Sunday, June 17, 2018

Quotations of Jewish Scripture - Gnostic Gospels

People who have read the gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John are familiar with how conscious the writers were -- and how conscious the people within their narratives were -- of the background of Jewish Scripture that shaped Jewish culture and informed Jewish thought. When we review the alternative gospels, do those show the same worldview? Is the thought within them steeped in Jewish view of a holy culture formed by a holy God, a holy Law, and a holy Scripture?

Here we review the quotations of Jewish Scripture in each of four gospels that are sometimes classified as Gnostic: the Gospel of Mary, the Gospel of Philip, the Coptic Gospel of Thomas, and the Gospel of Truth.

The Gospel of Mary and the Gospel of Truth are mentioned here simply because I've included them each time we discuss the Gnostic gospels. However, they contain no quotations of Jewish Scripture, and we can proceed to the remaining Gnostic gospels.

The Gospel of Philip contains one quotation that traces to the Jewish Scriptures:

"My God, my God, why, O Lord, have you forsaken me?". It was on the cross that he said these words, for he had departed from that place. 

 The Coptic Gospel of Thomas also contains one quotation that traces to the Jewish Scriptures:


Jesus said, "I shall give you what no eye has seen and what no ear has heard and what no hand has touched and what has never occurred to the human mind."

From the four Gnostic gospels, those are the sum total of quotations that trace to the Old Testament or Hebrew Scriptures. There are some points of interest that both items share:
  • Both quotations occur in Jesus' sayings
  • Neither quotation is identified by the author as a quotation from Jewish Scripture
  • There are no instances where the author independently applies a perspective or expectation from Jewish Scripture
From this, it is not clear if either author was aware that their material included quotes from a source earlier than Jesus. It is not clear from this alone whether either author was familiar with Jewish Scripture -- though some upcoming analysis will shed further light on this, when we discuss how the different authors handled other aspects of Jewish thought and history. And there is no sign here that either author attaches any particular importance to Jewish Scripture.

I'd caution any readers not to draw premature conclusions from the simple scarcity of quotations, by itself. As we move forward with other areas, we will see a more complete picture that allows us to draw better-rounded conclusions.


One other feature of interest to me is that the second quote ("what no eye has seen and what no ear has heard", etc from the Coptic Gospel of Thomas) is not attributed directly to Jesus anywhere in the New Testament. Leaving all possibilities open at this point, we could imagine that either Jesus had quoted that Scripture also and the New Testament gospels didn't record it though Paul brings up the quotation (1 Corinthians 2:9, quoting Isaiah 64:4), or that the author of the Gospel of Thomas may have heard the quotation of Paul or Isaiah and attributed it to Jesus.

2 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for your series about the Gnostic Gospels! I have been working on a project that intersects with the question of our ability to utilize late sources for historical purposes, and your blog posts are directing me to interesting questions and highlighting texts to pay attention to in this context. Thank you!

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  2. Hi Martin
    - Thank you for reading, and for the encouragement.

    Hi James McGrath
    - I've had a long-term interest in the non-canonical Scriptures. I have so many categories of findings that I've reviewed and I am still writing up. I'm glad someone else shares the interest. : )

    Take care & God bless
    Anne / WF

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