Critical Text of Q - This is the English translation of the text of Q as it has been reconstructed by the International Q Project of the Society of Biblical Literature.
Gospel of Q - All sides to the controversy.
Gospel of Thomas - These are the secret sayings that the living Jesus spoke and Didymos Judas Thomas recorded.
Thomas Commentary - This site explores modern interpretations of the Gospel according to Thomas, an ancient text preserved in a Coptic translation at Nag Hammadi and Greek fragments at Oxyrhynchus. With no particular slant, this commentary gathers together quotations from various scholars in order to elucidate the meaning of the sayings, many of which are rightly described as "obscure."
Gospel of Mary - The complete extant text of the Gospel of Mary is presented. Unfortunately, the extant manuscript of the Gospel of Mary is missing pages 1 to 6 and pages 11 to 14 -- pages that included sections of the text up to chapter 4, and portions of chapter 5 to 8.
Pre-Markian Passion - The text presented depends on the Young's Literal Translation of the passion narrative in the Gospel of Mark, verses 14:32-15:47.
Gospel of the Hebrews - The Gospel of the Nazaraeans ("observers") in Hebrew is believed to have been the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew and the source for the present gospel (which was composed in Greek).
Secret Gospel of Mark - Clement of Alexandria presents fragments from the text of this secret gospel which he claims is in the custody of the Church in Alexandria, but which is kept secret.
Gospel of Peter - Discovered in a monk's grave in 1886, the Gospel of Peter is a fragmentary gospel. Simon Peter is supposedly the author of this text and that is why it became known as the Gospel of Peter.
Gospel of Philip - Because of the contents, the eccentric arrangement, and the literary types exhibited, it is likely that The Gospel of Philip is a collection of excerpts mainly from a Christian Gnostic sacramental catechesis. It explains the significance of sacramental rites of initiation, the meaning of sacred names, especially names of Jesus, and provides paraenesis for the life of the initiated. It interprets Biblical passages, particularly from the book of Genesis, makes use of typology, both historical and sacramental, and, as catechists do, argues on the basis of analogy and parable. In these and other ways The Gospel of Philip resembles the orthodox catechisms from the second through fourth centuries. (Description by Wesley W. Isenberg, the translator of the text).
Gospel of Nicodemus - Tischendorf in his Evangelia Apocrypha divides the whole writing into two parts: (1) the story of the Passion; (2) the Descent into hell.
Gospel of Truth - The Gospel of Truth is one of the ancient texts discovered along with the The Gospel of Thomas in 1945 at Naj 'Hammádě at the Jabal al-Tárif mountain.
Infancy Gospel of Thomas - "Here beginneth a treatise of the Boyhood of Jesus according to Thomas."
Infancy Gospel of James - The majority of the Protovangelion ("primary gospel", an alternative title for this text) is devoted not to the infancy of Christ, but rather the life of Mary. She is portrayed as not only a virgin but one who was a bastion of ritual purity her entire life. Much of the dogma responsible for the veneration of Mary can be traced to this document.
Sophia of Jesus - recorded by an unnamed hand.
Dialog of the Savior - The single surviving copy of the Dialogue of the Savior was discovered within the Coptic library at Nag Hammadi in 1945.
Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 840 - A gospel fragment.
Gospel of the Nazaraeans - The text is a listing of all known fragments of the Hebrew Gospel called the Gospel of the Nazaraeans.
Gospel of the Ebionites - "The Gospel of the Ebionites is a gospel harmony preserved in a few quotations in the writings of Epiphanius (a church writer who lived at the end of the fourth century C.E.)." (Quotation from Ron Cameron in The Other Gospels, 1982.
Papyrus Oxyrhnchus 1224 - Gospel fragments.
Papyrus Egerton 2 - Gospel fragments.
Acts of Thomas - This apocryphal acts tells the story of Judas Thomas, the twin.
Apocryphal Psalms of David - These scrolls tell of the great deeds of God and of David, as they praise the works and actions of both. Included in the scrolls containing the Apocryphal Psalms of David are Psalms 151 and 154, which are not normally found in the Bible, in which the book of Psalms ends with Psalm 150.
The (First) Apocalypse of James - 'It is the Lord who spoke with me: "See now the completion of my redemption. I have given you a sign of these things, James, my brother. For not without reason have I called you my brother, although you are not my brother materially. And I am not ignorant concerning you; so that when I give you a sign - know and hear."'
The (Second) Apocalypse of James - 'This is the discourse that James the Just spoke in Jerusalem, which Mareim, one of the priests, wrote.'
Internet Sacred Text Archive - The Internet Sacred Text Archive includes electronic texts of nearly a thousand of the most important books and articles ever written, including over two hundred transcribed specially for sacred-texts. The site also offers a CD-ROM of the texts for sale.