Gospel Truth
By APRIL D. DECONICK
Published: December 1, 2007
AMID much publicity last year, the National Geographic
Society announced that a lost 3rd-century religious text had been found,
the Gospel of Judas Iscariot. The shocker: Judas didn’t betray
Jesus. Instead, Jesus asked Judas, his most trusted and beloved disciple,
to hand him over to be killed. Judas’s reward? Ascent to heaven
and exaltation above the other disciples.
It was a great story. Unfortunately, after re-translating
the society’s transcription of the Coptic text, I have found that
the actual meaning is vastly different. While National Geographic’s
translation supported the provocative interpretation of Judas as a hero,
a more careful reading makes clear that Judas is not only no hero, he
is a demon.
Several of the translation choices made by the society’s
scholars fall well outside the commonly accepted practices in the field.
For example, in one instance the National Geographic transcription refers
to Judas as a “daimon,” which the society’s experts
have translated as “spirit.” Actually, the universally accepted
word for “spirit” is “pneuma ” — in Gnostic
literature “daimon” is always taken to mean “demon.”
Likewise, Judas is not set apart “for” the
holy generation, as the National Geographic translation says, he is
separated “from” it. He does not receive the mysteries of
the kingdom because “it is possible for him to go there.”
He receives them because Jesus tells him that he can’t go there,
and Jesus doesn’t want Judas to betray him out of ignorance. Jesus
wants him informed, so that the demonic Judas can suffer all that he
deserves.
Perhaps the most egregious mistake I found was a single
alteration made to the original Coptic. According to the National Geographic
translation, Judas’s ascent to the holy generation would be cursed.
But it’s clear from the transcription that the scholars altered
the Coptic original, which eliminated a negative from the original sentence.
In fact, the original states that Judas will “not ascend to the
holy generation.” To its credit, National Geographic has acknowledged
this mistake, albeit far too late to change the public misconception.
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