![cover image](https://wikiwandv2-19431.kxcdn.com/_next/image?url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Codex_Tchacos_p33.jpg/640px-Codex_Tchacos_p33.jpg&w=640&q=50)
Infancy Gospel of Thomas
Gospel about the childhood of Jesus / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Infancy Gospel of Thomas is an apocryphal gospel about the childhood of Jesus. The scholarly consensus dates it to the mid-to-late second century, with the oldest extant manuscript dating to the fourth or fifth century.[1] The document is generally considered to be Gnostic in origin because of references in letters (by Hippolytus of Rome and Origen of Alexandria) to a "Gospel of Thomas", but it is unclear whether those letters refer to the Infancy Gospel or the Gospel of Thomas, a sayings gospel discovered near Nag Hammadi, Egypt in 1945.[2]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2018) |
Infancy Gospel of Thomas | |
---|---|
![]() Young Jesus brings clay birds to life. | |
Information | |
Religion | Christianity |
Author | "Thomas the Israelite" |
Language | Greek |
Period | Early Christianity (2nd Century) |
Early Christian writers regarded the Infancy Gospel of Thomas as inauthentic and heretical. Eusebius rejected it as a heretical "fiction" in the third book of his fourth-century Church History, and Pope Gelasius I included it in his list of heretical books in the fifth century.