Homebrewed Christianity

The Infancy Gospel of Thomas on the Big Screen

Nov 13, 2025
Lotfi Nathan, a Coptic Christian filmmaker, discusses his provocative new film, "The Carpenter's Son," which adapts the Infancy Gospel of Thomas. He dives into the challenges of portraying Jesus' coming-of-age and his struggle with divine identity. The conversation explores the use of horror to convey biblical awe, the importance of Joseph's perspective, and the complexities of Jesus' maturation. With unique casting choices and a focus on moral dilemmas, Nathan invites viewers to wrestle with deep theological questions behind this unconventional narrative.
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INSIGHT

Jesus' Coming-Of-Age As Theological Lens

  • The film adapts the Infancy Gospel of Thomas to explore Jesus' coming-of-age and identity crisis.
  • It uses horror elements to surface theological questions about incarnation, suffering, and vocation.
ANECDOTE

Father's Book Sparked The Film

  • Lotfi Nathan's father introduced him to a restored copy of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas and sparked the idea for the film.
  • Nathan saw the text as rare fan-fiction that could sustain a cinematic project and immediately felt compelled to adapt it.
INSIGHT

Horror Amplifies The Sacred's Wildness

  • Nathan argues biblical and apocryphal material naturally lends itself to horror aesthetics because sacred texts often contain terrifying imagery.
  • He treats that horror as a palette, not mere controversy, to depict spiritual and moral complexity.
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