Tag Archives: christian hoaxes

Great Jesus Hoax 3D

It’s sort of funny to watch the late Columbia Professor Morton Smith toy with his adversaries as he defends the authenticity of the so-called “Secret Gospel of Mark,” which he claimed to have stumbled on in a monastery library at Mar Saba, Jerusalem, in 1958. The debate was a like a game.

You can’t catch me, he taunts, through the pages of his recently republished account of the “discovery,” The Secret Gospel. I’m smarter than you!

Like an unrepentant James Frey, Smith starts his screed with this hilarious warning: “No doubt if the past, like a motion picture, could be replayed, I should be shocked to find how much of the story I have already invented. Memory is perhaps more fallacious than forgetfulness.”

Huh? I can only imagine what the publisher of my memoir “Bad Dog (A Love Story)” would have said if I’d put that in my Author’s Note. P.S. I’m making this up!

Despite being a New Testament scholar, Smith was an atheist, driven out of the warm arms of Jesus by mysterious, bad childhood experiences. His Secret Gospel tells a tawdry tale of pedophilia by the Son of God Himself. It also supports Smith’s belief that so-called “miracles” like the raising of Lazarus in John were late accretions to early, non-miraculous gay orgies — um, I mean, events.

Early on in his misremembered account, Smith says, he “cast about, trying to find plausible reasons for assigning both letter and Gospel to the middle ages, the Renaissance, or the seventeenth century.” Or the 20th? For reasons he doesn’t share, he decided it was genuine. In other words, the least likely explanation became for him obvious.

Okay. He then decides Jesus must have baptized his followers (although this is not mentioned in our actual Gospels). And in a spurt of camp humor he writes [enhanced by my italics and "!"]:

“Thus the body of each possessed Christian is in effect a part (a “member,” that is a hand or foot or whatever [!]) of the body of the Messiah, who lives and acts [!] in [!] them all.” (p94)

But Jesus was not content to act in his disciples bodies — oh, no. He also enjoyed other baptismal actions, as Smith hints in a snickering footnote:

“Manipulation, too, was probably involved; the stories of Jesus’ miracles give a very large place to the use of his hands.”

Heh heh. Get it? Read this with learned commentaries from Professors Beavis and Butthead.

Smith goes on to argue that most likely (1) Jesus wrote stuff, (2) it was “suppressed”, and (3) it was suppressed because of its “libertine content” [i.e., tales of orgiastic initiations]. No evidence exists for any of these (3) points.

So twisted does Smith’s pretzel logic become that at one point he actually says:

“So the total neglect of the letter [containing the Secret Gospel] through seventeen centuries argues for its authenticity.” (p136)

Whassup? Smith seems to be inventing a new historical principle here: If there’s no evidence that something happened, that proves it happened!

Interesting. A recent book by Stephen Carlson called The Gospel Hoax lays out compelling reasons to think Smith forged the Gospel himself as a younger man. In addition to a devastating dissection of the letter’s handwriting, Carlson shows how Smith embedded clues to his own identity within the Gospel. Amazing.

Augustine got it right, after all: The ultimate reason for the Fall of Man is narcissism!

The Amazing Jesus Hoax! (part 1)

Imagine a highly respected scholar stumbled on a mysterious, hastily-scribbled letter in the back of a 17th century book in an ancient monastery in the desert outside Jerusalem. The letter was written in a 17th (or perhaps 18th) century hand, but its language indicated the contents came from much, much earlier.

Our professor was just a failed academic at the time — his tenure hadn’t come through. He had a difficult personality, in part due to being from New York, in part to an understandable rage against the Puritan sexual mores of the time. It was the 1950s, and he was perhaps a violently closeted gay man.

So he cannot believe his luck, there in that dusty monastery library. A copy of an ancient manuscript — one his vast training allowed him tentatively to attribute, on stylistic grounds, to the early Christian centuries. And even better, the letter itself contained a quotation from an even earlier source: a substantial section from nothing less than a “Lost Gospel” with heretofore suppressed details about the ministry and personality of Jesus himself! Knock knock, tenure committee!

Our professor took some natural-light photographs of the manuscript and (for reasons that are not entirely clear) put the book back on the shelf. Then he left the library and went back to America.

He showed his slightly grainy black-and-white photographs to some academic friends, who agreed the handwriting appeared to be from the 18th century. He studied the language of the letter and was able to attribute it to Clement of Alexandria, a well-known bishop and Church Father who wrote around the year 200 — and, as luck would have it, a prolific letter writer, thousands of words of whose actual letters were readily available for comparison.

Our professor then . . .  waited 20 years. That’s right. He established impressive credentials as an award-winning historian of Ancient Palestine, a tenured Columbia professor, textbook author, and belligerent jerk. Recapturing the precious manuscript seemed bizarrely unimportant to him. It remains missing and was never subject to the only real means of authenticating genuineness: microscopic physical examination of the paper, ink and handwriting.

Then, in the mid-1970s, safely tenured, he published two books on the manuscript he’d found back in 1958. Controversy greeted them, but nobody seemed to want to say the obvious. The “Gospel” was taken seriously, the “Letter” included in a standard edition of Clement’s works.

The professor’s first defense was a bulky, densely-footnoted, academically intimidating discussion put out by Harvard University Press. The second is a brief, lively book I’ve just finished called The Secret Gospel: The Discovery and Interpretation of the Secret Gospel According to Mark, reissued recently by a religious cult in California. The author (our professor): Morton Smith.

Well, well. The fact that this “Secret Gospel” was taken so seriously for so long, and continues to have its advocates, is the best argument I’ve seen lately for the proposition that academics have no common sense.

From beginning to end, Morton Smith’s incendiary discovery reads like a massive middle finger to the academy — an incredible insult so clever, so smart, even bright people are left absolutely speechless.

Morton Smith almost certainly forged the letter and had it “lost” so a physical analysis could not be performed. Then he spent decades writing intricate “defenses” of the letter that were, in fact, little more than pretexts for him to parade unrelated, tangential arguments for his own pet theories.

It’s an incredible story. Better than Holy Blood, Holy Grail. More tomorrow …