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The Thirteenth Apostle: Revised Edition - What the Gospel of Judas Really Says (Paperback, Revised edition)
Loot Price: R959
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The Thirteenth Apostle: Revised Edition - What the Gospel of Judas Really Says (Paperback, Revised edition)
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In 2006 National Geographic released the first English translation
of the Gospel of Judas, a second-century text discovered in Egypt
in the 1970s. The translation caused a sensation because it seemed
to overturn the popular image of Judas the betrayer and instead
presented a benevolent Judas who was a friend of Jesus. In The
Thirteenth Apostle April DeConick offers a new translation of the
Gospel of Judas which seriously challenges the National Geographic
interpretation of a good Judas. Inspired by the efforts of the
National Geographic team to piece together this ancient manuscript,
DeConick sought out the original Coptic text and began her own
translation. "I didn't find the sublime Judas, at least not in
Coptic. What I found were a series of English translation choices
made by the National Geographic team, choices that permitted a
different Judas to emerge in the English translation than in the
Coptic original. Judas was not only not sublime, he was far more
demonic than any Judas I know in any other piece of early Christian
literature, Gnostic or otherwise." DeConick contends that the
Gospel of Judas is not about a "good" Judas, or even a "poor old"
Judas. It is a gospel parody about a "demon" Judas written by a
particular group of Gnostic Christians known as the Sethians who
lived in the second century CE. The purpose of the text was to
criticize 'mainstream' or apostolic Christianity from the point of
view of these Gnostic Christians, especially their doctrine of
atonement, their Eucharistic practices, and their creedal faith
which they claimed to have inherited from the twelve disciples.
Professor DeConick provides her English translation and
interpretation of this newly recovered gospel within the previously
overlooked context of a Christianity in the second century that was
sectarian and conflicted. The first book to challenge the National
Geographic version of the Gospel of Judas, The Thirteenth Apostle
is sure to inspire to fresh debate around this most infamous of
biblical figures. This fully revised and updated edition includes a
new chapter, 'Judas the Star', and a substantial new preface which
reflects upon the controversial reception of The Thirteenth Apostle
and the advances in scholarship that have been made since its
publication.
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