Synopsis
"This book explores how Christianity
began by tracing its earliest texts, including the secret
Gospel of Thomas, rediscovered in Egypt in 1945".
"When her infant son was diagnosed with fatal pulmonary
hypertension, Elaine Pagels's spiritual and intellectual
quest took on a new urgency, leading her to explore historical
and archeological sources and to investigate what Jesus
and his teachings meant to his followers before the invention
of doctrine - and before the invention of Christianity
as we know it".
"The
astonishing discovery of the Gospel of Thomas, along with
more than fifty other early Christian texts unknown since
antiquity, offers startling clues. Pagels compares such
sources as Thomas's gospel (which claims to give Jesus'
secret teaching, and find its closest affinities with
kabbalah) with the canonic texts to show how Christian
leaders chose to include some gospels and exclude others
from the collection we have come to know as the New Testament.
To stabilize the emerging Christian church in times of
devastating persecution, the church fathers constructed
the canon, creed, and hierarchy - and, in the process,
suppressed many of its spiritual resources."
Drawing
on new scholarship - her own, and that of an international
group of scholars - Pagels shows that what matters about
Christianity involves much more than any one set of beliefs.
Traditions embodied in Judaism and Christianity can powerfully
affect us in heart, mind, and spirit, inspire visions
of a new society based on practicing justice and love,
even heal and transform us.