Did Jesus Make a Difference?

Cahill fans will not be disappointed by his new book, rich in imagination and historical scholarship

Desire of the Everlasting Hills:
The World Before and After Jesus

By Thomas Cahill
(Nan A. Talese/Doubleday; $24.95)

Thomas Cahill's new book tells his story of Jesus and Christian origins. It combines his accessible and often lively prose with his factual and imaginative work as a historian. It is also a work of passion and piety, signaled by its title: "Desire of the Everlasting Hills." Beginning and ending his book among the hills of Rome, he reflects on the significance of hills in the brutal history of the world and asks: Is it not "the desire of the everlasting hills [an allusion to Genesis 49:26] that the everlasting cycle of human cruelty, of man's inhumanity to man, be brought to an end?" In the rest of the book, he presents a picture of Jesus and earliest Christianity as the incarnation of an answer to that desire.

As the third volume in his "hinges of history" series, it follows his well-known "How the Irish Saved Civilization" and "The Gifts of the Jews." In six chapters, he addresses the world before Jesus, Jesus himself, and first-century Christianity. Beginning with Alexander the Great, he describes the world into which Jesus was born. Subsequent chapters cover much of the New Testament: the Jesus the apostles knew (the gospels of Mark and Matthew), the cosmic Christ (Paul and Revelation), the gentile messiah (Luke), the "people of the way" (Acts), and "the Word made flesh" (John).

Readers of this new book will not be disappointed. "Desire of the Everlasting Hills" is informed by both imagination and historical scholarship. He tells us what Peter and Paul looked like: the former curly-haired, bear-like and lumbering; the latter smallish, balding, lean, and quick, with the appearance of a long-distance runner. Cahill's historical treatment of the New Testament is indebted primarily to moderate Catholic scholars such as Raymond Brown, Joseph Fitzmyer, and John Meier, and to non-Catholics such as Richard Horsley and Walter Wink.

His exposition of the apostle Paul is refreshingly positive. Portraying Paul as a driven and caring man whose itinerant life must have been marked by "overwhelming loneliness," Cahill describes the theology that shines forth from Paul's letters as "amazing for its clarity, profundity, and consistency of development." He finds in Paul "the only clarion affirmation of sexual equality in the whole of the Bible" and the first in the world's literature. He sees Paul as "downright rabid" about economic equality. And in his chapter on Acts (called "Drunk in the Morning Light"), he sketches a fetching picture of the Spirit-filled radicalism of early Christianity.

Continued on page 2: »

Related Topics:

entertainment

Comments

Add Comment »

To comment on this content you must be a registered user:

Sign-Up or Log-In

About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

DiggDeliciousNewsvineRedditStumbleTechnoratiFacebook