JUDAS
ISCARIOT REBORN
Discovery
of the Judas Gospel
An ancient text
lost for 1,700 years says Christ's betrayer was his truest disciple.
Stes de Necker
(With due recognition by
the work done by Andrew Cockburn)
Hands
trembling slightly from Parkinson’s disease, Professor Rodolphe Kasser picked
up the ancient text and began reading in a strong, clear voice: "pe-di-ah-kawn-aus
ente plah-nay.” These strange words were Coptic, the language spoken
in Egypt at the dawn of Christianity. They had gone unheard ever
since the early church declared the document off-limits for Christians.
This copy
somehow survived. Hidden over eons in the Egyptian desert, it was finally
uncovered late in the 20th century. Then it vanished into the netherworld of
antiquities traders, one of whom abandoned it for 16 years in a bank vault in Hicksville, New
York. By the time it reached Kasser, the papyrus—a form of paper made of dried
water plants—was decaying into fragments, its message on the verge of being
lost forever.
The
78-year-old scholar, one of the world's leading Coptic experts, finished
reading and carefully placed the page back on the table. "It is a
beautiful language, is it not? Egyptian written in Greek characters.” He
smiled. “This is a passage where Jesus is explaining to the disciples that they
are on the wrong track.” The text has entranced him, and no wonder. The opening
line of the first page reads:
"The
secret account of the revelation that Jesus spoke in conversation with Judas
Iscariot. . . .”
After nearly 2,000 years, the most
hated man in history is back.
Everyone
remembers the story of Jesus Christ's close friend, one of the 12 Apostles, who
sold him out for 30 pieces of silver, identifying him with a kiss. Later,
crazed with guilt, Judas hanged himself. He is the ultimate symbol of
treachery. Stockyards call the goat that leads other animals to slaughter the
Judas goat. In Germany, officials can forbid new parents from choosing the
name Judas. Guides at the historic Coptic Hanging Church in Old Cairo point out
one black column in the church’s white colonnades—Judas, of course.
Christianity would not be the same
without its traitor.
There is a
sinister backdrop to traditional depictions of Judas. As Christianity distanced
itself from its origins as a Jewish sect, Christian thinkers found it
increasingly convenient to blame the Jews as a people for the arrest and
execution of Christ, and to cast Judas as the archetypal Jew. The four Gospels,
for example, treat Roman governor Pontius Pilate gently while condemning Judas
and the Jewish high priests.
The
"secret account” gives us a very different Judas. In this version, he is a
hero. Unlike the other disciples, he truly understands Christ’s message. In
handing Jesus over to the authorities, he is doing his leader's bidding,
knowing full well the fate he will bring on himself. Jesus warns him:
"You will be cursed.”
This
message is startling enough to raise suspicions of fraud, common with alleged
biblical artefacts. For
example, an empty limestone box said to have held the bones of James, brother
of Jesus, attracted massive crowds when it was displayed in 2002—but soon
turned out to be an ingenious fake.
A Gospel of Judas is clearly more
enticing than an empty box, but so far every test confirms its antiquity.
The
National Geographic Society, which is helping support the restoration and
translation of the manuscript, commissioned a top carbon-dating laboratory at
the University of Arizona to analyze the papyrus book, or codex, containing the
gospel. Tests on five separate samples from the papyrus and the leather binding
date the codex to sometime between 220 and 340 A.D.
The ink
appears to be an ancient recipe—a mix of iron gall and soot inks. And Coptic
scholars say telltale turns of phrase in the gospel indicate that it was
translated from Greek, the language in which most Christian texts were
originally written in the first and second centuries. “We all feel comfortable
putting this copy in the fourth century,” one expert says, "and Kasser is
sure enough to devote the end of his life to it.”
A further
confirmation comes from the distant past. Around A.D. 180, Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyon in
what was then Roman Gaul, wrote a massive treatise called Against
Heresies. The book was a fierce denunciation of all those whose views about
Jesus and his message differed from those of the mainstream church. Among those
he attacked was a group who revered Judas, "the traitor,” and had produced
a “fictitious history,” which "they style the Gospel of Judas.”
Decades before the fragile manuscript
in Kasser's hands was written, the angry bishop apparently knew of the original
Greek text.
Irenaeus
had plenty of heresies to contend with. In the early centuries of Christianity,
what we call the church, operating through a top-down hierarchy of priests and
bishops, was only one of many groups inspired by Jesus. Biblical scholar Marvin
Meyer of Chapman University, who worked with Kasser to translate the
gospel, sums up the situation as “Christianity trying to find its style.”
For instance, a group called the Ebionites maintained
that Christians should obey all Jewish religious laws, while another, the
Marcionites, rejected any connection between the God of the New Testament and
the Jewish God. Some said that Jesus had been wholly divine, contradicting
those who insisted he was completely human. Yet another sect, the
Carpocratians, allegedly indulged in ritualized spouse swapping. Many of these
groups were Gnostics, followers of the same strain of early Christianity
reflected in the Judas gospel.
"Gnosis means
'knowledge' in Greek,” Meyer explains. The Gnostics "believed that there
is an ultimate source of goodness, which they thought of as the divine mind,
outside the physical universe. Humans carry a spark of that divine power, but
they are cut off by the material world all around them”—a flawed world, as the
Gnostics saw it, the work of an inferior creator rather than the ultimate God.
While
Christians, like Irenaeus, stressed that only Jesus, the son of
God, was simultaneously human and divine, the Gnostics proposed that ordinary
people could be connected to God. Salvation lay in awakening that divine spark
within the human spirit and reconnecting with the divine mind. Doing so
required the guidance of a teacher, and that, according to the Gnostics, was
Christ’s role. Those who grasped his message could become as divine as Christ
himself.
Hence
Irenaeus’s hostility. "These people were mystics,” says Meyer.
"Mystics have always drawn the ire of institutionalized religion. Mystics,
after all, hear the voice of God from within and don't need a priest to
intercede for them.” Irenaeus began his book after he returned from a trip and
found his flock in Lyon being subverted by a Gnostic preacher named Marcus, who
was encouraging his initiates to demonstrate direct contact with the divine by
prophesying. Hardly less outrageous was Marcus’s evident success with women in
the flock. The preacher’s "deluded victim,” wrote Irenaeus indignantly,
"impudently utters some nonsense” and “henceforth considers herself to be
a prophet!”
Until
recent decades, such doctrines were glimpsed mainly through the denunciations
of antagonists like Irenaeus, but in 1945 Egyptian peasants found a set of
long-lost Gnostic texts buried in an earthenware jar near the town of Nag
Hammadi. Among them were over a dozen entirely new versions of Christ’s
teachings, including Gospels of Thomas and Philip and a Gospel of Truth.
Now we
have the Gospel of Judas.
In ancient
times, some of these alternative versions may have circulated more widely than
the familiar four Gospels. "Most of the manuscripts, or at least
fragments, from the second century that we have found are copies of other
Christian books,” says Bart Ehrman, professor of religious studies at the University of North
Carolina. A long-buried side of early Christianity is re-emerging.
The notion of "gospels” that
contradict the canonical four in the New Testament is deeply unsettling in the Dutch Reformed church.
It remains unclear whether the authors of any of
the gospels—even the familiar four— actually witnessed the events they
described. Evangelical biblical scholar Craig Evans of Acadia Divinity College says
the canonical Gospels ultimately eclipsed the others because their version of
Christ’s teachings and passion had the ring of truth. “Those early Christian
groups were generally poor; they couldn’t afford to have more than a few books
copied, so the members would say, 'I want the Apostle John’s gospel, and so
on,'" he argues. "The canonical Gospels are the ones that they
themselves considered the most authentic.”
Or perhaps the alternatives were simply
outmanoeuvred in the battle for the Christian mind.
The Judas
gospel vividly reflects the struggle waged long ago between the Gnostics and
the hierarchical church. In the very first scene, Jesus laughs at the disciples for
praying to "your god,” meaning the disastrous god who created the world.
He compares the disciples to a priest in the temple (almost certainly a
reference to the mainstream church), whom he calls "a minister of error”
planting "trees without fruit, in my name, in a shameful manner.” He
challenges the disciples to look at him and understand what he really is, but
they turn away.
The key
passage comes when Jesus tells Judas: "You will sacrifice the man that
clothes me.” In plain English, or Coptic, Judas is going to kill Jesus—and thus
do him a favour. “That
really isn’t Jesus at all,” says Meyer. "He will at last get rid of his
material, physical flesh, thereby liberating the real Christ, the divine being
inside.”
That Judas
is entrusted with this task is a sign of his special status. "Lift up your
eyes and look at the cloud and the light within it and the stars surrounding
it,” Jesus tells him encouragingly. "The star that leads the way is your
star." Ultimately, Judas has a revelation in which he enters a
"luminous cloud." People on the ground hear a voice from the cloud,
though what it says may be forever unknown due to a tear in the papyrus.
The gospel
ends abruptly with a brief note reporting that Judas "received some
money" and handed Jesus over to the arresting party.
To Craig
Evans, this tale is a meaningless fiction, written long ago in support of a
dead-end belief system. "There is nothing in the Gospel of Judas,” he
says, "that tells us anything we could consider historically reliable.”
But other
scholars believe it is an important new window into the minds of early
Christians. "This changes the history of early Christianity," says
Elaine Pagels, professor
of religion at Princeton University. "We don't look to the
gospels for historical information, but for the fundamentals of the Christian
faith.”
By the end
of the fourth century, it was unwise to
possess such books. In 313 A.D. the Roman
Emperor Constantine had legalized Christianity. But his tolerance extended only
to the organized church, which he showered with riches and privileges, not to
mention tax breaks. Heretics, Christians who disagreed with the official doctrines, got no support, were hit
with penalties, and were eventually ordered to stop meeting.
Irenaeus
had already nominated the familiar four Gospels as the only ones that
Christians should read. His list ultimately became church policy. In 367A.D. Athanasius, the powerful Bishop of Alexandria and
a keen admirer of Irenaeus, issued an order to every Christian in Egypt listing
27 texts, including today's Gospels, as the only New Testament books that could
be regarded as sacred.
That list endures to this day.
We cannot know
how many books were lost as the Bible took shape, but we do know that some were
hidden away. The Nag Hammadi trove was buried in a heavy, waist-high jar,
perhaps by monks from the nearby monasteries of St. Pachomius.
It would have taken only one man to
hide the Judas gospel, which was bound together with three other Gnostic texts.
The
documents survived unmolested through centuries of war and upheaval. They
remained unread until early May 1983, when Stephen Emmel, a graduate student
working in Rome, got a call from a fellow scholar, who wanted him to
travel to Switzerland and check on some Coptic documents on offer
from a mysterious source. In Geneva, Emmel and two colleagues were
directed to a hotel room where they were met by two men—an Egyptian who spoke
no English and a Greek who translated.
"We
were given about half an hour to look into what were effectively three shoe
boxes. Inside were papyri wrapped in newspaper," says Emmel. "We
weren’t allowed to take photographs or make any notes." The papyrus was
already beginning to crumble, so he did not dare touch it by hand. Kneeling
beside the bed, he gingerly lifted some of the leaves with tweezers and spotted
the name Judas. He mistakenly assumed the name referred to Judas Thomas,
another disciple, but he did understand that this was a totally unknown work of
great significance.
One of
Emmel’s colleagues disappeared into the bathroom to negotiate a deal. Emmel was
authorized to offer no more than $50,000; the sellers demanded three million
dollars and not a penny less. "No way was anyone going to pay that
money," says Emmel, now a professor at the University of Münster in Germany,
who sadly recalls the papyrus as “beautiful” and laments its deterioration
since the meeting. While the two sides lunched, he slipped away and frantically
noted down everything he could remember.
That was the last any scholar saw of
the documents for the next 17 years.
According
to the present owners of the Judas gospel, the Egyptian in that Geneva hotel
room was a Cairo antiquities dealer named Hanna. He had bought the
manuscript from a village trader who made his living scouting such material.
Exactly where or how the trader had come across the collection is unclear. He
is dead now, and his relatives in the Maghagha district, a 160 kilometers south of Cairo, become strangely
reticent when challenged to reveal the site of the find.
Soon after
Hanna acquired the manuscript and before he could take it overseas, his entire
stock disappeared in a robbery. In Hanna's telling, the stolen goods were
spirited out of the country and ended up in the hands of another dealer. Later
Hanna succeeded in retrieving part of the hoard, including the gospel.
Once upon a
time, few would question how a priceless antiquity left its host country. Any
visitor could simply pick up artefacts and send
them abroad. That is how great museums like the British Museum and
the Louvre acquired many of their treasures. Today, antiquities-rich nations
take a more proprietary attitude, banning private ownership and strictly
controlling the export of their heritage. Respectable buyers such as museums
try to ensure a legitimate provenance, or origin, for an artefact by establishing that it has not been
stolen or illegally exported.
In early
1980, when the theft took place, Egypt had already made it illegal to
possess unregistered antiquities or export them without a government license.
It is not clear precisely how this law applies to the codex. But questions
about its provenance have shadowed it ever since.
Hanna,
however, was determined to get top dollar for it. The academics in Geneva confirmed
through their excitement that it was indeed valuable, so he headed for New
York to find a buyer with real money. The foray came to nothing, whereupon
Hanna apparently lost heart and retired back to Cairo. Before he left New
York, he rented a safe deposit box in a Citibank branch in Hicksville, Long
Island, where he parked the codex and some other ancient papyri. There they
remained, untouched and mouldering, while
Hanna intermittently tried to interest other buyers.
His price, reportedly, was always too
high.
Finally, in
April 2000, he made a sale. The buyer was Frieda Nussberger-Tchacos, an
Egyptian-born Greek who had made her way to the top of the cutthroat
antiquities business after studying Egyptology in Paris. She will not
divulge what she paid, conceding only that a rumoured figure of $300,000 is "wrong, but
in the neighbourhood." It
occurred to her that the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University might
be a possible buyer, so she deposited her wares with one of the library’s
manuscript experts, Professor Robert Babcock.
A few days
later, as she was heading out of Manhattan to catch a flight to her
home in Zürich, the professor phoned. His news was explosive, but it was his
excitement, audible even on a cell phone in the din of Manhattan rush-hour
traffic, that
Frieda Tchacos remembers best. "He was saying, 'This is unbelievable
material; I think it is the Gospel of Judas Iscariot,' but I really only heard
the emotion vibrating in his voice.”
Only later, in the long hours over the
dark Atlantic, did Tchacos begin to appreciate that she actually owned the
fabled Gospel of Judas.
Greeks talk
about moira, ‘fate’, and in the months that followed, Tchacos
began to feel that her moira had become entangled in a terrible way with Judas,
"like a curse.” The Beinecke held on to the document for five months but
then refused to bite, despite the vibrating Babcock, largely because of doubts
about its provenance. So Tchacos turned from the Ivy League to Akron, Ohio,
and an opera singer turned dealer in old manuscripts named Bruce Ferrini.
Her
rejection by Yale had been disheartening, and the trip to Akron was a
nightmare. "My flight from Kennedy was cancelled, so I had to fly from
LaGuardia on a little plane. I had the material carefully packed in black
boxes, but they wouldn't let me carry them into the cabin.”
Judas flew
to Ohio in the hold. In return for Judas and other manuscripts,
Ferrini gave Tchacos a sales contract with a Ferrini company called Nemo and
two postdated checks for 1.25 million dollars each.
Ferrini did
not return numerous phone calls seeking his version of the story. But people
who saw the Judas manuscript while it was in his possession say that he
shuffled the pages. "He wanted to make it look more complete,"
suggests Coptic expert Gregor Wurst, who is helping to restore it.
More fragments were coming off.
Tchacos had
begun having qualms about the deal within days of returning home. Her doubts
increased when a friend named Mario Roberty pointed out that nemo is
Latin for "no one.”
Roberty, a
quick-witted and engaging Swiss lawyer, knows the world of antiquities dealers
and runs a foundation dedicated to ancient art. He was, he says,
"fascinated” by Tchacos’s story and happily agreed to help her reclaim
Judas.
Ferrini's
huge checks were due at the beginning of 2001. To help keep pressure on the Akron dealer,
Roberty enlisted the antiquities trade's own weapon of mass destruction, a
former dealer named Michel van Rijn.
The London-based van Rijn runs a
wide-ranging website that is totally uninhibited in flaying his many enemies in
the antiquities world.
Briefed by
Roberty, van Rijn broke the news of the gospel, adding that it was "in the
claws of the 'multi-talented’ manuscript dealer, Bruce P. Ferrini," who
was in “deep financial troubles.” In stark terms, he warned potential buyers:
“You buy? You touch? You will be prosecuted!”
In February
2001, Tchacos reclaimed the Judas codex and brought it to Switzerland,
where, five months later, she met Kasser.
At that
moment, she says, Judas turned from curse to blessing. As Kasser began
painstakingly teasing the meaning of the codex from the fragments, Roberty
embarked on an imaginative solution to the provenance problem: selling the
translation and media rights while promising to return the original material to Egypt.
Roberty’s foundation, which now
controls the manuscript, has signed an agreement with the National Geographic
Society.
Relieved of
her marketing concerns, Tchacos has herself begun to sound a little mystical.
"Everything is predestined,” she murmurs. "I was myself predestined
by Judas to rehabilitate him.”
On the edge
of Lake Geneva, upstairs in an anonymous building, a specialist carefully
manipulates a tiny scrap of papyrus into its proper place, and part of an
ancient sentence is restored.
Judas, reborn, is about to face the
world!
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