The Incarnation in Papyrus 66 and Papyrus 75
Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between the earliest witnesses to the New Testament—specifically Papyrus 66 (๐66) and Papyrus 75 (๐75)—and the theological development of the "Christmas" narrative. While Papyrus 66 (๐66) preserves the Johannine Prologue’s high Christology of the Logos becoming flesh, and Papyrus 75 (๐75) provides a critical textual link to the Lukan birth narrative. By examining these late 2nd to early 3rd-century codices, we can observe how the early Church synthesized the mystical "Incarnation" of John with the historical "Nativity" of Luke to form the foundational "Christmas" theology.
Papyrus 66 (๐66) and Papyrus 75 (๐75) are among the earliest extant witnesses to the Gospel of John and Luke respectively, dating to the late second and early third centuries. Neither manuscript preserves a narrative of Jesus’ birth in the conventional sense associated with Christmas liturgy. Yet both are profoundly relevant to Christmas theology. This paper argues that ๐66 and ๐75 together testify to an early Christian understanding of the Incarnation that precedes and undergirds later nativity traditions. Christmas, as revealed through these papyri, is not primarily a story of shepherds and angels but a metaphysical claim about divine embodiment, historical time, and salvific presence.
I. Introduction: The Textual Origins of Christmas
Christmas, as a feast, emerges centuries after the composition of the New Testament texts. To read Christmas back into early manuscripts risks anachronism. Yet the theological core of Christmas—the claim that God entered history as a human being—is embedded deeply in the earliest strata of Christian scripture. Papyrus 66 and Papyrus 75, though fragmentary and devoid of festive narrative, preserve precisely this claim in its most austere and radical form. These papyri represent a Christianity still thinking through the shock of incarnation rather than celebrating it ritually.
The modern celebration of Christmas is a liturgical harmonization of two distinct biblical traditions: the historical infancy narrative found in the Gospel of Luke and the cosmic pre-existence of Christ described in the Gospel of John. To understand the earliest physical evidence of these traditions, scholars turn to the Bodmer Papyri.
Papyrus 66 (๐66) (Bodmer II): Dated c. 200 CE, it is a near-complete codex of the Gospel of John.
Papyrus 75 (๐75) (Bodmer XIV-XV): Dated c. 175–225 CE, it contains substantial portions of Luke and John.
II. Papyrus 66: The "Cosmic Christmas"
Papyrus 66, containing large portions of the Gospel of John, is particularly significant for Christmas theology because John offers no infancy narrative. Instead, John opens with a cosmological overture: the Logos existing “in the beginning,” through whom all things came to be. The crucial Christmas moment in John is not a birth scene but the declaration that “the Word became flesh.”
In ๐66, this claim appears without doctrinal softening. The text emphasizes sarx (flesh), not merely humanity in the abstract. This is incarnation at its most scandalous: the eternal Logos takes on perishable matter. Christmas here is not pastoral but ontological. There is no stable, no mother’s song—only the staggering assertion that divine transcendence has collapsed into biological vulnerability.
The early date of ๐66 suggests that this high Christology was not a late theological embellishment but foundational. Christmas theology, in this light, begins not with sentiment but with metaphysics. God does not merely visit humanity; God becomes materially present within it.
While John’s Gospel contains no manger, no shepherds, and no Magi, Papyrus 66 (๐66) provides the earliest substantial witness to the Prologue (John 1:1–18), which serves as the theological bedrock for Christmas.
In Papyrus 66 (๐66), we find the definitive statement of the Incarnation:
ฮบฮฑแฝถ แฝ ฮปฯฮณฮฟฯ ฯแฝฐฯฮพ แผฮณฮญฮฝฮตฯฮฟ ฮบฮฑแฝถ แผฯฮบฮฎฮฝฯฯฮตฮฝ แผฮฝ แผกฮผแฟฮฝ
(And the Word became flesh and dwelt [tabernacled] among us — John 1:14)
The presence of this text in a professional codex from the year 200 CE confirms that the "high Christology" of the Incarnation—the idea that the baby in the manger was the eternal Logos—was firmly established in the early Christian consciousness long before the formalization of the Christmas feast in the 4th century.
III. Papyrus 75: The Historical Witness to the Birth
Papyrus 75 preserves significant portions of Luke and is notable for its textual closeness to Codex Vaticanus. Luke, unlike John, contains a detailed infancy narrative. Yet the surviving sections of ๐75 do not emphasize the nativity scenes. Instead, they foreground Jesus’ identity, authority, and relationship to God within history.
What ๐75 contributes to Christmas theology is historical anchoring. Luke insists that salvation unfolds within verifiable time—under governors, emperors, and political systems. Even when the nativity narrative is absent from the preserved text, the theological trajectory remains: the incarnation is not mythic timelessness but an event embedded in human chronology.
Christmas, as implied by ๐75, is the moment eternity submits to history’s constraints. God enters census records, travel fatigue, and geopolitical reality. The absence of explicit Christmas imagery in the papyrus paradoxically sharpens this point: incarnation is not dependent on pageantry to be real.
Papyrus 75 (๐75) is monumental because it is the earliest manuscript to show the Gospels of Luke and John bound together in a single volume. This physical joining reflects a "theological joining" of their two different "birth" stories.
The Lukan Link: Papyrus 75 (๐75) contains much of Luke, though the very first chapters (the Nativity) are fragmentary. However, its close textual affinity with Codex Vaticanus suggests it was part of a tradition that meticulously preserved the Lukan infancy narrative.7
Harmonization: By placing Luke (the "Human" birth) and John (the "Divine" origin) side-by-side Papyrus 75 (๐75) allowed early readers to see the Nativity as the fulfillment of the Logos becoming flesh.
|
Feature |
Papyrus 66 (John) |
Papyrus 75 (Luke/John) |
|
Approx. Date |
200 CE |
175–225 CE |
|
Christmas Focus |
Theological
(Incarnation) |
Structural (Joining Luke
& John) |
|
Key Verse |
John 1:14 (Word
became flesh) |
Luke 2 (Contextual
proximity) |
IV. Synthesis: From Papyrus to Liturgy
Read together, ๐66 and ๐75 offer a bifocal vision of Christmas. John, preserved in ๐66, frames incarnation from above: the descent of the Logos into flesh. Luke, preserved in ๐75, frames incarnation from within history: the arrival of salvation amid human institutions and suffering.
Christmas theology emerges at the intersection of these perspectives. It is neither pure myth nor mere biography. It is the claim that the infinite enters the finite without ceasing to be infinite, and that this entry occurs at a specific moment in time. The papyri reveal that early Christians were less concerned with celebrating Jesus’ birth than with grappling with its implications.
The relationship between these two papyri reveals that the "Christmas" story was not a later legendary accretion but was deeply rooted in the earliest textual traditions.
Papyrus 66 (๐66) ensured the baby was seen as God.
Papyrus 75 (๐75) ensured the God-man was seen as a Historical Person born in Bethlehem.8
Together, these manuscripts represent the "Dual Nature" of Christ (Human and Divine) that defines the Christmas season.
Conclusion
Papyrus 66 and Papyrus 75 remind us that Christmas was a doctrine before it was a holiday. The earliest witnesses to the gospel texts preserve a raw and unsettling idea: God has a body, and history is forever altered by that fact. Long before trees, hymns, or dates on a calendar, Christmas existed as a theological rupture.
In these papyri, Christmas is quiet, almost hidden, but intellectually explosive. The absence of festive detail is not a deficit but a clue. Early Christianity was still stunned by the incarnation. Celebration would come later. First came the text.
Papyrus 66 (๐66) and Papyrus 75 (๐75) serve as the silent witnesses to the birth of Christian dogma. They prove that by the end of the second century, the Church already possessed the full "script" of Christmas—the historical details of a Judean birth and the profound mystery of the eternal Logos entering time.