Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 13th May 2025
Paperback
Published: 7th March 2024
Hardback
Published: 7th March 2024
Heresy: Jesus Christ and the Other Sons of God
By (Author) Catherine Nixey
Pan Macmillan
Picador
7th March 2024
7th March 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Blasphemy, heresy, apostasy
Theology
Social and cultural history
Middle Eastern history
Ancient history
232.901
Hardback
384
Width 164mm, Height 243mm, Spine 35mm
634g
'In the beginning was the Word,' says the Gospel of John. This sentence - and the words of all four gospels - is central to the teachings of the Christian church and has shaped Western art, literature and language, and the Western mind. Yet in the years after the death of Christ there was not merely one word, nor any consensus as to who Jesus was or why he had mattered. There were many different Jesuses, among them the aggressive Jesus who scorned his parents and crippled those who opposed him, the Jesus who sold his twin into slavery and the Jesus who had someone crucified in his stead. Moreover, in the early years of the first millennium there were many other saviours, many sons of gods who healed the sick and cured the lame. But as Christianity spread, they were pronounced unacceptable - even heretical - and they faded from view. Now, in Heresy, Catherine Nixey tells their extraordinary story, one of contingency, chance and plurality. It is a story about what might have been.
How on earth could an ancient Greek word meaning 'choice' come to be used exclusively negatively to mean heresy Catherine Nixey, expert in the darkening age of Late Antique religiosity, has all the answers, brilliantly resurrecting a teeming plurality of non-canonical, non-orthodox, and above all allegedly non-Christian ideas and practices with cool intellectual clarity and vivid literary skill. -- Paul Cartledge, author of The Spartans and Thermopylae
Heresy is a brilliant book - sometimes frightening, occasionally funny, frequently unsettling and always a thrill to read. It probes painfully into the pathology of belief. * The Times *
Enthralling . . . Heresy illuminates a forgotten world - and it's an absolute pleasure to read. * The Sunday Telegraph *
Catherine Nixey studied Classics at Cambridge and now works as a journalist at The Economist. Her writing has previously appeared in The Times, and The Financial Times, among others. She lives in England with her husband. Her first book, The Darkening Age, was published in 2017 and was an international bestseller, and won a Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Award.