Valuable historically  -what were people thinking a few centuries  after 
Christ?-
this strikes me as about as objectively worthless as anything  gets.
 
BR Note
 
---------------------------------------
 
 
 
Newfound 'Gospel of the Lots of Mary' Discovered in Ancient Text

by Owen Jarus, Live Science Contributor   |  February 03, 2015

 
A 1,500-year-old book that contains a previously unknown gospel has been  
deciphered. The ancient manuscript may have been used to provide guidance or  
encouragement to people seeking help for their problems, according to a  
researcher who has studied the text. 
Written in _Coptic,  an Egyptian language_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/48833-ancient-egyptian-handbook-spells-deciphered.html)
 , the opening reads (in 
translation): 
"The Gospel of the lots of Mary, the mother of the Lord Jesus Christ, she 
to  whom Gabriel the Archangel brought the good news. He who will go forward 
with  his whole heart will obtain what he seeks. Only do not be of two  
minds."
 
 
Anne Marie Luijendijk, a professor of religion at Princeton University,  
discovered that this newfound gospel is like no other. "When I began 
deciphering  the manuscript and encountered the word 'gospel' in the opening 
line, I 
expected  to read a narrative about the life and death of Jesus as the 
canonical gospels  present, or a collection of sayings similar to the Gospel of 
Thomas (a  non-canonical text)," she wrote in her book "Forbidden Oracles? 
The Gospel of  the Lots of Mary" (Mohr Siebeck, 2014).  
What she found instead was a series of 37 oracles, written vaguely, and 
with  only a few that mention Jesus. 
The text would have been _used for  divination_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/28593-fortune-telling.html) , Luijendijk said. A 
person seeking an answer 
to a question could  have sought out the owner of this book, asked a 
question, and gone through a  process that would randomly select one of the 37 
oracles to help find a solution  to the person's problem. The owner of the book 
could have acted as a diviner,  helping to interpret the written oracles, she 
said. 
Alternatively, the text could have been owned by someone who, when 
confronted  with a question, simply opened an oracle at random to seek an 
answer.
 
The 37 oracles are all written vaguely; for instance, oracle seven says, 
"You  know, o human, that you did your utmost again. You did not gain anything 
but  loss, dispute, and war. But if you are patient a little, the matter 
will prosper  through the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob." 
Another example is oracle 34, which reads, "Go forward immediately. This is 
a  thing from God. You know that, behold, for many days you are suffering 
greatly.  But it is of no concern to you, because you have come to the haven 
of  victory." 
Throughout the book "the text refers to hardships, _suffering  and 
violence_ (http://www.livescience.com/13268-war-his
tory-human-aggression-nuclear-weapons.html) , and occasionally one finds a 
threat. On the whole, however, a  
positive outlet prevails," Luijendijk wrote in her book. 
Another interesting example, that illustrates the ancient book's positive  
outlook, is oracle 24, which reads, "Stop being of two minds, o human, 
whether  this thing will happen or not. Yes, it will happen! Be brave and do 
not 
be of  two minds. Because it will remain with you a long time and you will 
receive joy  and happiness." 
A 'gospel' like no other 
In the ancient world, a special type of book, sometimes called a "lot 
book,"  was used to _try to  predict a person's future_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/41859-ouija-board.html) . Luijendijk says that this 
is the only lot book  
found so far that calls itself a "gospel" — a word that literally means 
"good  news." 
"The fact that this book is called that way is very significant," 
Luijendijk  told Live Science in an interview. "To me, it also really indicated 
that 
it had  something to do [with] how people would consult it and also about 
being [seen]  as good news," she said. "Nobody who wants to know the future 
wants to hear bad  news in a sense." 
Although people today associate the word "gospel" as being a text that 
talks  about the _life  of Jesus_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/38014-physical-evidence-jesus-debated.html) , 
people in ancient times may have had a different 
perspective.  
"The fact that this is not a gospel in the traditional sense gives ample  
reason to inquire about the reception and use of the term 'gospel' in Late  
Antiquity," Luijendijk wrote. 
Where did it come from?  
The text is now owned by Harvard University's Sackler Museum. It was given 
to  Harvard in 1984 by Beatrice Kelekian, who donated it in memory of her 
husband,  Charles Dikran Kelekian. Charles' father, Dikran Kelekian 
(1868-1951), was "an  influential trader of Coptic antiquaries, deemed the 
'dean of 
antiquities' among  New York art dealers," Luijendijk wrote in her book.
 
It is not known where the Kelekians got the gospel. Luijendijk searched the 
 Kelekian family archive but found no information about where the text came 
from  or when it was acquired. 
It's possible that, in ancient times, the book was used by a diviner at the 
 Shrine of Saint Colluthus in Egypt, a "_Christian  site of pilgrimage_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/21346-church-nativity-jesus-birthplace-world-heritag
e.html)  and healing," Luijendijk wrote. At this shrine,  archaeologists 
have found texts with written questions, indicating that the site  was used 
for various forms of divination. 
"Among the services offered to visitors of the shrine were dream 
incubation,  ritual bathing, and both book and ticket divination," Luijendijk 
wrote. 
Miniature text 
One interesting feature of the book is its small size. The pages measure 
less  than 3 inches (75 millimeters) in height and 2.7 inches (68.7 
millimeters) in  width. The codex is "only as large as my palm," Luijendijk 
wrote. 
"Given the book's small size, the handwriting is surprisingly legible and  
quite elegant," she wrote. The book's small size made it portable and, if  
necessary, easy to conceal. Luijendijk notes that some early church leaders 
had  a negative view of divination and put in place rules discouraging the  
practice. 
Regardless of why its makers made the text so small, the book was heavily  
used, with ancient thumbprints still visible in the margins. "The manuscript 
 clearly has been used a lot," Luijendijk said

-- 
-- 
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

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to