(ZMVT about history) What Jewish Talmud says about filthy (ritually impure Gentile) Christians
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| Middle Eastern/North African Rabbi Yeshua |
The church is believed to have been built in part upon the site of Jesus’s tomb, which the Gospel of John describes as having been “a garden.”
Their dig uncovered evidence of 2,000-year-old olive trees and grapevines, suggesting the site had indeed once been used for agriculture [if not gardening].
- This story is a collaboration with Biography.com
- The Unknown Years of Jesus
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| The Unknown Life of Jesus |
As a literary device, this description of the burial place of Jesus Christ is effective; it offers a contrast between the site of Jesus’s death at the crucifixion site of Calvary (also called Golgotha, both derived from the Latin for “place of the skull”) and a fertile garden, brimming with life.
It also provides a cyclical shape to the final chapter of the Christ [the Anointed One's] narrative, which begins with his arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane.
So, as storytelling, this single sentence from the Gospel of John (the most recently written of the four canonical gospels, most scholars agree) has a substantial power to its brevity.
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| Unknown years of Jesus (Nicolas Notovitch) |
Yet, thanks to a new discovery reported in the Times of Israel, that sentence might be key to confirming where the real [Jewish, Nazarene, or Essene] man at the center of the Christian faith was placed after his famous [imperial Roman torture practice of] crucifixion. More
- Today I Found Out (MSN)
- Jewish Jesus; Para Bellum; Michael Natale, Popular Mechanics, Nov. 25, 2025; Sheldon S., Seth Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly






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