Texts and information concerning the Apocryphal Acts: including the Acts of Peter, the Acts of Paul, the Acts of John, the Acts of Andrew, the Acts of Peter and the Twelve, the Acts of Thomas, and the Acts of the Martyr Habib.
This category is for apocryphal apocalypses: including the Apocalypse of Peter, the Apocalypse of Paul, the Vision of Paul, and other apocryphal apocalypses.
Although many of the later Councils of the Catholic church are not recognised by other churches, the first six are recognised by Anglicans as being authoritative and the first seven are recognised by the Orthodox church as being authoritative.
These councils are:
Nicaea I (325)
Constantinople I (381)
Ephesus (431)
Chalcedon (451)
Constantinople II (553)
Constantinople III (680-681)
Nicaea II (787)
Please only submit sites that relate to these seven councils: Nicaea I (325) - Constantinople I - (381) - Ephesus (431) - Chalcedon (451) - Constantinople II (553) - Constantinople III (680-681) - Nicaea II (787).
The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of sayings or brief dialogues attributed to Jesus. It was compiled about 150 - 250 A. D. The only complete copy is a Coptic translation found in Egypt, although fragments of Greek texts are extant. As the earliest extant non-canonical document about Jesus, it commands considerable scholarly attention and public interest.
This category is for sites with information specifically about the ancient Gospel of Thomas, rediscovered in Egypt near Nag Hamadi in 1947.
Information and texts concerning pseudonymous epistles: including the Epistle of the Apostles, the Apocryphon of James, the Correspondence of Jesus and Agbar, the Apocryphon of John, the Epistle to the Laodiceans, the Correspondence of Paul and Seneca, the Letter of Peter to Philip, and the Acts of Pilate.
This category is for texts and information concerning the lost sayings gospel Q hypothesized to be a source behind the gospels of Matthew and Luke. Also relevant are sites that dispute the existence of Q.
This category contains information and texts concerning the Secret Gospel of Mark, the text which is quoted by Clement of Alexandria in a letter discovered by Morton Smith.