UPDATE: The Reaction to Karen King’s Gospel Discovery
When the divinity scholar unveiled the papyrus fragment that she says refers to Jesus’ “wife,” our reporter was there in Rome amidst the firestorm of criticism
- By Ariel Sabar
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2012, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 8)
For legal purposes, the 1982 date of the correspondence was crucial, though it may well strike critics as suspiciously convenient. The next year, Egypt would revise its antiquities law to declare that all discoveries after 1983 were the unequivocal property of the Egyptian government.
Though King can read Coptic and has worked with papyri, she would need outside help to authenticate the fragment. She forwarded the photos to AnneMarie Luijendijk, an authority on Coptic papyri and sacred scriptures at Princeton. (King had overseen her dissertation at Harvard.)
Luijendijk took the images to Roger Bagnall, a renowned papyrologist who directs the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University. Every few weeks, a group of papyrologists in the New York area gather at Bagnall’s Upper West Side apartment to vet new discoveries. Bagnall serves tea, coffee and cookies, and projects images of papyri under discussion onto a screen in his living room. After looking at images of the papyrus, “we were unanimous in believing, yes, this was OK,” Bagnall told me by phone.
It wasn’t until King brought the fragment by train to Bagnall’s office last March that he and Luijendijk reached a firm conclusion. The papyrus’ color and texture, along with the parallel deterioration of the ink and the reeds, were signs of authenticity. Also convincing was the scribe’s middling penmanship. “It’s clear the pen wasn’t perhaps of ideal quality and the writer didn’t have complete control of it,” said Bagnall. “The flow of ink was highly irregular. This wasn’t a high-class professional working with good tools. That is one of the things that tells you it’s real, because a modern scribe wouldn’t do that. You’d have to be really kind of perversely skilled to produce something like this as a fake.”
The Sahidic dialect of Coptic and the style of the handwriting, with letters whose tails do not stray above or below the line, reminded Luijendijk of texts from Nag Hammadi and elsewhere and helped her and Bagnall date the fragment to the second half of the fourth century A.D. and place its probable origins in Upper Egypt.
The fragment’s rough edges suggest that it had been cut from a larger manuscript; experts told me that some dealers, keener on profit than preservation, will dice up a text for maximum return. The presence of writing on both sides indicated it was part of a codex—or book—rather than a scroll.
In Luijendijk’s judgment, the scribe’s handwriting—functional, but not refined—suggests that this gospel was read not in a church, where more elegant calligraphy prevailed, but by early Christians who gathered in homes for private study. “Something like a Bible study group,” Luijendijk told me.
To help bring out letters whose ink had faded, King borrowed Bagnall’s infrared camera and used Photoshop to enhance the contrasts. The papyrus’ back side, or verso, is so badly damaged that only a few key words—“my mother” and “three”—were decipherable. But on the front side, or recto, King gleaned eight fragmentary lines:
1) “not [to] me. My mother gave to me li[fe]...”
2) The disciples said to Jesus, “
3) deny. Mary is worthy of it
4) ” Jesus said to them, “My wife
5) she will be able to be my disciple
6) Let wicked people swell up
7) As for me, I dwell with herin order to
8) an image
The line—“Jesus said to them, ‘My wife...’”—is truncated but unequivocal. But with so little surrounding text, what might it mean?
Some of the phrases echoed, if distantly, passages in Luke, Matthew and Thomas about the role of family in the life of disciples. The parallels convinced King that this gospel was first composed, most likely in Greek, in the second century A.D., when such questions were a subject of lively theological discussion. (The term “gospel,” as King uses it in her analysis, is any early Christian writing that describes the life—or afterlife—of Jesus.) Despite the New Testament’s many Marys, King infers from a variety of clues that the “Mary” in Line 3 is “probably” Magdalene, and that the “wife” in Line 4 and “she” in Line 5 is this same woman.
For King, the best historical evidence that Magdalene was not Jesus’ wife is that the New Testament (which is silent about his marital status) refers to her by her hometown, Migdal, a fishing village, rather than by her relationship to the Messiah. “The most odd thing in the world is her standing next to Jesus and the New Testament identifying her by the place she comes from instead of her husband,” King told me. In that time, “women’s status was determined by the men to whom they were attached.” Think of “Mary, Mother of Jesus, Wife of Joseph.”
The first known statements about Jesus’ celibacy appeared about a century after his death. Clement of Alexandria, a theologian and church father who lived from A.D. 150 to A.D. 215, reported on a group of second-century Christians “who say outright that marriage is fornication and teach that it was introduced by the devil. They proudly say that they are imitating the Lord who neither married or had any possession in this world, boasting that they understand the gospel better than anyone else.”
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Comments (19)
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Your article The Gospel According to King by Ariel Sabar summarizes this explosive issue well. Yet, I remain perplexed why your correspondent found it necessary to refer to two important discoveries made in Jerusalem in 1980 - the "Jesus family tomb" and the "James Ossuary" as "hoaxes, or, at best, wishful thinking". I emphatically state the the Jesus family tomb and James's Ossuary are neither. No one well familiar with the tomb materials has cast any doubt that the it is a genuine 2nd Temple Period (pre-70CE)tomb. Neither has anyone expressed any reservations that the inscriptions on six of the ossuaries, including the names Mariya (Mary), Yeshua bar Yosef (Jesus son of Joseph), Yehuda bar Yeshua (Juda, son of Jesus, Yose (Joseph), Mattya (Matthew) and Mariamne Mara, are genuine. In fact, the ossuaries can be viewed in one museum or another. Doubt has only been cast on the interpretation of the name Mariamne Mara as Maria Magdalena and the interpretation of the tomb as being that of the family of Jesus of Nazareth. In view of Professor King's discovery, the ossuaries referring to a son of Jesus and, based on Byzantine literary sources, Maria Magdalena (Mariamne Mara) the film by investigative journalist Simcha Jacobovici that the Jesus of the Jesus family tomb is Jesus of Nazareth, is certainly not as preposterous as it may have seemed in the past. The James Ossuary (inscribed "James son of Joseph, brother of Jesus")and its owner antiquities collector Oded Golan spent some four years in Israeli courts after the authenticity of the inscription was challenged. The judge ruled that the prosecution had been unable to prove their case. If so, there is no good reason to doubt the authenticity of the inscription. Whatever the case, your correspondent should have checked his sources more carefully and not use harsh terms such as "hoax" when only disagreements regarding interpretations of facts had taken place.
Posted by Dr. Aryeh E. Shimron on December 13,2012 | 04:39 PM
Jesus never had any children. He did not obey the first commandment God gave to man. Genesis 1; 28.
Posted by James F. Jackson on November 16,2012 | 04:36 PM
I just read the very interesting article about Karen King's parchment. Toward the end of the story, it says that the results of a radiocarbon dating test and ink analysis weren't expected before mid-October. As it is now mid-November, I am curious as to what the tests showed?
Posted by Stephanie Ceman on November 15,2012 | 10:48 PM
This article reminded me of how the public reacted to Yoko Ono when she became involved with John Lennon.The same with how they react with Jesus being involved with Mary. It's almost as if we do not want our icons involved with anyone but "us".
Posted by Cathy Hamilton on November 15,2012 | 06:07 PM
1. On Jesus being married, the canonical gospels I think would have mentioned her. His mother and brothers are mentioned easily enough when they try to take Jesus away from his public ministry. St. Peter was married, and the gospels mention that: Jesus cured St. Peter’s mother-in-law. Further, it would have been difficult to support a household as an itinerant preacher. St. Peter and the boys at least fished once in a while. Once Jesus gets John’s baptism, he never seems to touch a hammer. 2. The fragment in question, valid or not, is a translation of the original Greek. Well, the Vulgate is a translation, too. Close maybe, but no cigar. 3. I don’t think Jesus being married would alter much in the life of the Church. The monastic tradition, with its three classical vows, grew up as a sideline. 4. Granted, Jesus being unmarried as a first-century Galilean carpenter is odd. Garry Wills writes that, even though celibacy was not an ideal everywhere at the time, it was among the Essenes near the Dead Sea. Wills writes that Jesus could have been part of that community before his public life. His rationale: Jesus knew three languages, when he should have known only two. Jesus knew Aramaic, the language of the street. He knew Greek, the real language of the Roman Empire (there was no translator when Jesus and Pilate spoke together). But Jesus knew Hebrew as well. Hebrew was an arcane liturgical, scholarly language (think pre-Vatican II Latin). Jesus could have learned Hebrew with the Essenes. 5. Apocryphal gospels may be fun and exotic, but they still can be bogus. Ever catch “The Protoevangelium of James”? The Church Fathers rejected it, with its amazing depiction of Jesus Brat, the murderous Nazareth bully. (I suspect the Church Fathers took copies with them at evening parties for a few laughs.)
Posted by Frank McEvoy on November 15,2012 | 12:27 PM
Let’s me see if I have this straight. The fragment is 1,600 years old, written by we know not who and says, ” Jesus said to them, my wife-“ This certainly warrants ten pages in the magazine. Actually, I am more concerned that Christians will consider this to be an insult to Jesus and go on murderous rampages on campuses around the world. Brings to mind, Shakespeare: “Much Ado About Nothing or Tempest in a Teapot.”
Posted by Samuel Clemens on November 8,2012 | 03:06 PM
If Jesus was not married, he was gay and followed the Greek view on women. This is highly unlikely. Jews got married. I dont understand why modern Christians argue this way, being fully brainwashed by the Early Church of fanatic men who sought to destroy everything in opposition to their view. The only reason to erase the possibility of marriage, was to avoid descendants of Jesus forming a dynasty and claim his inheritance through the female line. From a Roman perspective the kingdom was now part of Rome, no longer a kingship. The fact that Mary Magdalena is associated with a harlot only goes to show that she is identified with Afrodite. It is the later church (ruled by men) who demonize her when they want to get rid of peganism. Women are demonized into the Medieval Period, an important element in laws of inheritance in favor of the male line.
Posted by Anton on November 4,2012 | 09:35 AM
Jesus is the Son of God. Don't you think that He would have taken a pure woman and not an ex-harlot? How rediculous. He was not sent here to partake in earthly things. He knew his time was short. There were corruptors even during the ministry of the disciples. Many of the New Testament books talk about this. That is why Biblical text is compared to itself, if it contradicts, it is not of God. Satan uses things like this to decieve the masses, even the church if that is possible. Study the Bible, its history and its people. Every time you read it the deaper your understanding of the truth of this world.
Posted by Allen on October 30,2012 | 08:47 PM
I'm just loving the discomfiture Ms. King has caused in the high seats of power. Not only is there a problem now with the priests "who forsook women and marriage" (as per sandyra below), but the alleged all-male enclave of Jesus's disciples has been used for most of two millennia to exclude women from the priesthood and everything else except congregant, nun-schoolteacher, and housekeeper for priests. Now there's a conundrum!
Posted by Sarah on October 30,2012 | 08:12 PM
I'm in agreement with Steve. From the translation, it seems to me that the disciples are arguing that Jesus SHOULD take Mary as his wife ("... Mary is worthy of it..."), but Jesus is explaining why he chooses NOT to marry ("... she will be able to be my disciple ..."). The line where Jesus says, "My wife..." could lead into any number of things - "My wife is the church", "My wife will be decided by my Father", etc. I am also not a expert so there may be reasons in the grammar or specific wordings to make them lean toward saying that Jesus is married to Mary, but the only hint at that is a single sentence in the article: 'Despite the New Testament's many Marys, King infers from a variety of clues that the "Mary" in Line 3 is "probably" Magdalene, and that the "wife" in Line 4 and "she" in Line 5 is the same woman.'
Posted by John on October 30,2012 | 02:27 PM
Frankly, I don't know what the big deal is. Why does everyone get upset if he had a wife? Considering the time period and the culture, it seems rather unreasonable to expect him NOT to have had a wife. I admit I am not an expert on Jewish customs, as I am Christian, however, didn't they all marry early? Wouldn't it have been expected that he would? He was sent here to live as a reglar man, was he not? To go through the same trials and tribulations? So, wouldn't that have included marraige?
Posted by Lori Lieder on October 30,2012 | 09:34 AM
Any update concerning the authenticity of the fragment? The story says that the radiocarbon dating and ink analysis may be done by mid-October.
Posted by Alicia on October 29,2012 | 01:22 PM
While the authenticity of the papyrus is being checked, I'd also look into the Smithsonian's claim in its November edition that Ariel Sabar's report was an "exclusive." There must be a lot of qualifiers to go along with that boast.The AP had stories in September, including one out of Boston.
Posted by james o. clifford, sr. on October 28,2012 | 08:38 PM
Of course the Roman Catholic Church (AKA the good old boys club) will not be receptive to a paper describing Jesus as having a wife. What will become of the priests who forsook women and marriage if this were proved true? No, women must never be held anywhere near the wondrousness of men. Amen. Get it? "A-MEN". You ladies need to go make them a sandwich or do laundry or something menial.
Posted by sandyra on October 27,2012 | 05:52 PM
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