Hi all - interesting points raised - and here's some thoughts:
Is not the notion of 'Q' that there is a prototypical gospel? There are four witnesses to an event, and they each give a different story, according to their own experience, and based on this, someone suggests that there was one record, from which the four have drawn their account. Have I got that right? Sounds very unlikely to me ...
Whilst there are many debates as to its provenance, the linguistic style of Thomas dates it to the 4th century - however that does not mean it is not a 4th century record of an older oral tradition...
... the problem then is that none of the commentators reference that tradition, so that Thomas was never around to be included as canonical.
Contrary to Pagel's opinion, many scholars refute the notion of Thomas as a gnostic gospel, because it does not share those doctrines that were common to the broad spread of gnosticism.
On the gnosticism of the 2nd century - Christians were not the only opponents. Many Platonic and Stoic philosophers also vilified gnostic teachings as being 'bad' or 'mob philosophy' it is a populist philosophy - all very attractive with a rich symbolism robbed from every philosophical tradition going, but in the end there are so many barriers between man and God - and the gnostic gods themselves act in the manner of totally vainglorious humans - motivated by ignorance, envy, greed, etc., that the comdemnation of Plato speaking of the Olympic pantheon applies equally in this case - if they are gods, then they ought to act so, and not display the worst facets of human nature.
On the Apostle:
Two things we know of Thomas:
One - when Christ yold his disciples he was going to Jerusalem, they were dumbstruck. It was Thomas who stated the obvious - let us all go, and die with him - Thomas, in symbolist terms the voice of the reason (Peter is the will, John the Baptist the human intellect, John the Theologian the spiritualised intellect) knew the outcome of such a decision - but like all the disciples, he had no foreknowledge of God's plan for mans' salvation.
Two - when Christ appeared to the disciples after the resurrection, Thomas was not there. Did Christ not know that one of the number was missing? Of course not - Thomas was absent because he had yet his part to play in the mission.
Also - where was he? The others were in hiding, behind locked doors, fearful of the mob. Not Thomas. He was out, again reason in action, he went up to Jerusalem to die with his Master, and would continue doing what he thought best until that time should come...
Lastly - Thomas was the first to acclaim Jesus as Divine - Peter had done so on the descent from Tabor, but only referring to Jesus as 'the Christ' - the saviour. John, in his gospel, notes that when he and Peter ran to the empty tomb, even when they looked inside they still did not believe, they still did not understand.
Thomas' "My Lord and my God!" was the first human acknowledgement of Christ as God - but only after Jesus 'proved' his resurrection - only after Thomas placed his hands in the wounds to prove to himself this was a risen body, and not an apparition. Again, as Jesus rebuked him, blessed are those who believe and have not seen (faith) above those who have seen (reason).
Thomas
Is not the notion of 'Q' that there is a prototypical gospel? There are four witnesses to an event, and they each give a different story, according to their own experience, and based on this, someone suggests that there was one record, from which the four have drawn their account. Have I got that right? Sounds very unlikely to me ...
Whilst there are many debates as to its provenance, the linguistic style of Thomas dates it to the 4th century - however that does not mean it is not a 4th century record of an older oral tradition...
... the problem then is that none of the commentators reference that tradition, so that Thomas was never around to be included as canonical.
Contrary to Pagel's opinion, many scholars refute the notion of Thomas as a gnostic gospel, because it does not share those doctrines that were common to the broad spread of gnosticism.
On the gnosticism of the 2nd century - Christians were not the only opponents. Many Platonic and Stoic philosophers also vilified gnostic teachings as being 'bad' or 'mob philosophy' it is a populist philosophy - all very attractive with a rich symbolism robbed from every philosophical tradition going, but in the end there are so many barriers between man and God - and the gnostic gods themselves act in the manner of totally vainglorious humans - motivated by ignorance, envy, greed, etc., that the comdemnation of Plato speaking of the Olympic pantheon applies equally in this case - if they are gods, then they ought to act so, and not display the worst facets of human nature.
On the Apostle:
Two things we know of Thomas:
One - when Christ yold his disciples he was going to Jerusalem, they were dumbstruck. It was Thomas who stated the obvious - let us all go, and die with him - Thomas, in symbolist terms the voice of the reason (Peter is the will, John the Baptist the human intellect, John the Theologian the spiritualised intellect) knew the outcome of such a decision - but like all the disciples, he had no foreknowledge of God's plan for mans' salvation.
Two - when Christ appeared to the disciples after the resurrection, Thomas was not there. Did Christ not know that one of the number was missing? Of course not - Thomas was absent because he had yet his part to play in the mission.
Also - where was he? The others were in hiding, behind locked doors, fearful of the mob. Not Thomas. He was out, again reason in action, he went up to Jerusalem to die with his Master, and would continue doing what he thought best until that time should come...
Lastly - Thomas was the first to acclaim Jesus as Divine - Peter had done so on the descent from Tabor, but only referring to Jesus as 'the Christ' - the saviour. John, in his gospel, notes that when he and Peter ran to the empty tomb, even when they looked inside they still did not believe, they still did not understand.
Thomas' "My Lord and my God!" was the first human acknowledgement of Christ as God - but only after Jesus 'proved' his resurrection - only after Thomas placed his hands in the wounds to prove to himself this was a risen body, and not an apparition. Again, as Jesus rebuked him, blessed are those who believe and have not seen (faith) above those who have seen (reason).
Thomas