Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Gospel of Judas/archive2

Gospel of Judas
It has a previous FAC - Featured article candidates/Gospel of Judas/archive1. It failed that FAC because the Gospel of Judas was too much of a current event at the time. It is not now a current event. Clinkophonist 22:44, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Object Needs more citations, especially in the Responses and reactions section--Peter Andersen 07:06, 24 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Object per above. It could use some more images too, though I doubt there would be much of a variety. The writing is not "brilliant" in some places: During the second and third centuries AD, various semi-Christian and non-Christian groups composed texts which are loosely labelled as New Testament Apocrypha, usually but not always in the names of apostles, patriarchs or other persons mentioned in the Old Testament, New Testament or older Jewish apocryphal literature &mdash; some of this is confusing. The centuries should be reworded properly and the text needs to be split since this has essentially become a run-on sentence. There are some other issues as well. &mdash;Eternal Equinox | talk 20:13, 25 June 2006 (UTC)
 * As there are no official Wikipedia guidelines regarding the role of the FA director or how an article is promoted to featured status I am giving this article my support. Please see the discussions [] and [] at the featured article talk page for my reasoning. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jayzel68 (talk • contribs)


 * It can be improved by reducing links to solitary years. In this article, there is only link: '2006'. A monobook tool allows this to be done with one click on a 'dates' tab in edit mode. You can then accept or reject the changes offered and/or do more editing before pressing 'Save'. Simply copy the entire contents of User:Bobblewik/monobook.js to your own monobook. Then follow the instructions in your monobook to clear the cache (i.e. press Ctrl-Shift-R in Firefox, or Ctrl-F5 in IE) before it will work. Hope that helps. bobblewik 19:41, 28 June 2006 (UTC)