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Infancy Gospel of Thomas
The following translation is based
on the Greek text printed in Ronald F. Hock's The
Infancy Gospels of James and Thomas. The text is a
slightly modified version of Tischendorf A. Chapters and verses
are divided as in the "Scholars Version" translation.
Chapter
1
(1)
I, Thomas the Israelite, am reporting to you, all my brothers
from the nations, to reveal the childhood and the greatness of
our Lord Jesus Christ, what he did in my country after he was
born. This is the beginning of it.
Chapter
2
(1) When the boy Jesus was
five years old, he was playing in a narrow part of a rushing stream.
(2) He was gathering the flowing waters into ponds, and immediately
they were made clean, and he ordered these things with a single
word. (3) And after he made clay, he molded twelve sparrows from
it. And it was the Sabbath when he did these things. But there
were also many other children playing with him.
(4) Then, a certain Jew
saw what Jesus was doing while playing on the Sabbath. Immediately,
he departed and reported to Jesus' father, Joseph, "Look,
your child is in the stream and he took clay and formed twelve
birds and profaned the Sabbath?"
(5) And Joseph went to the
area and when he saw him, he shouted, "Why are you doing
these things that are not permitted on the Sabbath?"
(6) Jesus, however, clapped
his hands and shouted to the sparrows, "Depart, fly, and
remember me now that you are alive." And the sparrows departed
shrieking.
(7) When the Jews saw this,
they were amazed. After they had gone away, they described to
their leaders what they had seen Jesus do.
Chapter
3
(1) The son of Annas the
scribe was standing there with Jesus. Taking a branch from a willow
tree, he dispersed the waters which Jesus had gathered. (2) When
Jesus saw what had happened, he became angry and said to him,
"You godless, brainless moron, what did the ponds and waters
do to you? Watch this now: you are going to dry up like a tree
and you will never produce leaves or roots or fruit."
(3) And immediately, this
child withered up completely. Then, Jesus departed and returned
to Joseph's house. (4) The parents of the one who had been withered
up, however, wailed for their young child as they took his remains
away. Then, they went to Joseph and accused him, "You are
responsible for the child who did this."
Chapter
4
(1) Next, he was going through
the village again and a running child bumped his shoulder. Becoming
bitter, Jesus said to him, "You will not complete your journey."
(2) Immediately, he fell down and died.
(3) Then, some of the people
who had seen what had happened said, "Where has this child
come from so that his every word is a completed deed?"
(4) And going to Joseph,
the parents of the one who had died found fault with him. They
said, "Because you have such a child, you are not allowed
to live with us in the village, or at least teach him to bless
and not curse. For our children are dead!"
Chapter
5
(1) And taking his child
aside, he warned him, saying, "Why are you doing these things?
These people are suffering and they hate us and cause trouble
for us."
(2) Then, Jesus said, "I
know that the words I speak are not mine. Nevertheless, I will
be silent for your sake, but these people will bear their punishment."
And immediately his accusers became blind.
(3) When they saw what he
had done, they were extremely afraid and did not know what to
do. And they talked about him, saying, "Every word he speaks,
good or evil, is an event and becomes a miracle."
(4) When Joseph saw that
Jesus had done this, however, he was outraged and took his ear
and pulled it extremely hard. (5) Then, the child became angry
and said to him, "It is enough for you to seek and not find,
but too much for you to act so unwisely. (6) Do you not know that
I am not yours? Do not trouble me."
Chapter
6
(1) A teacher named Zacchaeus
overheard everything Jesus said to Joseph and marveled, saying
to himself, "As just a child, he utters these things."
And taking Joseph aside, he said to him, "You have a wise
child; he has a good mind, but give him to me that he may learn
letters. I will teach him all knowledge so that he will not be
rebellious."
(3) Replying, Joseph said
to him, "Nobody except God can subordinate this child. Do
not consider him to be a small cross, brother."
(4) As Jesus heard Joseph
saying this, he laughed and said to Zacchaeus, "Really, teacher,
what my father has said to you is true. (5) I am the Lord of this
people and am here in your presence and have been born among you
and am with you. (6) I know where you are from and how many years
there will be in your lives. I am telling you the truth, teacher,
when you were born, I existed. And if you want to be a perfect
teacher, listen to me and I will teach you wisdom which nobody
knows except me and the one who sent me to you. (7) For you are
my disciple and I know you, how old you are and how old you will
live to be. (8) And when you see the cross my father has described,
you will believe that everything I have said to you is true."
(9) Then, the Jews who were
present and heard Jesus were amazed and said, "What a strange
and remarkable event. The child is only five years old and already
he says such things. For we never heard anyone who speaks words
like this child does."
(10) Replying to them, Jesus
said, "Are you so amazed? Then you should believe more of
what I said to you. I really also know when you and your parents
were born and I will tell you this remarkable fact: even when
the world was created, I and the one who sent me to you existed."
(11) When the Jews heard
the child say this, however, it made them angry, even though they
were not able to reply to his speech. (12) Then, the child came
forward and leaping toward them, he said, "I taunted you!
For I know that you are amazed by little things and have minuscule
minds."
(13) Since they thought
they were being consoled by the child's exhortation, the teacher
said to Joseph, "Lead him to the school and I will teach
him letters."
(14) So Joseph took him
by the hand and led him into the classroom. (15) And the teacher
wrote the alphabet for him and began to practice it many times,
but the child said nothing and did not answer him for a long time.
(16) Becoming outraged, the teacher hit him on the head. After
enduring this stoically, the child said to him, "I am teaching
you more than being taught by you because I know the letters you
are teaching me and your judgment is great. These things are to
you like a copper pitcher or a clashing cymbal which do not offer
glory or wisdom through sound. (17) Nobody understands the power
of my wisdom." (18) Then, when his rage was finished, he
said the alphabet from alpha to omega very quickly.
(19) Looking the teacher
in the face, he told him, "Since you do not know the nature
of the alpha, how are going to teach me the beta? (20) Hypocrite,
if you know, first teach me the alpha then I will believe what
you say about the beta." (21) Then, he began to tell the
teacher about the first letter. And the teacher was not strong
enough to say anything.
(22) Then, while many were
listening, he said to Zacchaeus, "Listen, teacher, and observe
the structure of the first letter, (23) how it has two standard
lines and impresses coming to a point in the middle and remaining
there, coming together, lifting up, dancing, having three corners,
having two corners, without strokes, of one family, well-balanced,
as long as the alpha has equal lines."
Chapter
7
(1) When Zacchaeus heard
such great words and allegories of this sort about the first letter
from the child, he was at a loss over what his defense and teaching
could be. (2) And he said to those present, "Oh me, I am
suffering and at a loss and am ashamed of myself because I took
this child. (3) So take him, I urge you, brother Joseph. I am
not able to bear his stare or his direct speech. (4) This child
was not born of the earth; he is even able to subdue fire. Perhaps,
he was born before the creation of the world. (5) What womb bore
him, what sort of mother brought him up, I know not. (6) Oh me,
friends, I am going out of my mind. (7) I deceived myself and
am suffering unimaginably. I struggled to have a student and I
have found that I have a teacher. (8) Brothers, consider the shame:
an experienced leader has been conquered by a child! (9) And I
may have to lose heart and die because of this child. For at this
very hour, I am not able to look him in the eye. (10) When everyone
says that I have been conquered by a child, what can I say? And
what more is there to say about the lines of the first letter
than what he already told me? I do not know. (11) So I beg you,
brother Joseph, take him to your house. Whether I should call
him a god or an angel or something else, I do not know."
Chapter
8
(1) While the Jews were
advising Zacchaeus, the child had a great laugh and said, "Now,
the fruitless bear fruit and the blind see and the deaf in the
understanding of the heart hear. (2) I am here from above that
I may rescue those below and call them to higher things, just
as the one who sent me to you commanded me."
(3) And when the child completed
his speech, those who were under his curse were immediately saved,
(4) but from then on, nobody dared to make him angry because they
did not want to be cursed or crippled.
Chapter
9
(1) And after a few days
passed, Jesus was up on a roof of a house. And one of the children
playing with him died after falling off the roof. And when the
other children saw, they fled and Jesus was left standing alone.
(2) When the parents of
the one who had died came, they accused Jesus, "Troublemaker,
you threw him down."
(3) But Jesus replied, "I
did not throw him down, rather he threw himself down. When he
was not acting carefully, he leaped off the roof and died."
(4) Jesus leaped off the
roof and stood by the corpse of the boy and cried out with a loud
voice and said, "Zeno," - for that was his name - "rise
up, talk to me: did I throw you down?"
(5) And rising up immediately,
he said, "No, Lord, you did not throw me down, but you did
raise me up."
(6) And when they saw this,
they were overwhelmed. The parents of the child glorified God
on account of the sign which had happened and they worshipped
Jesus.
Chapter
10
(1) A short number of days
later, when a certain young man was splitting wood in the neighborhood,
his ax fell and cut through the bottom of his foot. As it became
bloodless, he was dying.
(2) Then, there was a great
clamor and a crowd formed and the child Jesus ran there. And forcing
his way through the crowd, he went and seized the young man's
wounded foot. Immediately, it was healed.
(3) Then, he said to the
young man, "Get up now, chop the wood and remember me."
(4) When the crowd saw what
had happened, they worshipped the child, saying, "Truly,
the spirit of God dwells in this child."
Chapter
11
(1) When Jesus was six years
old, his mother sent him to draw water to carry into the house.
But he accidentally let the water go in the crowd, (2) and crashing,
the water jar broke. (3) But unfolding the cloak which was thrown
around him, he filled it with water and carried it to his mother.
(4) When his mother saw
the sign he had done, she kissed him and treasured in her heart
the mysterious things she had seen him do.
Chapter
12
(1) Then again, in the season
of sowing, the child went with his father to sow grain in their
field. And as his father was sowing, the child Jesus also sowed
one measure of grain. (2) And after he harvested and threshed
it, it produced one hundred measures. (3) And calling all the
poor of the village to the threshing floor, he gave them grain
freely. And Joseph carried the remaining grain away. (4) Jesus
was eight years old when he did this sign.
Chapter
13
(1) Since his father was
a carpenter, he was making plows and yokes in that season. (2)
An order for a bed was given to him from a rich man, (3) but one
of the boards, the one called the crossbeam, was shorter than
the other. And since Joseph had no idea what to do, the child
Jesus said to his father Joseph, "Put the two pieces of wood
down and line up the ends."
(3) And Joseph did just
as the child told him. Then, Jesus stood at the other end and
grasped the shorter piece of wood and stretching it, he made it
equal with the other.
(4) And his father Joseph
saw and was amazed and, taking the child, he kissed him, saying,
"I am blessed because God gave me this child."
Chapter
14
(1) When Joseph saw the
child's willingness and age and that his mind was also ready,
he again wanted him to become accustomed to letters. So, taking
him, he gave him to another teacher. (2) The teacher said to Joseph,
"First I will teach him Greek, then Hebrew." For the
teacher knew about the child's earlier attempt and was afraid.
Nonetheless, after writing the alphabet, he instructed the boy
for many hours, even though he did not reply to him.
(3) Then, Jesus said to
him, "If you are really a teacher and if you know the letters
so well, tell me the meaning of the alpha and I will tell you
the meaning of the beta."
(4) As he was growing frustrated,
the teacher struck him on the head. Then, Jesus became angry and
cursed him. Immediately, he fainted and fell on his face.
(5) Then, Jesus turned back
to Joseph's house, but Joseph was distressed. He instructed the
boy's mother, "Do not let him out the door because the people
who anger him will die."
Chapter
15
(1) After some time had
passed, again another teacher, a close friend of Joseph, said
to him, "Send the child to me in my classroom. Perhaps with
flattery, I will be able to teach him the letters."
(2) And Joseph said to him,
"If you are sure, brother, take him with you." And while
he took him along with much fear and anxiety, the child went along
gladly.
(3) And coming boldly into
the classroom, he found a book lying on the desk and taking it,
he read the letters in it. Opening his mouth, he spoke in the
Holy Spirit and taught the law to those standing there.
(4) A large multitude came
and stood around, listening to him. And they marveled at the fullness
of his teaching and the readiness of his speech, saying, "This
is a child saying such things."
(5) When Joseph heard what
was going on, he was afraid and ran to the classroom, thinking,
"This teacher is not accustomed to him."
(6) The teacher, however,
said to Joseph, "Brother, I want you to know that I received
the child as a student, but since he is full of grace and wisdom,
I am asking you, brother, take him to your house."
(7) When the child heard
these things, he immediately smiled at him and said, "Since
you have spoken and witnessed correctly, for your sake the one
who was wounded will be healed." And at once, the other teacher
was healed. Then, Joseph took the child and went back to his house.
Chapter
16
(1) Then, Joseph sent his
son James to tie up wood and bring it into his house, but the
child Jesus also followed him. And while James was collecting
the bushes, a viper bit his hand. (2) And as he lay on the ground
dying, Jesus approached and blew on the bite. And immediately,
his anguish ceased and the animal broke apart and at once James
was healthy.
Chapter
17
(1) After these things happened,
an infant in Joseph's neighborhood died and his mother mourned
greatly. When Jesus heard that she was extremely sad and was making
an uproar, he ran there frantically.
(2) And finding the child
dead, he touched his stomach and said, "I say to you, infant,
do not die, but live and be with your mother."
(3) Immediately, he was
resurrected and laughed. Then, Jesus said to the woman, "Take
the child, give him your breast, and remember me."
(4) And when the crowd standing
around saw this, they were amazed and said, "Truly, this
child either was God or an angel of God because all his words
are completed deeds." And Jesus departed from there playing
with other children.
Chapter
18
(1) Another year later,
a man building a house died after falling from the full height
of it. And after a great commotion began, Jesus stood up and went
there. (2) And seeing the dead man lying there, he grabbed his
hand and said, "I say to you, man, arise, do your work."
And rising up immediately, he worshipped him.
(3) When the crowd saw,
they were amazed and said, "This child is a heavenly being.
For he has saved many souls from death and has the power to continue
saving souls throughout his whole life."
Chapter
19
(1) When he was twelve years
old, his parents went to Jerusalem with a caravan for the festival
of Passover, as was their custom. (2) And after the Passover,
they returned to their home. When they departed, however, the
child Jesus returned to Jerusalem, although his parents thought
he was in the caravan. (3) After traveling along the road for
one day, they sought him among their relatives. When they did
not find him, they grieved. And they turned back to the city,
searching for him.
(4) And after three days,
they found him in the temple, sitting in the middle of the teachers
and listening to the law and questioning them. (5) Everyone paid
attention to him and was amazed at how this child was questioning
the elders and teachers of the people so closely, interpreting
the chief points of the law and parables of the prophets. (6)
Then, his mother Mary came to him and said, "Why did you
do this to us, child? See how we are troubled as we search for
you."
(7) And Jesus said to them,
"Why are you searching for me? Do you not know that I must
be in my father's house?"
(8) Then, the scribes and
Pharisees said, "Are you the mother of this child?"
(9) She said, "I am."
(10) And they said to her,
"Blessed are you among women because God has blessed the
fruit of your womb. For we have never seen or heard such glory
or virtue or wisdom."
(11) When Jesus got up,
he followed his mother and submitted to his parents. And his mother
treasured everything that had happened. (12) And Jesus continued
to grow in wisdom and age and grace.
(13) To him be the glory
forever and ever, amen.
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