Technomancer wrote:You know, I don't buy this at all. The Gospel of Judas is a major story because it relates to the earliest years of the Christian church, and is the most significant document from that period to be translated in several decades. Most people in North America identify themselves as Christian in some way, so any news story relating to the origins of their faith is going to be major news (and so it should be!). Understandably, most major media outlets are going to cover this subject because it is of immediate interest to their customers. The fact that they sometimes fail to fully grasp all of the nuances in the story should also be no surprise, given how bad a job they do of reporting many complicated subjects that require specialist knowledge and training (e.g. science).
First of all the "discovery" is not new. It was discovered in the 1970's. Some work may have been done in translation that was released recently, but the 26 pages the NYT talks about were known in 1999. So much for "New Discovery," this is nothing more than old news in the scientific community. Keep in mind every Christmas and Easter season we get media coverage about a"new discovery" that tries to prove Christians got it wrong. This year is no different.
Second, yes it is historical in that it teaches us what a heretical group believed in the era of aproximately 180 AD (When it was mentioned by St Irenaeus in Adversus Haeresies), but it is not accurate to say it teaches us about "Christianity" except in the loosest sense. There are countless documents about the early years of the Church all in agreement. What makes this one "newsworthy" is the fact that it is about a group who disagreed with Christianity and sought to set themselves up as knowing secrets that Jesus didn't teach the other disciples.
Not exactly. While some people include the deuteros in their definition of the 'apocrypha', the term more generally refers to any sacred books outside of the accepted canon. This includes the various OT and NT books which are outside of any historically accepted canon of scripture (e.g. The Apocalypse of Adam, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, etc)
Yes, but I was using the common term to distinguish it from the gnostics to clear up the misconception a previous poster had. I am quite aware of the full meaning of the term.
mitsuki lover wrote:The way I heard it Jesus and Mary Magdalene were supposed to have had a daugther who married into the Merovengian line of Kings.
A theory done in a 1980's book "Holy Blood Holy Grail" which is considered junk science and the basis of "The DaVinci Code"
CDLViking wrote:Technomancer has a point as well. While the Gospel of Judas may not have much worth to the average believer, those who study Church history and theology may be quite interested in it. I start theological studies next year, and it would be interesting to have a copy of the Gospel of Judas to read alongside Ireneaus' Against Heresies, to see exactly what he is writing about.
As far as that goes, yes I agree, but it does not have the earth shaking effect on Christianity that the media implies it does. It has historical value as a text, but not something that will force Christians to re-evaluate Judas.