One of the most striking finds in the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls, found at Qumran and attributed to an Essence sect which flourished there, was that the language of the Gospel of St John, so often thought to be Greek if not Gnostic, has now been shown to be in line with Semitic speculative thought in the 1st century.
The Gospel is not gnostic, nor Hellenic, but Hebrew in foundation.
The term 'Logos' is found to have correlation in the Judaic 'Memra' — the Word of God (Genesis 7:16, 17:2, 21:20 ... ) and the idea of the Word or Wisdom of God being with God is evident in the Book of Wisdom.
Another assumed sign were the dualist pairings, eg light/darkness, truth/lie, spirit/flesh. The DSS also use these selfsame terms, showing that such ideas were not alien to Hebraic speculation. Far from it.
The assumption that they were a sure marker of gnostic ideas was mistaken.
Within the text itself, of course, a profound knowledge of Judaic belief is explicit, moreso now that scholars are recovering data of 1st century Judaism.
The famous 'I am' statements have been argued by C.H. Dodd, among others, to be a translation of the Hebrew 'ani hu' (Isaiah 43:10), the secret Divine Name.
On the other hand, continuing research into gnostic documents, such as the Nag Hamadi finds, posts the question of whether the documents show that gnosticism influenced Christianity, or that Christianity influenced gnosticism.
As many of the significant texts post-date the Gospels, it is as likely, if not moreso, that they have incorporated Christian images, ideas and motifs into their own documents, as gnostics generally tended to do.
One of the most famous, Valentinus, was at one time a Christian, and a theologian. Here we meet the problem of 'retro-fitting' — the interpetation of data according to certain presuppositions.
The assumption of gnostic or Greek influence is nowhere as certain as once it was, whereas the idea of John drawing on theological currents of the contemporary Judaic world is nigh-on proven.
Thomas
The Gospel is not gnostic, nor Hellenic, but Hebrew in foundation.
The term 'Logos' is found to have correlation in the Judaic 'Memra' — the Word of God (Genesis 7:16, 17:2, 21:20 ... ) and the idea of the Word or Wisdom of God being with God is evident in the Book of Wisdom.
Another assumed sign were the dualist pairings, eg light/darkness, truth/lie, spirit/flesh. The DSS also use these selfsame terms, showing that such ideas were not alien to Hebraic speculation. Far from it.
The assumption that they were a sure marker of gnostic ideas was mistaken.
Within the text itself, of course, a profound knowledge of Judaic belief is explicit, moreso now that scholars are recovering data of 1st century Judaism.
The famous 'I am' statements have been argued by C.H. Dodd, among others, to be a translation of the Hebrew 'ani hu' (Isaiah 43:10), the secret Divine Name.
On the other hand, continuing research into gnostic documents, such as the Nag Hamadi finds, posts the question of whether the documents show that gnosticism influenced Christianity, or that Christianity influenced gnosticism.
As many of the significant texts post-date the Gospels, it is as likely, if not moreso, that they have incorporated Christian images, ideas and motifs into their own documents, as gnostics generally tended to do.
One of the most famous, Valentinus, was at one time a Christian, and a theologian. Here we meet the problem of 'retro-fitting' — the interpetation of data according to certain presuppositions.
The assumption of gnostic or Greek influence is nowhere as certain as once it was, whereas the idea of John drawing on theological currents of the contemporary Judaic world is nigh-on proven.
Thomas