Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (2024)

The Series "From Jesus to Christ: The First Christians" is a historical documentary series that tellsthe epic story of the rise of Christianity. The four-hour program explores the life of Jesus, hisdeath, and the men and women whose belief, conviction, and martyrdom created the religion we now knowas Christianity.

Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (1)Drawing upon historical evidence that has created a revolution in New Testamentscholarship, the series challenges familiar assumptions and conventional notions about Christianorigins. Archaeological finds have yielded new understandings of Jesus' class and social status;fresh interpretations have transformed earlier ideas about the identity of the early Christians andtheir communities. Through engaging, on-camera interviews with twelve scholars-New Testamenttheologians, archaeologists, and historians-the series presents their contributions to thisintellectual revolution. Together they represent a range of viewpoints, a diversity of faiths, and ashared commitment to bring new ways of thinking about Christianity to a public audience.

"From Jesus to Christ" reveals that Christianity did not arise as a single, uniform, and coherent movement, but asone marked by diversity of opinion, practice, and belief. From the beginning, the movement was forgedby conflict as the early Christians wrestled with their Jewish heritage, collided with paganism,challenged the authority of the Roman Empire, and clashed with each other. The series conveys theearly Christians' struggle to understand Jesus and the meaning of his message and suggests that theirancient world of 2,000 years ago may not be so very different from our own. No matter what your faith,or what you believe, this series will ask you to reconsider what you think you know about a story thathas so decisively shaped Western civilization.

Part 1

Program 1 examines how Judaism and Roman rule, Pax Romana or "Roman peace," shaped Jesus' life. Jesus was an ordinary Jewish resident of this time, but new archaeological findings show that he wasprobably not the humble village peasant often portrayed. Nazareth, where he was born and raised, wasa suburb of the major city Sepphoris. As a Jew, Jesus was influenced by the diversity and thetensions characteristic of Judaism at that time.

Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (2)Jesus was most likely arrested and executed by Roman authorities whose principal concern was to keep the peace. The Romans had little tolerance for thoseit judged disruptive of the Pax Romana, punishing them in many ways, including crucifixion. The deathof Jesus was a Roman act; there was little if any notice taken by Jewish people. Jesus was anothervictim of the Pax Romana. It is a stark ending, and it leaves some important questions. Jesus wasborn before 4 b.c.e. and died around 30 c.e. ("of the common era," the equivalent of a.d.). The timeline is short, but the historical scale is large.

Questions for reflection

  1. What was most surprising about the historical information of the program?
  2. What difference does it make who really killed Jesus? (Prompt: Think about how traditional stories contributed to the rise of antisemitism, anti-Judaism, the Holocaust.)

Part 2

Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (3)Program 2 explores the period after the crucifixion of Jesus and traces the beginnings of theJesus Movement, in those early years before it was called Christianity. It began as a sect withinJudaism. Along the way, the early Christians began to branch out and to spread their message tonon-Jews or gentiles (meaning "nations"). Around 50 c.e., the Apostle Paul travelled away from thetraditional centers of the Jesus Movement and began to found new churches in Greek cities. Hisletters to these fledgling congregations mark the first writings of the New Testament. Meanwhile,expectations about the coming of the Kingdom of God would culminate in a catastrophic Jewish revoltagainst Rome from 66-70 c.e., ending in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple-the center ofJewish spiritual life. The traumatic failure of this revolt would dramatically affect the future forJews and Christians.

Questions for reflection

  1. Why do the scholars refer to this emerging religion as the Jesus Movementinstead of Christianity in its early years?
  2. How did the early followers of Jesus spread his message? How do their messages and methods compareto those used by fledgling religions today?
  3. What conditions allowed Christianity to grow as quickly as it did?

Part 3

Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (4)Program 3 follows thestory of the first attempts to write the life of Jesus-the Gospels. They were products of social andreligious reconstruction in the period after the war, ranging from roughly 70 to after 100 c.e. Theprogram looks at how these stories were passed down before they were written and how the writing ofeach Gospel reflects the experiences and circumstances of early Christians. They do not all tell thesame story of Jesus because each one is responding to a different audience and circumstances. Duringthis time, a growing tension appeared between the emergent Christian groups and their Jewishneighbors. The result was a process of debate, identity, and separation that shaped both religioustraditions forever. And there were still other external forces, including a second, devastatingJewish war, the Bar Kochbah revolt, which erupted in 132 c.e.

Questions for reflection

  1. Why are there so many different images of Jesus in the Gospels?
  2. How are the authors of the Gospels interjecting their own beliefs and circumstances into the story of Jesus? What is the value of understanding how stories are influenced by the storyteller?

Part 4

Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (5)As it became separate from Judaism, the Christian Movement would face new challenges-bothinternal and external. In the period between 100 and 300 c.e., the movement grew throughout the Romanempire. The Christian Movement also became suspicious in the eyes of the Roman authorities. Attimes there were heated debates-about beliefs, worship, and even about Jesus himself. At other times,faced by external threats, the Christian Movement pulled together. In the end, what started as asmall sect of Judaism became a significant part of the population, enough so that a new Roman emperor,Constantine, decided that they should be part of the official religion of Rome. This was a momentouschange for Christianity. As the fourth century dawned, the cross was transformed into a symbol oftriumph and Jesus of Nazareth became Jesus Christ. In only three hundred years, the empire that hadsent Jesus to his death embraced Christianity as an official religion and worshipped him as divine.

Questions for reflection

  1. What difference did Rome's embracing of Christianity make? What impact cana government's acceptance or rejection of religion have on religion and government?
  2. What religious movements of today could become dominant religions in the future? What conditions would be necessary for a religion to grow as quickly as Christianity did?
  3. Like paganism, what religions today are in danger of extinction? What steps can a religion take to ensure its survival?

Continuing the Discussion

  1. How does learning new historical information affect faith?
  2. Who were the "heroes" featured in the program? What similarities/differences did they have? Do the heroes of antiquity remind you of any contemporary heroes?
  3. What about today's world is similar to the time of the early Christians?
Viewers' Guide | From Jesus To Christ | FRONTLINE (2024)
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