Wednesday, August 19, 2015

The Prove of the Wife of Jesus has Risen

The Prove if the Wife Of Jesus has Risen

Finding of New Evidence that Existence of Jesus's Wife and why the Vatican is Highly Against Evidence 

By Aye Sarita 
papyrus script "jesus states his wife..."


Harvard University Finding and State the following 







Introduction








The Gospel of Jesus’s Wife: Scientific testing and imaging as of March 2014

On September 18, 2012, Karen L. King announced the existence of a papyrus fragment 
dubbed The Gospel of Jesus’s Wife at the International Coptic Congress in Rome.
 In the months following this announcement, papyrological examination, scientific 
analysis of the ink and papyrus, and various forms of imaging were performed by 
multiple professional teams. These usually included comparative testing of a fragment
 of the Gospel of John in Coptic. No evidence of modern fabrication (“forgery”) 
was found. The results of these analyses do helpfully demonstrate a number of points, 
including:
  • The papyrus material is ancient, and can be dated to the seventh to eighth c.c.e.
  • The carbon composition of the ink, too, is consistent with ancient inks.
  • Microscopic imaging was used to investigate whether the ink might be pooled in

 damaged sections of the fragment in ways that would indicate it had been applied 
after the damage had already been done. No evidence of such pooling was found.
  • Careful examination was also made of certain letters, especially the all-important alpha 

on the heavily inscribed side of the fragment (“recto”) in line 4, which reads "my wife". 
If a sigma had been overwritten by this alpha, the meaning would have been changed 
from “the woman” to “my wife.” No evidence of overwriting is evident.
  • King has also done more research on the history of what early Christians had to say about

 Jesus’s marital status and on the interpretation of the fragment itself. She argues that t
he main topic of the fragment is to affirm that women who are mothers and wives can 
be disciples of Jesus—a topic that was hotly debated in early Christianity as celibate 
virginity increasingly became highly valued.







Papyrus fragment: front. Karen L. King 2012

“‘Jesus said to them, ‘My wife …’: A New Coptic Papyrus Fragment”

A critical edition, English translation, photographs, and an analysis of the material artifact, its language, meaning and history have now been published by Karen L. King in the Harvard Theological Review 107.2 (April 2014). The results of a papyrological examination, as well as Raman, FT-IR, and radiocarbon testing are summarized in reports also published there by the respective researchers. 

View fragment transcription and translation



















The Gospel of Jesus’s Wife 


















Testing of Harvard's University Findings 







Testing Indicates "Gospel of Jesus's Wife" Papyrus Fragment to be Ancient







By Jonathan Beasley
April 10, 2014
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.,—A wide range of scientific testing indicates 
that a papyrus fragment containing the words, "Jesus said to them, my wife" is
 an ancient document, dating between the sixth to ninth centuries CE. Its contents
 may originally have been composed as early as the second to fourth centuries.
The fragment does not in any way provide evidence that the historical Jesus 
was married, as Karen L. King, the Hollis Professor of Divinity at
Harvard Divinity School, has stressed since she announced the existence 
of the fragment in the fall of 2012. Rather, the fragment belongs to early 
Christian debates over whether it was better for Christians to be celibate 
virgins or to marry and have children. The fragment is weighing in on this issue, 
according to King.
"The main topic of the fragment is to affirm that women who are mothers and wives can
 be disciples of Jesus—a topic that was hotly debated in early Christianity as celibate 
virginity increasingly became highly valued," King explained.
After receiving the fragment in December 2011 from the owner, 
King took the papyrus to New York in 2012 to be examined by Roger Bagnall, director 
of the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University. After 
Bagnall's initial assessment that the fragment was ancient based on handwriting 
and other features, further analysis began in earnest.  
Over the past two years, extensive testing of the papyrus and the carbon ink, as well as
 analysis of the handwriting and grammar, all indicate that the existing material fragment 
dates to between the sixth and ninth centuries CE. None of the testing has produced any 
evidence that the fragment is a modern fabrication or forgery.
Two radiocarbon tests were conducted to determine the date of the papyrus. 
In the first test, the sample size was too small and resulted in an unreliable date.
 A second test performed by Noreen Tuross at Harvard University in conjunction 
with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Instituteproduced a date of origination for 
the piece of papyrus from 659 to 859 CE. Other testing with FT-IR microspectroscopy
 at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) confirmed the homogeneous chemical 
composition of the papyrus and examined patterns of oxidation.
James Yardley, Senior Research Scientist in the Center for Integrated Science 
and Engineering, Columbia University, and Alexis Hagadorn, Head of Conservation 
at Columbia University Libraries, used a technique called micro-Raman spectroscopy 
to determine that the carbon character of the ink matched samples of other papyri that 
date from the first to eighth centuries CE.
Malcolm Choat from Macquarie University examined the fragment at HDS and offered 
an independent assessment of the handwriting. 
Microscopic and multispectral imaging provided other significant information about 
the nature and extent of the damage and helped to resolve a variety of questions about
 possible forgery.  For example, if ink had pooled on the lower fibers of the front, it would
 have shown the papyrus was written on after it had been damaged. Or if the alpha had
 overwritten a sigma in line four, it would have shown that someone tampered with an
 ancient fragment that read “the woman” by changing it into “my wife.” No evidence of this kind is apparent, however.
After all the research was complete, King weighed all the evidence of the age and characteristics of the papyrus and ink, handwriting, language, and historical context to conclude the fragment is almost certainly a product of early Christians, not a modern forger.
King first announced the existence of the fragment on September 18, 2012, at the 
International Coptic Congress in Rome, and dubbed it "The Gospel of Jesus's Wife." 
The use of the word "gospel" makes no claim to canonical status. The title refers to the 
fragment's most distinctive claim (that Jesus was married), and serves as a short-hand 
reference to the fragment.
Nothing is known about the discovery of the fragment—which measures only about 
one-and-a-half inches by three inches—but it is assumed to have come from Egypt
 because it is written in Coptic, the form of the Egyptian language used by Christians t
here starting in the Roman imperial period.
Twice in the tiny fragment, Jesus speaks of his mother, his wife, and a female

disciple—one of whom may be identified as "Mary." The disciples discuss

whether Mary is worthy, and Jesus states that "she can be my disciple."
The real author of the fragment is not known and would likely remain unknown even 
if more of the text of the Gospel of Jesus's Wife had survived. This remaining piece is 
too small to know anything definite about who may have composed, read, or circulated it,
 except that they were Christians.
"This gospel fragment provides a reason to reconsider what we thought we knew
 by asking what the role claims of Jesus's marital status played historically in early 
Christian controversies over marriage, celibacy, and family," King said. 

Stay Tune i shall post more on this story .. so stay tuned... -Aye Sarita



Havard FULL Report 

This article offers a critical edition of a papyrus fragment in Coptic that contains a dialogue between Jesus and his disciples in which Jesus speaks of “my wife.”1 The fragment does not provide evidence that the historical Jesus was married but concerns an early Christian debate over whether women who are wives and mothers can be disciples of Jesus. Solely for purposes of reference, the fragment is given the title The Gospel of Jesus's Wife (GJW).2
The existence of the GJW papyrus was announced at the International Coptic Congress in Rome, September 18, 2012, and a draft of the critical edition with digital photographs was posted on the Harvard Divinity School website. The critical edition published here is very much a collaborative project, although any remaining defects are mine alone. Roger Bagnall, AnneMarie Luijendijk, and Ariel Shisha-Halevy offered significant contributions, and I offer them my deepest gratitude. Their continued help and the aid of many other scholars and scientists are reflected in the critical edition published here. Also helpful were many of the critical and constructive comments, questions, and analyses in three peer reviews, in online media, and through private communications. I have attempted throughout to give serious consideration to all the relevant points of which I am aware, although the overt discussion of forgery is taken up only in the section on dating.
In addition to those already named, let me acknowledge and thank the following for their enormous generosity of time and expertise: Rose Lincoln and B. D. Colen produced high-resolution digital photographs. Malcolm Choat examined the fragment during a visit to Harvard (November 14–15, 2012). Microscopic imaging was conducted by Douglas Fishkind and Casey Kraft with Henry Lie at the Harvard Center for Biological Imaging (December 17, 2012). Raman testing of the ink was done by James Yardley with Alexis Hagadorn at Columbia University (March 11–12, 2013). Radiocarbon analysis was performed by Greg Hodgins at the University of Arizona Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Laboratory (June–July, 2013). Funding for the carbon-14 (14C) testing was generously provided by a gift from Tricia Nichols. Multispectral imaging was performed by Michael Toth and select images were processed by William Christians-Barry (August 26, 2013). Timothy Swager, Joseph Azzarelli, and John Goods performed Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) testing at MIT (November 5, 2013). Harvard librarians, especially Douglas Gragg, were gracious and patient supporters. Harvard's communications professionals took the lead in public dissemination. Noreen Tuross gave invaluable advice and conducted a crucial range of testing including a second radiocarbon determination. Hal Taussig offered collegial counsel. David Hempton, Dean of the Harvard Divinity School was a source of consistent support and much-needed advice throughout the entire process. And finally, to the many other supporters not named here, I offer my sincere appreciation.
The critical edition begins with a transcription of the Coptic text and English translation, followed by a discussion of the material artifact (papyrology, paleography, form and uses), language, interpretation, and the history of the manuscript. Summary reports of analysis performed on the ink and papyrus completed to date follow. Full reports, imaging, and other supplementary materials may be found athttp://www.gospelofjesusswife.hds.harvard.edu/ (GJW webpage).

Transcription

  • S0017816014000133_eqnU1
3

Translation

  • S0017816014000133_eqnU2

Papyrological Description

The fragment has a largely regular rectangular shape measuring ca. 4 cm in height by ca. 8 cm in width. The lines of text are incomplete, suggesting it belonged to a larger piece of papyrus. It is not possible to determine its original size because none of the margins are preserved, and no known direct parallels exist upon which to reconstruct the text.5 The fragment may have been inscribed on a single new leaf or a reused piece of papyrus, perhaps taken from a wide margin or an uninscribed portion of a leaf.6 (The terms “recto” [→] and “verso” [↓] are used solely to indicate the dominant fiber patterns on each side.7)
The extant papyrus has suffered significant damage. On the right third of the verso (↓) (measuring ca. 3.4 cm in width), some letters are visible, although there is a notable loss of ink.8 On the left two-thirds (measuring ca. 4.6 cm in width), many of the vertical fibers and pith are missing. Choat concludes that “the lack of ink on the left two-thirds of the ‘back’ is clearly caused by the loss of most of the upper layer of fibers at this point.”9 Numerous holes are evident in this section of the fragment, for example a hole in the final  in  (→3). Indeed, back-lit digital photographs show light streaming through the left two-thirds but not the right third. On one section on the verso (↓) measuring ca. 0.6 cm wide by 4 cm high (located ca. 2.2 cm from left margin), the vertical fibers are almost entirely absent and the horizontal fibers of the recto (→3) are clearly visible. Moreover, the division between the two sections is marked by a vertical break that appeared on initial observation of the verso to be a collesis. The recto, however, shows no corresponding indication. On viewing additional imaging, Bagnall suggested that what we are seeing is a strip of reed from the “verso” layer lifting away from the “recto” layer.10
Many fibers on the left edge of the recto (→) are damaged or misaligned. The bottom and right (→) edges appear somewhat jagged. In contrast, the top edge is clean and appears to have been cut.11On the recto, one can observe many places where the pith is gone or fibers are broken or misplaced; note, for example, line →4, where the papyrus is folded over in a tiny flap on the upper stroke of the and another on the , just above the hole in the papyrus that mars these letters. Moreover, in →3, dislocated fibers have obscured the first letter of the line due to damage after the page was inscribed. In →4, several letters have discontinuous strokes with missing ink because of damage to the material. For instance, the diagonal stroke before the  lacks its center where there is a small hole in the papyrus. And in that same line (→4), the horizontal bar of the  of  is split.
Examination with microscopic imaging using top, side, and back lighting does not show ink on the lower fibers of the recto.12
Visible, however, is some material13 of a brown-orange color on the top of the ink, observable with the naked eye on the upper right of the  in  (line →3) and on the lower stroke of the first  in (line →7). Tinier bits of this material “splattered” toward the right side of the recto can be observed in the microscopic imaging.
Raman analysis done by James Yardley and Alexis Hagadorn has determined that the fragment is inscribed in ink based on carbon “lamp black” pigments.14Analysis indicates the possibility of similar but not identical inks on each side, perhaps indicating different batches of ink. The differences, however, fall within the range of experimental error so this possibility is not certain. In addition, Columbia researchers are studying details in Raman spectra that may indicate aging of carbon black pigments. Their research to date shows that details of the Raman spectra of carbon-based pigments inGJW match closely those of several manuscripts from the Columbia collection of papyri dated between 1 b.c.e. and 800 c.e., while they deviate significantly from modern commercial lamp black pigments. The implication is that the GJW fragment belongs within the ancient group.
Radiocarbon analysis conducted by Greg Hodgins at the NSR-Arizona ANS Laboratory (June–July 2013) produced a date of 404 to 209 b.c.e. The reliability of this date is problematic, however, given that the small size of the sample led to the interruption of the cleaning protocol in order to reduce loss. In addition, the low δ13C (stable isotope) value of 14.3% is odd, although not impossible among plants that employ the C4 biosynthetic pathway.15 Initially it was speculated that this oddity might indicate the presence of an unknown contaminant that would result in an older-than-expected dating. Subsequent FT-IR microspectroscopic analysis by the Swager team at MIT did not, however, identify a specific contaminant (beyond the “orange” spots).16 A second radiocarbon analysis of the papyrus was done by Noreen Tuross (Harvard University) in conjunction with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (January–February 2014). She reports a δ13C value of −12‰ and a mean date of 741 c.e. for GJW.17
The FT-IR testing did, however, produce additional information.18 The team concluded the papyrus's chemical composition and patterns of oxidation are consistent with old papyrus by comparing the GJWfragment with a fragment of the Gospel of John (dated by Hodgins's and Tuross's radiocarbon testing to the seventh–eighth centuries c.e.) and with modern papyrus. Neither the recto and verso nor the inked and “bare” areas of the GJW papyrus displayed major spectral differences. The nature of the oxidative aging of both GJW and the John fragments, however, differs notably from modern papyrus.19
Current testing thus supports the conclusion that the papyrus and ink of GJW are ancient.

Paleography

The recto (→) has eight incomplete lines of unimodular Coptic script, and the verso (↓) has six. With small letters and relatively little space between the lines, the recto has a cramped look, due perhaps to the need to fit the desired text onto a limited area.20 The letters on the verso, however, are somewhat larger and the spacing is broader.
The letters are slightly irregular in optical density (e.g., appearing sometimes lighter or darker) and in size (measuring ca. 3 to 5 mm in height and ca. 2 to 5 mm in width). Their irregularity can be appreciated by noting, for example, that epsilons measure from ca. 3 to 4.5 mm in height and from ca. 2 to 4 mm in width.
AnneMarie Luijendijk observed the following from visual examination of the papyrus:21 Letters are unadorned and without ligatures. The vertical strokes are generally upright; mu is formed with four strokes; epsilon, theta, omicron, and sigma are wide and round; upsilon is tall and narrow with a highv-shaped top. The scribe may have aimed at bilinear (short) letters, but the lines are not entirely straight, and the spacing varies such that this is not always successful. The scribe placed fairly narrow superlinear strokes above single letters. The name Jesus is written as a nomen sacrum (→ 2, 4), a scribal feature common in Christian manuscripts.22
Notable, too, is a blank area followed by an oblique stroke in →4, possibly functioning like aparagraphos to mark a textual division.23 The odd appearance of the sigma in  (→3) may be due to a phonological confusion of zeta with sigma, corrected by overwriting a sigma. Additionally, the  in  (→5) appears to have been corrected, but the  in  shows no sign of correction.24
The uneven optical density and occasional smudging of the letters may be due not only to abrasion, but to dipping too much ink or re-inking the pen. Bagnall suggests that the pen itself may have been blunt and not holding the ink well.25 Magnification also shows a number of places where the ends of letters form tails or forks; these could indicate the use of a brush rather than a pen, or alternatively may be due to a poor pen and inadequate scribal skill.26
Finally, due to the poor preservation of the verso, it is not possible to determine conclusively whether both sides of the papyrus are from the same scribal hand, although they appear similar. Differences in spacing and the possibility that different batches of ink were used on the two sides are also not unequivocal indicators.
In summary, the general impression of the recto is a crude and unpracticed, functional script, such as one might expect from a scribe who has not progressed beyond an elementary “school hand.”27 As several experts have helpfully pointed out, the script shows the characteristics of neither a formal literary (“professional”) hand nor documentary script.28 Magical, school, or private texts do offer cases of idiosyncrasy and crudeness.29

Form and Use(s)

The cramped size and crudeness of the script almost certainly rule out the form of a formal literary codex or production for public reading, for example in a liturgical church or school setting.30 Once we leave the world of the formal codex (or scroll), however, we enter into an astonishing diversity of literary productions and their functions in a wide variety of settings. The extant papyri include single leaves, scraps, and even miniature “codices,” which are often characterized by crude and idiosyncratic handwriting, as well as orthographic, grammatical, and other scribal infelicities. Often their functions are obscure, and many are without secure provenance.31 The fact that, as Frankfurter observes, “the concept of supernatural power in Egypt was strongly tied to the notion of writing” indicates that some of these papyri may have had utility for protection (from demons).32 Moreover, multiple functions or reuse confuse tidy categorization (e.g., in distinguishing scripture from magic).33 The poor scribal and literary quality of such texts probably tells us more about the social and economic status of whoever produced and used them than it does about their relative importance to their owners.
The GJW fragment shares the features of many of these artifacts.34 Some have suggested that it may be an amulet due to its compact size and regular shape.35 Although no folds remain, the regular edges may indicate where a larger leaf has broken along the fold lines, leaving a middle section of the page without margins.36 The very mention of Jesus (and his mother Mary) may have given GJW an aura of sacrality, and the seemingly odd appearance of the “curse” in line →6 may indicate that the papyrus was considered to have protective value. (Re)use as an amulet would not, however, eliminate the possibility that it may be an excerpt from a longer work used for private study or devotional use or that it may have originated as an aide-mémoire or even a practice text.37
The language of the fragment is standard Sahidic. While the orthography of the first person singular suffix pronoun as object of the preposition  is normally , the spelling of  (→1 and →5) is comprehensible within the range of Sahidic orthography38 and is not sufficient to indicate dialectal influence, e.g., from Lycopolitan, in which  also appears. Given that Sahidic can be well characterized as “an aggregation of linguistic habits only imperfectly and variously standardized,”39 such orthographic variation is not consequential.40
Inscription in Sahidic provides only a rough indication of the papyrus's geographical provenance and region of circulation since it may also point toward the increasing tendency of Christians to use Sahidic, notably as “the first Coptic dialect into which the Scriptures were translated” in the third to fourth centuries.41
A substantial portion of early Coptic literature was translated from Greek, including the closest parallels to GJW,42suggesting that it, too, may originally have been composed in Greek although it is extant only in Coptic. While plausible, this supposition cannot be definitively established on the basis of this tiny fragment.
The grammar and syntax of GJW can be described as follows:
→1  is the extraposited subject43 (feminine singular possessive article  plus noun ).  is the past tense conjugation base with feminine singular personal intermediate.  consists of the double-object infinitive  that “takes two objects always immediately suffixed in a string, one after another, expressing personal recipient + thing given.”44 While rare, the absence of the mediating direct object marker  before  has precedents.45
→2 : This sentence contains the suffixally conjugated verboid  that “signals direct discourse”; it is almost always completed by  “to introduce reported discourse,”46 but note the variant and discussion of line →4 below.
→3 : The verb  (Graeco-Coptic related to the Greek ἀρνέομαι) can be intransitive47 or transitive (with the direct object marker  before the entity term). Here the previous sentence must end with  because if  were the object of , it would need to be marked by the direct object marker . A durative sentence () follows, with a definite subject () and durative infinitive (here the transitive verb  with object marked by  meaning “to be worthy of”).48 There is no clear antecedent for the feminine singular personal suffix . The sentence could be restored to end with the negator , but this is not required grammatically. Or the  could, inter alia, begin a new sentence or be restored with the connector .
→4 : Although not standard, the absence of  following  to introduce direct discourse is attested in Gos. Thom. and the Manichaean Kephalaia, which also vary their usage of  with and without .49 In line →2 above, the standard form of  with  appears, indicating the usage is variable here as well.
The antecedent of the third person plural personal suffix () of the preposition  is most probably “the disciples” (see →2), establishing that the fragment contains a dialogue between Jesus and the disciples.
Regarding  (my wife),  (singular) always means “wife” not “woman.”50 Given that Jesus is the speaker, the possessive article indicates that he is speaking of his wife.
→5  is a durative sentence composed of a third person feminine singular personal prefix of the durative sentence () with future (), verbal auxiliary  (be able to), prenominal infinitive () with zero article phrase (), and preposition () with first person singular suffix pronoun object (). Layton notes that  in combination with  expresses the present tense “without distinguishing present and future” and that the durative sentence  plus zero article phrase means “have/perform the function of, have the characteristic of.” Moreover, it can have “ingressive meaning, expressing entry into a state; in other words, the distinction between being and becoming is cancelled.”51 The sentence should therefore be understood to mean that “she” is able to perform the functions of or have the characteristics of being a disciple. Assuming Jesus is speaking here, the prepositional phrase indicates she is able to be a disciple “to me,” i.e., to Jesus. The reference for  (she) is not certain, but the immediate extant antecedent is “my wife.”
→6  is a non-durative sentence with the jussive conjugation base .52 The jussive expresses a command and is used only in dialogue.53 This sentence offers two interesting features. The first, , apparently contradicts the well-established pattern in which the attributive clause after a definite (specific) antecedent takes the relative form, while after a non-definite (non-specific) antecedent it takes the circumstantial form;54 that is, one would expect either (relative) or  (circumstantial).  may, however, be regarded as a case of the phenomenon studied by Shisha-Halevy of “zero-determined generic noun as antecedent of a relative (not circumstantial!).”55 He regards it as a rare attestation of an as yet only partially understood phenomenon in which “non-specific, as a rule generic nuclei combine with the Relative conversion.”56In this case, , albeit not definite, combines with a relative clause.
The other issue in →6 is the lexical identification of the infinitive. Luijendijk, Shisha-Halevy,57 and the third reviewer suggested  (swell). The term is often used to describe unpleasant bodily tumors, illness, and swellings58 and would fit the proverbial character of a call for the wicked to suffer.
→7  is a durative sentence with an extraposited topic (, the personal independent), first person singular personal prefix of the durative sentence (), qualitative infinitive (), and preposition () with third person feminine suffix pronoun as object (). The preposition  + infinitive forms an infinitive phrase (“in order to, to”).  + main clause (“because”) is not possible because the ink traces at the end of the line preclude the letter .
→8 This damaged line contains only one visible word, , the noun with the indefinite article ().

Genre: Dialogue and Polemics

The extant text of GJW presents a dialogue between Jesus and his disciples. In line →2, the disciples are addressing their remarks to Jesus, and in line→4, the antecedent of the third person plural “them” most probably refers to “the disciples.” It is therefore highly probable that Jesus is directly addressing his disciples in the first person in the other extant lines. On the verso, another instance of “my mother” occurs, indicating more direct speech. It is not clear whether the dialogue was part of a more extensive work that contained narrative passages.
Dialogues are familiar constituents of early Christian gospel literature, both in canonical and extracanonical gospels,59and the broader generic category for GJW is gospel, insofar as this category is defined capaciously to include all early Christian literature whose narrative or dialogue encompasses some aspect of Jesus's career (including post-resurrection appearances) or that designates itself as “gospel” already in antiquity.60 Although it is unknown whether the fragment belongs to a larger work titled a “gospel,” in content it most closely resembles works that are (e.g., Matt, Luke, Gos. Thom.Gos. Mary, and Gos. Phil.).61
The dialogue concerns family and discipleship. Jesus speaks of “my mother” and “my wife” in lines →1 and 4, and line →5 refers to a female person who is able to be Jesus's “disciple.” Moreover, there appears to be some controversy or polemic, although it is unclear precisely what the concerns are. The term  in line →3 indicates that something or someone is being denied or rejected, and the line goes on to address whether Mary is worthy of something. In addition, line →7 contains what appears to be, if not a curse, at least a strong wish that the wicked should swell up, indicating some kind of antipathy.
More tentatively, the first four extant letters of line →1 () may be the conclusion of a well-known Jesus saying found in Matt 10:37, Luke 14:26 (Q 14:26), and Gos. Thom. 55 and 101.62 This suggestion is based on two factors. First, the topics of family, worthiness, and discipleship are similar, and secondly, the version in Gos. Thom. (NHC II,2 49.34, 36) also ends with these four Coptic letters.63 In addition, line →5 offers a construction () similar to Gos. Thom. 55 and 101 (though the sentence in GJW is positive and the personal prefix is feminine not masculine). Furthermore, the version of the saying in Gos. Thom. 101 (NHC II,2 49.36–50.2) continues with a contrast between Jesus's (natal?) mother and his true mother who gave him life. While no such contrast is apparent in GJW, the similarity suggests that the restoration of “li[fe]” at the end of line →1 () is possible. Together these similarities make the restoration of some version of this saying highly likely in my opinion. However, given that none of the variants in this widespread tradition exactly match GJW, the precise form of the saying here cannot be definitively determined, nor is its direct literary dependence upon Gos. Thom. assured.
The verso of the fragment, which has only two clearly legible Coptic words, “my mother” and “forth,” offers little help to interpretation. Nor is it certain that the verso text belongs to the same literary composition as the recto, although that should be considered a possibility given the topic of “my mother” on both sides of the fragment.
Much remains tantalizingly open, given the tiny size of the fragment, the loss of text at the beginning and end of every extant line, and the serious damage, especially to line →8 and to the entire verso. What is being taught about family and discipleship? What is the issue (or issues) of the polemics? What is being stated about “my mother,” “Mary,” “my wife,” and “my disciple”? To whom do they refer? Might these figures be related? If so, how? Any answers to these questions will remain speculative to a greater or lesser degree, as is true for all historical reconstruction, but all the more so for fragmentary texts like GJW. Nonetheless, the themes of family and discipleship stand out, as well as the attention given to female figures. The topic of Jesus's marital status invites consideration as well.

Who is Worthy and Able to be Jesus's Disciple?

Family and discipleship were issues that deeply concerned early Christians. In a world where family membership assumed strong ties of duty, loyalty, and a social identity that carried religious or cultic obligations, those who followed Jesus would often have found themselves at odds with natal family members. Sayings in the early gospel tradition emphasize that mission and loyalty to Jesus should override familial relations and could put followers at risk of losing their lives.64
Yet at the same time, Jesus's followers were constituting themselves using the language of family, with God as Father, Jesus as his Son, and members of the churches as brothers and sisters—or alternatively Christ as bridegroom and the Church as his virginal bride. For example, in Mark 3:31–35 when Jesus's mother and brothers come asking for him, Jesus tells the crowd, “Whosoever does the will of God is my brother, and sister, and mother.”65 The Gospel of Thomas differentiates natal and spiritual families in the sharpest terms. For example, in Gos. Thom. 101, Jesus distinguishes between parents one should hate and those one should love, differentiating his (birth?) mother from his “true” mother who gave him life.66 And in saying 105 Jesus says, “Whoever knows father and mother67 will be called the child of a harlot” (Gos. Thom. 50:16–18), equating birth through human lust with sexual illegitimacy and implying that one's true identity is as a child of the divine Father (and Mother?).68 By using this strong language of hating family, slurring natal relations as illegitimacy and harlotry, and by contrasting natal family with the family of God in Christ, gospel writers were attempting to dis-embed believers from their natal families, at least in terms of primary loyalty, and to re-embed them as concrete members in a new (fictive) family, the church. In later centuries, these sayings took on new significance as Christians faced ruptures with natal families and broader communities during times of persecution69 or as believers were urged to give up marriage and reproduction in favor of lives of sexual renunciation.70
Might the similarities of these dominical sayings to the dialogue between Jesus and his disciples inGJW indicate similar concerns with the cost of discipleship or the identification of one's true (spiritual) family? Jesus speaks in GJW about worthiness and who is able to be his disciple, and, as we have seen, the mention of family members (mother and wife) in such a context is not surprising. Indeed the clear focus on female figures—“Mary,” “my mother,” “my wife,” “my (female) disciple”—suggests a special interest in the worthiness of women to be disciples. That someone or something is being denied or rejected (→3), that someone speaks about the (un)worthiness of Mary (→3), and that Jesus defends some particular woman's ability to be his disciple (→5) all seem to indicate that the topic under discussion concerns questions or challenges about women and discipleship, in particular sexually active and reproductive women (wives and mothers). We know these were topics under debate in the early period of Christian formation. For example, in Gos. Thom. 114 Peter declares, “Let Mary leave us, for women are not worthy of life” (a position Jesus corrects), and 1 Timothy condemns those who forbid marriage, insisting that women will be saved through childbearing (4:1–5; 2:15). Might GJW, too, be weighing in on such controversies? Let us take a closer look.

Women and Discipleship: Mary, My Mother, My Wife, My Disciple

While certainly Jesus's reference to “my wife” is the most startling aspect of the fragment for modern readers, it is also notable that he refers as well to “my mother,” “Mary,” and “my (female) disciple.” All these figures, except a wife, are characters in narratives of Jesus's life found in early Christian writings both within and outside of the New Testament canon. It is not entirely clear, however, how many women are being referred to in GJW,71 who they are, precisely what is being said about them, or what larger issues are under discussion.
To whom, for example, does “Mary” refer—Jesus's mother, his wife, a female disciple, yet another figure, or even all of these? Early Christianity's well-known profusion and confusion of Marys should make us cautious in identifying Mary here. “Mary” was a popular name among Jewish women, and six of the sixteen named women in the New Testament are called “Mary.”72 Two Marys, however, are particularly prominent: Jesus's mother and Mary Magdalene. It seems likely that “Mary” refers to one of these, but which? Orthography is not decisive since early Christian literature uses the spelling of “Mary” () found in GJW →3 variably for both Mary the mother of Jesus and Mary Magdalene.73Further difficulty arises in that later tradition not infrequently assigns to the mother Mary roles otherwise belonging to Mary Magdalene,74 and the reverse occurs as well, albeit more rarely.75 Both are traditionally regarded as disciples of Jesus. In one case multiple Mary figures are directly identified.Gospel of Philip 59.6–11 first refers to three Marys but then conflates them into a single figure76 (There are three who always walked with the Lord: Mary his mother and her sister and Magdalene, who is called his partner [koinônos]. For Mary is his sister and his mother and his spouse [hôtre]).77
Moreover, it is possible that the references to mother, Mary, and wife do not refer to characters in the career of the historical Jesus but are being deployed metaphorically as figures of the Church (fem.) or heavenly Wisdom (Sophia; fem.) or symbolically/typologically as brides of Christ or even mothers. Examples abound. In the later church, Jesus's mother is presented as the model for virgins who are understood as brides of Christ. Athanasius, for example, writes: “But Mary, the bearer of God, remains a virgin [so that she might be a pattern for] everyone coming after her. If a woman desires to remain a virgin and bride of Christ, she can look to her [Mary’s] life and imitate it.”78 Thus Mary the mother is, in that sense, “the image” for both his mother and his bride. As for Mary Magdalene, she too was allegorically interpreted as the bride of Christ, for example in a fourth-century intertextual interpretation of Song 3 with John 20.79 Moreover, in Gos. Phil., it may be that Mary Magdalene is identified as “the mother of angels” and the type of the heavenly Wisdom.80 However, Gos. Phil. also teaches that Mary the mother conceived not by the Holy Spirit but from the Father of the All, and from their union Jesus's body came into being (Gos. Phil. 71:4–9; see also 55:23–36). Thus Gos. Phil. ascribes roles in the heavenly drama of salvation to the “historical” figures of both Mary Magdalene and Jesus's mother.
Much more could be said here, but this brief discussion already illustrates that early Christian literature offers numerous examples where a Mary appears as Jesus's mother, bride, sister, heavenly Wisdom, Church, or archetype for virginal brides of Christ. Moreover, the practices of “confusing” or identifying various Marys with each other or assigning them metaphorical or typological roles in Christian dramas of salvation demonstrate the “flexibility” of early tradition in appealing to these important female figures for various ends.
Where might the references to “mother,” “Mary,” “my wife,” and “my disciple” in GJW be situated in this field? The polemics of the fragment may help in answering this question. What are the issues under debate?
While non-Christian outsiders did ridicule the notion of Mary's virginal motherhood,81 among Christians Jesus's mother became increasingly valorized, even venerated, for her exemplary piety and virginity.82Her motherhood, however, was also a crucial, if contentious, site to explore and debate theological questions about the nature of the incarnation. Certainly some Christians were questioning the fleshly status of Jesus's birth, suggesting for example that his birth mother was only a pipe through which he flowed, contributing nothing.83 Other Christians emphasized the very physical character of the birth.84For GJW, the insistence that his mother gave him life might well be an affirmation that his birth mother did indeed give him life—perhaps in opposition to views such as that of Gos. Thom. 101, which distinguishes Jesus's birth mother from his true mother. While such debates may have their focus on the incarnation or the spiritual nature of believers, representations of Jesus's mother also impacted Christian attitudes toward women generally, especially in regard to controversies over female virginity and reproduction. If GJW →3 concerns Jesus's mother, it would seem to support mothers against those who deny their worthiness.
What about Jesus's reference to “my wife” (GJW →4)? Might it belong to intra-Christian polemics over the value of marriage? Let us consider this question in the broader context of what early Christians said about Jesus's marital status.85
The New Testament gospels never explicitly claim that Jesus was not married, but other literature does portray Christ as married metaphorically to the Church or to Jerusalem.86 The first Christians to claim that Jesus was not married used the claim to denounce all marriage, according to Clement of Alexandria. In his Stromateis, he reports on some second-century Christians “who say outright that marriage is fornication and teach that it was introduced by the devil. They proudly say that they are imitating the Lord who neither married nor had any possession in this world, boasting that they understand the gospel better than anyone else.”87 Tertullian, too, stated that Christ was “totally unwed” (innuptus in totum) and he urged believers to a higher perfection by imitating Christ's status as spado in carne (“an impotent person” or “eunuch in flesh”—perhaps referring to Matt 19:8–9, 12), although Tertullian invoked Jesus's celibacy not to forbid marriage altogether but to charge believers against a second marriage.88 As a high valuation of celibacy and virginity flourished, the position that Jesus was a virgin who never married came to be dominant, even though the extreme denunciation of marriage was rejected.89 On the other hand, the ascetic movement tended to produce many “brides of Christ,” virgins who pledged themselves to him in “spiritual marriage.”90 Without referring to a married Jesus, however, other Christians already in the second century pushed back against the devaluation or rejection of marriage and childbearing. 1 Timothy, for example, requires bishops to be married (3:2), argues that woman are saved by bearing children (2:15), and rebukes those who reject marriage as liars possessed by demons (4:15).
Arguably, however, Gos. Phil. does portray Mary Magdalene as the spousal partner of the fleshly (incarnate) Jesus, as part of its complex theological articulation of Jesus's incarnation and Christian salvation.91 It interprets Eph 5:22–33 in conjunction with a developing incarnational theology in which everything about Jesus is considered to have spiritual meaning, not only his teaching and deeds, but his birth, death, and resurrection—and his marriage. The Gospel of Philip interprets that marriage as a symbolic paradigm enacted by Christians in an initiation ritual (involving the normal water baptism, anointing with oil, the communal greeting of a kiss, and the Eucharist meal) that effectively made initiates into members of the body of Christ, the Church, and thus restored human unity with the divine. Just as Jesus's incarnation was the result of the union of the Father of the All with the virgin, so, too, the spiritual truth that Jesus taught in his marriage with Mary Magdalene was the union and restoration to unity with God. Baptism also purified Christians from demon possession and its pollutions, so that marriage between Christians was pure, free from demonic presence, and a matter of will not the lust of sexual desire. In short, Gos. Phil. offers an incarnational theology that embraces the pure marriage of Christians as a paradigm established by Christ in his own incarnate life.92
While it is impossible to read such a fully developed incarnational theology into the GJW fragment, if “Mary” (GJW →3) is the antecedent for “my wife” (GJW →4), it may be that this Mary is understood to be Mary Magdalene. Moreover, if the antecedent for “disciple” (GJW →5) is “my wife” (GJW →4), what might the polemics in GJW imply?
While later tradition in the West erroneously identified Mary Magdalene as a repentant prostitute,93earlier Christian literature portrays her as an exemplary woman disciple and even a leader in the Jesus movement.94 Some early Christian writings, however, challenge her status,95 notably through the figure of Peter.96 In Gos. Mary, for example, Peter states that Jesus loved her more than other women (10:1–3), but later he and Andrew challenge her role as a leading disciple (17:10–22). Levi, however, defends her, stating:  (For if the Savior made her worthy, who are you then for your part to reject her? Assuredly the Savior's knowledge of her is completely reliable. That is why he loved her more than us; 18:10–15).97 Jesus's love of Mary affirms her status as favored disciple and does not explicitly refer to her as a wife.98 There are, however, some intriguing semantic similarities to GJW. Although the precise terms used in Gos. Mary are different from GJW →3, the Greek ἄξιος can render the Coptic ,99 and the semantic ranges of  (cast out, discard) and  (deny, reject) are perhaps not so far apart. Moreover, grammatically, the antecedent of  in GJW →3 could be  (discipleship), a point that would fit Jesus's statement in GJW →5 that “she is able to be my disciple.” Such similarities are not sufficient to establish a direct literary relationship between the two works. The relatively widespread polemic against Mary Magdalene as beloved of Jesus and as a follower whose discipleship is challenged, however, provides a compelling context in which to read theGJW fragment.
Finally, let us consider the remarkable opinion of Simon Peter in Gos. Thom. 114:  (Let Mary leave us, for women are not worthy of life).100 Given the “confusion” of Marys, it is again not entirely clear who is being referred to here. But whether Mary is Jesus's mother, the prominent disciple Mary Magdalene, or even some third Mary, the statement that all women are not worthy of life is remarkable. And even though Jesus steps in to defend Mary (and women), stating that he will make her a “living spirit resembling you males,”101 this response is not a particularly robust defense of femaleness. In contrast, Jesus's statement in GJW that his mother brought him life and is worthy (GJW→ 1, 3) and his claim that his wife is able to be his disciple (GJW →4–5) offer a more robust affirmation that women who are wives and mothers are worthy and able to be disciples of Jesus.
In the end, many possibilities remain open. The Mary in line →3 could refer the Jesus's mother, his wife, or even a different figure. Jesus's marriage in GJW might be carnal, celibate,102 metaphorical, and/or symbolic-paradigmatic. I consider it highly likely, however, that the polemical issue of the dialogue concerns the discipleship of women. There is no direct evidence that the issue of women's discipleship under discussion here centered around leadership roles within Christian communities. Rather it may be that GJW is interested in countering views that valued virginal celibacy over marriage and childbirth or positions that made rejecting sexual life a requirement for discipleship. The dialogue may be representing Jesus's mother and his wife as paradigms for married, child-bearing Christian women and affirming that they are worthy and able to be his disciples. Other interpretations are of course possible, but this one makes good sense within the early history of Christianity, when questions of marriage and reproduction, the status of Mary the mother and Mary Magdalene, and the meaning of Jesus's incarnation were all widespread topics of theological and ethical concern.

Ancient Provenance

Papyrus texts written in the Coptic (Sahidic) language were produced almost exclusively in Egypt between approximately the third century (when Coptic came into circulation) and the tenth century (when papyrus largely was no longer used). Most ancient finds come from tombs and burials, within caches of private documents in ancient towns, or in rubbish dumps. Some papyri have been reused in mummification or book cartonnage. The provenance of most Coptic papyri, however, remains uncertain.103 Where the GJW fragment was found is unknown, but its poor condition suggests that it may have come from a rubbish dump or a burial site, although other contexts cannot be ruled out.104 Its content and the use of nomina sacra indicate production and use by Christians.

Modern Period

The current owner of the papyrus states that he acquired the papyrus in 1999. Upon request for information about provenance, the owner provided me with a photocopy of a contract for the sale of “6 Coptic papyrus fragments, one believed to be a Gospel” from Hans-Ulrich Laukamp, dated November 12, 1999, and signed by both parties.105 A handwritten comment on the contract states: “Seller surrenders photocopies of correspondence in German. Papyri were acquired in 1963 by the seller in Potsdam (East Germany).” The current owner said that he received the six papyri in an envelope and himself conserved them between plates of plexiglass/lucite.
The owner also sent me scanned copies of two photocopies. One is of an unsigned and undated handwritten note in German, stating the following:
Professor Fecht believes that the small fragment, approximately 8 cm in size, is the sole example of a text in which Jesus uses direct speech with reference to having a wife. Fecht is of the opinion that this could be evidence for a possible marriage.106
If these two documents pertain to the GJW fragment currently on loan to Harvard University, they would indicate that it was in Germany in the early 1960s.107
In July 2010, the owner contacted me, requesting I look at a Coptic papyrus in his collection, and subsequently sent photographs. In December 2011, he delivered the GJW papyrus by hand to Harvard Divinity School for study and publication. In March 2012, the GJW fragment was examined at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World in New York, by the Institute's director Roger Bagnall and by AnneMarie Luijendijk (Princeton University). Announcement of the discovery was made at the International Association for Coptic Studies meeting in Rome, September 18, 2012, and a draft edition with photographs was posted online. The open and lively discussion that followed gave helpful direction and focus to subsequent research, including further study of the papyrus and ink, detailed above.

Dating the Manuscript and the Question of Forgery

From the moment the fragment's existence was announced, discussion of dating focused on the question of whether it was produced in antiquity or was fabricated in modernity with the intent to deceive (“forgery”108). This question deserves serious consideration and requires taking account of all the pertinent factors as a whole. These include: characteristics of the materials (papyrus and ink); application of the ink on the page; handwriting; language; compositional practice; the provenance of discovery; and historical contextualization.109 Let us consider each in turn.
The scientific testing completed thus far consistently provides positive evidence of the antiquity of the papyrus and ink, including radiocarbon, spectroscopic, and oxidation characteristics, with no evidence of modern fabrication. Hypothetically, a clever forger could acquire a piece of ancient papyrus and fabricate ink from ancient papyrus fragments or other vegetable matter—both of which would pass these kinds of inspection. Yardley comments, however, that while correct, “in practice this may not be so simple. The soot created in this way would not be at all the same as the soot normally used for inks unless the person who burned the papyrus was exceedingly careful to follow a procedure similar to or related to the processes used by the ancients.”110 Moreover, the very early (unreliable?) 14C dating is problematic since it requires hypothesizing either that a scribe already in antiquity acquired a centuries-old papyrus to inscribe or that a forger acquired and inscribed it in modernity; both of these hypotheses have difficulties. Further testing that indicates a date for the GJW papyrus within the seventh to eighth centuries resolves these difficulties.
Shadows on the relatively low-resolution photographs that were initially published seemed to indicate ink on the lower layers of the recto fibers and led to speculation that a forger inscribed the ancient papyrus after it was damaged. Microscopic examination disconfirms this suggestion.
Papyrologists agree that the clumsiness of the script indicates an unprofessional, inexperienced hand but differ in their evaluation of whether it is due to the elementary educational level of an ancient writer or a forger's inexperience writing on papyrus. They also note the small “tails” on some letters that may indicate an anachronistic use of a brush rather than a pen, but Choat finds this point inconclusive. Bagnall suggests a poor pen may be a factor.
The initial estimation of a fourth-century c.e. date for the extant manuscript of GJW was based on paleography, but this method has significant limitations given the current state of the field.111 A later date is indicated by the age of the papyrus.
The tiny fragment contains two rare grammatical features, which can be accounted for as 1) unusual but not unknown syntactic features, 2) scribal errors, 3) indications of a forger with a poor knowledge of Coptic, or 4) copying from the November 2002 online, interlinear version of Gos. Thom. 50.1 by Grondin, which erroneously omits the  before .112 The fact that, even if these rarities are regarded as grammatical mistakes, they are attested in ancient Coptic manuscripts (i.e., they are the kind of errors that native speakers make) tends to persuade me against option 3.113 This point also makes option 4 less likely, and indeed this option has an additional difficulty in requiring proof that the statements and documentation provided by the owner are also false or forged.
Moreover, in my opinion, option 4 lacks any plausibility unless the hypothesis is proved correct that the content of GJW was composed by “cobbling together” extracts from modern editions of Gos. Thom. 114This hypothesis is, however, highly problematic.115 The method used by forgery proponents to establish this compositional practice assumes forgery and then produces similarities between the two works (as they suggest a forger would) by locating parallels dispersed throughout Gos. Thom.Sometimes the parallel is only a single detached word or a grammatical form. The method also requires positing hypothetical editorial changes or grammatical errors by the forger or by emending the text of GJW to account for differences from Gos. Thom.116 It should be noted that while the proposed parallels are largely made up of very common vocabulary, the fragment's two most distinctive or unusual terms ( and ) have no parallels in Gos. Thom. As Peppard and Paananen have pointed out, such a method cannot distinguish between “authentic and fake” passages nor even show direct literary dependence.117 The results, therefore, are not evidence for forgery but at best might be one way of accounting for the text if forgery were to be established by other methods. More to the point, the GJW fragment can easily be accounted for by the ancient compositional practices used by all early Christian literature (including ancient forgeries). These ancient practices are characterized by a lack of fixity as well as continuity; they include memory and oral composition, performance, and transmission, as well as excerpting and “editing.”118 The relation among the Synoptic Gospels is a well-known example combining literary dependence with redactional change to produce theologically distinctive dialogues and narratives, such as forgery proponents suggest for GJW's relation to Gos. Thom. One does not, however, have to posit modern forgery to account for GJW's literary dependence upon Gos. Thom. (or other comparands), since that would have been possible in antiquity as well. Moreover, apart from the question of literary dependence, GJW fits well generically among gospel literature composed and circulated in the early centuries of Christianity.
The interpretive contextualizations offered by forgery proponents have variously pointed toward contemporary debates over whether Jesus was married or over ecclesiastical leadership, as well as the portrait of Mary Magdalene in popular media and fiction, and (alleged) modern hoaxes.119 If the fragment concerns the discipleship of wives and mothers, however, these are mostly irrelevant as well as unsubstantiated. Rather, scholarship on ancient Christianity has established significant and widespread attention by Christians in the first to sixth centuries c.e. to issues of marriage and reproduction, virginity and celibacy, sexual desire and sin, family and discipleship, and Jesus's marital status. These form a demonstrable ancient historical context for the GJW fragment, even though the claim that Jesus had a human wife is rare, if not unique.
The lack of information regarding the provenance of the discovery is unfortunate since, when known, such information is extremely pertinent. Given that the provenance of small Coptic papyrus fragments is frequently unknown, however, the lack is neither unusual nor decisive for the question of dating. While we can wish for strong evidence, such as an inscribed date or provenance established by professional archaeological excavation, arguments from silence based on these deficiencies are not determinative of the question one way or the other.
On the basis of the criteria considered above and the research done to date, where does the weight of the evidence fall in considering the date of the GJW fragment? On the side of a date in antiquity, all the evidence can be marshaled: the placement of the ink, its chemical composition, the age of the papyrus, and patterns of aging and damage support ancient manufacture and inscription. The inexperienced handwriting and linguistic features fit a poorly trained scribe (with a poor pen?) who is a native speaker. The genre and literary comparands (including Gos. Thom.) are a fit for ancient Christianity, as are the topics of discussion. On the side of a date in modernity, the gravest difficulty for me lies in explaining how a forger incompetent in Coptic language with poor scribal skills (perhaps even anachronistically using a brush) was yet so highly skilled as to secure ancient papyrus, make ink with an ancient technique, leave no ink traces out of place at the microscopic level, achieve patterns of differential aging, fabricate a paper trail of modern supporting documents, and provide a good fit for an ancient historical context—one that no serious scholar considers to be evidence of the historical Jesus's marital status. In my judgment such a combination of bumbling and sophistication seems extremely unlikely. Further research or the development of new methods may offer determinative evidence, but for now, I would judge the weight of evidence to fall on the side of dating the GJWpapyrus as a material artifact to antiquity, probably the seventh to eighth centuries c.e.

History in Antiquity

There is insufficient evidence to speculate with any confidence about who may have composed, copied, read, or circulated GJW in antiquity except to conclude they were Christians. Many ancient Christian gospels were pseudonymous, but without a title or other identification, the ancient attribution of this text (if it explicitly had one) remains unknown. Sahidic Coptic language and material composition place the fragment's provenance in Egypt in antiquity. Given that the generic form and content fit within the historical context of the second to fifth centuries of Christianity, the fragment's content might have been composed in this period. More speculatively, given that the closest materials parallel to our fragment in content and genre are found in literature originally composed in Greek in the second century, subsequently translated into Coptic, and circulated in the fourth and fifth centuries (namely, Gos. Thom., Gos. Mary, and probably Gos. Phil.), it is possible that the dialogue of the GJWfragment may also have been composed as early as the second half of the second century in Greek, later translated into Coptic, and circulated in later centuries.
The most historically reliable early Christian literature is silent about Jesus's marital status, and the GJW fragment does not change that situation. It is not evidence that Jesus was married, but it does appear to support the favorable position on marriage and reproduction taken by the canonical 1 Timothy, and it stands on the side of Jesus as he refutes the statement of Peter in Gos. Thom. 114 that “women are not worthy of life.” Although we cannot know whether this damaged fragment supported the ancient patriarchal household order or argued that females should become male as these writings do, it does seem to enter debates over whether Jesus's incarnate life pointed toward marriage or celibacy as the ideal mode of Christian life. Ultimately such questions raise theological issues of whether sexuality belongs to being fully human or necessarily compromises holiness. In my reading, however, the main point of the GJWfragment is simply to affirm that women who are wives and mothers can be Jesus's disciples.
Fifty-nine years passed from the rediscovery of the fifth-century Berlin Codex in 1896 until its first publication in 1955. Its final editor, Walter Till, expressed a sentiment with which I have come to have a deep sympathy after only two years. “At some point,” he wrote, “a man must find the courage to let the manuscript leave one's hand even if one is convinced that there is much that is still imperfect. That is unavoidable with all human endeavors.”120 So, too, this article is not the last word on the subject of the GJW fragment, but I hope it will be a useful contribution to ongoing discussion and research.

Afterword

In January 2014, I concluded this article by stating it would not be the last word on the subject. And now in early March, I received news of the results of the second radiocarbon testing of the material artifact of GJW that gives it a mean date of 741 c.e. This date suggests a new line of inquiry into the context of the fragment's circulation in Egypt of the Islamic period, given the Qur’an's designation of Jesus as “Son of Mary” and its view that prophets (among whom Jesus is numbered) were usually married, although the Qur’an does not state specifically that Jesus was married.

Notes

1 I would like to thank the owner for permission to study and publish GJW and a Coptic fragment of the Gospel of John.
2 The term “gospel” in GJW regards the probable genre of the work to which this fragment belongs. It does not imply canonical status or the historical accuracy of the content. Nor does it imply that GJWwas the title in antiquity, or that “Jesus's wife” is the “author” of this work, is a major character in it, or is even a significant topic of discussion.
3 Or: “I exist with it/her”; “I dwell with it/her.”
4 For imaging used in describing the material artifact, see the GJW webpage.
5 See Stephen Emmel , “On Using ‘Proportional Extension of Text’ as a Criterion for Placing Fragments in a Dismembered Codex,” in Christianity in Egypt: Literary Production and Intellectual Trends in Late Antiquity; Studies in Honor of Tito Orlandi (ed. Paola Buzi and Alberto Camplani ; SEAug 125; Rome: Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum, 2011) 257–78 [Google Scholar].
6 Compare, e.g., NHC VI, 11–12.
7 See Eric G. Turner , The Terms Recto and Verso: The Anatomy of a Papyrus Roll (ed. Jean Bingen and Georges Nachtergael ; vol. 1 of Actes du XVe Congrès international de papyrologie, Bruxelles-Louvain, 29 août–3 septembre 1977; Papyrologica Bruxellensia 16; Brussels: Fondation égyptologique Reine Élisabeth, 1978) [Google Scholar].
8 Since carbon pigments are highly resistant to fading, the “faded” appearance is probably due to the absence of ink, which may result from abrasion or some other cause.
9 See Malcolm Choat, “The Gospel of Jesus's Wife: A Preliminary Paleographical Assessment,” below, 160–62, at 162.
10 For imaging illustrating these features, see the GJW webpage.
11 It is not possible to determine whether cutting was done in antiquity or modernity, e.g., perhaps by an antiquities dealer cutting or tearing a larger page into sections in order to have more pieces for sale, as Bagnall suggested in conversation (pers. comm., March 12, 2012). Compare Alin Suciu's comments on a fragment from the Tchacos Codex (“Newly Found Fragments from Codex Tchacos,” Patristics, Apocrypha, Coptic Literature and Manuscripts [blog], October 10, 2010,http://alinsuciu.com/2012/10/10/newly-found-fragments-of-codex-tchacos/).
12 See imaging posted on the GJW webpage; also Choat, “Assessment,” 161–62.
13 Under microscopic imaging the contamination resembles a resin or wax (see the GJW webpage), but testing to date (Raman and FT-IR) has not succeeded in identifying it.
14 See James T. Yardley and Alexis Hagadorn, “Characterization of the Chemical Nature of the Black Ink in the Manuscript of The Gospel of Jesus's Wife through Micro-Raman Spectroscopy,” brief summary below, 162–64, and full report on the GJW webpage.
15 See Gregory Hodgins, “Accelerated Mass Spectrometry Radiocarbon Determination of Papyrus Samples,” below, 166–69, with supplemental report on the GJW webpage.
16 See Joseph M. Azzarelli, John B. Goods, and Timothy M. Swager, “Study of Two Papyrus Fragments with Fourier Transform Infrared Microspectroscopy” posted on the GJW webpage; the executive summary of this study is published below, 165.
17 See Noreen Tuross, “Accelerated Mass Spectrometry Radiocarbon Determination of Papyrus Samples,” below, 170–71.
18 See Azzarelli, Goods, and Swager, “Executive Summary,” below, 165.
19 See Azzarelli, Goods, and Swager, “Study,” GJW webpage.
20 See similar examples in NHC VI at 63:33–36; 65:8–14; note, too, the cramped script on the culminating page, 78.
21 Her description in this paragraph generally follows Bentley Layton's categories in A Catalogue of Coptic Literary Manuscripts in the British Library Acquired Since the Year 1906 (London: British Library, 1987) esp. lxiii–lxiv [Google Scholar].
22 See Ludwig Traube , Nomina Sacra. Versuch einer Geschichte der christlichen Kürzung (Quellen und Untersuchungen zur lateinischen Philologie des Mittelalters 2; Munich: Beck, 1907) [Google Scholar]Larry W. Hurtado , “The Origin of the Nomina Sacra: A Proposal,” JBL 117 (1998) 655–73; idem, The Earliest Christian Artifacts: Manuscripts and Christian Origins (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2006); AnneMarie Luijendijk , Greetings in the Lord: Early Christians and the Oxyrhynchus Papyri (HTS 60; Cambridge: Harvard Divinity School, 2008) 57–78 [Google Scholar]Scott Bucking , “A Sahidic Coptic Manuscript in the Private Collection of Lloyd E. Cotsen (P. Cotsen 1) and the Limits of Papyrological Interpretation,” Journal of Coptic Studies 8 (2006) 55–78 [OpenURL Query Data] [CrossRef]  [Google Scholar], at 59–60.
23 See Kathleen McNamee , Sigla and Select Marginalia in Greek Literary Papyri (Papyrologica Bruxellensia 26; Brussels: Fondation égyptologique Reine Élisabeth, 1992) 17–18 [Google Scholar]; regarding Coptic papyri, see Leo Depuydt , Catalogue of Coptic Manuscripts in the Pierpont Morgan Library (2 vols.; Corpus of Illuminated Manuscripts 4–5; Louvain: Peeters, 1993) 1:487–88 [Google Scholar]; 2: plate 418. Choat, however, judges a letter to be more likely than a mark of punctuation (“Assessment,” 162).
24 Raman analysis also indicates a single ink (Yardley and Hagadorn, “Characterization,” 164).
25 For other instances of uneven ink flow, see, e.g., P.Ryl.Copt. 314 and 396 (images online athttp://enriqueta.man.ac.uk/luna/servlet/ManchesterDev~93~3).
26 See the comments of Choat, “Assessment,” 161.
27 See Raffaella Cribiore , Writing, Teachers, and Students in Graeco-Roman Egypt (ASP 36; Atlanta: Scholar's Press, 1996) 102–6 [Google Scholar].
28 See also Iain Gardner and Malcolm Choat , “Towards a Palaeography of Fourth-Century Documentary Coptic,” in Coptic Studies on the Threshold of a New Millennium: Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Coptic Studies, Leiden, August 27–September 2, 2000 (ed. Mat Immerzeel and Jacques van der Vliet ; 2 vols.; OLA 133; Louvain: Peeters, 2004) 1:495–503 [Google Scholar], at 497; and Choat, “Assessment,” 161.
29 Coarse and cramped writing with uneven inking and blotches can be observed, for example, on P.Kell.Copt. 19, a private letter; see Coptic Documentary Texts from Kellis: P.Kell.V (P.Kell.Copt. 10–52; O.Kell.Copt. 1–2) (ed. Iain Gardner, Anthony Alcock, and Wolf-Peter Funk; Dakhleh Oasis Project 9; Oxford: Oxbow, 1999) vol. 1:156 and plate 12.
30 My thanks to the several scholars who corrected my own initial assumption that the fragment might belong to a formal codex.
31 See examples in Thomas J. Kraus , “Manuscripts with the Lord's Prayer—They Are More Than Simply Witnesses to That Text Itself,” in New Testament Manuscripts: Their Texts and Their World (ed. Thomas J. Kraus and Tobias Niklas ; Texts and Editions for New Testament Study 2; Leiden: Brill, 2006) 227–66 [Google Scholar].
32 David Frankfurter , Religion in Roman Egypt: Assimilation and Resistance (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1998) 268 [Google Scholar]; see also 267–72.
33 See, e.g., Tommy Wasserman , “P78 (P.Oxy. XXXIV 2684): The Epistle of Jude on an Amulet?,” inNew Testament Manuscripts: Their Texts and Their World (ed. Thomas J. Kraus and Tobias Niklas ; Texts and Editions for New Testament Study 2; Leiden: Brill, 2006) 137–60 [Google Scholar].
34 Compare, e.g., P.Berol. 11710, an unprovenanced, bilingual Greek and Coptic “gospel” (amulet?) consisting of two leaves measuring 6.5 by 7.5 cm (with visible holes probably used for binding the leaves together), which contains a dialogue between Jesus and Nathaniel with strong similarities to John 1:48–49; although crude and idiosyncratic, the hand is dated solely on paleographical grounds to the 6th cent. c.e. (see Thomas J. Kraus , “P.Berol. 11710,” in Gospel Fragments [ed. Thomas J. Kraus , Michael J. Kruger , and Tobias Nicklas ; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009] 228–39 [Google Scholar]).
35 Amulets are often, but not always, long and narrow. For a useful discussion of criteria for amulets and problems of classification of certain texts, see Theodore de Bruyn and Jitse H. F. Dijkstra , “Greek Amulets and Formularies Containing Christian Elements: A Checklist of Papyri, Parchments, Ostraka, and Tablets,” BASP 48 (2011) 163–216 [OpenURL Query Data]  [Google Scholar], esp. the discussion at 167–73 and the dimensions listed in the tables accompanying the article. See also Theodore de Bruyn , “Papyri, Parchments, Ostraca, and Tablets Written with Biblical Texts in Greek and Used as Amulets: A Preliminary List,” in Early Christian Manuscripts: Examples of Applied Method and Approach (ed. Thomas J. Kraus and Tobias Nicklas ; Texts and Editions for New Testament Study 5; Leiden: Brill, 2010) 145–90 [Google Scholar].
36 See examples in Ancient Coptic Magic: Coptic Texts of Ritual Power (ed. Marvin Meyer and Richard Smith; San Francisco: Harper, 1994).
37 See Sarah Clackson , “Coptic Oxyrhynchus,” in Oxyrhynchus: A City and Its Texts (ed. Alan K. Bowman et al.; Graeco-Roman Memoirs 93; London: Egypt Exploration Society, 2007) 332–41 [Google Scholar], at 336.
38 See Bentley Layton, A Coptic Grammar (3rd ed., revised and expanded; Porta linguarum orientalium 2/20; Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2011) 68–70 (¶¶ 85–86); 17 (¶ 16 [a]).
39 See Ariel Shisha-Halevy , “Sahidic,” in The Coptic Encyclopedia (ed. Aziz S. Atiya ; 8 vols.; New York: Macmillan, 1991) 8:194–202 [Google Scholar], at 195.
40 Cf. the variation of  and  attested in 1 Apoc. Jas. TC 15.13; 16.4; 26.18 in Codex Tchacos. Texte und Analysen (ed. Johanna Brankaer and Hans-Gebhard Bethge; TU 161; Berlin: De Gruyter, 2007).
41 Shisha-Halevy, “Sahidic,” 195.
42 Notably the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, as well as Greek fragments, are extant for two of the closest parallel texts, Gos. Mary (see Colin H. Roberts, “463. The Gospel of Mary,” in Theological and Literary Texts (Nos. 457–551) [vol. 3 of Catalogue of the Greek Papyri in the John Rylands Library; Manchester, U.K.: Manchester University Press, 1938] 18–23; and P. J. Parsons, “3525. Gospel of Mary,” in Texts (Nos. 3522–3600) [Oxyrhynchus Papyri 50; Graeco-Roman Memoirs 70; London: Egypt Exploration Society, 1983] 12–14) and Gos. Thom. (see Harold W. Attridge , “Appendix: The Greek Fragments,” in Nag Hammadi Codex II, 2–7, Together with XIII, 2*, Brit. Lib. Or. 4926(1), and P. OXY. 1, 654, 655 [ed. Bentley Layton ; 2 vols.; NHS 20–21; Leiden: Brill, 1989] 1:95–128[Google Scholar]).
43 Layton, A Coptic Grammar, 256 (¶ 330).
44 Layton, A Coptic Grammar, 135 (¶ 173); for full discussion, see Stephen Emmel , “Proclitic Forms of the Verb  in Coptic,” in Studies Presented to Hans Jakob Polotsky (ed. Dwight W. Young ; East Gloucester, Mass.: Pirtle and Polson, 1981) 131–46 [Google Scholar]. To be added to Emmel's study are now, inter alia, four examples without the mediating direct object marker before the definite or possessive article + noun from the Coptic documentary papyri found at Kellis: P.Kell.Copt. 22.42:  (he gave me the remainder against them); P.Kell.Copt. 22.54:  (they have already given me my fare); P.Kell.Copt. 43.16:  (when he gave me the tunic); P.Kell.Copt. 36.18–19:  ([you can give] him these 1400 talents) (Coptic Documentary Texts from Kellis[ed. Gardner, Alcock, and Funk]).
45 See n. 44 above. For an orthographic variant of this construction with  before , see Gos. Thom. (NHC II) 50.1.
46 Layton, A Coptic Grammar, 302–3 (¶ 380).
47 See, e.g., Acts 4:16 and John 18:25, 27 in The Coptic Version of the New Testament in the Southern Dialect Otherwise Called Sahidic and Thebaic (ed. George William Horner; 11 vols.; Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1911–1924) 3:286 and 6:72.
48 My thanks to the third reviewer for helpfully suggesting this analysis and also for noting that if the sentence were understood “deny Mary is worthy of it” then one would expect . Alternatively, Ariel Shisha-Halevy suggests it could be a case of “pleonastic negation,” but examples would need to be identified (pers. comm., January 8, 2014).
49 See the index to the Gospel of Thomas in Nag Hammadi Codex II, 2–7 (ed. Layton) 1:270. My thanks to Wolf-Peter Funk for alerting me to examples in Kephalaia, e.g., 89.22, 24, 30–31 (without ; 89.28–29, 33 with ), inter alia, in Kephalaia. 1. Hälfte (Lieferung 1–10) (ed. Hugo Ibscher; Manichäische Handschriften der staatlichen Museen Berlin 1; Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1940) 221. Here I am not including consideration of “the intercalability of the parenthetic ” (see Ariel Shisha-Halevy , Coptic Grammatical Categories: Structural Studies in the Syntax of Shenoutean Sahidic [AnOr 53; Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1986] 162–63 [Google Scholar]) since the situation of such cases does not apply.
50  and  are not always flexible (i.e., interchangeable) in syntactic usage. Shisha-Halevy notes that “ is the Egyptian (ḥmt) with the prefixed (s.t), probably meaning ‘feminine human being’” (pers. comm., January 8, 2014). Dwight W. Young notes that  is always used “in cases with the definite article which are followed by the genitival particle n prefixed to either a proper name or a noun with a determinative prefix,” although he goes on to state incorrectly that “hime cannot be used with the possessive article, contrary to the practise [sic] in both Old Coptic and Demotic” (“The Distribution ofshime and hime in Literary Sahidic,” JAOS 91 [1971] 507–9, at 507a and 508a). Francis Llewellyn Griffith had indeed offered examples in his edition of the First Tale of Khamuas 3.5, where he distinguishes  (ḥm.t) from  (s- ḥm-t), noting that the former “always means ‘wife’” (Stories of the High Priests of Memphis: The Sethon of Herodotus and the Demotic Tales of Khamuas [Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1900] 86 [transcription], 87 [translation and note]); see also his edition of an old Coptic horoscope, where he writes (concerning v. 7): “. This word in the singular means ‘wife’ not ‘woman’ in all passages in which I can trace it in Sah[idic]” (“The Old Coptic Horoscope of the Stobart Collection,” ZÄS 38 [1900] 71–85, at 79 [text], 80 [comment]). Examples of  with possessive article () have now been identified, e.g., in Exeg. Soul (NHC II,6) 129.9 and Hyp. Arch. (NHC II,4) 91.5, 14. Regarding the latter Layton writes: “ (sing.) deserves a separate index entry with the gloss ‘wife’ (ḥm. t) as distinct from  ‘woman’ (or ‘wife’) (s.t- ḥm. t). Sahidic  (sing.) occurs only in possessive constructions or in  (‘marry’) and always with that specific meaning,” and he suggests that the examples from Griffith are therefore worth resurrecting ( Bentley Layton , “The Text and Orthography of the Coptic Hypostasis of the Archons (CG II,4),” ZPE 11 [1973] 173–200, at 183[OpenURL Query Data]  [Google Scholar]).
51 Layton, A Coptic Grammar, 148 (¶ 184c), 141 (¶ 180b) [italics in original].
52 It is grammatically possible to understand  for  (negative aorist), but this reading makes little sense in context (“The wicked person shall never swell” or “generally never swells”) and imposes a non-Sahidic form into an otherwise Sahidic environment. Alin Suciu and Hugo Lundhaug read the negative aorist here but need to emend the verb to make sense of it (“A Peculiar Dialectical Feature in the Gospel of Jesus's Wife, Line 6,” Patristics, Apocrypha, Coptic Literature and Manuscripts [blog], September 27, 2012, http://alinsuciu.com/2012/09/27/alin-suciu-hugo-lundhaug-an-interesting-dialectal-feature-in-the-gospel-of-jesuss-wife-line-6).
53 See Layton, A Coptic Grammar, 268 (¶ 340).
54 See ibid., 326–29 (¶¶ 403–7) for a fuller discussion.
55 Ariel Shisha-Halevy, pers. comm., September 7, 2012. For fuller discussion and examples, see Ariel Shisha-Halevy , Topics in Coptic Syntax: Structural Studies in the Bohairic Dialect (OLA 160; Louvain: Peeters, 2007) 351–52 [Google Scholar], 489 n. 19, 597–99; and idem, “Bohairic-Late Egyptian Diaglosses: A Contribution to the Typology of Egyptian,” in Studies Presented to Hans Jakob Polotsky(ed. Dwight W. Young; East Gloucester, Mass.: Pirtle and Polson, 1981) 413–38, esp. 423.
56 Shisha-Halevy, Topics, 598. N.B.:  is not a definite noun but a generic nucleus (e.g., not “the wicked man” but “wicked people”).
57 AnneMarie Luijendijk, pers. comm.; Ariel Shisha-Halevy, pers. comm., September 7, 2012.
58 See Walter E. Crum , A Coptic Dictionary (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1939) 610 [Google Scholar].
59 See Judith Hartenstein , “Dialogische Evangelien,” in Evangelien und Verwandtes (vol. 1.2 of Antike christliche Apokryphen in deutscher Übersetzung; ed. Christoph Markschies and Jens Schröter ; 2 vols; 7th ed.; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2012) 1051–58 [Google Scholar]; eadem, Die zweite Lehre. Erscheinungen des Auferstandenen als Rahmenerzählung frühchristlicher Dialoge (TUGAL 146; Berlin: Akademie, 2000); Silke Petersen , ‘Zerstört die Werke der Weiblichkeit!’ Maria Magdalena, Salome und andere Jüngerinnen Jesu in christlich-gnostischen Schriften (Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 48; Leiden: Brill, 1999) 35–93 [Google Scholar]. Whether the dialogue in GJW is set before or after the resurrection is not clear.
60 See, e.g., the collection in Antike christliche Apokryphen (ed. Markschies and Schröter).
61 The suggestion that this fragment belongs to a gospel genre is not meant to imply either that it fits specific theological criteria or that it narrates a full life of Jesus. For the contours of the debate over what constitutes a gospel, see Helmut Koester , Ancient Christian Gospels: Their History and Development (Philadelphia: Trinity, 1990) [Google Scholar]N. T. Wright , “When is a Gospel not a Gospel?,” in Judas and the Gospel of Jesus: Have We Missed the Truth about Christianity? (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Book House, 2006) 63–85 [Google Scholar]James A. Kelhoffer , “‘Gospel’ as a Literary Title in Early Christianity and the Question of What Is (and Is Not) a ‘Gospel’ in Canons of Scholarly Literature,” in Jesus in apokryphen Evangelienüberlieferung. Beiträge zu ausserkanonischen Jesusüberlieferungen aus verschiedenen Sprach- und Kulturtraditionen (ed. Jörg Frey and Jens Schröter ; WUNT 254; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2010) 399–422 [Google Scholar]; Joost Hagen, “Ein anderer Kontext für die Berliner und Straßburger ‘Evangelienfragmente’: Das ‘Evangelium des Erlösers’ und andere ‘Apostelevangelien’ in der koptischen Literatur,” in ibid., 339–71; Christoph Heil , “Evangelium als Gattung,” in Historiographie und Biographie im Neuen Testament und seiner Umwelt(ed. Thomas Schmeller ; NTOA/SUNT 69; Berlin: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2009) 63–94 [Google Scholar].
62 All citations of New Testament literature in Coptic are from Coptic Version (ed. Horner), with modifications of the English translation by me. Unless otherwise noted, citations and English translations of the Coptic text of Gos. Thom. are from Nag Hammadi Codex II, 2–7 (ed. Layton), 1:52–92.
63 Gos. Thom. 101 (NHC II,2 49.32–50.1):  (Whoever does not hate his fat[her] and his mother in my way will not be able to become my d[iscip]le, and whoever does [not] love his [father a]nd his mother in my way will not be able to become [my] dis[ciple]. For my mother is she who []. But my true [moth]er gave me life).
64 See Luke 14:26; Matt 10:1–42, esp. 35–39; Gos. Thom. 55.
65 Versions of this saying are also found in Matt 12:46–50; Luke 8:19–21; Gos. Thom. 99 (NHC II,249:21–26); and Gos. Eb. 5 (Epiphanius, Haer. 30.14.5), indicating it was relatively widespread.
66 Suggestions for restoration of the lacuna at 49:36–50:1 include  (she who [gave me birth, she destr]oyed [me]) and  (she [dec]eived [me]); see Synopsis quattuor Evangeliorum (ed. Kurt Aland; 15th ed., 3rd corrected and expanded printing; Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2001) 543 nn. 143, 145. These restorations suggest either a connection between physical birth and destruction (death), thereby contrasting physical birth with spiritual life, or a contrast between falsehood and truth. While both are possible, in my opinion, the former reading conveys a better sense in the context of Gos. Thom.
67  refer here to classes of persons, not individuals.
68 Compare John 1:12–13; Gos. Phil. 55:23–26.
69 For examples of family tensions in the context of 2nd- and 3rd-cent. martyrdom, see Mart. Perpetua3, 5–6; Origen, Mart. 37.
70 See the discussion of Elizabeth A. Clark , Reading Renunciation: Asceticism and Scripture in Early Christianity (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1999) 196–203 [Google Scholar], esp. examples on p. 198. Writers appealed especially to Luke 14:26–27, given its rejection of wives (see, e.g., Clement of Alexandria, Strom. 3.15.97; he appears to have in mind Julius Cassianus's bookConcerning Continence and Celibacy mentioned at Strom. 3.13.91; for a modern edition, see Stromata Buch I–VI [ed. Otto Stählin; vol. 2 of Clemens Alexandrinus; GCS 15; Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1906]).
71 See a similar problem in John 19:25; Mark 15:40.
72 I.e., the mother of Jesus, Mary of Magdala, Mary of Bethany, Mary the mother of James and Joseph, Mary of Clopas, and the “other” Mary. A survey by Tal Ilan documents the popularity of the name, concluding that almost a quarter of all recorded names of Jewish women in Palestine between 330b.c.e. and 200 c.e. are Mary (“Notes on the Distribution of Jewish Women's Names in Palestine in the Second Temple and Mishnaic Periods,” JJS 40 [1989] 186–200). For discussion of the spelling of names for Mary (e.g., Maria, Mariam, Mariamme), see Antti Marjanen, The Woman Jesus Loved: Mary Magdalene in the Nag Hammadi Library and Related Documents (Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 40; Leiden: Brill, 1996) 64 nn. 34, 35; and Petersen, ‘Zerstört die Werke der Weiblichkeit!’, 251–52.
73 See Stephen J. Shoemaker , “A Case of Mistaken Identity? Naming the Gnostic Mary,” in Which Mary? The Marys of Early Christian Tradition (ed. F. Stanley Jones ; SBLSymS 20; Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2002) 5–30 [Google Scholar], at 9–17; François Bovon, “Mary Magdalene in theActs of Philip,” in Which Mary? (ed. Jones), 75–80.
74 For example, Mary Magdalene's role as apostle to the apostles (John 20:11–17) is ascribed to the mother. For this and other examples of how to identify Marys, see Ann Graham Brock , Mary Magdalene, The First Apostle: The Struggle for Authority (HTS 51; Cambridge: Harvard Divinity School, 2003) 123–42 [Google Scholar]Stephen J. Shoemaker , “Rethinking the ‘Gnostic Mary’: Mary of Nazareth and Mary of Magdala in Early Christian Tradition,” JECS 9 (2001) 555–95 [OpenURL Query Data]  [Google Scholar]; and in Which Mary? The Marys of Early Christian Tradition (ed. F. Stanley Jones; SBLSymS 20; Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2002), see Stephen J. Shoemaker, “Case of Mistaken Identity?,” 5–30; Antti Marjanen, “The Mother of Jesus or the Magdalene? The Identity of Mary in the So-Called Gnostic Christian Texts,” 31–41; and Ann Graham Brock, “Setting the Record Straight—The Politics of Identification: Mary Magdalene and Mary the Mother in the Pistis Sophia,” 43–52.
75 See Bovon, “Mary Magdalene,” 88.
76 See Hans-Josef Klauck , “Die dreifache Maria. Zur Rezeption von John 19,25 in EvPhil 32,” in The Four Gospels 1992: Festschrift Frans Neirynck (ed. Frans van Segbroeck ; 3 vols.; BETL 100; Louvain: Louvain University Press, 1992) 3:2343–58 [Google Scholar]; Marjanen, The Woman Jesus Loved, 160–62; Hans-Martin Schenke, Das Philippus-Evangelium (Nag-Hammadi-Codex II,3). Neu herausgegeben, übersetzt und erklärt (TUGAL 143; Berlin: Akademie, 1997) 269–72; and Hugo Lundhaug, Images of Rebirth: Cognitive Poetics and Transformational Soteriology in the “Gospel of Philip” and “Exegesis on the Soul” (Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 73; Leiden: Brill, 2010) 396–97. Schenke also notes Epiphanius's report that Jesus had a sister named Mary (Pan. 78.8.1; Schenke, Das Philippus-Evangelium, 269–70).
77 See Schenke, Das Philippus-Evangelium. Unless otherwise noted, the English translations of Gos. Phil. are mine based on Schenke's text, with reference also to Bentley Layton and Wesley W. Isenberg, “The Gospel of Philip,” in Nag Hammadi Codex II,2–7 (ed. Layton), 1:145–215.
78 See Athanasius, First Letter to Virgins 11 (see also 9–18); translation in David Brakke , Athanasius and Asceticism (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995) 277 [Google Scholar]; Coptic text in L.-Théoplile Lefort, S. Athanase. Lettres festales et pastorales en copte (2 vols.; CSCO 150–151; Scriptores Coptici 19–20; Louvain: Durbecq, 1955) 1:77, lines 29–34. Mary and other virgins are also referred to as an image () for others (ibid, 78, line 6), the same term found in GJW →8.
79 See Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lecture 14.12.
80 See the discussion of Gos. Phil. 63:30–64:5 in Karen L. King , “The Place of the Gospel of Philip in the Context of Early Christian Claims about Jesus’ Marital Status,” NTS 59 (2013) 565–87 [OpenURL Query Data]  [CrossRef]  [Google Scholar], at 578–79.
81 E.g., the anti-Christian philosopher Celsus (see Origen, Cels. 1.32–39).
82 Early interest was shown in Mary as the virgin mother of Jesus and as a kind of anti-type to Eve (see, for example, Prot. Jas.; Justin Martyr, 1 Apol. 1.12, 33; Dial. 100; Melito of Sardis, On Easter123; Irenaeus, Haer. 3.22; 5.19; Epid. 33; Tertullian, Carn. Chr., esp. 17.1–5; Clement of Alexandria,Strom. 6.15 and 7.16; Paed. 1.6; Origen, Comm. Jo. 32.16; Comm. Rom. 3.10; Hippolytus, Noet. 17). For discussion of the cult of Mary, see Origins of the Cult of the Virgin Mary (ed. Chris Maunder; London: Burns & Oates, 2008).
83 See Irenaeus, Haer. 1.7.2.
84 See, e.g., Tertullian, Carn. Chr.
85 For a somewhat fuller discussion of this question, see King, “Place of the Gospel of Philip,” 566–69, 576–87.
86 See, e.g., 2 Cor 11:4–5; Eph 5:18–33; Rev 21:2, 9.
87 Clement of Alexandria, Strom. 3.6.49; the translation is that of Henry Chadwick in Alexandrian Christianity: Selected Translations of Clement and Origen with Introductions and Notes (ed. John Ernest Leonard Oulton and Henry Chadwick; LCC 2; Philadelphia: Westminster, 1954) 62–63. Although Clement himself opposes this stark rejection of marriage, he does not directly contradict the claim that Jesus did not marry. Clement may very well be referring here to the 2nd-cent. figure Tatian (see Strom. 3.6.81–82), whom Irenaeus (Haer. 1.27.1) and Eusebius (Hist. eccl. 4.29) regard as the founder of the Encratites, a designation for certain (heretical) persons or groups who rejected marriage. For examples of Christian rejection of sex, marriage, and reproduction, see Peter Brown ,The Body and Society: Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity (Lectures on the History of Religions 2/13; New York: Columbia University Press, 1988) 83–102 [Google Scholar].
88 See Tertullian, Mon. 5.5–7 (Le Mariage unique [ed. and trans. Paul Mattei; SC 343; Paris: Cerf, 1988] 150–53).
89 See, e.g., John Chrysostom, Virginit. 11.1; 13.4.
90 See Elizabeth Clark , “The Celibate Bridegroom and His Virginal Brides: Metaphor and the Marriage of Jesus in Early Christian Ascetic Literature,” CH 7 (2008) 1–25 [OpenURL Query Data]  [Google Scholar].
91 See esp. Gos. Phil. 59.6–11; 63.30–64.5. For the full argument, see King, “Place of the Gospel of Philip,” 570–83. My argument there builds inter alia particularly on the work of Schenke, Das Philippus-Evangelium, and Einar Thomassen , The Spiritual Seed: The Church of the “Valentinians” (Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 60; Leiden: Brill, 2006) esp. 90–102 [Google Scholar], 272, 341–50.
92 The Gospel of Philip is widely regarded as belonging to Valentinian Christianity, which allowed marriage (see King, “Place of the Gospel of Philip,” 581). Although speculative, minor semantic connections between Gos. Phil. and GJW also point toward a possible Valentinian theological context:Gos. Phil. 78.21  (GJW →7) might carry a sexual connotation (see Schenke, Das Philippus-Evangelium, 481), and the term  (GJW →8) is important for Gos. Phil.'s notion of Jesus's marriage as a symbolic paradigm (see King, “Place of the Gospel of Philip,” 571–76).
93 The identification of Mary of Magdala with three other figures—Mary of Bethany (John 11:1–2; 12:1–3), the woman caught in adultery (John 8:3–11), and the sinner woman (Luke 7:37–38)—resulted in the erroneous portrait of Mary Magdalene as a repentant prostitute. See Jane Schaberg , “How Mary Magdalene Became A Whore,” BRev 8 (1992) 30–37 [OpenURL Query Data]  [Google Scholar], 51–52; eadem, “Thinking Back through the Magdalene,” Cont 1 (1991) 71–90; Karen L. King , The Gospel of Mary of Magdala: Jesus and the First Woman Apostle (Santa Rosa, Calif.: Polebridge, 2003) 151–52 [Google Scholar].
94 The Magdalene's role as a prominent disciple is emphasized in 2nd- and 3rd-cent. literature (see Marjanen, The Woman Jesus Loved). For a fuller discussion of portraits of Mary of Magdala in the New Testament, see Jane Schaberg , The Resurrection of Mary Magdalene: Legends, Apocrypha, and the Christian Testament (New York: Continuum, 2002) [Google Scholar].
95 See King, The Gospel of Mary, 83–90; Marjanen, The Woman Jesus Loved.
96 See Brock, Mary Magdalene, esp. 73–104.
97 Compare the Greek of P.Ryl. 463, 22–25: ει ο σωτη[ρ] αξιαν αυτην ηγησατο συ τις ει εξουθενων αυτην παντως γαρ εκεινος ειδως αυτην ασφ[αλ]ω[ς] ηγαπησεν. Coptic and Greek texts of Gos. Maryare cited from R. McL. Wilson and George MacRae , “The Gospel of Mary” in Nag Hammadi Codices V, 2–5 and VI, with Papyrus Berolinensis 8502, 1 and 4 (ed. James Brashler and Douglas Parrott ; NHS 11; Leiden: Brill, 1979) 456–71 [Google Scholar], at 468.
98 Tradition speaks of Jesus's loving male disciples as well, e.g., John 15:12, employing the same verb (ἀγαπάω) that is used in the Greek fragment of Gos. Mary (P.Ryl. 463, 25), without any suggestion of a sexual relationship. For further discussion, see King, The Gospel of Mary, 145–46; eadem, “Why All the Controversy? Mary in the Gospel of Mary” in Which Mary? The Marys of Early Christian Tradition(ed. F. Stanley Jones; SBLSymS 20; Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2002) 53–74; and Birger A. Pearson , “Did Jesus Marry?,” BRev 21 (2005) 32–39 , 47, esp. 37–39.
99 See Crum, Coptic Dictionary, 179.
100 Gos. Thom. 51:18–20.
101 Several commentators have noted the similarity here to GJW →3. It is not clear of what she is (or is not) worthy. It cannot be “life” because the antecedent is grammatically fem. sg. (), while “life” in Coptic is masc. sg. Nor does it parallel Matt 10:37 where Jesus speaks of being “worthy of me,” because “me” again would require a masc. sg. personal suffix.
102 Apart from the question to whom “Mary” refers, the reference to Jesus's wife as a disciple might, however, indicate that the “wife” is regarded as a “sister-wife.” Christians frequently referred to each other as brothers and sisters in Christ, such that some Christian men referred to their wives in this sense as also sisters (1 Cor 9:5). On the other hand, the female partner in “celibate marriage,” in which a male and a female Christian lived together but without sexual intercourse, could be called a “sister-wife” (see 1 Cor 9:5; Clement of Alexandria, Strom. 6.12). These cases make it possible to speculate tentatively on restoring the end of line →4 with  (and [my sister]), but other possibilities remain.
103 See Bridget Leach and John Tait , “Papyrus,” in Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology (ed. Paul T. Nicholson and Ian Shaw ; Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2000) 227–53[Google Scholar], at 241. Clackson writes that in contrast to the Oxyrhynchus papyri, “most surviving Coptic texts are unprovenanced and undated” (“Coptic Oxyrhynchus,” 340).
104 See AnneMarie Luijendijk , “Sacred Scriptures as Trash: Biblical Papyri from Oxyrhynchus,” VC 64 (2010) 217–54.
105 The amount of the price paid was whited out on the copy I was sent.
106 “Professor Fecht glaubt, daß der kleine ca. 8 cm große Papyrus das einzige Beispiel für einen Text ist, in dem Jesus die direkte Rede in Bezug auf eine Ehefrau benutzt. Fecht meint, daß dies ein Beweis für eine mögliche Ehe sein könnte.” The named Professor Fecht might be Gerhard Fecht (1922–2006), professor of Egyptology at the Free University, Berlin.
107 The second document is a photocopy of a typed and signed letter addressed to H. U. Laukamp dated July 15, 1982, from Prof. Dr. Peter Munro (Freie Universität, Ägyptologisches Seminar, Berlin), stating that a colleague, Professor Fecht, has identified one of Mr. Laukamp's papyri as having nine lines of writing, measuring approximately 110 by 80 mm, and containing text from the Gospel of John. Fecht is said to have suggested a probable date from the 2nd to 5th cents. c.e. Munro declines to give Laukamp an appraisal of its value but advises that this fragment be preserved between glass plates in order to protect it from further damage. The letter makes no mention of the GJW fragment. The collection of the GJW's owner does contain a fragment of the Gospel of John fitting this description, which was subsequently received on loan by Harvard University for examination and publication (November 13, 2012).
108 Technically “forgery” implies a false claim to authorship and is not relevant here given the lack of any ascription (ancient or modern) to GJW.
109 A more concise view: “Authentication should then really be viewed as 1) failure to uncover evidence of forgery, and 2) placement of results within a known historical context” (Joseph G. Barabe et al., “Examination of the Gospel of Judas using an Integrated Approach to Ink Characterization,”Microscopy Today 14.4 [2006] 6–15, at 6).
110 Pers. comm., December 14, 2013.
111 See Layton, Catalogue, xxiv; idem, “Towards a New Coptic Palaeography,” in Acts of the Second International Congress of Coptic Studies, Roma, 22–26 September 1980 (ed. Tito Orlandi and Frederik Wisse; Rome: Centro Italiano Microfiches, 1985) 149–58; Rudolphe Kasser , “Paleography,” in The Coptic Encyclopedia (ed. Aziz S. Atiya ; 8 vols.; New York: Macmillan, 1991) 8:175–84 [Google Scholar]Stephen Emmel , “Recent Progress in Coptic Codicology and Paleography (1988–1992),” inActs of the Fifth International Congress of Coptic Studies, Washington, 12–15 August, 1992 (ed. Tito Orlandi and David W. Johnson ; 2 vols.; Rome: Centro Italiano Microfiches, 1993) 1:22–49 [Google Scholar]; idem, “Recent Progress in Coptic Codicology and Paleography (1992–1996),” in Ägypten und Nubien in spätantiker und christlicher Zeit. Akten des 6. Internationalen Koptologenkongresses, Münster, 20.–26. Juli 1996 (ed. Stephen Emmel et al.; 2 vols.; Sprachen und Kulturen des christlichen Orients 6; Wiesbaden: Reichert, 1999) 2:65–78; Anne Boud’hors , “Paléographie et codicologie coptes. Progrès et perspectives (1996–2004),” in Huitième Congrès international d’Études coptes, Paris, 28 juin–3 juillet 2004. Bilans et perspectives 2000–2004 (ed. Anne Boud’hors and Denyse Vaillancourt ; Cahiers de la bibliothèque copte 15; Paris: De Boccard, 2006) 95–109 [Google Scholar]; and the recent bibliography by Sofía Torallas Tovar, “Coptic Codicology and Palaeography (2004–2012): Provisional Bibliography,” accessed September 20, 2013,http://www.copticcongress2012.uniroma1.it/Report_Torallas.pdf. For 4th-cent. Coptic documentary texts, see also Gardner and Choat, “Towards a Palaeography.” Clackson notes an “irregular and inexperienced hand that is hard to date from palaeographical criteria” (“Coptic Oxyrhynchus,” 335 and n. 10).
112 See Michael W. Grondin, “Did a Forger Use My Interlinear?,” November 14, 2012,http://www.gospel-thomas.net/x_gjw_ps2.htm. The suggestion came from Andrew Bernhard (seeAnthony Le Donne , The Wife of Jesus: Ancient Texts and Modern Scandals [London: Oneworld Publications, 2013] 64 [Google Scholar]).
113 So, too, Ariel Shisha-Halevy: “I believe—on the basis of language and grammar—the text is authentic. That is to say, all its grammatical ‘noteworthy’ features, separately or conjointly do not warrant condemning it as forgery” (pers. comm., September 7, 2012).
114 See esp. Francis Watson, “The Gospel of Jesus’ Wife: How a Fake Gospel-Fragment Was Composed; Introduction and Summary”; “The Gospel of Jesus’ Wife: How a Fake Gospel-Fragment Was Composed”; and “Addendum: The End of the Line?”; all three pieces are dated September 2012 and are available at http://ntweblog.blogspot.com/2012/09/revised-versions-of-francis-watsons.html. My sincere thanks to Prof. Watson for collegially sending me copies of these essays.
115 See also below my response to Leo Depuydt, 190–93.
116 See Watson, “Fake Gospel-Fragment: Introduction and Summary,” “Fake Gospel-Fragment,” and “Addendum”; Suciu and Lundhaug, “A Peculiar Dialectical Feature.”
117 Michael Peppard, “Is the ‘Jesus’ Wife’ Papyrus a Forgery? And Other Queries,” September 25, 2012, https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/blog/jesus-wife-papyrus-forgery-and-other-queries; Timo S. Paananen, “Another ‘Fake’ or Just a Problem of Method: What Francis Watson's Analysis Does to Papyrus Köln 255?” (http://blue.butler.edu/~jfmcgrat/GJW/Another Fake Or Just a Problem of Method by Timo S. Paananen.pdf).
118 See, e.g., Jocelyn Penny Small , Wax Tablets of the Mind: Cognitive Studies of Memory and Literacy in Classical Antiquity (London: Routledge, 1997) [Google Scholar].
119 See, e.g., Le Donne, Wife of Jesus.
120 Walter C. Till and Hans-Martin Schenke , Die gnostischen Schriften des koptischen Papyrus Berolinensis 8502 (2nd ed.; TU 60. Berlin: Akademie, 1972) 2 [Google Scholar] [translation mine].

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