Several people have asked about the "Gospel of Judas" they have heard about on television. Below you will find an excellent
article written by Dr. Al Mohler from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary on the subject. It is reprinted by permission
from Baptist Press.
FIRST-PERSON: Responding to The Gospel of Judas
By R. Albert Mohler Jr.
Apr 7, 2006
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)--Headlines around the world
are announcing the publication of a "long lost" and "suppressed" ancient document, known as The Gospel of Judas. The National
Geographic Society announced the publication at a major media event April 6, just in time to boost publicity for its special
on the National Geographic Channel April 9.
The announcement led to a frenzy of media coverage,
ranging from responsible reports to outrageous sensationalism. According to some commentators, the publication of this new
document will force a complete reformulation of Christianity and our understanding of both Judas and Jesus. In reality, nothing
of the sort is in view. The document is highly interesting, however, offering an ancient and authoritative source into the
thinking of heretical groups who offered alternative understandings of Christianity.
The document purports to be written by Judas, even
though it certainly was written long after Judas's death. Nevertheless, the very existence of this document, rooted in the
third century after Christ, indicates something of the struggle Christian leaders confronted in defining and defending the
authentic Gospel against heretical groups such as the Gnostics.
A quick look at The Gospel of Judas reveals the
contrast between this document and the four canonical Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. The English version, edited
by Rudolphe Kasser, Marvin Meyer, and Gregor Wurst, presents an accessible and readable version of the portions of the Codex
Tchacos now available. The most remarkable feature of this text is its thoroughly Gnostic character. The substance of this
Gospel bears virtually no resemblance to orthodox Christianity -- a fact which explains why the early church recognized this
writing for what it is, and rejected it as neither authoritative nor authentic.
In "The Lost Gospel: The Quest for the Gospel of
Judas Iscariot," Herbert Krosney explains how the codex was discovered and traces the events that led to its publication in
English this week:
"In the mid- to late 1970s, hidden for more than
fifteen hundred years, an ancient text emerged from the sands of Egypt. Near the banks of the Nile River, some Egyptian peasants,
fellahin, stumbled upon a cavern. In biblical times, such chambers had been used to bury the dead. The peasants entered the
cave, seeking ancient gold or jewelry, anything of value that they could sell. Instead, among a pile of human bones, they
discovered a crumbling limestone box. Inside it, they came upon an unexpected find -- a mysterious leather-bound book, a codex."
The portion of the text that is now translated
is taken from 13 pages of papyrus, with the text written in Coptic, a language of ancient Egypt. Most scholars agree that
The Gospel of Judas was originally written in Greek, and later translated into Coptic. This was the common history of many
Gnostic texts, especially those associated with groups common to the area in which the manuscript was found.
"The Lost Gospel" reads like a suspense thriller
at times, tracing the odd and admittedly remarkable story of how the codex was preserved and eventually published. Those familiar
with the story of the Dead Sea scrolls and the documents of the Nag Hammadi library will recognize significant parallels in
the saga of how the texts and manuscripts were found and eventually made available for scholarly review and publication.
The Gnostic character of the text is immediately
evident. In his supposed conversations with Judas, Jesus speaks in Gnostic categories such as "aeons" and an "eternal realm."
Judas is identified as the "thirteenth spirit" who was appointed by God to be the agent of releasing Jesus from the physical
body in which He was trapped in the incarnation.
When Judas speaks of a vision and asks for its
interpretation, Jesus answers: "Judas, your star has led you astray." Jesus continues: "No person of mortal birth is worthy
to enter the house you have seen, for that place is reserved for the holy. Neither the sun nor the moon will rule there, nor
the day, but the holy will abide there always, in the eternal realm with the holy angels. Look, I have explained to you the
mysteries of the kingdom and I have taught you about the error of the stars; and ... sent it ... on the twelve aeons."
The concept of secret and mysterious knowledge
was central to Gnostic sects. The Gospel of Judas purports to reveal conversations between Jesus and Judas that had been kept
secret from the rest of humanity. The Gnostics prized their secret knowledge, and taught a profound dualism between the material
and spiritual worlds. They understood the material world, including the entire cosmos, to be a trap for the spiritual world.
In essence, the Gnostics sought to escape the material world and to enter the world of spirit.
Accordingly, the most revealing statement in the
entire text of The Gospel of Judas records Jesus saying to Judas, "But you will exceed all of them. For you will sacrifice
the man that clothes me."
In other words, Judas would perform a service to
Jesus by betraying Him to those who would then crucify Him, liberating Jesus from the physical body and freeing Him as spirit.
As the editors of The Gospel of Judas indicate in a footnote, "The death of Jesus, with the assistance of Judas, is taken
to be the liberation of the spiritual person within."
Needless to say, this is in direct conflict with
the Christian Gospel and the New Testament. The consistent witness of the New Testament is that Jesus came in order to die
for sinners -- willingly accepting the cross and dying as the substitutionary sacrifice for sin.
This redemptive action is completely missing from
The Gospel of Judas. For that reason, the text was rejected by early Christian leaders. Writing about the year 180, Irenaeus,
a major Christian figure among the early church fathers, identified the text now known as The Gospel of Judas as heretical.
In his foreword to "The Lost Gospel," Bart Ehrman, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, explains,
"This gospel was about the relationship between Jesus and Judas, and indicated that Judas didn't actually betray Jesus, but
did what Jesus wanted him to do, because Judas was the one who really knew the truth, as Jesus wanted it communicated."
Ehrman, no friend to orthodox Christianity, has
correctly explained the problem. Irenaeus rejected the text precisely because it was in direct conflict with the canonical
Gospels and with the teaching of the Apostles. Accordingly, it was his responsibility to warn the church about the heretical
nature of this document. Still, the very fact that Irenaeus mentions the document with such a specific reference gives considerable
credence to the claim that The Gospel of Judas is as old in its origin as its patrons now claim.
We now know a great deal about the Gnostic sects
common to the first centuries of Christianity. The particular sect thought to be associated with the origin of The Gospel
of Judas was known as the Cainites. The peculiar teachings of this sect included the rehabilitation of many characters presented
negatively in the Bible -- starting with Cain. In essence, the Cainites attempted to take the negative figures of the Bible
and present them in a heroic light. In order to do this, of course, they had to create alternative texts and an alternative
rendering of the story of Jesus.
What are Christians to make of all this? The publication
of The Gospel of Judas is a matter of genuine interest. After all, it is important for Christians to understand the context
of early Christianity -- a context in which the church was required to exercise tremendous discernment in confronting heretical
teachings and rejecting spurious texts.
The scholarly research behind the publication of
The Gospel of Judas appears to be sound and responsible. The codex manuscript was submitted to the most rigorous historical
process in terms of dating, chemical composition, and similar questions. In the end, it appears that the document is most
likely authentic, in terms of its origin from within a heretical sect in the third century.
Nevertheless, extravagant claims about the theological
significance of The Gospel of Judas are unwarranted, ridiculous, and driven by those who themselves call for a reformulation
of Christianity.
The resurgence of interest in Gnostic texts such
as The Gospel of Thomas and The Gospel of Judas is driven by an effort, at least on the part of some figures, to argue that
early Christianity had no essential theological core. Instead, scholars such as Elaine Pagels of Princeton University want
to argue that, "These discoveries are exploding the myth of a monolithic religion, and demonstrating how diverse -- and fascinating
-- the early Christian movement really was." What Pagels and many other figures argue is that early Christianity was a cauldron
of competing theologies, and that ideological and political factors explain why an "orthodox" tradition eventually won, suppressing
all competing theologies. Accordingly, these same figures argue that today's Christians should be open to these variant teachings
that had long been suppressed and hidden from view.
Metropolitan Bishoy, leader of the Coptic Orthodox
Church, dismissed The Gospel of Judas as "non-Christian babbling resulting from a group of people trying to create a false
'amalgam' between the Greek mythology and Far East religions with Christianity . . . They were written by a group of people
who were aliens to the main Christian stream of the early Christianity. These texts are neither reliable nor accurate Christian
texts, as they are historically and logically alien to the main Christian thinking and philosophy of the early and present
Christians." The Metropolitan is right, but we are better armed to face the heresies of our own day if we face with honesty
the heresies of times past.
Simon Gathercole, a New Testament professor at
Aberdeen University, defended the text as authentic, but relatively unimportant. "It is certainly an ancient text, but not
ancient enough to tell us anything new," Gathercole explains. "It contains themes which are alien to the first-century world
of Jesus and Judas, but which became popular later."
Indeed, those Gnostic ideas did become popular
later, and they are becoming increasingly popular now. The truth of the Gospel stands, and Christians will retain firm confidence
in the authenticity of the New Testament and, in particular, of the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Nevertheless,
old Gnosticisms are continually repackaged and "rediscovered" even as new forms of Gnostic thought emerge in our postmodern
culture.
Informed Christians will be watchful and aware
when confronting churches or institutions that present spurious writings, rejected as heretical by the early church, on the
same plane as the New Testament.
The verdict of Athanasius, one of the greatest
leaders of the early church, still stands: "Let no man add to these, neither let him take ought from these, for concerning
these the Lord put to shame the Sadducees, and said, 'Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures.' And He reproved the Jews, saying,
'Search the Scriptures, for these are they that testify of Me.'"
--30--
This column was adapted from Mohler's website at
www.albertmohler.com. Mohler is president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky. For more articles and
resources by Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, visit www.albertmohler.com.
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