Show CIIi1ISTh OWN wollus1 I EXTRAORDINARY UISOOVERYGF I ANCIENT BYRIAG MANUSCRIPT stmt totsIa ltaerel Tessera tr I elleI for Sissy taoswrls II11nt1 ieioier sl the taigas irodIA eledyreg TIN hlnorhsh5s llIot Lurch oral v n MNUIeJUPT 01 1 ilea Four OeipeU In the native I tonga tf bias I ha at Ud been lOUIIII11tt grot r lilt Illblleal trrts e that bas tree din covered In cent urea urleThla This II I prabably the ohtlt authentic I i record nt tho doltlga and Mjrlagief 1 the Havlour It wan written within fifty yearn of the death of the laat of the Apostlean nanr lo the lime 01 Christ u wo today are to the Urn ot Wishing IonThe The opela of the 1Mb art tram lbs Ireek manuecrlpt Christ however how-ever addrnteil the multltudaal talked talk-ed with his dlKlptw In Syria lb e native I na-tive tongue He Uarned at III nether knee And here for the first Urns the Christian world l baa Ibo history the Havlour told lln the very word Ik used the Inflection the spelling the I pre dee shades of meaning Written In the native language ot Palestine thin ag d 1 manuscript is more valuable tun tho Oreek trantlatlona which are he accepted ac-cepted loapela of Christianity la I It 1 not alrange therefore that students stu-dents of the Illble Creek and Srrlne I crolarn nail historians hive turned thrown open to controversy by tMs Hyrlae inaniin rcpt III reaogs on hit question are unorthodox It la I here distinctly stated that Jesus was the natural son of Joseph Th manuscript which has now been found la l alone In this new reading No other hlalorlral document of the kind make any mieh assertion The exact word hosed are these Jofph Its whom was betrothed the Virgin Mary begat Jesu who called Christ Her la a distinct affirmation that Joseph was the natural father ot the Bavlor This Byrluc manmcrlptltie old eat authentic record of the JwpelK here makes a statement contained lu I none of the other and later document I The story of the finding of thla ancient an-cient manuscript by two women with a kodak Is I one of the moat marvelous In Ibo history of Illblleal literature Nowhere baa It n counterpart In the remote and almost Inaccraat 1110 monastery of 81 Catherine which I Iho Emperor I Justinian caused to ho eroded In the ninth eentury I I upon the I alto ot some at tho moat toundlni mlracleatwo nineteenth century women with a snapshot camera ask for a look nt the musty documents with which the cellar la I stored The monks can scarcely bellevo their oenees when they learn that then two women mado the hazardoiia Journoy across the desert on dromedarlea to Inspect their musty tomes 10mTho They are loath to disturb their parch ment and papyri In hair sleep ot centuries cen-turies for two ouch casual tourist until Ihe latter present credential from the authorities ot the Greek church which nt once opens the vaults the hidden cells and the ancient cheat Then on almost endless array of pirchmcnta la I unearthed for their Inspection Ancient acrolls leaves parchments which no human or had neon for n I e II I I I Q 7 ira 1 iF tl II AP tf vC S I v I XMaiS A I I I 14 G jrsSTt 4 G 1004 rAJ LO va rL ± r I i rssf sslfe 11 v iWs I I I I I I + Nt IHOToaiiAiHic nniHom cTioNOf A IAOI ov THI nosras I with foxcrlsh oxolti ment to lain totally 1 uwipecletl trr wuri of iai rod history Hut almost I ni renrnkautt u the discover I dis-cover uf the manuscript nibs t extraordinary extraor-dinary story ot how It was oaearthnl The detail ot Iho visit of two IlnrilUli women to Iho lonely monastery of Ht Catherine on the summit ot MtuntSlnal and the accldint which reveled tho Hyrlae loipols are told below To return lu the manuscript I Christ na we know was muter ot several language but It li certain that I H > rlac wai the ono lie learned ua nn Infant In moments of great mintil excitement excite-ment It woe Ihla languugeSyrlno that leaped natural to III llpi and when Ho rrled out In anguish upon the Cross Ho spoke In Hrl c worili which our IIrNlk mallet has to translate but which In thl newly dUroverM loipel stand In their proper place with no natal translation These lospeli I give for Instance on entirely new reading ot proper name From thla It appears that there WOO no such person at Jmlii Iscarlot hut tInt ho who betrajed hk Master with a klti woo Judy tUarltta that Peters name was Cepha and that law correct name for the Mount of Olives I waa lIolh Kalla Hut above and beyond t 1 such technl eat difference u them nre the now i i and unexpected readings of the looped I which this ancient manuscript ills 1 I I class upon dogmatic qmitloas ot Iho first Importance Written ai ILia admitted ad-mitted ao near to the death of John and couched In the lumum whlcli < woe iiatlvn In 1aleatlm this the old tat of authentic records of Ills llfo and million mutt take Ita plase In the very front among historical documents docu-ments I Aol right here It might be laid that tubs undent document which has been found In the very place when Mown recalled the commanrments whllo It coincides with the translations of the iMpela accepted up to the present day yet dlfftra from II The difference la I of Itself regarded RII proof ot Itt originality and ituutne nes noIn In doctrinal matters there in differ one that have ready arowtd tho theologians Thus li the entlro quM 1 lion ot Ibo Immaculate Coaceptlon thousand > cars and sheets of papyrus written ocr and rewritten over are placed before them In the ancient II brat whrre the sunlight li hardly strong enough tn enable them to tako their photograph With tho latest productions of thin nineteenth century era kodaks arnsltlto films and do elopers these two new women from Cambridge university worked hour by hour on Mount Slnnl among parchments written during the first century It 1 was thus that they dlicomcd thin pallmpieat of tho Gospels A pallmp rest la t on ancient parchment or other document whoao original writing had liren I rrawd to make room for n later record Icncrnlly n good deal ot Ibo original writing can bo > deciphered In such document many ot which havo been written over two or moro times In this manner Tno Hyrlae lospr which have now turned up had no been I written ore In anlrr I to make mi of ol the original I ahreta n second into aomo monk who I attached little Importance to the documents docu-ments crated with knife or pumice stone the first writing Ho then wrote over It the lives of name of the saints Tho Compel writing Will that which wan underneath Upon n second Journey mado to the monutcry by these two new women nno of them Mn I tawli armed herself her-self with tour bottled I of a foul amell ing liquid with which she washed the wiered leave thin aa the claims roo lvlnn the original writing In all Itt rlRrncM When the original ennp shot picture I of thin document were taken the two inn women were i-nn of the Importance nl I of their work A prortator ot Oriental I tangling nt Cambridge university to whom they showed the developed photographs pho-tographs read the 8 > rlac writing and Will much excited by hla discovery I |