Omslagafbeelding van de show Christianity Unearthed

Christianity Unearthed

Podcast door Tom Schuster

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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Over Christianity Unearthed

Christianity did not begin as one thing. It began as many - competing movements, rival texts, contested memories - and one of them won. Christianity Unearthed traces how that happened, and what was lost in the winning. Hosted by Tom Schuster - researcher, historian, and author of seven unpublished volumes on the history of the biblical world - this is a long-form history podcast that examines Christianity not as a matter of faith but as a human phenomenon: shaped by empire, catastrophe, politics, memory, and power. The series spans four thousand years, beginning in the Bronze Age world that produced the Hebrew Bible and moving through the birth of Christianity, its fracturing, its conquests, its reformations, and its long decline into the present. It is structured in five Ages. The podcast launches with Age Two: The Winner's Tale — an examination of the period 0–500 CE, when one Christianity survived and the others were erased. This is history for listeners who want to understand how the most influential institution in Western civilization actually came to be — and why the story it tells about itself is not the only story there is.

Alle afleveringen

24 afleveringen

aflevering S2E10 Luke - The Coherence Machine artwork

S2E10 Luke - The Coherence Machine

There was never one story of Jesus. The Gospel of Luke made one. The Gospel of Luke opens by admitting what later Christians would prefer to forget. Many accounts of Jesus already existed when Luke sat down to write. He writes after the Gospel of Mark and the Gospel of Matthew, in Greek, outside Jerusalem, for a reader who needs certainty. His aim is not preservation. It is order. This episode reads the Gospel of Luke as a coherence machine. A chaotic movement is crushed. An ordered movement can be seen, believed, and allowed to survive. Luke takes scattered tradition and gives it sequence, geography, and moral direction. We trace how Luke does this work: • he admits the plurality, then organises it into a single line • he anchors the story in named rulers and real places to make it publicly defensible • he centres reversal, mercy, the poor, women, and Samaritans as the moral architecture • he shifts the centre of salvation from sacrifice to repentance • he makes Jesus a saviour of the human race, not only of Israel • he writes a Jesus who dies composed and forgiving, not abandoned Luke also solves the problem of the delayed end of the world. If the end does not arrive on time, the movement must still make sense. Luke gives Christianity a theology of time. Urgency becomes mission. Expansion becomes the form. Coherence is not free. Smoothing fracture hides real disagreement. Removing atonement from the death of Jesus is a theological choice, not an accident. Yet without Luke, Christianity probably does not travel this far, or hold together this well, or survive the loss of its founder inside time. Luke does not erase the plurality. Luke orders it. Not from tradition. From evidence.

19 mei 2026 - 1 h 9 min
aflevering S2E9 Matthew - When Jewish Christianity Breaks from Judaism artwork

S2E9 Matthew - When Jewish Christianity Breaks from Judaism

When does an argument turn into a fracture? Matthew is not a calm biography of Jesus. It is a gospel written under pressure, by a community trying to stay inside Israel's story while being pushed toward a gentile future. And you can watch the temperature rise inside the text itself. This episode follows Matthew's arc from continuity to break. Early on, the gospel still sounds at home in Jewish renewal. By Matthew 23, the Pharisees are denounced in a drumbeat of woes. In the passion narrative, Pilate washes his hands and the crowd speaks a line that later centuries would weaponize. By the end, the mission turns outward to all nations and the community has learned to say "their synagogues" as though the place is no longer theirs. We trace the seams where the shift becomes visible. The Israel-first mission of Matthew 10 sitting beside the universal commission of Matthew 28. The Galilee ending that walks away from Temple power. The parable in which a king burns a city, written with the ash of 70 CE in its mouth. The Birkat ha-minim pushing back from the synagogue side. And Matthew 18 building a portable court so a community without a center can still be an assembly. Matthew is fracture before empire. It is intra-Jewish conflict caught mid-break, not the later Christian polemic it became. This episode shows how to hear it that way.

12 mei 2026 - 31 min
aflevering S2E8 Matthew - How Scripture Was Used to Claim Jesus artwork

S2E8 Matthew - How Scripture Was Used to Claim Jesus

What if Matthew is not a biography but an argument? Matthew is not a calm story of Jesus. It is a gospel written under pressure, by a community trying to remain inside Israel's story while being pulled toward a gentile future. The community is writing in Greek, in a diaspora world likely centered on Antioch, with synagogue boundaries hardening and gentiles already in the room. Every quotation from scripture is therefore a bid for ownership of Israel's story. This episode shows how Matthew uses that scripture to claim Jesus as Israel's Messiah. It opens with a genealogy that functions as thesis statement, anchoring Jesus to David and Abraham. It runs a steady drumbeat of fulfillment formulas, "this took place to fulfill," again and again, like an interpretive stamp. It insists that the law is not abolished but intensified, in the most striking words in the Sermon on the Mount: "not one letter, not one stroke of a letter, will pass from the law." And it stages Jesus on a mountain like a new Moses, authoritative interpreter of Torah, not founder of an unrelated religion. It also shows why Matthew is not flat. The gospel preserves an Israel-first mission next to language that prepares for a wider one. It preserves a Jewish renewal voice next to the earliest use of the word "church" in any gospel. It preserves earlier overlap with Judaism and later institutional drift in the same book. Reading Matthew historically means hearing both at once. Matthew does not simply tell the story of Jesus. It argues that this community has read Israel correctly.

5 mei 2026 - 33 min
aflevering S2E7 After the Temple - When Christianity Grew Out of Judaism artwork

S2E7 After the Temple - When Christianity Grew Out of Judaism

Christianity did not break away from Judaism. It grew inside it. Before 70 CE, there was no single Judaism to splinter from. Priests, Pharisees, apocalyptic sects, baptist movements, rural prophets, and diaspora synagogues argued over scripture, purity, authority, and what God was about to do next. The Jesus movement was one voice inside that contested world. Then Rome destroyed the Temple. Sacrifice ended. The priestly aristocracy lost its altar. Authority moved from altar to interpretation, from Hebrew scroll to Greek translation, from sanctuary to scattered rooms. The rabbinic trajectory begins there, not because one council decided it, but because portable practice was the only kind that survived. Sixty years later, Rome crushed the Bar Kokhba revolt. Jerusalem was remade. Jewish messianism became dangerous ground. And the Jesus movement was a messianic movement. This episode traces how two related traditions adapted to the same rupture. Why Jewish followers of Jesus were slowly squeezed, too Torah-observant for gentile assemblies, too Christ-centered for rabbinic consolidation. How the Septuagint and the Hebrew canon drifted into different scriptural worlds. Why Isaiah 7:14 reads "virgin" in Greek and "young woman" in Hebrew, and why that single word mattered. Why a book like Enoch could be prophecy in one community and invisible in the next a generation later. Shared vocabulary. Diverging authority. Hardening boundaries. The split between early Christianity and post-Temple Judaism was slower, messier, and more entangled than later history remembers. The break was not a moment. It was a drift.

28 apr 2026 - 31 min
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