The Psalms of Thomas (more correctly Psalms of Thom) are a set of third-century
psalms[1] found appended to the end of a
CopticManichaean psalm book, which was in turn part of the
Medinet Madi library excavated in 1929. The psalms were originally published in 1938 by
Charles Allberry.[2]
The meter and structure of the psalms suggest that they were originally written in
Eastern Aramaic. There are 20 psalms in total.[3] The themes and content of the psalms bear a considerable resemblance to the
Hymn of the Pearl from the
Acts of Thomas.
Authorship
Considerable controversy continues as to whether the Thomas or Thom referred to could be the
Apostle Thomas,
Mani's disciple, also called Thomas, or the
Gnostic concept of the
divine twin. This is because the latter is referred to in other parts of the Coptic Manichaean Psalm-book as a distinct person from the Apostle. The enigma has since deepened with the publication of the
Cologne Mani-Codex in the 1970s, which showed that Mani himself came out of a baptizing Christian sect called the
Elkasaites (= Elcesaites).
List of psalms
Concerning the Light
Concerning the coming of the Soul
Concerning the First Man
Concerning the First Man
The Soul, which is the First Man
Concerning the Living Spirit
That of the Living Spirit
That of the Envoy
That of the Perfect Man
Concerning the molding of the ...
... concerning his son
... of the Savior
... the Church unto (?) the Apostle
I heard the cry of a physician
For a table has been set in the house
Salome built a tower
The Little one made music by night
I reached the door of the garden
The vine which grew from the Living ones
The cry of Pamoun
Mandaean parallels
In 1949,
Torgny Säve-Söderbergh suggested that the psalms were largely based upon canonical
Mandaean texts (despite Jesus being mentioned positively in two psalms). Säve-Söderbergh's work on the psalms demonstrating that Mandaeism did not derive from Manichaeism, as was formerly commonly believed.[4][5] For instance, Psalm 13 has parallels with prayers
125,
129 (cf. Psalms of Thomas 13:1–8), and
155 (cf. Psalms of Thomas 13:37–45) in the
Qolasta.[6]
Säve-Söderbergh (1949) notes Mandaean parallels such as the following.[4]
Psalms 1, 2, 6, 8, 12, and 14 have concluding formulae (e.g., on the victorious return of Light) that are similar to the Mandaean ʿniana ("response") prayers, which are
Qolasta prayers
78–
103.
Psalm 2 has parallels with Hymn 15 in Book 3 of the
Left Ginza (both have "trembling demons" that were defeated).
In Psalm 5, the phrase "treasure of life" is a parallel of the Mandaean formula "I am a mana of the Great Life," a phrase often found in the numerous hymns of Book 2 of the
Left Ginza. In
Mandaic, mana (ࡌࡀࡍࡀ) has been variously translated as "mind," "nous," or "treasure." In Mandaeism,
Simat Hayyi, the name of a female
uthra, also literally translates as "Treasure of Life."
Psalm 6 directly corresponds with
Qolastaprayer 66, which is in turn identical with Hymn 43 in Book 3 of the
Left Ginza.
Psalm 8 has various Mandaean motifs, such as the capture of demons and the triumph of Light (e.g., chapter 15 in Book 2 of the
Left Ginza).
In Psalm 12, phrases such as "the empty one" and "the laden one" have parallels with the end of chapter 47 of the
Mandaean Book of John. In the same chapter, phrases such as "ears but would not hear" have parallels in Psalm 14.
In Psalm 17, the "mockery litany," in which aspects of the transient material world are mocked, has parallels with chapter 12 of the
Mandaean Book of John.
Van Bladel (2017) suggests that an equally plausible scenario is that of Manichaeism and Mandaeism both having borrowed the hymns from another common source, likely the funeral prayer(s) of an Aramaic-speaking Judeo-Christian group in Mesopotamia such as the
Elchasites.[7]
^Allberry, C. R. C., editor & translator, with a contribution by Hugo Ibscher, Coptic Manichaean Psalm-book part II,
W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart, 1938. The Psalms of Thomas occupy pages 203-227.
^
abSäve-Söderbergh, Torgny (1949). Studies in the Coptic Manichaean Psalm-book. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksells Boktryckeri AB.
OCLC5687415.
^Lofts, Mark J. (2013). "How Old are the Psalms of Thomas and what is their Relation to the Gospel of Thomas?" In
ARAM 25:2 (2013) 445-461.
^Gelbert, Carlos (2013). The Mandaeans and the Christians in the time of Jesus Christ: enemies from the first days of the church. Fairfield, N.S.W.: Living Water Books. pp. 174–178.
ISBN978-0-9580346-4-7.
OCLC853508149.