Jesus of Wikipedia
Using Christ's page as a guide to the online encyclopedia's  ten-year 
history.
By Chris WilsonUpdated  Friday, Jan. 14, 2011, at 8:11 PM ET  
 
 


At 1:12 a.m. on March 3, 2001, Jimmy Wales created a page  for Jesus on a 
three-month-old site called _Wikipedia_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus) 
. "Jesus Christ  is a central figure in Christianity," he wrote. The site's 
co-founder followed  with a petition to his fellow first-generation editors: 
"I fear great  controversy if this encyclopedia entry isn't written well, 
and so I think we  should all plunge in and duke it out quickly." Four months 
later, a user called  "Hiram" answered the call, changing "a central 
figure" to "the central figure"  and writing a respectable four-paragraph 
summary 
of the Biblical story of Jesus.  "Added some details. Not enough, I know," 
he noted in the comments to his  edit. 
Wikipedia turned 10 years old this week, and perhaps  no entry better 
captures its chaotic ascendency than that of _Jesus Christ_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus) . What follows  is a brief history of 
Wikipedia Jesus—his 
test, trials, and the chaotic world  into which he was born. 
Jesus had a quiet adolescence, reared by  well-behaved editors. Users 
fiddled with sentences and paragraphs, expanding on  references and adding a 
broader accounting of his role in the Judaic religions.  He was briefly 
promoted 
to the "most central figure in Christianity," but was  restored to mere 
centrality in the next edit. The "Jews for Jesus" made a brief  appearance on 
his page in August of 2002, but were _removed_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jesus&oldid=6799595)  with  a polite 
explanation as to why. 
Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger occasionally  ducked in to brush up little 
disputes. 
Wikipedia Jesus was vandalized for the first time on  Nov. 6, 2002, when an 
anonymous user _replaced the entire  page_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jesus&oldid=6799701)  with the 
repeated phrase "bla bla is all I 
hear." Jesus existed  in such a state for five minutes before another user 
rescued him. In the new  year, he got a photo. It was removed three days 
later. By his second birthday,  he had a seven-chapter entry covering his 
teachings, roles in various  denominations and other religions, and historical 
footprint. By this point, he  was gathering disciples, with a small number of 
Wikipedians emerging as the  primary scribes of Jesus' teachings and legacy. 
(Some made edits to the page six  or seven times a day.) On Feb. 1, 2004, he 
met a robot, a new kind of Wikipedian  who spruces up pages automatically, 
like a Roomba. He celebrated his  1000th edit around his third birthday, 
unaware othat storm clouds  were gathering on the horizon.



As Wikipedia's profile grew, Jesus attracted more  unwanted attention. In 
2004, someone named Lord Cornholio erased the page and _linked it_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jesus&oldid=6800606)  to  a now 
defunct 
site called "tubgirl." Even when the page was safe from vandals,  it read with 
considerably less admiration. "Jesus Christ … is controversial  figure about 
whom there are many points of view," declared _the entry's first  sentence_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jesus&oldid=6800758)  in April 
2004. Many edits were now being struck down by  Jesus's loyal defenders 
because they're "NPOV"—a Wikipedia term for "non-neutral  point-of-view." There 
was a long series of back-and-forths about his sexuality.  In November 2004, 
he was briefly _accused of offering  political advice_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jesus&oldid=7616262)  to newly 
re-elected George W. 
Bush, but was quickly  absolved.  
The vandals only got worse. On Jan. 19, 2005, Wikipedia Jesus got a 
security  detail; unregistered users were now forbidden to edit the page. As 
soon 
as the  protection was lifted, the vandals came back. His followers began to 
develop a  division of labor: Some were janitors, others grammarians, and a 
few monitored  all legitimate contributions with a cautious eye. Either 
because of or in spite  of their efforts, the page got branded with a 
disclaimer: "The neutrality of  this article is disputed," with clip art of an 
unbalanced scale. There was a  tense dispute over the use of "A.D." versus 
"C.E." 
for dates. 
By this point, Wikipedia had grown to an extent that  Jesus needed a last 
name to distinguish himself from _other people named Jesus_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_(disambiguation)) .  In the summer of 2006, 
his security 
detail returned for good. This provided a  degree of stability, and after a 
few months Wikipedia Jesus is suddenly a grown  man. His page is 16,000 
words long. Most edits improved on minor points; the  bibliography is the 
fastest growing part of the page as more and more  documentation is added, lest 
the angel of NPOV smite an addition. Robots are a  common sight now, scrubbing 
links and renovating code. 
Wales' kingdom has grown unimaginably since he  created Wikipedia Jesus. 
More than 2.5 million entries _have been written_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:EnwikipediaArt.PNG)  since  March 3, 2001, 
and many of the edits to 
Jesus are simply links to all of these  new pages. In 2006, _nearly 7,000 
edits were  made_ 
(http://toolserver.org/~soxred93/articleinfo/index.php?article=Jesus&lang=en&wiki=wikipedia)
  to Jesus' profile. In 2009 there are barely 
1,000. Users will  continue to polish his edges, but their work feels 
mostly done. Meanwhile, the  vandals circle, waiting for the moment when that 
protection comes  down.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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