11 episodes

Who was the historical Jesus of Nazareth? What did he actually say and do, as contrasted with what early Christians (e.g., Paul and the Gospel writers) believed that he said and did? What did the man Jesus actually think of himself and of his mission, as contrasted with the messianic and even divine claims that the New Testament makes about him? In short, what are the differences—and continuities—between the Jesus who lived and died in history and the Christ who lives on in believers’ faith?



Over the last four decades historical scholarship on Jesus and his times—whether conducted by Jews, Christians, or non-believers—has arrived at a strong consensus about what this undeniably historical figure (born ca. 4 BCE, died ca. 30 CE) said and did, and how he presented himself and his message to his Jewish audience. Often that historical evidence about Jesus does not easily dovetail with the traditional doctrines of Christianity. How then might one adjudicate those conflicting claims?


This is a course about history, not about faith or theology. It will examine the best available literary and historical evidence about Jesus and his times and will discuss methodologies for interpreting that evidence, in order to help participants make their own judgments and draw their own conclusions.


Presented by the Stanford Continuing Studies Program.



Released with a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license.

Historical Jesus Stanford Continuing Studies Program

    • Religion & Spirituality

Who was the historical Jesus of Nazareth? What did he actually say and do, as contrasted with what early Christians (e.g., Paul and the Gospel writers) believed that he said and did? What did the man Jesus actually think of himself and of his mission, as contrasted with the messianic and even divine claims that the New Testament makes about him? In short, what are the differences—and continuities—between the Jesus who lived and died in history and the Christ who lives on in believers’ faith?



Over the last four decades historical scholarship on Jesus and his times—whether conducted by Jews, Christians, or non-believers—has arrived at a strong consensus about what this undeniably historical figure (born ca. 4 BCE, died ca. 30 CE) said and did, and how he presented himself and his message to his Jewish audience. Often that historical evidence about Jesus does not easily dovetail with the traditional doctrines of Christianity. How then might one adjudicate those conflicting claims?


This is a course about history, not about faith or theology. It will examine the best available literary and historical evidence about Jesus and his times and will discuss methodologies for interpreting that evidence, in order to help participants make their own judgments and draw their own conclusions.


Presented by the Stanford Continuing Studies Program.



Released with a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license.

    The Historical Jesus Course Syllabus

    The Historical Jesus Course Syllabus

    "Pealing" the Onion

    "Pealing" the Onion

    From the Gospels and Paul back to Yeshua.

    • 5 sec
    Apocalypse Now

    Apocalypse Now

    From the Baptist to the Kingdom.

    • 5 sec
    Apocalypse to Come

    Apocalypse to Come

    Awakening the prophet.

    • 5 sec
    Call Me Yeshua

    Call Me Yeshua

    Opening lecture of Thomas Sheehan's Continuing Studies course, The Historical Jesus.

    • 6 sec
    Crisis and Continuity

    Crisis and Continuity

    The making of a martyr.

    • 6 sec

Top Podcasts In Religion & Spirituality

Omar Suleiman
Muslim Central
Martin Reen's podcast
Martin Reen
Qalam Institute Podcast
Qalam Institute
Spökjakt På Riktigt – LaxTon Podden
Niclas Laaksonen & Tony Martinsson | LaxTon Ghost Sweden
Sounds True: Insights at the Edge
Tami Simon
Navigating Consciousness with Rupert Sheldrake
Rupert Sheldrake

You Might Also Like

History in the Bible
Garry Stevens
Biblical Time Machine
Dave Roos
Misquoting Jesus with Bart Ehrman
Bart Ehrman
The Ancients
History Hit
In Our Time
BBC Radio 4
Philosophize This!
Stephen West

More by Stanford

The Fourier Transforms and Its Applications
Brad Osgood
History of the International System
James Sheehan
Geography of World Cultures
Stanford Continuing Studies Program
Human Behavioral Biology
Robert Sapolsky
Stanford Pathfinders with Howard Wolf
Stanford Radio, Sirius XM, Stanford Alumni Association
Modern Physics: General Theory of Relativity (Fall 2012)
Stanford Continuing Studies