دانلود کتاب James the Just in the Habakkuk Pesher
by Robert Eisenman
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عنوان فارسی: جیمز فقط در حبقوق Pesher |
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Review
I'm currently reading Neil Asher Silberman's book on the Scrolls history, "The Hidden Scrolls", in which he shows Eisenman on one side, the consensus scholars on the other. How long will it be before they back off and let the one who knows what he is talking about tell the story? There is much left to do in dismantling 20 centuries of Christian and Rabbinic Jewish covering up. James is the one who had preeminence in the first century. That is now established. Eisenman only stops short when he concludes, "Who and whatever James was, so was Jesus". James was the Master and that is clear, not only as he said, in Acts 1 where fictional 'Judas' covers him (and also as fictional "Joseph Barsabbas JUSTus"), BUT IN THE BETRAYAL, TOO. It was only because Eisenman isn't familiar with the living Masters tradition (Sant Mat, now the Radha Soami Satsang, Beas > [...] that he didn't extend his investigation to the overwriting of James as 'Judas' in "the Betrayal" coverup of his installation as successor Master. Here is that final chapter: The Bible says Saviors Testament I tried telling him in person, since he is the one who found James elsewhere in the gospels and Acts, but he wasn't receptive. The world of Western religion is never again to be the same. There is no going back from what we now know about the Masters of Palestine, John the Baptist, James the Just, Simeon Cleophas, and Judas Thomas. They all taught what is today called 'Surat Shabd Yoga' ('Listening to the Sound Union') of John 3:8 and many other passages.
About the Author
Robert Eisenman is the author of The New Testament Code: The Cup of the Lord, the Damascus Covenant, and the Blood of Christ (2006), James the Brother of Jesus: The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of Early Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls (1998), The Dead Sea Scrolls and the First Christians (1996), Islamic Law in Palestine and Israel: A History of the Survival of Tanzimat and Shari’ah (1978), and co-editor of The Facsimile Edition of the Dead Sea Scrolls (1989), The Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered (1992), and James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls Volumes I and II (2012). Robert is an Emeritus Professor of Middle East Religions and Archaeology and the former Director of the Institute for the Study of Judeo-Christian Origins at California State University Long Beach and Visiting Senior Member of Linacre College, Oxford. He holds a B.A. from Cornell University in Philosophy and Engineering Physics (1958), an M.A. from New York University in Near Eastern Studies (1966), and a Ph.D from Columbia University in Middle East Languages and Cultures and Islamic Law (1971). He was a Senior Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Postgraduate Hebrew Studies and an American Endowment for the Humanities Fellow-in-Residence at the Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem, where the Dead Sea Scrolls were first examined. In 1991-92, he was the Consultant to the Huntington Library in San Marino, California on its decision to open its archives and allow free access for all scholars to the previously unpublished Scrolls. In 2002, he was the first to publicly announce that the so-called ‘James Ossuary’, which so suddenly and ‘miraculously’ appeared, was fraudulent; and he did this on the very same day it was made public on the basis of the actual inscription itself and what it said without any ‘scientific’ or ‘pseudoscientific’ aids.