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particularly in the reconstructed emotional life of the young Jesus. In many things I prefer Eisenman's "James the Brother of Jesus", and tend to have enough familiarity and history with the material that improbable or over-enthusiastic speculations are simply "filed". Where Chilton does sparkle is in his cultural reconstructions - the Temple culture, his explanation of "outbreak" (translated as leprosy, which was undefined at the time) and its roots in the taboos of Genesis, and primarily the meaning of his words during the last supper.
In general, I am inclined to think arguments of fabrication are somewhat misplaced, given the field, as Eisenman convincingly deconstructs the large scale fabrication of our primary reference material. That is, the research is a matter of weighing the variances between lies, reverse-engineering toward what was possible and probable. Chilton does so well, and where he doesn't it is fairly transparent.
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