Secret Gospels: Essays on Thomas and the Secret Gospel of Mark

Secret Gospels: Essays on Thomas and the Secret Gospel of Mark

by Marvin Meyer (Author)

Synopsis

Marvin Meyer is one of the leading experts on the secret gospels Gospel of Thomas, Secret Gospel of Mark, and others who has changed forever how we read the canonical gospels and understand early Christianity. In this new collection of his work, Meyer looks at these revolutionary texts in original and illuminating ways. He writes, for example, about the naked youths in the villa of the Mysteries. On the walls of a villa in Pompeii, a famous mural depicts a naked male reading from a scroll, a look of wonder on his face. A naked youth again appears in the Gospel of Mark, abandoning his garment and fleeing naked when apprehended during Jesus' arrest. A similar youth appears in the Secret Gospel of Mark. These youths, Meyer proposes, serve as an image of religious initiation, candidates for the mysteries of Dionysus or of Christ. This is one of the many aspects of the secret gospels that Meyer examines with expert insight and creativity. Topics range from gender and infancy stories to discipleship and the relationship of the Gospel of Thomas to Islamic literature. Meyer's spellbinding readings of these materials offer fresh understandings of the canonical gospels. Marvin Meyer is Griset Professor of Bible and Christian Studies, and Director of the Albert Schweitzer Institute at Chapman University, Orange, California. He is author of The Secret Teachings of Jesus: Four Gnostic Gospels and The Gospel of Thomas: The Hidden Sayings of Jesus, and co-editor of Jesus Then and Now (Trinity Press International).

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 208
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Published: 01 Feb 2003

ISBN 10: 1563384094
ISBN 13: 9781563384097

Media Reviews
The perceptive and witty insights of Marvin Meyer make his scholarly essays a delight to read. And contrary to some doubters, the Gospel of Thomas and the Secret Mark episode still provide vital clues for understanding Christianity s formative years. John Dart news editor, The Christian Century--John Dart
If you wish to be hooked, read Marvin Meyer's erudite and compelling essays on the gospels of Thomas and Secret Mark, for his fresh study reads with the authority and suspense of Agatha Christie at her best. He commands first-century Greek, Coptic, and Syriac/Aramaic/Hebrew scriptures, their wisdom and messianic epiphanies and key recent scholarly interpretations. A distinguished biblical and gnostic scholar, Meyer immerses us in the light of an age, offering his syncretistic insights. Quietly countering those who would dismiss an early dating for Thomas, he makes this extraordinary gospel more relevant, citing Paul as one probably versed in Thomas's Jesus. With precision, innovation, and supple humor he calls a spade a spade. A profound and essential book. Willis Barnstone Distinguished Professor, Indiana University Comparative Literature Institute of Biblical and Literature Studies--Willis Barnstone
Marvin Meyer's new book, Secret Gospels, offers many new insights among his knowlegeable and thoughtful discussions of these marvellous and famously difficult texts. Elaine Pagels--Elaine Pagels
Meyer (Bible & Christian studies, Chapman Univ.; director, Albert Schweitzer Inst.) is one of our most notable scholars on the extracoanonical mystery literature associated with the New Testament the Gospel of Thomas, the Secret Gospel of Mark, and the Gnostic Gospels. His new book deals principally with the enigmatic appearance of a naked or near-naked young man both in canonical and extracanonical writings dealing with Jesus. His book includes a respectful review of existing primary and secondary sources and culminates in a thoughtful comparison of the Mark fragments with the apparent myster-initiation depicted at the Villa of the Mysteries in Pompeii without, however, directly dealing with the potentially disturbing implications of that comparison regarding Jesus' own role in religious initiation practices. Still, his book is a capably written and thought-provoking discussion of a perennial puzzle in New Testament studies. Library Journal, March 2003--Sanford Lakoff
The Gospel of Thomas and the Secret Gospel of Mark are two early Christian texts known in the second century, suppressed, or simply lost, only to surface in the latter half of the twentieth century. Marvin Meyer has been one of the few New Testament scholars to make them a focus of his research and to incorporate them into a modern historical construct of Christian origins. For over twenty years Meyer has investigated the less-well known and less popular aspects of Christian origins, its lost gospels, and the unfamiliar ancient culture in which Christianity became a Hellenistic religion. His collected essays on the two most notorious of these ancient gospels, Thomas and Secret Mark, demonstrates their importance for the origins of Christianity and brings them into the main stream of New Testament scholarship. Charles W. Hedrick Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri--Sanford Lakoff
A compelling reconstruction of the place of these gospels within Christian origins. Religious Studies Review, Volume 29, Number 4, October 2003.--Sanford Lakoff
Heavily documented, interesting, challenging, with a provocative glimpse into early Christian literary history and theology. Currents in Theology & Mission, 4/04--Sanford Lakoff Currents In Theology and Mission
Author Bio
Marvin Meyer is Professor of Religious Studies at Chapman College.