John Dominic Crossan has written:
'The Last Week' -- subject(s): Bible, Passion Week, Criticism, interpretation, OverDrive, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Biography
'Four other gospels' -- subject(s): Criticism, interpretation, Apocryphal books (New Testament), Bible, Apocryphal Gospels
'Jesus - Una Biografia Revolucionaria'
'The Cross That Spoke' -- subject(s): Criticism, interpretation, Bible, Gospel of Peter, Resurrection, Passion
'The Essential Jesus' -- subject(s): Biography, Words
'Excavating Jesus' -- subject(s): Excavations (Archaeology), Antiquities, Bible, OverDrive, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
'Jesus' -- subject(s): Biography, Historicity, OverDrive, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
'Hymn to a savage god'
'Der historische Jesus'
'Who Killed Jesus?' -- subject(s): History of doctrines, Criticism, interpretation, Bible, Role of Jews, Passion, Gospel of Peter, Christianity and antisemitism, Resurrection, Passion narratives (Gospels), History, Resurection, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, OverDrive
'The Last Week LP'
'Excavating Jesus: Beneath the Stones, Behind the Texts'
'The Gospel of eternal life' -- subject(s): Theology, Bible. N.T., Johannine literature, Bible
'The birth of Christianity' -- subject(s): Origin, Christianity, Resurrection, Nieuwe Testament, Christendom, Christentum, Entstehung
'The First Christmas' -- subject(s): Criticism, interpretation, Bible, Nativity, OverDrive, History, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
'The greatest prayer' -- subject(s): Meditations, Lord's prayer
John Dominic Crossan was born in 1934.
John Dominic Gerletti has written: 'Techniques of learning and teaching' -- subject(s): Study skills, Teaching 'Civil defense management, California supplement' -- subject(s): Civil defense
John Dominic Crossan has: Played himself in "Mysteries of the Bible" in 1994. Played himself in "Peter Jennings Reporting: The Search for Jesus" in 2000. Played himself in "Time Machine: Banned from the Bible" in 2003. Played himself in "In the Footsteps of Jesus" in 2003. Played himself in "The Lost Tomb of Jesus" in 2007. Played himself in "Jesus Conspiracies" in 2012.
The cast of Jesus Conspiracies - 2012 includes: John Dominic Crossan as himself James Joseph Raymond III as himself
D. R. G. Owen has written: 'Scientism, man, and religion' -- subject(s): Religion and science 'Marxism and the scientific tradition' 'Social thought and Anglican theology' -- subject(s): Church and the world
Dominic John was born in 1980.
A:There has never been any proof of any gods. That this applies equally to the Christian God as to the Sumerian gods is highlighted by John Dominic Crossan (The Birth of Christianity) who says that each believer has a connection with his or her god, whoever that god is.
Dominic St. John Marner has written: 'St. Cuthbert' -- subject(s): Biography, Christian saints, Church history, Cult, English Illumination of books and manuscripts, History, Illumination of books and manuscripts, English, Illumination of books and manuscripts, Medieval, Medieval Illumination of books and manuscripts, Portraits, Vita Sancti Cuthberti
The cast of In the Footsteps of Jesus - 2003 includes: Bruce Chilton as himself John Dominic Crossan as himself Shimon Gibson as himself Zvi Greenhut as himself Jon Seligman as himself Jan Willem Drijvers as himself
The Catholic Church's articles of dogma and faith, and its Canon law on dogmatic approval, say a lot about official heresies about Christology and Mariology, they also generally disavow eschatology. What this means is that the Catholic church has VERY LITTLE to say about the historical Jesus as a matter of what Christians have to believe; they must believe the supernatural and salvational claims of Jesus Christ and the Pope; they need not believe anything in particular about ancient Palestine or the Universe as a whole. For this reason, John Dominic Crossan is neither endorsed nor condemned by the Catholic Church; he still considers himself a Catholic in good standing and holds to the Apostolic creed and Catholic dogma as a matter of supernatural faith, but this does not entail a physical resurrection of Jesus Christ or belief that he did miraculous acts in the past. Many Catholics, including Jesuits, Bishops, etc. hold views on the historical and supernatural Jesus that contradict, often strongly, the views of John Dominic Crossan and some of the scholars on whom he relies. This includes the current Pope, who wrote a book on the historical Jesus with a radically different methodology than Crossan. However, as the Pope is infallible only on matters of faith and morals, and not science or history (and even then only when speaking intentionally Ex Cathedra) it is not considered heretical or against Canon law to contradict the historical beliefs of the Pope. John Dominic Crossan is a man who left the priesthood to marry. His studies and conclusions are wildly at odds with what the Catholic Church has always believed and taught. To be "accepted by the Roman Catholic Church" writings must normally have both an Imprimatur and a Nihil Obstat. I am quite sure that none of Mr. Crossan's writings have either, so the answer to your question would be in the negative.
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