Turkey says it has acquired a 1,500-year-old Bible in which Jesus Christ is
believed to have foretold the advent of Prophet Mohammed (Peace be upon Him),
press reports said on Monday.
Pope Benedict XVI has reportedly requested to see the book, which has been
hidden in Turkey for the last 12 years before it was revealed this week.
The Book, worth around $28 million, is said to contain Jesus’ prediction of
the Prophet’s coming but was suppressed by the Christian Church for years for
its strong resemblance to the Islamic view of Jesus, Turkish culture and tourism
minister Ertugrul Gunay was quoted on Monday as saying.
“In line with Islamic belief, the Gospel treats Jesus as a human being and
not a God. It rejects the ideas of the Holy Trinity and the Crucifixion and
reveals that Jesus predicted the coming of the Prophet Mohammed,” Gunay told the
British Daily Mail newspaper.
“In one version of the gospel, he is said to have told a priest: ‘How shall
the Messiah be called? Mohammed is his blessed name…..and in another, Jesus
denied being the Messiah, claiming that he or she would be Ishmaelite, the term
used for an Arab,” he added.
According to the report, carried by Gulf newspapers and the Saudi Alarabiya
news network, Muslims believe the text, which many say is the Gospel of
Barnabas, is an addition to the original gospels of Mark, Matthew, Luke and
John. St. Barnabas is traditionally identified as the founder of the Cypriot
Church, an early Christian later named an apostle.
Gunay said the Vatican has officially requested to see the book, which Turkey
had discovered during a police anti-smuggling operation in 2000.
The gang was convicted of smuggling various items seized during the
operation, including the Bible, and all the artifacts were kept in a safe at an
Ankara courthouse. It remained closely guarded by authorities before being
handed over to the Ankara Ethnography Museum where it will soon be put on show.
No comments:
Post a Comment