

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
E-ISSN: 1545-6986|56|1|117-137
ISSN: 0021-9371
Source: Journal of British Studies, Vol.56, Iss.1, 2017-01, pp. : 117-137
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Abstract
This article examines images of Jesus broadcast on the BBC from the 1930s through the 1950s. During these years, the BBC sought to use its cultural influence to replace popular religiosity with what the clerics who staffed its Religious Broadcasting Department (RBD) regarded as a more masculine, modern, and vigorous national religious faith. To achieve this aim, the RBD marshaled the might of British New Testament scholarship and its image of a warrior-like, apocalyptic historical Jesus. Yet the RBD's hopes of bridging the gap between popular religiosity and its own vision of Christianity went unrealized. Programs on Jesus that reached a genuinely national audience—
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