The Daily Telegraph

Don’t take it as Gospel, earliest study suggests

- By Olivia Rudgard Religious Affairs Correspond­ent

THE earliest Latin interpreta­tion of the Gospels has been brought to light by a British academic – and it suggests that readers should not take the Bible literally.

Lost for 1,500 years, the fourth-century commentary by Fortunatia­nus of Aquileia, an African-born Italian bishop, interprets the Gospels as a series of allegories.

Dr Hugh Houghton, of the University of Birmingham, who has translated the work, said the find added weight to the idea that many early scholars did not see the Bible as a history, but a series of coded messages on key elements of Christiani­ty.

“There’s been an assumption that it’s a literal record of truth – a lot of the early scholars got very worried about inconsiste­ncies between Matthew and Luke, for example.

“But for people teaching the Bible in the fourth century, it’s not the literal meaning which is important, it’s how it’s read allegorica­lly.”

The approach differs from the growing trend of biblical literalism adopted by modern fundamenta­list Christians, which has been the basis for beliefs such as the idea that the Earth is 6,000 years old and that it was created in seven days.

The 100-page document examines the Gospel of Matthew in detail and part of the Gospels according to Luke and John. It was hidden for 1,500 years within an anonymous manuscript in Cologne Cathedral Library, until it was digitised by the University of Salzburg in 2012. However, it remained untranslat­ed until Dr Houghton came across it after an Austrian colleague read about it in a local newspaper.

The original manuscript is thought to have been transcribe­d in around AD800, more than 400 years after it was written. It predates better-known writings by more famous scholars such as St Augustine, St Jerome and St Ambrose.

 ??  ?? Hugh Houghton said that early scholars saw the Gospels as more allegory than history
Hugh Houghton said that early scholars saw the Gospels as more allegory than history

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