Monday, August 06, 2007

The Gospel Hoax

Here's a book I hadn't heard of till I saw a notice about it on Andreas Kostenberger's blog:
The Gospel Hoax: Morton Smith’s Invention of
Secret Mark by Stephen C. Carlson (Baylor University Press)

Andreas Kostenberger writes:
This is a thoroughly enjoyable, even fascinating, account of an astounding scholarly hoax perpetrated by Morton Smith on his colleagues. As Stephen Carlson compellingly demonstrates, Smith left several unmistakable clues that show that he forged an alleged ancient manuscript called “Secret Mark.” Why did he do this? and What are the lessons we can learn from the way in which Secret Mark was received by other scholars? I will certainly challenge my future graduate students to ponder the abiding questions raised by this provocative volume.
From Publishers Weekly
"Secret Mark" is the name given to a portion of a document allegedly uncovered in 1958 on a trip to the monastery of Mar Saba, located near Jerusalem. Purportedly written by Clement of Alexandria to someone called Theodore in the late second or early third century, the document was discovered by Morton Smith, at the time assistant professor of history at Columbia University. Secret Mark caused a stir in the academic community, as it alludes to a homosexual relationship between Jesus and Mark, and casts doubt on the authenticity of portions of the canonized gospel of Mark. Carlson is interested, not just in the authenticity of Secret Mark, but in the issue of historical hoaxes in general. His task is made difficult in that the Mar Saba documents are no longer available for inspection, so he depends on the photographs supplied by Smith. Carlson concludes that Secret Mark is indeed a hoax, and contains clear signs of a 20th-century provenance. Moreover, he points directly at Smith as the perpetrator of the fraud. Utilizing sound historical and linguistic methods, Carlson presents a convincing case for Smith's authorship of Secret Mark. While readers unfamiliar with the critical apparatus scholars use to evaluate ancient texts will find the book challenging, Carlson's presentation of the evidence strongly supports his views.
Larry Hurtado:
Stephen Carlson's expose of the supposed letter of Clement of Alexandria and its reference to a lost "Secret" version of Mark's Gospel is a scholarly bombshell. Built on pains-taking research, without any shrillness in tone, Carlson's argument is clear and compelling. Scholars in the field of Christian Origins will have to reckon with it, and many will have to re-think some important matters about the Gospels and the historical Jesus. A wider public will find this a fascinating detective story. Far from being some lost version of the story of Jesus, Secret Mark is uncovered as a great practical joke--one that keeps Morton Smith laughing from his grave. --Larry W. Hurtado, Professor of New Testament Language, Literature & Theology, School of Divinity, New College, University of Edinburgh