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An Amazing Discovery
Southwest Missouri State University professor Charles Hedrick opens the discussion by setting the stage for us, as we asked him to do, without revealing his own belief in the authenticity of Secret Mark.
In 1958 Morton Smith, a 43-year-old Columbia University history professor, spent the summer looking for ancient manuscripts and handwritten entries in old printed books at monasteries in Turkey, Greece and the Holy Land. One of his destinations was the storied Greek Orthodox monastery of Mar Saba in the Judean wilderness, roughly a dozen miles southeast of Jerusalem.
Smith was no stranger to the place. Seventeen years earlier he had spent two months of seclusion there, fully participating in its meditative way of life. Day began in the isolated Byzantine structure with morning worship from midnight until 6:00 a.m., only to be resumed again in the afternoon from 1:30 to 3:00. Around 5:00 p.m. the monks observed evening prayers and then slept till midnight. “Between the services was silence—the silence of the desert, no voices, no sounds of animals, not even wind in the trees,” as Smith described it.1 It was a life of worship, meditation and spiritual reflection.
After his first trip to Mar Saba in 1941, Morton Smith was ordained an Episcopal deacon (in 1944). Although not officially, in effect he later left the clergy, however, to pursue the scholarly life. He once quipped to the eminent Yale scholar E.R. Goodenough that “he was passing out cigars because he was no longer a Father.”2 He remained a lifelong bachelor.
On his second visit to the monastery (in 1958), Smith excused himself from the daily liturgy in order to give complete focus to his manuscript search. He later published a catalogue of the manuscripts he discovered at Mar Saba.3
Each morning he would climb the stairs to the cluttered tower library together with a monk assigned to sit with him while he worked. There he found manuscripts and nearly 500 books scattered hither and yon and jammed into the bookcase. Each day he was permitted to take a few books to his monk’s cell for study. One of the books he examined was written in Latin and Greek, lacking a cover and a title page. It later turned out to be a 1646 edition of the letters of Ignatius of Antioch edited by Isaac Voss.4 The final pages of the printed book had originally been blank, but now they contained a handwritten Greek manuscript of the 18th century (judging by the handwriting), which purported to be a copy of a letter by the second-century church leader Clement of Alexandria.
The Clement letter is addressed to one Theodore, otherwise unknown. Theodore apparently had asked Clement questions about a Secret Gospel of Mark, and Clement answers by quoting two excerpts from the Secret Gospel.
Smith photographed the letter and at the end of the summer returned to his teaching duties at Columbia. He spent the next 15 years studying the handwritten manuscript, conferring with colleagues and preparing it for publication. In 1973 Smith simultaneously published two books on the Clement letter: one a scholarly book titled Clement of Alexandria and a Secret Gospel of Mark and the other a popular book titled The Secret Gospel: The Discovery and Interpretation of The Secret Gospel According to Mark. Both books exploded like bombshells on the reading public, but in the academic guild it was a “nuclear event.”5
Clement’s letter to Theodore appears to be something of a diatribe against the Carpocratians, a Gnostic-Christian group whose members (Clement says in the letter) “wander ... into a boundless abyss of the carnal and bodily sins” and embrace “blasphemous and carnal doctrine” (Smith’s translation). Clement elsewhere accuses them of engaging in orgies: They “overturn the lamps and so remove the light that would uncover the shame of their dissolute ‘righteousness’ and unite with whom they will” (Stromata III.2). Another second-century writer, Irenaeus, accused them of “practicing magic arts and incantations, love potions and love feasts” and of living dissolute lives (Against Heresies I.25.3). The Carpocratians further claimed, according to Irenaeus, that one must experience “everything ungodly and impious” in order to free one’s soul from the world (Against Heresies I.25.4). In his letter, Clement commends Theodore for “silencing the unspeakable teachings of the Carpocratians,” and then proceeds to his own denunciations of them.
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Secret MarkMorton was not a forger as was proven by Mark Koester Divinity Professor at Harvard. Why doesn't Bart Ehrman see that his evidence is not plausible to the average citizen with a brain? Wishing the letter is a forgery does not make it so. • • • • • • • Secret Gospel of MarkStephen Carlson's book conclusively proved that Morton Smith's Secret Gospel of Mark was not authentic. See Craig Blomberg's review on the web at http://www.denverseminary.edu/article/the-gospel-hoax-morton-smiths-invention-of-secret-mark/ Morton undoubtedly had the talent and sufficient personal reasons to do this. • • • • • • • Secret Gospel of MarkWhile the early christian view of this ritual displays gnostic influence, Jesus may have been following the groove of an earlier tradition; the magical miracle workings of Honi the Circle-Maker (CROSSAN, The Historical Jesus, pp.142-148).The only one to refer to God as "Father" in rabbinical literature as did Jesus. If the raising of Lazarus from the dead required a ritual described in Numbers 19, this is consistant with kabbalistic writings identifying the Red Heifer with magic. • • • • • • • The Rich Young Man Who Will Be SavedClement was indeed aware of a second gospel and also states that this gospel(s) was kept hidden, being read only to those who were being “perfected.” In addition, Clement did write about “Who Is the Rich Man Who Will Be Saved?” which is basically a commentary on the “Rich Young Ruler” story in Mark; combined with the additions of SGM. It is suspected that Clement had to answer with such a commentary due to his congregants’ misconception about rich people’s difficulties in getting into heaven. • • • • • • • Secret MarkThe Catholic trinity is as follows: The Father (male), the Son (self explanatory) and the Holy Ghost, which is deemed also to be Male. See Catholic Encyclopaedia: Holy Ghost. There is nothing out of context with 'Secret Mark'; genuine or forgery. The only unsavoury aspect in this saga are the minds that see what they want to see. • • • • • • • Secret Gospel of MarkA lie in the time of Jesus is still a lie today. If people give place to lies then there faith is small and useless. • • • • • • • Secret St. Mark ReferenceI find it sad that so much personal and professional negativity should follow as to the veracity of the document and it's source....After all, Smith staked a good part of his reputation on its study and subsequent publication... That the letter has been conveniently misplaced, surprises me not, considering the sometimes poorly organized refuse of textual materials in repositories, ...see the example of how Smith was said to have found the book and letter itself, originally... • • • • • • • VILLOVERDECurious that the items disappeared. Find them, test them, controversy should be over. Funny how religious discoveries are always met with scepticism rather that joy. • • • • • • • Secret MarkI look on this Secret Mark as just another attempt to undermine faith in the Scriptures and in the divinity of Jesus Christ, who walked perfectly in an imperfect world. Jesus did nothing in secret. When He was taken before the High Priest, before His crucifiction He stated, "I spake openly to the world; I ever taught in the synagogue, and in the temple, whither the Jews always resort; and in secret have I said nothing." • • • • • • • Secret GospelI have been extensively studying the "Secret Gospel" in my spare time for many years now, and I have come to the irrevocable conclusion that SGM is indeed an authentic document. There are too many witnesses and testimonies to ignore, not to mention the new color photos. I have no doubt in my mind, especially after examining the watermarks that remain visible in most of the photographs. People need to accept this, as have Clementine scholars, and move towards trying to understand the text. • • • • • • • Scret Gospel of MarkMy first observation in this question of a second gospel is that Clement was aware of a second gospel which implies that multiple copies were available. If so, where are they? Secondly, as head of the church would Clement not have written on such an important subject in other communications? The BAR article does not reference other Clement comments on the subject or the lack thereof. • • • • • • • Morton Smith's findThere's no way of telling whether Morton Smith faked it, found it or - as is always possible - found an older fake and was fooled. The studies which claim fakery are as dubious as those that claim it's genuinely Markan. We lack sufficient data. But it's interesting because it presents an alternative telling of the raising of Lazarus perhaps showing us more about a character who most scholars tend to write off as a fiction of the Gospel writer of "John". • • • • • • • gospel of markAs usual, the church 'keepers of the truth' have hidden or "misplaced" the original letter,, how familiar does that ring ?? It's been going on for many centuries,,,, and,, sadly , continues today.... • • • • • • • Mark's "Secret Gospel"?I agree with the last comment about this "secret Gospel" being "fishy." I would add that it also has that distinct rank odor charactistic of ancient Gnostic "secret knowledge," but in this case it also has been overlayed by the more recent academic "fishy smell" added by Smith and others. "For wherever the carcase is, there will the eagles [Margin, or vultures] be gathered together." Matt. 24:28 (RSV) cf. Luke 17:37. • • • • • • • Helmut Koester's QuestionThe answer to the question that Helmut Koester poses as the title to his article in support of the authenticity of Morton Smith's greatest con job is, "yes". (See, "Was Morton Smith a Great Thespian and I a Complete Fool?", BAR Vol 35, No. 6) • • • • • • • The Secret Gospel of MarkPerhaps a look at history. See what the Jerusalem Church, during the times of St.'s Cyril, Basil, and Gregory emphasized in the liturgies they were being asked to develop for the local congregations; those to become the Oriental Orthodox Churches. The two most significant services for the liturgical year were a celebration of the Baptism of Jesus and the Incarnation of Jesus. And, I believe you will find Lent, as a prerequisite for baptism, tied to the Incarnation and not the Crucifixion. • • • • • • • Secret MarkLatter-day Saints will recognize an aspect of the LDS Temple endowment ceremony in Clement's quotations from Secret Mark. This is something that could not be forged by anyone who had not themselves been initiated. Furthermore, if this is a valid connection, Morton Smith's interpretations are quite incorrect. It has nothing to do with baptism, or (God forbid) homosexual union, but refers to a body of secret teachings and rituals, that Clement called "the mysteries of the kingdom." • • • • • • • Secret Gospel of MarkNot being an historian, I comment from ignorance. However, it seems that we only have photocopies of a copy of a letter (that we cannot find anymore) written or not written by a church father about a secret gospel that may or may not exist. If I am correct, we have a number of copies of the Gospel of Mark, but this is the only "prove" of a secret gospel. This seems like a case of starting a fire to have smoke as apposed to "Where there is smoke, their is fire"? This does sound a bit fishy. • • • • • • • |
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