With Sunday school, an illustrated Bible, hymns and Christmas songs, children learn about Jesus’ life from start to finish. But the Bible isn’t so linear. It was “a huge effort to pull all four Gospels together, as
if they tell a single story,” Pagels explains. These books have some
similarities and curious differences. For example, Matthew and Luke mention the
birth of Jesus, but Mark and John do not. Matthew says the Magi follow the new
star that proclaims the birth of the new king. Luke has no star and no Magi,
but local herdsmen visit baby Jesus asleep in the manger.
Matthew, Mark, and Luke share similar content, order of events, and wording, which suggests they may have used common sources. However, the authors and the audiences were different. Mark, who wrote the earliest surviving account, was a devout Jew who believed in one God. Luke was a Gentile and became a (Jewish) convert. John, who Pagels calls the “radical revisionist writer,” is the one who explicitly says Jesus is the Son of God, whose sacrificial death atoned for the sins of the world. All of them use words of the Jewish prophets and the Psalms to prove Jesus’ life was foretold in Scriptures.
In 325 CE, Emperor Constantine gathered 300 bishops to
formulate the Nicene Creed, the core Christian beliefs about the nature of God
and the divinity of Christ—the basis of the Gospel of John. Over the decades
that followed, church leaders and councils decided which doctrines and stories
fit this overarching message. Of the many stories of Jesus that existed, few
were chosen as scripture; the rest were destroyed.*
The Gospels remind us how Jesus lived, with love,
compassion, and support for everyone. And, as Pagels declares, “In a world
filled with challenge, oppression, and suffering, their stories shift—often
suddenly—into hope.”
Miracles and Wonder is both the keystone and cornerstone to Pagels’ other books on early Christianity and the Gnostics. As a historian and religious scholar, she thoughtfully considers the historical mystery of Jesus and his message while adding personal stories and reflections on her life’s work.
Thanks to Doubleday for the ARC.
Rating: ★★★★★
Miracles and Wonder: The Historical Mystery of Jesus
by Elaine Pagels
Doubleday, 2025
*Despite the decree, monks from Nag Hammadi hid some of the forbidden texts in caves. In 1945, these early Christian and Gnostic texts were discovered in a sealed jar.

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