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Long lost masterpiece sold christ
Long lost masterpiece sold christ







long lost masterpiece sold christ
  1. #Long lost masterpiece sold christ full
  2. #Long lost masterpiece sold christ series
long lost masterpiece sold christ

We know that a writer in the 2nd century told this story, which is the story of the encounter between Judas Iscariot and Jesus some time after the Resurrection. We don't really know 100 percent that it's Judas' account. I think that the gospel of Judas Iscariot is actually a very reverent document coming from approximately the 2nd century - well after the four gospels accepted as the canonical gospels were actually written. And Judas is the one who enables all of us to help find that inner spark within ourselves. And that sacrifice is to sacrifice the life of Jesus in order that Jesus may attain eternity and immortality. He's the person who is asked to make the ultimate sacrifice. There's no direct mention of the Resurrection. How is it different? What does he say?Ī: First of all, Judas and Jesus are meeting in some nether land possibly after the Resurrection. In the Bible, Judas betrays Jesus, but this gospel tells a different story - Judas' version of what happened. Q: This is not the Judas Iscariot that we know from the Bible. He is Jesus' favorite disciple - he is the person who enables Jesus to reach the heavens, and he himself is a star in the sky, according to the words of Jesus. Question: Herb Krosney, what is in this lost gospel about Judas? What does it say about Judas Iscariot?Īnswer: Judas is actually in a totally revised relationship to Jesus.

#Long lost masterpiece sold christ series

Kenneth Garrett/National Geographic SocietyĪs part of a ongoing series of conversations with leading researchers and explorers for the Radio Expeditions co-production with the National Geographic Society, Day to Day host Alex Chadwick talks with Herb Krosney, author of The Lost Gospel, a new book about how the Gospel of Judas was found, and the international effort to authenticate, conserve, and translate it: Pages of the codex will be on display at the National Geographic Society, and will eventually reside at the Coptic Museum in Cairo, Egypt.Ī page from the restored gospel begins: "The secret account of the revelation that Jesus spoke in conversation with Judas Iscariot during a week, three days before he celebrated Passover." The first showing is Sunday, April 9, at 8 PM ET.Īdditionally, the Gospel of Judas is featured on the May cover of National Geographic magazine.

#Long lost masterpiece sold christ full

The full story of the discovery and restoration of the Gospel of Judas can be seen on the National Geographic Channel. The National Geographic Society unveiled the only known copy of the Gospel of Judas on Thursday. The 66-page manuscript contains not only the Gospel of Judas but also a text titled James (also known as First Apocalypse of James), a letter of Peter to Philip and a fragment of a fourth text scholars for now are calling the Book of Allogenes. Rodolphe Kasser, one of the world's leading Coptic scholars, was recruited to reconstruct the manuscript and to transcribe and translate the text. When attempts to resell the manuscript fell through, Tchacos - alarmed by the codex's rapidly deteriorating state - transferred it to the Maecenas Foundation for Ancient Art in Basel, Switzerland, in February 2001 for conservation and translation. The codex languished in a safe deposit box on Long Island, N.Y., for 16 years before being bought in 2000 by Zurich-based antiquities dealer Frieda Nussberger-Tchacos. It then circulated among antiquities traders, moving from Egypt to Europe to the United States. The leather-bound papyrus codex, believed to have been translated from the original ancient Greek to the Coptic language around 300 AD, was found in the 1970s in a cave in the desert near El Minya, Egypt. The story of how this gospel was found, and the international effort to authenticate, conserve, and translate it, has been chronicled in the new book by Herb Krosney called The Lost Gospel. Judas is shown as Jesus' best friend, asked by Jesus himself to betray his identity to fulfill the prophecy and liberate his soul to ascend to heaven. But a newly restored papyrus document dating to the 2nd century AD portrays a very different man. To most Christians, Judas is seen as a traitor, the disciple who betrayed Jesus to the Romans for 30 pieces of silver. Now a new gospel has been unveiled by the National Geographic Society - one that focuses on the story of Judas Iscariot. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John make up the four accepted Gospels of the Christian New Testament. 'Gospel' Offers Radical New Perspective on Judas April 6, 2006









Long lost masterpiece sold christ