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Infancy Gospel of Thomas From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with Gospel of Thomas.
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The Infancy Gospel of Thomas is a pseudepigraphical gospel about the childhood of Jesus that is believed to date
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to the 2nd century. It was part of a popular genre of biblical work, written to satisfy a hunger among early Christians
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for more miraculous and anecdotal stories of the childhood of Jesus than the Gospel of Luke provided. Later
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references by Hippolytus of Rome and Origen of Alexandria to a Gospel of Thomas are more likely to be referring to
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this Infancy Gospel than to the wholly different Gospel of Thomas with which it is sometimes confused. It would appear to be unrelated to the Canonical Gospels.
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Contents [hide]
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1 Author
Recent changes
2 Dating
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3 Manuscript tradition 4 Content
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5 Syriac Infancy Gospel
Related changes
6 See also
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7 Further reading
Special pages
8 References
Permanent link Page information
9 External links
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Author
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The Infancy Gospel of Thomas is a work attributed to "Thomas the Israelite" (in a medieval Latin
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version).[citation needed] The biblical Thomas (or Judas Thomas, Didymos Judas Thomas, etc.) is very unlikely to have
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had anything to do with the text, though some scholars believe it was a gentile. Whoever its initial author was, he seems not to have known much of Jewish life besides what he could learn from the Gospel of Luke, which the text
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seems to refer to directly in ch. 19; Sabbath and over observances are mentioned.
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Dating
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Esperanto
The first known probable quotation of its text is from Irenaeus of Lyon, ca 185. The earliest possible date of
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authorship is in the 80s A.D., the approximate date of the Gospel of Luke, from which the author of the Infancy Gospel
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borrowed the story of Jesus in the temple at age twelve (see Infancy 19:1-12 and Luke 2:41-52). Scholars generally
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agree on a date in the mid- to late-2nd century A.D. There are two 2nd century documents, the Epistula Apostolorum
Latina
and Irenaeus' Adversus haereses, which refer to a story of Jesus' tutor telling him, "Say beta," and him replying, "First
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tell me the meaning of alpha." It is generally agreed that there was at least some period of oral transmission of the
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text, either wholly or as several different stories before it was first redacted and transcribed, and it is thus entirely
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possible that both of these documents and the Infancy Gospel of Thomas all refer to the oral versions of this story.
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Manuscript tradition
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This section may require copyediting. (September 2014)
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It is unknown whether the original language of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas was Greek or Syriac. The few surviving Greek manuscripts provide no clues themselves, since none of them date before the 13th century (James), while the earliest authorities, according to the editor and translator Montague Rhodes James, are a much abbreviated 6th century Syriac version, and a Latin palimpsest at Vienna of the 5th or 6th century, which has never been fully translated. There is such a plethora of manuscripts, translations, shortened versions, alternates, and parallels with slight nuance differences. James found that they prevented an easy ing of which text was which. This number of texts and versions reflect the work's widespread popularity into the High Middle Ages.
Content
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The text describes the life of the child Jesus, with fanciful, and sometimes malevolent, supernatural events, comparable to the trickster nature of the god-child in many a Greek myth. One of the episodes involves Jesus making clay birds, which he then proceeds to bring to life, an act also attributed to Jesus in Quran 5:110 ,[1] although
Jesus's age at the time of the event is not specified in the Quran. In another episode, a child disperses water that Jesus has collected. Jesus, aged one, then curses him, which causes the child's body to wither into a corpse. Another child dies when Jesus curses him when he apparently accidentally bumps into Jesus, throws a stone at Jesus, or punches Jesus (depending on the translation). When Joseph and Mary's neighbors complain, they are miraculously struck blind by Jesus. Jesus then starts receiving lessons, but arrogantly tries to teach the teacher instead, upsetting the teacher who suspects supernatural origins. Jesus is amused by this suspicion, which he confirms, and revokes all his earlier apparent cruelty. Subsequently he resurrects a friend who is killed when he falls from a roof, and heals another who cuts his foot with an axe. After various other demonstrations of supernatural ability, new teachers try to teach Jesus, but he proceeds to explain the law to them instead. There is another set of miracles in which Jesus heals his brother who is bitten by a snake, and two others who have died from different causes. Finally, the text recounts the episode in Luke in which Jesus, aged twelve, teaches in the temple. Although the miracles seem quite randomly inserted into the text, there are three miracles before, and three after, each of the sets of lessons. The structure of the story is essentially: Bringing life to a dried fish (this is only present in later texts) (First group) 3 Miracles - Breathes life into birds fashioned from clay, curses a boy, who then becomes a corpse, curses a boy who falls dead and his parents become blind Attempt to teach Jesus which fails, with Jesus doing the teaching 3 Miracles - Reverses his earlier acts, resurrects a friend who fell from a roof, heals a man who chopped his foot with an axe.[2] (Second group) 3 Miracles - Carries water on cloth, produces a feast from a single grain, stretches a beam of wood to help his father finish constructing a bed Attempts to teach Jesus, which fail, with Jesus doing the teaching 3 Miracles - Heals James from snake poison, resurrects a child who died of illness, resurrects a man who died in a construction accident Incident in the temple paralleling Luke
Syriac Infancy Gospel
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The Syriac Infancy Gospel (Injilu 't Tufuliyyah), translated from a Coptic original, gives some parallels to the episodes "recorded in the book of Josephus the Chief Priest, who was in the time of Christ."[citation needed]
See also
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Unknown years of Jesus
Further reading
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Barnstone, Willis (ed.). The Other Bible, Harper Collins, 1984, pp. 398–403. ISBN 0-06-250031-7
References
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1. ^ Kate Zebiri of the University of London (Spring 2000). "Contemporary Muslim Understanding of the Miracles of Jesus"
(PDF). The Muslim World (Hartford Seminary's Macdonald Center for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim
Relations) 90: 74. Retrieved 2010-01-04. "In the Qur'an, the miracles of Jesus are described in two ages: 3:49 and 5:110. Qur'an 3:49 attributes the following words to Jesus: I have come to you, with a Sign from your Lord, in that I make for you of clay, the figure of a bird, and breathe into it, and it becomes a bird by God's permission" 2. ^ Gospel of Thomas Greek Text A
External links
(Archive), Wesley Center Online, Northwest Nazarene University
[edit]
Early Christian Writings : Infancy Gospel of Thomas Gnostic Society Library : Infancy Gospel of Thomas introduction and translations by M.R. James, 1924 Categories: Syriac literature 3rd-century manuscripts
Infancy Gospels
Gnostic Gospels
Wikisource has original text related to this article: Infancy Gospel of Thomas
2nd-century manuscripts
Thomas the Apostle
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