The Gospels are not the earliest Christian scriptures. Here's a handy timeline and resource:
Early Christian Writings: New Testament, Apocrypha, Gnostics, Church Fathers
Thank you so much for that link, I really appreciate it. I started to read the Gospel of Thomas and it has opened and clarified my mind more about Jesus and Christianity. It has provided me with confidence. I find this Gospel very fascinating that I currently searching for some Buddhist commentaries and interpretations of the literature.
I do not know if this is true or not but, I have heard that scholars agree that we only have six sentences that can be attributed to Jesus Christ having said, maybe even less than that. With that in my mind, to open a text that might actually be words spoken by a once living and Breathing Jesus Christ is very touching to me. As I was reading it, I had the feeling that I was actually there listening to one of Jesus' sermons. That I am his disciple. As I was trying to decode the words imagining them actually be said by him, it was magical, I fell in love with it, and started to cling to Jesus. The Jesus freak within was awaken I never knew I had cause I am a Buddhist.
Some parts of the text I think can be found in the new testament if memory serves me correct. I checked the agreed on date and it seems the Gospel of Thomas is not late and about as early as even the earliest of the Four Canonized Gospels so, that makes me feel more confident that this perhaps is a very legitimate text. I guess during and after Jesus there really were various groups that different ideas about who Jesus was.
From reading some of the Gospel last night I became more confident that, perhaps Christianity is not at all about getting the right beliefs, the right, dogma, and right doctrine. No, it is about spirituality; a path of self realization. The established church just would have us think otherwise, so that we hand over our own freedom, sovereignty, and spirituality to an institution that controls us. I see the way Christianity or Bible being practiced today as a behavioral tool. If we behave good we get a reward.
The Gospel of Thomas gives me the impression that we are to took spirituality into our own hands and, when we do, we are free, empowered, and liberated.
I have heard in Buddhism there are Buddhists who elevated Buddha to status of God. I even have heard that Pure Land Buddhists believe in the Amida Buddha that, this Amida Buddha will take them to the pure land after they day. That we are saved by grace. Sounds similar to Today's Christianity.
I wonder.... Could the same sort of thing we find in Buddhism in regard to the contrast of Pure land Buddhists versus Theravada Buddhist can also be seen in Christianity as well? Some Christianities emphasized the spiritual path, maybe others were very esoteric in practicing the Jesus' highest inner teachings for the few, and others emphasizing, a more belief. The exception is that the latter, "Today's Christianity", was harshly imposed in history. If you did not agree with their doctrines, you were to be tortured and executed. All other points of view on Jesus was banned, burned, and outlawed. Therefore, we can not see the diversity in Christianity in that retrospect of spirituality versus Dogma. I think in Buddhism there was no suppressing of other ideas about Buddha, just different sects.