Saturday, April 08, 2006

The Gospel of Judas

David Kopel has an interesting analogy:

Suppose that sometime around the year 3,800 A.D., someone wrote a newspaper that began: "According to a recently-discovered document, which appears to have been written sometime before 1926, Benedict Arnold did not attempt to betray George Washington and the American cause, as is commonly believed. Rather, Benedict Arnold was acting at the request of George Washington, because Washington wanted Arnold to help him create a dictatorship of the proletariat and the abolition of private property."

A reader who knew her ancient history would recognize that the newly-discovered "Arnold document" was almost certainly not a historically accurate account of the relationship between George Washington and Benedict Arnold. The reader would know that the terms "dictatorship of the proletariat" and "abolition of private property" come from a political philosophy, Marxism, which was created long after Washington and Arnold were dead. The reader would also know that the most reliable records from the 18th century provided no support for the theory that Washington or Arnold favored a dictatorship of the proletariat or the abolition of private property.

This Friday's coverage of the so-called "Gospel of Judas" in much of the U.S. media was appallingly stupid. The Judas gospel is interesting in its own right, but the notion that it disproves, or casts into doubt, the traditional orthodox understanding of the betrayal of Jesus is preposterous.

Elsewhere, Andy Bryan thinks that the Gospel of Judas is as cute as a button.

4 comments:

truevyne said...

I'm thinking of rewriting the gospel...How does "The Gospel According to Pam" sound to you?

John said...

I'd like to write a novel called "The Gospel According to Pilate."

kc bob said...

Thanks for the insightful analogy. People with an anti-God bias short-circuit their brains and soak this Judas Gospel stuff up. Reminds me of Dan Brown and the DaVinci code cult ... don't confuse them with the facts ... They've already made up their mind. Isn't is interesting that Christians are often called narrow-minded :)

Beth Quick said...

Of course, Imagine that we had no record of JFK's assasination until the 1990's - then you've got the gospel of Mark. After reading the gospel and watching the special, I'm not impressed with the gospel. It is certainly very gnostic, and I don't find gnostic theology very convincing. But the timing is less concerning to me, because none of the canonical gospels have been dated very early. Earlier, yes. But 30 years is still a long time to wait to write about something.