physics and biology, in which reality is understood as coherence,
Cosmic Becoming Cycle → poetic and metaphysical expansion
Embodied Process Realism → formal philosophical framework
Processual Divine Coherence → theological bridge
Ancient Manuscripts, Scribal Cultures, and the Formation of Scripture
I. Ancient Manuscripts
II. Textual Variants and Scribal Changes
III. Manuscript Families and the Diversity of Early Christianity
IV. Canon Formation and the Construction of Scripture
Essay 49 - JESUS & DIVERSITY
The Historical Jesus, Translation, and Christianity’s Many Voices
V. The Historical Jesus and the Problem of Reconstruction
VI. Translation, Interpretation, and the Reinvention of Scripture
VII. Lost Christianities
Essay 50 - WHEN CERTAINTY COLLAPSES
Memory, Deconstruction, and the Future of Faith
VIII. Modern Fundamentalism and the Myth of “Biblical Christianity”
IX. The Bible as Historical Memory Rather Than Perfect Transcript
X. Reconstruction, Deconstruction, and the Future of Christianity
XI. The Bible After Certainty
Essay 51 - SCHOLARLY FOUNDATIONS
Textual Criticism, Archaeology, and the Rediscovery of Ancient Worlds
XII. Textual Criticism and Modern Scholarship
XIII. The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Hebrew Bible
Essay 52 - POLITICS, ETHICS, & FUTURE
Empire, Nationalism, and Reconstructing Christianity After Certainty
XIV. Revelation, Empire, and Political Religion
XV. Reconstructing Christianity After Manuscript History
XVI. Conclusion - The Bible as Humanity’s Long Conversation About God
The first essay (no. 48 of the reality series) of The Bible in History & Christianity’s Search for God explored the unstable world of manuscripts, textual variants, scribal transmission, and canon formation. Yet behind every manuscript lies a deeper and even more difficult question:
Who was Jesus?
For many modern Christians, this question appears deceptively simple. The Gospels are often treated as straightforward historical biographies preserving direct and unified accounts of Jesus’ life and teachings. Yet the closer scholarship moves toward the origins of Christianity, the more complicated the figure of Jesus becomes.
The surviving traditions about Jesus emerge not from direct recordings, but from layers of:
- memory,
- oral tradition,
- theological interpretation,
- translation,
- liturgical development,
- and evolving communal identity.
The result is not a singular uncontested portrait, but many portraits.
- The Jesus of Mark differs from the Jesus of John.
- The Jesus of Jewish Christianity differs from the Jesus of later imperial orthodoxy.
- The Jesus preserved in mystical traditions differs from the Jesus of apocalyptic communities.
- Even the language through which Jesus was transmitted continually reshaped how he was understood (sic, Aramaic, Koine Greek, Variants of Koine Greek, Latin, Coptic, Syriac, and etc.)
This essay therefore moves beyond manuscripts themselves into the diversity of Christianity’s earliest interpretive worlds.
It explores:
- the problem of reconstructing the historical Jesus,
- the role of translation in shaping theology, and
- the competing Christianities that emerged across the ancient Mediterranean world.
What emerges is not merely textual instability.
What emerges is Christianity in the process of becoming.
The deeper scholars move into the world of biblical manuscripts, textual variants, canon formation, and competing Christian traditions, the more difficult it becomes to speak confidently about recovering a single, uncontested picture of the historical Jesus.
This does not mean Jesus did not exist.
The overwhelming majority of historians agree that a Jewish teacher named Jesus emerged within first-century Roman Palestine and became the catalyst for the movement later known as Christianity.
The real difficulty lies elsewhere.
The problem is that every surviving account of Jesus already comes mediated through layers of:
- memory,
- theology,
- oral tradition,
- liturgical repetition,
- editorial shaping,
- translation,
- and scribal transmission.
And those traditions evolved historically.
The earliest followers of Jesus lived within an overwhelmingly oral culture.
Stories circulated verbally:
- in homes,
- synagogues,
- marketplaces,
- communal meals,
- worship gatherings,
- and missionary preaching.
The Gospels themselves were written decades after Jesus’ death.
During those intervening years, traditions concerning Jesus were continually repeated, adapted, interpreted, and reshaped according to the needs of differing Christian communities.
This is not unusual.
All ancient religious traditions evolved through communal memory.
Yet it means that the Gospel accounts already represent theological interpretation as much as historical recollection.
The evangelists were not modern journalists attempting detached objective biography.
They were early gospel theologians constructing meaningful narratives about who they believed Jesus was.
Each Gospel therefore emphasizes different themes.
The canonical Gospels themselves present noticeably different portrayals of Jesus.
The Gospel of Mark, generally regarded as the earliest canonical Gospel, presents Jesus as:
- apocalyptic,
- urgent,
- misunderstood,
- secretive,
- and moving rapidly toward suffering and death.
Mark’s Jesus often appears emotionally intense, isolated, and surrounded by confusion.
Even the disciples frequently failed to understand him.
Matthew reshapes Jesus into a more overtly Jewish and messianic figure.
Jesus becomes:
- a new Moses,
- fulfillment of prophecy,
- interpreter of Torah,
- and teacher of righteousness.
Matthew repeatedly links Jesus to Hebrew Scripture fulfillment formulas:
“This was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet…”
Matthew's Gospel addresses tensions between emerging Christianity and Jewish identity.
Luke presents a more universalized and socially compassionate Jesus.
Themes emphasized include:
- concern for the poor,
- women,
- outsiders,
- social reversal,
- forgiveness,
- and historical continuity.
Luke’s Jesus often appears calmer, more composed, and more philosophically expansive.
The Gospel of John differs dramatically from the Synoptic Gospels (Mark, Matthew, Luke).
Here Jesus speaks in long theological discourses and appears openly conscious of his divine identity from the beginning.
John’s Jesus is:
- cosmic,
- preexistent,
- mystical,
- and deeply theological.
The emphasis shifts from apocalyptic kingdom proclamation toward metaphysical revelation:
“I and the Father are one.”
Many scholars therefore regard John as reflecting a later and more developed theological interpretation of Jesus.
The differences between the Gospels create profound historical questions.
Did Jesus primarily proclaim:
- apocalyptic judgment?
- mystical union with God?
- ethical transformation?
- social reversal?
- imminent kingdom expectation?
- cosmic salvation?
- wisdom teaching?
- sacrificial redemption?
The answer depends partly upon which traditions one privileges.
Modern scholarship therefore often distinguishes between:
- the historical Jesus,
- and the Christ of faith.
The “historical Jesus” refers to the attempt to reconstruct the probable first-century Jewish figure behind the traditions.
The “Christ of faith” refers to the many theological interpretations developed by differing Christian communities over time.
These two categories overlap, yet they are not identical.
The diversity of manuscript traditions reflects an even deeper diversity of early Christian understandings of Jesus.
Different groups viewed Jesus differently.
Some emphasized Jesus as:
- divine Logos,
- heavenly redeemer,
- Jewish Messiah,
- prophetic teacher,
- wisdom figure,
- cosmic revealer,
- resurrected Lord,
- mystical mediator,
- or eschatological judge.
Still others (Gnostics) viewed Jesus primarily as a spiritual revealer imparting hidden knowledge.
These differing Christologies competed vigorously during Christianity’s earliest centuries.
The manuscripts preserve traces of these theological struggles.
At times scribes altered passages specifically to strengthen emerging orthodox views of Jesus.
For example:
- ambiguous passages were clarified,
- divine titles expanded,
- and difficult readings softened.
The textual tradition therefore became one mechanism through which the church gradually stabilized its theology.
The fully developed doctrines familiar to many modern Christians did not exist in complete form during Christianity’s earliest decades.
Doctrines concerning:
- the Trinity,
- Christ’s dual natures,
- original sin,
- substitutionary atonement,
- biblical inerrancy,
- and ecclesiastical authority
developed gradually across centuries of theological debate.
The Jesus of the first century became increasingly interpreted through:
- Greek philosophy,
- Roman political structures,
- ecclesiastical councils,
- liturgical traditions,
- and theological systematization.
This does not necessarily mean those doctrines are meaningless.
But it does mean they are historical developments rather than untouched first-century formulations.
Modern forms of rigid biblical literalism often assume direct unmediated access to Jesus through Scripture.
Yet manuscript history complicates such certainty profoundly.
What readers actually encounter is:
- layered tradition,
- edited memory,
- theological interpretation,
- scribal transmission,
- translation history,
- and canon formation.
The Bible therefore does not function as a simplistic historical transcript descending unchanged through time.
It functions more like a living historical archive preserving Christianity’s evolving attempts to understand:
- Jesus,
- God,
- salvation,
- suffering,
- hope,
- judgment,
- love,
- and transcendence.
The search for the historical Jesus thus becomes not merely a recovery project, but an encounter with the astonishing diversity of early Christianity itself.
Ultimately, the manuscript traditions reveal something larger than textual instability.
They reveal humanity’s continuous struggle to interpret transformative experience.
The early Christians were attempting to understand what Jesus meant:
- religiously,
- politically,
- cosmically,
- ethically,
- and spiritually.
Different communities answered differently.
And those differing answers became embedded within the manuscript tradition itself.
The result is not a singular uncontested portrait, but a multilayered historical tapestry revealing Christianity in the process of becoming.
The manuscripts preserve not merely the memory of Jesus.
They preserve humanity wrestling with the meaning of Jesus across centuries of history.
Every translation of the Bible is also an interpretation of the Bible.
As manuscripts moved across:
- languages,
- empires,
- cultures,
- theological systems,
- and historical eras,
the meaning of Scripture continued evolving.
The Bible that modern readers encounter today is not simply an ancient text preserved unchanged through time. It is the cumulative result of centuries of:
- translation,
- editorial decisions,
- doctrinal assumptions,
- linguistic limitations,
- political pressures,
- and theological interpretation.
Translation itself is never neutral.
Words do not transfer perfectly from one language into another.
The Bible therefore exists not merely as manuscript tradition, but as a long history of interpretive reconstruction.
The biblical texts emerged primarily in:
- Hebrew,
- Aramaic,
- and Koine Greek.
These ancient languages contain concepts, idioms, metaphors, and grammatical structures that often resist precise modern translation.
For example, ancient Hebrew tends to think concretely, relationally, and poetically rather than abstractly or philosophically.
Koine Greek contains layers of meaning shaped by:
- Hellenistic philosophy,
- Jewish theology,
- imperial culture,
- and rhetorical tradition.
Many biblical terms therefore carry broad semantic ranges.
A single Greek word may possess:
- legal,
- relational,
- mystical,
- ethical,
- political,
- or philosophical implications simultaneously.
Translators must choose which shades of meaning to emphasize.
In doing so, theology inevitably enters translation.
Translation decisions often reflect the doctrinal assumptions of translators themselves.
For example:
- should ekklesia be translated as “church” or “assembly”?
- should sarx mean “flesh,” “sinful nature,” or “human weakness”?
- should dikaiosyne be rendered “justice” or “righteousness”?
- should aionios mean “eternal,” “age-lasting,” or “pertaining to the age”?
Each choice carries theological consequences.
Over centuries, certain doctrinal traditions became embedded within translation itself.
This means modern readers frequently inherit theological interpretation without realizing it.
The text arrives already filtered through centuries of doctrinal assumptions.
One of the earliest and most influential translations of Scripture was the Septuagint - the Greek translation of Hebrew Scriptures produced several centuries before Jesus.
The Septuagint became enormously important because many early Christians spoke Greek rather than Hebrew.
In fact, many New Testament authors appear to quote the Septuagint rather than later standardized Hebrew texts.
Yet the Septuagint sometimes differs significantly from the Hebrew Masoretic tradition later used in Judaism.
This means that early Christianity itself emerged partly through a translated version of Scripture already containing interpretive differences.
Translation was therefore embedded into Christianity from the very beginning.
As Christianity spread westward, Latin gradually replaced Greek as the dominant language of the western church.
During the late fourth century, Jerome produced the Latin Vulgate, which became the authoritative Bible of medieval Western Christianity for over a thousand years.
Jerome himself wrestled with enormous textual difficulties:
- conflicting manuscripts,
- variant readings,
- Hebrew versus Greek traditions,
- and theological controversies.
His work shaped Western Christianity profoundly.
Yet even the Vulgate underwent centuries of copying, revision, and variation.
The medieval church therefore inherited not one perfectly stable text, but another evolving manuscript tradition layered atop earlier traditions.
The invention of the printing press transformed biblical transmission dramatically.
For the first time, texts could be reproduced mechanically rather than copied entirely by hand.
This greatly reduced scribal variation while simultaneously accelerating theological conflict.
The Protestant Reformation placed Scripture at the center of religious authority.
Figures such as Martin Luther argued that believers should have direct access to Scripture in their own languages.
This produced an explosion of vernacular translations:
- German,
- English,
- French,
- and many others.
Yet the Reformation also intensified disputes over:
- canon,
- translation,
- authority,
- and interpretation.
Even among Protestants, radically different readings of Scripture quickly emerged.
Ironically, wider access to the Bible did not produce theological unity.
It produced even greater interpretive fragmentation.
The King James Version, published in 1611, became one of the most influential English translations in history.
Yet the translators worked primarily from the Textus Receptus - a Greek text compiled from relatively late Byzantine manuscripts.
Since then, much earlier manuscripts have been discovered, including:
- Codex Sinaiticus,
- Codex Vaticanus,
- and numerous ancient papyri.
Modern critical editions therefore differ significantly from the textual basis underlying the King James Version.
This explains why some verses appearing in older translations are:
- bracketed,
- footnoted,
- or omitted in many modern Bibles.
Examples include:
- the longer ending of Mark,
- the Johannine Comma,
- and portions of the adultery narrative in John.
Modern biblical translation thus remains deeply tied to ongoing manuscript scholarship.
The Bible continues to evolve textually even today.
Every modern Bible represents a chain of historical decisions:
- which manuscripts to prioritize,
- which variants to include,
- how to render ancient words,
- how much theology to preserve,
- and how much ambiguity to retain.
Translation therefore becomes a form of reconstruction.
No reader encounters Scripture in a pure untouched form.
Everyone encounters Scripture through layers of historical mediation.
This does not necessarily invalidate the Bible.
But it profoundly complicates simplistic notions of direct, perfect, unfiltered revelation.
The manuscript and translation traditions help explain why Christianity today exists in thousands of forms.
Different communities emphasize different:
- translations,
- doctrines,
- theological frameworks,
- interpretive traditions,
- ethical systems,
- and cultural assumptions.
The Bible itself became a shared, yet unstable foundation, capable of generating radically different forms of Christianity.
The same Scriptures have been used to justify:
- pacifism and holy war,
- democracy and monarchy,
- liberation and oppression,
- inclusion and exclusion,
- mysticism and rationalism,
- social reform and authoritarian nationalism.
This is has resulted precisely because the biblical tradition is:
- historically layered,
- interpretively open, and
- textually complex.
The history of translation reveals that the Bible has never existed apart from interpretation.
Every generation reconstructs Scripture anew within its own historical world.
The manuscripts therefore expose the Bible not as a static object frozen outside history, but as a living tradition continually re-entering history through:
- language,
- culture,
- theology,
- politics,
- ethics,
- and communal imagination.
What readers inherit today is not merely an ancient book.
It is the accumulated memory of civilizations continually rewriting, translating, preserving, debating, and reimagining what divine revelation might mean.
One of the most striking discoveries of modern scholarship is the realization that early Christianity contained far more diversity than later orthodoxy admitted.
For centuries, church history was often written from the perspective of victorious orthodoxy.
Alternative Christian movements were dismissed simply as:
- heresies,
- distortions,
- or deviations from “true Christianity.”
Modern manuscript discoveries complicated this narrative profoundly.
Texts discovered at Nag Hammadi in Egypt during 1945 revealed entire streams of early Christian literature previously suppressed or forgotten.
These included:
- the Gospel of Thomas,
- Gospel of Philip,
- Gospel of Truth,
- Apocryphon of John,
- and many others.
These writings revealed forms of Christianity emphasizing:
- mystical knowledge,
- spiritual awakening,
- interior transformation,
- symbolic cosmology,
- and direct experiential insight.
Meanwhile, other Christian groups developed very different theological systems.
- The Ebionites emphasized Jewish continuity and viewed Jesus primarily as a prophetic human figure.
- Marcion rejected the Hebrew Scriptures entirely and proposed a radically dualistic theology separating the God of Israel from the God revealed through Jesus.
- Montanists emphasized prophecy, ecstatic revelation, and apocalyptic expectation.
- Syriac Christianity developed rich poetic and mystical traditions distinct from later Greco-Roman orthodoxy.
The sheer diversity of these movements reveals that Christianity did not evolve as a singular unified religion.
It evolved culturally, competitively, personally.
Different communities:
- interpreted Jesus differently,
- preserved different texts,
- emphasized different rituals,
- and developed different theological priorities.
The eventual triumph of orthodoxy reflected:
- institutional organization,
- episcopal authority,
- theological consolidation,
- imperial support,
- and historical circumstance.
The manuscripts preserve traces of these lost Christianities beneath the surface of later doctrinal stability.
Essay Summary
This essay examines how the figure of Jesus evolved through:
- oral tradition,
- Gospel formation,
- translation history,
- theological interpretation,
- and competing Christian movements.
The study proceeds through three interconnected movements:
- The Historical Jesus ProblemExamining how the Gospel traditions preserve differing theological portraits of Jesus and why reconstructing the historical figure behind them remains historically difficult.
- Translation and the Reinvention of ScriptureExploring how biblical translation shaped Christian theology across languages, empires, and historical eras.
- Christianity’s Many VoicesInvestigating the diversity of early Christian movements and the lost Christianities eventually excluded from orthodoxy.
Rather than presenting Christianity as a singular fixed religion descending unchanged through history, the manuscript traditions reveal a dynamic and pluralistic movement continually reinterpreting Jesus according to differing communal, theological, political, and spiritual needs.
This essay therefore explores not only the history of Jesus traditions, but the broader human struggle to interpret meaning, transcendence, authority, and faith across unstable historical worlds.
Essay Summary
- oral tradition,
- Gospel formation,
- translation history,
- theological interpretation,
- and competing Christian movements.
The manuscript traditions reveal that early Christianity did not preserve a single universally agreed portrait of Jesus. Instead, differing communities remembered, translated, interpreted, and reconstructed Jesus according to their own theological, political, liturgical, and spiritual worlds.
The essay proceeds through three interconnected movements:
1. The Historical Jesus and the Problem of ReconstructionThe first section explores the historical difficulties involved in reconstructing the figure of Jesus behind the Gospel traditions.
The canonical Gospels preserve differing portrayals of Jesus shaped through decades of oral transmission, theological reflection, and communal memory. Rather than functioning as modern historical biographies, the Gospels emerged as theological narratives expressing the evolving concerns of early Christian communities.
The search for the “historical Jesus” therefore becomes inseparable from the history of Christianity’s many interpretations of Jesus.
2. Translation, Interpretation, and the Reinvention of Scripture
The second section examines how translation itself continually reshaped Christian theology across languages, empires, and civilizations.
As biblical traditions moved through:
- Hebrew,
- Aramaic,
- Greek,
- Latin,
- and eventually modern vernacular languages,
the meaning of Scripture evolved through countless interpretive decisions.
Translation therefore became not merely linguistic transmission, but theological reconstruction.
The Bible inherited by modern readers emerges through centuries of:
- translation,
- interpretation,
- doctrinal development,
- and cultural adaptation.
3. Lost Christianities
The final section investigates the remarkable diversity of early Christian movements that once existed throughout the ancient Mediterranean world.
Modern manuscript discoveries reveal that early Christianity contained many competing understandings of:
- Jesus,
- salvation,
- resurrection,
- authority,
- spirituality,
- and divine revelation.
Groups later labeled:
- Gnostic,
- Ebionite,
- Marcionite,
- Montanist,
- and other “heretical” movements
were once living forms of Christianity possessing their own:
- scriptures,
- liturgies,
- theological systems,
- and communities.
The eventual triumph of orthodoxy emerged gradually through institutional consolidation, theological conflict, and historical circumstance.
Taken together, these three movements reveal Christianity not as a singular fixed religion descending unchanged through history, but as a dynamic and pluralistic movement continually reinterpreting Jesus according to changing historical worlds.
The manuscripts preserve not merely the memory of Jesus.
They preserve humanity’s continuing struggle to understand what Jesus meant.
Memory, Deconstruction, and the Future of Faith
VII. Modern Fundamentalism and the Myth of “Biblical Christianity”
VIII. The Bible as Historical Memory Rather Than Perfect Transcript
IX. Reconstruction, Deconstruction, and the Future of Christianity
X. The Bible After Certainty
Bruce M. Metzger and Bart D. Ehrman. The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration. 4th ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Bart D. Ehrman. Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why. New York: HarperOne, 2005.
———. The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
David Parker. An Introduction to the New Testament Manuscripts and Their Texts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.
Philip W. Comfort. Encountering the Manuscripts: An Introduction to New Testament Paleography and Textual Criticism. Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2005.
Karel van der Toorn. Scribal Culture and the Making of the Hebrew Bible. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007.
II. Canon Formation and Early Christianity
Bruce M. Metzger. The Canon of the New Testament: Its Origin, Development, and Significance. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987.
Lee Martin McDonald. The Biblical Canon: Its Origin, Transmission, and Authority. 3rd ed. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2007.
Helmut Koester. Introduction to the New Testament. 2 vols. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1982.
Larry W. Hurtado. Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003.
Walter Bauer. Orthodoxy and Heresy in Earliest Christianity. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971.
III. Lost Christianities and Gnostic Traditions
Bart D. Ehrman. Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Elaine Pagels. The Gnostic Gospels. New York: Random House, 1979.
———. Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas. New York: Random House, 2003.
Karen L. King. What Is Gnosticism? Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.
James H. Charlesworth, ed. The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1983–1985.
IV. Historical Jesus Studies
John Dominic Crossan. The Historical Jesus: The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1991.
Geza Vermes. Jesus the Jew: A Historian’s Reading of the Gospels. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1973.
James D. G. Dunn. Jesus Remembered. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003.
N. T. Wright. The New Testament and the People of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992.
Raymond E. Brown. An Introduction to the New Testament. New York: Doubleday, 1997.
V. Hebrew Bible, Archaeology, and Ancient Israel
Richard Elliott Friedman. Who Wrote the Bible? New York: Harper & Row, 1987.
Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman. The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology’s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. New York: Free Press, 2001.
Thomas L. Thompson. The Mythic Past: Biblical Archaeology and the Myth of Israel. New York: Basic Books, 1999.
John J. Collins. The Apocalyptic Imagination: An Introduction to Jewish Apocalyptic Literature. 3rd ed. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2016.
VI. General Histories of the Bible and Christianity
Karen Armstrong. The Bible: A Biography. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2007.
Diarmaid MacCulloch. Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years. New York: Viking, 2009.
John Barton. A History of the Bible: The Story of the World’s Most Influential Book. New York: Viking, 2019.
Bart D. Ehrman. Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don’t Know About Them). New York: HarperOne, 2009.
VII. Contemporary Critical and Theological Reflections
Francesca Stavrakopoulou. God: An Anatomy. New York: Knopf, 2022.
Bart D. Ehrman. Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don’t Know About Them). New York: HarperOne, 2009.
Karen Armstrong. The Bible: A Biography. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2007.
John Barton. A History of the Bible: The Story of the World’s Most Influential Book. New York: Viking, 2019.