The Quest of the Historical JesusA Critical Study of its Progress From Reimarus to WredeByAlbert SchweitzerPrivatdocent in New Testament Studies in the University of StrassburgTranslated ByW. Montgomery, B.A., B.D.With a Preface byF. C. Burkitt, M.A., D.D.Norrisian Professor of Divinity in the University of CambridgeSecond English EditionLondonAdam and Charles Black1911ContentsPrefaceI. The ProblemII. Hermann Samuel ReimarusIII. The Lives Of Jesus Of The Earlier RationalismIV. The Earliest Fictitious Lives Of JesusV. Fully Developed Rationalism—PaulusVI. The Last Phase Of Rationalism—Hase And SchleiermacherVII. David Friedrich Strauss—The Man And His FateVIII. Strauss's First “Life Of Jesus”IX. Strauss's Opponents And SupportersX. The Marcan HypothesisXI. Bruno Bauer. The First Sceptical Life Of JesusXII. Further Imaginative Lives Of JesusXIII. RenanXIV. The “Liberal” Lives Of JesusXV. The Eschatological QuestionXVI. The Struggle Against EschatologyXVII. Questions Regarding The Aramaic Language, Rabbinic Parallels, And Buddhistic InfluenceXVIII. The Position Of The Subject At The Close Of The Nineteenth CenturyXIX. Thoroughgoing Scepticism And Thoroughgoing EschatologyXX. ResultsIndex Of Authors And WorksFootnotes
The Quest of the Historical JesusA Critical Study of its Progress From Reimarus to WredeByAlbert SchweitzerPrivatdocent in New Testament Studies in the University of StrassburgTranslated ByW. Montgomery, B.A., B.D.With a Preface byF. C. Burkitt, M.A., D.D.Norrisian Professor of Divinity in the University of CambridgeSecond English EditionLondonAdam and Charles Black1911ContentsPrefaceI. The ProblemII. Hermann Samuel ReimarusIII. The Lives Of Jesus Of The Earlier RationalismIV. The Earliest Fictitious Lives Of JesusV. Fully Developed Rationalism—PaulusVI. The Last Phase Of Rationalism—Hase And SchleiermacherVII. David Friedrich Strauss—The Man And His FateVIII. Strauss's First “Life Of Jesus”IX. Strauss's Opponents And SupportersX. The Marcan HypothesisXI. Bruno Bauer. The First Sceptical Life Of JesusXII. Further Imaginative Lives Of JesusXIII. RenanXIV. The “Liberal” Lives Of JesusXV. The Eschatological QuestionXVI. The Struggle Against EschatologyXVII. Questions Regarding The Aramaic Language, Rabbinic Parallels, And Buddhistic InfluenceXVIII. The Position Of The Subject At The Close Of The Nineteenth CenturyXIX. Thoroughgoing Scepticism And Thoroughgoing EschatologyXX. ResultsIndex Of Authors And WorksFootnotes
The Quest of the Historical JesusA Critical Study of its Progress From Reimarus to WredeByAlbert SchweitzerPrivatdocent in New Testament Studies in the University of StrassburgTranslated ByW. Montgomery, B.A., B.D.With a Preface byF. C. Burkitt, M.A., D.D.Norrisian Professor of Divinity in the University of CambridgeSecond English EditionLondonAdam and Charles Black1911
The Quest of the Historical Jesus
A Critical Study of its Progress From Reimarus to Wrede
By
Albert Schweitzer
Privatdocent in New Testament Studies in the University of Strassburg
Translated By
W. Montgomery, B.A., B.D.
With a Preface by
F. C. Burkitt, M.A., D.D.
Norrisian Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge
Second English Edition
London
Adam and Charles Black
1911
ContentsPrefaceI. The ProblemII. Hermann Samuel ReimarusIII. The Lives Of Jesus Of The Earlier RationalismIV. The Earliest Fictitious Lives Of JesusV. Fully Developed Rationalism—PaulusVI. The Last Phase Of Rationalism—Hase And SchleiermacherVII. David Friedrich Strauss—The Man And His FateVIII. Strauss's First “Life Of Jesus”IX. Strauss's Opponents And SupportersX. The Marcan HypothesisXI. Bruno Bauer. The First Sceptical Life Of JesusXII. Further Imaginative Lives Of JesusXIII. RenanXIV. The “Liberal” Lives Of JesusXV. The Eschatological QuestionXVI. The Struggle Against EschatologyXVII. Questions Regarding The Aramaic Language, Rabbinic Parallels, And Buddhistic InfluenceXVIII. The Position Of The Subject At The Close Of The Nineteenth CenturyXIX. Thoroughgoing Scepticism And Thoroughgoing EschatologyXX. ResultsIndex Of Authors And WorksFootnotes