First Things
June 21, 2016
 
 The Da Vinci Code All Over  Again
by _Grant Kaplan_ (http://www.firstthings.com/author/grant-kaplan)  
 
ast Thursday, my Facebook feed alerted me to a _fascinating  piece_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/07/the-unbelievable-tale-of-jesus-
wife/485573/)  of investigative journalism, published the previous day by 
The  Atlantic. The article details Ariel Sabar’s exposure of the provenance 
of a  Coptic papyrus that, some say, proves that Jesus was married. Sabar 
demonstrates  that it is almost certainly a fake.  
This artifact was dubbed “_The Gospel of Jesus’s  Wife_ 
(http://gospelofjesusswife.hds.harvard.edu/) ” by Karen King, who staked much 
of her 
professional reputation on it.  King, an authority on early Christianity and 
Gnosticism who holds the Hollis  Chair of Divinity at Harvard—the oldest 
endowed 
chair at our nation’s oldest  university—had announced the discovery of this 
papyrus at a 2012 Coptic  conference in Rome. She published the results of 
her study of the papyrus two  years later in the Harvard Theological Review, a 
first-tier,  peer-reviewed journal of religious studies. If the papyrus 
turned out to be a  forgery, the revelation might be discrediting for King and 
for others who lent  it credence. (As King herself said, “If it’s a forgery 
… it’s a career  breaker.”) 
King, however, is not the focus of Sabar’s article. Sabar investigated the  
seller of the artifact—a shady German fellow named Walter Fritz, whose 
varied  exploits and proclivities make the characters in the Da Vinci Code seem 
 
downright conventional. A university dropout and part-time pornographer, 
Fritz  managed to fabricate a Gnostic artifact that duped one of the world’s 
leading  experts on early, extra-canonical Christianity, plus enough of her 
peers to  satisfy the Harvard Theological Review. How did this happen? 
Perhaps  the appeal of Gnosticism, for a certain type of scholar, made this 
artifact too  good to check. 
It is worth noting that many scholars were skeptical of “The Gospel of  
Jesus’s Wife” from the first. The entire July 2015 issue of New Testament  
Studies is devoted to disputing its authenticity. Tests have shown that the  
papyrus scrap is indeed ancient, and that the ink contains no modern  
ingredients. But the Coptic grammar is imperfect, duplicating an error that is  
present in a widely available excerpt from the Gospel of Thomas. King,  
however, 
did not view the Coptic errors as invalidating the fragment—quite the  
opposite. If the papyrus was a forgery, she said, it evinced a “combination of  
bumbling and sophistication” that she doubted could coexist in one person. 
But a combination of bumbling and sophistication is, Sabar argues, the mark 
 of Walter Fritz. Once a promising student of Egyptology at the Free 
University  of Berlin, Fritz left his Masters program in the early 1990s 
without 
taking his  degree. He then had a stint as a museum director in East Germany 
before moving  to Florida to work as an auto parts dealer. 
He is married to a woman who shares his enthusiasm for filling the internet 
 with occult and esoteric writings. Fritz’s wife calls herself “clairvoyant
” and  claims to channel “universal truths” from God and the archangel 
Michael, through  the process of “automatic writing.” She also has starred in 
an extensive series  of pornographic videos, which the couple launched in 
2003—one month after the  publication of The Da Vinci Code. 
The timing is perhaps no coincidence. Sabar ventures that Fritz and his 
wife  may have viewed The Da Vinci Code, with its Gnostic argument for the  
sacredness of sex, as “a way to sanctify their adventurous sex life, to cloak 
it  in the garb of faith.” In his youth, Fritz wanted to be a Catholic 
priest. Now  he confesses hostility to Catholic belief and sympathy for 
“Gnostic 
texts that  allow women a discipleship and see Jesus more as a spiritual 
person and not as a  demigod.” He thus had a motive for the forgery, as well as 
the “combination of  bumbling and sophistication” that King said she found 
authenticating. 
Should King have known better? As a scholar of modern Christianity, I am 
not  qualified to weigh in on the scholarly merits of her work. My interest 
concerns  the fascinations of Gnosticism itself. I cannot entirely fault King 
for being  intrigued by the Gnostic gospels and alternative Christian 
origins. When I first  heard of these matters, I asked for a copy of the 
_Gospel  
of Thomas_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Gospel-Thomas-Gnostic-Wisdom-Jesus/dp/1594770468/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1466446151&sr=8-1&keywords=gospel+of+thomas)
  
for Christmas. Somewhere in every scholar lurks a conspiracy  theorist, and 
no field of study taps into this sentiment quite like the field of  early 
alternative Christianities. Scholars hope that new discoveries will reveal  
the true Jesus, stripped of the cloak draped over him by so many orthodoxies. 
 Such hopes led to the duping of King. 
Back in 2003, I was not prepared for the event of The Da Vinci Code.  
Having avoided contemporary fiction for most of my adult life, I at first could 
 
not believe what English prose had been reduced to, let alone that any 
reader  could find the book’s substantive claims remotely plausible. But on 
reflection I  realized that for the modern mind, distrustful of institution and 
convention,  the Christian church proves a massive stumbling block. Could it 
really be that  religious truth lay in the hands of a Church that 
safeguarded it reliably for  almost two thousand years? Was it not more likely 
that 
Jesus, despite his  occasional talk of hell, was really a counter-cultural 
figure—though the Church  had done everything in her power to strip him of his 
genuine humanity? (Never  mind that the canonical Jesus is far more 
appealing than the docetic Jesus of  the Gnostic gospels.) 
The study of Gnosticism entails two dogmas: that the official story of 
Jesus  is a ruse; and that we modern scholars, with our toolkit of archaeology, 
 
philology, and hermeneutical suspicion, can uncover the true story buried  
underneath the sands of Nag Hammadi and the bodies of outcast Christians. 
Rather  than being thoroughgoing skeptics, then, Gnostic scholars persist in a 
kind of  bifurcated rationality, on one level skeptical, and on another 
gullible. They  are not alone in having these qualities (just think of Ben 
Carson), but in this  case, the exposure of her gullibility has proved quite 
embarrassing to King. 
After his investigations yielded a mountain of evidence pointing toward  
forgery, Sabar contacted King for comment. King expressed no curiosity about  
Sabar’s discoveries, and she denied Sabar’s request for conversation. Even 
more  stunning, she declared that she did not entertain questions of 
provenance (the  history of the transaction of an artifact) at all. Only after 
reading Sabar’s  published piece did King _reverse  her stance_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/06/karen-king-responds-to-the-unbelievable-
tale-of-jesus-wife/487484/) , admitting the probability of the fake (while 
hoping the papyrus  could stay at Harvard for further study). She waxed 
positive about the  centrality of provenance, almost like a senior scientist 
suddenly awakening to  the danger of corporate-funded studies. 
Although King may end up the butt of a few insider jokes at venues such as  
the International Congress of Coptic Studies, I doubt that the wider  
intellectual community will learn anything from this episode. When the secular  
intelligentsia falls prey to the same kind of credulity and intellectual  
flaccidity more frequently associated with the ecclesiastical community, the  
intelligentsia and its media arm pause for a minute, then move on. 
Both the tellers of the tale and those who love to hear it would have to 
move  too much mental furniture in order to see that the markers of our modern 
 world—the care for truth, the sanctity of the individual, the siding with  
victims—derive from Christianity, indeed from canonical, orthodox 
Christianity.  It is of course the fault of traditional Christianity that it 
has too 
often  forgotten how radical the canonical Gospels are. But Fritz’s forgery, 
toward  which King was so credulous, would merely have delivered us a 
mythic  Christianity that was still less radical, even if more to our  liking

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