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God's Ghostwriters: Enslaved Christians and the Making of the Bible

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From an award-winning biblical scholar, the untold story of how enslaved people created, gave meaning to, and spread the word of the New Testament, shaping the very foundations of Christianity in ways both subtle and profound.

For the past two thousand years, Christian tradition, scholarship, and pop culture has credited the authorship of the New Testament to a select group of men: Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Paul. But the truth is that these individuals, who have been rewarded with sainthood for their work, did not write alone. In some meaningful ways they did not write all.

Hidden behind these named and sainted individuals are a cluster of enslaved coauthors and collaborators, almost all of whom go unnamed and uncredited. They were responsible for producing the earliest manuscripts of the New Testament. In fact, there was no aspect of textual production and circulation in which they did not play a part: they made the parchment and papyri on which Christian texts were written. They took dictation, removed grammatical infelicities, and polished and refined the final manuscripts. Those manuscripts were then duplicated and bound by bookmakers and booksellers who, recent research has shown, were also enslaved or formerly enslaved. When the Christian message began to move independently from the first apostles it was enslaved missionaries who undertook the dangerous and arduous journeys across the Mediterranean and along dusty Roman roads to move Christianity from Jerusalem and the Levant to Rome, Spain, North Africa, and Egypt. Finally, when these texts were read aloud to new audiences of curious potential converts, it was educated and trained enslaved workers who performed them—deciding whether a statement was sincere or sarcastic; a throwaway remark or something central to be emphasized. Their influence in the spread of Christianity and making of the Bible was enormous, yet their role has been almost entirely overlooked until now.

Filled with profound ramifications revelations both for what it means to be a Christian and for how we read individual texts themselves, God’s Ghostwriters is a groundbreaking and rigorously researched book about how enslaved people shaped the Bible, and with it all of Christianity.

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First published March 26, 2024

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Candida R. Moss

24 books43 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 55 reviews
193 reviews50 followers
April 2, 2024
There is a problem that exists in the world of Christian scholarship that does not exist anywhere else. Speculations and guesses are normal with human beings, but not even the most imaginative fiction writer or even wizards can surpass many contemporary writers in their ability to conjure.

This book is one of the greatest examples of that tendency. It goes like this: read a passage of scripture, come up with a possible interpretation of a passage, sentence, or word. Make a protracted speculation on this novel reading, ignore the testimony of historical interpretation, and attribute the historical interpretation to powerful interests. By the time you are done, this tissue of speculation becomes a rock upon which castles of assertions are made.

The book is based on a simple and uncontroversial idea: many of the New Testament authors used enslaved people to write their books. That's it. Simple. But that by itself is not a good enough reason to write a book. Upon this simple idea, piles of speculations begin to be poured. Maybe Mark was a slave. Maybe some of the words in the letters of Paul were really chosen by the enslaved person who wrote it. Maybe the reason why the Gospels and epistles have a "slavish" tone is because they were all written by slaves. Maybe the reason why Mark's gospel does not have a birth story of Jesus is because Jesus, like Mark, was a slave. Or maybe because Jesus' mother was a slave. Or a sex worker. Or an enslaved sex worker.

These kinds of speculations increase until by the end of the book we are now told of the very possible problem of the faithfulness with which the New Testament texts have been transmitted based on the possibility that these books were copied by slaves who were not even Christians. Not only that. In fact, if we assume that these books were written by slaves then we can understand some portions of the New Testament better than they have been understood prior to now. It even gets better. If we assume these books were written and copied by enslaved people then this can explain variant readings not as mistakes or doctrinal corruptions, but as ways in which these slaves exercised their agency.
Profile Image for Antonis.
43 reviews
May 6, 2024
The book is premised on a simple and non-controversial notion: that, during the first centuries of the Common Era, most people, the writers of the New Testament included, used slaves to actually write their books. Based on this idea, the author piles speculation upon speculation (the book is full of “most likely”, “probably” etc. - I counted five “perhaps” and one “maybe” in one page alone): perhaps Mark was a slave, maybe the slavish language of some of Jesus’s sayings is due to the slave scribes, it is possible that the words in Paul’s letters were deliberately chosen by an enslaved secretary.
On the other hand, the author ignores alternative but equally plausible explanations (to give an example: In the description of Paul’s heatstroke during his journey to Damascus, Paul is helped by “anonymous attendants” who, according to the author’s “plausible guess” were slaves; the idea that these attendants were fellow travelers, given that in those days people seldom travelled alone for safety reasons, is never entertained).
All this in order to convince the reader that variant readings in the New Testament are not the result of errors in copying or deliberate doctrinal transformation but an expression of the enslaved scribes’ agency.
I was not able to finish this book. If you are interested to know who actually wrote the New Testament and who is responsible for the variant readings, try “Guardians of Letters” by Kim Haines-Eitzen; it is much better documented and does not rely on speculation.
Profile Image for Blue.
337 reviews5 followers
December 4, 2023
One of the main writers in "God's Ghostwriters'' by Candida Moss is Paul. He too had helpful writers walking behind him. It can not remain unsaid. There are the enslaved who write too. Most of us love and respect Paul. We know about his life because he shares it in his letters. It is hard for us to believe he is disliked and terribly misunderstood by some people in Ephesus and other places like Corinth. His message just rubbed these people the wrong way. I suppose he wonders what will happen when he gets to Rome. For sure, the hate will grow louder. Chastity is not a favorite topic for most men and women. We do know he will find himself in a Roman dungeon. This book explains the lives of writers who followed along with authors. It also includes the enslaved. I wonder should these people not have a chance to hear a thank you from our Modern countries and cities. They were very needed and not easy to find. Not every person could write and read in Rome and elsewhere. If you have an interest in life in Rome, this book tells about those who lived there, known and observed by Ancient Historians.
Profile Image for Jessica.
91 reviews
April 26, 2024
The idea of scribes assisting in writing the Bible is mind blowing and something that seems so obvious that I can't imagine why it hasn't crossed my mind before. It is something I will constantly have in mind as I study from now on.

I did feel like this book leapt to a LOT of conclusions without significant evidence. Though, it was always presented as such, and I do respect that she didn't try to pass off ideas as absolute fact. Studying ancient history is always going to require a bit of imagination and I do appreciate that it was clearly stated what was fact and what was idea.

I personally would have preferred to read a paper with just the facts rather than a full book with all the ideas and a few facts.
Profile Image for JP.
163 reviews
August 29, 2024
Super thought provoking take on biblical authorship. Really hammered home to me the harms of leaving out the humans responsible for compiling, translating, and organizing religious text in favor of giving credit to men in power.
Profile Image for Josh Kemp.
40 reviews
June 6, 2025
Dr. Moss' book is a fast read and broadly accessible to a popular audience. Those uber-wary of anachronism may not enjoy her imaginative narratives, but I believe that Dr. Moss is right when she says that "disinterested history is sometimes also morally negligent." For that reason, regardless of whether they are the most accurate accounts of what could've happened, her stories about Alexamenos (the subject of the Palatine graffito) and Felix (an imagined lector that could've provided the extended ending of Mark) add dramatic flair to her compelling arguments. As I am interested in orality and performance of the gospels, I especially enjoyed her chapter on the role that lectors played in auditory reading.
Profile Image for Becky.
1,375 reviews56 followers
April 2, 2025
A fascinating view into the lives of the enslaved scribes responsible for recording the texts that became the New Testament. This is a solid study of the Roman world.
Profile Image for Daniel Kukwa.
4,755 reviews123 followers
May 13, 2024
Although I feel it goes off into a slight series of tangents towards the end, this is another excellent book that takes a unique and unexplored aspect of history and takes it out for a spin. It leaves some interesting questions to contemplate, especially for those who have imbedded certainties around its primary topic.
214 reviews
February 12, 2025
Well researched and good food for thought. Once the author lays out how writing happened in Jesus' day, it makes total sense that enslaved persons would do much of the tedious work of writing.
Profile Image for Tim Preston.
43 reviews3 followers
June 19, 2025
Interesting book about the forgotten, mostly unnamed, people, the majority of them slaves, who helped to create the New Testament by acting as scribes, secretaries, copiers of manuscripts and readers aloud for the main authors, and how they may have influenced the New Testament we have today. It has implications for our understanding of how other ancient literature was created as well.

Near the end of St Paul's letter to the Romans, Chapter 16 Verse 22 states:

'I, Tertius, the writer of this letter, greet you in the Lord'

a rare open acknowledgement that Paul did not physically write his own letters. We know nothing else about Tertius, although the name was one commonly given to slaves.

The authoress, Candida Moss, has had an academic career in the USA and UK. She is currently Edward Cadbury Professor of Theology at Birmingham in her native England. (Edward Cadbury was a member of the Birmingham Chocolate manufacturing family). She is a Roman Catholic, although not the most traditional kind.

As normal in academia now, she uses the cumbersome but politically correct terms 'enslavers' and 'enslaved people' rather than masters and slaves. Supposedly, to call a slave a slave is almost to accept the justice of slavery and to define a person only as a slave, ignoring other aspects of their humanity. To me that is a word game. 18th and 19th Century writers with first hand experience of servitude like Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass and Booker T Washington had no problem with saying 'I was a slave', although all those I have just named strongly criticised slavery.

Despite years of studying the Bible and early Church, it was only when, aged around 40, Professor Moss needed reading glasses, that it occurred to her to ask what happened in the Ancient World when people's eyesight made it difficult to read, or arthritic hands made it hard to write for long periods, or to unroll the scrolls of which most books consisted then.

The solution, very often, was to rely on educated slaves, not just to write what they dictated, but often to read to them as well.

Indeed, most early Christians, whether because they were, like much of the population, illiterate, or because books, which had to be laboriously copied by hand, usually by slaves, were expensive, did not actually read the Scriptures but had them read to them, usually with others in a congregation or social gathering.

Reading aloud to an audience was considered a skilled task, often also performed by slaves, whose performance commonly included gestures, facial expressions and tone of voice to emphasise the meaning. Occasionally what may have been 'stage directions' to whoever was to read them aloud are preserved in the text.

Although we still have copies of the texts of the Bible much as would have been read to the early Christians, we have mostly lost these other aspects of these live performances that contributed to people's understanding of the Gospels, Epistles etc.

Slavery has existed in various forms for most of human history, probably before, since human tribes first realised keeping some of their defeated enemies alive as slaves could be more useful than killing them.

Modern Western ideas of slavery are dominated by one particular example, plantation slavery in the Americas from the 16th to 19th Centuries, especially the 19th Century southern USA. There, teaching slaves to read and write was discouraged or illegal. Hence, some people are surprised that in the Ancient World many slaves were not only literate but more educated than their masters.

However, in the 19th Century USA, printed books, reading glasses and improved lighting made it easier to read. The Romans had none of those things. Consequently, especially as masters got older, the only way they could continue to read or to write was to have a literate slave to read to them and write letters and books the master dictated.

Many small traders and craftsmen were illiterate or semi-literate, so it made sense for them, individually or clubbing together, to buy or hire a literate slave to deal with business correspondence, write business signs and business agreements for them, and to teach young slaves to read and write to enhance their value.

We should not be misled by the example of mostly illiterate SubSaharan African slaves transported to the Americas down to the 19th Century (I say mostly illiterate. A few Muslims among them were literate in Arabic) into thinking Ancient slaves were also like that. By the ruthless custom of Ancient warfare, if a city did not negotiate surrender terms in time and was taken by storm, not only everything but everyone in it became the absolute property of the victors. In this way, even royalty and educated people on the losing side became slaves.

Sometimes, if they pleased their master, they might be freed as a reward, but then they were often expected either to remain in their master's employment and/or to perform duties for him out of gratitude or client/patron relations. Even so, the Roman Senate periodically debated whether to re-enslave 'ungrateful' freedmen.

The life of an educated slave secretary in Ancient times was usually better than being, say, a plantation slave in the 18th Century West Indies. However, even Ancient slave secretaries could at any time be whipped or sold on the whim of their master.

It was in a way revolutionary that early Christianity taught that a slave's soul and reward in Heaven could be of equal worth to his master's. However, while freeing a deserving slave, as with other acts of charity, could be virtuous, there is no sign Christians wanted to abolish slavery completely. Slavery was so omnipresent It was probably too hard to imagine the World without it.

How far slave or freed slave secretaries and copyists influenced the texts they helped to create and preserve is often impossible to know, but Professor Moss suggests, and presents some evidence that, this occurred more than usually realised.

We don't know how often St Paul asked Tertius 'Is there a better way to phrase that?' or 'Who was that man in Corinth I ought to thank in my letter?' or how often Tertius may have misheard or misunderstood Paul's dictation, or quietly corrected his grammar or style in the writing, and subtly changed it, but it is likely that sometimes he did.

[I once listened to a recording of a debate in the British House of Commons while following the official written record of it in Hansard. It was striking how many changes the editors of Hansard had quietly made, to correct grammar, remove the 'y'know's and other 'fillers', unmix metaphors and finish sentences the speaker had allowed to trail off. Most of these we scarcely notice in ordinary speech, but they look glaring on the page. Yet until modern recording technology, the written record in Hansard was often all historians had, and often treated as though an exact record of what was said.]

Scribes copying a text often had to work from old, damaged or faded manuscripts and sometimes had to try to reconstruct what a damaged original text had said. Sometimes they missed out whole passages, whether by accident, to finish the work more quickly so they could be paid or stop work for the day, or because they did not like what the passage said.

At least one ancient Gospel manuscript contains mistakes that should have been obvious to a Christian scribe, such as getting the Lord's Prayer wrong. This suggests that, even if copied for a Christian master, the copying was done by a non-Christian slave.

What happened to slave scribes when their own eyesight failed, I don't think the authoress tells us.

However, she does speculate that some parts of the New Testament may have either been composed or influenced by slave secretaries and copyists. The cruel bodily punishments imagined to await sinners in the next life may have been influenced by the punishments to which slaves could be subjected. The fact that the New Testament emphasises that rewards and punishments in the hereafter will fall on the rich and masters as much as on the poor and slaves:

'The first shall be last and the last shall be first'

must have appealed to many downtrodden slaves.

Finally, especially since this book encourages us to think of those other than the official authors who played a part in creating and disseminating books, I comment on the reading of the Audiobook.

I only began listening to Audiobooks in the last year or so, but in my limited experience to date, Audiobook versions of books by women are most often read, if not by the authoress herself, then by other women, so the listener gets a sense of the book speaking with a female voice and female point of view.

I prefer that, especially in a work like this in which a female writer challenges a scholarly consensus of generations of mostly male academics and clergy.

I might forgive the absence of that here if the male narrator had a rich voice and gave a particularly eloquent reading. However, the narrator here, Elliott Chapman, while quite adequate, is nothing special.
Profile Image for Shrike58.
1,463 reviews25 followers
November 25, 2025
That I picked up this book was mostly on the basis of the cryptic title, and the question as to whatever could the author be writing about.

It turns out that Moss has mostly written a sociological take on how the gospels came to be a physical object, as most of scribes and secretaries of the Roman empire at the time in question were slaves, before looking at the nature of how that reality would condition the work of the apostles. This is as the original apostles do not seem to be literate men, apart from Paul, who had to dictate their thoughts for transmission to a broader community, and it seems likely that the literary works of the early Church are best regarded as collaborative efforts.

Suffused through all this are the realities of Roman slavery, how that is a background to the New Testament, and how this impacted what was really being preached in the early Church. This is as new believers were being called to be slaves of God, with manumission only coming with the resurrection.

Seeing as we really only have fragments of Roman history that have been teased out over time, Moss makes no apologies for turning the mismatched pieces into a construct of her imagination; this is merely the job of the historian. She also makes no apologies for contesting what she sees as the misuse of the Bible, as a tool to justify the self-serving behavior of the self-anointed "saved" at the expense of those whom they would exploit.

Finally, Moss also has little use for the notion that the Bible is effectively written in stone, but is a lived tradition that is rewritten as need calls for, be it for better or worse. She also makes a plea for more imagination in our social relations, as imagination is what leads to empathy, which leads to the sense of mercy that those of us who call ourselves Christians should be trying to exercise. So yes, this book is as much an exercise in advocacy as it is a work of history.

How to rate this book was a tough call, as it is rather speculative and it is a polemic. Moss mostly conducts herself with enough care that I'm inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt.
32 reviews21 followers
September 2, 2024
It’s very thought provoking, however I have doubts about the amount of creative liberties that may have been taken.
Profile Image for francee.
75 reviews
December 19, 2024
definitely not the content i was expecting, but the content i certainly needed. will be contemplating some things now.
Profile Image for Melia.
347 reviews10 followers
August 1, 2024
This was an interesting perspective on the aspects of early Christian history that have less documentation than others. Candida Moss presents an aspect of Roman society that is inextricable from it, and therefore inextricable from the Empire's history in Christianity.
Several other reviews of this book have taken umbrage with Moss' suppositions that the Apostles would have used enslaved labor to transcribe the gospels, and that enslaved writers made intellectual and stylistic contributions to the Bible. This objection mainly comes from the fact that Moss does not present concrete proof that this occurred, and some of her suggestions rely on, well, suggestions. And it is true that there is nothing outside of a single reference to a scribe in one of Paul's scriptures which says CONCLUSIVELY that they did. However, Moss' research does make this theory quite PLAUSIBLE, which is nothing to ignore.

With the type of history we're dealing with here - lower class, enslaved, nitty gritty history - the threshold of proof is hard to hit. Records have no reason to document whether a slave transcribed a scholar's writings because it is so commonplace to do so. In two thousand years, we probably won't know if a modern researcher used Google to look up details because today we have no reason to explicitly say that we did; it is simply the way things are done.

In this vein, Moss suggests not that the Apostles were secretly and extraordinarily exploiting slave labor in a way never before seen, rather she gives ample evidence that this practice was ubiquitous in the Roman empire, and we should not assume that the Apostles were different. This suggestion, while rooted in the day to day aspects of early history, is not nearly as banal in modern implication. She opens us up to the suggestion that there were contributors to the earliest existing versions of the Jesus story that might have had very real influence on what metaphors were used, what turns of phrase, and how the gospel itself presents the narrative of Christ.

Now admittedly, I don't think this book can be read as a new absolute truth to take as, for lack of a better term, gospel. Some of the images put forth here are educated guesses. The view of the imprisoned Paul dictating his letters through a gap in his prison to a scribe who is taking it down is compelling, but it is a guess. Much of her evidence that the writers used enslaved scribes relies on 1) the ubiquitousness of this practice, and 2) the argument that aged or infirm disciples might not have been able to write on their own. This is amble evidence to suggest that it is very possible; it's just not enough to say that it was DEFINITELY true.

Discounting the theoretical aspect of the book, Candida Moss did have valuable insight into the language of slavery and its influence on the New Testament. The metaphors of slavery are often seen as calls to servitude by a reader who has never experienced slavery, but this puts into context how these words might have sounded to one who did. I do not believe a different perspective on the language of the Bible dampens it or dilutes its potency. Theologically, this book's claims do challenge a Sola Scripta point of view, however they are foundational to an examination of the Scriptures as a living document.
Profile Image for Greg Motter.
32 reviews11 followers
January 23, 2025
Learned alot from this one (3.5 stars), but to me it definitely did not live up to Moss's prior book The Myth of Persecution: How Early Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom, which is one of my all time favorite history books about early Christianity.

I think some of the issue with this book for me was, as others have mentioned, the title gave me a false impression. I think a more accurate title (but would have sold fewer books) would have been. 'Slavery in the Roman Empire: and how that may have impacted the writing of the Bible, but certainly impacted the formation of Christianity.' Also at times, for me as a non believer, there was just too much theology and not enough history, and too much guessing how things could have happened. I was just expecting a bit more pure history.

With that said, I learned many very interesting things. A couple of my favorites were:

Moss's writing style is always a pleasure to read, and this is a very interesting read, despite my initial frustration of it not being quite what I expected. Also for a Christian it'd be more interesting and relevant than it even was for me.
Profile Image for Timothy Grubbs.
1,415 reviews7 followers
March 21, 2025
Do not read…

God's Ghostwriters: Enslaved Christians and the Making of the Bible by Candida Moss is a highly speculative work of academic fiction that relies on assertions and suggestions of what likely happened without any significant support…

This book is a testament to the idea of “come up with a theme and stick to it”.

Starting with hypothetical Christian slave schoolchildren during Jesus’s crucifixion to describing apostle missionaries as enslaved laborers, the book takes some wide leaps with little academic support.

Sure, you could look at the 30 pages of footnotes and think the author knows what they are talking about, but when most of the sources are after 2000 (outside of scattered lines from the Bible), it starts to make you question it.

The author started form a flawed premise and chose to focus on that and avoid any actual evidence of what they were taking about.

On numerous occasions the author says essentially “we can’t know what happened here” and the. Goes into great detail about (wink wink) what happened…

This was a pretty rough book to get through…
Profile Image for Socraticgadfly.
1,416 reviews459 followers
January 30, 2025
God’s Ghostwriters? Fair amount of disappointment, especially given that Candida Moss’ book on the “Myth of Persecution” was pretty good. About 35-40 percent through, I was thinking this can’t be more than 3 stars. By 60 percent or so, I’m thinking, it can’t be more than 2. But, at around the 75 percent mark, I’m thinking, well, it can be 3.

Contra many low-star reviewers on Goodreads, my issue is not primarily with some of her conjectures, but with some godawful mistakes on biblical criticism — mistakes that people below her academic pay grade, and below mine, know are wrong, at least in the first case.

First, she gives the appearance of thinking Paul was a Roman citizen. WRONG! Never mentioned or claimed by Paul, of course.

Second, she thinks the last one-quarter of Acts, from Paul’s temple arrest on, is historical, or at least historical enough to have him getting to Rome. WRONG! Go here for the particularly "high" ahistoricity of the last one-quarter of Acts, as well as comments on Paul not being a Roman citizen.

Third, she seems to give some credibility to the historicity of Papias. Not.Even.Wrong. Based on a scribal slave of Cicero’s, and his veneration, if you will, she claims that an enslaved Mark would have testified to the veracity of recording Peter. Well, beyond this being based on one enslaved scribe and anecdotal comments about him, rather than a collection of statements to that end from patrician Romans, it’s also of course dependent on giving credibility to the historicity of Papias.

OK, with that said? My thoughts about her explication on ancient Roman slavery, New Testament slave imagery and its literalness and more are long, and behind a spoiler alert.



And, with all that?

The last tipping point down to 2 instead of up to 3 stars? This book could have been tighter, as well as less speculative, on its theme, as well as not having the errors in biblical criticism.

Related? There's too much food for thought for this to get the "meh" tag, let alone the "bs" one. But, Moss apparently is going to be headed more toward modernist sociology critiques of the New Testament and its world and I'll probably not ride that bus any more.
Profile Image for Desirae.
3,125 reviews182 followers
June 29, 2024
Moss brings together research on the history of labor, book history, clerical labor, Atlantic slavery, psychology, archeology, and history of medicine, all cited on a phenomenal companion website that will change the way that public scholarship is done. The book is written beautifully and clearly, has a compelling argument that makes you want to keep reading more, and offers the kind of evidence that you can't "unsee" when you read the Bible and other ancient texts. What is more, God's Ghostwriters makes explicit connections to social and economic practices in the present so that we all must reckon with the impacts of forced and uncredited labor not just on the writing of the Bible, but upon the world we inhabit. Because of that this is a must read not just for people who are interested in the Bible and the History of Christianity, but for anyone who is interested in enslavement, labor history, human rights and cultural history.
Profile Image for Jacob.
5 reviews
July 2, 2024
There are too many “what ifs” “perhaps” and “maybes” being used to justify arguments in this book. Some arguments are borderline sacrilegious. The idea of enslaved people assisting in the writing/copying/distribution of the New Testament was explained well, and for that it gets a second star. This history lesson on its own could have been a shorter, more complete, and better book. The wild assumptions and house of cards assembled on top of this baseline is where it lost me.
11 reviews1 follower
December 28, 2024
Really brought to light the historical and social context in which the new testament was written. The author theorized a lot but always made it clear when this was the case and why they made the assumptions they did. A bit long for the point it makes.
Profile Image for Michael.
429 reviews
July 19, 2025
This is an incredible and accessible history of writing in general and the writing of the gospels specifically. Within the context of the theological aspirations of the New Testament to document the life of Jesus, the meaning of his death and resurrection, and God's intervention in history through Christ, Moss creates a detailed history of how the Gospels and Epistles would have come to be written and the status of their Authority, both in terms of who wrote them and to whom authorship is credited. This is a materialist tour de force in biblical reading, as it shifts focus away from Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, Peter, etc... and casts an eye, instead, on the slaves and servants tasked with taking dictation, copying, editing, and reproducing of biblical texts, as well as the institutions that supported their enslavement. This is an excellent companion piece to The Origins of Early Christian Literature, The Apostle and Empire, and Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark when trying to think about how the New Testament was written and transmitted in the first centuries of the common era.
1 review
December 29, 2025
This was a tough book to finish. If you’re looking for an academically supported read, this is not it. The author fills in the chasms that exist in her premise between the little evidence that is provided with large amounts of speculation. The vast amounts of speculation take on a fictional narrative, and as the chapters pile up, the read ultimately feels like the author wants her premise to be true so badly, but just can’t quite get anyone else to believe her, that she drops all notions of respect for the material.

Summary: Woman author (trust me, she wants to this to be a prominent feature of the book), argues that the non-documented but presumed to be enslaved, (however, well-educated), unnamed book workers of the New Testament encoded their oppressed reality into the words to illustrate that the Christian God of the New Testament is ultimately an omnipotent enslaver of all believers and followers, exhibiting the same treacherous behaviors that the enslaved who were forced to write these letters, (again presumably, against their will,) were subjected to by their Master/Lord/Owner.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Mike Clarke.
576 reviews15 followers
July 4, 2025
Testament decolonised: Candida Moss does a good job of making a potentially turgid subject - just who did actually write the books of the New Testament* - lively and readable. Taking head on that the attributed authors weren’t necessarily the sole scribes or even actually involved will no doubt bring on the haters in droves, and if that doesn’t wind some people up then her exposition of the role of slaves in handing down these tracts to us surely will. She’s fair-minded, even managing to make Paul come out of this as less of the misogenic old slavery-enthusiast he normally gets painted, though she’s clear he didn’t write all the epistles he’s credited with. The stories of some of the slaves, the barbarity to which they were routinely exposed and the expectation that even if freed they should continue to be grateful is interesting in terms of what it inspired. An object lesson that everything - even scripture - is a product of its time and its makers. *obviously not Revelation, it’s too barking.
Profile Image for Joelle Colville-Hanson.
Author 2 books3 followers
May 7, 2024
I do recommend it but I have mixed responses to it. She provides a much needed perspective on how the early Christian community was enmeshed and influenced by an enslaving culture, not just as enslaved people but as enslavers as well.

She points out that writing in the first century was tedious and laborious and wealthy people used scribes, usually enslaved people to do the actual writing for them.

From that and the fact that Paul employed a scribe, she posits that much of the New Testament may have been written by enslaved scribes who not only took dictation but added their own additions and POV.

She admits a lot of it is speculation but it seems like speculation and imagination does a lot more heavy lifting than one expects from a scholarly work.

Still with that caveat it adds another important dimension to the conversation about the origins of The New Testament and is worth a read.
Profile Image for Gabriel.
15 reviews
April 29, 2024
This book offers a renewed focus on an often-forgotten perspective on the authorship of the Gospels and other New Testament books: the role that slaves, or former slaves, played in the formation and shaping of the text. This perspective offers great explanatory power to various puzzling aspects of the NT, from why the various letters from Paul read so differently or may be seen as “forged” by many modern scholars, to a possible reason why Jesus didn’t know when “the hour” would come. And perhaps most importantly, it makes us reflect on the power and impact that the perpetration of enslaver ideology by the NT has had on our modern society. A must read for anyone interested in understanding the roles slavery played in both shaping the Bible and modern society.
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Author 2 books6 followers
August 17, 2024
I've read a lot of history, I wrote a book about scribes, and I sing in a church choir every Sunday -- so I've heard a lot of stories from the bible. And yet, it never occurred to me that the carpenters and fishermen in those stories were illiterate people. And so, their stories had to have been recorded by scribes, who in Roman times were often slaves. Those who read the gospels aloud in church services had to have been slaves as well, because the audience would not have been literate.

Candida Moss, an academic and a writer on religious affairs, dives into a specific aspect of Christian history that I had never considered before. I appreciate her scholarly approach to an intriguing topic.
5 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2024
I'm not sure if I agree with everything that was said in this book, but it definitely gave me a lot to think about and research further. I'll admit that as much as I've thought about who wrote the New Testament, I haven't put much thought into who committed the literal act of writing it down, let alone sharing it with others both orally and through physical distribution. While I'm not a fan of "history-telling", I think Moss (and her co-authors) did a fantastic job in putting this book together and presenting her arguments. Whether you like "history-telling" or just prefer the facts (much like myself), I think you'll find something here to enjoy.

P.S. I'm excited to hear the panel discussion on this book at the upcoming SBL meeting!
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