Difference between revisions of "Category:Jesus Bloodline (subject)"

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'''Jesus Bloodline''' refers to a series of fictional speculations about the existence of Jesus' descendants from his marriage with [[Mary Magdalene]] (or other women), or as the result of a DNA cloning experiment.
'''Jesus Bloodline''' refers to a series of fictional speculations about the existence of Jesus' descendants from his marriage with [[Mary Magdalene]] (or other woman).
 
Cf. also [[Jesus Cloning]].


==Overview==
==Overview==
The idea that Jesus fathered children (from his marriage with Martha and Mary), appeared in [[O teleutaios peirasmos (1951 Kazantzakis), novel]], as part of the ''last temptation'' Jesus had to reject on the cross.  
The idea that Jesus fathered children (from his marriage with Martha and Mary), appeared in [[O teleutaios peirasmos (1951 Kazantzakis), novel]], as part of the ''last temptation'' Jesus had to reject on the cross.  
====Jesus & Mary Magdalene Bloodline====


In the 1970s, such an idea became part of an elaborated fictional scheme revealing the hidden presence of a Jesus Bloodline in history (from his marriage with [[Mary Magdalene]]) and the eternal struggle between the Church and the ''Priory of Sion'' to suppress/defend the truth, until contemporary times.
In the 1970s, such an idea became part of an elaborated fictional scheme revealing the hidden presence of a Jesus Bloodline in history (from his marriage with [[Mary Magdalene]]) and the eternal struggle between the Church and the ''Priory of Sion'' to suppress/defend the truth, until contemporary times.
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In 2007 the arch-fi documentary [[The Lost Tomb of Jesus (2007 Jacobovici), arch-fi]]  
In 2007 the arch-fi documentary [[The Lost Tomb of Jesus (2007 Jacobovici), arch-fi]]  
announced the discovery of the burial place of Jesus and his family, including the remains of his "wife" [[Mary Magdalene]] and their child.
announced the discovery of the burial place of Jesus and his family, including the remains of his "wife" [[Mary Magdalene]] and their child.
====The cloning of Jesus====
As soon as the possibility of cloning was scientifically advanced, there were numerous speculations about the possibility of "resurrecting" long-dead spiritual or political leaders. The horror movie "Boys from Brazil" (1978) dealt with an attempt by neo-Nazis to clone Hitler.
A 1999 episode of The Outer Limits first explored the issue of cloning Jesus.
In 2000 a hoax from a group called "The Second Coming Project" announced on the Web their intention to clone Jesus by 2001. For some years the group kept apologizing for the delay, attributed to unspecified technical problems, while reiterating their commitment to find "authentic" DNA remains of Jesus. 
In 2004 an episode of the fictional TV series ''ReGenesis'' dealt with the attempt by a fanatic religious sect to clone Jesus (see [[The Face of God (2004 Jennings), TV film]]).
See also "In His Image: Book One of the CloneChrist Trilogy" by James BeauSeigneur; "The Jesus Thief," (and its forthcoming sequel "Risen") by J.R. Lankford; and "Cloning Christ," by Peter Senese and Robert Geis; "The Genesis Code" by John Case, "The Shroud" by Jaqueline Druga-Marchetti and "The Sacred Helix," by Mark Garon.


==Related categories==
==Related categories==
*[[Mary Magdalene]] / [[Married Jesus]]
*[[Mary Magdalene]] / [[Married Jesus]] / [[Jesus Cloning]]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 07:55, 11 December 2010

Jesus Bloodline refers to a series of fictional speculations about the existence of Jesus' descendants from his marriage with Mary Magdalene (or other woman).

Cf. also Jesus Cloning.

Overview

The idea that Jesus fathered children (from his marriage with Martha and Mary), appeared in O teleutaios peirasmos (1951 Kazantzakis), novel, as part of the last temptation Jesus had to reject on the cross.

In the 1970s, such an idea became part of an elaborated fictional scheme revealing the hidden presence of a Jesus Bloodline in history (from his marriage with Mary Magdalene) and the eternal struggle between the Church and the Priory of Sion to suppress/defend the truth, until contemporary times.

The international success of The Da Vinci Code (2003 Brown), novel popularized the arch-fi work of authors such as Baigent and Starbird.

In 2007 the arch-fi documentary The Lost Tomb of Jesus (2007 Jacobovici), arch-fi announced the discovery of the burial place of Jesus and his family, including the remains of his "wife" Mary Magdalene and their child.

Related categories

External links

Media in category "Jesus Bloodline (subject)"

The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total.