Of Jesus’ twelve
disciples, Thomas, to me, is the most intriguing. There’s the mystical Thomas, of
the Secret Gospel of Thomas, to whom Jesus chooses to divulge his secrets:(1)
Jesus said to
his disciples: "Compare me, and tell me whom I am like."
(2) Simon Peter said to him: "You are like a just messenger."
(3) Matthew said to him: "You are like an (especially) wise philosopher."
(4) Thomas said to him:
"Teacher, my mouth will not bear at all to say whom you are like."
(5) Jesus said: "I am not your teacher. For you have drunk, you have
become intoxicated at the bubbling spring that I have measured out."
(6) And he took him, (and) withdrew, (and) he said three words to him.
(7) But when Thomas came back to his companions, they asked him:
"What did Jesus say to you?"
(8) Thomas said to them: "If I tell you one of the words he said to me,
you will pick up stones and throw them at me,
and fire will come out of the stones (and) burn you up."
(3) Matthew said to him: "You are like an (especially) wise philosopher."
(4) Thomas said to him:
"Teacher, my mouth will not bear at all to say whom you are like."
(5) Jesus said: "I am not your teacher. For you have drunk, you have
become intoxicated at the bubbling spring that I have measured out."
(6) And he took him, (and) withdrew, (and) he said three words to him.
(7) But when Thomas came back to his companions, they asked him:
"What did Jesus say to you?"
(8) Thomas said to them: "If I tell you one of the words he said to me,
you will pick up stones and throw them at me,
and fire will come out of the stones (and) burn you up."
-Saying 13
Patterson/Robinson translation
And then there’s the other mystical Thomas, of The Book of
Thomas the Contender, who is portrayed
as the twin brother of Jesus:
The
savior said, "Brother Thomas while you have time in the world, listen to
me, and I will reveal to you the things you have pondered in your mind.
"Now,
since it has been said that you are my twin and true companion, examine
yourself, and learn who you are, in what way you exist, and how you will come
to be. Since you will be called my brother, it is not fitting that you be
ignorant of yourself. And I know that you have understood, because you had
already understood that I am the knowledge of the truth. So while you accompany
me, although you are uncomprehending, you have (in fact) already come to know,
and you will be called 'the one who knows himself'. For he who has not known
himself has known nothing, but he who has known himself has at the same time already
achieved knowledge about the depth of the all. So then, you, my brother Thomas,
have beheld what is obscure to men, that is, what they ignorantly stumble
against."
-from the John D. Turner
translation
The Acts of Thomas, a third-century writing,
portrays Thomas as a missionary to India, as well as a twin brother of Jesus,
who performs miracles and admonishes a newly-married couple to abstain from
sex. This Thomas makes the Puritans look like free love advocates.
But, of course, the Thomas we know best is the
Thomas of John’s Gospel, the disciple who was not present in the Upper Room
when the risen Christ first appeared to the other apostles. When told of this
miracle, he took the disciples’ tales with more than a grain of salt:
“Unless I see the mark of the nails in his
hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I
will not believe.”
A week later his
disciples were again in the house, and Thomas was with them. Although the doors
were shut, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you.” Then
he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see my hands. Reach out your hand
and put it in my side. Do not doubt but believe.” Thomas answered him, “My Lord
and my God!” Jesus said to him, “Have you believed because you have seen me?
Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”
(John 20:25b-29 (NRSV)
Thomas does not go so far as to put his hand in
Jesus’ side, but he got the point. It’s always seemed unfair that Thomas is singled
out and admonished by Jesus because of his doubt, while the other disciples
were never so tested. Professor Elaine Pagels in Beyond Belief: The Secret
Gospel of Thomas (Random House,
2003), argues that the author of John’s Gospel was familiar with the Gospel
of Thomas, and used the story to discredit the disciple as insufficiently
trusting.
The theologian Marcus
Borg made a distinction between the pre-Easter Jesus and the post-Easter Jesus,
with the Gospel of John portrait of Jesus being very much a post-Easter one. John
does not follow the narrative of the three synoptic Gospels—Mark, Matthew, and
Luke—but presents us with a mystical Jesus who says “I am the way, and the
truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” -John 14:6 (NRSV)
John’s Christ puts a premium on belief, as opposed to, say, Luke’s Sermon on
the Plain, or Matthew’s Sermon on the Mount, where actions and attitudes are
the focus.
Perhaps
Pagels is right—that the author of John wanted to discredit the Thomas of the
Gnostic Gospel. But even if he did the Thomas portrayed in John’s Gospel is a
sympathetic character because he’s so human—of course he’s unwilling to believe
a dead man could come back to life. (In the synoptic Gospels, the male disciples
don’t believe Mary Magdalene when she announces the Resurrection, but Jesus
never admonishes them for unbelief.) Yet for someone raised as an agnostic and still
having a difficult time with belief, I identify with this Thomas. I was confirmed
at Trinity, Iowa City, in 1979, which was not Anglo-Catholic enough at the time
to require confirmation names. If it had, mine would have been Thomas.
In the
Anglican Communion, the feast of St. Thomas is December 21, so he’s lost in the
pre-Christmas anxiety. The Roman Catholics celebrate him on July 3, which means
he loses out to Independence Day in the United States. So the most reliable
celebration of St. Thomas is the Second Sunday of Easter, when the Gospel
reading is the story of Thomas’s doubt and belief. And, of course, the service
ought to include the singing of “O Sons and Daughters, Let Us Sing!”
I’m still
fascinated with the mystical Thomas of the Gnostic Gospels and curious about the
Acts of Thomas. But the all-too-human Thomas of John’s Gospel resonates with
me.
Image: St. Thomas by El Greco (Wikimedia Commons)
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