Considering the Infancy of Jesus Gospels
Every once in a while, there will be news about a gospel, Bible fragment, or other ancient text that purports to provide special insight. People get all a-twitter about these things, thinking that knowledge can be gained from texts that were omitted from the Bible.
Here is an expensive word that may impress your friends if you use it: pseudepigrapha. Essentially, it is an ancient text that is falsely attributed to a famous person. There are quite of few of those things. An infancy gospel is credited to Thomas, and I doubt he would approve of it.
Apostle St. Thomas / El Greco, ca. 1612 |
A newly published fragment of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas recently made headlines, prompting people to call it “the oldest written record of Jesus’ childhood.” Given that many Christians may hear the news, it’s important to be informed about what it is, whether it really gives us information about Jesus’ childhood, and how to have conversations about it with others.
You should read the rest. It's short. It's interesting. It's found at "Do the Infancy Gospels Tell Us About Jesus’ Childhood?"