Why Some Ancient Gospels Didn’t Make The Cut (January 4, 2026 Sunday School)
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Presenter: GPPC Parish Associate Rev. Kit Schooley
What happens when the eyewitnesses are gone, the libraries are empty, and communities stretch from Syria to Africa with different memories of Jesus? We step into that world and explore how early Christians tried to make sense of a Savior they never met, zeroing in on the Infancy Gospel of Thomas and the contested ground where heresy and orthodoxy first took shape.
We start by mapping the East–West split: a bustling network of congregations in Syria and Asia Minor, a quieter Rome, and traditions that diverged on details as basic as a cave birth versus a stable. From there, we unpack why names were attached to texts long after the fact, how “gospel” once meant heroic storytelling, and the criteria the church eventually used to sift canon from curiosity. Then we wade into three striking childhood scenes—a clap that sets clay sparrows flying, a five-year-old who stuns a teacher with claims of preexistence, and a quiet workshop miracle that stretches a short plank to size—asking what these stories reveal about power, piety, and the desire to fill narrative gaps.
Along the way, we tackle the big questions animating the second and third centuries: Is the Kingdom something we await or something we cultivate within? How did Gnostic ideas about matter, spirit, and hidden knowledge shape debates on sin and salvation? Why did later leaders reject pre-baptism miracles, and why did public verifiability matter to canon formation? By reading these texts in their context—missionary aims, anti-Jewish edges, and philosophical crosswinds—we see orthodoxy emerging not from certainty but from centuries of wrestling, memory, and community judgment.
Stay to the end for a preview of our next stop: the Gospel of Mary and the disciples’ struggle with authority, voice, and spiritual insight. If this journey into the formative centuries deepened your curiosity, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with the one question you’re still turning over.
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