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Originally posted by Eyeofhorus
I was watching stigmata the other day, and afterward I went online an looked up several translations of the gospel of St. Thomas.
For those who are unfamiliar with the gospel, it is written in Aramaic (the language of christ) and it is regarded as the closest publication ever to the true words of Jesus Christ himself.
The problem for the church is that this gospel basically proves/says that the church is complete bunk, and that God is within us, not within the walls of a church. And that your body is the only temple.
This being very important to the teachings of Christ, why has it been left out of the bible?
Moreover, why has the chhurch surpressed this document, do they fear it will destroy the church?
Originally posted by roger_pearse
There is nothing to connect the text with Jesus and the apostolic circle. The production of 'real gospels' has been a cottage industry since the second century AD down to our own times, to make money or gain advantage. No-one actually connected to the apostles ever refers to it.
Originally posted by Eyeofhorus
Thanks for the extra information, good post. I understand the differnce between the coptic and greek texts now...
but considering how the romans/greeks (Emperor constantine) basically composed the new testament in order to create the new religion for the ages...
...I still cannot accept the document as complete fiction. What if the document WAS rewritten, and re-translated? It has been known to happen in the past. Wouldn't that just mean that someone may have translated the original document into a diffent form/language?
The books of the apocrypha were written in the same time period as the bible, by the same people, as a complete representation of the "missing books" of the new testament
And why are there two versions of this text (greek and coptic)? That suggests that they may have both been derived from the same text at their creation, maybe the original is written in another language completely (aramaic?), and possibly not even written on paper. Have we even found what could be considered the "original" text?