{"id":10363,"date":"2003-10-10T16:54:49","date_gmt":"2003-10-10T21:54:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/?p=10363"},"modified":"2013-05-10T14:45:55","modified_gmt":"2013-05-10T18:45:55","slug":"october-10-2003-elaine-pagels-extended-interview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2003\/10\/10\/october-10-2003-elaine-pagels-extended-interview\/10363\/","title":{"rendered":" Elaine Pagels Extended Interview"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2003\/10\/pagels-banner.jpg\" alt=\"Author and historian Elaine Pagels\" width=\"636\" height=\"193\" \/><\/p>\n<p><strong>Read more excerpts from Mary Alice Williams&#8217;s interview with  Princeton historian Elaine Pagels, author of BEYOND BELIEF: THE SECRET  GOSPEL OF THOMAS (Random House):<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What is the Gospel of Thomas?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The Gospel of Thomas claims to be the secret sayings of Jesus. There  are 114 of them, so it says many things, but the central message is that  Jesus is the one who reveals the divine light that brought the universe  into being, and that you and I also reveal that light.<\/p>\n<p>That image is in every tradition &#8212; Buddhist, Christian, Jewish. But  most Christian tradition speaks of Jesus as the divine light incarnate  in the universe, and the rest of us [as] in darkness, needing to be  enlightened from him alone.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What do you think this quote from the Gospel of Thomas says to us:  &#8220;If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save  you. If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring  forth will destroy you&#8221;?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: That&#8217;s a remarkable saying. It was because of that that I first wrote  THE GNOSTIC GOSPELS. I took that psychologically. I took it to mean you  bring forth what is potential within you. Or, if you suppress what is  potential, this is damaging to the personality. I think that&#8217;s true  enough, as artists know, [as] anyone creative knows. But now I  understand it&#8217;s also a spiritual statement. It&#8217;s about bringing forth  what is within you. It&#8217;s not just your natural potential, but it&#8217;s that  we are created in the image of God and, therefore, we have this divine  energy that can be accessed or suppressed.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How did Gnostics view Jesus?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s a single way to answer that, and I&#8217;m not sure  that I would even call the Gospel of Thomas &#8220;Gnostic&#8221; anymore. But the  way they see Jesus is as a person who manifests the divine and who shows  others how to find access to that source within themselves.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: He was more guide than God?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Yes. Perhaps more like a Buddhist kind of teaching &#8212; that he is a  man, but he is an enlightened one. He&#8217;s not a god and you, too, can  become enlightened in that way.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How are the Gnostic Gospels different from the Synoptic Gospels?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: We use the word &#8220;synoptic&#8221; to talk about Matthew, Mark, and Luke, and  it really means &#8220;seeing together,&#8221; because they all have a similar  perspective. Matthew and Luke &#8212; whoever wrote those Gospels &#8212; used  Mark as a focus and as a basic story. So all of them have a lot in  common.<\/p>\n<p>What we call the Gnostic Gospels are a range of other Gospels, some of  them recently discovered and previously unknown but probably very  ancient. We simply had never known them. They weren&#8217;t part of the New  Testament. What&#8217;s different about the Gospel of Thomas is that, instead  of focusing entirely on who Jesus is and the wonderful works of Jesus,  it focuses on how you and I can find the kingdom of God, or life in the  presence of God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What is the argument between the Gospel of John and the Gospel of Thomas?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The Gospel of John speaks of Jesus as the &#8220;light of the world,&#8221; the  divine one who comes into the world to rescue the human race from sin  and darkness, and says if you believe in him, you can be saved; you can  have everlasting life. If you don&#8217;t believe in him, you go to  everlasting death.<\/p>\n<p>The Gospel of Thomas, on the other hand, speaks of Jesus as the divine  light that comes from heaven, but says &#8220;and you, too, have access to  that divine source within yourself,&#8221; even apart from Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>What we now realize &#8212; and more clearly than ever because of the newly  discovered Gospels &#8212; is that, instead of one tradition about Jesus,  there were in the early Christian movement ranges of traditions about  Jesus, several traditions, and they were associated with different  disciples. So you would have the gospel according to Matthew, who taught  some of the teachings of Jesus, and the gospel according to John, which  taught others, [and] the gospel according to Thomas.<\/p>\n<p>When we look at Thomas and John together, we see that they have a lot in  common. They used the same kind of language. But I can now see that  John was written to say, &#8220;Well, yes, Thomas almost gets it right but  misses the main point,&#8221; which for John is that you must believe in Jesus  in order to be saved and that he alone offers the only access.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What is the historical background on this?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Everybody who wants to study the beginning of Christianity usually  has the same motivation that I had. It was totally typical: if we go  back to the beginning, we&#8217;ll find what really happened, the original,  the perfect, golden nugget. We&#8217;ll find the words of Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>What we actually find when we go back there is that the earliest  evidence is very diverse. That&#8217;s not the story we were told as  Christians, because the Christian church chose to simplify it and give  us a single version of the story and cut out, therefore, the kind of  diversity that we can now see.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Was it political?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It was certainly political. It was also religious. Those were not separate.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Was Thomas&#8217;s talking about each of us being seekers of God a difficult concept to organize an orthodox institution around?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Yes. If you&#8217;re going to have a church that says, as one of the  primary church leaders, Irenaeus, did, &#8220;Outside the church there is no  salvation,&#8221; there are certain things you might not want Jesus to have  said, if he said them. For example: &#8220;If you bring forth what is within  you, what you bring forth will save you.&#8221; That might suggest you don&#8217;t  need a church, or a priest, or an institution.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Why was it important that an institution be established?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: People who study the way religions develop have shown that if you  have a charismatic teacher and you don&#8217;t have an institution develop  around that teacher within about a generation to transmit succession  within the group, the movement just dies. So the survival of  Christianity in the way that we know it probably depends on the  development of institutions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: If all of the Gospels that were found in 1945 at Nag Hammadi had  been part of our Christian heritage, what would have changed?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It would have been harder to maintain the idea of a single,  authoritative, doctrinal teaching. You could say, &#8220;These are the basic  teachings of the church, and beyond that you can explore this, or this,  or this.&#8221; But what the church has often said is, &#8220;These are the  authoritative teachings, and that&#8217;s it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Are we impoverished because of that?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think very much so, because the openness to discovery, the openness  to different interpretations, which you do find in the early  communities, was, in some cases, limited.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Suppressed?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Deliberately suppressed, because the question of whose authority  rules the church became of enormous importance in the fourth century,  when the church became powerful and politically established and wealthy.  And ruling the church was a matter of enormous prestige and power.  Politics and religion are quite inseparable in this respect. If you have  a strong religious conviction, it may well have political implications.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: And if the Gnostic Gospels had not been suppressed?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think [Christianity] could&#8217;ve been much more open in its scope.  What these Gospels offer, in fact, you find in some Eastern Orthodox  churches &#8212; a great deal of openness to revelation, to understanding the  speculation. You find it also in Pentecostal churches &#8212; the conviction  that you can be inspired by the Holy Spirit. You find this in many  churches. But it&#8217;s not part of official teaching very often. So yes, I  think it could&#8217;ve been very much more open-ended. But one would have  sacrificed the claim to a kind of sacrosanct authority that certain  Christian leaders have always liked to claim.<\/p>\n<p>At the time, I think it was absolutely essential for the survival of the  movement, because it was so much threatened by persecution and by  complete scattering. It was necessary at that time, probably, to  consolidate the church and try to make a simple message accessible and  universal.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Say more about the story of the discovery of the Gnostic texts.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: A library of ancient Christian texts was found quite by accident when  a villager in upper Egypt, Mohammad Ali al-Samman, went out of his  village with his brothers to dig for birdlime to fertilize their crops.  As they were digging near an ancient cliff, they found a six-foot jar,  and in it were 13 books that were bound in tooled gazelle leather. What  he discovered in these were over 50 ancient, early Christian texts and  Gospels. It was an astonishing discovery, and it&#8217;s completely changed  the way we understand the history of Christianity. The texts were  written originally in Greek, like all of the early Christian writings,  [including] the New Testament. But they were found translated from Greek  into Coptic, an ancient African language. We have to read Coptic and  understand the Greek to try to read these texts.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You say John says Jesus was the &#8220;son of God.&#8221; Didn&#8217;t they all say that?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: All of the Gospels talk about Jesus as the &#8220;son of God.&#8221; When I was  growing up, I thought that meant some kind of divine, unique, special  being unlike anyone else. When you study it historically, you see that  this term &#8220;son of God&#8221; would be used for a king. So David, the king of  Israel, was the &#8220;son of God.&#8221; Or, the king of Egypt could be the son of  the god Ra. That&#8217;s just the way you talked about a king. Often the  language about &#8220;son of God&#8221; is a language about kingly prerogative.<\/p>\n<p>But what the Gospels don&#8217;t all say is that Jesus is some kind of very  different being. That&#8217;s what we often think &#8212; he&#8217;s the son of God, and  we&#8217;re mere humans. The Gospel of John says, &#8220;He is not a human being  like you and me. He began in heaven. He originated with God himself, and  he became incarnate in a human body in which he dwelt.&#8221; So he wasn&#8217;t a  human. In Paul&#8217;s words, &#8220;He came in human form.&#8221; But that doesn&#8217;t mean  he was a human as you and I are.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, anyone who knows Christian theology will say, &#8220;Well, that&#8217;s  wrong. Jesus is truly human and truly divine.&#8221; That becomes the orthodox  teaching &#8212; that Jesus is, in fact, truly human and truly divine. But  that is quite different from what you see in the Gospel of John. If you  just read John alone and you don&#8217;t read all [the Gospels] as a collage  the way we usually do, as if they all meant the same thing, it&#8217;s as  though Jesus is a being of light that comes into the world and speaks as  if he were God walking on earth. That&#8217;s what makes his speech so  offensive and so strange in the Gospel of John: &#8220;Before Abraham was, I  am.&#8221; People pick up rocks to throw at him because they think he&#8217;s making  himself God &#8212; which, in fact, he is. And the author of John will say,  &#8220;Well, yes. But, you see, of course he was.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Had the church gone with Thomas&#8217;s version, would the church be radically different? Would it have existed at all?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The Christian church at the time the New Testament was shaped, at the  time these Gospels were being considered, was under enormous pressure  of persecution. It was, perhaps, in danger of being completely  annihilated through the persecution and the execution of its members.  That kind of church under siege needed a tremendous amount of close  organization, and that was given to the church by the leaders who chose  the Gospels that we have in the New Testament. It might have worked  [with the Gospel of Thomas] had we had a number of Gospels the way we do  now. I think it might&#8217;ve worked very well. But all we know is what  really happened, and that is that some of the leaders said, &#8220;No, we  don&#8217;t want anything that invites speculation, anything that invites  creative imagination, anything that invites inspiration. We just want to  have a clear message and a clear community. We want to know who&#8217;s in  and who&#8217;s out.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What about those who might say that you have given John short shrift?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: When I began to realize that the Gospel of John and the Gospel of  Thomas were part of an intense conversation or argument in the early  Christian movement between different groups of followers of Jesus, each  trying to understand the teachings and interpret them, I focused on the  difference. However, I [also] talk about the enormous range of ways the  Gospel of John can be interpreted. You think about the many poets, like  St. John of the Cross in Catholic tradition or T. S. Eliot in Anglican  tradition, who love the Gospel of John, [and] the many theologians  who&#8217;ve interpreted it. The Gospel of John is very rich, as its tradition  shows.<\/p>\n<p>We also know there were people in the second and third century who could  read all those Gospels together and find them completely congenial.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You were raised in a family that was religiously nonobservant, and  you joined an evangelical church for a while. Did that have a major  impact on how you see religion?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Well, certainly. I think that most of us who study religion do so  because we have some engagement in the matter, obviously. Why would we  devote our life [to] studying this? I find some of these texts, as well  as some of the texts of the New Testament, enormously spiritually  powerful.<\/p>\n<p>The kind of churches that I went to as a child &#8212; liberal Christian  churches &#8212; don&#8217;t have the kind of intensity and power that many  evangelical churches do. When I encountered that, I realized there was  something very powerful about the Christian tradition. One feels that  also in Catholic churches and many other churches &#8212; all kinds of  churches. And when I realized that, I thought, &#8220;I was brought up to  think that Christianity would just become obsolete. Why is it that here  we are in the twenty-first century, and religion is enormously alive and  well?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: The more orthodox religion is, the more it grows?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: In some cases, I think that&#8217;s true, because it has the intensity that  it may lack if you start adding too many things. However, many people  who are engaged in evangelical Christianity have thought, &#8220;Well, if  you&#8217;re not an evangelical, what relevance could your faith possibly have  when you&#8217;re in need, when you&#8217;re in distress, when you&#8217;re really up  against it one way or the other?&#8221; And yet, there are many of us for whom  that kind of search is still an essential part of our lives.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You begin your new book by describing how you walked into the  Church of the Heavenly Rest in New York City after learning that your  son had been diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I went into that church not actually intending to go to a service. I  found I was enormously moved by the worship, by the music, by the  congregation assembled. And I realized there is much that I love about  Christian tradition &#8212; and much that I needed about Christian tradition.<\/p>\n<p>What I also realized was that it wasn&#8217;t primarily about a set of  beliefs: &#8220;Do I believe in this and that and the other thing?&#8221; It was the  congregation gathered together for worship, it was the music, it was  the common values, it was what was felt and experienced and shared in  that worship. It&#8217;s not that I say beliefs don&#8217;t matter &#8212; by no means;  but they were not the focus. For many Christians, [beliefs] have been  right in the center: If people say, &#8220;Are you a Christian?&#8221; and you then  say, &#8220;What do you mean by that?&#8221; the usual follow-up question is, &#8220;Well,  do you believe that Jesus is the son of God?&#8221; or &#8220;Do you believe that  such and such?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What does religion have to say in times of grief?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: In times of grief, speaking for myself, one can&#8217;t hear about belief  very much, I think. In times of grief, people often go to churches. They  go for the worship. They go for the funeral. They go for a way to cope  with the unimaginable. We don&#8217;t have many ways to do that. People most  often go back to those powerful, simple, enormously compelling means of  dealing with grief.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You buried the two loves of your life, your son and your husband,  within 15 months of each other. What did religion offer you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It offered a very slender thread of a way to survive and to continue  to hope. In times of grief, it&#8217;s hard to hear what is being said about  beliefs or about heaven or any of that. But one can find a path in that,  nevertheless.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: And communion with other people?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Absolutely. That&#8217;s, perhaps, the most important thing. What one can  find in a time of grief has a lot to do with the sharing with other  people, and also, I think, importantly, with a sense of a spiritual  dimension in our lives.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What happened to your faith after the deaths of your husband and your son?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It&#8217;s hard to talk about that. It depends what you mean, I guess, by  &#8220;faith.&#8221; One somehow has to go on and find a way to hope again. I found  in that church, in the people gathered there, in various ways, some  solace and some help. Of course, also with friends and others; it wasn&#8217;t  the only way, but it was an important way.<\/p>\n<p>Of course you get angry. How can you not get angry? I don&#8217;t think I  subscribed to the theory of a morally ordered universe. My late husband  was an elementary particle physicist who worked on chaos theory. I  didn&#8217;t think of the universe as morally ordered in some obvious sense.  But there is a basic assumption [you] make about the world and about the  way things happen. And those assumptions do get shattered in times like  that. One can think, &#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve been doing pretty well, and things  should turn out well.&#8221; When we do that and things turn out horrendously,  our impulse, because of our tradition, is to blame ourselves. After  all, if you read the book of Genesis, it says people who do good things  receive good things. And people who do bad things have terrible things  happen. So it&#8217;s usual, when people have catastrophes happen, for them to  say, &#8220;Why is this happening to me?&#8221; as if that were some kind of  anomaly in the universe. I don&#8217;t think it is. That is the way things  happen in the universe. But it certainly would have shattered any kind  of conventional faith.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You&#8217;re so careful not to say &#8220;I.&#8221;<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Well &#8212; yes.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: It didn&#8217;t shatter your conventional faith?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I didn&#8217;t have one. I guess I didn&#8217;t have a conventional kind of  belief in all of these things. But it clarified for me that belief was  not the primary issue. Long before those things happened, when I had my  original family intact, I was working on THE GNOSTIC GOSPELS and I  realized that conventional views of Christian faith that I&#8217;d heard when I  was growing up were simply made up long after the fact. If I had had a  conventional kind of faith, I wouldn&#8217;t have been studying the beginnings  of Christianity, because people who do that are doing it because they  need to explore what they mean by &#8220;faith.&#8221; I had been doing that for a  long time already, so there wasn&#8217;t that kind of belief structure to fall  apart. However, my world did fall apart. It was absolutely devastating.  It&#8217;s a kind of maelstrom.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Did the community of the faithful, as it were, help you through it?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: They certainly did, and many people outside the church, as well. But  the sense of a spiritual dimension was something essential for me.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Why? Because it gives you hope in a time of fear?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think so. Not fear so much as just devastation. [It gives you] some kind of hope &#8212; yes.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Tell me about your life now.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I felt that my world had been completely shattered and devastated, as  it was. My late husband and I had adopted two children, one of whom was  three months old at the time. The other was two-and-a half. I couldn&#8217;t  ever imagine having a life again. And I find it amazing, 15 years later,  to be remarried to somebody who had also been widowed and suffered a  devastating loss and to have three more children included in our family,  his wonderful sons. Both of us learned how to go on. Both of us learned  that we could remember the ones that we loved very much, still, and  also include new families and new joy in our lives.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You have said, &#8220;When you go through terrible tragedy, you have a choice. You can either live as a victim or a hero.&#8221;<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I don&#8217;t feel much like a hero. I just think anyone who can survive it is about as heroic as you get.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Did the Gospel of Thomas always resonate with you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: From the time I began to read the Gospel of Thomas, I was expecting  it to be abominable, blasphemous heresy. That&#8217;s what I was told. One of  my teachers said to me recently, &#8220;We just thought the Gospel of Thomas  was weird.&#8221; So when I started to read it, I expected to find it to be  weird. In fact, I find it very moving and spiritually resonant.<\/p>\n<p>I also thought that it would be contrary to the gospels of the New  Testament. What I now see is that it&#8217;s not necessarily contrary, it&#8217;s  complementary. And it can open up new vistas on that tradition.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Do we know from these texts whether women played a much larger role in Christianity than one would think?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: In the Gospel of Mary, for example, Mary Magdalene appears not as a  prostitute but as a disciple &#8212; not only a disciple, but a special  disciple who was entrusted with particularly deep understandings of the  teachings of Jesus, as the Gospel of Thomas suggests about Thomas. In  some of these other Gospels, we find women in very different positions,  with very different kinds of respect &#8212; as disciples, as apostles, as  teachers &#8212; than you find in the Gospels of the New Testament.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: In fact, some of the early Christian churches were led by women?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Yes, many of them were. But women were not allowed positions of  formal authority after the second century in orthodox churches.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What would have been the effect if we had looked at Jesus in the way Thomas did?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: If the Gospel of Thomas had survived within the tradition, we would  have had just simply a greater range of understandings of Jesus. One  could see him as a sacrifice for sin. One could see him as a teacher of  righteousness, a teacher of love for the other and love for God. And one  could also see him as a manifestation of what is potential in everyone.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Did the early church fathers suppress information in order to  tailor an orthodox institution in their own narrow, patriarchal way?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: That is certainly a possible interpretation of it. I think there was  much more at stake. I would say that in the early Christian movement,  many different groups claimed to have the best possible understanding of  Jesus. And one of those groups which was widely consolidated and widely  spread prevailed over the others. You can give it that kind of very  negative read, and some of us may agree about that. But they were, from  their point of view, trying to salvage the church as they saw it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Why was the church afraid of the Gnostic Gospels?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The people who disliked these other Gospels included leaders such as  Bishop Athanasius, who was very much concerned about establishing his  authority over all the monks in Egypt.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: And who ordered them burned?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Right. These books were treasured in one of the oldest monasteries in  Egypt by monks who saw them as guides to spiritual development. There  are monks today who see them that way, as well. But the bishop, who  wanted authority consolidated in himself, told them, &#8220;Get rid of all  those books. You don&#8217;t need all those books. All you need are the ones  that I will mention now.&#8221; He mentions a list, which is our first list of  the 27 books of the New Testament. He told them, &#8220;Get rid of your  library, and just keep these.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Do you think that belief in Jesus as God has been overemphasized in Christianity?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think it has. Christianity as we know it is almost defined as  belief in Jesus as God. What we lose when we see it that way [are] many  other perspectives. The Gospel of Mark doesn&#8217;t picture Jesus as God. The  Gospel of Matthew doesn&#8217;t picture Jesus as God. Matthew pictures Jesus  as a rabbi, as a new Moses who teaches the divine Torah &#8212; &#8220;You shall  love the Lord your God with all your heart, and your neighbor as  yourself.&#8221; In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus says to people, &#8220;Do not call  me good. There&#8217;s only one who is good, and that is God.&#8221; The Gospel of  Matthew does not suggest that Jesus is in any way God. It is a much more  traditionally Jewish book which speaks about love of God and love of  the neighbor as the essential devotion of any person.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Why do you think your books resonate so with the public? Why is a book about religion on the best-seller list?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: For many people the sense of a spiritual dimension in our lives is  really essential, but it&#8217;s a kind of unspoken need in many people who  have left Christianity behind, or left whatever religious tradition with  which they grew up behind, because they think of it as childish, as  delusional, as sentimental. They don&#8217;t acknowledge that this, in fact,  is a very deep part of our nature. They also are taught that you can&#8217;t  think about religion, that there&#8217;s something antireligious in exploring,  in thinking, in discussing &#8212; as though that were somehow an act of  faithlessness. This book [BEYOND BELIEF] and this kind of work are an  invitation to explore it from many different perspectives.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Can you doubt or even reject certain canonical teachings and still be religious?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It seems to me that if we think that to be a participant in a  Christian church you have to believe a whole set of teachings, say, in  the creed, before you can even participate in worship, this is a great  loss. If one has to swallow the whole tradition as taught by this person  or that person, one can often find it completely indigestible. What  many people do is simply leave it all behind, instead of doing what  Christians have always done in every denomination, which is choose what  they find they have the most affinity with and what speaks to their  deepest understanding, leaving aside other things.<\/p>\n<p>Christians have been taught, you&#8217;re not supposed to pick and choose.  Picking and choosing is called &#8220;heresy.&#8221; The word &#8220;heresy&#8221; means  &#8220;choice.&#8221; And heresy &#8212; that is, choosing &#8212; has been considered a  terrible thing for Christians to do. I don&#8217;t agree with that, as you can  tell.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Do most people want a rigid set of beliefs to cling to?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s necessary. Most people think that if you&#8217;re  talking about religion, you are talking about what you believe. It&#8217;s not  all about what you believe. It&#8217;s about what values we share. It&#8217;s about  what commitments we have to the sacredness of life, for example.  There&#8217;s much else that&#8217;s wider and deeper in this tradition than a  particular set of beliefs on which Christians in different denominations  would disagree.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Some say that you smack of New Age religiosity.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: People have said that this sounds like a New Age kind of teaching,  and that I find kind of humorous. I mean, if 2,000 years is &#8220;new,&#8221; then I  suppose it is.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You&#8217;ve said that spiritual exploration takes many forms. What do you mean by that?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Look at Christian tradition today that extends from Pentecostal,  Baptist, Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Methodist, Roman Catholic, Eastern  Orthodox, Serbian, Coptic, Ethiopic churches &#8212; churches all over the  world of every kind. There&#8217;s a huge range of them. It&#8217;s often been the  tradition of various churches to say, &#8220;This is the only true church, and  all the others are heretics.&#8221; Do we still believe that?<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What about the notion that the Holy Spirit guided the selection of the Gospels, and so it&#8217;s right?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I was taught that the religious understanding of the history of  Christianity is that the Holy Spirit guides the church, and that&#8217;s why  it follows the &#8220;true&#8221; path. That may work for people who are staying  within a theological framework. I couldn&#8217;t help asking the question,  &#8220;But what actually happened on a human level?&#8221; And there I find that,  besides the Holy Spirit, there is a great deal of political, social, and  religious controversy that is unacknowledged unless you begin to look  at the historical picture in a more realistic way.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Do the Christian creeds exclude mysticism?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The creeds do not explicitly exclude mysticism, but mystics within  Christian tradition have to walk very carefully to say, &#8220;Yes, I may have  a relationship with God, but I am a miserable human, and God, of  course, is a divine being.&#8221; You read how Teresa of Avila abases herself  &#8212; or any of the mystics &#8212; because they want to avoid what is heresy.  Heresy in Christian tradition, and also in some Jewish and Muslim  traditions, has to do with speaking of yourself and God as if they were  on some kind of continuum, instead of opposites. And yet, that is the  language that mystics have instinctively spoken. That is the language  you find in the Gospel of Thomas.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: BEYOND BELIEF, the title of your book &#8212; what does that mean?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: To me, it meant that there is a great deal in Christian tradition  which goes beyond the simple question of what you believe and what you  don&#8217;t believe. There&#8217;s worship, there is community, there are shared  values, there&#8217;s spiritual discovery.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You&#8217;ve said that demonization is one of the plagues of religious tradition.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: When I was working on a book on Satan, I realized that there are very  dark and potentially evil sides to religious tradition, including  Christian tradition. In the tradition that I know best, demonizing other  people and claiming that they are &#8220;agents of the devil&#8221; has, in the  history of Christianity, allowed for terrible violence in the name of  religion, in the name of God&#8217;s truth. That, of course, is not exclusive  to Christianity.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Should Christianity be understood as a set system of beliefs or an  ongoing search for the spiritual? And are they mutually exclusive?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think one can see both. Certainly there are sets of beliefs that  are part of any religious tradition. Is that all? Well, one can say,  &#8220;No, that&#8217;s not all.&#8221; There is also spiritual inquiry. In the early  Christian movement, these seemed to be completely compatible. It&#8217;s only  in the third and fourth century that some leaders of the church tried to  separate the two and say, &#8220;No. You must take these beliefs and no more  exploration.&#8221; They&#8217;ve always been compatible for many people within  Christian tradition. For saints of the church, it&#8217;s always been  understood that you don&#8217;t simply stop with certain beliefs, but you keep  on exploring. And that exploration can lead to new discoveries.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How do people usually react to your work?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The response to this kind of work is usually very visceral and  powerful. It&#8217;s often deep, and it&#8217;s been overwhelmingly positive. There  are people who are genuinely outraged and shaken by this kind of  exploration, either because it&#8217;s unfamiliar or because they think it&#8217;s  faithless or antithetical and damaging to God&#8217;s truth. I&#8217;m not one of  those people.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What attracted you to studying and teaching religion?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I just realized that there was something very powerful about  Christian tradition, about religious tradition, and I wanted to  understand something about how it moves us so much, how it becomes so  compelling, why it is still an enormously powerful force in our lives.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You try very hard not to personalize any of this and not to use words like &#8220;suppress.&#8221; <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I&#8217;m trying not to use polemical language. After I wrote THE GNOSTIC  GOSPELS, I realized that the perspective was particularly Protestant. It  was rooting for the underdog &#8212; in this case the heretics &#8212; against  the authorities in the church and the bishops and the hierarchy. Now I  realize that&#8217;s a little oversimplified. To write history well, one has  to be on both sides of a controversy. You could write the history of the  Civil War, but if you&#8217;re only on one side, it&#8217;s not going to be a very  powerful story. In this work, I&#8217;m really trying to engage the  controversy as fully as I can.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: It&#8217;s interesting that the victor always writes the history. And in this case, for 1,600 years the vanquished were hidden.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: That&#8217;s right. And for 1,600 years, the books were gone, so we were  told that heretics say blasphemous and terrible things, but we never  knew what they said. This is really our first opportunity to look at a  whole library of writings that were called &#8220;heretical&#8221; and see the  enormous range and diversity of what Christians were doing in the first  few centuries. We are rewriting the history of Christianity.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Read more excerpts from Mary Alice Williams&#8217;s interview with Princeton historian Elaine Pagels, author of BEYOND BELIEF: THE SECRET GOSPEL OF THOMAS (Random House): Q: What is the Gospel of Thomas? A: The Gospel of Thomas claims to be the &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2003\/10\/10\/october-10-2003-elaine-pagels-extended-interview\/10363\/\" class=\"more\">More <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":72,"featured_media":17612,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[830,1965,4689,10362,10365,3786,6863,5889],"class_list":["post-10363","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-author","tag-bible","tag-christianity","tag-elaine-pagels","tag-gospel-of-thomas","tag-grief","tag-jesus-christ","tag-new-testament","topics-literature-and-the-arts","faith-christian"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 10, 2003 ~ Elaine Pagels Extended Interview | October 10, 2003 | Religion &amp; 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