Gospel of Q
More evidence that the gospels were not written by disciples. Q has
been known to be behind the gospels and Q also has an unknown author.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/story/qthomas.html
More About Q and the Gospel of Thomas
An accidental discovery in Egypt seems to confirm the
existence of the 'lost' gospel of Q.
by Marilyn Mellowes
Q is the designation for a gospel that no longer exists, but many think must
have existed at one time. In fact, even though no copy of this gospel has
survived independently, some nineteenth-century scholars found fragments of such
an early Christian composition embeded in the gospels of Matthew and Luke.
By putting these two gospels beside that of Mark, scholars realized that when
Matthew and Luke are telling the story about Jesus, for the most part they both
follow the order and often even the wording of Mark. But, into this common
narrative outline, Matthew and Luke each insert extra sayings and teachings of
Jesus. And although Matthew and Luke do not put these sayings in the same order,
nevertheless they each repeat many of the same sayings, sometimes word for word.
Since for other reasons it seems unlikely that either Matthew or Luke could
have copied from the other, how can this sort of agreement be explained? The
answer appears to be that Matthew and Luke each had two sources in common: the
Gospel of Mark and another gospel, now lost, a collection of sayings known only
as Q.
Q stands for "Quelle," the German word for source. Although no
actual copy of Q has ever been found, many scholars are convinced that such a
document once circulated in early Christian communities. Since it was difficult
to get excited about something that did not exist, Q remained a hypothesis that
lingered on the edges of scholarly research. But in 1945, a chance discovery in
Egypt provided surprisingly new evidence that rekindled interest in the possible
existence of Q.
Two brothers were looking for fertilizer at the base of cliffs in the
Egyptian region of Nag Hammadi, where the Nile bends on its way from
Chenoboskeia to Pabau. As they searched, the brother called Mohammad Ali hit a
hard object, concealed under the ground. It proved to be a huge earthen jar,
closed with a shallow red dish. At first Mohammad Ali was afraid to open the
jar, lest a jinn might be closed up inside it. But finally he summoned the
courage to break it, hoping that it might contain gold. Out tumbled, not gold,
but twelve books bound in gazelle leather.
These books would prove one of the most important archaeological finds of the
twentieth century. And one of the reasons for their importance is the valuable
evidence they provide for the existence of the sayings collection known as Q.
These manuscripts, now known as the Nag Hammadi Library, contained a complete
manuscript of the Gospel of Thomas. A fragment of this gospel, written in Greek,
had been found earlier at Oxyrynchos in Egypt. But it was only a fragment. The
text found at Nag Hammadi, although complete, was written in Coptic, which was
the form of the Egyptian language in use during later Roman imperial times.
On the basis of this text, however, scholars were able to reconstruct the
Gospel of Thomas in Greek, the original language of its composition. By this
means, they were able to compare its contents with those of writings found in
the New Testament.
The Gospel of Thomas is very different from the gospels that have become part
of the New Testament. It contains no narrative material, nor is there any story
of the birth, the life, or the death of Jesus. It consists only of sayings, 114
in all, each preceded by the phrase, "And Jesus said." The collected
sayings of the Gospel of Thomas are designated by its author as "the secret
sayings which the living Jesus spoke."
Some of the sayings from the Gospel of Thomas are very much like those found
in the gospels of Matthew and Luke, for example:"Jesus said, 'Come to me,
for my yoke is easy and my mastery is gentle, and you will find repose.'"
(#90) But others are puzzling: "Jesus said, 'Become passers by.'"
(#42).
According to this author, salvation is achieved in the recognition of one's
origin (the light) and one's destiny (the repose). And in order to return to his
or her origin, the disciplemust separate from the world by "stripping
off" the garment of flesh and "passing by" corruptible human
existence.
For New Testament scholars, one of the most interesting things about this
gospel is that its author (who calls himself Didymos Judas Thomas) appears to
have used sayings from the same collection used by Matthew and Luke. But for
this author and his community, the meaning of these sayings was clearly very
different. The Gospel of Thomas, therefore, provided exciting new evidence for
the existence of an earlier collection of sayings used by a variety of Christian
communities.
In 1989, a team of researchers led by James M. Robinson of the Institute for
Antiquity and Christianity in Claremont, CA, began a most unlikely task: the
"reconstruction" of the Gospel of Q. Robinson and his team are
accomplishing this by a highly detailed literary analysis of Matthew, Luke, and
Thomas. Their painstaking work goes "verse by verse, word by word, case
ending by case ending." After nearly ten years of work, the results of
their efforts are soon to be published as the Critical Edition of Q.
The "recovery" of the Q gospel has stimulated a debate about the
nature early Christian communities, and by extension, the origins of
Christianity itself. One scholar, Burton Mack, has advanced a radical thesis:
that at least some Christian communities did not see Jesus as a Messiah; they
saw him as a teacher of wisdom, a man who tried to teach others how to live. For
them, Jesus was not divine, but fully human. These first followers of Jesus
differed from other Christians whose ritual and practice was centered on the
death and the resurrection of Jesus. Their did not emerge as the
"winners" of history; perhaps because the maintaining the faith
required the existence of a story that included not only the life of Jesus but
also his Passion.