Benjamin Adamah
Did Jesus Survive the Crucifixion?What if the life of Jesus unfolded quite differently than we’ve been told for centuries? Two Essene manuscripts, allegedly written around 37-40 CE, name a certain Euphanias as his biological father and describe in detail how Jesus survived the crucifixion. The prevailing consensus deems them brilliant forgeries-but if they were fabrications, why did the Church deploy state authorities, even mobilizing police forces, to suppress their circulation? What exactly were they so desperate to conceal?In Codex Nazareth, these forbidden documents appear together for the first time in a single volume-fully translated, annotated, and introduced with in-depth contextual analysis. Their contents diverge sharply from the canonical gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John-and yet appear historically more plausible.The scrolls were reportedly discovered in a library in Alexandria, in a former Greek monastery. They were attributed to a member of the Essene brotherhood who is said to have trained Jesus as a healer. Immediately after their discovery, ecclesiastical and Jesuit forces attempted to block publication. Through Masonic networks, however, the texts eventually found their way to Germany. One Latin original is believed to be blackshelved in the Vatican’s secret archives, passed on by the Académie française.Codex Nazareth challenges not belief, but inquiry. It invites you to step onto a new stage of the Christ mystery-one with a distinct voice and historical resonance of its own.