A cave near Al Minya, Egypt believed to be the discovery
site of the Codex documents |
GOSPEL OF JUDAS
Learning from our past is an essential part of the Waitt Institute
for Discovery’s approach to making tomorrow’s world a more
informed and better place. Supporting important research and discovery
that will add valuable new information to our understanding of the world’s
culture and history exemplifies the mission of our organization. To
this end the discovery and translation of the Gospel of Judas and Codex
documents represents exactly that – a rare opportunity to shed
new light on the historical, political, linguistic and cultural context
surrounding this ancient Coptic manuscript from the third or fourth
century.
A codex is an ancient bound book of folded papyrus pages. Codices were
usually scriptural or classical texts because they were easier to manage
and could contain more information than scrolls.
This codex contains the Gospel of Judas and other texts which were
discovered in Al Minya, Egypt in the early 1970s. Having survived in
the desert for more than 1.600 years, the papyrus deteriorated greatly
when it was transferred to a safe deposit box in Long Island, N.Y. This
damage has made the restoration process an enormous undertaking for
Professor Rodolphe Kasser, world-renowned Coptic scholar and his team
of researchers.

Rodolphe Kasser, (l.) with Ted Waitt
examining the ancient manuscripts. |
Decoding these texts is a dramatic discovery of cultural interest,
the text itself offers an alternative interpertation of the relationship
between Jesus and Judas. Although the author of the Gospel of Judas
remains anonymous, the original text is believed to have been written
in Greek around A.D. 150 by a group of early gnostic Christians. This
Coptic version is believed to have been a copy of that version which
was written around A.D. 300. Scholars knew of the existence of the Gospel
of Judas because of references in other ancient texts, the first known
being in A.D. 180.
The Waitt Institute for Discovery's interest is in helping researchers
determine the historical significance of the documents, and ensuring
that these documents and their content are available for scholars and
people of faith to review and study for generations to come.
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Actual page from the Codex (left)
Codex text on papyrus, in close up (below) |
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Along with the staff of the National Geographic and the team of world-class
scientists and historians who have and will continue to study the documents,
the inquiry into these documents has been conducted with the utmost
standards of professional scholarship. These documents, after their
translation and preservation, will be given to Egypt, the country of
origin.
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