The document in question - although it is often not named in these stories - is the medieval Gospel of Barnabas. It is surely one of the strangest of texts from the occidental Middle Ages. It has long been an object of fascination because it does indeed present a Mahometan or at least Islaamified version of the life of Christ. It is clearly a work of the Middle Ages, although there remains the possibility that it contains material from earlier periods - even from the early Christian era.
Over the years it has been the centrepiece of the present author's academic work. Unfortunately, it has been - and continues to be - entangled in the febrile inter-religious disputes of Christian and Mahometan apologists. For their part, the Musulmans claim that it is the long lost Injeel of the Prophet Isa. The Christians, on the other hand, want to dismiss it as a worthless or even a "vile" forgery. The present writer is firmly of the view that it is best to consider it separate from this atmosphere of polemic.
You can find some work on this fascinating and mysterious text here:
Yours,
Harper McAlpine Black
No comments:
Post a Comment