The Inside Story of a Controversial New Text About Jesus
According to a top religion scholar, this 1,600-year-old text fragment suggests that some early Christians believed Jesus was married—possibly to Mary Magdalene
- By Ariel Sabar
- Smithsonian.com, September 18, 2012, Subscribe
In our November 2012 issue, writer Ariel Sabar reported from Rome on the reaction to King's discovery, both among the religious and academic communities. Read the full version of his report here.
Harvard Divinity School’s Andover Hall overlooks a quiet street some 15 minutes by foot from the bustle of Harvard Square. A Gothic tower of gray stone rises from its center, its parapet engraved with the icons of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. I had come to the school, in early September, to see Karen L. King, the Hollis professor of divinity, the oldest endowed chair in the United States and one of the most prestigious perches in religious studies. In two weeks, King was set to announce a discovery apt to send jolts through the world of biblical scholarship—and beyond.
King had given me an office number on the fifth floor, but the elevator had no “5” button. When I asked a janitor for directions, he looked at me sideways and said the building had no such floor. I found it eventually, by scaling a narrow flight of stairs that appeared to lead to the roof but opened instead on a garret-like room in the highest reaches of the tower.
“So here it is,” King said. On her desk, next to an open can of Diet Dr Pepper promoting the movie The Avengers, was a scrap of papyrus pressed between two plates of plexiglass.
The fragment was a shade smaller than an ATM card, honey-hued and densely inked on both sides with faded black script. The writing, King told me, was in the ancient Egyptian language of Coptic, into which many early Christian texts were translated in the third and fourth centuries, when Alexandria vied with Rome as an incubator of Christian thought.
When she lifted the papyrus to her office’s arched window, sunlight seeped through in places where the reeds had worn thin. “It’s in pretty good shape,” she said. “I’m not going to look this good after 1,600 years.”
But neither the language nor the papyrus’ apparent age was particularly remarkable. What had captivated King when a private collector first e-mailed her images of the papyrus was a phrase at its center in which Jesus says “my wife.”
The fragment’s 33 words, scattered across 14 incomplete lines, leave a good deal to interpretation. But in King’s analysis, and as she argues in a forthcoming article in the Harvard Theological Review, the “wife” Jesus refers to is probably Mary Magdalene, and Jesus appears to be defending her against someone, perhaps one of the male disciples.
“She will be able to be my disciple,” Jesus replies. Then, two lines later, he says: “I dwell with her.”
The papyrus was a stunner: the first and only known text from antiquity to depict a married Jesus.
But Dan Brown fans, be warned: King makes no claim for its usefulness as biography. The text was probably composed in Greek a century or so after Jesus’ crucifixion, then copied into Coptic some two centuries later. As evidence that the real-life Jesus was married, the fragment is scarcely more dispositive than Brown’s controversial 2003 novel, The Da Vinci Code.
What it does seem to reveal is more subtle and complex: that some group of early Christians drew spiritual strength from portraying the man whose teachings they followed as having a wife. And not just any wife, but possibly Mary Magdalene, the most-mentioned woman in the New Testament besides Jesus’ mother.
The question the discovery raises, King told me, is, “Why is it that only the literature that said he was celibate survived? And all of the texts that showed he had an intimate relationship with Magdalene or is married didn’t survive? Is that 100 percent happenstance? Or is it because of the fact that celibacy becomes the ideal for Christianity?”
How this small fragment figures into longstanding Christian debates about marriage and sexuality is likely to be a subject of intense debate. Because chemical tests of its ink have not yet been run, the papyrus is also apt to be challenged on the basis of authenticity; King herself emphasizes that her theories about the text's significance are based on the assumption that the fragment is genuine, a question that has by no means been definitively settled. That her article's publication will be seen at least in part as a provocation is clear from the title King has given the text: “The Gospel of Jesus’s Wife.”
* * *
King, who is 58, wears rimless oval glasses and is partial to loose-fitting clothes in solid colors. Her gray-streaked hair is held in place with bobby pins. Nothing about her looks or manner is flashy.
“I’m a fundamentally shy person,” she told me over dinner in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in early September.
King moved to Harvard from Occidental College in 1997 and found herself on a fast track. In 2009, Harvard named her the Hollis professor of divinity, a 288-year-old post that had never before been held by a woman.
Her scholarship has been a kind of sustained critique of what she calls the “master story” of Christianity: a narrative that casts the canonical texts of the New Testament as divine revelation that passed through Jesus in “an unbroken chain” to the apostles and their successors—church fathers, ministers, priests and bishops who carried these truths into the present day.
According to this “myth of origins,” as she has called it, followers of Jesus who accepted the New Testament—chiefly the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, written roughly between A.D. 65 and A.D. 95, or at least 35 years after Jesus’ death—were true Christians. Followers of Jesus inspired by noncanonical gospels were heretics hornswoggled by the devil.
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Comments (77)
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This is not the only recent discovery. A page from the Oxyringhus trash heap in Egypt was also read in 2005 with similar ideas. Amazingly, the above report does not include it. See part of one report below Jesus and Mary Magdalene: A New Gospel Fragment Discovered By Jonathan Sheen The Liverpool Observer 19 April 2005 In what may eventually prove to be a serious challenge to traditional Christian ideas of the life of Jesus, scholars at Oxford University announced Tuesday the discovery of a previously unknown Gospel fragment among a collection of ancient Egyptian papyri. The single papyrus sheet was found among the collection known as the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, a horde of ancient texts uncovered in Egypt in the last century. The fragment contains dialogue between Jesus and Mary Magdalene, and the words spoken suggest something that can only come as a shock to mainstream Christians: that Jesus and Mary were husband and wife. "A revelation of this kind, at this time, is beyond ironic," said Lisa Heist, project director at the Oxford Paleographic Center. "It is uncanny." Heist pointed to the great irony in the discovery's timing. see http://news.liverpoolobserver.co.uk/world/science_technology/story.jsp?story=630165
Posted by H. Tailor on January 8,2013 | 03:49 AM
Please!! Ms King is just another overly educated false prophet. Christ also talks about His bride in the New Testiment. His Bride is the Church and the Church incorporates all believers from all Christian denominations. It does not mean that He was married to one specific woman and that He took her to be his wife. I am not very educated but even I know a false prophet when I hear one. The Bible is the true Word of God not a fairytale. Not to be changed to suit us today. The book of Jude warns Christians that certain men and women will worm in unnoticed. It was going on back then and will continue until Christ's return.
Posted by zee thomas on January 6,2013 | 01:59 PM
I appreciate the information & thoughts given in this article. However, I would like to hear what some literary specialists think about this literary fragment. I believe a fuller examination is important because it will provide a well-rounded understanding of the fragment. The fragment itself falls into the fields of linguistics, ancient languages, archaeology, papyrology, general literary studies, & possibly others. Although King may be a language expert, she may not be a literary expert. I think a literary expert would bring to the discussion valuable literary considerations such as the fragment's genre, author, circumstances out of which it was written, the purpose for which it was written, audience, & more. All of these things bear significantly on how the fragment should be interpreted, then understood, that is, if it is possible to correctly understand such a small fragment. The fragment is a pixel of a larger picture. So, after the authenticity of the fragment is settled, this question remains, what is the larger picture? That is the goal of scholarship and the various fields of research concerning the fragment.
Posted by Dozier Lee on December 1,2012 | 02:11 AM
'The question the discovery raises, King told me, is, “Why is it that only the literature that said he was celibate survived? And all of the texts that showed he had an intimate relationship with Magdalene or is married didn’t survive? Is that 100 percent happenstance? Or is it because of the fact that celibacy becomes the ideal for Christianity?” So you are already way off from the start with or without your new evidence, celibacy is not the ideal of Christianity its the ideal of pagan religions like catholicism. The ideal of Christianity is to seek the kingdom of God, so it means you do have a wife and children, and promote the agenda of God, not the agenda of the pope, and God happens to say that we are to bring the good news of the gospel everywhere so that others may be saved. Revelation tells us that Jesus will return only once all places on earth have heard the good news, then and only then will the kingdom of God come, thus the Christian ideal is to preach the good news of the gospel to all corners of the earth, celibacy is not a prerequisite.
Posted by Clem on November 6,2012 | 05:43 PM
Et tu, Jesus?
Posted by Mesut Tigli on October 25,2012 | 08:01 AM
Jesus was a rabbi. I believe rabbis were expected to be married. Not a big deal.
Posted by jorod on October 7,2012 | 10:27 PM
I'm really sorry, but the Bible says that when a man and a woman get married they become one. A perfectly holy person can't become one with a sinner.
Posted by Ester on October 2,2012 | 07:53 AM
Nothing news worthy here...Jesus often referenced His church in the termonology as His "bride". (see as example the parable of the 10 Virgins) Really trying to make some news...keep trying
Posted by Eleni on October 1,2012 | 01:16 PM
i am surprised that professor king did not sort out the technicalities of the text,ink and papyrus before her public statements in rome at the international conference.it has resulted in much negativity to theological investigation,encouraged by outrageous statements by some uncritical scholars.thank goodness smithsonian have delayed the broadcast-hopefully it will be critically assessed before transmission. peter long,global co-ordinator:the international pseudepigrapha study network.
Posted by rev.dr.peter long on September 30,2012 | 12:58 PM
Whether Jesus was married or not is simply unimportant when one realizes that who he was and what he had to say about our sinful nature and escaping the consequences of our sin and establishing a renewed rellationship with the Lord God are the important results of his life on earth. His marital state has no bearing on that. But when I read in the 19th chapter of the Gospel of John, how a crucified and suffering Jesus meticulously made arrangments from the cross for John to take care of his mother, I wonder how such a man could completely ignore his wife (who if indeed Mary Magdelene was his wife) who was standing there with his mother. That was making a pointed statement that "Let her hang, I'm not concerned with what happens to her." I do not think any interpretation of his life and identity would find that in character for him.
Posted by Robert F. Foster on September 29,2012 | 11:03 PM
HJ Silver.....Best comment on the site.
Posted by Pulseguy on September 29,2012 | 04:22 PM
There are still earlier 'Gospels' that portray Jesus making birds from clay and killing children who insult his mom. How come we don't have a 'Jesus the child-killer?' article? Because this is all about us and nothing about the New Testament
Posted by Prof Robert Davis on September 28,2012 | 05:23 PM
His suffering would not have been complete otherwise.
Posted by H.J. Silver on September 25,2012 | 05:47 PM
This has got to be an intentional move from science to sensationalism with this controvsary about Jesus. Have you merged with one of the supermarket tabloids ??? Your credability is at stake here.
Posted by Don on September 25,2012 | 11:08 AM
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