12/04/2025

John 10:22-23: Mediaeval Hebrew Manuscripts Prove That Yeshu Did NOT Celebrate Hanukkah

BS"D


Introduction: The Systematic Manipulation of Hebrew Texts by Christian Missionaries

The movements known as "Messianic Judaism" and "Netzarites" have constructed over recent decades a theological narrative founded upon a fraudulent premise: that Yeshua (Jesus) was a halakhically observant Jew who celebrated Jewish festivals, including Hanukkah, and that primitive Christianity therefore represented a legitimate form of Judaism. This ideological construction depends entirely upon modern Hebraised translations of the New Testament—especially the influential missionary version by Franz Delitzsch (1877)—which retrospectively insert Judaic terminology such as חֲנֻכָּה (Hanukkah) into passages where this word never existed in the most ancient textual witnesses:

וַיְהִי חֲנֻכָּה בִּירוּשָׁלָיִם וְהָעֵת סְתָיו׃ וְיֵשׁוּעַ מִתְהַלֵךְ בַּמִּקְדָּשׁ בְּאוּלָם שֶׁל־שְׁלֹמֹה׃ וַיָּסֹבּוּ אֹתוֹ הַיְּהוּדִים וַיֹּאמְרוּ אֵלָיו עַד־אָנָה תַּתְלֶה אֶת־נַפְשֵׁנוּ אִם־הַמָּשִׁיחַ אַתָּה אֱמָר־נָא וְנִשְׁמְעָה בְאָזְנֵינוּ׃ וַיַּעַן אֹתָם יֵשׁוּעַ הֵן הִגַּדְתִּי אֲלֵיכֶם וְלֹא הֶאֱמַנְתֶּם בִּי הַמַּעֲשִׂים אֲשֶׁר־אֲנִי עֹשֶׂה בְּשֵׁם אָבִי הֵם יָעִידוּ עָלָי׃ וְאַתֶּם לֹא תַאֲמִינוּ כִּי לֹא מִצֹּאנִי אַתֶּם כַּאֲשֶׁר אָמַרְתִּי לָכֶם׃ צֹאנִי תִּשְׁמַעְנָה אֶת־קוֹלִי וַאֲנִי יְדַעְתִּין וְאַחֲרַי תֵּלַכְנָה׃ וַאֲנִי אֶתֵּן לָהֶן חַיֵּי עוֹלָם וְלֹא תֹאבַדְנָה לָנֶצַח וְאִישׁ לֹא־יַחֲטֹף אֶתְהֶן מִיָּדִי׃ הָאָב אֲשֶׁר נְתָנָן לִי גָּדוֹל הוּא עַל־כֹּל וְאִישׁ לֹא־יַחֲטֹף אֶתְהֶן מִיַּד הָאָב׃ אֲנִי וְאָבִי אֶחָד אֲנָחְנוּ׃.

(Translation: And at the feast of Hanukkah (dedication) in Jerusalem, during the autumn season, Yeshua was walking in the Temple (Mikdash), in the portico of Solomon (Shlomoh). The Jews surrounded him and said to him: "How long will you keep us in suspense? If you are the Mashiach (Messiah), tell us clearly so that we may hear." And Yeshua answered them: "I have already told you and you have not believed. The works that I do in the name of my Avi (Father) bear witness to me. You do not believe because you are not of my sheep, as I have told you. My sheep hear my voice, I know them and they follow me. I give them Chaim Olam (eternal life), and they shall never perish, and no one shall snatch them from my hand. My Avi, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one can snatch them from the hand of the Av. I and my Avi are Echad (one).)

Delitzsch, F. (1996). ספרי הברית החדשה [The Books of the New Testament] (Rev. ed.). Trinitarian Bible Society. (Original work published 1877) p. 209.

As Jews committed to textual truth and the integrity of our sources, we have an obligation to expose this manipulation through rigorous examination of mediaeval Hebrew manuscripts of the Gospel of John, particularly the passage of John 10:22-23 which missionaries routinely exploit to claim that "Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah in the Temple". What this analysis will reveal is devastating for their pretensions: none of the most ancient and reliable Hebrew manuscripts mentions Hanukkah; this association represents a late seventeenth-century textual corruption combined with nineteenth-century missionary Hebraisation, designed specifically to make Christianity appear more Jewish than it actually is.

This study is not an abstract academic exercise but a necessary response to a concrete missionary threat that confuses vulnerable Jews by presenting them with a fictitious "Jewish Yeshua" constructed through systematic distortion of textual sources. We shall examine five key Hebrew manuscripts that document the true textual history of John 10:22-23, demonstrating empirically that the word חֲנֻכָּה never formed part of the primitive Hebrew traditions of this passage, and that its insertion into modern translations constitutes deliberate textual fraud in the service of Christian missionary agendas.

The Critical Importance of Mediaeval Hebrew Manuscripts for Dismantling the Messianic Narrative

Before examining the specific manuscripts, we must establish why the study of mediaeval Hebrew texts of the Gospel of John proves absolutely critical for refuting Messianic claims. Messianic groups operate through a sophisticated but fundamentally dishonest rhetorical strategy: they present modern Hebraised translations (Delitzsch, Salkinson-Ginsburg, United Bible Societies) as if they faithfully reflected ancient texts, citing them selectively to "demonstrate" that Yeshua observed the mitzvot and celebrated Jewish festivals. When confronted, they appeal to the circular argument that "the New Testament was originally written in Hebrew/Aramaic", without ever providing manuscript evidence to support such a claim for the canonical Gospels.

The mediaeval Hebrew manuscripts of the Gospel of John, especially those preserved in the traditions of the Even Bochan (אבן בוחן, "The Touchstone") of Shem Tov ben Isaac Ibn Shaprut, dismantle this strategy because they provide tangible material evidence of how these texts actually circulated in communities employing Hebrew. By examining these manuscripts we can determine empirically what terminology was actually employed in the most ancient Hebrew versions available, how texts became corrupted throughout mediaeval manuscript transmission, when and how associations with Jewish festivals that missionaries exploit were introduced, and whether there exists textual foundation for the claims that primitive Hebrew versions supported the Messianic narrative.

The answer, as we shall demonstrate, is absolutely devastating for the missionaries: the most ancient Hebrew manuscripts do not mention Hanukkah at all, and the association with this festival arises solely through accidental seventeenth-century palaeographic errors, mediaeval editorial harmonisations influenced by the Greek text, and modern nineteenth-century missionary Hebraisation with explicit conversion agendas.

We shall now examine the five key manuscripts in chronological order, documenting the true textual history that missionaries prefer to conceal.

I. MS Vat. ebr. 100, folio 135v (Vatican Apostolic Library)—The Most Ancient Textual Witness: No Mention of Hanukkah

Manuscript History

MS Vat. ebr. 100 of the Vatican Apostolic Library represents one of the most ancient available Hebrew witnesses to the Gospel of John. Although the precise dating of the manuscript is uncertain due to the absence of a colophon, specialists in Hebrew palaeography situate it in the early mediaeval period based upon characteristics of the Sephardic script employed. This manuscript forms part of the collection of anti-Christian polemical texts that circulated amongst mediaeval Jewish communities, specifically within the tradition of the Even Bochan (אבן בוחן, "The Touchstone") compiled by Rabbi Shem Tov ben Isaac Ibn Shaprut in the fourteenth century.

The Even Bochan constitutes a fundamental polemical work of mediaeval Spanish Judaism that included, amongst other materials, a complete Hebrew version of the Gospel of Matthew together with systematic refutations of Christian pretensions. Although the Vatican MS contains the Gospel of John, not Matthew, it reflects the same polemical textual tradition: preserving Hebrew versions of Christian texts precisely to facilitate their refutation through critical analysis. This provenance proves critical for understanding the manuscript's value: it was not produced by Hebraising Christians with missionary agendas, but preserved in Jewish contexts for purposes of religious controversy.

The Hebrew Text and Its Translation

Folio 135v of MS Vat. ebr. 100 presents the text of John 10:22-23 in the following manner:

אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם וחורף היה. והולך ישאוש במקדש באכסדרת שלמה.

("Rather, these words were spoken in Yerushalayim (Jerusalem), and it was winter. And Yeshu'sh (Jesus) was walking in the Mikdash (Temple), in the portico of Shlomo (Solomon).")

Critical Analysis: What This Text Does NOT Say

The devastating importance of this manuscript for dismantling Messianic claims resides precisely in what is absent: there is no mention whatsoever of חֲנֻכָּה (Hanukkah) nor of any specific festival. The text employs only three fundamental textual elements.

First, the expression אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם ("Rather, these words were spoken in Jerusalem"). This Hebrew narrative construction has no equivalent in any known Greek manuscript. It represents a specifically Semitic idiomatic turn absent from all Greek versions. The Greek manuscripts, from Codex Sinaiticus to Vaticanus, through Alexandrinus and Bezae, consistently employ constructions such as Ἐγένετο [δὲ/τότε] τὰ ἐγκαίνια ἐν [τοῖς] Ἱεροσολύμοις ("And it came to pass [then] the Enkainia in Jerusalem"), never a narrative formulation of the type "rather, these words were spoken". This Hebrew phrase suggests that this text might preserve elements of a more primitive Hebrew or Aramaic tradition, not simply a mediaeval back-translation from Greek.

Second, וחורף היה ("and it was winter"). This is an exclusively seasonal reference, not liturgical. It mentions the season—חורף means winter—without identifying any festival. This term is completely different from חֲנֻכָּה which missionaries insert into their modern translations.

Third, והולך ישאוש במקדש ("and Yeshu'sh was walking in the Mikdash"). The use of the verb of movement והולך ("and he was walking" or "he walked") indicates mere physical presence, not participation in any liturgical celebration. The phrase באכסדרת שלמה ("in the portico of Solomon") designates a common public transit area, not the sacred sanctuary of the Temple.

Devastating Implications for Missionaries

If the most ancient available Hebrew version of the passage does not mention Hanukkah but only winter, on what textual basis do missionaries claim that "Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah"? The answer is simple and dishonest: they invent the association through modern translations that insert חֲנֻכָּה where the manuscript says וחורף היה.

When a missionary shows you a translation by Franz Delitzsch that says וַיְהִי חֲנֻכָּה בִּירוּשָׁלָיִם ("And it was Hanukkah in Jerusalem"), the critical question is: In which ancient Hebrew manuscript does that reading appear? The honest answer would be: in none of the ancient manuscripts; Delitzsch invented it in 1877 for missionary purposes. But one rarely receives honesty from those who construct their theology upon textual forgeries.

II. MS 59b Wrocław/Breslau (1578, Constantinople)—Stability of the Primitive Tradition Without Hanukkah

Manuscript History

MS 59b of the University Library of Wrocław, formerly Breslau, constitutes an extraordinarily valuable witness due to its precise historical documentation and its tragic modern history. This manuscript was copied in the year 1578 by the scribe Ya'akov ben Shemu'el Catalani (יעקב בן שמואל קטלני) in the city of Constantinople, present-day Istanbul, Turkey, capital of the Ottoman Empire. The manuscript's colophon records that it was commissioned by Yitzhak Akrish (יצחק עקריש) and that the copying work was completed in the house of Yosef ha-Nasi (יוסף הנשיא), also known as Don Joseph Nasi, the Duke of Naxos, one of the most prominent and influential Jewish figures of the Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth century.

The manuscript formed part of the prestigious collection of the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau (Jüdisch-Theologisches Seminar) in Poland. During the Second World War, the Nazis systematically plundered libraries and Jewish collections throughout Eastern Europe; this manuscript was stolen and disappeared during the occupation. Miraculously, it was rediscovered after the war in Czechoslovakia, where it had been transported together with other stolen Jewish cultural treasures. The manuscript was temporarily preserved in the National Library of the Czech Republic in Prague before eventually being returned to Poland and deposited in the University Library of Wrocław, where it is currently conserved.

This tragic history underscores the fragility of manuscript transmission and the importance of each surviving textual witness. The fact that this manuscript survived the Holocaust when millions of Jews and their texts were destroyed confers upon it additional testimonial value: it is a survivor bearing critical textual evidence against missionary forgeries.

The Hebrew Text and Its Translation

MS 59b presents the text of John 10:22-23 in a manner practically identical to the Vatican MS:

אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם וחורף היה. והולך ישו במקדש באכסדרת שלמה.

("Rather, these words were spoken in Jerusalem, and it was winter. And Yeshu was walking in the Temple, in the portico of Solomon.")

Critical Analysis: Confirmation of the Primitive Reading

The importance of MS Wrocław lies in its confirmation of the textual stability of the primitive reading through multiple converging factors. First, it represents diverse geographies: the Vatican MS comes from Italy whilst MS Wrocław was copied in Constantinople, capital of the Ottoman Empire. These Jewish centres are completely separated by thousands of kilometres, suggesting that the shared reading results not from direct dependence but from a more ancient common textual tradition.

Second, it demonstrates stability through centuries of transmission. Between the Vatican MS, dated to the early mediaeval period, and MS Wrocław of 1578, several centuries elapsed. The fact that both manuscripts preserve the reading וחורף היה without mention of Hanukkah demonstrates that this formulation remained stable throughout that entire transmission.

Third, it evidences remarkable terminological consistency. Both manuscripts employ אלא הדברים נאמרו for the introductory narrative construction and וחורף היה for the seasonal reference. This precise terminological convergence suggests a common textual source or an extraordinarily conservative transmission tradition.

The only observable minor difference is ישו (Yeshu) in Wrocław versus ישאוש (Yeshu'sh) in Vatican, a trivial orthographic variation of the name that does not affect the substantive meaning of the passage.

Implications for Missionaries

When two independent Hebrew manuscripts, separated by centuries and geographies, converge towards the same reading—absence of Hanukkah, presence only of winter reference—this constitutes solid textual evidence that that reading reflects the primitive tradition. Missionaries cannot appeal to "manuscript variants" or "alternative traditions" that mention Hanukkah in this period, because they simply do not exist.

The critical question that must be posed is: if Hanukkah were truly part of the original text, why do Hebrew manuscripts from the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries not mention it? The obvious answer is that the association with Hanukkah did not exist in Hebrew textual traditions of that period; it was invented later through processes we shall document in subsequent manuscripts.

III. MS A 207 Saint Petersburg (1689)—The Palaeographic Corruption That Created the Confusion with Hanukkah

Manuscript History

MS A 207 of the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg constitutes a critical textual witness for completely different reasons from the previous manuscripts: it documents the precise historical moment when the textual corruption occurred that would later allow missionaries to claim fraudulently that the text "spoke of Hanukkah".

This manuscript was copied in the year תמ"ט, corresponding to 1689, by the scribe Hayyim Shelomoh ben Moshe Gagin (חיים שלמה בן משה גאגין). The colophon preserved on folio 123b records:

"I... Hayyim Shelomoh Gagin son of the honourable master Moshe Gagin of blessed memory... and I wrote it and completed it on Thursday 13 Nisan of the year תב'א'מ'ו', which equals תמ"ט according to the year 1689, and I planted on the mountain of your inheritance according to the minor reckoning."

The manuscript forms part of a קובץ בפולמוס (polemical collection) containing multiple anti-Christian works: the Even Bochan (אבן בחן) of Shem Tov Ibn Shaprut on folios 1a-123b, the Bitul Yesodot ha-Notzrim (בטול יסודות הנוצרים, "Refutation of the Foundations of the Christians") also by Shem Tov Ibn Shaprut on folios 124a-127a, the Bitul Ikarei ha-Notzrim (בטול עיקרי הנוצרים, "Refutation of the Principles of the Christians") by Hasdai Crescas on folios 128a-137a, and the Vikuach ha-Ramban (ויכוח הרמב"ן, "The Disputation of Nachmanides") on folios 137b-142b.

This composition reveals that the manuscript was produced within the Jewish tradition of anti-Christian literature, not by Hebraising Christians. The scribe Gagin was copying Jewish polemical texts to preserve refutation arguments against Christian pretensions.

The Hebrew Text and Its Translation

Here is where textual history takes a critical turn. MS A 207 presents:

אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם בחנוכה היה. והולך ישו במקדש באכסדרת שלמה.

("Rather, these words were spoken in Jerusalem, in Hanukkah it was. And Yeshu was walking in the Temple, in the portico of Solomon.")

Palaeographic Analysis: How the Copying Error Occurred

Observe the critical change: where previous manuscripts said וחורף היה ("and it was winter"), this manuscript says בחנוכה היה ("in Hanukkah it was"). How could this radical transformation of meaning occur?

The answer resides in the characteristics of mediaeval semi-cursive Sephardic script. In this calligraphic style, the following palaeographic confusions are extremely plausible and documentable. The letter ו (vav) can appear visually similar to ב (bet) depending upon the scribe's ductus; in semi-cursive writing, both have similar curved strokes, and if the upper stroke of the vav is prominent, it can be confused with the closed space characteristic of the bet. The letter ח (chet) remains unchanged, being the same letter in both words. The second ו (vav) can be misinterpreted as part of a sequence נו (nun-vav), especially if vertical strokes are close together in manuscripts with compact writing. The ר (resh) with its rounded form open to the left can be confused with כ (kaf), especially when the upper stroke is not completely closed or when the ink has run slightly. Finally, the ף (final peh) with its characteristic descending stroke can be misinterpreted as ה (he) when the distinctive loop of the final peh is not clearly formed or when the source manuscript is deteriorated.

The result of these sequential confusions is that וחורף (five letters: vav-chet-vav-resh-final peh) transforms into בחנוכה (five letters: bet-chet-nun-vav-kaf-he), radically altering the meaning from "and it was winter" to "in Hanukkah it was".

This is not theoretical speculation; it is precisely the type of error that palaeographers regularly document in mediaeval manuscripts when a copyist works with a deteriorated or stained source manuscript, with deficient illumination typical of copies made by candlelight, with fatigue after hours of continuous copying, or with semi-cursive writing where letters connect and distinctive strokes progressively become ambiguous.

Devastating Implications: The Missionaries' "Hanukkah" is a Seventeenth-Century Copying Error

This palaeographic evidence completely dismantles the Messianic narrative. The word בחנוכה that eventually allowed missionaries to claim that "Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah" did not exist in Hebrew manuscripts until 1689, when it first appeared as the result of an accidental copying error.

Before 1689, documented manuscripts consistently present the reading: MS Vatican ebr. 100 (early mediaeval) says וחורף היה ("and it was winter"); MS Wrocław 59 (1578) says וחורף היה ("and it was winter"); no known manuscript mentions חֲנֻכָּה in this passage.

After 1689, MS Saint Petersburg A 207 presents בחנוכה היה ("in Hanukkah it was"), constituting a documentable palaeographic corruption.

Messianic apologists who cite modern translations with חֲנֻכָּה are, unknowingly, perpetuating a seventeenth-century copying error, presenting it fraudulently as if it reflected the original text. Their entire theology of the "Jewish Yeshua who celebrated Hanukkah" rests upon a confusion between ו and ב, between ר and כ, between ף and ה, committed by a tired copyist more than three centuries ago.

IV. MS Heb. 751=8 (National Library of Israel)—Mediaeval Editorial Harmonisation: Physical Evidence of Textual Manipulation

Manuscript History

MS Heb. 751=8 of the National Library of Israel represents one of the most fascinating and revealing textual witnesses because it preserves visible physical evidence of deliberate editorial intervention. This mediaeval manuscript in Ashkenazic cursive script was later edited and published by the Jewish scholar Adolf (Ze'ev) Poznański around 1900 as part of his academic work on Jewish polemical texts.

The manuscript was copied from MS Breslau 59 (Wrocław) and collated with additional manuscripts from the British Museum (Add. 26,964), Rome (Casanate 3099), and Paris (fragment Héber. 831), as documented by an introductory note in German by the scholar M. Braun. The manuscript came to the National Library of Israel from the collection of David Simonsen of Copenhagen after his death, as recorded in the Sefer ha-Yovel le-Aharon Friman (Jubilee Book for Aaron Friman), page 115, number 1A.

The manuscript contains the Even Bochan (אבן בחן) with translation of the four gospels on folios 264-409, the Ma'amar ha-Vikuach (מאמר הויכוח, "Treatise on the Disputation") by Shem Tov Ibn Shaprut on the nine foundations of Christianity on folios 473-493 in reverse order, and annotations and commentaries by the copyist or editor on folios 334b-385a.

The Hebrew Text, the Visible Correction, and Its Translation

Here is where the evidence becomes absolutely devastating for missionaries. The corresponding folio of MS Heb. 751=8 shows physically struck-through text followed by an overwritten correction:

וחנוכה נעשתה בירושלם וחורף היה...ו… והולך ישו במקדש באכסדרת שלמה.

("And Hanukkah took place in Jerusalem, and it was winter…[and]… And Yeshu was walking in the Temple, in the portico of Solomon.")

But the palaeographic evidence reveals a complex editorial process. The words אלא הדברים נאמרו were physically struck through by the mediaeval scribe. In their place, the scribe wrote וחנוכה נעשתה ("And Hanukkah took place"). וחורף היה ("and it was winter") was maintained from the earlier tradition.

Critical Analysis: A Scribe Caught Between Contradictory Traditions

Why would a mediaeval scribe strike through part of the text and write something different? The explanation becomes clear when we consider the historical context and the textual pressures he faced.

The scribe had access to multiple Hebrew manuscripts with contradictory readings. Some manuscripts said וחורף היה, reflecting the correct primitive tradition. Other manuscripts, such as that of Saint Petersburg, said בחנוכה היה, perpetuating the palaeographic corruption of the seventeenth century.

Moreover, the scribe also consulted the canonical Greek text, which presented Ἐγένετο [δὲ/τότε] τὰ ἐγκαίνια ἐν [τοῖς] Ἱεροσολύμοις [καὶ] χειμὼν ἦν ("It came to pass [then] the enkainia in Jerusalem [and] it was winter"). This Greek text included both the reference to "enkainia" (dedication/renewal) and the mention of winter.

The scribe attempted to "reconcile" these contradictory traditions through a hybrid editorial solution. He eliminated אלא הדברים נאמרו, the primitive Semitic construction absent from the Greek. He wrote וחנוכה נעשתה, deliberately approximating the Greek structure Ἐγένετο τὰ ἐγκαίνια ("It came to pass the enkainia"). He maintained וחורף היה, preserving the winter reference present in both ancient Hebrew manuscripts and in the Greek.

The Devastating Paradox: Harmonisation Towards the Greek

The result of this editorial intervention is profoundly ironic: in attempting to "correct" the Hebrew text, the scribe moved it away from the primitive Semitic stratum and closer to the Hellenised Greek formulation. This demonstrates several critical points for understanding textual history.

First, the primitive Hebrew text did not derive from the Greek. It contained specifically Semitic constructions absent from the Greek, such as אלא הדברים נאמרו, which have no equivalent in any known Greek variant.

Second, the mediaeval scribe considered the canonical Greek text authoritative. He consciously modified the Hebrew to make it structurally resemble the Greek, eliminating the distinctive Semitic elements.

Third, the "Judaised" version that includes חנוכה is paradoxically the most Hellenised, not the most primitive. The insertion of וחנוכה נעשתה represents a deliberate approximation to the Greek formulation Ἐγένετο τὰ ἐγκαίνια, not the preservation of an ancient Hebrew tradition.

Implications for Messianic Movements

This physical evidence of visible textual manipulation dismantles the Messianic narrative on multiple levels that must be clearly understood.

At the first level of analysis, the word חנוכה in this manuscript was not originally in the text; it was deliberately inserted by a mediaeval scribe through editorial correction physically visible on the parchment.

At the second level, this insertion was motivated by the desire to harmonise the Hebrew with the canonical Greek, not by preserving a primitive independent Hebrew tradition. The scribe was subordinating the Hebrew text to the Greek considered authoritative.

At the third level, the text that missionaries cite as "evidence" that Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah is precisely the most manipulated and least primitive text of all available Hebrew manuscripts. It represents the final result of an editorial harmonisation process, not a witness to the original tradition.

When a missionary shows you a translation by Delitzsch with חֲנֻכָּה, the critical question is: did you know that in the mediaeval Hebrew manuscript where that word appears, it was inserted through editorial correction by striking through the original text? The honest answer would have to acknowledge that missionary materials never mention this inconvenient palaeographic evidence that contradicts their claims of primitive textual authenticity.

V. Cochin Hebrew Manuscript—Gaster MS 1616 (The John Rylands Library, Manchester)—Independent Witness Confirming: No Hanukkah in the Primitive Tradition

Manuscript History: The Most Important Witness of All

The Cochin Hebrew Manuscript (catalogued as Gaster Hebrew MS 1616 in The John Rylands Library of Manchester, England) constitutes without any doubt the most devastating textual witness for Messianic pretensions, for a reason that transcends all previous palaeographic considerations: it represents a completely independent textual tradition from Europe, preserved in a geographically isolated Jewish community for centuries.

Provenance and Historical Significance

This paper codex of 126 folios (238 × 186 mm) was originally brought from the community of the "Black Jews" or Malabar Jews of Cochin/Travancore (southwest coast of India) by the Reverend Dr. Claudius Buchanan, who deposited it in Cambridge University Library as MS Oo 1.32. In 1810, Thomas Yeates (1768-1839) of the British Museum made an exact copy of the original manuscript, meticulously transcribing the text from the original Rashi script into square Hebrew characters (contrary to an erroneous note in Moses Gaster's manuscript list indicating Rashi script in the copy).

Yeates himself, in his honest introductory note, warns the reader:

"The text has not been subjected to any correction. In it are found important errors of construction in the number and gender of nouns and persons of verbs, some additions and omissions, with various other inaccuracies of which the transcriber considers it necessary to warn the reader."

This frankness by the British copyist about the textual witness is laudable and stands in sharp contrast to the dishonest practices of modern missionary translators who suppress inconvenient manuscript evidence.

The Jewish community of Cochin, established according to their own traditions since ancient times in Kerala, India, remained completely isolated for centuries from European Christian theological controversies, from the centres of mediaeval Hebrew manuscript production in Spain, Italy and the Ottoman Empire, from the currents of textual transmission that produced the Vatican, Wrocław and Saint Petersburg manuscripts, and from the Christian missionary Hebraisation agendas that culminated in Delitzsch.

This community preserved versions of the New Testament in Hebrew that reflect more primitive textual traditions, completely free from Christian apologetic pressures and the Hebraising agendas of nineteenth-century European missionaries.

In terms of rigorous textual criticism, when two manuscript traditions that could not have mutually influenced each other due to absolute geographical separation—Mediterranean Europe versus Indian subcontinent—and radical cultural isolation converge towards the same specific reading, that reading possesses a probability close to certainty of reflecting the most primitive textual stratum prior to any bifurcation of traditions.

The Hebrew Text and Its Translation

Folio 200 of the Cochin Manuscript presents John 10:22-23 in the following manner:

Hebrew text:

22 הוא זה היה אמרו חג בירשלים וזמן חויף היה: 23 והיה מהלך ישו בהיכל של מקום שלמה:

(22 It was then, they said, the feast in Yerushalayim!, and it was wintertime. 23 And Yeshu was walking in the Heikhal of the place of Shelomoh.)

Critical Analysis: Devastating Independent Convergence

The importance of this text cannot be exaggerated. The textual characteristics reveal critical evidence that completely dismantles Messianic claims.

Verse 22 employs only חג (chag, "feast") without any specification. It does not say חג חֲנֻכָּה ("feast of Hanukkah"), it does not say חֲנֻכָּה alone, it does not say חנוכת הבית ("dedication of the house or temple"). It says simply חג, an indefinite, generic feast, without specific identification.

The construction הוא זה היה אמרו חג בירושלים ("It was then, they said, the feast in Yerushalayim!") with the verb אמרו ("they said") even suggests a notable narrative distancing. The author is indirectly reporting what others said about the occasion, without himself committing to a specific identification of which feast it was. This syntactic detail indicates that the original text did not intend to link the event with any particular Jewish celebration.

The text continues saying וזמן חויף היה ("and it was wintertime"), where זמן means "time" as a generic temporal term, and חויף probably represents a dialectal variant or corruption of the term חורף meaning "winter". Again, this is a purely seasonal reference, not liturgical, without connotations of halakhic observance or participation in specific Jewish festivals.

Verse 23 presents architectural terminology different from the European tradition. It says בהיכל של מקום שלמה ("in the Heikhal of the place of Shelomoh"), instead of באכסדרת שלמה ("in the portico of Solomon") employed by European manuscripts. This terminological variation confirms that the Cochin tradition developed completely separate from European currents, employing different Hebrew vocabulary for architectural concepts, demonstrating absolute textual independence.

The Devastating Convergence: Europe + Cochin = No Hanukkah

The cumulative evidence of independent converging traditions proves irrefutable. Let us consider the manuscript witnesses in their entirety.

The European tradition, represented by Italy and the Ottoman Empire, presents MS Vatican ebr. 100 from the early mediaeval period saying וחורף היה ("and it was winter"), and MS Wrocław 59 from 1578 saying וחורף היה ("and it was winter"). None of these European manuscripts mentions חֲנֻכָּה at all.

The Indian tradition, preserved in Cochin and completely independent of Europe, presents MS Gaster 1616 prior to 1810 saying חג... וזמן חויף היה ("the feast... and it was wintertime"). This Indian manuscript does not mention חֲנֻכָּה, employing only an indefinite generic feast.

The convergence is mathematically devastating: two manuscript traditions that could not have mutually influenced each other for centuries converge towards total absence of חֲנֻכָּה, presence of seasonal winter reference, and absence of specific liturgical elements of Hanukkah such as lighting of candles, recitation of Hallel, or characteristic blessings.

Irrefutable Implications

This convergence constitutes what in textual criticism is termed independent convergent witness, the strongest type of evidence available for establishing original readings through rigorous scientific methodology.

The question that must be posed to those who claim that "Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah" is inescapable: if Hebrew versions of the Gospel of John preserved in mediaeval Europe—Italy, Spain, Ottoman Empire—and in India—Cochin, completely isolated for centuries—both omit any mention of Hanukkah and employ only generic seasonal references or indefinite feasts, upon what ancient manuscript textual basis is the claim that Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah founded?

The honest and devastating answer is: upon no ancient manuscript basis; solely upon modern nineteenth-century missionary translations that invented the association without foundation in primitive textual witnesses. Franz Delitzsch and subsequent translators inserted חֲנֻכָּה into their Hebraised versions without consulting or deliberately ignoring the mediaeval manuscript evidence that completely contradicts such a reading.

Reconstruction of Textual History: From the Semitic Original to Modern Missionary Forgery

Having examined the five key manuscripts, we can now reconstruct with reasonable certainty the complete textual trajectory of John 10:22-23, demonstrating how the word חֲנֻכָּה, absent from all primitive textual strata, was progressively inserted until culminating in the modern missionary forgeries that Messianic groups exploit without critical understanding of their spurious origin.

Phase 1 (First Century): Proposed Semitic Original Text

The hypothetical formulation of the original Semitic text would be:

אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם וחורף היה

("Rather, these words were spoken in Jerusalem, and it was winter")

This primitive text would exhibit specifically Semitic characteristics. It would employ the narrative construction אלא הדברים נאמרו, a natural Hebrew or Aramaic idiomatic turn absent from all known Greek versions. It would include exclusively seasonal reference through וחורף היה without any liturgical connotation. It would completely lack mention of specific festival, without reference to Hanukkah, dedication, or ritual ceremony of any kind.

Evidence for this primitive phase comes from multiple converging manuscript sources. MS Vatican ebr. 100 preserves precisely אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם וחורף היה. MS Wrocław 59 preserves the same identical formulation. MS Cochin preserves independent parallel formulation: חג... וזמן חויף היה, employing indefinite feast plus winter reference.

The independent Europe-Cochin convergence towards Semitic formulations mentioning only winter or generic indefinite feast, without חֲנֻכָּה, constitutes almost definitive evidence through rigorous textual criticism methodology that the original Semitic text did not identify the passage with Hanukkah.

Phase 2 (First-Second Century): Translation and Hellenising Adaptation into Greek

The Greek formulation resulting from the translation process would be:

Ἐγένετο [δὲ/τότε] τὰ ἐγκαίνια ἐν [τοῖς] Ἱεροσολύμοις [καὶ] χειμὼν ἦν

("It came to pass [then] the enkainia in Jerusalem [and] it was winter")

This Hellenising translation process implied critical and significant changes. The Semitic construction אלא הדברים נאמרו was simplified to Ἐγένετο [δὲ/τότε], losing the idiomatic Hebrew character and adopting standard Koiné Greek formulation meaning simply "it came to pass" or "it happened".

Critically, the Greek translator introduced the term τὰ ἐγκαίνια, which means "the enkainia" or "the dedication" or "the renewal". This is a specification or interpretation that the Semitic original did not contain. The Greek term ἐγκαίνια is generic, designating any ceremony of dedication, renewal or inauguration, without necessary specifically Jewish connotation. It was employed in the Hellenistic world for dedications of pagan temples, imperial statues, and public buildings completely alien to Judaism.

The seasonal reference was maintained: וחורף היה was translated as χειμὼν ἦν, preserving the winter mention present in the Semitic original.

The result of this process was that Greek uncial manuscripts of the fourth-fifth century, including Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Alexandrinus, Codex Vaticanus, Codex Bezae, and Codex Washingtonianus, preserve this Hellenised version that already includes τὰ ἐγκαίνια but significantly does not mention Hanukkah specifically through any Jewish technical term.

Phase 3 (Early Mediaeval): Preservation of Primitive Hebrew Tradition

MS Vatican ebr. 100 together with MS Cochin, representing completely independent European and Indian traditions, both preserve formulations reflecting the primitive Semitic stratum prior to the Hellenisation process. Both mention only winter or indefinite feast without liturgical specification. Neither mentions חֲנֻכָּה at all.

The critical interpretation of this evidence is that these Hebrew manuscript traditions do not derive from simple mechanical back-translation from the canonical Greek, but preserve elements of more primitive Semitic textual traditions than the fourth-fifth century Greek text itself. The presence of Semitic idiomatic constructions absent from the Greek, combined with the independent convergence of geographically isolated traditions, strongly suggests that these Hebrew manuscripts reflect textual strata prior to the translation and Hellenisation process documented in the Greek uncials.

Phase 4 (Sixteenth Century): Faithful Transmission of the Primitive Tradition

MS Wrocław 59, copied in 1578 in Constantinople, faithfully maintains the reading אלא הדברים נאמרו בירושלם וחורף היה, demonstrating remarkable textual stability through centuries of manuscript transmission. This stability indicates that the primitive formulation without mention of Hanukkah was the standard and widely accepted reading in communities preserving these polemical texts.

Phase 5 (Seventeenth Century): Critical Accidental Palaeographic Corruption

MS Saint Petersburg A 207, copied in 1689, introduces the critical transformation: וחורף becomes בחנוכה through palaeographic error in semi-cursive Sephardic script. This represents the first documented historical moment when textual association with Hanukkah appears. The origin of this reading is not preserved primitive tradition but accidental palaeographic confusion caused by visual similarities between letters in deteriorated cursive writing.

Phase 6 (Late Mediaeval): Editorial Harmonisation Towards the Canonical Greek

MS Heb. 751=8 physically documents through visible struck-through text the editorial harmonisation process. A mediaeval scribe, confronting contradictory variants in different Hebrew manuscripts and consulting the Greek text considered authoritative, strikes through אלא הדברים נאמרו, writes וחנוכה נעשתה deliberately approximating the Greek structure Ἐγένετο τὰ ἐγκαίνια, and maintains וחורף היה from the primitive tradition.

The result is a hybrid text that paradoxically moves away from the primitive Semitic and approaches the Hellenised Greek. This demonstrates that the version with חנוכה does not preserve primitive Hebrew tradition but represents mediaeval harmonisation towards the Greek text considered canonical and authoritative.

Phase 7 (Nineteenth Century): Consolidating and Fraudulent Missionary Hebraisation

Franz Delitzsch in 1877, working for the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews with explicit and confessed missionary agenda, adopts or directly inserts חֲנֻכָּה into his Hebraised translation, presenting it as "faithful" and "authentic" translation. Delitzsch completely ignores or deliberately suppresses the primitive manuscript evidence contradicting this reading. His translation consolidates the fraudulent association in modern Hebraised versions of the New Testament that would subsequently be employed by Messianic groups without critical understanding of their spurious origin and textually dishonest methodology.

Subsequent translations such as Salkinson-Ginsburg and United Bible Societies versions perpetuate this forgery, consolidating in the Messianic imagination the completely unfounded notion that "Yeshua celebrated Hanukkah" based upon texts representing the most distant and distorted point from the primitive formulations documented in mediaeval manuscripts.

Conclusion: What the Hebrew Manuscripts Really Demonstrate and How to Respond to Missionaries

Those who have been contacted by Messianic missionaries or Netzarite groups now possess irrefutable empirical evidence documented in mediaeval parchments to respond to their fraudulent claims about "Yeshua the observant Jew who celebrated Hanukkah".

The convergent primitive witnesses from Europe and Cochin, completely independent manuscript traditions separated by thousands of kilometres and centuries of cultural isolation, mention only וחורף היה ("and it was winter") or זמן חויף ("wintertime"). They employ Semitic narrative constructions absent from the Greek such as אלא הדברים נאמרו. They refer to indefinite feast through חג without liturgical specification. They do not mention חֲנֻכָּה at all. They do not describe celebration, ritual, or any liturgical observance. They do not contain distinctive elements of Hanukkah such as lighting of candles, oil miracle, recitation of Hallel, or characteristic blessings of this festival.

What missionaries systematically conceal through deliberate omission is that the word חֲנֻכָּה first appears in Hebrew manuscripts only in 1689 as the result of accidental palaeographic error. No Hebrew manuscript prior to 1689 contains textual association with Hanukkah. Completely independent manuscript traditions—Mediterranean Europe and Cochin in India—converge towards total absence of Hanukkah, constituting the strongest type of convergent evidence available in textual criticism. The "Judaised" version including חנוכה is the documentable product of accidental seventeenth-century corruption, mediaeval editorial harmonisation towards the Greek text considered authoritative, and fraudulent nineteenth-century missionary Hebraisation. Franz Delitzsch worked explicitly for the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews with confessed and documented missionary agenda in his own writings.

The "observant Jewish Yeshua of Hanukkah" presented by missionaries is a fiction constructed through modern Hebraised translations with confessed and documented missionary agendas, deliberate ignorance or fraudulent suppression of primitive manuscripts contradicting their claims, dishonest presentation of late textual corruptions as if they were original readings, and calculated exploitation of most Jews' lack of access to primary manuscripts and rigorous textual criticism methodology.

The mediaeval Hebrew manuscripts, far from supporting modern Messianic claims, are completely dismantled by tangible material evidence preserved in parchments that can be examined, photographed, and palaeographically analysed. The textual evidence irrefutably demonstrates that the primitive Semitic text did not mention Hanukkah, as confirmed by the independent convergence of European and Indian subcontinental manuscripts. The association with Hanukkah is late, appearing only after the seventeenth century through documentable processes. It arises through accidental palaeographic error caused by confusion between similar letters in semi-cursive script. It is subsequently consolidated by nineteenth-century Christian missionaries working explicitly for Jewish conversion societies.

The textual truth, documented in surviving mediaeval parchments, photographable, palaeographically analysable, and verifiable through rigorous scientific methodology, dismantles missionary forgeries. Authentic Judaism remains founded upon the Torah from Sinai faithfully transmitted through generations, not upon Christian fictions Judaised through systematic textual manipulation and fraudulent presentation of late corruptions as if they were primitive witnesses.