occasional mention of apocryphal texts and traditions in popular culture. The second is to provide a forum for those interested in the Christian Apocrypha (scholars and non-scholars) to exchange ideas and information.

Apocryphicity is maintained by Dr. Tony Chartrand-Burke who teaches Biblical Studies at the Atkinson School of Arts and Letters (a part of York University in Toronto, Canada). The opinions expressed here are his own.

Anyone interested in the topic of the Christian Apocrypha is welcome to read the posts and, if inspired, add comments. From time-to-time I offer courses on the Christian Apocrypha and Gnosticism; students of these courses are encouraged to participate also.

I would be very grateful if readers would send me links to recent developments online regarding Christian Apocrypha (ancient, medieval, or even modern) along with your own comments if you have any. These can be sent to my e-mail address (tburke@yorku.ca) or can be submitted simply as a comment to any of the blog postings.

Be sure to check out my homepage which features pages related to the CA (including links to other websites and an on-going bibliography project), as well as the web’s premier Infancy Gospel of Thomas page and material related to other research projects.


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Review of Craig Evans’ “Fabricating Jesus”

January 21st, 2007 by Tony

I recently picked up the book Fabricating Jesus: How Modern Scholars Distort the Gospels by Craig Evans (Acadia Divinity College scholar and participant at last year’s Ottawa Apocrypha Workshop). The book is intended as a response to the controversial scholarship that claims, among other things, that certain apocryphal Christian literature has value for recovering the Historical Jesus. I have been reading many such “responses” lately from such as Ben Witherington III and Darrell L. Bock (both of whom have contributed opening blurbs to the book applauding Evans’ work). Though I don’t have much personally invested in Historical Jesus scholarship, I do take issue with much of what these authors have to say about the Christian Apocrypha. I hope to post something further on this in a few days (perhaps once I finish Evans’ book). For now, read this review from the Two Tack’s Thoughts blog. 

Posted in Fabricating Jesus | | Permalink

One Response

  1. Noah Tutak Says:

    Hey, thanks for the shout out. I look forward to your thoughts on the book.

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