I don't think so.
There was a time of course that being a professor had authority. The various European colonial empires used missionaries as part of their reach for global dominion. The professor helped "explain" Holy Writ balancing his responsibility as member of an Imperial order with actual learning. As these Imperial orders began collapsing, so too did the apologetic nature of their authority.
Without getting too deeply involved in politics, as long as the professor served a role in the hegemonic "order" he was respected and the political "authorities" granted him what was clearly reciprocal authority. Once universities began to cut up, "deconstruct" and what not "the Bible" the professor lost the authority that the political order granted him.
This is just a fact of life. Morton Smith and his protege Jacob Neusner were arch-conservative scholars. They despised the leftist university climate they worked within. Neusner was appointed as part of Reagan's "revolution" to clean up the NEA. The paradox of Morton Smith's discovery of a certain letter of Clement of Alexandria in the Mar Saba monastery near Bethlehem is that Smith wasn't a "leftist" scholar trying to make Jesus a spokesman for "social change." He was fascist, according to one of his students, almost "to the right of Hitler" although Smith bore no hatred of the Jews. In fact all the loves of his life seem to have been Jewish women.
The discovery of Clement's Letter to Theodore should have marked a major turning point of that understanding of the past that never happened. Instead a handful of "other" conservative scholars developed a conspiracy theory - read carefully Smith and Landau's culling of Quentin Quesnell's personal notes that I helped preserve at the Smith College archives, Quesnell was (secretly) a conspiracy theorist, he suspected Smith and Darby Nock worked together on this "forgery" - in order to blunt its authority.
I use the word authority throughout quite deliberately. Now academics prefer their interpretation, their reconstruction of antiquity over antiquity itself. What could be more valuable than having a letter from let's Irenaeus of Lyons to help understand Roman Christianity of the late second century? We now have a letter from a contemporary in Christianity Alexandria and the argument against its authenticity has completely fallen apart. Yet Marcionite studies would rather stay engrossed in their wholly subjective analysis of "what the canon of Marcion looked like" from culling together all the scriptural references made in anti-Marcionite texts like Adversus Marcionem or unreliable authors like Epiphanius of Salamis. They would prefer to argue over Q. They would prefer to do anything other than settle the question once and for all whether the Letter to Theodore is an actual letter of Clement of Alexandria.
It is an authentic letter of Clement of Alexandria and it tells us something remarkable about the origins of Christianity.
Morton Smith may have been a repressed homosexual in 1958. He was unlikely to be a practicing homosexual in 1958 given the obvious time restraints between his travels, his job at Columbia University and his real life (secret) and documented relationships with the mother of one of his students. These sons and daughters of a conspiracy theorist want us to believe that on top of this incredible work schedule Smith was visiting non-existent gay bars in Manhattan and as a sort of "Satanic hobby" when not "cottaging" or whatever other superficialities they manage to conjure up in their imaginary timeline, he was actively learning to make 17th century ink, practicing 18th century Byzantine handwriting, cobbling together a perfect replica of Clement of Alexandria and the evangelist Mark's writing habits and fitting that "gospel fragment" into an extremely niched "window" of antiquity - i.e. that window which knew that a collection of Letters of Clement of Alexandria once existed at the Mar Saba monastery in the desert near Bethlehem because John of Damascus saw it there and quotes from it, that Clement of Alexandria preferred the Gospel of Mark and at the end of pre-Nicene Christianity St Mark's martyrium in the wilderness of a place called the "Cattle Pasture" was the headquarters of an alternative tradition to the Rome-centric worldview initiating its priests with a "secret" rite developed from a "gospel of Mark" brought over from Rome by the evangelist according to early sources.
Yes, in a highly improbable way Morton Smith could have "known" all of this and yes, as a "rogue scholar" he "could have decided" to forge a text using archaic Greek script and smuggled this book into the library. But it is such a crazy theory - one which has been repeated as fact for almost 70 years without any corroborating evidence. These people promoting such nonsense just expected that some massive piece of evidence would just fall from the tree at some point and it never has, save from gossip mongering about Morton Smith's homosexuality.
There are so many rabbit holes here which I and most other people who study early Christianity have no real expertise. The simple fact is that it would be highly unusual for an associate professor in 1958 who would go on to become "one of the greats" to forge a document that was outside of his real area of expertise. Smith eventually specialized in the history of early Israelite religion. The Letter to Theodore is not about that. In one of the most enlightening videos on the subject (not in the way intended I might add) Craig Evans, a Canadian Biblical scholar who is famous for introducing a silly "Canadian" angle to the sordid history of conspiracy theorizing in relation to this document (the Hunter Hogg pulp fiction novel which "anticipated" Smith's discovery) argues that Smith's attempt to make to Theodore about magic when it is clearly not about magic is "really a proof" of Smith's complex forgery methodology.
No it is not. It is only proof of what I and many others dislike about academics. They always make things about "themselves" like a rustic hairdresser's chit chat with customers.
I liked Morton Smith. He introduced me to Celsus and the possibility that Jesus might have been a magician. But his attempt to make the Letter to Theodore and the "Secret Gospel of Mark" about magic and magicians and all the things he became interested in the 1960s is a precursor really for Evans attempts to connect the Hunter Hogg novel to the controversy. These fucking people always want to make it about them and their concerns. The objectivity that real scholarship demands is lonely. And in a world where there is a unprecedented loneliness and alienation, groups within the study of early Christianity "naturally" break off into factions, championing causes for little more than finding friends.
I had a teacher in Grade 5 who told my classmates that friendships developed against a common enemy don't last. But what Ms Yamaguchi didn't tell us is that when you get older these are the only kinds of personal relationships. But that's another story.
I actually prefer Morton Smith's analysis in his second book the Secret Gospel to Clement of Alexandria and a Secret Gospel of Mark (CASGM), the original academic work. Both books were released in the same year owing to delays with CASGM. CASGM represented Smith's original research up to about 1965. He gave up his relationship with his girlfriend at the time of the discovery and became engrossed in his research, laying the ground for Jesus the Magician, which was ultimately published in 1978.
Jesus the Magician is in my mind the best possible explanation for Jesus as a historical figure. Essentially Smith asks, "how do you explain the gospels historically?" that is rationally i.e. without an appeal for miracles being "real." Smith essentially makes the case that Celsus, a prominent pagan critic from 180 CE, identifies Jesus as a popular magician because Jesus must have been a popular magician. The "brilliance" of Smith's formulation is that it is wholly based in ancient sources and ancient religious testimonies.
The problem with Smith's theory is that it is out of step with what Clement of Alexandria believed about Jesus and the gospel used by his community in Alexandria. Whether critics like to believe it or not, Clement's homily on Mark 10:17 - 31 (which survives essentially in some end pages of manuscripts associated with his "successor" (we don't really know the relationship between the two men but it sounds good) Origen of Alexandria. The Alexandrian community in Clement's day clearly was attached to the gospel of Mark and so we see him make his authoritative understanding of Christianity's understanding of the relationship between personal wealth and following Jesus from the Gospel of Mark not Matthew, Luke or John. End of story.
This is not surprising because Eusebius over a century later repeats the story we hear from other sources about Mark bringing a gospel from Rome to Alexandria and establishing the first Christian community in the city. None of this would be remotely controversial if Morton Smith wasn't reviled as a "fag" scholar who gave up being a priest to engage in a secular "queer" lifestyle.
The so-called "Arian Church" was really a continuation of this Alexandrian community of St Mark. Arius was the "presbyter" of the Church of St Mark referenced in the Letter to Theodore. His predecessor Peter of Alexandria presided over Egyptian Christianity from the "church" mentioned by Eusebius from a document he quotes from Philo of Alexandria in the first century. This doesn't mean that Mark "actually" founded the community referenced by Philo. What it does show is that Eusebius's information went back to a pre-Eusebian "Alexandrian Church of St Mark" and the appeal of Arius and his circle to Clement, Origen and Dionysius of Alexandria shows that Alexandria was a real rival - an African rival - of the European Church of Rome.
With all of this said, Clement's citation of the Alexandrian text of Mark 10:17 - 31 has many textual anomalies. It represents a "harmonized" text of Mark - i.e. where the words sound used by Mark show up not in the "standard" text of Mark (as preserved by scriptoriums from the third to fifth centuries, but Matthew and Luke's account of the pericope. Now because I am not a narcissist (at least to the extent of my peers) I don't happen to believe that "standard Mark" should be accepted as the "true text" of Mark. Clement's homily represents the earliest testimony of Mark's actual wording (older, I believe than even Irenaeus's discussion of Mark in Book Three of Adversus Haereses).
What is most incredible about this citation is a little word which shows up in the description of "rich guy" as simply a three letter word - τις. This little word changes everything. It proves or at least suggests that this "someone" (τις) was Paul or at least quite specifically the Marcionite Paul, the Paul of heresy.
The title of Clement's homily Τίς ὁ σωζόμενος πλούσιος; (“Who is the rich man that is being saved?”) can be read as a deliberate transformation of the τις in his Mark 10:17. In the Alexandrian text of Mark, the story begins, ἐκπορευομένου αὐτοῦ εἰς ὁδόν προσελθών τις ἐγονυπέτει λέγων…—“as he was going out into the road, a certain one (τις) ran up and knelt before him, saying…”. Mark introduces the rich inquirer only as τις, an anonymous, indefinite “someone.” In later accentuation, the interrogative τίς (“who?”) and the indefinite τις (“someone”) are distinguished by accents, but in the manuscripts the underlying form is the same word: ΤΙΣ. Graphically and lexically, Clement’s τίς and Mark’s τις are the same item.
Clement’s treatise is an extended exposition of precisely this Markan pericope, so the verbal echo is unlikely to be accidental. What Mark presents narratively as τις—a certain unnamed rich man—Clement recasts programmatically as a question: Τίς ὁ σωζόμενος πλούσιος; “Who is the rich person who is saved?” In effect, he lifts Mark’s τις out of the narrative, re-accentuates it as τίς, and turns the anonymous figure into a universal problem: which “someone,” which rich person (potentially among Clement’s own hearers), will actually become that man who is saved? The same ΤΙΣ that appears in Mark as an indefinite “someone” thus reappears in Clement as an interrogative “who?”, and the entire homily is framed as the answer to that question generated by Mark 10:17.
I have found repeated reference to τις as Paul in Clement's Alexandrian tradition. But that τις held a special place as a signal for a "secret figure" shows up in Tertullian's reporting on the Marcionite tradition. Why is there this parallel? We will pick this up in our next post. But let's report the facts.
In Adversus Marcionem IV Tertullian first references
this character while making passing mention of Marcion “arguing more
strenuously (against us) with that I‑know‑not‑what fellow” (apud illum suum
nescio quem), adding the adjectives συνταλαίπωρος and συμμισούμενος.
We next encounter him as a general reference in IV.36 to “all you who already
share in his pity and are his fellow-sufferers” (omnesque iam commiserones et
coodibiles) and where he goes on to introduce the question “by that certain
someone” (ab illo quodam)– clearly translating the Greek τις of Luke 18:18. I don’t think this is an accident. The first nescio quem was referencing
someone who went by the guise τις. But how could Marcion be bringing in a
character from the gospel to support his argumentation?
The same unmarked τις is the sole descriptor of the
wealthy inquirer in the Alexandrian form of Mark preserved by Clement; it is
therefore difficult to avoid the conclusion that Clement’s anonymous rich man,
Tertullian’s nescio quem, and the Marcionite apostle converge in a
single figure. Clement
already cites a Marcionite tradition that Paul “flourished immediately after
the Lord’s ascension,” eliminating the Damascus-persecutor motif and signaling
a ministry that begins where the gospel ends. If Mark’s τις was
understood to be Paul, that identification would explain why Tertullian treats
the nescio quem as Marcion’s ultimate proof‑text: Marcion’s Gospel,
circulating without an author’s name, would have introduced Paul under the
deliberately opaque pronoun.
But the very concept of “the gospel of Jesus Christ” is
rarely examined. Whose gospel is it really? I will touch upon this later. Let us merely acknowledge that the Alexandrian tradition hints in many ways that this τις figure was originally Paul. Origen had already exploited the anonymity, suggesting that the rich inquirer
supplied the backdrop for Paul’s pressing beyond the Law’s incompleteness to
perfection. Clement follows suit – albeit more cautiously.
Using the Alexandrian Mark, Clement exploits the kneeling τις
to move the audience closer to identifying him with Paul. His exegesis begins:
If, then, the Law of Moses had
sufficed to confer eternal life, it would have been pointless for the Saviour
Himself to come and suffer on our behalf … and pointless for the man who had
kept all the commandments from childhood to fall on his knees and beg
immortality from another. For he had not merely observed the Law, but had done
so from earliest youth … Yet if τις, in juvenile frolicsomeness (ἐν
σκιρτήματι νεοτησίῳ) and youthful fire, shows a judgment beyond his years,
such a one is an admirable combatant, conspicuous and prematurely hoary in
mind.
Because Clement elsewhere implies that Paul was still a
youth at the Gospel’s close, he draws attention to Mark’s remark that the man
kept the Law “from his youth” by reading it as “from earliest youth,” thereby
allowing the figure to remain young at the episode’s climax.
Among Clement’s scant biographical notices he affirms Paul’s
Hebrew lineage and his mastery of the Law prior to conversion. Identifying Paul with the anonymous τις supplies the final piece of the
puzzle. In strikingly Marcionite fashion, Clement summarises the pericope thus:
He is questioned concerning the
matters for which He has also come down (κατελήλυθεν) … in order to show
the foundation of the Gospel, that it is a gift of eternal life. And, as God,
He foreknew both the questions that would be put to Him and the answers that
τις would return.
When Tertullian opposes the Marcionite reading, he does not
quote their exegesis directly. Instead, Adversus Marcionem reproduces it
obliquely through Mic 6:8, aligning the prophet’s three‑fold demand—doing
justice, loving mercy, walking humbly—with Christ’s imperatives in the
pericope. Clement, in Quis dives, approaches the same lesson through
1 Cor 13: even one who distributes all possessions but lacks ἀγάπη gains
nothing. The same exegesis shared by Marcion and Clement.
Paul could be linked so intimately with the episode only if
he were once identified with the rich youth. The Marcionite reading, preserved
in Clement and Origen and caricatured by Tertullian, thus furnishes an
alternative self‑portrait of the apostle—one that predates the persecutor‑turned‑convert
narrative of Acts and challenges the complacency of later orthodoxy. Harnack
notes of Tertullian’s nescio quem “[t]his individual was likely, for
Marcion, the representative of all his like-minded followers” – in other words,
the Marcionite Paul.
As noted, Paul himself repeatedly employs the indefinite pronoun τις
when he wishes to veil self‑reference. John Chrysostom, commenting on 2 Cor 12, explains that the apostle,
when “about to enter into praise, he hides himself (κρύπτει ἑαυτόν), saying, ‘I
know a man…,’ and again, ‘About such a one I will boast, but about myself I
will not boast.’” Chrysostom then quotes 2 Cor 11:21 in support of his proposition, “Whatever
anyone (τις) dares to boast of…I also dare,” —and concludes that Paul is
speaking wholly of himself while hiding beneath another persona (προσωπεῖον ἕτερον).
Margaret Mitchell has shown that Chrysostom reads this
rhetorical strategy as a deliberate προσωποποιΐα: the mask of τις both
reveals and conceals the apostle. The roots of this understanding undoubtedly go deep. Jewish exegetes were
already accustomed to finding God or his angel beneath the sobriquet ἄνθρωπος/איש;
Philo’s man according to the image—a certain form (ἰδέα τις),
bodiless and incorruptible—shows how readily an anonymous “someone” could
bear transcendent significance. Photius reports that Clement held that the “person that appeared ‘in flesh’ as
Jesus, was a lesser (τὸν ἥττονα) being, a sort of power of God (δύναμίς τις τοῦ
θεοῦ) … [which] penetrated or inhabited the hearts of men such as the prophets.” As
we shall demonstrate shortly, Paul’s understanding of himself as “τις” is only
a further refinement of these original Jewish building blocks by means of Cicero.
Clement capitalises on this idiom when he develops Paul as
the exemplar of perfected humanity. “A certain person (ὁ … τις
ἄνθρωπος),” he writes, “is stamped according to the impress of the choices
he adopts.” Adam
was perfect in his formation, lacking nothing of the idea of humanity;
yet a higher mode of generation, becoming, is disclosed in the apostle
who surpasses the Law. Here Clement’s anthropology dovetails with his
reading of Mark 10: the kneeling τις—left anonymous in the Alexandrian
text—is none other than Paul, youthful yet already accomplished in legal observance,
poised to surpass the Law under Christ’s call to perfection.
Chrysostom extends Clement’s trajectory by situating Paul at
the centre of Christian μίμησις. For the Antiochene preacher, Paul
is the perfect copy of Christ and the living πίναξ upon which
believers should fix their gaze. He
invites his congregation to imagine a painted panel more splendid than any
imperial portrait, for it is fashioned not of wood or canvas but of soul and
body—the very workmanship of God. The assembly’s spontaneous applause,
reported by Chrysostom himself, suggests that the audience sensed the force of
a tradition that had long held Paul to be more than a post‑ascension convert:
he is the model, the prototype, perhaps even the hidden protagonist, of the
Gospel narrative.
Such a tradition, though suppressed by Irenaeus and later
heresiologists, persisted in Marcionite circles. Irenaeus had branded it
criminal to exalt Paul as the lone recipient of the mystery, yet the evidence
surveyed here—Paul inserted into the Gospel as the anonymous τις, Paul
identified with the Paraclete, Paul called forth immediately after the
ascension—explains why an alternative, reactionary portrait emerged: the once‑persecutor
turned late disciple of Acts. By recasting Paul as Saul, orthodoxy sought
to limit the apostle’s radical authority over the faith he founded.
Tertullian
pays special attention to the “anonymous” character of the Marcionite gospel
4.2.3. Lurking within Clementine Homilies
(II.22) Simon Magus wished to be called "a certain supreme power of
God" (ἀ νωτ€τη τις δύναμις).