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Chapter, Paragraph grey = Comment text
1 I | Commentary ~ The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of traditional
2 I | attributed to Didymos Judas Thomas, the "Doubting Thomas" of
3 I | Judas Thomas, the "Doubting Thomas" of the canonical Gospels,
4 I | versions of the Gospel of Thomas today. The first was discovered
5 I | of the Nag Hammadi finds. Thomas was probably first written
6 I | speculation on the relationship of Thomas to the canonical Gospels.
7 I | Gospels. Many Sayings in Thomas have parallels with the
8 I | leads many to believe that Thomas was also based on the so-called "
9 I | some have speculated that Thomas may in fact be "Q". Unlike
10 I | like "Q", the Gospel of Thomas has no narrative connecting
11 I | Testament parallels show that Thomas contains either more primitive
12 I | primitive versions. Either way, Thomas seems to preserve earlier
13 I | attribute the Gospel of Thomas to any particular sect,
14 I | versions of the Gospel of Thomas. Of the 114 Sayings in the
15 II | II: Coptic Gospel of Thomas~ P) These are the secret
16 II | and which Didymos Judas Thomas wrote down. ~
17 II, 13 | like a wise philosopher." Thomas said to Him, "Master, my
18 II, 13 | told him three things. When Thomas returned to his companions,
19 II, 13 | What did Jesus say to you?" Thomas said to them, "If I tell
20 III | Fragments of Greek Gospel of Thomas~ Several fragments of a
21 III | fragments of a Greek version of Thomas were found among the Oxyrhynchys
22 III, 115| which Judas, who is called Thomas, wrote down" ~
23 IV | Canonical Comparisons of Thomas Sayings ~ I have grouped
24 IV | sayings in the Gospel of Thomas into 5 categories. Sayings
25 IV | 62b: Mt6:3 69a: Mt5:8 (cf. Thomas saying 68) 69b: Mt5:6, Lk6:
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