Chapters fourteen and fifteen in the book, The Jesus of History, offers several interesting theories. However, these theories seem to stem from a theme central to the title of the book. The focus of these chapters maintains that the Jesus who walked the earth taught with a certain degree of humanity. These chapters account for religious reasons for war, crusades, and the power of the teaching of Christ without use of the miracle for validity. In the end, the depiction of Christ has a duality to it- first, the Christ of spirituality and secondly, the Christ that lived with and commented on the laws of man.