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Origins and Sources of the Gospel of Barnabas
Origins and Sources of the Gospel of Barnabas
by John Gilchrist
An Analysis of the Gospel of Barnabas
- Introduction
- 1. Was Barnabas really its author?
- 2. Evidence of its Medieval Origin
- 3. Other Evidences against its Authenticity
- 4. Who Really Composed this Forgery?
- Bibliography
INTRODUCTION
Although the Gospel of Barnabas has in recent years been
distributed fairly widely throughout the Muslim world in
many languages, most Muslims have not as yet seen a copy
of this book. Nevertheless the knowledge of its existence
is fairly widespread in the Muslim community.
Since 1973 the English translation of the Gospel of
Barnabas by Lonsdale and Laura Ragg has been reprinted in
large numbers by the Begum Aisha Bawany Wakf in Pakistan
and a number of these reprints have come into worldwide
circulation. The general position, however, is that most
Muslims remain largely ignorant of the book and its contents
as a whole.
It has been a blissful ignorance. For too long many Muslims
have been persuaded that this book tells the ultimate truth
about the life and teaching of Jesus Christ. It alleges that
Jesus was not the Son of God, that he was not crucified, and
that he foretold the coming of Muhammad. As a result some
Muslims believe that this is the true Injil that was given
to Jesus. The Gospel of Barnabas, however, does not claim to
be the Injil but actually distinguishes itself from the book
allegedly given to Jesus. In the following passage we find
this distinction very clearly brought out:
The angel Gabriel presented to him as it were a shining
mirror, a book, which descended into the heart of Jesus,
in which he had knowledge of what God hath done and
what he hath said, and what God willeth insomuch that
everything was laid bare and open to him; as he said
unto me: 'Believe, Barnabas, that I know every prophet
with every prophecy, insomuch that whatever I say the
whole hath come forth from that book'.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.9).
Other Muslims believe that the Gospel of Barnabas is the
"original testament" and that the Christians have substituted
it with the "New Testament". Such an attitude betrays a woeful
ignorance, not only of the Gospel of Barnabas, but also of the
structure of the Christian Bible as a whole.
Because we are persuaded, however, that ignorance is a great
evil - no matter how blissful it may be - and because ignorance
is the handmaid of error, we deem it necessary to set out the
true facts about the Gospel of Barnabas so that it may be clear
to Muslim peoples everywhere that this book is a patent forgery
of the Middle Ages and that the Muslims will be doing the cause
of truth a great service by admitting once and for all that the
Gospel of Barnabas is of no historical value at all and that it
is to be rejected as a genuine account of the life and teaching
of Jesus Christ.
This booklet does not purport to be a contribution to the
ongoing scholarly study that is being conducted in the Christian
world into the background and origins of the Gospel of Barnabas.
For this we are chiefly indebted to the Raggs, who first
translated the Gospel into English, and to men like Gairdner,
Jomier and Slomp who have gone to great lengths in the cause of
truth to provide substantial evidence of the falsehood of the
Gospel of Barnabas. Rather we have endeavoured to produce here
in summary form some of the clear proofs which have come from
these studies so that our Muslim friends may see that the Gospel
of Barnabas is a forgery which has become a lamentable red-herring
across the trail of Christian-Muslim apologetics in the modern
world.
It has been our purpose in some small measure to convey to the
Muslim community worldwide some of the fruits of these studies.
We have done this purely because we believe that it is deeply
regrettable that men should believe that this book is a true
account of the life of Jesus Christ.
Because we believe that no lover of truth will wish to be deluded
by a counterfeit for long, we have elected to reveal briefly to
our Muslim readers some of the origins and sources of the Gospel
of Barnabas. We trust that our readers will peruse this booklet
with a genuine desire to know where the Gospel of Barnabas really
came from and when it was really written - and that they will draw
a fair conclusion from the evidence set forth in the following
pages of this booklet.
1. Was Barnabas really its author?
This book professes to be a Gospel and alleges that its author
was the Apostle Barnabas. We must therefore begin by enquiring
who the man Barnabas really was and at the same time must decide
whether he is the author of the book we are considering in this
booklet. To do this we must make some comparisons between the
knowledge that we have of the real Apostle Barnabas in the
Bible and the professed author of the Gospel of Barnabas. At
the beginning and end of this book two comments appear which
immediately assist us in our quest. They are these:
Many, being deceived of Satan, under pretence of piety,
are preaching most impious doctrine, calling Jesus son
of God, repudiating the circumcision ordained of God for
ever, and permitting every unclean meat: among whom Paul
also hath been deceived.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.2).
Others preached that he really died, but rose again.
Others preached, and yet preach, that Jesus is the
son of God, among whom is Paul deceived.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.273).
The author of this book uses strong language to denounce
the teaching of Paul in particular, especially regarding
circumcision; the crucifixion, death and resurrection of Jesus;
and the Christian belief that Jesus is the Son of God. The whole
book abounds in discourses levelled against those things which
the author particularly takes Paul to task for, and there can be
no doubt that the author of this book is poles apart from Paul
and his doctrine and is diametrically opposed to his preaching
and teaching.
This is the first of many evidences against the authenticity of
this book for whoever wrote it expediently appended the name
"Barnabas" to it as its author, whereas only a brief reflection
on the actual profile of the real Apostle Barnabas will show that
he cannot possibly be the author of this book.
Let us briefly go through the history of Barnabas in the Bible.
He only appears among the apostles after the ascension of Jesus
to heaven when the early Christian Church was taking root in the
land of Palestine. As a gesture of faith and love towards his
brethren, he sold a field he owned and gave the proceeds to the
apostles for distribution at their discretion to those who were
in need among the brethren. This gesture of kindness was a great
source of encouragement to the believers and the apostles accordingly
named him "Bar-nabas", which means "Son of encouragement". Before
this he had been known only by his common name Joseph (Acts 4.36).
Here the author of the Gospel of Barnabas makes his first serious
blunder for he suggests throughout his book, not only that
Barnabas was actually one of the twelve disciples of Jesus during
his ministry on earth, but also that he was known by this name
"Barnabas" throughout that period of ministry. On more than one
occasion in the book we find that Jesus allegedly addressed him
by name and the first occasion, which comes particularly early
in the book, is this one:
Jesus answered: 'Be not sore grieved, Barnabas;
for those whom God hath chosen before the creation
of the world shall not perish'
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.21).
Now we have here a patent anachronism which destroys the
possibility that this book was really written by the Apostle
Barnabas. The apostles only gave him the name "Barnabas"
(Son of encouragement) after the ascension of Jesus because of
the generous act he had done which had heartened the spirits of
the early Christians. But the Gospel of Barnabas makes Jesus call
him by this name some three years before he ascended to heaven.
This is a serious - in our view fatal - objection to the claim
that this book was written by the Apostle Barnabas.
As we press on in our study of the life of Barnabas, however, we
find further proofs that destroy the claim that this book was
really written by him. The next time he appears in the early
events of the Church was on the occasion of Paul's first visit to
all the apostles in Jerusalem. Because the apostles knew that Paul
had in previous years been a relentless persecutor of the early
Christians (primarily because they believed that Jesus was the
Son of God!), the apostles and other Christians in Jerusalem
doubted whether he really was now converted to their faith. It
is indeed a revelation to discover, in the light of the vehement
attacks made on Paul in the Gospel of Barnabas, just who it was
who went to great pains to assure the brethren in Jerusalem that
Paul was really a disciple:
But Barnabas took him, and brought him to the apostles,
and declared to them how on the road he had seen the
Lord, who spoke to him, and how at Damascus he had
preached boldly in the name of Jesus.
Acts 9.27
We are now confronted with a second serious chain of evidence
against the suggestion that Barnabas was the author of the "Gospel"
attributed to him. Only seven verses earlier we read that when Paul
engaged in public preaching in the synagogue of Damascus, "immediately
he proclaimed Jesus, saying, 'He is the Son of God'." (Acts 9.20).
When this same Paul came to Jerusalem, it was Barnabas who vigorously
defended him as a true disciple of Jesus.
What a contrast we have here with the book we are considering where
the author, supposedly Barnabas, takes Paul to task for the very
fact that he was proclaiming that Jesus was the Son of God. The true
Barnabas was the right-hand man of this very Paul who publicly taught
that Jesus was indeed the Son of God. It is this same Barnabas who
represented him at Jerusalem and who spared no effort in persuading
the disciples there that Paul really was a disciple of Jesus.
Later on in this booklet we shall show that the Gospel of Barnabas
was first written not earlier than fourteen centuries after Christ
and that the author, whoever he was, simply chose to make Barnabas
the alleged author of his obnoxious forgery. The men we referred to
earlier, who have made much in-depth study into the origins and
sources of the Gospel of Barnabas, have also tried to ascertain why
the real author of this book chose to make Barnabas its supposed
author. One or two plausible theories have been suggested, but to
this day we have not been able to discover why he did this.
But one thing we do know - the actual author of the Gospel of
Barnabas could not have made a worse choice for the "authorship"
of his book than Barnabas. He has written this book ostensibly as
a defence against "Pauline Christianity" (as some put it) and yet
he has, probably without serious reflection, chosen as his author
the one man we always find at the side of Paul - recommending him
at all times as a true disciple of Jesus and endorsing his preaching
wherever he went. To put it plainly, the author of the Gospel of
Barnabas has chosen as the alleged author of the book he has composed
against the teaching of Paul the very man who supported that teaching
more actively than anyone else during his ministry. Barnabas was the
spiritual blood-brother of Paul. Our real author has, in a second
awful manner, made another calamitous blunder by suggesting that
the Apostle Barnabas - of all people! - was the author of the
fraudulent "Gospel" he has composed.
As we go further into the life of Barnabas this fact comes out even
more clearly. When the church in Jerusalem heard that the church in
Antioch was growing well, the apostles decided to send Barnabas
there to take over the teaching and instruction of the new believers.
But Barnabas, of his own volition, decided that he could not handle
this by himself, and decided to obtain the assistance of another
fellow-believer well-grounded in the faith for this work. Without
hesitation Barnabas went all the way to Tarsus in Asia Minor to
find Paul and immediately he brought him to Antioch to assist him
in the instruction of the church in the city. We read the following
of their ministry:
For a whole year they met with the church, and taught
a large company of people; and in Antioch the disciples
were for the first time called Christians.
Acts 11.26
Under the joint ministry of Paul and Barnabas, the disciples were
first called Christians - because Barnabas was a true champion of
the very "Pauline Christianity" that the Gospel of Barnabas sets out
to refute. After this Paul and Barnabas went to Jerusalem with aid
for the brethren because of a famine that was taking place in the
days of the Roman emperor Claudius (Acts 11.28-30). After this Paul
and Barnabas returned to Antioch (Acts 12.25). They continued to
lead the church there and were subsequently sent out by the church
to preach the Gospel in the provinces of Galatia (in what is part
of Turkey as we know it today).
Wherever they went Paul and Barnabas preached that Jesus was the
Son of God and that God had raised him from the dead (cf. Acts 13.33).
And yet, the author of the Gospel of Barnabas would have us believe
that Barnabas was an archenemy of Paul on these matters! We even find
them both proclaiming that the restrictive ordinances of Judaism
(e.g. circumcision) should not be forced upon the Gentiles and that
they were unnecessary for salvation. A very interesting event in
their joint ministry is recorded in these words:
But some men came down from Judea and were teaching the
brethren, 'Unless you are circumcised according to the
custom of Moses, you cannot be saved'. And when Paul and
Barnabas had no small dissension and debate with them,
Paul and Barnabas and some of the others were appointed
to go up to Jerusalem to the apostles and elders about
this question. Acts 15.1-2
Certain Judaisers had come among the early Christians stating that
circumcision was necessary for salvation. Who do we find debating
hotly with them on this point? None other than Paul and Barnabas!
And yet, in the Gospel of Barnabas, we read that one of the
"impious doctrines" that Paul was holding to was repudiation of
circumcision. That he repudiated it as an essential element of
salvation we will readily concede (Galatians 5. 2-6) - but his
chief partner in this repudiation is none other than Barnabas!
Once again the author has blundered in making Barnabas the author
of his deplorable forgery.
Indeed, according to the Gospel of Barnabas, Jesus is alleged to
have said to his disciples:
'Leave fear to him that hath not circumcised his foreskin,
for he is deprived of paradise'
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.26).
Thus circumcision is an essential element and a prerequisite of
salvation in the Gospel of Barnabas and the author obviously
assents to this doctrine. But of the real Barnabas we read that
he joined with Paul in furiously debating against the doctrine
of the Judaisers that circumcision was necessary for salvation.
It is quite clear that the real Barnabas was not the author of
the book that bears his name and that someone else not only forged
this book but misrepresented the name of its author as well.
The current publishers of the Gospel of Barnabas (Begum Aisha
Bawany Wakf) are well aware that the major objective of the Gospel
of Barnabas is to counteract "Pauline Christianity". In an appendix
entitled "Life and Message of Barnabas" they allege that the passage
about the debate on the issue of circumcision reveals a growing rift
between Paul and Barnabas. They quote Acts 15.2 (quoted above) and
shamelessly comment: "After this rift, there was a parting of the
ways" between Paul and Barnabas (The Gospel of Barnabas, p.279).
But it is quite obvious that the rift was not between Paul and
Barnabas on the issue but between the men from Judea on the one
hand who were glorifying circumcision and Paul and Barnabas on the
other who were furiously against perverting the freedom of the
religion of Jesus with legalistic traditions and restrictions that
could save nobody. Because this appendix appears in all editions of
the Gospel of Barnabas published today we must say that the whole
article is a brazen misrepresentation of the true relationship
between Paul and Barnabas. The writer of the article has had to
disown conscience in trying to force the theory of the Gospel of
Barnabas that Paul and Barnabas disagreed on doctrinal matters.
At no stage is there any evidence that Paul and Barnabas ever
disagreed on a matter of doctrine. They once had a minor personal
dispute when Paul did not wish to take John Mark on a missionary
journey, as he had fallen back on a previous one, to the provinces
of Galatia (Acts 15.38-40). This, however, was purely a personal
matter which was clearly resolved as we see in other passages of
Scripture (Colossians 4.10 and 2 Timothy 4.11). On one other
occasion Barnabas was guilty of some religious discrimination with
other Jewish Christians in Antioch when they would not eat with the
Gentile Christians (Galatians 2.13). Paul censured this strongly
but this was also not about a doctrinal matter but one of common
fellowship between all Christians no matter what their background.
None of these minor disputes had anything to do with the fundamental
doctrines Paul and Barnabas so rigidly promoted - the repudiation
of circumcision as necessary for salvation, the crucifixion and
resurrection of Jesus Christ, and the basic doctrine that Jesus is
the Son of God. Rather we have extensive evidence that Barnabas was
the prime vindicator of all these doctrines that Paul taught.
Paul's later letter to the Christians of Galatia helps us even more
to perceive the truth of this fact. In the second chapter we read
that Paul went up to Jerusalem - with Barnabas of course - taking
Titus, an uncircumcised Greek, with him as a test case against the
necessity of circumcision (Galatians 2.1). But Titus, however, was
not compelled to be circumcised - obviously as a result of the
persuasive arguments of Paul and Barnabas against circumcision as
an essential element of salvation.
Not only did the apostles at Jerusalem agree with Paul and Barnabas
that circumcision was unnecessary but, as Paul said, they "gave to
me and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship" (Galatians 2.9).
Once again the sympathy and unity of Barnabas with Paul is plainly
revealed and it is obvious that in the early church, whenever the
Christians at Jerusalem thought of Barnabas, they must have
immediately associated him with Paul.
In the third chapter of Galatians we have further evidence that
Barnabas was a Christian in every way and not one who was opposed
to Christianity as the author of the Gospel of Barnabas is. Paul,
aggrieved that the Galatians were considering such a trivial matter
as circumcision as essential for salvation, openly censured them for
losing sight of the wondrous and all-sufficient work of Jesus who
alone made salvation a reality for men through his atoning death on
the cross. He rebuked them in the following words which show quite
plainly what the heart of his message to them was:
O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you, before whose
eyes Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified?
Galatians 3.1
We must ask: by whom was Jesus Christ "publicly portrayed as
crucified" before the eyes of the Galatians? Who first preached to
them the Gospel of Jesus? No one else but Paul and Barnabas! So from
this letter we have further concrete evidence that Barnabas was a
champion of the Gospel which Paul preached. Certainly he was not
only an apostle of true Christian persuasion, but in his quest for
Christian fellowship chose Paul as his closest companion. Of all
people the Apostle Barnabas could not be the author of the Gospel
attributed to him!
The transparent unity in the mission and purpose of Paul and
Barnabas is finally made even yet clearer by this brief summary of
their activities together:
"Devout converts to Judaism followed Paul and Barnabas, who spoke
to them and urged them to continue in the grace of God (Acts 13.43)
... Paul and Barnabas spoke out boldly (13.46) ... the Jews stirred
up persecution against Paul and Barnabas (13.50) ... Paul went on
with Barnabas to Derbe (14. 20) ... Paul and Barnabas had no small
dissension and debate with them (15.2) ... and they listened to
Barnabas and Paul as they related what signs and wonders God had
done through them among the Gentiles (15.12) ... then it seemed
good to the apostles and elders, with the whole church, to choose
men from among them and send them to Antioch with Paul and Barnabas
(15.22) ... our beloved Barnabas and Paul, men who have risked their
lives for the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ (15.26) ... Paul and
Barnabas remained in Antioch, teaching and preaching the word of the
Lord (15.35)"
There is such a contrast between the real Barnabas who through all
these events chooses Paul as his companion, and the pseudo-author of
the Gospel of Barnabas, who has a positive antagonism to Paul and his
teaching, that we cannot help but conclude that the Gospel of Barnabas
is a forgery. It was not written by Barnabas but by someone else who
made a major tactical blunder in choosing a close companion of Paul
as the author of this book.
Two points from within the Gospel of Barnabas also show that the
author could not be the real Apostle Barnabas. Firstly, this book
makes Jesus constantly deny that he is the Messiah (further treatment
of this subject follows later in this booklet) and yet the same book
calls Jesus himself the "Christ" (p.2). Now any man with a basic
knowledge of Greek knows that "Christos" is the Greek translation of
Messiah (a Hebrew word) and that "Jesus Christ" is an anglicised form
of the Greek "Iesous Christos", meaning "Jesus the Messiah". The very
real contradiction that exists here in the Gospel of Barnabas is
further evidence that the author was not Barnabas himself. He came
from Cyprus, an island where Greek was the common tongue, and Greek
would have been his home language. The real Barnabas would never have
made such a mistake as to call Jesus the Christ and deny that he was
the Messiah!
Secondly, the author of the Gospel of Barnabas has chosen to know
nothing of the ministry of John the Baptist in his book but has
deviously taken the testimony of John to Jesus in the Bible and
changed it into a supposed testimony of Jesus to Muhammad. Whether
Jesus ever predicted the coming of Muhammad or not is not at issue
here (see Is Muhammad Foretold in the Bible?, No.5 in this series,
for a treatment of that subject). What is obvious, however, to anyone
who has read the life of Jesus in the Bible, is that the author of
the Gospel of Barnabas has tried to make Jesus a herald of the coming
of Muhammad in the very mould of John the Baptist who was a herald of
the coming of Jesus, and to achieve this he has put Jesus in the shoes
of John and has made him say of Muhammad what John really said of him!
Accordingly the author of the Gospel of Barnabas has had to omit
the person and ministry of John from his book altogether. But the
clear and consistent account of John's ministry in the Bible (see
particularly Matthew chapter 3, John chapters 1 and 3) and the plain
endorsement in the Qur'an of the ministry of John the Baptist as a
herald of Jesus (Surah 3.39) both expose the deceitfulness of the
author of the Gospel of Barnabas. It is certain that the real Barnabas,
who was a "good man, full of the Holy Spirit and of faith" (Acts 11.24),
would never have resorted to such falsehood in the cause of truth to
which he was so dedicated throughout his life.
We conclude that there is overwhelming evidence that the real Barnabas
was most certainly not the author of the book being circulated today
in the Muslim world which purports to be written by him. But now let us
press on to a brief examination of the internal evidence of the Gospel
of Barnabas to see whether it has any credibility at all, or whether it
is not really a "bare-faced forgery", as George Sale put it, that has
been unwittingly distributed throughout the Islamic world in the service
of Satan and his causes alone.
2. Evidence of its Medieval Origin
We find much evidence in the Gospel of Barnabas that it was first
written in the Middle Ages - many centuries after the times of Jesus
and Muhammad.
a). The Centenary Jubilee.
In the time of Moses God ordained that the Jews were to observe a
jubilee year twice a century:
A jubilee shall that fiftieth year be to you.
Leviticus 25.11
Throughout the centuries this command was observed and the Roman
Catholic Church eventually took it over into the Christian faith.
About 1300 AD Pope Boniface the Eighth gave a decree that the jubilee
should be observed once every hundred years. This is the only occasion
in all history that the jubilee year was made to be only once every
hundred years. After the death of Boniface, however, Pope Clemens
the Sixth decreed in 1343 AD that the jubilee year should revert to
once every fifty years as it was observed by the Jews after the time
of Moses. Now we find in the Gospel of Barnabas that Jesus is alleged
to have said:
'And then through all the world will God be worshipped,
and mercy received, insomuch that the year of jubilee,
which now cometh every hundred years, shall by the Messiah
be reduced to every year in every place.'
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.104).
Only one solution can account for this remarkable coincidence. The
author of the Gospel of Barnabas could only have quoted Jesus as
speaking of the year of jubilee as coming "every hundred years" if
he knew of the decree of Pope Boniface. But how could he know of
this decree unless he lived at the same time as the Pope or sometime
afterwards? This is a clear anachronism which compels us to conclude
that the Gospel of Barnabas could not have been written earlier than
the fourteenth century AD.
This also means that the Gospel of Barnabas dates at least seven
hundred years after the time of Muhammad and it is in the circumstances
of no historical value at all. Although it often makes Jesus predict
the coming of Muhammad by name (which is why it is a best-seller in the
world of Islam today), as it was written after the death of Muhammad,
these "prophecies" are of no interest or value at all. Indeed the
Gospel of Barnabas contains many discourses and practices fully
synonymous with the basic teachings of Islam - but these too are of
no value because the book was written at least seven hundred years
after the advent of Islam.
Prophecies that are first composed centuries after the event they
foretell has come to pass are of no more interest or value than
yesterday's weather forecast. We conclude, from the striking quote
about the jubilee year, that the author of the Gospel of Barnabas
wrote his book not earlier than the fourteenth century after Christ.
Let us press on to examine further evidence of mediaeval features.
b). Quotations from Dante.
Dante was an Italian who, significantly, also lived about the time
of Pope Boniface and wrote his famous "Divina Comedia" in the
fourteenth century. This was basically a fantasy about hell,
purgatory and paradise according to the Roman Catholic beliefs of
his times.
Now in the Gospel of Barnabas we read that Jesus allegedly said of
the prophets of old:
'Readily and with gladness they went to their death,
so as not to offend against the law of God given by Moses
his servant, and go and serve false and lying gods'.
(Gospel of Barnabas, p.27).
The expression "false and lying gods" (dei falsi e lugiardi) is
found elsewhere in the Gospel of Barnabas as well. On one occasion
it is Jesus again who supposedly uses these words (p.99) and on
another it is the author himself who describes Herod as serving
"false and lying gods" (p.267). Nevertheless this expression is
found in neither the Bible nor the Qur'an. What is interesting,
however, is that it is a direct quote from Dante! (Inferno 1.72).
Many of the descriptions of hell in the Gospel of Barnabas (pp.
76-77) are reminiscent of those in the third canto of Dante's
Inferno as well.
Likewise the expression "raging hunger" (rabbiosa fame) is also
reminiscent of the first canto of Dante's Inferno. Both speak of
the "circles of hell" and the author of the Gospel of Barnabas
also makes Jesus say to Peter:
'Know ye therefore that hell is one, yet hath seven centres
one below another. Hence, even as sin is of seven kinds,
for as seven gates of hell hath Satan generated it: so there
are seven punishments therein'.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.171).
This is precisely Dante's description found in the fifth and sixth
cantos of his Inferno. We could go on and quote many more examples
but space here demands that we press on to other evidences that
the Gospel of Barnabas was written in the Middle Ages. One striking
quote must be mentioned, however, because in this case the Gospel
of Barnabas agrees with Dante while contradicting the Qur'an. We
read in the Qur'an that there are seven heavens:
He it is who created for you all that is in the earth.
Then turned He to the heaven, and fashioned it as
seven heavens. Surah 2.29
On the contrary we read in the Gospel of Barnabas that there are
nine heavens and that Paradise like Dante's Empyrean - is the
tenth heaven above all the other nine. The author of the Gospel
of Barnabas makes Jesus say:
'Paradise is so great that no man can measure it.
Verily I say unto thee that the heavens are nine ...
I say to thee that paradise is greater than all the
earth and all the heavens together'.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.223).
Clearly the author of the Gospel of Barnabas knew Dante's work and
had no scruples to quote from it. Accordingly we have further
evidence that the Gospel of Barnabas could not have been written
earlier than the fourteenth century - hundreds of years after the
times of Jesus and Muhammad. It is accordingly a worthless forgery
which should be disowned as such by every Muslim who believes in
his heart that no lie can be of the truth.
c). The Mediaeval Environment of the Gospel.
The author of the Gospel of Barnabas claims to have been with Jesus
throughout his ministry and accordingly must have walked with him
throughout the land of Palestine during those three years that
Jesus served the people of Israel. In the circumstances we would
expect to find a first-century, Palestinian environment in his book
- such as we find in the four true Gospels of the Christian Bible.
But we are astonished to find many incidents which betray a mediaeval,
western-European background in the Gospel of Barnabas. Firstly we
read:
'Behold then how beautiful is the world in summer-time,
when all things bear fruit. The very peasant, intoxicated
with gladness by reason of the harvest that is come,
maketh the valleys and mountains resound with his singing,
for that he loveth his labours supremely'.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.217).
This is a fair description of Spain or Italy in summer but most
certainly not of Palestine where the rain falls in winter and where
the fields are parched in summer. In any event Palestine has always
been a part of the world where cultivation of the land has required
much effort and where much of the countryside is barren and grassless.
We find it surprising that this land should be appealed to as one
which in summer-time is a good example of the delightful environment
of Paradise. Indeed Jesus is alleged to have delivered this discourse
to his disciples in the wilderness beyond the Jordan (p.211) where
they were hardly likely to have any evidence of the glories of the
lush gardens of Paradise.
Again we read in the Gospel of Barnabas that Martha, her sister Mary,
and her brother Lazarus were the overlords of two towns, Magdala and
Bethany (p.242). This proprietorship of villages and towns belongs to
the Middle Ages when the system of feudalism was rooted in European
society. Certainly no such practice was known at the time of Jesus
when the occupying Roman forces controlled most of the land of
Palestine.
These anachronisms rule out any possibility that the Gospel of
Barnabas is genuinely what it claims to be. It does well appear to
be a forgery of the Middle Ages written by a Muslim who, probably
frustrated at being unable to prove that the true Gospels in the
Bible are corrupted, wrote a false Gospel and proclaimed that his
corruption was the truth! A similar example of the mediaeval
environment of this Gospel is the reference in it to wine casks
(p.196), for wine was stored in skins in Palestine (Matthew 9.17)
while wooden casks were used in Europe in the Middle Ages.
In conclusion, however, it must be pointed out that whereas the
author of the Gospel of Barnabas reveals in his book that he has
an accurate knowledge of the structure of mediaeval society, he
simultaneously exposes his ignorance of the land of Palestine which
he is supposed to have traversed as a disciple of Jesus for at least
three years! He says:
Having arrived at the city of Nazareth the sea-men spread
through the city all that Jesus had wrought.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.23).
In this passage Nazareth is represented as a coastal city, a harbour
on the lake of Galilee. After this we read that Jesus "went up to
Capernaum" (p.23) from Nazareth, as though Capernaum was in the
hillside near the sea of Galilee. Here the author really has his
facts incorrect, for Capernaum was the coastal city and Nazareth
was up in the hills (where it is to this day). Jesus would have
gone up from Capernaum to Nazareth, not the other way around as the
author of the Gospel of Barnabas has it. This evidence also shows
that the author of the Gospel of Barnabas lived in Europe in the
Middle Ages rather than in Palestine at the time of Jesus.
3. Other Evidences against its Authenticity
Before concluding this booklet let us briefly consider some of the
other evidences that prove that the Gospel of Barnabas is a forgery.
Firstly, this book makes Jesus often state that he is not the Messiah
but that Muhammad would be the Messiah. It is a constant, recurring
theme in the Gospel of Barnabas. Two quotes show, not only that Jesus
did not consider himself the Messiah, but preached that Muhammad was
to be the Messiah:
Jesus confessed and said the truth: 'I am not the Messiah
... I am indeed sent to the house of Israel as a prophet of
salvation; but after me shall come the Messiah'.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, pp.54, 104).
Other passages in the Gospel of Barnabas contain similar denials
by Jesus that he was the Messiah. It is clearly one of the express
purposes of this book to establish Muhammad as the Messiah and to
subject Jesus to him in dignity and authority. Here, however, the
author of this book has overreached himself in his zeal for the
cause of Islam. For the Qur'an plainly admits that Jesus is the
Messiah on numerous occasions and in doing so it confirms the
teaching of Jesus himself that he was indeed the Messiah (John 4.26,
Matthew 16.20). One quote from the Qur'an will suffice to prove this:
'O Mary! Lo! Allah giveth thee glad tidings of a word from Him,
whose name is the Messiah, Jesus son of Mary, illustrious in the
world and the Hereafter'. Surah 3.45
The Gospel of Barnabas was obviously written as an ideal "Islamic"
Gospel, setting forth a life of Christ in which he is made to be
the Isa of the Qur'an rather than the Lord Jesus Christ of the
Christian Gospels. But as it so hopelessly contradicts both the
Qur'an and the Bible on the fact that Jesus was the Messiah and
does this so often and so consistently, it must be rejected as a
forgery by Christian and Muslim alike. There is no room here for
apologetics or efforts to reconcile this book with the Qur'an or
the Bible. It is a counterfeit.
Secondly, it is alleged that the Romans stirred up the Jews to such
an extent about the real nature of Jesus that "all Judea was in
arms" (p.115), ready to fight for or against the various beliefs
being spread among them about him. As a result six hundred thousand
gathered for battle - two hundred thousand each for the beliefs that
he was God, that he was the Son of God, and that he was only a prophet;
all of them being prepared for a three-cornered contest where each
side took on the other two at one and the same time!
The story betrays itself as a phenomenal myth and fantasy by its
hopeless overstatement of the number of men gathered for battle.
(The author often resorts to wild exaggerations of facts and numbers
in his book in an apparent attempt to create a wondrous impact on
his readers). Where did the Jews suddenly find six hundred thousand
swords at a time when the Romans not only suppressed but also
prevented the manufacture of military hardware by this nation? Rather
than fight one another, this whole army could with ease have driven
the Romans right out of Palestine for the Roman army throughout the
world numbered less than half this figure. Only a small garrison
controlled Judea and secular history knows of no such monumental
preparation for a three-cornered contest of such gigantic proportions!
The Gospel of Barnabas furthermore suggests that Pilate, Herod and
Caiaphas went to great pains to prevent the pending holocaust. We
find this hard to believe. If indeed the Jews were six hundred
thousand strong, Pilate would have been only too delighted to see
them decimate one another in a three-cornered contest!
The Gospel of Barnabas also clearly contradicts the Qur'an about
the birth of Jesus when it says:
The virgin was surrounded by a light exceeding bright
and brought forth her son without pain.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.5).
This is a clear repetition of Roman Catholic beliefs of the
Middle Ages. The bright light and the painless birth find parallels
in the beliefs about the Virgin Mary in the churches of Europe in
Mediaeval times. No such details are found in the Biblical account
of the birth of Jesus but the Qur'an directly contradicts the Gospel
of Barnabas when it says:
And the pangs of childbirth drove her unto the trunk
of the palm tree. Surah 19.23
Because the Gospel of Barnabas purports to be an account of the
life of Jesus written by one of his disciples, and further because
it has been clearly composed to synchronise with the Qur'an in its
concept of Jesus as a prophet of Islam, the Muslim world has not
hesitated to foist this book on the Christian world as the "true
Gospel". But we are constrained to ask how this book can be true
in Muslim eyes if it contradicts the Qur'an which the Muslims believe
to be the Word of God.
In the Gospel of Barnabas we read that Pontius Pilate was governor
of Judea both at the time of the birth of Jesus (p.4) and during the
time of his ministry thirty years later. Palestine was a particularly
difficult trouble-spot for the Romans and no governor was sent there
for long - let alone thirty years. We know from history in any event
that Pilate was only appointed governor in 27 AD - more than a
generation after the birth of Jesus. This is another faux pas - one
of many in the pages of this Gospel.
Another contradiction between the Gospel of Barnabas and the Qur'an
is found in their respective accounts of the end times. According to
the Gospel of Barnabas, on the thirteenth day of a fifteen day climax
leading to the end of all things, "the heaven shall be rolled up like
a book, and it shall rain fire, so that every living thing shall die"
(p.70). The Qur'an, however, says of the Last Day:
But when the shout cometh on the day when a man fleeth
from his brother and his mother and his father and his wife
and his children, every man will have that day concern enough
to make him heedless of others. Surah 80.33-37
There is a clear contradiction here. The Gospel of Barnabas states
that two days before the end all shall perish but the Qur'an states
that men will still be alive until the last day when the trumpet
shall sound from heaven. The Muslim world must choose between the
Qur'an and the Gospel of Barnabas - no man can sincerely believe
that the latter book is a true account of the life of Jesus Christ
if he still believes that the Qur'an is the Word of God.
Furthermore according to the Gospel of Barnabas all angels shall die
on the last day (p.70) but the Qur'an knows nothing of the death of
angels but states that eight of them will bear the Lord's throne on
the last day (Surah 69.17). Any Muslim who believes that the Qur'an
is the Word of God and any Christian who believes that the Bible is
the Word of God must reject the Gospel of Barnabas as a hybrid
composition of no literary or religious value at all.
We could go on and produce even further proofs that this book is
truly a "bare-faced forgery" as George Sale so succinctly put it
but the evidence given in this booklet should be sufficient to
convince any reasonable Muslim that, while he might feel it would
be very useful for a Gospel to be discovered wherein Jesus foretells
the coming of Muhammad, the Gospel of Barnabas just does not provide
him with the honest evidence he needs. Muslim interest in this book
is understandable but, in the name of truth and honesty, the Muslims
of the world should admit that it is not a book contemporary with
the life of Jesus, which proves that he really was the Isa of the
Qur'an, but rather a lamentable forgery which, far from promoting
the cause of Islam, must ultimately damage it if foolish men continue
to propagate it as a true account of the life and teachings of Jesus
Christ. We shall conclude with a brief study of the likely origin and
author of the Gospel of Barnabas from the evidence we possess at the
present time.
4. Who Really Composed this Forgery?
There are only two known manuscripts of the Gospel of Barnabas which
existed before any copies were made from the texts available to us.
The Italian version is in a library today in Vienna whereas only
fragments remain of the Spanish version. George Sale, in his comments
on the Gospel of Barnabas in his "Preliminary Discourse to the Koran"
and a further short preface in his book, speaks of a complete Spanish
version in his lifetime which he saw for himself. It appears that
the Spanish version may well have been the original one. In the
introduction to this version it is claimed that it is a translation
of the Italian version but numerous spelling errors in the Italian
version - typical of an author using Italian as a second language
- certainly show at least that the author was more at home in Spain
than Italy. Nevertheless this does not prevent the possibility that
someone from Spain tried his hand at composing an original in Italian.
This possibility is made all the more real by two considerations.
Firstly, as the author often quotes the Vulgate (the Latin translation
of the Bible) and has borrowed many of his stories from the Scriptures,
he might well have found it more convenient to use the Italian language
medium for his own contrived composition.
Secondly, he might have thought that his book would look far more
authentic if it was written in Italian. It would serve to substantiate
the introduction of the Spanish version where it was alleged that the
Gospel of Barnabas was originally hidden in the Pope's library before
it was discovered in rather questionable circumstances by a certain
Fra Marine who allegedly became a Muslim after reading it. The Italian
text may have been written to give some credence to this story - if
the Gospel was to appear in Spain first of all, it would be far more
suitable to have it written in the foreign tongue in the land of its
alleged origin, rather than in the local dialect. This latter
alternative might have cast immediate suspicion on its real origin -
especially if an Italian version could not be produced to verify the
claim that the original came from Italy.
Certain features, however, substantiate the suggestion that this book
was first written in Spain by a Spaniard, no matter what language he
originally wrote it in. The Gospel of Barnabas makes Jesus say:
'For he who would get in change a piece of gold
must have sixty mites'.
(The Gospel of Barnabas, p.71).
The Italian version divides the golden "denarius" into sixty "minuti".
These coins were actually of Spanish origin during the pre-Islamic
Visigothic period and openly betray a Spanish background to the
original Gospel of Barnabas.
No one knows who actually wrote the Gospel of Barnabas but what is
known, without shadow of doubt, is that whoever it was, it most
certainly was not the Apostle Barnabas. It was most probably a
Muslim in Spain who, possibly the victim of the reconquest of his
country, decided to take private revenge by composing a false Gospel
under the assumed name of Barnabas to give his obnoxious forgery
some measure of apparent authenticity. He probably first composed
the Italian script to maintain this appearance of genuineness but
simultaneously composed (or arranged for such a translation) a
Spanish version for distribution in his own country. He may well
have been the notorious Fra Marine or he may have been the translator
Mustafa de Aranda, or indeed he may well have been both - using the
two names for the same expedient ends as those he sought to achieve
through using the name of Barnabas as the author of his book. He most
certainly was someone far more at home in Spain in the Middle Ages
rather than in Palestine at the time of Jesus Christ.
Whatever the Gospel of Barnabas may claim to be, whatever it may
appear to be, whatever the Muslim world would like it to be, a general
study of its contents and authorship shows that it is a poor attempt
to forge a life of Jesus consonant with the profile of Jesus in the
Qur'an and Islamic tradition. The Muslim world will do well to reject
this book as a clear forgery - for that is what it unmistakably proves
to be.
BIBLIOGRAPHY -- BOOKS AND ARTICLES:
Begum Aisha Bawany Wakf - The Gospel of Barnabas. (3rd Edition,
with introduction). (Begum Aisha Bawany Wakf, Karachi, Pakistan,
1974).
Begum Aisha Bawany Wakf - The Gospel of Barnabas. (6th Edition,
with appendix). (Bawany Islamic Literature Trust Ltd., Karachi,
Pakistan, 1977).
Durrani, M H - Forgotten Gospel of St Barnabas. (International
Islamic Publishers, Karachi, Pakistan. 1982).
Durrani, M H - In Defence of Gospel of St Barnabas. (Muslim Digest,
April 1975, Durban, South Africa).
Gairdner, W H T and Abdul-Ahad, S - The Gospel of Barnabas -
An Essay and Enquiry. (Henry Martyn Institute of Islamic Studies,
Hyderabad, India, 1975).
Gilchrist, J D - The Gospel of Barnabas - Is this "The Amazing Truth''?
Or is it a "Bare-faced Forgery"? (Jesus to the Muslims, Benoni, South
Africa, 1976).
Jadeed, I - The Gospel of Barnabas: A False Testimony. (The Good Way,
Rikon, Switzerland. 1980).
Kritzinger, J N J - A Critical Study of the Gospel of Barnabas.
(Benoni, South Africa, 1979).
Kritzinger, J N J - The Gospel of Barnabas Carefully Examined.
(Pretoria, South Africa, 1975).
Peerbhai, A - Missing Documents from Gospel of Barnabas.
(Islamic Institute, Durban, South Africa, 1967).
Peerbhai, A - World Seminar on the Gospel of Barnabas. (Al-Jihaad
International Islamic Movement. Cape Town, South Africa, 1975).
Ragg, L and L - The Gospel of Barnabas. (Clarendon Press, Oxford,
England, 1907).
Rahim, M A - The Gospel of Barnabas. (Qur'an Council of Pakistan,
Karachi, Pakistan, 1973).
Slomp, J - Pseudo-Barnabas in the Context of Muslim-Christian
Apologetics. (Christian Study Centre, Rawalpindi, Pakistan, 1974).
Slomp, J - The Gospel in Dispute. (Pontifico Institute Di Studi
Arabi, Rome, Italy, 1978).
Slomp, J - The Pseudo-Gospel of Barnabas. (Bulletin, Secretariatus
pro non Christianis. Citta del Vaticano, 1976).
Sox, D - The Gospel of Barnabas. (George Allen & Unwin Ltd.,
London. England. 1984).
Wadood, A C A - The Holy Prophet Foretold by Jesus Christ in the
Gospel of St Barnabas. (Ceylon Muslim Missionary Society, Colombo,
Sri Lanka, 1973).
Further material on the Gospel of Barnabas
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