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The pre-canonical version of the Fourth Gospel clearly named Mary Magdalene as the disciple whom Jesus loved, just as the Gnostic writings still do. The Gnostic writings reflect a dependency on the pre-Gospel text which the "Secessionists" brought to the Gnostic groups after the schism (Brown 1979: 149). The rest of the community, Brown's "Apostolic Christians," also had the same pre-Gospel text. They, however, redacted their text in order to make it more acceptable to the emerging institutional church which they wished to join. They quashed references to Mary Magdalene as having been their founder. They, instead, made references in the text to a "Beloved Disciple," but turned the disciple into an anonymous male. In two passages of the text, their redaction attempts to make the Beloved Disciple and Mary Magdalene seem to be two different individuals by having them appear together in the same scenes. (Structural flaws within those passages, discussed below, support this contention.) They did this because they knew that the church leaders would not accept the authenticity of a Gospel written by a woman. As Brown has observed: "The acceptance of the (Fourth) Gospel into the canon...was only at the price of an assurance that it had apostolic origins" (1979: 149). And, in the worldview of the institutional church leaders, no woman's ministry could be deemed apostolic.
Did you get this idea from your own study, or did you hear it from some other source? If so, please let me know where.
Originally posted by stalkingwolf
Did you get this idea from your own study, or did you hear it from some other source? If so, please let me know where.
A little of both. Right at this point I cannot recall exact "chapter and verse" of where I read it.
Originally posted by pieman
it's an interesting theory, but it seems to be based on the idea that the gospel of john was written fairly close to the death of christ, i thought modern schollars had dated it quite a bit later. also, as i understood it, none of the gospels were written by the person they are named for anyway, as a way to add weight to the account, this would suggest that it is a possibility that every gospel could be written by a woman.
another question that occours to me, and i note it for the sake of discussion, does the gender of the author change the context of the document in any way? wouldn't it be fair to say that the writers of the gospels go out of their way to remove themselves from the accounts. so being, the message is made the focus and not the messanger, speculation about the author is at best, acidemic and at worst, unfounded fanaticisim to equality or atheism.