The papyrus fragment dubbed "The Gospel of Jesus' Wife" (image @www.newsday.com)
By
now I am sure most Americans with access to the Internet are aware of last week’s
announcement by Harvard Professor Karen King that she had identified a papyrus
fragment, written in Coptic and tentatively dated to the 4th century,
that speaks of Jesus’ “wife” (for the best treatment of the backstory of the
announcement, see this article
in the Smithsonian Magazine; for photographic images of the papyrus fragment,
transcriptions, and a provisional translation from Dr. King, see here).
The
part of the fragment that has garnered the most attention is the fragmentary
lines 4 and 5, which read thus (in King’s translation):
] Jesus said to them, “My wife … [
] She will be able to be a disciple to me, and [
The
Smithsonian article claims that this discovery is “apt to send jolts through the world of biblical
scholarship—and beyond.” Peter Mucha of
the Philadelphia Inquirer articulates why he thinks line 4 is viewed by many as
controversial: “Traditional
Christian teaching is that Jesus was celibate and a divine being who left no
physical remains, because three days after the crucifixion he ascended bodily
into heaven.” Likewise, Laurie Goodstein of the New York Times calls line 5 “provocative” in its assertion that
a woman could be elevated to the status of a “disciple.” My first reaction to such hype is to think
that journalists should simply steer clear of biblical historical scholarly
discussions in view of their obvious unfamiliarity with it. Yes, Jesus has historically been viewed as
celibate, but does “historic Christian teaching” — let alone the Bible —teach
that Jesus was/is a “divine being” simpliciter
so as to deny the possibility that he could
have been married if he had so chosen?
And Goodstein’s belief that the notion of a female “disciple” would be
shocking flies in the face of explicit New Testament evidence that there were,
in fact, women disciples during the time of Jesus’ earthly ministry (e.g., Luke
8), and that there was at least one woman prominent enough in the earliest
church to be called (in an extended sense) an “apostle” (i.e., Junia, Rom
16:7).
Moreover,
I would like to ask what scholar of the New Testament or the history of early
Christianity would be shocked to hear that the belief that Jesus had been
married could have been held and articulated in the 4th century? Indeed, the 2nd century Gnostic
text Gospel of Thomas has Jesus provocatively
lying on a (dining) couch with Salome. The
2nd/3rd century Gnostic text Gospel of Philip possibly portrays Jesus as kissing Mary of Magdala
(the manuscript discovered at Nag Hammadi in 1945 is damaged at the relevant
point) and describes her as Jesus’ koinōnos, “companion.”
Not
only is the notion of a married Jesus not surprising, let alone unique, it begs
the question as to whether or not such a decontextualized claim, found on a
single late, fragmentary papyrus with an unknown provenance, has any claim to
be taken seriously as history. Indeed, even Dr. King took pains to make
clear that the text cannot be made to offer proof that the actual, historical Jesus
of Nazareth was married (see here). Furthermore, as Cambridge University’s Dirk
Jongkind, citing Roger Bagnall, has pointed
out, the clearly cut upper edge of the fragment, along with the facts that
the text both begins and ends in the middle of sentences and the words, “My
wife” are left hanging and unexplained, bear the unmistakable mark of being
caused by the hand of a modern antiquities dealer who divided up a larger
papyrus so as to maximize profit by having more pieces to sell. And the lack of context for the reference to “my
wife” could also be less than accidental:
We all have our own favourite examples of the enticing brochures advertising our perfect holiday homes, which fortuitously manage to miss the oil refinery on the horizon, the overhead power lines, or the motorway at the back of the property. Here we have a fragment which has been deliberately altered, 'most likely' by a modern dealer seeking to maximize profit, who gets rid of 'something'. And this 'something' might well be in the same league as the oil refinery – it might be a spoiler that affected the value of this fragment negatively. The fragment may have been torn in the shape it is now in order to coax the reader into a certain interpretation.Indeed, the difficulty of basing anything on such a fragmentary text is demonstrated with typical hilarity by comedian and de facto political commentator Jon Stewart on last Thursday’s edition of The Daily Show (see the video clip here).
There is, furthermore, the question of authenticity, which is by no means settled. The first thing that struck me when reading the fragment was the similarity to two “sayings” of Jesus found in the Gospel of Thomas (especially sayings 101, 114). My suspicions have been strengthened by the work of Durham University’s Francis Watson, who has demonstrated that “line 1 of GJW reproduces not only the precise words from GTh 101 underlined above but also the line-division of the extant Coptic manuscript.” His conclusion seems inexorable:
The author or compiler of GJW is evidently dependent on the one extant manuscript of the Coptic GTh, the line-division of which he or she slavishly follows at this point. An obvious explanation is that the author has used a modern printed edition of the Coptic text, where the original line-divisions are preserved.
The text, in other words, at most demonstrates that the belief
that Jesus had been married was still alive in certain quarters of deviant “Christianity”
that had produced the Gospel of Thomas back
in the 2nd century. Notice
that I am unabashedly labeling “Gnostic” Christianity as a Johnny-come-lately,
substandard form of Christianity that flowered in the second century, and whose
difference from the portrait of Jesus found in the four canonical Gospels is an
index of its secondary character. This
is a perspective clearly at odds with that of Professor King, who has made her
name by virtue of research into such later “Gospels” as the Gospel of Mary
of Magdala
and the Gospel of Judas (with the
like-minded Elaine Pagels). Indeed, King
even resists calling “Gnosticism” by its name, claiming
that such nomenclature is simply due to the imperialism of the victorious “orthodox”
Christians who emerged triumphant in the second century.
To
me, the “discovery” of this fragment is really much ado about nothing. But it, like the fictional scenario popularized
in Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code, has
clearly caught the fancy of the public who appear all too willing to accept the
plausibility, despite the mass of
historical evidence to the contrary, of the portraits of Jesus found
therein. Indeed, ever since Lessing’s
posthumous publication of Reimarus’s Wolfenbüttel Fragments in 1774-78, the so-called “Quest for the
Historical Jesus,” in all its various stages, has largely been, in reality, a
quest for an alternative Jesus to the
one found in the Bible and in historic Christian theology. For whatever reason — the simple desire to
strip Jesus of the divinity ascribed to him by the church, (in this case) the
desire to empower women sexually in view of a supposed negative view of the
worth of the female body in the ancient church (the view of April DeConick in
her book, Holy Misogyny) — the alternative
visions of Jesus and Christianity found in these (much) later texts have found
a willing audience to consider their claims. (an aside: why Pagels, King, and
other women are amenable to the Gospel of Thomas is somewhat mystifying to me
in view of its own view of women. Indeed, in GT 114, one of the very texts reflected in the Gospel of Jesus’ Wife, it explicitly expresses a misogynistic
statement that would never be found in the canonical texts they so dislike: “See,
I shall lead her, so that I will make her male, that she too might become a
living spirit, resembling you males.”).
In
fact, however, the claim of such later Gnostic texts to historical
trustworthiness —or even to be considered as worthy to be placed alongside the
canonical texts —has been shown time and again to be baseless (see, for example,
Philip Jenkins’ Hidden Gospels, Craig Evans’ Fabricating
Jesus, and Darrell Bock’s The Missing Gospels). The credulity of so many today regarding them
is the result of the demise of modernistic positivism and its replacement with
an unreflective postmodernism. But
history, no matter how messy, still must be done, and thinking people, while
acknowledging the postmodern critique, will ever concern themselves (humbly) with
plausibilities and probabilities. And in
the case of the alternative Christologies so fashionable today, one must say
that they have indeed been weighed and found wanting, dashed upon the cruel
rocks of history. With regard to Jesus’
marital status, I believe there is nothing fatal to the notion that he could have been married. But
there is no good evidence that he was, and the silence of the New Testament in
this regard speaks volumes, particularly in light of the absence in it of both
misogyny and the metaphysical dualism characteristic of the Greek philosophy
that later had a detrimental effect on the worldview of Christians in the Roman
Empire.
For
further discussion, besides the posts by Watson and Jongkind, mentioned above,
see also the following posts by Dan Wallace, Simon Gathercole, and Philip
Jenkins.
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