Buy on Amazon
https://www.ebooknetworking.net/books_detail-1902636651.html
The Mystery of the Two Jesus Children: And the Descent of the Spirit of the Sun
Book Details
Author(s)Bernard Nesfield-Cookson
PublisherTemple Lodge Publishing
ISBN / ASIN1902636651
ISBN-139781902636658
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,089,492
CategoryReligion
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
The Christian Gospels give two widely differing genealogies for Jesus, which have baffled theologians throughout the centuries. Not only are these genealogies irreconcilable, but the stories of the two accounts of the birth of Jesus, as given by Matthew and Luke, are also radically different. How can this be accounted for?
An ancient tradition tells that there were two children named Jesus, a year apart in age and both born to parents named Mary and Joseph. These two children, brought up in close proximity, eventually united in a mysterious way, resulting in a single Jesus destined to grow up and fulfill the prophecies of the Old Testament.
In grappling with this mystery, Nesfield-Cookson uses all available sources biblical accounts, Christian apocryphal writings, Aramaic and Hebrew documents discovered in the Qumran caves in the twentieth century (the Dead Sea Scrolls ), writings by Syrian theologians of the thirteenth century, and, in particular, statements by Rudolf Steiner, the first modern thinker to speak of the existence of two Jesus children. The author also refers to the many works of art largely by Italian artists of the Renaissance period which appear to depict two Jesus children. Fifteen of these paintings are reproduced as beautiful, full-color plates.
The author also develops a parallel theme regarding the mystery of Christ and Jesus the gradual descent of Christ (the Spirit of the Sun) from the spiritual world into the physical body of Jesus.
An ancient tradition tells that there were two children named Jesus, a year apart in age and both born to parents named Mary and Joseph. These two children, brought up in close proximity, eventually united in a mysterious way, resulting in a single Jesus destined to grow up and fulfill the prophecies of the Old Testament.
In grappling with this mystery, Nesfield-Cookson uses all available sources biblical accounts, Christian apocryphal writings, Aramaic and Hebrew documents discovered in the Qumran caves in the twentieth century (the Dead Sea Scrolls ), writings by Syrian theologians of the thirteenth century, and, in particular, statements by Rudolf Steiner, the first modern thinker to speak of the existence of two Jesus children. The author also refers to the many works of art largely by Italian artists of the Renaissance period which appear to depict two Jesus children. Fifteen of these paintings are reproduced as beautiful, full-color plates.
The author also develops a parallel theme regarding the mystery of Christ and Jesus the gradual descent of Christ (the Spirit of the Sun) from the spiritual world into the physical body of Jesus.












