http://www.washtimes.com/national/20060407-120642-3758r.htm

Judas stars as 'anti-hero' in gospel
By Julia Duin
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
April 7, 2006 



"The Gospel of Judas," an ancient Egyptian manuscript vilified by the early 
church as heresy, was released yesterday by National Geographic as one of the 
greatest archaeological finds of the past century. 
    "We are confident this is a piece of genuine, Christian apocryphal 
literature," said Terry Garcia, National Geographic executive vice president. 
"This is the most significant discovery in the last 60 years," comparable to 
the Dead Sea Scrolls, he added. 
    Purporting to tell the story of one of history's most vilified men, the 
gospel is named after Judas Iscariot, the disciple who betrayed Jesus to the 
Jewish authorities for 30 silver coins. 
    The Judas gospel, in 1,000 fragments before it was recently assembled and 
translated, includes conversations between Jesus and his disciples about 
angelic hierarchies, cosmology, the underworld and Creation. Judas is given 
star billing in this account as Jesus' chief confidant among the disciples, 
contrary to the portrayals in the four canonical Gospels. 
    "Judas is presented as the one to whom everything is told," said Gregor 
Wurst, a German scholar who helped translate the document. "Judas was an 
anti-hero." 
    It claims that Jesus and Judas planned Jesus' Crucifixion so that the death 
of Christ's weak, earthly body could release His spirit to enjoy the glories of 
heaven. 
    Near the end of the Judas gospel, Jesus tells Judas he will "exceed" the 
rest of the disciples "for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me." 
    This concept comes from gnosticism, a doctrine that believes salvation 
comes not by Jesus' death and Resurrection, but through secret knowledge 
imparted by Him to select individuals. 
    Gnostic writers produced several gospels named after New Testament figures 
such as the Apostle Thomas and Mary Magdalene. None have been considered 
authoritative since the Christian canon was defined in the 4th century. 
    A lineup of scholars assembled by National Geographic yesterday admitted 
the book has no proven link to the Judas who, according to the Gospel of 
Matthew, committed suicide soon after he betrayed Jesus. 
    "There is no independent historical tradition behind this text," said the 
Rev. Donald Senior, president of the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. The 
writers of the Gospel of Judas, he added, "made its characters to be 
mouthpieces of their own theology." 
    Marvin Meyer, a Bible and Christian studies professor at the Albert 
Schweitzer Institute at Chapman University in Orange, Calif., called the 
document a "mystical portrayal" combining Jewish mysticism and Platonism, which 
sees matter, including the human body, as imperfect, transitory and less than 
the ideal world of the spirit.

The 26-page codex, or manuscript, had a circuitous route to discovery. Scholars 
knew of its existence because of its mention in "Against Heresies," a treatise 
written in 180 by Irenaeus, bishop of Lyon. Irenaeus called the account "a 
fictitious story." 
    The document remained a legend until a copy -- in the ancient Coptic 
language, native to Egypt -- was unearthed sometime in the 1970s near El Minya 
in upper Egypt. 
    In 1978, it was sold to an antiquities dealer in Cairo, who spent several 
years trying to sell it, but his asking price was too high for interested 
scholars. In 1984, the manuscript was stored in a Hicksville, N.Y., bank 
safe-deposit box where it stayed until 2000, when Zurich antiquities dealer 
Frieda Nussberger-Tchacos purchased it. 
    She then transferred it to the Maecenas Foundation for Ancient Art in 
Basel, Switzerland, to be preserved and translated. Samples sent to the 
University of Arizona's radiocarbon-dating lab a year ago showed the 
manuscript's date as between 220 and 340. It is not known who wrote the 
document or when the original, probably written in Greek, was composed. 
    National Geographic has published a book, set up a museum exhibit, put 
together a TV special to air Sunday and has devoted the May issue of its 
magazine to the gospel. 
    



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