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  • The Judas manuscript: Is it Gospel?

    Times of Malta, Malta
    April 15 2006

    The Judas manuscript: Is it Gospel?
    Mark Micallef


    Judas betraying Christ as depicted in a Good Friday statue in Naxxar.
    Photo: Gino Galea


    Lost for 1,700 years, the National Geographic Society recently
    released a translation of what is believed to be the gospel of Judas,
    an anonymous account of early Christian history, which recasts Judas
    Iscariot, the symbol of treachery personified, in a new, positive
    light. Mark Micallef looks into the claims of "the gospel" in a bid
    to establish what effect it will have on established Christian
    doctrine.

    Not only did Judas not betray Jesus for 30 pieces of silver,
    according to this manuscript, but he was actually following his
    master's orders in handing him over to his executioners. In doing so,
    Judas helped Christ fulfil the biblical prophecies of saving mankind.

    The first Coptic to English translation and interpretation of the
    script was presented by the National Geographic Society last week
    during a highly publicised press conference in Washington, where a
    few pages of the restored text were also put on display.

    The leather-bound codex - as the collection of texts is known - was
    found containing the fragile 26-page manuscript along with other
    non-biblical texts in middle Egypt near Armenia in the 1970s. The
    entire 66-page codex includes a letter by Peter and a text of what
    scholars are provisionally calling the Book of Allogenes, along with
    a text titled James.

    The relic, however, disappeared in the world of antiquities traders
    shortly after being found, moving first to Europe and then to the US.
    Once in the US it was abandoned in a safe deposit box at a bank in
    Long Island, New York, for 16 years by a trader who could not find a
    buyer.

    Frida Naspurichakos, a Zurich-based arts dealer, rescued the codex in
    2000, but the manuscript was quickly deteriorating and the document
    was transferred to the Maecenas Foundation for Ancient Art in Basel,
    Switzerland, for conservation and translation.

    Five years later the National Geographic struck a publication deal
    with the foundation and last week, after some 1,700 years of silence,
    the purported version of the most reviled man in history was made
    available for public consumption.

    Along with a feature article in its flagship magazine, the society
    published two books on the gospel of Judas, while the National
    Geographic TV channel ran a special two-hour documentary on the
    manuscript last Sunday.

    Despite what the name may lead some to believe, the gospel was not
    written by Judas himself - unlike that of Luke, Mark, Mathew and
    John. In fact, the author has not been established.

    Experts believe the script may be a Coptic copy of a still earlier
    gospel of Judas, written in Greek about 150 years after Jesus's
    death. In fact, the first known reference to a Judas gospel was
    around 180 AD, in the influential work of the early Christian Bishop
    St Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses (Against the Heresies).

    By this time there were many accounts of the life of Christ, written
    by various early Christians in several gospels. Bishop Irenaeus
    helped streamline the Christian message by arguing that there should
    be just four approved gospels: by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. All
    others, including the gospel of Judas, are known as apocrypha - not
    inspired by God and, therefore, not part of the canonical Gospels -
    and were labelled at the time by early Church as heretical.

    In fact, the gospel of Judas is only the latest of many texts
    discovered recently, which include the gospels of Thomas, Mary
    Magdalene and Philip, believed to be written by an early Christian
    sect, the Gnostics. Gnostics were seen by early Church leaders as
    unorthodox, and were denounced as heretics.

    Catholic theology still stands
    The discovery of the Judas gospel may shed more light on the
    "diversity and vibrancy of early Christianity", in the words of Rev.
    Donald Senior from the Chicago Catholic Theological Union, who was on
    the panel during last week's presentation.

    But does it really shake Catholic dogma?

    Fr Thomas Williams, dean of theology at the Regina Apostolorum
    University in Rome, thinks it does not. Of a similar opinion are the
    Bishop Emeritus of Gozo, Nikol Cauchi, and Fr Martin Micallef,
    lecturer at the department of Sacred Scriptures at the University of
    Malta.

    In an interview with Zenit, a Catholic newswire, Fr Williams says
    Gnostic gospels, of which there are many, are not Christian documents
    per se because they proceed from what is known as a syncretistic sect
    that incorporated elements from different religions, including
    Christianity.

    "From the moment of the Gnostic gospels' appearance, the Christian
    community rejected these documents because of their incompatibility
    with the Christian faith. The gospel of Judas would be a document of
    this sort."

    Fr Micallef concurs: "The history of how the New Testament document
    was given canonical status illustrates the fact that the choice of
    texts was not coincidental". During the council of Trent, which took
    place towards the mid-1500, the Church closed the list of books
    deemed to be divinely inspired. "Seventy-two books: 45 in the Old
    Testament and 27 in the new. No more, no less", Fr Micallef insists.

    The council also secured the chasm between the Catholic and the
    Protestant Church. In fact, Protestants do not accept the Catholic
    canonical books.

    Both Mgr Cauchi and Fr Micallef agree that while the find is very
    interesting from a historic standpoint, it changes nothing for the
    Church theologically.

    Unlike the accounts in the New Testament, the author of the gospel of
    Judas believed that Judas Iscariot alone among the 12 disciples
    understood the meaning of Jesus's teachings. The Gnostics believed in
    a secret, mystical knowledge of how people could escape the prisons
    of their material bodies and return to the spiritual realm from which
    they came.

    But this emphasis on mystical knowledge rivals the mainstream
    position of the Church. Fr Micallef said: "These Gnostic documents
    originate from a heretical sect contemporary of early Christianity,
    which based its faith on the concept of 'knowledge'. Gnosis, in fact,
    means knowledge in Greek. In contrast, the Church always taught that
    salvation comes from faith in Christ, and not 'knowledge'".

    "Therefore, Gnostic documents do not add or take away anything from
    the Catholic theological perspective."

    The document is officially deemed a Gnostic text even by the scholars
    who translated it. Actually, the team that analysed the manuscript,
    led by historian Rodolphe Kasser, formerly of the University of
    Geneva, commented that the theological concepts and linguistic
    structure of the Judas codex are very similar to those of the Nag
    Hammadi manuscripts - a large group of Gnostic texts named after the
    place where they were found.

    Thirteen leather-bound papyrus codices were found in the
    middle-Egyptian region, buried in a sealed jar. The writings included
    52, mostly Gnostic, texts, believed to be a library hidden by monks
    from the nearby monastery of St Pachomius when the material was
    considered heretical. It was even an offence to own one.

    The Church believes the material of such early Christian sects was
    often an attempt to "fill in the historical blanks" left by the
    established gospel on the life of Christ.

    Mgr Cauchi explains that some early Christian communities believed
    that not enough was written about the Christ's childhood, for
    example, and they attempted to fill the gap in this way.

    To this effect, Fr Micallef points out that the primary goal of the
    four gospels was not to serve as a biography of Christ but as a
    catechism of the message and person of Jesus as the Son of God.
    "Therefore, the apocryphal gospels were written to fill this void,"
    he said.

    Elaine Pagels, professor of religion at Princeton University,
    however, thinks that such discoveries are exploding the myth of a
    monolithic religion, and demonstrating how diverse and fascinating
    the early Christian movement really was.

    The true role of Judas
    There is, however, a crucial aspect to consider: the key revelation
    in the Judas text to many is probably that he was no traitor at all.
    This is all the more significant since the figure of Judas is often
    thought of as the quintessential, somewhat racist portrayal of the
    Jewish traitor who sold his master for money.

    Mgr Cauchi says the gospel itself does not use the words sold or
    betrayed as such, but rather that Judas handed Jesus over to the
    Romans.

    The ultimate executioners of the Golgotha tragedy, he points out,
    were the Romans. "There are various interpretations of why Judas
    betrayed Jesus... for money... to instigate a revolution. But does
    this mean we can reconcile what the gospel says with the thesis that
    emerges from this text? I don't think so.

    "Christ said that the human being can be deceived into handing over
    the Son of God to the enemy. So I think that the thesis that Judas
    was acting on his orders is a bit far fetched, if I may say so."

    Nonetheless, Mgr Cauchi continued, no theologian says that Judas went
    to hell. "In fact, it is said that Judas's mistake was that he hung
    himself on a tree. He should have asked for forgiveness and God would
    have rehabilitated him as he did with Peter."

    "Overall", Mgr Cauchi concludes, "I don't think there needs to be a
    lot of fuss. I'm giving my personal opinion here but actually I think
    that if this text and others like it help generate interest in
    Christian history and literature, this find could be a blessing in
    disguise."
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