In April the National Geographic Society announced the discovery
of an early Christian text, the Gospel of Judas, written in Coptic around
240 to 350 A.D. It is believed to be a copy of the original Greek manuscript
from the second century. One of a number of early Christian texts recounting
Jesus’ life and teachings, the Gospel of Judas was omitted from
the New Testament canon. It paints Judas not as an evil person, but as
Jesus’ truest disciple. Scholars of religion like Princeton’s
Elaine Pagels knew about the existence of the Gospel of Judas from the
writings of a second-century church father, Irenaeus, the bishop of Lyon.
A consultant to the National Geographic Society, Pagels wrote in a New
York Times op-ed that the discovery of the Judas Gospel contributes to
“exploding the myth of a monolithic Christianity and showing how
diverse and fascinating the early Christian movement really was.”
She spoke with PAW associate editor Katherine Federici Greenwood.
What is the major difference between the four Gospels of the New
Testament (Mark, Matthew, Luke, and John) and the Gospel of Judas?
The four Gospels agree that Jesus was handed over by Judas and that
there was a divine purpose. Where they disagree is on the motive. In Mark,
the earliest [canonical Gospel], there is no reason given about why Judas
betrayed Jesus. Mark just says he decided to betray him and he was going
to hand him over, and the chief priests were delighted and offered him
money. Luke and Matthew say Judas did it for money. Luke and John say
that he did it because he was possessed by Satan.
The Gospel of Judas says Judas did it because Jesus required him to
do it, knowing that his death was somehow a sacred mystery. According
to the Gospel of Judas, Judas has a dream in which he sees other disciples
stoning him to death, because they think he is a traitor. He cries out
to Jesus and asks about this dream, and Jesus says that they will misunderstand
you and you will suffer, but you will be greater than they. The Gospel
of Judas says that Jesus revealed to Judas alone secret mysteries about
the universe and about Jesus’ and Judas’ destinies. What that
says to me is that the followers of Jesus within a generation of his death
are arguing intensely about why Judas did it.
There are other differences. The Gospel of Judas sees questions about
good and evil as a more mysterious phenomenon than you see in the New
Testament Gospels, where you see a clearer morality play — Judas
is bad and Jesus is good. In the Gospel of Judas, the view of morality
is more complex and suggests that suffering in the world doesn’t
just come out of human sin, but is mysteriously built into the universe.
In this Gospel, the 12 disciples don’t understand Jesus very well
— Judas understands him better. Now, this is probably what I call
a minority report. It was written by somebody who sides with the disciple
whom everybody hates.
What is the implication of the Gospel of Judas for Christianity?
The Gospel of Judas helps us examine how what we call Christianity came
into being, how it developed, how traditions that are called orthodox
annihilated all the other positions. It’s not what you learn about
in Sunday school, where one usually hears the moral story that Judas is
bad and Judas is punished and he hangs himself. This is a very different
perception, a much more complex perception of good and evil. I’m
not saying it’s better, it’s just very different.
Why do you think the Gospel of Judas was left out of the New Testament
canon by early church leaders?
Irenaeus said the Gospel of Judas was outrageous. It challenges the
role of the disciples he considered most important — Peter and Paul
— because the Gospel of Judas attributes to Judas the greatest understanding
of Jesus. And the Gospel of Judas challenged the authority of the bishops
who claim that their authority rests on Peter and Paul, as the founders
of the Church of Rome. The Gospel of Judas might have taken a lot of people
in another direction.
So noncanonical Gospels like the Gospel of Judas — known as
the Gnostic Gospels — provide a more complex view of the early Christian
movement?
Yes, but I don’t call them Gnostic Gospels now. I call them Christian
Gospels. In saying that, I don’t mean that the Gnostic Gospels and
the four Gospels in the New Testament are all equally right or accurate;
I just mean there were different ways of being Christian and arguments
about what it meant in the first several centuries after Jesus’
death. And unless we’re going to just buy the definitions that were
made by church leaders who decided which Gospels to include in the New
Testament, we have to look at the different kinds of Christians and teachings
at that time.