Woodbrooke Studies Vol 2
Woodbrooke Studies Vol 2
Woodbrooke Studies Vol 2
WOODBROOKE
VOL.
II
STUDIES
OAK, BIRMINGHAM
WOODBROOKE STUDIES
CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS IN SYRIAC, ARABIC, AND GARSHUNI, EDITED AND TRANSLATED
A.
MINGANA
RENDEL HARRIS
VOLUME
1.
2.
3.
Volume
12,
CAMBRIDGE
W. HEFFER & SONS LIMITED
1928
INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
The
present
volume
I
is
"
WoodMSS.
volume
texts contained in
my own
I
collection.
interest
first
of
the
and Oriental
printed in
those
Germany.
my
appreciative remarks of
all
who have
discoursed on the
their
words
the
"
friendly "
criticism
Studies
whenever
have
felt
justified
in
doing
so,
with a view
to further
improvement.
to
inquiries,
I
In
answer
may
here state
the "Studies"
Bourn ville,
Christian
Birmingham
literature
in
trust
(<$)
that
my
collection
MSS. on
in
Syriac,
Garshuni,
been given
Settlement,
Woodbrooke
Selly
which appears
on the
title-page of the
A
and
in
word
of
thanks
due
to
the
to the
way
task.
my
gratitude to
my
venerable
virility
friend for
of
A.
JOHN RYLAXDS LIBRARY,
1st
MINGANA.
August, 1928.
His curious
wife
slip to
Luke was
dream
present
of
Pilate's
instead of
the
volume.
CONTENTS.
PAGES
1-162
1-10
11-90
91-162
163-240
163-177
........
178-210
Text
211-240
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
Preface and Translation
241-332
241-282
Text
283-332
WOODBROOKE
CHRISTIAN EDITED
STUDIES.
ARABIC, AND GARS HUM CRITICAL APPARATUS.
BY A. MINGANA.
WITH INTRODUCTIONS.
BY
RENDEL HARRIS.
FASC.
3.
Mahdi.
INTRODUCTION.
IN
the year 781 A.D. in the reign of Mahdi, the third of the Abbassid Caliphs at Bagdad, there occurred a two-days' debate between the Catholicos or Patriarch of the East Syrian Church
also the recognised
(who was
Caliph
head
of
all
himself,
as
being the
spiritual
and
temporal
head
of
the
Mohammedan religion. It was a time when Islam was in ness of its new faith and animated by the glory of those
triumphs by which the
the fresh-
Most Holy
(blessed
is
He
call
!)
With the final consolidation of the new faith prophet and messenger. and the necessary canonisation of its great document (one book this
time, not four), there
of \vhich of
had come
himself
also the
dawn
of a
new
civilisation,
had never dreamed, and the splendour founded Mahdi's Bagdad, by predecessor, Mansur, had, to some
its
Mohammed
We
in
Haroun
al
Raschid,
who
is,
fact,
whom
second son and ultimately the successor of the Caliph with the Patriarch Timothy held his debate, and he is actually
engaged on a military expedition on behalf of his father for the further conquest of the unsubdued West, at the time when the discussion was
taking place.
What
is
more important
for us to realise
is,
not that
we
WOODBROOKE
Al
STUDIES
we
1
are very
Mohammed
Less than
it
50 years
of the
have elapsed
and
is
not only in a
first
we
Commanders
still
of the Faithful
in
a literary sense
we
for
we
have no
earlier
documentary is com-
monly regarded
Islam.
as decadent Christianity
The
period to
which
we
will
refer
is
itself.
So Dr. Mingana
directly contributing to
Mohammedan
published
for
if
history.
Nor
the
document,
which
is
here
the
first
Moslem,
we
find,
on reading
Meso-
commonly
Bagdad, as it has been in later by we may read the debate with and So under less rulers. days generous an open mind, whether we are Moslems or Christians, and we shall at
intolerance, at least in
least
be able
to
side,
if
we
and buttressed by obsolete practices and rituals, and doctrine, which has next to nothing to apologise for in the
shape of obscure rituals, was, in the time of the early Abbassid Caliphs, undivorced from reason, and not requiring, either first or last, the sacrifice of the intellect. As we read the report of the conference, we
shall
be surprised to
find
:
how
one another's arguments the Patriarch praises the Caliph, endorsing from time to time his theology, and we feel the sincerity of his commendations, which outrun any possible cloak of hypocrisy
;
and the
Caliph on
his side
is
so touched
by the piety and the eloquence of his an appeal which, if done into Latin,
esses.'
would
" "
'
be,
O cum
talis sis,
utinam noster
their
If
Mohammed
meanings
fine."
On
so far as to startle
he does
not,
like
stagger at the
Koran and
the
sword
"
;
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
he uses the Kuran as a text-book
in the debate,
Old Testament
uses
it,
in the
suppres-
"
sion of idolatry.
Who
will not,"
says Timothy,
"praise, honour,
and
exalt the
one
who
God
in
him
in the
sword
as
Moses
it
when he saw
all
that they
and when
it
he
killed
those
who were
..."
from which
appears that
great
Timothy would have made an excellent Puritan, and a but we preacher of the Old Testament among the Ironsides
;
in the desire
document before
us.
One
may be
is
given to those
who
called
Orthodox
rightly
Christianity.
Do
work
he
It
by a preliminary objection
official
was
may,
the
representative of
we
think, safely
Catholic definitions.
Once indeed he
deals
a dying or a suffering
God may
expect
be taken
in
an ortho-
dox
sense.
We
must
not,
of course,
to find
Ashis
sumption of
the Virgin, of
which he
clearly
;
knows nothing
however, the modern if, Mariolatry indeed is moderate enough reader does not ask too much from the Patriarch's noble confession of
faith,
he
let
will find as
much
as
he has a
And
now
us turn to our
Moslems on
Apology, and see what it tells us with regard the one hand, and the Christian
Apologetic
in
Apology
religion,
or the
its
Defence
of the Faith
is
from
its
first
publication
end
of
possible
that
existence
as
announced
function of
and
4
followers.
WOODBROOKE
You
!
STUDIES
shall
Synagogues, yes
sake,
to
be brought before Sanhedrin and beaten in and before kings and rulers shall ye be set for my
In this
way
Jesus describes
;
what we may
court of
a progressive Apologetic, an expanding defence the judges change, the defence will change to match the court. It is a
Jews
Notice
the vision of Jesus in the matter of Apology, and His implied assertion
of
His own
sake.
central position in
any
my
And
as
He
is
in the dock,
and
be standing in the dock with Him and He with them, or they will be allowed to act as Counsel for His defence He does
;
Pagan
Apologia.
Naturally the manner of the defence will vary, according to the constitution of the Court, and the code of laws which has been
infringed.
is
We
own
into
shall,
in Christian
sat
They
their
had
before ever
Roman
were
seen,
and
one" were
"
the primal
veloped
the
Non
in
licet
vos esse" of
important to keep
this
mind because
we
document
before us abundant traces that the Testimony which Jesus foretold was,
to
begin with,
that
it
was
even though the Jewish advocates had ceased developed along to appear, and the Jews themselves had come to be dismissed with One cannot understand Christian contempt by the Christian Orator.
this line,
We shall
what
We
were speaking
of the Christian
we
shall
They were
was
to
not to premeditate,
nor prepare
speeches prepared and preferred Silence, plus what we may without irreverence The Spirit itself should tell them, call the Luck of the Holy Ghost.
;
set
their position
to say, as well as
to abstain
from preparing to
No
doubt
in
the
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
first
ages,
and often
it
to
what seemed
and so
we have
philosophers
with documents, which they throw at the heads of princes, without waiting for the arrest which they may feel sure will not very long be
deferred.
over,
Where
there
is
no Court
of
they will
make
say in
use
book-form the things which they would like to Dialogue, and Justin Martyr, for instance, does not say in a full and open Court.
really vary his
theme
in
Apology to his Dialogue document will show the same arguments and The Apology was never recited, and some
people say that the Dialogue, considered as a discourse between real are not disposed to concede this persons, never occurred. only
We
to
we
are bearing in
mind
shows
that
it
Apology
be derived from an
even
when
may be
aside in favour
a true philosopher
you can
is
speak
while Justin
a Platonist, and
God
until
him awkwardly,
his
robe the
Book
of the
Prophets of
Israel.
These preliminary considerations will help us to understand the He position which Timothy is going to take up before the Caliph.
will
take part
in
a philosophical
and
it
theological
argument,
it
more
;
but
he knows that the common ground of their agreement does not lie in the Moslem philosophy, however much they may overlap Christian
thought, but in the
common
and he and
is
is
him
in
this
much
Chief
Rabbi
of
a hundred
Each
both accept the Torah both accept the Gospel (only the in a caveat Caliph puts against possible corruptions either of Torah or and what is Gospel, in a sense that would be unfavourable to Islam)
;
more
least
the
6
Christian debater
WOODBROOKE
is
STUDIES
Kuran
in cases
where
its
testi-
mony
is
Law
The
area of
way, and even when qualified by limitations, a wider area than could be marked out if the Caliph had been, let
In that sense Christian
nearer
together
than either
could
be
in
debate
first
controversialists.
who
for the
we
Moreover
it
is
not merely an
one hand by the courtesy and grace of a prince, who has the very life of his opponent contingent upon a word that he might say, but is too
good a Moslem
of the Patriarch,
to say,
and on the other hand evoked by the courage of his utterance. The two are at
one in a number of fundamental points, and this underlying unity so well expressed and so generously admitted on both sides, is what gives As we have the document something more than a passing value.
said, the
It is,
of debate
at
least
it
seems
so.
One
and
Christian or
Moslem
tradition
I
apologetic.
to recall
something wrote some years since in review of a tract which my dear The Tmine friend, Mrs. Gibson, had written on what she called Nature of God.
In this connection
I
which
published
was an Arabic
treatise
which she had transcribed from an early MS. in the Library of the 1 Convent of St. Kathrine on Mount Sinai. It was edited by her
under the
"
title
On
the Triune
evidently
intended as
a piece of propaganda,
his
the conversion by a
Christian writer of
Moslem
same
neighbours,
It
quarter.
Moslem and
I
Christian relations
if
assigned,
is
which
I
we
are engaged.
asserted should
Mukammedanos,
was not
went
wider ground
of
and
volume
of Studio. Sinaitica.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
on
to point out in the pages of the
7
J
whom
Mrs.
the very
same Scriptural arguments in dealing with Moslems predecessors had been in the habit of using against the Jews.
he had
for the
lost
book
of
was
made
necessary
by the change
in the persons
Moslems.
My
fallen
lies in
One
its
Testimonies, with
Jews have
from grace, that new worship and a new covenant have been called for, followed by the series of Biblical proofs on the nature
of the
Messiah, to
satisfy ourselves
completely that
we
are sailing on
and Cyprian.
Look,
for
instance,
at
the
following
statements
of
Timothy
in
"
the
our victorious King, the changes that were to take place God has clearly predicted
prophets
previously
whom we
have mentioned.
God
'
dissolution of the
"
Law
of
Moses and
saith the
Lord, that
will
make a new
first
covenant,
Here Timothy
book
'
method
of Cyprian's
of
Testimonies.
He
goes on
to tell the
Caliph that
We
and
distinct
Torah and
the prophet's"
testimonies about
Him."
The Jews did not Torah and the prophets were These he proceeds torepeat, in the
to the
"
same way as
Justin and Cyprian repeat them, only adding Christian corpus of Testimonies such corroboration as he can
extract
from the pages of the Kuran, of which he has evidently been a careful student. When he is challenged to say whether the title Servant Oj
God
is
:
title
Son of God, he
replies
8
"
WOODBROOKE
He
STUDIES
way, and a lamb.
He
was
He
was a
Here we
whole
section
titles
of Christ, to
which a
was
Book of
Testimonies, but
currency Testimonies of the Prophets conserved it. do not think that any one will read the Patriarch's biblical arguments carefully without seeing that they are based upon a previous collection of prophecies. These
We
whom
the appeal
and Prophets was in order but it must never be forgotten that the Law and the Prophets are equally a Court of Appeal for the
;
Law
Moslems.
The
is
whether the
Law
and
the Prophets and the Testimonies that they contain have been trans-
text.
The
challenge as to
made by
form
we were
surprised to find
so early
Moslem Old
says,
and
New
falsified
name
of
Muhammad
as the Prophet
of
God.
The
Patriarch
is
Muhammad
;
of
whom
Let the uncorrupt copies be produced since they and since they cannot be found, it is
corruption.
Of
we may
" I would be very nearly resolves into a concession on one side that Could concession if it were to be a Moslem possible." go persuaded
further than the admission that
Muhammad
walked
prophets, whether
that
if I
we
call
or the statement
had found
in the
Muhammad,
left
the
I would have left the Gospel for the Kuran, Torah and the Prophets for the Gospel ? All
have
is
this
consistent with
"
sweet reasonableness."
The
defect of the
Kuran
is
Timothy's judgment.
He
makes no concession
that
is
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
belief
craft,
;
9
religion into state-
and
those
who
of
oppose
in the
West
the
new
militarism of
hell,"
the East
by the name
1
he
serious Christian or a sober-minded Moslem goes further than either a Was it a crime to defend Constantinople against could follow him. it be no crime but the highest virtue to defend would and Bagdad, " " Murderers was a two-edged epithet against Byzantium ?
Bagdad
it
do
so.
and
inconsistency, which at least may add to our constant wonder how such tractable and submissive people as the Patriarch represents could
we
turn
with admiration to the dignity and the courteousness of the Caliph's If he is pressed into a position in which he has attitude in debate.
he introduces a new
times, as
nothing to reply, or where nothing further can be said with advantage, Somesubject, or repeats a former statement.
when
Sun and
its
Light and
its
such similitudes are insufficient for the exposition of the Nature " of God, the Caliph observes (with a twinkle in his eye) that You will
that
all
God
in
your bodily comparisons and similitudes." had admitted in advance, and was ready
concede and repeat, only with the explanation that the creature, discoursing on the nature of the Creator, must necessarily use the
So they continue
their
two-days' discourse, agreeing where they can, as on the Virgin Birth of Jesus and the sinlessness of His character (which the Caliph holds
it
is
blasphemy
to deny),
and
differing
as on the
Unity or Trinity of God, and on the question whether either Christ really died on the Cross.
In the
God
or
not transcendental in
its
interpretation, the
Parable,
we may
call
on a fog-
ridden day. Jesus Himself had played with the Quest for such a Pearl in the Gospel but this time the Pearl is not overseas it has
; ;
Was
he perhaps affected
by the fanaticism
of
certain persecuting
Byzantine Emperors?
10
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
;
been dropped on the floor of the house many are searching think have found one it, many they grasping a stone, another a
glass or the like, while
for
bit
it,
of
Who shall
it.
say in
declare
When
the fog
we shall know. We have it, says the Caliph, with a own which has the very ring of reality. Amen, says the Patriarch, may we all be found in possession of it, when the Day of The Judgment, of illuminated and undeceived Judgment arrives.
Eureka
of his
Patriarch, however,
that
all
was
it
to
be thought
faiths,
till
chance
He
the Pearl to
which
The
is
groping
the darkened
its
room and
luminosity of
'
own.
One
*
the
awful rose of
Dawn
atmosphere has a can find it in the dark, without waiting for at the end of the world, in which both
in the fog-laden
Moslem and
this soft
Christian believe.
He indicates some of
itself
;
the
ways
in
which
for
God
and wonders,
of
the
Holy
Spirit,
the Paraclete.
And
so the
two noble champions withdraw from the arena, praying for his Majesty and his heirs a kingdom that
be moved.
RENDEL HARRIS.
PREFACE, EDITION
BY A.
AND TRANSLATION.
MINGANA.
PREFATORY NOTE.
in
the
following
critical
1GIVE accompanied by a
Christianity.
The
writer
the
Apology
is
the
celebrated
Nestorian Patriarch Timothy I. (A.D. 780-823), and the man to whom it was delivered by word of mouth is no less than Mahdi, the third
There is reason to believe that it 'Abbassid Caliph (A.D. 775-785). was delivered in this way towards the end of A.D. 781 or at the latest
782.
See below,
p.
84.
The Apology
title
is
mentioned by 'Abdisho*
Discussion with Mahdi."
of Nisibin in his
"
Assemani, Bib. Orient., nl 162. The Apology is in the form of a private theological discussion between Timothy and Mahdi. It is not necessary to suppose that every word
in
it
was
it
that
made under
the circumstances of the questions and answers of the Caliph and the
Patriarch.
We
may
some confidence
his
words
gist of his
objections.
Arabic, but
we
have
it
now
ecclesiastical
have ever
See
of
It
any Church either Eastern or Western. is naturally somewhat difficult to ascertain the duration
of the time
tfiat
must have elapsed between the two days of the oral discussion of
the
two
first
1
friendly antagonists,
was
written
his
down
in its
and the days in which that oral discussion present form by the Christian protagonist
On
my Early Spread of Christianity in Central Asia, 1925, pp. 12-17, 74-76. See also my Early Spread of Christianity in India, 1926,
34 and 64.
12
WOODBROOKE
the nature of
STUDIES
in
From
the text
am
inclined to
believe that that time could not have been very considerable,
and
783
which
we
"before these days" (p. 16). I have in my footnotes compared Timothy's Apology under Mahdi
in the eighth century
that of
'Abd al-Masih
Kindi's
and that
I
of 'Ali b.
at-Tabari.
is
in favour of Christianity
1
to
which
refer
by
the
Ma'mun
(A.D. 813-833),
and
wad-Daulah,
I
is
in favour of
2
Rabban is entitled Kitab ad- Din Islam, and was written under the Caliph
Apology mentioned by
'
may
the
is
Muslim Blruni
of Nisibin
was 'Abdallah
discussions
al-Hashimi, informs us
Apology.
The Apology
itself
makes mention
contemporary events
that took place in the time of the author, such as the insurrection of
G Atabag al-Khurrami, and counts two hundred
which the Prophet lived down to the time in which it was written.' Kindi himself being decidedly a Nestorian could not possibly be confused wtth any other author of a hostile community from the beginning of the ninth to the end of the tenth century, such as the Jacobite
Yahya
hymn,
"
sleep
in
b.
'Adi
who
Kindi
"
"
who
created
the light,"
10
explains the
clearly
and
shows
belief in the passages his adhesion to the Nestorian Christological 11 author could No Jacobite possibly have mystery of the Incarnation.
many
done
this.
was
use in
my
by
in
My
my own 3
edition
1922-1923. 4 Catalogue
5
Athar,
in
213.
*
Risalah,
p. 8.
'Ibid., p. 65.
ii,
Ibid., p. 105.
and
iii,
p. 47.
ibid.,
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
book
of such
13
1
an aggressive tone as that created by the Caliph Ma'mun, and no author could have spoken in such a way of himself, of his adversary and of Islam in general except a man of a true and noble
Arabian extraction
as Kindi,
on
his
own
showing," was.
As to the distinction between si/at dhat and sifat fil they are adaptations to Arabic and Islamic philosophy of the previously known
Syriac terms of dilaita
the present
dakkyana and
Timothy
Even
cannot,
Apology
of
therefore, see
why
a Christian
Arab author
and
in
820
at
made
was
home
my judgment
the argument
taken from the use of these two terms in favour of a later date for the
3
Christian
Apology
is
scientifically
unwarranted
by the Nestorian
Christian
has also been urged that another detail might suggest that the Apology was not composed by Kindi but by an author of
and
that
is
is
it
makes
the
name
of
Muhammad
God.
It
who
died in A.D. 923 refuted an opinion similar to this held by the Hanbali Barbahari, the Apology could not be ascribed to about A.D. 820. But is it not probable that such a belief was held also by
some Muslims
What
first
proof have
to
we
that
it
was
the
the
man
:
After a careful study of the subject I have come to in my the only probable conclusion that from internal and external judgment
belief ?
evidence
in spite of
Kindi's
Apology
it.
for Christianity
is
some
variants exhibited
MSS.
that contain
at
by the different Arabic and Garshuni The contrary opinion is, I believe, a mistake
which should be
once corrected.
To
fidence that
the
Patriarch
acquired at first-hand
his
it
well acquainted with the does not seem to have been knowledge was rather derived from some Christians of
may
state
own community.
of the existence of
is also very doubtful whether he was aware a Syriac translation of the Islamic Book. The
It
p. 134.
3
Encydop&dia of Islam,
5
ii.
ii.
1021.
1021.
Encyclopedia of Islam,
14
"
phrase
I
WOODBROOKE
"
STUDIES
in this
heard
not a
The most
xix.
in
1
a
;
48
iv.
56
iv.
59
iv.
70
xix.
34
xxi.
91
and
xc. 1-3.
He
is
also
aware
of the existence of
The
Kur'an
emphasised
in
my
foot-notes, but
it
will not
put side
If
Kur'an as quoted by Barsalibi by l and by Timothy. a text which I edited and translated in 925 both texts are identical there would be strong reasons for believing
side the Syriac text of the
1
Barsalibi
from a
is
On
not Barsalibi's
text.
Barsalibi.
|Jo
-
Timothy.
]]
rnr>VAo
|]}
wOlQi^.
|]o
jO1Q\^O
j]
iv,
156.
>>ZiaLo 0105
xix,
34.
iii,
48.
Not
in
Barsalibi.
xix,
7.
^? U*C
xxi,
91
oriLo
i\i> oaio
xc,
1-:
Not
in
Bar?alibi.
1r^ loOUj
iv,
170.
An
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
The
preserved
15
only old
in the
MS.
Apology
1
is
the one
Monastery
which may be
it
From
are tran17.
Seert 65,'
Vatican
8 1,
Apart frem Seert 65 which might have been ascribed to the eighteenth century all the other MSS. were copied in the nineteenth century, and
if
we have a faithful copy of the MS. of we have practically all the other MSS.
For
Lady
It
my
present edition
give all
Mingana
7 in facsimile.
was
transcribed
some
thirty years
Abraham Shikwana
of our
it
of
MS.
(in
of the
1
Monastery
I
Lady, and
in
my
journey to the
East
925)
collated
The reader has therefore every myself with the original MS. In some reason to rely on the accuracy of the text of the Apology.
passages
clearness.
my
The
sometimes maintained.
p.
In
an
article in the
J.R. A. S. (1920,
Apology
versies
for Islam
drew
between Muslims and Christians had not undergone any the same remark holds good appreciable change since the 9th century with regard to Timothy's and Kindi's Apologies for Christianity.
;
TRANSLATION.
With
will write the debate held by the Patriarch Timothy before Mahdi, the Commander of the Faithful, by way of question and answer on the subject of the Christian religion.
the assistance of
God we
Mar
On
^o.
:
the one
I
hand
am
in
in
feel
reference to No.
96
p.
is
57.
The
a misprint.
In Scher's In my last journey to the East in 1925 I was catalogue. informed on the spot that this MS. was among those which had been destroyed by Kurds in the world war of 1914-1918. 3 In 1909, p. 263 and in Zeit. f. Assyr., ix., p. 363. 4 In Revue des Bibliotheques, \ 908, No special mention, howp. 80.
/A,
erer, is
3
made of the Apology in the Catalogue. The correspondent of the Patriarch. He was
monk and
teacher of the monastery of
priest,
Mar Abraham,
Metropolitan of Elam.
lo
of the
\VOOnnROOKt: SIVOIKS
futility
work
state
It is
true that
could not
Km acquired
in the
cfrscussion Heroin
may
an experience from
one involved
promt
lucubration,
/ *m *i*w
in order to confirm
and
inasmuch as the habit of friendly correspondence hat acquired the right of prescription from very early times, and has thereby received an additional title to existence ; as a
habit,
corroborate a traditional
matter of fact
KitVruxv..
\
is
it
bom and
i>
.iiul
grow* in us from our childhood, nay even W.N Jmfell fa xhAcluiUl ot Mu-h a Jm.ition.
.-i
H AM MUM,
to
Mid ^ An Kx^miK -^m^imo uitiin^ when I am reminded by a wise man who says that draw upon that which is difficult to inherit This is
KoW%Ver,
I
also
due
is
to
me
difficult
and
is
even
against
my
we know
Weoften see that a strong and well rooted branch goes spontaneously
back to its former and congenial
and we do
find that
when
has been violently twisted, powerful torrents are diverted from their
stale after it
natural channels with violence, they return immediately to their natural and customary course, without the need of any violence, This
me in relation to your groat wisdom to put a stop to our correspondence we must needs make me of violence, but after the ca&afcH* of this viokftce* we go back to our natural state, while love conquers all between us and covers die weaknesses of the Desh whkh
Happens to
j
ate
whkh
known
and
your great wisdom* as if you were their father and originator, and are Love also known to all the members of the Orthodox Church,
and hides all these weaknesses as Aft water covers and hides But let us now embark on our mam die rodb that are under k. habit and ancient custom. subject in the way sanctioned by our old
covers
be known to your wisdom, God-loving Lord, that before the* days 1 had an audience of our victorious King, and according to Majesty. When, in the. nmited spnot usage I prawd God and h
Lei
it
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
allowed to me,
'n
1
17
had
finished the
which
spake
of the nature of
thing to me,
which he
Catholicos, a
utters such
man
like
words of my complimentary address, God and His Eternity, he did some" O had never done before he said to me and who all this knowledge you possesses
;
:
about
God
I
sublime words concerning God, is not justified in saying He married a woman from whom He begat a son." " And who is, God-loving King, replied to his Majesty
that
'
God
is
"
-And
is
our
vu lorious
King
said to
me
"
:
What
"
:
?"
And
replied to his
in
Majesty
King, Christ
the
Word-God,
who appeared
victorious
King
"
?
the flesh for the salvation of the world." And our " not that Christ is the me Do you say questioned
:
Son
the
1
of
God
of
And
1
replied to his
"
:
Son
God, and
confess
Him
King, Christ
as such.
is
Him
This
learned from Christ Himself in the Gospel and from the Books of
the Torah and of the Prophets, which know Him and call Him by the " " name of Son of God but not a son in the flesh as children are born
way, but an admirable and wonderful Son, sublime and higher than mind and words, as it fits a divine Son
in
the carnal
more
to be."
:
"
Our King
asked then
"
:
How ?
"
And
replied to his
is
Majesty
it
He
is
born,
we
learn
and
believe in
times,
but
and we
dare not investigate how He was born before the are not able to understand the fact at all, as God is
we
in all things
but
we may
say in an
soul,
who
is
Word,
before
that
"
all
the worlds."
And
it.
born of God, high above the times and " our King said to me Do you not say
:
He was born of
say
it
"
the Virgin
We
and confess
And
said to his
is
Christ
of
man born
soul
of
Mary.
From
He
is
is
Word-God,
the sun and
He
is
light
from
fact that
He is born
fore,
1
of the Virgin Mary, in time from the Father is, thereborn eternally, and from the Mother He is born in time, without
He He
man
The
'
Abdallah
Christian apologist Kindi refutes an objection of his adversary, " b. Isma'il al-Hashimi, which was in almost identical terms
:
We
never say about the Most High God that He begat a son," AY.sw.'W//, p. 37.
He
married a
woman
2
from
whom
Cf.
Is. ix.
6.
18
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
a Father, without any marital contact, and without any break in the seals of the virginity of His Mother." Then our God-loving King said to me " That He was born of
:
Mary
is
found
in
the Book,
and
"
is
well
seals
known, but
possible that
He
"
?
of the virginity of
if
His mother
And
replied to
him
King,
we consider
it is
both facts
because
should be born without breaking the seals of his mother's virginity, and is equally impossible that He should be conceived without a man's intercourse. But if we consider not
impossible that a
man
nature but God, the Lord of nature, as the Virgin was able to conceive without marital relations, so was she able to be delivered of her child
without any break in her virginal seals. There is nothing impossible " 2 with God, who can do everything."- Then the King said That a man can be born withour marital intercourse is borne out by the
:
example
of
fashioned by
man
God
we have no
And
That
the
He
His mother we
there
is
From Book
example
rent
to
it
the side of
Adam without
having
and the example of Jesus Christ who ascended Heaven without having torn and breached the firmament. In this
or fractured
of
them.
without having broken her virginal seals all This can also be illustrated from nature
Mary
is
born
apples and all aromatic substances is born of their respective trees or of the plants without breaking and tearing them, and the rays are born
born
As all these are sun without tearing or breaking its spheric form. of their generators without tearing them or rending them, so also as His Christ was born of Mary without breaking her virginal seals
;
Father
is
wonderful, so also
is
His temporal
Mary."
iii.
Kur an,
41
xxi. 91
2
.
Luke
i.
37.
Kur'in
iii.
41
etc.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
And
time ?"
19
me
:
"
:
Eternal
One
born
in
And
answered
"
It
He
was
born of Mary,
O
is
And
beings
:
me
There
are, therefore,
two
distinct
one
eternal
and
God
from
God
as
you
said,
and the
other temporal, the latter is therefore a pure man from " Christ is not two beings, I retorted King, nor
:
Son and
l
there are in
Him two
natures,
is
belongs to the
itself
Word and
with the
Word-God."
I
And
They
are, there-
whom created and fashioned, and the other uncreated and unfashioned," And said to him " We do not deny the duality of natures, O King, nor their mutual relations, but we profess that
fore,
two, one of
both
of
them
the
constitute
And
King
is
is
retorted
"If
He
I
is
one
He
is
:
He
is
two,
He
not one."
And
one
in
replied to
him
and
is
if
A man
one,
while in reality he
and two
former
is
in
composition and individuality, the distinction found between his soul and his body the
two
his
and corporeal. Our King, together with the insignia of his Kingdom is also one King and not two, however great may be the difference that separates him
invisible
spiritual,
and
and the
latter visible
from
his dresses.
the clothings
same
Christ,
same way the Word of God, together with of humanity which He put on from Mary, is one and the and not two, although there is in Him the natural differIn the
;
Word-God and His humanity and the fact that one does not preclude the fact that He is also two. The very same Christ and Son is indeed known and confessed as one, and the
He
is
fact that
He
is
also
or mixture, because
~
the
known
attributes of
one person
of the
Son
and Christ."
" our King retorted to me Even in this you cannot save And I demonstrated the fact to him yourself from duality in Christ." " The tongue and the word are through another illustration and said
And
with
at
"
Note
the semi-Nestorian expression of putting on, clothing oneself as applied to the union of God with man in the Incarnation. In the
"
following pages
we
shall not
every time.
Parsopa,
20
WOODBROOKE
in
STUDIES
in
way
that the
two
two words nor two tongues, but one word, together with the tongue and the voice, so that they are called by all one tongue with This is the word and the voice, and in them one does not expel two.
also the case with the
Word-God
distinction
He
is
while
preserving
the
between
His
visibility,
in
His
and between His Divinity and His humanity. Christ son-ship, and two in the attributes of His natures."
our King said to
to
one
And
to
My
God and
your
me " Did not Jesus Christ " God ? And said " It
:
say,
is
am going
is
another sentence
which precedes it and which is worthy of mention." And the King asked: "Which is it?" And I said: "Our Lord said to His
'
Disciples
am
going to
"
My
God
If
Father and to your Father, and to can this be And our King said "
:
My
?
How
He
His God,
I
He
is
His Father, He is not His God, and if " not His Father what is this contradiction ?
is
;
He
:
He is And
replied to
him
"
There
is
no contradiction
here,
God-loving
King.
it
The
fact that
He
is
that
He
is
also
His
God
His Father by nature does not carry with by nature, and the fact that He is His
God by
is,
He
is
His Father by
nature.
He
Him
;
however, from His Father by the nature of the Word, born of from eternity, as light from the sun and word from the soul
and
God
is
His
God by
Word
born of
Man is living and rational only by the nature of his soul, Mary. which has indeed received from God a living and rational nature, but
he
is
said to
be
living
and
rational in his
body
also,
through
its
associa-
and
rational soul.
In reality
what he
is
by nature
when his body and soul are separated, is not what he is in its composite state when his body and soul are united. In spite of all this however, In the same is one he called living and rational man and not tivo. way God is called, and is, the Christ's Father by the nature of the union of Word- God with our human nature, and on the other hand
He
is
called
in
His
God
by the nature
of
His humanity
that
He
took
from us
"
Word-God.
In this
way He
John xx.
1
is
He
7.
The Arabic
niu/tal.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
was not born was
the
of
21
Mary
in the
He
born of
God
in
same way as He was born of God, nor the same way as He was born of Mary. So
really one, in spite of
His
God
as Father
He is Word-God,
God
of
His
from Mary."
here marks of doubt as to the possibility of
all
the above explanations, and I removed his doubt through another " The letter of the Commander of the Faithful illustration, and said
is
one, both
in the
words
it
and
in the
papyrus on
is
which the words are written, and our King, the King of Kings, He is called called both the father and the owner of his letter.
father through the
its
words born
of
his soul,
on the papyrus, and he is called its owner through his being the owner Neither the of the papyrus on which the words have been written.
papyrus, however, is, by nature, from the soul of the King, nor the words are by nature from the papyrus-reed, but the words are by
nature born of the soul of the King, and the papyrus
of the papyrus-reed,
t,e.,
from Trarrupo?.
In this
His being Word-God and in His humanity taken from us, but the very same God of Christ is both His Father and His God His Father, from the fact that He was born before the times of
one, both
in
:
the Father,
and His
God
from the
fact that
is
He
is
was born
in
time of
Mary.
is
By
nature, however,
He
not a
man from
first
the
Word
He
God, and
in
man."
said to
Then
loving
our
me
I
"
:
has no genital
And
replied to
"O
God-
King,
how
can the
spirit
As He
worlds
without
of the
instruments of creation,
genital
so
He
medium
organs.
If
He could not be born without the intermediary of He could not by inference have created without the
the early
of cases,
There is no doubt therefore that the official letters and documents of Abbasids were written on papyrus and not on parchment. The Arabic word Kirtas seems by inference to indicate papyrus in the majority
if
not always.
22
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
If
He
created without
He was, therefore, born without the genital Lo, the sun also begets the rays of light without any genital
is
and create, although He is a and without any genital organs and simple and not a composite spirit instruments of creation begets the Son and makes the Spirit proceed
therefore able to beget
;
God
He
from the essence of His person as the sun does for the
heat."
light
and the
And
Holy
them."
me
"
:
Do
:
Spirit ?
And
I
answered
you believe in Father, Son and "I worship them and believe in
therefore,
Then
"
'You,
believe
in
in
three
Gods
And
"
King
The
belief
the above
belief in
belief in
and the
God.
The
So
God.
We
Spirit as
one God.
Jesus Christ
taught
us,
prophets.
his spirit,
our God-loving King is one King with his word and and not three Kings, and as no one is able to distinguish
spirit
As
calls
him King
so also
God
is
one
God
with
His
Word
and His
the Spirit of
its light
God
its
Spirit, and not three Gods, because the Word and are inseparable from Him. And as the sun with
is
and
heat
God
with His
Word
and His
not three
Gods
but
is
and
is
called
one God."
Then
me
' :
What
is
my word
It
is
:
some"
God
and disappears." And I replied does not resemble in His nature the Commander
to
him
As
of the Faithful,
so also the
Word and
because
the Spirit of
God do
Commander
do not
This
exist,
is
of the Faithful.
We men
sometimes
and sometimes
exist
we have
we are created.
at
spirit,
which
one time
and
another cease to
is
but
He
exist, and have a beginning and an end. higher and more exalted than all is not like us exists divinely and eternally, and there was no
time in which
not be.
He was not, nor will there be a time in which He will He has no beginning and no end, because He is not created.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
In
23
the
same
way
are
is
His
Word
and His
Spirit,
who
exist divinely
and
eternally, that
God
with God, without any separation." " Are the Word and the Spirit not Then our King said to me " And I replied " No never. As light and separable from God ?
: : :
Word) and
the Spirit
God
light
Him.
it
If
and
its
heat,
it
will
immediately become
will cease to
Spirit,
be sun, so also
if
one
be a
He
will cease to
is
and
1
living
called
irrational,
"
is
dead.
If
one, therefore,
a time in which
He
had no
Spirit, such a one would blaspheme against God, because his saying would be equivalent to asserting that there was a time in If such adjectives are conwhich God had no reason and no life.
Word
and no
sidered as blasphemy
that
said of
God,
it
follows
God
begat the
Word
Spirit
proceeding from
life.
Him
eternally
and without
any
life
beginning, as a source of
God
is
and wisdom
wisdom
to all the
all
to flow to
the
wisdom He imparts by His Word rational beings, and as a source of life He causes life living beings, celestial and terrestrial alike, because
as a source of
God
is
Word
and His
Spirit."
And
God."
Books
me
"
:
Tell
me
me
I
that the
' :
Word
and the
And
replied
We
'
can demonstrate
from the
of the Prophets,
prophets,
David
said
and afterwards from the Gospel. As to the first thus By the Word of the Lord were the
:
all
Spirit of
His mouth.'
were God,
4
'
In
Word
of
shall
glorify the
God Word
as
of
if it
in the
God.'
Further, in
dead he
said of
God,
Thou
sendest
"
"
same root milltha is used to express both " reason and word." The author plays on this identical root in a constant manner. " 2 " In Syr. which means also " soul." Spirit 3 4 Ps. xxxiii. 6 Ps. Ivi. 10 (Peshitta). (Peshitta).
In Syr. the
24
forth
WOODBROOKE
Thy
Spirit
l
STUDIES
the earth.'
being, nor
The
and they are created, and Thou renewest the face of prophet David would not have glorified a created
called creator
would he have
and fashioned.
'
was
of
created
as
:
'
who Word
God
itself
2
he writes
God, without a beginning and without an end, because Thou art for ever, O Lord, and Thy Word standeth in
Heaven
the
God
is
for ever in
heaven, so also
Word
who
is
God
is
in
heaven
is
for ever
he
without an end
also
who
speaks of the
'
Word
God
in a
way
similar to that of
David,
in saying thus
Word
of our
for ever.'
Other prophets
Gospel
:
So
far as the
is
'
also speak of this point in several passages. concerned we gather the same conclusion from In the beginning
was
4
the
Word, and
the
Word
two
was with God, and the Word was God.' that the Word is eternal, and that things
:
We
the
nature.
us also the
'
In
Him was
"
(in
Spirit in
same
Word
Word
God was
it."
'
'
life
which
means
Him) was
"
Spirit
or
"
He
was
In saying of the
was," does not refer to any beginning, and so is the case with regard to the second passage referring to " " was is not speaking of the Spirit. Indeed the Gospel in using this
in the first passage that
Word
He
"
His
in
creation but of
His
eternity.
If
Spirit
is life
and
life is
eternally
the Spirit
?) is
is
consequently
eternally in
God.
'
And
Jesus Christ
of
the Spirit of
God, and the life and light His Father, And now,
Self with the glory
6
men.
Father,
I
O
to
Thou
Me
with Thine
own
which
had
'
;
with
Thee
had
He
said here,
which
if
He had before
'
came
Him
He
said,
With
kad come
'
to
me
with
Thee
was a
He
would have
'
taught us that
He
made being, but since He said with the glory which / had with Thee before the world was He clearly taught us that while
'
Ps. cxix.
89
(Peshitta).
6
Is.
xl. 8.
*John
1.
John
i.
4.
John
xvii. 5.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
all
25
beginning, as the
the world
of
was created
He
alone
was without a
Word
"
God.
He
was about
all
to ascend to
Heaven
them
l
He
said to
His
'
disciples,
Go
and
and teach
of the
in the
name
of the Father,
Holy
Ghost.'
Jesus Christ
made
One who
is
As poral beings with the One who has no beginning and no end. the wise men do not mix promiscuously with one another in one count
sun, stone
in a
and
and
three pearls, or three stars, as these are similar in separate way nature and resemble one another in everything, so also would the case
be with Jesus Christ, who would have never allowed himself to count with God His Word and His Spirit, if He did not know that they
How could He have made equal in were equal to God in nature. honour and royal power the one who was not God in nature with the one who was, or the one who was temporal with the one who was
eternal ?
It is
who
"
participate in royal
honour but
the children
me "What is the difference between the Son and the Spirit, and how is it that the Son is not the Spirit nor the Spirit the Son ? Since you said that God is not composite there should not be any difference with God in the fact that He begets and
Then
our King said to
:
makes proceed from Himself." And I replied to our King There is no difference, King, between the persons in
'
as follows
their rela-
tion to
first
is
the
second
third proceeds
;
and
God
consists in
and
He
made
and
Him
and separation
procession.
in the
is
for generation
God
'
and
'
since the
terms
'
because all bodies organs imply a body are composite it follows that and cleavage organs do not apply to God indeed God being without body and not being composite, is and thought of without any notion of cleavage separation.'
cleavage
;
'
and
'
'
xxviii. 19.
Most
of the
26
Reason comes out
WOODBROOKE
of the soul
STUDIES
but it comes out of it without any suffering, without any cleavage, and without the instrumentality of organs. The very same sun begets and makes heat come out of it, without any cleavage or bodily light
separation,
and
in a
way
is
from
all
all
the heat from all its spheric globe. " All the reason and all the mind are from
all
by
process of birth
all
heat and
and the second by that of procession, as all the the mind are with the sun and with the soul respectively,
all
and
all
and with
light.
This very method applies to the Word and the Spirit the former is begotten, and the latter proceeds from God and the Father, not through any material cleavage, and any suffering, nor from a special
organ, but as from an uncircumscribed being
in
:
an uncircumscribed one
in all
who
is all
without space
and
way
that the
Son
is
Son, "
in qualifications
and
attributes.
From
whole
the whole of an apple the whole of the scent and the and proceed in a way that the apple
does not make the scent proceed from one part of it and beget the taste from another, but scent and taste come out of all the apple. While scent and taste are mixed with each other and with the apple,
is not scent and scent they are nevertheless separate in a way that taste is not taste, and are not confused with each other, nor separated from each other, but are so to speak mixed together in a separate way, and
amazing
a mixed way, by a process that is as separated from each other in In this very way from the unciras it is incomprehensible.
way
begotten and the Spirit proceeds, in an the eternal from the eternal, the uncreated
is
spiritual
from the
spiritual.
uncircumscribed they are not separated from one another, and since with one another, they are not bodies they are not mixed and confused
but are separated in their persons in a united way, so to speak, and God is, therefore, one are united in their nature in a separate way.
in nature
with three personal attributes." And our King said to me "If they are not separated by remoteness and nearness as they are uncircumscribed, the Father therefore,
:
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
and the
Spirit clothed
;
27
together
human body,
if
human
" As the word of the Majesty which it is written, while his on the with papyrus King clothes itself soul and his mind cannot be said to do the same, and as his soul and
to his
:
body with the Son, how is it " And I replied and space ?
his
his
the case
put on our human body without having been separated from the Father and the Spirit, yet the Father and the Spirit cannot be said to have put on our
with the
Word
of
God
because although
He
human body.
"
Further, the
is
word
that
is
itself
it
with
not
and yet
is
separated from the soul and the mind, and the soul and the mind are not said that they clothe themselves with the voice, and no man ever
says that he heard the
word
of so-and-so,
and
this in spite of
the fact
word
is
In this very
way
the
Himself with a body from ourselves, without having been separated in the least from the Father and the Spirit, and in this way also the Father and the Spirit are not said to have put on
Word- God
the
Word.
body is believed to be and actually is the temple and the clothing of the soul, but it is not believed and actually is not the temple and the clothing of the word and of the mind, in spite of
the fact that neither the
nor
the
is
the soul
itself
is
way
spoken having put on our human body, while the Father and the Spirit are not said to have put it on, in spite of the
alone
fact that
Word
Word
in distance
and
locality."
The
objections
and the
difficulties raised
rebutted and explained in the above way. " After these the King said to me
:
Who
is
leader?"
And
"
:
replied:
"Our
Lord Jesus
"Was
was."
not?"
"
:
And
He
And
me
Why
do you
28
not
WOODBROOKE
then circumcise yourself
?
If
STUDIES
leader
also
is
Jesus
Christ,
by
necessity
circumcise yourself."
And
spoke thus
King,
Jesus Christ
eight days
baptised.
He
was circumcised
His
Law, and
He
was
baptised while
He
was about
I
l
He
annulled circumcision.
Law
as the Christ
all the Law ; I follow the Gospel, and that is why I do not circumcise myself in spite of the fact that Christ circumcised HimI believe self, but I baptise myself with water and spirit like Him.
followed
in Jesus Christ,
and
was baptised
consider baptism
me.
How did Jesus Christ abolish King asked me circumcision and what is the meaning of the image you have spoken " of ? And I replied " All the Torah, was, King, the image of
And
our
: ' '
"
are the image of the and the and Christ, priesthood high-priesthood of the Law are the image of the high-priesthood of Christ, and the carnal circumcision is the image of His spiritual circumcision. As He
sacrifice of Jesus
the Gospel.
The
the
Law
abolished the
Law
and
the priesthood
sacrifices
by His
so
is
sacrifice,
priesthood,
also
He
is
performed by
of
work
of the
hands
men by means
of the
3
of
work
hands
of the
of
the sacrament
of
the resurrection from death." And our King said " If Christ abolished the
:
Law
and
all
its
requirements,
He
:
is,
therefore,
its
enemy and
its
adversary.
We call
I
enemies those
replied to
who destroy and contradict one another." And " him The light of the stars is abolished by the light of
light
the sun,
1
and the
Matt.
v.
of the latter
is
enemy
of that of
CL
17.
This objection about the circumcision of Christ and the uncircumcision of Christians is also mentioned and refuted by the Christian apologist Kindi, It is likewise alluded to Risalah, p. 109. by the Muslim apologist 'AH of Kitab translation. 159-160 ud-D'in, pp. Tabari, my " 3 The same Syriac word means both "mystery" and sacrament."
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
the former
;
29
also abolished
is
by the
dom
of
God
enemy of himself an earthly heavenly Kingdom, and the Kingenemy of men. In this very way
;
He
is
and destroyed the Law by the Gospel, while enemy and the adversaiy of the Law."
And
and pray
me
it
"
Where
between
His
our
birth
and His
l
ascension to
"
?
Heaven
?
I
Was
and
in
:
replied Jerusalem " God and pray in the direction of the then do worship you Why
:
And
I
Yes."
And
King asked
East?"
God,
And
King,
replied:
"The
Omnipotent
will
be performed by mankind
of the
Kingdom
of
Kingdom
of
Eden
therefore worship
the paradise
pray rightly
is
which
is is
Kingdom
of
Heaven.
in
There
Jesus Christ
walked
King.
In the thirtieth
year he repaid to
God
all
human
to Him. It was a debt that no man and no angel was able to has never been a created being that was free from because there pay, sin, except the Man with whom God clothed Himself and became
owed
one with Him in a wonderful unity. " After having then paid to God the debt of
all
abrogated, annulled, and torn the contract containing it, He went to the Jordan, to John the Baptist, and was baptised by him, and thus
the
Kingdom
to
of
that of
His ascension
He
economy
baptism, laws, ordinances, prayers, in the direction of the east, and the sacrifice that we offer. worship
ourselves.
All these things He practised in His person and taught us to practise Because He wished to proclaim to the world through His disciples the Gospel, the baptism, the sacrifice and the worship
:
I.e.
Temple.
is
Syr.
baita
the
Arab, bait
al-makdis.
-
This teaching
that of
Theodore
Mopsuestia.
30
and prayer
person, in
to
WOODBROOKE
God,
STUDIES
fulfilled
fulfil
He
performed and
them
all in
His own
had seen
Him
themselves what they practising Himself, and that they might teach others to
do
the same.
"
East
;
God
started
is
indeed
in
that
direction that
is
Adam
and
his children
1
Jacob and Moses used to worship God and to pray while turning towards the east and Paradise, that is towards the direction and the place in which God had been worshipped
Isaac,
Adam
and
his children, as
we have
His
just
now
disciples to
worship
the
God and
of
commandment
Adam transgressed pray towards the east. of God, he was driven out of Paradise, and when
Because
Paradise he was thrown on
this
he went out
accursed
earth.
Having been thrown on this accursed earth, he turned his face away from God, and his children worshipped demons, stars, sun, moon and
The Word of God came then to the graven and molten images. in human men a children of body, and in His person paid to God the To remind them, however, of the debt that they were owing Him.
place from which their father
of the
in
of his transgression
their faces
in
it
towards Paradise
that
God was
first
men from
Word of God freed them from the worship of idols, He also the direction of their sight and their mind towards turned rightly God and towards Paradise where He was first worshipped. He
and the
simply brought back the one
his father.
who was
This
to
is
why
when
Finally,
we
is
worship
God
in the direction of
He
is
of
Eden was
the opinion of the majority of Eastern Fathers, many of whom believe also To it, according to them, the souls of the that it is found in the firmament.
just
go
2
till
Kur'an,
6.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
Our King
"
31
then worship and
then said to
I
me
his
"
:
Did
:
Christ
pray
that
And
And
answered
Majesty
:
pray."
"
worshipped and prayed, you deny His divinity, because if He worshipped and prayed He is not God if He was God, he " He would not have worshipped and prayed." And I replied
:
He
did not worship and pray as God, because as such He is the receiver of the worship and prayer of both the celestial and the terrestrial beings,
in conjunction
Spirit,
but
It
He
worshipped
and
prayed as a
human
born
kind.
has been
made
is
manifest
God He
of
man
worshipped and prayed for our sake, because no need of worship and prayer." And our King said to me " There is no creature that has no And I replied " Has Jesus Christ, need of worship and prayer."
Mary.
He
further
in
He
Himself was
the
Word
of
God, sinned
or not?"-
And
!
God
from saying such a thing preserve "Has God created the worlds with His
me
our King replied in the affirmative and I "Is the one who is neither a sinner nor in need of anything, asked " in need of worship and prayer ? And our King answered " No."
:
May And then asked Word or not?" And " said Yes." And then
:
"
"
And
a
is
Word
from Mary, and if as a Word of God thing, and as a man He did not commit any
man
He is the
Lord
of every-
sin as the
who is the Lord of everything and a creator is King testify, not in need, and he who is not a sinner is pure, it follows that Jesus Christ worshipped and prayed to God neither as one in need nor as a
and
if
he
sinner,
prayer to
'
worshipped and prayed in order to teach worship and disciples, and through them to every human being. The disciples would not have yielded to His teaching, if He had
but
He
His
not put it into practice in His own person. There is no creature that has not sinned except Jesus Christ, the Word of God, and is the
He
As He
His own humanity appeared above the dirt was baptised without having any need of baptism,
in
who
and as
He
own
sin,
so also
billahi.
32
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
for
He
in
Our God-loving King ended the above subject here, and embarked " on another theme and said to me How is it that you accept Christ
:
and the Gospel from the testimony of the Torah and of the prophets, and you do not accept Muhammad from the testimony of Christ and
"
the Gospel
And
"
:
our King,
we
have received concerning Christ numerous and distinct testimonies from the Torah and the prophets. All of the latter prophesied in one
" accord and harmony in one place about His mother Behold a 2 bear a conceive and and shall us that He shall son," virgin taught
:
like the
Word
of
God.
It is
inded
fit
that the
out a mother should have been born in the flesh from a virgin mother without a father, in order that His second birth may be a witness to
His
first birth.
His name
"
:
And
His name
"
will
shall
Mighty God
of the worlds."
He
.
work
will
His coming
'
in saying,
Behold your
God
will come.
He
Then
Then shall the lame opened, and the ears of the deaf shall hear. man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall be loosened.' 4 Yet in another place they disclose to us His passion and His death,
'
He
shall
5
be
killed
for our
transgressions,
and humbled
for
our
iniquities.'
'
to us about
His
resurrection,
my Thy Holy One to see corruption,' and me, Thou art my Son this day have
;
Thou
7
suffered
The Lord
begotten Thee.'
Thou
'
made
gifts to men,'
and
9
God went up
is
of
Muhammad
found
in
is
the claim
made by
ummi
-
whom
See
3
the Prophet himself in Kur'an, vii. 1 they find written down with them in the
Ixi.
the Gospel."
Is. vii.
fi
also
6.
Is. vii.
'
14 and
7.
ix. 6.
Is.
8
xxxv. 4-6.
Ixviii.
Is.
9
liii.
5.
Ps.
ii.
Ps.
18.
Ps. xlvii. 5.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
"Some
heaven
of heaven,
33
in saying,
am
one
Him
Him
Him and worship Him. His an everlasting dominion, and His kingdom shall not pass "These and scores of other passages of the away nor be destroyed.'
peoples of the earth should serve
is
:
dominion
prophets
show
Him.
So
far as
Muhammad
concerned
a single
testimony either
refer to his
from Jesus Christ or from the Gospel which would " name or to his works
And
that
made
a sign to
mean
:
me
the question
"Have
me:
Spirit
God-loving King,
"And
?
replied to
him: "No,
And
I
"Who
of
is
then
the
Paraclete
"And
;
God."
God ?"
by
And
;
attribute
:
as
King asked: "What is the Spirit of God, by nature and one who proceeds, replied And our glorious Jesus Christ taught about Him."
the
And
"
"
:
"
send unto you the Spirit- Paraclete who proaway ceedeth from the Father, whom the world cannot receive, who dwelleth
Heaven,
is
will
searcheth
God, who
our
I
your remembrance
And And
who will take of mine and show unto you.' King said to me "All these refer to Muhammad."
:
replied to
him
"If
Muhammad
since
the Paraclete
the Spirit of
is the Spirit of God, Muhammad, would, therefore, be God and the Spirit of God being uncircumscribed like God, Muhammad would also be uncircumscribed like God and he
; ;
vii.
2
13-14.
John
3
xiv. 16,
xvi.
Cor.
ii.
10.
The Muslims have always believed that the Paraclete spoken of in the Gospel referred to Muhammad. See Kitab ad-Din of Ibn Rabban (pp. 40-1 4 of my translation), who even corroborates his statement by an appeal
1 1
as Yahsubi
in
his
word. Many other writers (such shifa) counts the name Paraclete among the various
names
of
the Prophet.
34
WOODBROOKE
is
;
STUDIES
who
visible
uncircumscribed being invisible, Muhammad would also be inand without a human body and he who is without a body
Indeed being uncomposed, Muhammad would also be uncomposed. he who is a spirit has no body, and he who has no body is also invisible,
and he who
is
is
invisible
is
also uncircumscribed
but he
who
is
circumscribed
is
God
is
is
follows from
Muhammad
The
is
Paraclete
is
of the Father,
and
Muhammad
Adam.
the
Since heaven
God
Adam,
the
Paraclete
is
not,
therefore,
Muhammad.
Muhammad owns
those
Further, the Paraclete searches the deep things of God, but that he does not know what might befall him and
1
who accept him. He who searches all things even the deep of God is not identical with the one who does not know what things might happen to him and to those who acknowledge him. Muhammad
is
His
Again, the Paraclete, as Jesus told was with them and among them while He was speaking
since
to them,
and
Muhammad was
not with
he cannot, therefore, have been the Paraclete. Finally, the Paraclete descended on the disciples ten days after the ascension of Jesus to heaven, while Muhammad was born more than six hundred years
from being the Paraclete. And Jesus taught the disciples that the Paraclete is one God in three persons, and since Muhammad does not believe in the doctrine of
later,
and
this
impedes
Muhammad
Paraclete wrought
disciples,
and
since
Godhead, he cannot be the Paraclete. And the sorts of prodigies and miracles through the Muhammad did not work a single miracle through
all
his followers
'
and
his disciples,
he
is
is
That
is
and
the
Son
fact that
He
he
is
the
is
maker
the
of the
heavenly
but the
powers and
world
is is
and
since
who
is
of everything
God, the
Spirit- Paraclete
therefore
God
2
God,
because
God
since
uncircumscribed.
Now
;
if
Muhammad
;
Kur'im,
vi.
50
vii.
88
xi.
33, etc.
John
xiv.
7.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
this
35
therefore
same Paraclete
is
the Spirit of
God,
Muhammad would
'
be the Spirit of God. Further, since David said, By the Spirit of God all the powers have been created,' celestial and terrestrial, Muhammad would be the creator of the celestial and terrestrial beings. Now since Muhammad is not the creator of heaven and earth, and since he who is not creator is not the Spirit of God, Muhammad is, and since the one who is not the therefore, not the Spirit of God Spirit of God is by inference not the Paraclete, Muhammad is not the
1
;
Paraclete.
this
been marked by a distinct portraiture characterising his coming, his name, his mother, and his people as the true portraiture of the coming
of Jesus Christ
is
found
this is
is
in the
Torah and
in the prophets.
Since
nothing resembling
it is
found in the Gospel concerning Muhammad, no mention of him in it at all, and that is the
single testimony
reason
why
:
about him."
And
the
said to
me
"
:
As
Jews behaved
towards Jesus whom they did not accept, so the Christians behaved towards Muhammad whom they did not accept." And I replied to " his Majesty The Jews did not accept Jesus in spite of the fact that the Torah and the prophets were full of testimonies about Him, and
:
this
As
"
:
to us
we have
not
accepted
Muhammad
our
because
we have
King
:
him
in
Books."
And
our
them."
that the
And
Books have been corrupted, and you have removed " Where is it known, replied to him thus King,
Books have been corrupted by us, and where is that uncorrupted Book from which you have learned that the Books which we use have been corrupted ? If there is such a book let it be placed in
the middle in order that
l -
we may
learn from
it
which
is
the corrupted
that the
bulk of Muslim testimony, based on Kur'an, vii. 56, is to the effect name of Muhammad is found in the Gospel. Almost all the work of Ibn Rabban entitled Kitab ad-Din wad-Daulah has been written for the purpose of showing that this name is found in Jewish and Christian scriptures.
1
The
ii.,
(See especially pp. 77-146 of my translation.) Cf. Ibn Sa'd's Tabakat, i., 89 and i. i., 123, and see the commentator Tabari on Kur'an, vii. 156, and the historians Ibn Hisham and Tabari.
36
Gospel and hold
a Gospel,
is
'
WOODBROOKE
to that
STUDIES
which
not corrupted. If there is no such that the Gospel of which we make use
is
corrupted
What
?
we have
Gospel
Gospel,
the one
Even
there
was mention
Muhammad made
it
;
in the
we would
name from
we would have
was
not
in the future.
Muhammad
follow,
whom you
and
Take
they cannot delete the name of Jesus from the Torah and the Prophets, they only contend against Him in
the example of the Jews
He was going to come in the future, and that He 1 has not come yet into the world. They resemble a blind man without eyes who stands in plain daylight and contends that the sun has
saying openly that
We
also
likewise
we would
not
if it
Muhammad
were found anywhere in it we would have simply quibbled concerning his right name and person like the Jews do in the case of Jesus. To tell the truth, if I had found in the Gospel a prophecy concerning
the coming of
Muhammad,
left
would have
"
left
Kur'an, as
have
the
And
me
I
Do you not
him
:
Book was
given by
God ?"
it
And
is
replied to
"
It is
not
my
business to
decide whether
from
God
or not.
But
will say
something of
which your Majesty is well aware, and that is all the words of God found in the Torah and in the Prophets, and those of them found in
the Gospel and in the writings of the Apostles, have been confirmed by signs and miracles as to the words of your Book they have not
;
It is imperative that been corroborated by a single sign or miracle. other and be annulled miracles should signs and miracles. signs by
When God
words
words
1
wished
to abrogate
He
He
confirmed by
the signs and miracles wrought by the Christ and the Apostles that the
of the
this
abrogated the
of the
first
miracles.
"
Similarly, as
d-nisiirc.
xxix.
He abrogated
is
Read samya
Muslim
all
Read
tradition,
49, etc.,
full
of
miracles of
sorts attributed
Prophet.
apparently been invented in order to answer the objection of the Christians to the effect that since Muhammad performed no miracle he was not a
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
the
first
37
signs and miracles by second ones, He ought to have abrogated If God had wished to second the signs and miracles by third ones. abrogate the Gospel and introduce another Book in its place He would
have done
because signs and miracles are witnesses of His will but your Book has not been confirmed by a single sign and miracle. Since signs and miracles are proofs of the will of God, the conclusion
this,
;
drawn from
their
is is
I
well
known
to
And
Who
And
of
then the
replied
:
rider
"
?
'The
on an on
a
of
Darius the
is
Mede, son
Assuerus,
and the
camel
who was
from El am.
The King
it
Elam destroyed
Persians,
and passed
to
the the
as Darius the
it
Mede had
to the
:
Medes."
"
From where is this known ? And our King said to me " From the context. In the preceding passage And replied By prophet said, Go up, O Elam, and mountains of Media.'
I
: '
"
the
the
'
words
'
Mountains
'
of
Media Darius
'
the
Mede
is
word
and
'
Elam
the
kingdom of the Persians is designated. The Book words that follow, And one of the horsemen came
is
Babylon
of the
fallen,
is
fallen,'
and
shows
it is
passage refers to
the
they
who
destroyed
kingdom
did he say that the first was riding our King said a And I replied "The second on camel ?" on an ass. and the
:
And
Babylonians." "
Why
reason
is
more
in use in
Through animals
and through countries to the powers and kingdoms which were to rise in them. Further, because the kingdom of the Medes was to be
was
to
be
Pp. 30-60 of my edition of Ibn Rabban's Apology, the Kitab ad-Din laad-Daulak, have been written for this purpose. The extent to which later tradition amplified this fabulous theme may be gauged by the
giren in Wensinck's Handbook of Early Muhammadan The thome of the lack of miracles on the part of Tradition, pp. 165-168. the Prophet is emphasised by the Christian apologist Kindi, Risalah, pp. 62
references
sqq.
and 67.
1
Read l-Parsaye.
Is.
xxi. 2.
38
strong
WOODBROOKE
and
valiant,
STUDIES
Medes through
God
the
weak
ass,
and
to that of Elamite
camel.
the
also
God
1
bear, and
and
Again,
in the vision
of the
King Nebuchadnezzar
in the
malleable
12
silver,
symbolised the kingdom of the Medes while that of the Persians and Elamites in the
God
strong brass.
of
same way the prophet alluded to the kingdom Media through the ass, and to that of Elam through the camel." And our King said to me "The rider on the ass is Jesus and
In this
:
the
rider
:
on
"
the
camel
is
Muhammad."
And
answered
his
our God-loving King, neither the order of times nor Majesty the succession of events will allow us to refer in this passage the riding
on the
is
ass to Christ
and the
riding
i
on the camel to
Muhammad.
It
Medes and
the camel to
the Elamites, and this order of the revelations and this succession of
Even if one, through similarity between adjectives and violence to the context and refers the passage dealing with does names, the ass to Jesus on account of a different passage Lowly, and
persons.
'
riding
upon an
ass,
and upon a
colt,
the foal of an
ass,'
yet
it is
not
the camel to Muhammad." possible to refer the passage dealing with " " And I replied And our King said : For what reason ?
"
'
said,
The
sceptre of the
kingdom
shall
not depart from Judah, nor an utterer of prophecy from his seed, until Jesus Christ come, because kingdom is His, and He is the expectation
of the peoples.'
1
In this he
2
shows that
after the
coming
*
of the Christ
Ezech. ix. 9. Dan. ii. 31 sqq. 5-6. great deal is made of this prophecy of Isaiah concerning the rider on an ass and the rider on a camel in Ibn Rabban's Apology the Kttab adDln (pp. 95-97 of my edition). The author concludes his references to it in "Are not men of intelligence the following words of my own translation
Dan.
vii.
and science amongst the People of the Book ashamed to attribute such a Did clear and sublime prophecy to some rude and barbarous people? not the adversaries feel abashed in saying that the rightly guided prophets of the family of Isaac prophesied about the Kings of Babylon, Media, Persia, and Khuzistan, and neglected to mention such an eminent Prophet and such
. .
"
Gen.
xlix.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
there will be neither prophet nor prophecy.
in saying that for putting an
39
Daniel also concurs
And
and prophecy, and for the coming of Christ, the King, seven weeks and threescore and two weeks will elapse, and then the Christ will be killed, and there will In this he not be any more kingdom and prophecy in Jerusalem/ end
to all vision
showed
Christ.
that visions
and prophecies
"
will
'
come
to
And
The
prophesied
until John.'
Every
prophecy, therefore,
was no prophecy nor did any the All prophets prophesied about Jesus Christ, and prophet the Christ directed us to the Kingdom of Heaven, and it is superfluous that after the knowledge that we have of God and the Kingdom of
time of Christ, and after Christ there
3
rise.
to the
knowledge
of the
human
As
to
earthly affairs
and kingdoms, and some other times concerning the As to Jesus adorable Epiphany and Incarnation of the Word-God.
Christ
earthly
He
affairs,
but
He
solely
taught
of
us things
dealing with
the
knowledge
self
of
God and
the
Kingdom
Heaven.
We
have already
and
prophecy extended as far as Christ only, as Christ Himthe prophets asserted, and since from the time of Christ
the
downwards only
being preached, as Jesus Christ taught, it is superfluous that after the adorable Incarnation of Christ we should accept and acknowledge another prophecy and
Kingdom
of
God
is
good and praiseworthy order of things is that which takes us up from the bottom to the top, from the human to the divine things, and from the earthly to the heavenly things but an
another prophet.
;
to
worthy."
And
"
Cross
1
" our victorious King said to me And I replied " First because it
: :
Why do
is
xi.
1
the cause of
3.
Dan.
ix.
24
sqq.
Matt.
the prophets, according to Muslim apologists, is Muhammad " If the prophet had not appeared the prophecies of the prophets about Ishmael and about die Prophet who is the last of the prophets would hare necessarily become without object." Ibn Rabban's Apology, the Kitab ad-Din, p. 77
last of
:
The
of
my
edition ct passim.
40
WOODBROOKE
our glorious King said to
STUDIES
cross
is
And
say,
me
"A
life
And
replied to
;
him
"
:
The
is
cross,
is
as
you
In
but death
life
resurrection,
this
and
resurrection
is
is
the cause of
life
and immortality.
the cause of
it,
the reason
why
through
indivisible
life
and immortality, and this is as a symbol of life and immortality, we God. It is through it that God opened to
ordered
bitter
light to
come
wood, who through the sight of a deadly serpent granted life to handed to us the fruit of life from the wood the Cross, and caused rays of immortality to shine upon us from
"As we
them, so also
come out
shone
1
of
we honour
fruit of life
was born
us.
to us,
upon
a decisive proof of the love of God for all, luminous rays of His love shine from all His creatures visible and invisible, but the
As
most luminous rays of the love of God are those that shine from the rational beings. This love of God can then be demonstrated from all
and from the ordinary Divine Providence that is manifest in them, but the great wealth of His love for all humanity is more strikingly
creatures,
in
He
God showed
which
all
It is life, salvation, and resurrection of all. only our victorious King, that the medium through which His love to all, should also be the medium through
And
I
me
replied to his
Majesty
Can God then Himself die ? And " The Son of God died in our nature, but
: :
"
not in His Divinity. When the royal purple and the insignia of the kingdom are torn, the dishonour redounds to the King so also is the
case with the death of the
said to
body
of the
Son-God."
And
our King
3
me
"May God
Him
preserve
me from
They
a
did not
1
kill
He made
to at
Read we-azlegh with a waw. 'This subject of the worship of the Cross is also alluded 39. length by the Christian apologist Kindi in his Risalak, p. 3 Here as above on p. 3 the Arab, a'udhu billTiJii.
1 1
some
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
similitude for
41
It is written And I said to him way." Peace be upon me the day I was born, and the in the Silrat /sa, " This passage the day I shall be sent again alive.' day I die, and
them
l
"
in this
'
shows
"
died and rose up. Further, God said to 'Isa (Jesus) Thee take die and I up again to me." " He did not die then, but He will die And our King said " Therefore He did not go up And I replied to him afterwards."
that
He
will
make Thee
to
heaven
either,
nor was
will
sent again alive, but He will go up to be sent again alive in the future. No, our heaven a long time ago, and has been sent
He
Book
also
testifies.
If
He
had
went up
died,
it
it
is
obvious
that
He
had died
previously,
and
if
He
is
known
He
had died by
had
stated before
His
died
coming."
And
by
David,
cried
;
me
"
:
Which prophet
Majesty hands and my
:
said that
He
crucifixion ?
And
"
replied to his
First the
who
'
said,
They
pierced
my
feet,
and
prophet my bones
and they looked and stared upon me they parted my garments 4 The Gospel testifies among them and cast lots upon my vesture.' that all these were fulfilled. And Isaiah said, He shall be killed for
; '
our
sins
'
and humbled
for
our iniquity.*
And
Him from the land of the living. gave my body to wounds and my cheeks to and did not turn And the blows, my face from shame and spittle.* prophet Daniel said, And the Messiah shall be killed but not for Himself.' And the prophet Zechariah said, And smite the shepherd of Israel on his cheeks,' and O sword, awake against my shepherd.'
said,
Wood
I
His
flesh
and
will destroy
'
'
'
'
Indeed numerous are the passages in which the prophets spoke of His
death, murder,
and
crucifixion."
And
way." them in
1
"
:
He made a similitude
him
?
And
this
replied to
"
:
way,
iv.
1
O
34.
our King
How
God
Kur'an,
56.
The Kurra
Timothy.
xix.
iii. 48. The Syriac niarfa? from Arab, wa-rafi'uka. 5 Ps. xxii. 16-18 (Peshitta). Is., liii. 5 (Peshitta). ' Cf, Jer. Lam., iii. 4 and 30 etc. Dan. ix. 26. Read lath.
"Zech.
xiii.
7.
42
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
that
show them something which was not true ? It is incongruous to God He should deceive and show something for another thing. If God deceived them and made a similitude for them, the Apostles who
simply wrote what
to them,
would be innocent
If
of the
deception,
and the
say that
it
would be God.
on the other
hand,
we
is
Satan
to
who made
in the
*
do
Economy
God
And who
to deceive
hawarlyun
that Satan
was able
them
Apostles drove and cast away the demons, who shouted and run away from them on account of the Divine power that was
?
The
if
accompanying them. If crucifixion was only an unreal similitude, and from it death took place, even death would be an unreal similitude we further assert that from this death there has been resurrection, which
;
in this case
would
also
be an unreal similitude
then out of
this resur-
and untrue.
resurrection
is
Now
also a reality
and not a
similitude
and
since death
was
a reality and not a similitude, and since death is preceded by crucifixion, this crucifixion is consequently a reality also, and not an illusion or a
similitude."
And
that
God
Him."
prophets have been killed by the Jews, but that not all those who 2 have been killed by the Jews are despicable and devoid of honour is
fact that
none
is
despicable and
in the sight of
God.
Since
it is
have generally been killed by the Jews, it follows that not all those who have been killed by the Jews are despicable and devoid of
honour.
This
we
So
far as Jesus
Christ
is
concerned
we
which
*
He
was not
imposed forcibly upon Him by them. I have power upon my soul to lay it
1
Because He, Jesus Christ, said, down, and I have power to take
Kur'an
to express
"
Apostles."
It is
is
in the East,
where
also
indicates
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
it
43
again
it
from me.'
In this
He
showed
of
that
He
would
out of His
own
free will,
His
own
He who when hangweakness or from the omnipotence of the Jews. moved the heavens, shook the earth, ing on the wood of the Cross
changed the dazzling sun into darkness and the shining moon into blood- redness, and He who rent the stones and the graves, raised
and resuscitated the dead, could not be so weak as not to be able to It is, therefore, out of His save Himself from the hands of the Jews.
own
and
He approached
the suffering
on the
cross
and death,
He
did not bear the death of crucifixion at the hands of the Jews
out of abjection and weakness on His part, but He bore both crucifixion and death at the hands of the Jews out of His own free will."
And
I
"No
:
blame
Jews
they simply "If the Jews had solely crucified answered his Majesty
fulfilled
and
satisfied
His wish."
And Him in
would
order that
He might
of
raise the
to heaven, they
crowns and
in
encomia
of all kinds,
if
these
Him
Him
might intensify His death and obliterate from the surface of the earth, they would with great justice be
of
worthy
Indeed they crucified Him not in order that He might go up to heaven but go down to Sheol God, however, raised Him up from the dead and took Him up to heaven." And our God- loving King said to me " Which of the two things
would you be
willing
If
to
admit
Was
the
Christ willing
to
be
crucified or not ?
He
was
willing to
be
crucified, the
Jews who
If,
however,
He was
the
Jews were
strong.
In this
He who
I
hands of His
crucifiers
whose
will
And
'What would
wisdom, say did He wish
King, endowed with high acumen and great When God created Satan as one of the angels, Satan to be an angel or not ? If God wished Him
:
'Johnx.
18.
44
to
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
be Satan instead of an angel, the wicked Satan would, therefore, but if God did not wish simply be accomplishing the will of God
;
Satan
to
the will
be Satan but an angel, and in spite of that he became Satan, of Satan became stronger than the will of God. How can
we
then call
will
will of Satan,
Satan prevailed ? and one against " Another question Did God wish Adam to go out of Paradise If He wished to drive him out of Paradise, why should or not ?
:
whom
Satan be blamed, who simply helped to do the will of God in his On the other hand, if God did not driving Adam from Paradise.
wish
Adam
to
go out of Paradise,
how
is it
God
became weak and was overcome, while the will of Satan became How can He be God, if His will has been strong and prevailed ? ? The fact that Satan and Adam sinned against overcome completely
the will of
God
does not
Him
to
be weak and
fall
deficient,
and the
fact that
Satan to
Adam
Adam to go out of Paradise does not from blame and censure, and the fact that
sin to
own
will are a
accomplish the will of God but to accomplish their good analogy to the case of Jesus Christ. He should
not indeed be precluded from being God, nor should He be rendered weak and deficient in strength by the fact that the Jews sinned but not and the by His will, and that in their insolence they crucified Him
;
wished
all
to
for the
life,
resurrec-
tion
and
"
salvation of
did not crucify the Christ because He willed it, but they crucified Him because of their hatred and malice both to Himself and to the One who sent Him. They crucified Him in order that
The Jews
Him
completely, and
rise
He
willed to be crucified so
all
He might live
"
again and
men
the
and proof of the resurrection of the dead. What would our victorious and powerful Another question J Do they wish King say about those who fight for the sake of God.
:
they do not wish to be killed and are killed, and if they their death has no merit, and they will not go to heaven
to
be
killed or not ?
If
ibl'is.
bi-sab~il il lahi.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
wish to be
killed, are their
45
?
If
they
are not blameworthy, how is it that unbelievers and believers are not blameworthy, and if they are blameworthy, why should they be so when what they did was simply to fulfil the wish of
killed
who
Muslims
The fact is that the murderers of the men who fight for are not exempted from fire and hell God the sake of indeed, the murderers do not slay them so that they may go to heaven, but they do it out of their wickedness and in order to destroy them. In this way
the victims ?
;
also the
Jews
will not
fire
by the
fact
They
did not
Him
live
because
He
rise
wished to be
crucified,
They
Him
Let
order that
He
in
crucified
Him
He
"
Jesus
was
do
wished
to
so.
This
is
Himself from the Jews, if He had known first from the fact that on several
Him, but because He did not wish to It is also known be seized by them, no one laid hands on Him. by the fact that while He was hanging on the cross, He moved the
occasions they ventured to seize
heavens, shook the earth, darkened the sun, blood-reddened the moon,
rent the stones,
in
them.
He who
opened the graves, and gave life to the dead that were was able to do all these things in such a divine
way, was surely able to save Himself from the Jews. rescued from the mouth of Sheol in such a wonderful
of
And He who
way
the temple
His humanity
after
it
had
lain
and three
nights,
was
but
if
He
had saved
it
and
if
He
crucified
He He
and
if if
and
He He
He
up
risen
to immortal
to immortal
the children of
men would
have remained without a sign and a decisive proof of the immortal life. To-day because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead
'
men
life,
and
of
life
and
it
come might be
it
indelibly impressed
upon mankind,
;
was
He
in
might
rise
was
He
should
and
46
order that
WOODBROOKE
He
is
STUDIES
have been
all.
first
This
might truly die it was imperative that His death should witnessed by all, as His resurrection was witnessed by why He died by crucifixion. If He were to suffer, to be
all,
crucified
when
He
had
all.
to rise
resurrection
fruit
would
also
be believed by
Immortal
thus the
of the crucifixion,
and the
dead
a resurrection which
cross.
all believers
expect
is
the
outcome
of the
He
the hands of
His
crucifiers,
He
of
would have brought profit to Himself alone, and would have been no use to the rest of mankind, like Enoch and Elijah who are kept
beyond the reach
of death for their exclusive benefit, but
in Paradise
now
that
He
kill
dared to
Him
self
on
their
own
account,
to
He
three days
first
and three
nights, rose
up
immortal
to
His own
and then
to all creatures,
and
all
full
He
of
and proof of resuscitation and resurrection to put His wish into practice in an Economy
crucifiers
rational
He
cannot be absolved from blame any more than the brothers of Joseph can be absolved from blame. "When Joseph was sold by his brothers as a slave to some men,
and he afterwards rose up from slavery to the government of Egypt, it was not the aim of those who sold him that he should govern Egypt.
they had dreamed of this they would never have sold him into Indeed, those who were unable to bear the recital of Joseph's slavery.
If
dreams on account
of their intense
jealousy
and
violent envy,
how
could they have borne seeing him at the head of a Government. They sold him into slavery but God, because of the injustice done to him by
his brothers, raised
to
:
power.
if
to the
Jews and
rise
to
their teacher
they had
known
that Christ
to
would
heaven
again to life
after
His
crucifixion,
selves to crucify
will."
Him
of
out of their
own wicked
"
this,
it
King
in
Kings
If
your Majesty
it
to pull
it
down
order to rebuild
it
again,
if
with
fire,
would you
enemy
down
the house, or
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
47
would you not rather inflict punishment on him, as on one who had de" And our molished and burned a house belonging to your Majesty ? " The one who would do such a thing would deserve King replied
:
"
a painful death
all
And
of
then answered
"So
temple of the
the
of
Word
Holy Spirit, man from a holy virgin, and which God raised afterwards to God showed in all this its thorough distinction from, and
all else.
God, which was anointed and confirmed by which was divinely fashioned without the intervention
heaven.
its
high
superiority over,
temple of the
Word
God,
of
As the heaven is high above the earth, the God is greater and more distinguished than all
If
of
men.
it
Jesus Christ
is
in
the throne of
on the throne
of
God."
Our Majesty victorious King asked: "Was it before or after His ascension to " And I replied to him " Before His ascension to heaven. heaven ?
I
King
to his
said
to
me
:
"
:
Who
"
" gave you the Gospel ? Lord Jesus Christ" And our
As
the Gospel
of Jesus
is
Economy
of Jesus
of the
works and
words
Christ,
and
as the
works
Christ
were done
to heaven,
was
heaven.
of
Further,
if
the Gospel
Kingdom
proclamation of the Kingdom of Heaven has been delivered to us by the mouth of our Lord, it follows that the
Heaven, and
this
Gospel was
also delivered to us by the mouth of our Lord." " Was not a our King, invested with power, said to me part of the Gospel written by Matthew, another part by Mark, a
And
"
third part
his
And
replied to
Majesty
It is
our King, that these four men wrote the true, did not write it, however, out of their own head nor
ments of any kind, and by profession they were generally fishermen, shoemakers or tentmakers. They wrote and transmitted to us what
they had heard and learned from Jesus Christ,
in actions
who had
taught them
the flesh
and words during all the rime He was walking with them in on the earth, and what the Spirit- Paraclete had reminded
them
of."
48
WOODBROOKE
And
our King said to
STUDIES
are they different from one
I
me:
"Why "
?
And
is
difference
between
their
answered
his
tion there
Different
:
some
of
them speak
of the wonderful phases of the moon, some others of the fine beauty of the stars, some others of the atmosphere, some others of the land and sea, and some others of some
brilliant
some others
Further, among the people who write on heaven alone some speak of its immense height and some others of the swiftness of its movement, and among those who speak of the sun alone, some write on the high and dazzling resplendence of its light, some others on
other topics.
its
heat,
of
its its
sphere,
some others on
its
purity and
effects.
Let your Majesty order some men to write on the topic of the resplendent glory of your Majesty, and some others on the great
quantity of your gold and silver,
pearls
"
lustre of
your
and precious
stones,
and some others on the beauty and fine your Majesty, and some others on the power, your Kingdom, and some others on the wisdom
and
ness,
intelligence of
virtue,
and
your Majesty, and yet some others on your gentleIn what they will write there might be piety.
in
differences of
words
not be
will
any contradiction between them, not even all be right in all that they will write, although some
omit some items, because there
is
They
of
them might
no one
who
is
Majesty.
the evangelists wrote concerning the words, deeds, and natures of Jesus
Christ.
none whatever.
The
four of
them write
topics
same way and without discrepancies and differences on the main of His conception, birth, baptism, teaching, passion on the cross,
and ascension
to heaven."
' :
And
Catholics, that as
God
gave the
me
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
the Gospel through the Christ,
49
Muhammad"
that
And
so "
He
my
the
gave the
furkan
through
replied
were
to take
clearly
predicted
prophets
mentioned.
'
God
Moses and
Behold the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah
according to the covenant that
that
I
I
new
:
not
made with
I
day
the
took them
by
the
hand
to bring
them out
of the land of
Egypt,
which covenant they nullified, and Lord but this shall be the covenant
:
saith
that
will
I
make with
will put
the house
of
Israel
saith
the Lord,
my
law
in
their
in
their hearts,
and
will
they shall be
his
And they shall teach no more every man people. " his nor Know the Lord," for they brother, neighbour saying.
my
know me from
the least of
shall all
greatest of them.'
In the of
above words
God
setting up of the Gospel. another Through prophet, called Joel, God disclosed the signs which would occur at the time of the dissolution of the Torah and the
'
up of the Gospel, and the signs concerning the Spirit- Paraclete which the Apostles, the commanders of the army of the Gospel, were
setting
to receive,
because
spirit
He
upon
said through
all
'
him,
And
afterwards
will
pour out
shall
my
flesh,
men
and your sons and your daughters shall dream dreams, and your
on
And
in
my
servants
3
and on
is
my
hand-
my
spirit
those days.'
This
said of the
who descended on
'
Jesus to heaven,
given.
1
He
the
had previously
in
And
the
And
will
is
show wonders
Syriac
the
I.e.
"
This
Kur'anic word
furkana,
salvation."
-
This prophecy is with much ingenuity ascribed to by the Muslim apologist, 'AH b. Rabban Tabari, who concludes his statement as follows " These meanings cannot be ascribed to any other besides the Muslims." Kitab ad Dm, p. 125 of my
Jer. xxxi.
32-34.
Muhammad and
to Islam
translation.
3
Joel
ii.
28-29.
50
WOODBROOK
STUDIES
The
All
heavens and the earth, blood and fire, and pillars of smoke. sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood.' l
this
'
took place at the Passion of Jesus Christ on the Cross. And he * further adds, Before the great and the terrible day of the Lord ;
he
the
calls
the
great
will
and
terrible
in
day
of the Lord,
Word- God
appear
angels, and the day on which the 3 Himself said in the Gospel.'
'
our flesh with great stars will fall from heaven, as Jesus And the prophet further adds,
shall
Whosoever
to say
shall call
be saved,' that
shall
live
is
whosoever
life.
shall receive
the Gospel of
God
an
everlasting
"
to
God,
from the
Law
signs,
the
Gospel when
He
showed
us
new
covenant, and
and
stars,
and when
He
showed us
:
the
gifts of
the
Holy
Spirit
which
He
wonders,
signs,
and
miracles.
God
irrefragable signs
for
the transition
from the
The Law
is
that
the Gospel,
Kingdom
of
of
Kingdom
clearly
Heaven."
And
me
"
:
I 4
will raise
among
Moses 'The
Who
I
and who
besides
Israelites
Muhammad?"
First of all
And
answered
Majesty:
Arabs,
the
our
are
Sovereign.
Abraham by Keturah
nearer to the
of three
Jacob from
whom
the
descended the
whom
Isaac
and sons
and
from
whom
whom
the
Arabs
the
their brothers,
Abraham.
The Cod.
Deut.
If
3 5
"
repeats inadvertently.
1
4 6
xviii.
8.
xxv. 2.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
to their to
51
not prophet Moses refers to the brethren of the children of Israel and own twelve tribes, it would be more appropriate to apply it
the
Edomites, because
it
has been
It is
shown
also
that they are nearer to not only the Arabs who are
brethren
of
the
Israelites
but
the
Ammonites and
the
Moabites. "
Further,
Moses
God
will raise
up from among their brethren a prophet to themselves and not to the Arabs, because he says that the prophet whom the Lord your God will raise up will be from among yourselves and not from outside
yourselves, from your brethren
strangers,
and then
that
This prophet will be similar and not dissimilar to him in doctrine. Biblical passage resembles that other passage in which God said to
them concerning a
brethren.'
1
'
king,
will
raise
up
As
in the subject
of a king
'
God
children
of
Ishmael by the
word
their brethren,'
the
subject of a
prophet
He
word. "
to his
Muhammad
own
people."
It
is
We must examine in
said
:
the construction
of the words.
like
a prophet from yourselves, from among unto me. If Muhammad be a prophet like
;
and Muhammad, who Moses, Moses wrought miracles and prodigies would in this case be a prophet like Moses, should have wrought
many
was
miracles
like
and
prodigies.
And
then,
if
prophet
given to
him on Mount
Sinai,
Muhammad
taught the
Torah and
festivals.
Muhammad
and Moses taught the Torah, the prophet Muhammad is not, therefore, like unto Moses, because the one who was to be a prophet like
unto Moses, would not have changed anything from Moses, and the one who is different in one from Moses is not a prophet like thing unto Moses. The prophet Moses spoke the above words concerning the prophets who from time to time rose after him from this or that
Jewish
l
tribe,
Ct.
Kings
xiv.
-Arab.
Kaum.
52
after
WOODBROOKE
them,
]
STUDIES
generation
who from
generation
to
were
sent to the
Israelites."
And
of the
me
"
:
What
is
the punishment
:
man who
what
of
is
mother
And
"
And
man who
honour
fetters,
his
mother?"
I
And
me:
"Strokes,
And said to his Majesty " The decision of your Majesty is just. And the man who kills his mother is also liable to the same punishment." And our King said to me " Jesus Christ
and death."
:
is,
therefore,
liable
to
the
He
"
:
let
His
is
killed her."
And
Which
to
come
I
"
And
our King
his
The world
Jesus Christ
to come."
let
And
die,
then
"
If
replied
His mother
which
He
as
than
this
one,
He
therefore invested
;
and
one
honours
his
transferred
mother
is
of
all
blessings,
life
Jesus
Christ
who who
to the immortal
is,
one and
therefore,
worthy
'
of all blessings.
While He takes up should Jesus Christ have done ? everybody from earth to heaven, and while, as God said, He causes them to be immortal after having been mortal, should He only have
What
Great ingenuity is shown by the Muslim apologist, 'AH b. Rabban will quote him here Tabari, to ascribe this prophecy to Muhammad. " in full And God has not raised up a prophet from among the brethren
We
of the children of Israel except Muhammad. The phrase, from the midst of them acts as a corroboration and limitation, viz. that he will be from the
'
'
As children of their father, and not from an avuncular relationship of his. to Christ and the rest of the prophets, they were from the Israelites themand he who believes that the Most High God has not put a between the man who is from the Jews themselves and the man who is from their brethren, believes wrongly. The one who might claim that this prophecy is about the Christ, would overlook two peculiarities and show ignorance in two aspects the first is that the Christ is from the children of David, and David is from themselves and not from their the second is that he who says once that the Christ is Creator brethren and not created, and then pretends that the Christ is like Moses, his speech Kitab ad-D~Di, pp. 85-86 is contradictory and his saying is inconsistent."
selves
;
distinction
of
my
translation.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
left
53
in
this
mortal
life ?
a great disgrace
every
other human being, was only natural and did not bring the smallest As it was not a dishonour to her to have been born disgrace to her. so also it was not a dishonour to her to have been born from a womb, If Mary had not died, again to eternal life from death and earth. not if she had and risen have not would she risen, she would have
1
;
been
far
it is
fair
that
of
Mary, the
mother
of
whom
the
Kingdom
Heaven was
up first to heaven. It was, thereHe who demolishes a have died. she should that fore, imperative house in order to renew it and ornament it, is not blameworthy but
praiseworthy." And our King said to
me
:
? "-
And
and
"
Jesus Christ
is
the
Word
of
God,
He is one nature good, Jesus Christ is, therefore, good. And our King said : with God, like light is one with the sun." " then did Jesus say, There is none good but one, that is one " "
God
How
?
'
God
" not
?
I
replied to
said
him
"
Was
the Prophet
David
'
just or
King
"
He was just
and head
of the just."-
And
said then
is
How
no one that
just,
then did the prophet David say, There is " And our King said " This no, not one,'
:
'
It has been said of the wicked ones." saying does not include David. And I said "So also the sentence, There is none good but one
:
'
As
'
the sentence,
'
There
is
no
one that
is
just
embraces many others to the exclusion of David, so There is none good embraces many others to
'
when he
just man, no, not even one,' so also the Christ did not include Himself when he said, There is none good
said,
is
'
There
no
is
one God.'
said about Himself,
'
The
I
'
am
the
is
good
shepherd,'
There
none good about Himself. Indeed, He said this sentence about the one whom He was addressing. The latter was thinking this in his
1
The
Matt. xix.
7.
Peshitta Version.
John
x.
54
heart
:
WOODBROOKE
how
is
STUDIES
is
difficult
establishing
There
found
in
God who gave us all the good things As to Jesus Christ, He disclosed to promise.
his
him
hidden thoughts and showed to him that flagrant contradiction with his thoughts, in calling * good master while in his thoughts he was saying
his
'
words were
in his
in
Him
'
words
him his thoughts with Why thy tongue while " in thy thoughts thou sayest about me, This one is no good, because
good,'
disclosed to
and wishing
to rebuke
him
He
and
'
said to him,
callest
thou
me good
;
He
that
orders
is
me
"
1
'
to
?
God
a good
tree.
none good but one Jesus Christ makes mention both of a good man and How is it possible that there is a good man and a
squander
my
fortune
there
is
good
tree,
"
is
not good
How
can
this
be
possible ?
And And
Christ
I
me
"
:
If
beautiful
Majesty:
to the
"We
world
that there
is
only one
prophet
heaven and
This
we know
from the prophet Malachi and from the angel Gabriel when he announced the birth of John to Zechariah."
And
"
plied
:
"
:
And who
'
is
that prophet
?"
And
re-
The prophet
I
Elijah.
which
The prophet Malachi who is the last of Remember ye the law of Moses, my
in
Horeb
with the
Behold I will send you Elijah the prophet, and judgments. before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord. And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of
the children to their fathers,
3
curse.'
And
vi.
the angel
come and smite the earth with a Gabriel when announcing to Zechariah the
lest
I
Luke
43, etc.
That the line of defence of the Christians against the Muslims of the effect that no prophet will rise after eighth and ninth centuries was to the Christ is borne out by the Muslim apologist, 'Ali b. Rabban Tabari, who in
his
the
my
24
xiii.
xxi. 9, in
is
which
prophets.
On
it
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
birth of
*
55
him,
thy prayer is heard, and thy wife Elizabeth shall bear thee a son, and thou shalt call his name John.
for
of
And
birth.
filled
thou
have joy and gladness, and many shall rejoice at his For he shall be great in the sight of the Lord, and shall be And with the Holy Ghost even from his mother's womb.
shalt
many
he turn
to
the
Lord
their
God.
And
he
shall
go before
l
him
the
in the spirit
and power
of the
prophet
Elijah, to turn
obedient to the
wisdom
of
just,
and
to
make ready
a people pre-
pared
'
our victorious Sovereign, how the angel called Jesus "Think, It is this prophet Elijah who, as we have the Lord their God.' world after the ascension of Jesus to into the come will learned, He will come to rebuke the Antichrist, and to teach and heaven.
preach to everybody concerning the second apparition of Jesus from As John, son of Zechariah, came before His apparition in heaven.
the
flesh,
and announced
Him
'
to
everybody
'
in saying,
'
Behold the
'
Lamb
of
shall baptise
God, which taketh away the sin 4 with Holy Ghost and fire,'
I
of the
world
'
He
is
that
He
'
is
whose shoes
Elijah
is
am
going to
come before
His
glorious ap-
and
to
for
His presence.
Both messsengers, John and Elijah, are from one power of the Spirit, with the difference that one already came before Christ and the other is going to come before Him, and their coming is similar and to
the
"
same
effect.
In the second
coming
He
will
from the graves. As the Word of God, He created everyfrom the and He is going to renew everything at the thing beginning
end.
Adam
He
And
is
the
end and no
limit to
of
is
no
our highly intelligent Sovereign said "If you had not corrupted the Torah and the Gospel, you would have found in them
:
Muhammad
1
also
And
2
to set his
mind
at
Luke Luke
i.
13-17
1
iii.
6.
56
rest
WOODBROOKE
on
this subject
I
STUDIES
To the mind of your Majesty, Sovereign you to whom God has granted that intelligence and broad-mindedness which are so useful for the administration
replied to
him
"
my
illustrious
of public in a
and
that
way
and you who speak and act with the it is due congruous dignity of your Majesty
for
to inquire
why and
Books.
of
Both the Torah and the prophets proclaim as with the voice thunder and teach us collectively the divinity and humanity of Christ,
birth
His wonderful
no man
'
will ever
written,
in
Who
and,
'
is
the
and,
' '
From
the
womb before
is
and,
His name
before the
sun.'
"
So
far as
virgin shall
His temporal birth is concerned it is written, Behold a 4 conceive and bear a son and shall call his name Emmanuel.'
Isaiah
'
David and
and
all
and miracles
He
was going
to
appearance
the earth
in the flesh,
of
God
was going to be filled through this appearance. They tell us about His passion, His crucifixion, and His death in the flesh, as we have demonstrated above. They tell us about His resurrection from
the dwelling of the dead
enlighten us concerning
to heaven.
Finally they
His second appearance from heaven and conof the dead which He is going to effect, and
is
He
all,
as
all
one
who
like
is
God
and the
Word
of
God.
is
Christian doctrine
embodied
for
a clear
to corrupt
They
and humanity
to heaven.
of Christ,
It
and that
1
His death,
8.
ii.
resurrection,
2
and ascension
9
2,
;
could
Is.
3
liii.
Cf.
Is.
Is.
li.
Prov.
24.
Cf. Ps.
Ixxii.
17;
xliv.
"
His name
"
is
of
'
David,
is
referred by the
himself.
Muslim
apologist,
AH
1
b.
1
Rabban
of
Tabari, to
yii.
Muhammud
my
translation.
Ms.
14.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
57
never have been possible for us to stir ourselves against ourselves, and tamper with the testimony of the Torah and the gospel to our Saviour.
we were able to corrupt the Books of the Torah and the Gospel that we have with us, how could we have tampered with those If one says here that we have corrupted those that are with the Jews ?
Even
if
"
are in theirs,
how is
hands while the Jews themselves corrupted those that it that the Jews have not corrupted those passages
The Christians through which the Christian religion is established ? never have had and will never have such deadly enemies as the Jews
;
if the Jews had, therefore, tampered with their Book, how could we Christians induce ourselves to accept a text which had been cor-
rupted and changed, a text which would have shaken the very foundaNo the truth is that neither we tions of the truth of our religion ?
;
Our mutual
hos-
"
If
possibility that
and the Jews are enemies, and if there is no enemies should have a common agreement on the line
it
was
and
on the corruption of the Books. Indeed the Jews with us on the of some verbs and nouns, tenses and meaning disagree persons, but concerning the words themselves they have never had any
the
Jews
to agree
The very same words are found with us and disagreement with us. with them without any changes. Since the Torah and the Prophets teach the truth of Christianity, we would have never allowed ourselves
to corrupt
we
our victorious Sovereign, them, and that is the reason why, could have never tampered with the Torah and the Prophets. The very same reason holds good with regard to the Gospel,
'
which
we
stances.
could not and would not have corrupted under any circumWhat the ancient prophets prophesied about the Christ is
The
on the eyes of our souls is the same from the Torah, from the prophets, and from the Gospel. The only difference is that in the first two Books
the light
is
in
in
words uttered
in
advance
the prophets had taught us about the divinity and humanity of Christ, and about all the Economy
it is
Book
What
this
enmity
is
also emphasised
by
58
of the
WOODBROOKE
Word-God
in the flesh, the
STUDIES
to
Gospel proclaimed
us without
Further,
Torah and the Gospel is one, and if way, we would have changed those
people are
things
some
somewhat
our victorious King asked me And what are those things " which you call undignified in our faith ? And I replied to his benev" olence Things such as the growth of Christ in stature and wisdom
: : ;
And
"
His
food, drink,
and
fatigue
His
ire
and lack
of omniscience
His
and
burial,
and
all
by some people to be mean and debasing. changed these and similar things held by some people
believed
undignified
;
We
might have also changed things that are believed by some other people to be contradictory, such as the questions dealing
to
we
with the times, days, verbs, pronouns, and facts, questions which appear some people to furnish a handle for objections that tend to some extent to
weaken our
statement.
submit that
tempted
them,
we
vealed by
them,
how could we have dared to tamper with whole passages reGod ? Not only could we not dream of tampering with but we are proud of them and consider them as higher and
others.
is
From
we
an eternal God, and believe that He is and from the passages that are believed
by some
true
to
we
same Jesus
is
man and
"
human
if
nature as ourselves.
No,
we have
name
one
iota, in the
the
of
Muhammad
were
in
the Book,
as
expected his coming and longed for it, with an to meet those about whom the desire expected eager prophets wrote, when they actually came or they were about to come.
we
Further,
what
closer relationship
have
we with
Arabs
that
we
who
appeared from
the Jews while rejecting the Prophet that appeared from the Arabs ? Our natural relationship with the Jews and with the Arabs is on the
same
footing.
Truth
to
tell,
other nations by
men, but
appearance of the
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
since they shut their eyes in order not to rejoice in the light that
to
59
came
enlighten the world, they have been despised and dejected, and
they thought of
God
kept
"
shell
is
the royal
treasuries as long
as
it,
it
contains
a pearl, but
when
it
is
thrown
outside
are the
In this
same way
had not appeared from them, is hidden in a shell, they were respected by all men, and God showed them to others, as a glorious and enlightened people, by means of the numerous signs and wonders but after the appearance from them that He performed among them
but
as long as Jews was hidden in them
the Christ
as a pearl
of the
Christ-God
turning
in the
flesh,
and
their rejection of
His revelation
and
their
all
among
other peoples.
are, therefore, despised
is
"The Jews
but the contrary
great
God and men, because they forsook and and idolatry worshipped and honoured one God polytheism, in this they deserve the love and the praise of all if, therefore, there
honour and esteem by
;
;
was an
allusion to their
Prophet
in
in the
we would
not
have introduced any changes it, but we would have accepted him with great joy and pleasure, in the same way as we are expecting the
one of
whom we
the world.
We
of
going to appear at the end of are not the correctors but the observers of the comis
spoke, and
who
mandments
God."
"
:
And
We
shall
hear
when business
affairs give
us a better
And
praised
God, King
of
who
grants to earthly
that through
And
him
Kings such a wisdom and understanding in order them they may administer their Empire without hindrance. blessed also his Majesty and prayed that God may preserve
the world for many years and establish his throne in piety and righteousness for ever and ever. And in this way I left him on
to
first
the
day.
60
WOODBROOKE
The
next day
l
STUDIES
had an audience of
his
Majesty.
Such audiences
had contantly taken place previously, sometimes for the affairs of the State, and some other times for the love of wisdom and learning which
was burning
loves also
in the
soul
of his
Majesty.
it
He
is
learning
when he
finds
in other
people,
and on
this
me
After
began
to
had paid to him my usual respects as King of Kings, he address me and converse with me not in a harsh and haughty
I
me
"
:
O
*'
Catholicos, did
you
bring a Gospel with you, as I had asked you "I have brought one, his exalted Majesty
:
And
replied to
God-loving
'
King."
this
And
Book
our
?
victorious
I
Sovereign
to
me
is
Who
gave you
"And
replied
him
"
:
the
Word of God that gave us the Gospel, O our God-loving King."" And our King said " Was it not written by four Apostles ? "It was written by four Apostles, as our And replied to him
:
King has
own
written by the Apostles, and if the Apostles simply wrote what they heard and learned from the Word-God, the Gospel has, therefore,
been given
written
angel,
in
reality
by the Word-God.
Similarly, the
Torah was
it
from an
the
and the angel heard and learned it from God, we assert that Torah was given by God and not by Moses. " In the same way also the Muslims say that they have received
Muhammad,
but since
angel,
Muhammad
therefore,
received
affirm
knowthe
ledge
they,
that
was divulged through him was not Muhammad's or the So also we Christians believe that although the angel's but God's. was to us by the Apostles, it was not given as from them Gospel given
Book
Word
:
and His
Spirit.
Or
Here
On
kawariyun.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
and
official
61
documents
of your
scribes and clerks, but they are not said to be those of scribes, but
and
of the
replied to his
is
He
worthy walked
of
all
praise,
by
all
reasonable people,
my
Sovereign.
in the
in
All the prophets taught the doctrine of one God, and since Muhammad taught the doctrine of the unity of God, he
lovers of
God.
walked,
therefore,
in
the path
of
the prophets.
Further,
all
the
prophets drove
to
nearer
good works, and since Muhammad drove his people away from bad works and brought them nearer to the good ones, he walked, therefore,
in the
Again, all the prophets separated men from idolatry and polytheism, and attached them to God and to His cult, and since Muhammad separated his people from idolatry and
path of the prophets.
polytheism, and attached them to the cult and the knowledge of one
God, beside
in the
whom
there
is
no other God,
Finally
it is
Muhammad
His
Word
and His
Spirit,
and
Word
and His
Muhammad
walked, therefore,
Who
?
who
not only
in
fought for
sword
God in words, but showed also his As Moses did with the Children of
had fashioned
of
zeal for
Israel
Him
the
when he saw
that they
killed
all
a golden calf
those
who were
soul, his
worshipping
so
also
Muhammad Him
more than
his
own
relatives.
He
praised,
promised them kingdom, praise and honour from God, both in this world and in the world to come in the Garden.' But those who
worshipped idols and not God he fought and opposed, and showed to them the torments of hell and of the fire which is never quenched and
in
which
"
all
And
:
what Abraham,
that friend
and beloved
of
God, did
in
Arab, tumar.
The
62
WOODBROOKE
and from
STUDIES
his kinsmen,
towards one
God
to other
Muhammad
did.
He turned
his face
their worshippers,
whether those
idols
were those
of his
own kinsmen
or of
strangers,
this
Because of
fore his feet
lion
and he honoured and worshipped only one God. God honoured him exceedingly and brought low l bein the
world
like a
is
below heaven
of the
thunder, viz
the
Kingdom
is
of the Persians
to say the
and
that
Romans.
that
The
Kingdom
of
and the
to say the
Kingdom
one
2
Romans,
suffer
attributed suffering
and death
who
cannot
and die
in
any way
of
his
process.
He
power
Commander
one
and
his children
from
our
to south.
Who
has praised, and will not weave a crown of glory and majesty to the one whom God has glorified and exalted ? These and similar things I and all God-lovers utter about
victorious King, the
whom God
Muhammad,
my
sovereign."
And
words
'
me
'
'
You
of the
Which words
And I replied to his gracious Majesty Prophet." " of his our victorious King believes that I must accept ?
me
"
:
And
my
That God
I
is
is
no
Him."
And
"
replied
:
one God,
have learned from the Torah, from the Prophets I stand and from the Gospel. by it and shall die in it." And our
victorious
King
one
said to
me
1
"
:
You
believe in one
his sentence
And
answered
"
:
believe in
God
in three,
and three
in one, but
ferent
Spirit.
in the persons of
God's
Word
and His
have
words."
And
"
:
How
is it
you mention do
1
Gods
whom
his
And
answered
Put a
waw
Allusion
to the Jacobites
and Melchites.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
"
63
one God,
Majesty
of
them
constitute
O
:
our
victorious King,
and the
fact that
He
is
Gods."
And
only one God precludes the " our King retorted The
statement that there is only one can they be one ?" And I replied " our Sovereign, not in Godhead, believe that they are three, but in persons, and that they are one not in persons but in Godhead." And our King retorted "The fact that they are three precludes
fact that there are three precludes the
God.
If
how
We
and the
one pre-
cludes
the
statement
1
that
admit."
one,
And
said to
him
three.
This
everybody will
are the cause of
The
three in
Him
of three,
O our
one
King.
Those
and
that
of three."
And
of
me
"
:
the cause of
one
What
is
"
this ?
answered
this
"
his question
is
:
One is
number one
number
King.
This
is,
cause of three, as
three
is is
said,
On
the other
since the
number
three
caused by
the
the
number
three
therefore the
:
one,
And
"In
process the
number
four
would
five
and
Godhead would
is
resolve
itself
into
And
replied to
our King
stop,
there
is
a time at which
one must
because
reality in everything.
in
We
In-
all
is
number
J
three.
all
and
numbers
three
and
perfect number.
In this
number three
Above
all
added
to themselves,
by means
of that
It follows from all complete and perfect number, as it is said. this that one is the cause of three and three of one, as we suggested." And our King said to me " Neither three nor two can possibly be " said of
:
God."
1
And
Neither, therefore,
64
one."
WOODBROOKE
And
:
STUDIES
:
" " our King asked ? And I answered cause of three is two, the cause of two would be one, and in
How
"If the
this
case
If
then
God
cannot he said to
one,
is
two and
that of
two
God
can-
Indeed this number one being the not, therefore be called one either. cause and the beginning of all numbers, and there being no number in God, we should not have applied it to Him. As, however, we do
apply this number to God without any reference to the beginning of an arithmetical number, we apply to Him also the number three without any implication of multiplication or division of Gods, but with
a particular reference to the Word and the Spirit of God, through which heaven and earth have been created, as we have demonstrated 1 If the number three cannot be in our previous colloquy. applied to
caused by the number one, the latter could not by inGod either, but if the number one can be applied to God, since this number one is the cause of the number three, the last
God,
since
it
is
ference be applied to
number can
God."
And
plurality,
our victorious
King said:
Godhead."
'The number
three
this
denotes
and
Godhead,
number
:
three has no
room
And
"
number,
Since there cannot King, and number is the cause of plurality. be any kind of plurality in God, even the number one would have no " the number one as applied to room in Him." And our King said
:
O our
God
is
attested in the
Book."
And
said
"So
also
is
the case,
find often such our King, with a number implying plurality. a number in the Torah, in the Prophets and in the Gospel, and as I hear, in your Book also, not, however, in connection with Godhead
We
it
is
written in
'
'
it,
Let us make
man
1
in
and
The man
is
become
as
The
of
"In number (also God is one because) He embraces all sorts of numbers, and number in itself is not numbered. Number, however, is divided into an even number and an odd number, and both even and odd numbers are finally included in the number three."
Risalah,
-
his
adversary 'Abdallah
b. Isma'il al-
p. 36.
i.
Gen.
26.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
'
65
2
one of us
'
and,
'
their language.'
is
As
of
*
to the Prophets,
3
;
it is
witten in them,
the
'
;
Lord
4
Hosts
the
and
'
hath sent
me
and
By
*
Word
of the
all
His hosts
it,
by the
Spirit of
His mouth.'
As
to the Gospel,
it
is
written in
Go
nations, baptising
of the
them
in the
"
name
to
'
of the Father,
it is
Holy Ghost'
'
As
and
your Book,
'
written in
it,
And we sent
s
Spirit,'
and
We
to
fashioned,'
We
into
and
the
God
in a plural form.
Holy Books
words
God
in a plural form,
what
the
Books
Since we had to presay concerning God we have to say and admit. serve without change the number one as applied to God, we had also
by inference
number three, that is Him. The number one refers to nature number three to God, His Word and His
is
because
God
*
not,
and
'
Sovereign said
'
The
'
in the expressions
in the
We
sent,'
We
'
breathed,'
We
said,'
Books not
but as a mark of Divine majesty and power. It is even the habit of the kings and governors of the earth to use such a mode of speech." And I replied to the wealth of his intelligence " What your glorious
:
is
true.
To you God
power and
is
and
kings.
The community
"
Gen. Gen.
iii.
22
7.
xi.
The
is
very same argument taken from the plural of majesty used by Kindi in his Apology for Christianity (Risalah,
effect.
pp. 40-44), where the same Biblical verses are quoted to the same
Ms.
xlviii.
16.
1
Ps. xxx.
(Peshitta).
1
Kur'an,
'
xix.
*ICur'an, xxi.
f>
9.
The
was no time
in
which
p. 39.
God
of
mind and
or otherwise of
Christianity,
word and
spirit is
in his
Apology
for
Risalah,
66
community
'
WOODBROOKE
of
STUDIES
of
kings rightly
make
the
as,
We
ordered,'
We
said,'
We
did,' etc.
lectively all
community
of
mankind
men
are one
with the king, and the king orders, says and does, all men order, say and do in the king, and he says and does in the name of all. "
Further, the kings are
soul,
human
beings,
power
and the body is in its turn composed of the Because a human being is composed of
many
make
'
speech, such as
We
did,'
We
ordered,' etc.
As
to
God who
is
simple in His nature and one in His essence and remote from
division
all
and bodily composition, what greatness and honour can possibly come to Him when He, who is one and undivided against Himself,
says in the plural form,
'
'
The
greatest
to
God
is is
that
as
He
is.
In
His essence
Spirit.
He
This
His
Word
and His
of
Word
His
nature, as the
word and
the
our vic-
King are of his nature, and he is one King with his word and which are constantly with him without cessation, without division
'
When,
'
We
'
spoke,'
We
said,'
We
did,'
and
Our image
Spirit,
and
to refer to
God,
His
Word
and His
King
of Kings.
Who
they are referred in the way just described, is more closely united to God than His
all,
governs
'
all
land directs
all ?
Spirit
through which
:
He
vivifies,
David spoke thus By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all His hosts by the Spirit of His " mouth and, He sent His Word and healed them, and delivered
and renews
'
all ?
'
them from
one
destruction
and
'
Thou
sendest forth
Thy
'
Spirit
4
and
Thou
Our
is
image' and
Our
like-
Put a
waw
6
before d-akh.
p.
Apology (Risalah
2 4
developed by Kindi
cvii.
in his
Ps. xxxiii.
(Peshitta).
Ps.
20.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
' '
67
We made,* and We by Moses and the expressions, 1 breathed,* used by Muhammad, do not refer to God but to the angels, how disgraceful it would be to believe that the image and the likeness
ness' used
of
God and
!
is
of the creator
are one
How
the
dishonourable
it
would be
to affirm that
!
God
a
says,
God
in
orders and
does
like
creator,
;
way
that
transcends that of
others
servants, do not order with God, but are under the order of they do not create with God, but are very much created by God.
God The
;
angels are
spirits
what David
'
Who
and His
ministers a flaming
fire.'
In this
are
made and
created.
"As
to the
Word
and
Spirit of
God
the prophet
David says
3
' :
that
and made, but creators and makers By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made,' and not His Word alone and the heavenly hosts were created by His Spirit and not His
;
'
' ;
Spirit alone
and,
' '
Because
He
'
said
*
commanded and
'
'
they were
created.'
says,'
says
and
commands
by word, and
word precedes
Since
God
is
one
since
after
Him, and
angels,
tions
and
to
God
is
whom
it
could
we
ascribe then
such expressions
'
believe,
God.
If
is
and the
'
Spirit of
it is
is
'
true,
also
also pos-
A.L.R
others,
as an
of the plural ive in connection with is also taken in favour of the Trinity by the Christian apologist Kindi.
God
Ps. civ. 4.
It
would perhaps be
and pronouns
of this sen-
tence in plural.
4
Ps. cxlviii. 5.
68
which are three
in
WOODBROOKE
number,
refer also in
1
STUDIES
your Book to God, His
Word
and His
Spirit.
:
" our victorious King said And what did impede the Prophet from saying that this was so, that is that these letters clearly
And
referred to
God, His
"
"
Spirit ?
And
replied to his
Majesty
people
The obstacle might have come from who would be listening to such a thing.
:
were accustomed
have
and
that of
Spirit.
why your Prophet proclaimed openly the doctrine of one God, but that of the Trinity he only showed it in a somewhat veiled and mysterious way,
is
was polytheism.
This
that
is
to
sent our Spirit and fashioned a through the expressions 2 not it in man.' He did teach order that his hearers complete openly
We
it
'
'
We
may
hide
not be scandalised by
it
and think
of polytheism,
in
order that he
may
of
The ancient prophets had also spoken of the unity of the nature God and used words referring to this unity in an open and clear
way, but the words which referred to His three persons they used them in a somewhat veiled and symbolical way. They did so not for any other reason than that of the weakness of men whose mind was
bound
up
in
idolatry
and polytheism.
When, however,
'
Christ
appeared
to us in the flesh,
He
the prophets
1
had
said in a veiled
Go
ye,' said
The
Patriarch
of
refers
here
to
mysterious letters
It is
placed
at
the
beginning
some Surahs
of the Kur'an.
the Christians at the very beginning of the 'Abbasid dynasty understood them In the Kur'an of our day the letters A.L.R. to refer to the Holy Trinity.
are found before Surahs 10, 11, 12, 14 and 5, and the letters T.S.M. before Surahs xxvi. and xxviii., but the three letters Y.S.M. are not found before
1
Why this any Surah at all, but Surah xxxvi has only the two letters Y.S. There is no question of a copyist's last change in our modern Kur'an ? error in the Syriac text, because the letters are named in words and not
written in figures only.
-
Kur'anic expressions.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
He
the
to
69
name Moses also
the
'
His and
Disciples,
of
Father,
and baptise all nations l the Son and of the Holy Ghost.'
'
'
in
of the
uttered
same
thing in
Israel,'
'
said he,
that
three,
"
Hear,
O
He
your
God
'
is
one Lord.'
In saying
is
one,'
he
refers to the
'
one nature
of
Godhead, and
he
in saying the
three words,
of that
Spirit
Godhead, as if one was saying were one eternal God. Job also
;
that
said,
God, His Word and His The Lord gave, and the
'
blessed be the
name
it
of the Lord.'
In blessing the
if
And our King said to me " If He is one, He is not three and " And He is three, He is not one what is this contradiction ?
:
;
answered
globe,
its
"
:
The
sun
its
is
also one,
its
spheric
light
and
heat,
sun
in
three powers.
and the very same sun is also three, one In the same way the soul has the powers of and the very same soul is one in one thing and
In the
same way
one
is
called one
in
its
and
three,
in
its
gold that
is
to say in
its
nature,
and three
persons that
to say in the
number
of denarii.
The
that they
above objects are one does not contradict and annul are also three, and the fact that they are
"
In the very
fact that
God
is
He
is
in three persons,
and the
that
He
is
in
He
one God.
is
Man
three,
a being
in
which
is
living, rational
one and
one
being one
man and
and mortal,
one, he
and
this
God
that
in
by and mortal, and by the fact that he is living, and mortal, he is by necessity one man. This applies also to whom the fact of His being three does not annul the other fact
is is
is
By
man
He
facts confirm
and
cor-
Spirit
is
Holy
Matt,
xxviii.
9.
Deut.
vi. 4.
Job.
121.
70
Spirit,
WOODBROOKE
He
is
STUDIES
in
is
one God, because the eternal nature of God consists Fatherhood, Filiation, and Procession, and in the three of them He one God, and in being one God He is the three of them."
And
is
me
"Do
you say
God
of
its
composed
above
three, as the
human
nature
is
composed
being living, rational, and mortal, and as the sun heat, and sphericity, and as the soul is composed
gence,
of reason
and as gold is composed of height, depth, and width ? " denied this and said No, this is not so." And our King
:
And
said to
then do you wish to demonstrate with bodily demonstra" And I answered tions One who has no body and is not composed ? " is there no other Because God like his Majesty Him, from whom
:
me
"
Why
might draw a demonstration as to what is a being that has no beAnd our King said to me " It is never allowed ginning and no end."
I
:
to
And
God,
that
said to
Him
said
:
"
:
We
be
in
complete ignorance of
"
:
King
of
Kings."
And our
we
with us
Lords,
;
"
is
King
Why ? "-And
:
answered
Because
all
say about
God
we
have
King
of all
We
us,
If
Mighty, Powerful, Omnipotent, Light, call God by these and similar adjectives from things that are with and it is from them that we take our demonstration concerning God.
from such demonstrations and do not speak of Him through them, with what and through what could we figure in our " mind Him who is higher than all image and likeness ? " call God by these And our victorious King said to me Him to resemble we understand not because names, things that we
we remove Him
We
have with
us,
but in order to
In this
show
that
He
is
far
things that are comparison. that are with us, we rather ascribe to ourselves things His, with great mercy from Him and great imperfection from us. Words such as
:
way, we do
not attribute to
God
kingdom,
life,
sight,
knowledge,
and
justice, etc.,
and
eternally to
and temporal way. With only belong to us in an unnatural, imperfect, God they have not begun and they will not end, but with us children
of
men
And
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
this subject,
71
O
It
wisdom
just
this
is
especially true of
now
said.
God
to
comparison with His creatures, that from the latter I drew a comparison concerning Him who, in reality, has no comparison with the
created beings at
of uplifting
that
all.
I
made
my
God.
with us compare very imperfectly with the things of Even in saying of God that He is one, we introduce in our mind division concerning Him, because when we say for instance one man,
we have
God.
one angel, one denarius, one pearl, we immediately think that singles out and separates one denarius from many
of a division denarii,
one
pearl from many pearls, one angel from many angels, and one man from many men. " man would not be counting rightly but promiscuously if He
were
to say
one
angels,
asses,
one
denarius and
pearl and two emeralds. Every entity is its own species, and we say one, two, or
: ;
men
one,
may
said,
With
all
these calculations
one
speaking of
would introduce
one angel or one
Likewise
Him
is
same sense as
in
our saying
man.
He
His
nature.
when
say
:
we
say three
we do
when we
Father, Son,
and Holy
we do
but
not say
it
in
a
it
way
that implies
we
think of
as something high
above us
"
in a divine, incomprehensible,
Our
fathers
intercourse,
and indescribable way. and our children were born from marital union and and their fatherhood and filiation have a beginning and an
end.
Further, a father
was a son
all
and
cessation.
As
to
God
way
comprehend.
They
humanity, but in a divine way that mind cannot do not arise from any intercourse between them,
nor are they from time or in the time but eternally without beginning and without end. Since the above three attributes are of the nature
72
of
WOODBROOKE
God, and the nature
of
STUDIES
has no beginning and no end, they also are without a beginning and without an end. And since He who is without a beginning and without an end is also unchangeable, that
God
and will remain without any modification. The things that are with us give but an imperfect comparison with the things that are above,
because things that are God's are above comparison and likeness, as we have already demonstrated." And our victorious King said " The mind of rational beings will not agree to speak of God who is eternally one in Himself in terms of "
:
Trinity."
is
And
answered
created,
rightly
and no created being can comprehend God, you have affirmed, King of Kings, that the mind of the rational beings
one
God
in
terms of Trinity.
The
mind,
God,
as to the nature of
rational
God we
mind
not so
i.e.
as from the
Books
of
Revelation,
from what
Himself through
"
The Word
of
God
'
said,
No
Son, and no one knoweth the Son but the Father,' and, The Spirit 2 No one knows searcheth all things even the deep things of God.' that is in man's own man what there is in him, so also no spirit except
The Word and except the Spirit of God. as heat and own nature His from God, being eternally 3 mind from the soul alone see light from the sun, and as reason and and know the Divine nature, and it is they who have revealed and
one knows what
the Spirit of
is
in
God
God
is
one and
three, as
have
my above words from the Torah, the Prophets, the Gospel, and the Kur'an according to what I have learned from those who are versed in the knowledge of your Book.
already shown
in
"
Were
it
Word
and His
'
Spirit
were
eternally from
self in
God would
and
-
Him-
the Torah,
as,
Our image
Our
1
likeness
and
'
Behold
John passim.
Here
Gen.
also the
i.
" " " same Syriac word milltha means word and reason."
Cor.
ii.
0.
26.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
'
73
the
man
is
become
their
as
one of us
'
confound
'
"
language
Let us go down and there and the Kur'an would not have said,
;
and
'
And we
Spirit
sent to her
'
our
'
'
Spirit
did,*
and
'
We breathed
and
so
into her
from
such
our
and
We
'
We
to
said,*
on.
By
expressions
Spirit
(The Kur'an)
our victorious
its
refers
as
we have
own
said above.
Has
mind
of the rational
beings,
Sovereign,
God
rather than
surely right,
fanciful conceptions ?
and
since
we
and
find in
them
that
The
speaks of
God
as one
as three,
we
are compelled
by the nature
does the nature
"
:
And
my
me
full
"How
I
of the subject
And
answered
Because
freedom
to his obedient
may
I
"
And
:
And anything you want." uncircumscribed Spirit?" " Does asked his Majesty
:
then said
Majesty to be " our King said Ask "Is not God a simple and
:
And our King said 'Yes." And He perceive in an uncircumscribed way with all His being, or does He perceive like us with one part only " and not with another ? And our King answered " He perceives with all its nature without any circumscription." And asked " Was there any other thing with Him from eternity, or not ? And our King answered " Surely not." And asked " Does " not a perceiver perceive a perceived object ? And our King
I
:
answered
"
Yes."
:
And
then asked
"If
God
is
beginning and from eternity, a perceiver and a knower perceives and knows a perceived and known object, and because there was no
created thing that
was
eternally with
God
since
He
created after-
wards when
He
wished
in case there
whom He
called a perceiver
might perceive and know eternally, how could He be and a knower in a Divine and eternal sense, and
"
?
And
"
:
What
-
is
true.
3
1
(Here (Here
also read
also
74
It
is
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
object,
and the knower a known one, but it is possible to say that He And I asked "If He is all perceived and knew His own self."
:
a perceiver without any circumscription, so that He does not perceive and know with one part and is perceived and known with another
part,
of
how man is
can a perceiver of this kind perceive Himself ? The eye the perceiver and it perceives the other objects, but it can
never perceive its own self except with another eye like itself, because the sight of the eye is unable to perceive itself. If the sight of the
composed eye cannot be divided into parts so perceives itself, and the other part is perceived by
think of
that
itself,
God who
parts "
?
is
without
that
He
perceives
Himself
"
:
and
is
perceived
by
Himself
And
Yes
;
Which
of the
I
two do you
answered:
no
:
God
perceive
Himself or not?"
And
He
perceives and
limits
and a knowledge that has no bounds." " How is it that your argumentation and
And
reasoning
concerning
divisions, separations,
and
"
:
partitions
do not rebound
against you ?
And
His
replied to
him
God
perceives
Word and
the Spirit are a clear mirror of the Father, a mirror that is not foreign to Him but of the same essence and nature as Himself, without any
limits
and bounds.
creatures,
He was
perceiving His
Word, His
Spirit,
and
His
divinely,
difference,
however, that
eternally, and before the worlds, with this He was perceiving and knowing His Word
and His
His nature, His very nature, and He was eternally as His nature but as His perceiving and knowing His creatures not He was perceiving and knowing His Word and His creatures. and eternally, and His creatures not as Spirit as existing divinely
Spirit as
Through His
Word
Spirit
He
infiniteness
perceives and knows the beauty, the splendour, of His own nature, and through His creatures the
beauty of His wisdom, of His power, and of His goodness, now, before now, and before all times, movements, and beginnings." " Are they parts of one And our King asked philosophically
:
another, and placed at a distance from one another, so that one part
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
"
perceives
:
75
I
and
"
the
other
is
perceived
And
replied
to
his
No, not so, King of Kings. They are not parts of Majesty one another, because a simple being has no parts and no composition nor are they placed at a distance one from the other, because the
;
His Word, and of His Spirit is one. The Father is in the Son, and the Son in the Spirit, without any break, distance, and confusion of any kind, as the soul is in the reason and
infiniteness of
God,
of
and
heat
as the
;
in
its
light,
and
and
as the colour, scent, and taste are in the apple, without any break,
confusion,
far
and promiscuity. All figures, comparisons, and images, are below that adorable and ineffable nature of God, so there is fear
that
we may
in the plurality of
:
Godhead."
such a fear
And
indeed."
"There
is
And
King
of
we
it
diminished something from Godhead, just as well as if we added As it is a blasphemy to add something to Godhead, something to it.
is
also a
as
it is
something from it in our belief, and not allowed to add anything to the sun or to the pearl, so it is
blasphemy
to diminish
He who
its
divests
God
His
Word
its
Spirit,
who would
its
divest
the sun of
light
its
heat,
and the
soul of
reason and
mind,
As it is impossible to beauty and its lustre. conceive a pearl without lustre, or a sun without light, or a soul withand the pearl
out reason
of
without
by
of
God should be Word and therefore, If, Spirit are God's nature, and God is eternal, it follows that the Word and the Spirit God are also eternal. They are not added to Him from outside
Word
it
is
that
of the
plurality of
Godhead, but
Spirit."
it
is
of the
essence of
God
to
possess both
Word and
"
:
And
In your previous
is
said that the perceiver perceives the one that that is perceived perceives also the one that
words you and the one perceived, and that if they perceives
;
be near a thing they are all there at the same time, because the Word and the Spirit of God are the object that is perceived by God and
are eternal like the perceiver
;
and
if
there
is
no perceiver there
is
no
if
there
is
things,
76
"
I
WOODBROOKE
did say them,
STUDIES
And
the
said
"
:
But
it
is
possible that
before
He
created them."
And
said
"
we cannot
His
God
perceived and
into being."
knew
eternally
creatures, before
He
:
brought them
"
And
should
The
if
us, therefore,
to believe that
nature of the subject will not compel the perceiver is eternal, the perceived
also
be
God
is
an eternal
creature which
is
perceived by
Him
it.
is
also eternal,
it
and the
fact that
the creature
also
is
is
He
such a necessity as that you were mentioning in the case of the creature has been vitiated, so also is the case with regard to the Word and the Spirit." And I said " our King, it is not the same kind of perception that affects the creature on the one hand, and the Word and the
the perceived object like
:
As
Spirit
on the
:
other.
This
as
follows
it is
true that
is
God was
the creature
limited
not
infinite,
God
is infinite,
perceptibility,
and the perception of God has no limits. God having no limits, His knowledge also has
David
'
no
His understanding is infinite.' 1 If God, therefore, has any perception, and if He is infinite and unlimited, that perception must by necessity be infinite and unlimited,
limits,
as the divine
says,
and
if
His perception
;
is infinite, it
is
likewise infinite
but the perceived object that is infinite being only the nature of God, it follows that His Word and His Spirit are from
His
nature, in the
spirit of
if
man
are
God
is
an
infinite
Word and
the Spirit
that
are from
Him
are also
"
Spirit in
infinite,
an
but
infinite
way
as
His
He
perceives
and
same
infinite
way
as are
His perception
and His Knowledge, but in a finite way according to the limits of the He perceived His creature only creature and of the human nature.
1
Ps. cxlvii. 5.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
77
through His prescience, and not as a substance that is of the same nature as Himself, and, on the contrary, He perceived the Word and
the Spirit not through
same nature
'
as Himself.
His prescience but as a substance that is of the This is the reason why the prophet David
said,
For
is
settled in
heaven
~
Isaiah,
The
grass withereth
and
Word
all
of
and
flower,
and the
Word
and
and the
eternal
.
Spirit
of
God
God
something
imperishable, immortal,
"
If,
therefore,
is
an
infinite
perceiver,
the
object
that
is
perceived by
Him
has also to be
infinite, in
of the perceived
this
except the Word and the indeed was not without perception and a perceived object of the same nature as Himself till He brought His creature into being, but
infinite- perceived
God
He possessed
eternal.
It
was
eternal
that
was
also
God
that
He
was not
a
if
perceiver
and a knower,
the time in
which
He
if
created.
And
God
and
is
a perceiver of the
known is
truly a perceiver
and
a knower,
His
it
Word
As
eternally,
follows that
to
Spirit were perceived by Him divinely and these same Word and Spirit were eternally
with Him.
creatures,
He
when
He
and
wished, by means
His
Word
:
and His
And
me
I
"O
Catholicos,
this is
your
religion
no one
And
God
"If the
by
Word and the Spirit are means of whom did God create
The Books
His
this
the heaven
all
teach us that
Spirit
He
by means
If
whom
did
He
also
Spirit ?
spirit,
He
the
be applied to them
-
Ps. cxix.
89
(Peskitta).
Is. ad.
8.
78
WOODBROOKE
?
If
STUDIES
by means
of
be created or uncreated
and
did
of the Christians
is
vindicated
and
if
created,
whom
gibberish argumentation go on indefinitely until we stop at that Word and that Spirit hidden eternally in God, by means of whom we assert that the worlds
will
God
create
them
And
this process of
were created."
And
King.
the
all
I
"
:
You
Catholicos."
And
said
"
:
appear to believe in three heads, This is certainly not so, our victorious
God
whom
Word
eternally, together,
and before
by way
of
filiation
and the
latter
way
that befits
the reason
why
person divested of word and spirit as the weakness of the Jewish He shines and emits rays eternally with the light of belief has it.
Word and the radiation of His Spirit, and He is one head with do not believe in God as stripped of His Word and His Spirit. His Word and Spirit, in the case of the former without mind and
His
I
l
reason,
and
without
spirit
and
life.
It is
only
the idolators
who
believe in
false
gods or idols
who have
neither
reason nor
life."
:
"It seems to me that you believe our victorious King said 2 a child." in a vacuous God, since you believe that He has And I " I do not believe that God is either vacuous or answered King, If solid, because both these adjectives denote bodies. vacuity and
:
And
belong to bodies, and God is a Spirit without a body, neither And the King qualifications can be ascribed to Him." " What then do you believe that God is if He is neither said " And I replied to His Majesty " God is a vacuous nor solid ?
solidity
of the
:
two
Spirit and an incorporeal light, from whom shine and radiate eternally and divinely His Word and His Spirit. The soul begets the mind and causes reason to proceed from it, and the fire begets the light and
The
Cod.
author
is ;
is
word
inilltJia
which
The
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
causes heat to proceed from
the soul or
fire
its
79
that either
nature,
So
God, about Whom we never say that He He makes His Word shine and His Spirit
eternally."
vacuous or
solid
when
radiate from
His essence
And
"
:
What
is
the difference in
God
And I replied There is the between shining and radiating ? same difference between shining and radiating in God as that found in the fire begets the the illustration furnished by the fire and the apple
: :
"
light
to
scent
taste
proceed from it, and the apple begets the and savour to proceed from it. Al-
though both the fire and the apple give rise, the former to light and heat, and the latter to scent and savour, yet they do not do it in the same manner and with an identical effect on the one and the same
sense of our body.
of feeling, the light
We
fire
with the eyes, the scent of the apple with the From its savour with the palate.
that the
becomes clear
This
is
mode
of
filiation is different
from that of
procession.
as far as
and
:
to
And
because
I
"
You
made
will
God
in
similes."
And
said
"
:
King,
am
a bodily
man
Because
am
a bodily man,
in
and not a
as
make
with
use of bodily
comparisons
speaking of God.
How
could
or any other
lips
human
This
is
being speak of
of
far
God
He
is
with a tongue of
flesh,
fashioned
soul
and mind
closely united to a
body
beyond the power of men and angels to do. God Himself speaks with the prophets about Himself not as He is, because they cannot know and hear about Him as He is, but simply in the way that fits
in
with their
own
nature, a
way
In
His
in
He
revealed Himself as
man, sometimes as fire, sometimes as wind, and some other times some other ways and similitudes.
'
The
'
divine
David
'
said,
He
ones
on behalf of God,
'
have
80
multiplied
'
WOODBROOKE
my
l
STUDIES
by
the ministry
'
visions
and used
similitudes
of
the
prophets
times
and one
and
in divers
2
manners spake
prophets.'
similitudes
If
God
bodily
and symbols,
we
with
stronger
to
reason
find
ourselves
Him
make
understand anything I except through bodily similitudes and metaphors. bold and assert that I hope I shall not deserve any
if I
God and
God
evil
3
sun to
just
rise
on the
on the
and the
unjust.
Your Majesty
of forgiveness
in
God
way
will
make us worthy
if
beings
we
speak of
God
an earthly
a spiritual
And
You
said before
subject that
God
is
above
all
the
thoughts and minds of created beings, and that all the thoughts and minds of created beings are lower not only than God Himself but also
however, that you put the servant and the Lord on the same footing you make the creator equal with the created, and
His work.
The
fact,
in this
you
fall
into error
and falsehood."
And
of
God
I my Sovereign, that the Word and the Spirit replied should be called servants and created I considered and consider
:
"
If is
the
Word and
by
God
His
It is
Word
Spirit,
and
and not
servants.
that belongs to
and
called
unreal, but in a
sense.
God and to His Word Word and Spirit of God not in an The kingdom which my victorious
as
Sovereign possesses
spirit,
the
same
that held
his no one separates his of with the diadem kingdom together kingdom, and he shines in his word and his spirit in a way that they are not three Kings, and in a way that he does not shine in the diadem of kingdom apart
so that
his
from
his
word and
Hos.
xii.
1
his spirit.
0.
Heb.
s
i.
1
.
Matt.
v.
45.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
"
If
it
:
81
say this
my powerful Sovereign, I will also please your Majesty, and the the splendour glory of the kingdom shine in one
x
and the same way in the Commander of the Faithful and in his sons Musa and Harun,' and in spite of the fact that kingdom and For this lordship in them are one, their personalities are different.
reason no one would venture to consider, without the splendour of
kingdom,
of
not only
the
Commander
of
the
Faithful but
also the
beautiful flowers
him
and
this
and majestic blossoms that budded and blossomed out indeed the three of them blossom in an identical kingdom, one and the same kingdom shines and radiates in each one
of them, so that
no one dares
to ascribe servitude to
any
of them.
In
way
of
kingdom, lordship,
and
and
if
Holy
Spirit,
Spirit, or
one
is
in
and no one
If
allowed to give to
God, His Word, and His any of them the name of God, while they be drawn I leave to a
servant.
the
Word and
are from
God
the
And
King
said
"
:
It
is
sometimes or to abstain from them some other times, but the minds
and the
which
is
induced to follow not your mind your conclusions, but the law of nature and the
"
inspired Books."
And
that
I
replied
O our
victorious King,
have uttered
in the first
have proved my words day and to-day both from nature and
I
from Book.
arguments from nature are concerned, I argued, confirmed, and corroborated my words sometimes from the soul with
far as
its
So
mind and
;
its
reason
fire
with
its
light
and
;
its
heat
sometimes from the apple with its scent and its savour and some other times from your Majesty and from the rational and royal flowers that grew from it Musa and Harun, the sons of your
:
Majesty.
'-The
As
^Caliph
is
to
the inspired
himself.
Books,
Mahdi
of
Harun
the Caliph
and famous Harun ar-Rashld. About Mahdi, see Tabari, Annales, iii. I,
82
WOODBROOKE
I
STUDIES
my
other times
ment. "
God
'
further
to
prophesy
Spirit,
I
in the following
Word
l
and
His
Before my King on my holy hill of Zion.' this He had called Him His Christ, the Lord and Against against His Christ.' If the Christ of God is a King, it follows that the Christ is not a servant but a King. Afterwards David called Him 3 twice Son, Thou art my Son and this day have begotten Thee,'
have
2
set
up
'
and,
4
Kiss the
If
Son
lest
the
perish from
His
a Son, as
God
it
called
Him
through
no son
'
is
a servant,
'
follows,
King, that
not a servant.
'
same prophet
right hand.'
5
David
he
Lord,'
Son,'
and
said,
The Lord
said unto
my
Lord,
is
Sit
my
And
in order to
show
that Christ
of the
God, he said on behalf of the Father as follows, In the beauties of 6 holiness from the womb I have begotten Thee from the beginning.'
'
'
God,
since
a Lord
it
no true Lord
' '
is
a servant,
'
not a servant.
'
"
God
fore,
both
from eternity
of
and
'
womb.'
God
is
King
Kings,
'
is
but
He
is
God
Ahaz, King of Israel, Behold a virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, and His name shall be called not a servant but Emmanuel, which 8 The same Isaiah said, For unto being interpreted is, God with us.*
*
'Ps.
4 7
ii. ii.
6.
2 5
Ps.
ii.
2.
1
Ps.
ii.
7.
Ps.
12.
Ps. ex.
and
4.
The Muslim
in
apologist,
'AH
b.
Rabban
"lord"
Syriac
mara
designates
edition.
Bible to
sometimes in the Bible to men, and 23; Is. xl. 10-11 and Ixiii. 14-16 the word 6 of my See Kitab ad-Din, pp. 87, 00, and " the word mara, Lord," refers sometimes in the
is
applied
whom
he knew
8
Is. vii.
14; Matt.
i.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
us a Child
83 Son
1
is
not a
servant
given,
God
this
of the Worlds.'
of
'
If
the
the
Son
of
God,
Son
God,
as
spoke through the prophet Isaiah, is the mighty worlds,' and not a servant in subjection, but a Lord and a Prince.
follows,
is
surely a
Lord and
a Prince, and not a servant in subjection. " As your Majesty would wax angry if your children were called servants, so also God will be wrathful if anybody called His Word
and
His
Spirit
servants.
As
the
honour and
dishonour
of
the
degree the honour and dishonour of on Him. It is for this reason that Christ said
'
the Gospel,
'
He
but
who
hath sent
life,
He who
is
God
shall abide
on him.'
I
The above
servant.
it
is
and not a
Kur'an
If is
Christ
testifies,
He
not a
Word and the Spirit of God, 4 is the Word and the Spirit of God, as the servant but a Lord, because the Word
the
It is
and the
Spirit of
God
are Lords.
by
this
method,
our
God-
loving King, based on the law of nature and on divinely inspired words, and not on purely human argumentation, word, and thought,
that
I
both
the
5
in the present
and
in
the
first
conversation have
Christ,
demonDivine
strated
lordship
and the
sonship
of
and
the
Trinity."
Our
aware,
called
victorious
King
said
"Has
by the prophets
?"
And
said
am
my
a servant, but that this appellation does not imply a real servitude is borne out by the illustration that may be taken from the status
of
of
your Majesty.
He
is
now
Is. ix.
3
6.
4
J
"
40.
Some
of the
apologist Kindi in
above Biblical verses are quoted also by the Christian his Risalah, pp. 46- 48.
1 1
84
called
WOODBROOKE
'
STUDIES
'
by everybody
he
will
military
Heir Presumptive,' but after your long reign, be proclaimed King and Sovereign by all. He served his service through the mission entrusted to him by your Majesty
and
will
tyrannical
By3
zantines.
Through
this service
and mission he
his princely
not lose
his
his freedom,
nor
honour and
glory,
and
name
is
of servitude
and
the
subjection, like
any other
of
So
also
Christ,
the
in
Son
the
heavenly King.
He
fulfilled
the will of
in
His coming
sin,
on His
military mission to
mankind, and
victory over
death,
and Satan.
not
He
did not by this act lose His royal Sonship, and did
become a
He
any other
individual.
Him
not by what
'
He
was, but by
what
called
He
was
believed
by
Him, according
A Servant, a Rejected
one, one without form or comeliness, a Stricken one, a Smitten one, a man of many sorrows.' 4 In another place, however, it has been said
of
Him that, He is the fairest of the children of men, the Mighty God of the worlds, the Father of the future world, the Messenger of
'
God, Prince
of Peace, a Son,
and a Child," as
on
we
demonstrated
nature,
in
our former
replies.
The
last
adjectives refer to
first
His
and
He
adjectives
and
in
He performed to His father for the salvation with the belief of the Jews who only looked compliance
His humanity, and were totally incapable of considering nature of His divinity that clothed itself completely with
humanity.
This expedition of Harun, son of the Caliph Mahdi, against the Byzantines led by Nicetas and governed by the Empress Irene and Leo is told at some length on the Muslim side by Tabari under the year A.H. 165 Cf. also the historians, Ibn (A.D. 781), Annales, iii. i. pp. 503-505.
iii. p. 213, and Mukaddasi, p. 150, etc. appears that this second conversation between Timothy and the Caliph took place in A.D. 781, while Harun, the Caliph's son, had not The sentences returned yet from his expedition against the Byzantines.
Khaldun,
3
It
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
"
85
Some
ignorant Byzantines
who know
may
and not a Prince and a King, but those who know him with certainty will not call him a simple soldier, but will consider him and
call
him King and Prince. In this way the prophets considered the Christ our Lord as God, King, and Son, but the unbelieving Jews He believed Him to be a servant and a mere man under subjection.
has indeed been called not only a servant, on account of His service,
but also a stone, a door, the way, and a lamb.
stone, not because
of
1
He
was
called a
He
was a
stone
His teaching
into the
and a door, because it is through Him knowledge of God and the way, because it is
;
we
entered
He who in
His
was immolated
way
life
In this
He
was a
servant
for
He
performed
account of the belief of the Jews. " I heard also that it is written in your Book that the Christ was sent not as a servant, but as a son, I swear by this mountain and by
'
the begetter
latter
'
child
is
whether the
Christ doth
if it is
written,
3
The
it is
God
'
He
4
'
He will be to Me a Son
the earth.'
earth,
5
and, also
will
not a servant
If
will raise
He who
therefore,
by above the Kings cannot King, not a servant and one under
is
Kitab-ad-D'in,
'
^All these adjectives are known to the Muslim apologist Ibn Rabban. p. 83 of my edition. 2 Kur'an xc. 1-3, is interpreted by late Muslim commentators to mean I do not swear by the Lord of the land nor by the begetter and what He begets.' In the early Islam the first word was evidently read as ' I shall swear la-uksimu, (with an affirmation), instead of la-uksimu, I shall not swear a I believe that the ancient and (with negation).
:
. .
.
'
'
'
reading
in
harmony with
Kur'an
in the
4
iv.
70.
The
:
author
5.
is
using the
5
Heb.
i.
86
subjection, but a
WOODBROOKE
King
of
STUDIES
It is
servant should be above angels and kings. " God said also about the Christ through the
'
His name
shall
endure
for ever,
men shall be blessed by Him, and all shall glorify Him.' How can the name of a servant endure for ever, and how can the name of a servant be before the sun and other creatures, and how can all nations be blessed by a servant, and how can all nations glorify a servant ? God said to His Word and His Spirit, Ask of me, and I shall give Thee the nations for Thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession. Thou shalt shepherd them with a rod of Be wise now, O ye Kings, and be instructed, ye judges of the iron.
All
'
earth.
fear,
and hold
to
Him
all
with trembling.
He
If all
His wrath
trust in
is
kindled but a
2
Blessed are
Him.'
the nations
are the inheritance and the possession of the Christ, and if he who has under his authority all the nations and the uttermost parts of the earth
is
O
;
is
and
if
the Kings
and the
God
is
and hold
to
Him
Christ
who
is
served, held
and
kissed
a King
and serve
Him Him
with
He
were a
servant,
what kind
of
He
bring
He
bestow on
who put their trust in Him ? That He is a Lord over all and a Master over all, He testifies about Himself, and His testimony is Indeed He said to His disciples when He was about to ascend true.
to heaven,
fly
on the
spiritual
wings of
3
the Seraphim,
If
All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.' Christ has been given all the power of heaven and earth, He who
1
Ps.
Ixxii.
7 (Peshitta).
See above
p.
3
Muhammad.
18.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
is
87
constituted in this
is
Christ, therefore,
way God
in
heaven and
all. If
in earth
is
is
God
over
all,
and
over
He
earth
not a true
He
heaven and
in
and
if
He
?
how
can
He
not be true
God
God,
Indeed
He
has
power
"
in
heaven and
in
in earth
because
is
He
is
since
any one
who
has power
heaven and
in earth
God.
The Archangel
Gabriel
testified to this
'
conception to the always virgin Mary, And He shall reign over the l If the house of Jacob, and of His Kingdom there shall be no end.'
Christ reigns for ever, and
if
the one
who
is
no
end
to his
kingdom,
it
follows,
all.
The
saying,
saw one
like the
son of
men coming on
and they brought Him near before the Ancient of days, who gave Him dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all nations should serve
Him and
kingdom
over
all,
worship Him.
His dominion
is
an everlasting dominion,
If
is
shall not
of Christ shall
the
God
and Christ
is,
therefore,
3
God
over
all,
O our
King
over the
prophets and the angels. " If Christ has been called by the prophets
it
God and
Lord, and
in
if
God
in
suffered
and died
the
flesh,
evident that
it is
the
human
Word-God
took
no Book,
neither in the
in the
we
find that
God
Himself died
but
in the
is
the
Son and Jesus Christ died suffered and died in the flesh
not right."
And
that
God
" our victorious King asked And who are those who say suffered and died in the flesh." And I answered " The
:
Jacobites and Melchites say that God as to us we not only do not assert that
nature, but that
suffered
and died
our
in the flesh, in
God
suffered
and died
our
He
passibility of
human
nature
that
He
put on from
Mary by His
impassibility,
and
its
mortality
by
He made
it
is
A created
-Dan.
vii.
13-14.
MS.
88
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
being cannot make himself resemble his Creator, but the Creator is It is not the able to bring His creature to His own resemblance.
picture that
picture in
but
is
it is
not the
it is
wood
in its
resemblance,
In
but
this
wood
in his
resemblance.
same way
passible
is
God
like
and mortal
not the mortal and passible nature that renders like itself, but it is by necessity God that
Himself.
On
and mortal human nature impassible and immortal the one hand, this is what the Jacobites and
is
Melchites say, and, on the other, this your Majesty to decide who are those
what we
say.
It
behoves
who
believe rightly
and those
who
believe wrongly."
And
that even
"
:
In this matter
Who dares
"
to assert that
God
think
demons do not say such a thing. say concerning one Word and Son of God,
In what, however,
all
of
And
we
O our victorious
in the
are
us as in
a dark house
night and
of people, to pick
lot of
in
the midst
strive
and
become aware
of
its
existence,
up the pearl, which will not fall to the lot of all but to the one only, while one will get hold of the pearl itself, another one
one of a stone or
of a bit of earth, but every
one will be happy and proud that he is the real possessor of the pearl. When, however, night and darkness disappear, and light and day
arise,
pearl,
stretch his
hand towards
which
He who possesses the alone can show what every one has in hand. pearl will rejoice and be happy and pleased with it, while those who
had
sad,
in
hand
pieces of glass
and
tears.
bits of
weep and be
and
"
will sigh
and shed
In this
same way
we children
hand
of
men
one
as in darkness.
The
faith fell in
the midst of
all
of us,
and
that
it
is
undoubtedly
of
we
In the
world
to
come, however,
the darkness of mortality passes, and the fog of ignorance dissolves, since it is the true and the real light to which the fog of ignorance is
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
absolutely foreign.
In
it
89
happy and
weep,
sigh,
pleased,
mere pieces
above."
of stone will
and shed
we
:
said
" The possessors of the pearl are our victorious King said Catholicos." And I answered " They not known in this world,
And
are partially
known,
O
:
And
partially
:
known, and
"By good by what are they known as such ?" And I answered and the wonders and victorious our deeds, works, by pious King, and miracles that God performs through those who possess the true
faith.
As
in the
is
somewhat
visible
even
in the
dark-
some extent
God indeed darkness and the fog of the present world. without faith of the has not left the pure pearl completely testimony
even
and evidence,
first
in the
He
first
through Moses, once by means of the prodigies and miracles that He wrought in Egypt, and another time when He divided the waters of the Red Sea into two and allowed the
confirmed the true faith in
Israelites to cross
it
Him
safely, but
in
its
depths.
and divided the Jordan into two through Joshua, son of Nun, and allowed the Israelites to cross it without any harm to themselves, and tied the sun and the moon to their own places until the
also split
He
their enemies.
He acted in
the
:
same way through the prophets who rose through David, Elijah, and Elisha.
"
Afterwards
He
the miracles
He
wrought
of the
children of men.
way
name
even than
prodigies
those
wrought by
in the
These
signs,
miracles,
and and
wrought
and
it
is is
by the
so
full
which
and
so precious that
it
outweighs
"
all
are
known."
And And
too
I
We
Amen,
King.
7
But may
in
God
grant us that
we
may
share
it
the shining
and beaming
90
lustre of the pearl
WOODBROOKE
!
STUDIES
faith before all
God
enjoy the
"
light
of the sun.
pray God, who is King of Kings, and Lord of Lords, to preserve the crown of the kingdom and the throne of the Commander of the Faithful for multitudinous days and numerous years May
!
We
He
his
to the throne of
kingdom
for ever
May He
all
may
the kings and governors of the world serve our Sovereign and his
till
the
day
"
!
in
of
Heaven
is
revealed
from heaven
to earth
And
:
And I replied to his sometimes performed even by unbelievers." " our victorious are not miracles but decepThese, King, Majesty
demons, and are performed not by the prophets This is holy men, but by idolaters and wicked men. said that good works and miracles are the lustre of I
Indeed,
Moses performed
miracles in Egypt,
and the
and Jambres performed them also there, but of God, and the sorcerers through The power of God, however, prethe deceptions of the demons. was defeated. of the demons that and vailed,
sorcerers Jannes
"
In
Rome
also
miracles, but the former performed them by the power of God, and the latter by the power of the demons, and for this reason Simon
Cephas was honoured and Simon Magus was laughed at and despised by every one, and his deception was exposed before the eyes of all
celestial
and
this
terrestrial
beings."
At
chamber,
residence.
our victorious King rose up and entered his audience and I left him and returned in peace to my patriarchal
Here ends
with Mahdi,
be to
1
God!
A third
iii.
3, pp. 137,
See Tabari, Annalcs, son of Mahdi, nicknamed ibn Ritah. The Cod. has erroneously 'Alah. 501, 522, 1035.
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
91
92
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
103
104
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
105
106
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107
108
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
It!
12
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14
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16
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STUDIES
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
125
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
129
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132
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133
134
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137
10
138
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139
140
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141
142
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143
144
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
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TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
149
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STUDIES
TIMOTHY'S APOLOGY
151
152
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153
154
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155
156
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157
158
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159
160
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161
162
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WOODBROOKE
STUDIES.
CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS IN SYRIAC, ARABIC, AND GARSHtJNI EDITED AND TRANSLATED WITH A CRITICAL APPARATUS.
BY A.
MINGANA.
WITH INTRODUCTIONS.
BY
RENDEL HARRIS.
FASC.
4.
INTRODUCTION.
the
present issue
of
the
Woodbrooke
Studies Dr.
Mingana
are associated together by the publishes two documents, which fact of a common Egyptian origin, and by their occurring side by side in the popular religious literature which was preserved in the Arabic language, as spoken by unlettered people, and recorded in the Syriac character, which combination of speech and script we call by
the
IN
name
of
Garshuni.
Of
we
the particular documents to which and writing there can be no doubt Paris Library and the Mingana collection, refer from the though they bear internal evidence of Egyptian origin, have come
from a
much wider
;
as on the Nile
they were found in Mesopotamia as well and although they are not of any great antiquity, as
field
;
go from which
is
we
for their
wide popular
diffusion
made
stronger
by the observation
that
modern products
mind.
They must have moved fast, when they are found to have moved so far. Nor does their modern dress preclude the supposition that they may contain iragments of early tradition embedded in their pages, for
it is
religion, that
we
beliefs
and opinions.
163
12
164
WOODBROOKE
The two documents
Pontius Pilate,
STUDIES
made
over into an accepted
glorified
spiritual history of
who
is
and
glorified saint,
accepted
in the
;
in the
Church
in
the heaven
the
she has, as
we
shall see,
We
may
call
one
of
exchanged personality with the Magdalene. the documents by the title of Pilatus beatus ;
may
pass as
less
Stabat Magdalena.
earlier tale
The
is
said to
be no
a person than the great Gamaliel the second is a sermon in which an is retold, as the former was also adopted, not without much
its
Greek name
of
Patrologia Orientalis there appeared a collection of Coptic Apocrypha under the editorship of E. Revillout, amongst which stood a number of Coptic fragments, of which Gamaliel
of the
volume
was supposed
to be the author,
similar to
was
Mary
at the sepulchre,
where there
is
Mary
;
the Virgin
Clearly,
and Mary
then, the
Magdalene
to
which
we have
referred
above.
compared, and in so far as the connection can be made out, it is with the Coptic Church and its literature that we are brought into contact.
Not
to the
For,
if
we
turn
Apocryphal
New
Testament
of
M. R.
James,
we
shall find
that, after
making a summary
he adds
in
conclusion (p.
passage
"
It
may be
warning
Copts were tireless in producing embroideries upon the Biblical stories, and perhaps in rewriting older documents
that
the
to suit their
own
taste.
Only
is
enable us to decide
later
how much,
fragments supply,
really archaic."
LAMENT OF THE
If
1
VIRGIN
'
165
the expansion
of the
we add
to the
words
texts,'
'
we
shall
documents before
They
upon
Biblical texts.
We
will
say,
frills
of
Biblical tapestry) with the texts of our documents, but first we must deal with the general question of the canonisation of St. Pilate and his
appearance
in the
Calendar.
studies ancient liturgies to
is
Eveiyone
who
aware
we
to
find a Psalter,
Book
;
of
Hours
or Missal, the
first
thing
we do
it
if it
if the Three Kings, probably probably from the area of Orleans from Cologne if St. Denys, perhaps from Pans, and so on, with
;
The
It is
have a preference for localities, or localities a preference not even necessary that the saint should have had a
St.
real existence.
Lucy
of
Syracuse was probably invented to set off Agnes of Catania, and both of them
Saints
In this
personifications of provinces.
may be the badges of cities, the way they acquire political signithough it may not always be easy to
see
what the
and
political
tracks,
as Jesus
meaning is, for even great Churches cover their once pointed out, the religious world is divided into
they
two
sects,
those
who worship
know
who know
names
of
Church can
us
why,
in
by the names
of
All
we
can say
is
that these
pair of twin-brothers
Twins
this
Heavenly came to who shall That ? Rome, why they they say should become the patron saints of the Medici is more obvious. In
;
but
case
it
we may
there.
fail
to detect
political
significance,
even
if
we
are
sure
was
more
clear illustration may be found to the above generalised statement as to political significance accompanying local provenience
166
in the case -of the
WOODBROOKE
Twins who
it.
STUDIES
devoted
to
around
Howi'many
churches are
memory
of
Crispin andf^Crispinian whose very names betray brotherhood by assonance. Yet these names have recently been restored to the pro-
posed
not
battle of
Agincourt and
"
so led
Henry V.
through Shakespeare
that
From
But
we
in
it
shall
be remembered."
;
The-liturgical sanction
is,
therefore, political
is
it is
also literary,
if
and
we may
say,
if
we
in
the calendar,
we
Now
we
lists
in returning to
first
is,
is
observe
of all that
is
local.
Pilate
Church.
He
along with his wife Procula. She is, in reading our document.
for canonisation.
We
fact,
about Procula
in
one
She
husband
after her.
We
must
try
The
Copts, indeed, have gone so far in conferring rank upon him that they regard him as a citizen of their own country as well as one of the
He
is
count of his nationality, as Pilate the Egyptian. So we may say that Pilate is a saint of the Levant and Egypt, but not, as far as one can
see, of the
However, we have
if this liturgical acceptance is not universal, it be very probable that where he does attain calendar rank, it will be reached gradually, for it is almost impossible to believe that any
people
who were
supplement
have, at one
moved from
The
of
by
bit.
We
how
was changed
memory
of
LAMENT OF THE
Meanwhile we
for
VIRGIN
167
find
we
whether good or bad, rapacious or compassionate, we are sure that Not even Mr. J. M. Robertson can prove his history Pilate existed. There is too much about him in to be capable of reduction to myth.
Tacitus,
find in
Gospel Tragedy.
We
in
;
whom we
our suspicions about Procula, canonicity, as we may have our doubts but Pilate is too firmly set in history to
may have
be capable
of displacement.
we
of
can detect
it
in the
Jesus
was born
Mary and
suffered
under Pontius
Pilate.
When we
we
may be
dered
'
They are commonly renperplexed at the terms employed. under Pontius Pilate' (eVt Ylovriov FletXarov) which probably should have expected means in the days of Pontius Pilate.'
'
We
'
Ti/3epiov) and if the statement is to have chronological value for those who were taught to recite the creed, Pontius Pilate bulks larger than the Emperor.
In the time of Tiberius
(eTrt
this
;
'
We
as-
it if
even
it
For as
far as the
Roman
governors of pro-
were concerned, they did not make calendars out passed away, and the peoples they pillaged were glad
them
they
to forget
them.
is
Sicilian calendar
with Verres in
it
But where
Roman
governor
whom
the early
Christian propaganda
to forget ?
were glad
The same
These
epistles,
whatever
later
may be
the ultimate
;
much
they were certainly written long after Pontius Pilate had come to a Yet we find St. Paul advising St. Timothy to regood or bad end.
member
in the
presence of
many
Here
the
same
expression, eVt
it
FleiXarou
is
used,
and
we
as 'under
168
Pontius Pilate.'
the date of the
WOODBROOKE
It
STUDIES
;
so
we
document may
Roman governor, who occupies so great a place in the Gospel. The point which we have made may seem to be trivial it is not If we were writing the history of that time as really so. contemporaneous observers, we should have said 'in the days of Tiberius,' or if we were Galileans, in the time of Herod.' Here we pick up our
;
'
clue
and the
it
he
has attained
Why
and
and
has
Herod no
no record
noble confession of
Jesus ?
as
good
the Gospels
then do they of the such as the Church diverse history occupy positions develops ? Is not Herod just as distinguished a historical character as Pilate ?
make no secret of Herod's contempt for Herod were made friends by the Trial of Christ.
Pilate
How
Acts of the Apostles the two are associated in the proof from the second Psalm that the heathen who raged and the kings and
In the
who gathered together against the Messiah were Herod and Pilate and the Jews. They are all in the same condemnation for their impotent rage. We have to explain how Pilate became detached from Herod and dissociated from the Jews, and how he became a Christian and was revered as a saint. Our document but we are not limited to our will help us to understand the process
rulers of the earth
;
late
Coptic tradition or
its
Greek
correlative.
We
When
of the
significant
But
of
the Jews no
man washed
;
of his judges
a definite removal of
to
Jews and
Herod
of Jesus.
remarks that
fragment, which he does not think of an earlier date than A.D. 50, he " another characteristic of (the Gospel) is its extremely
anti-Judaic attitude.
Blame
is
possible,
LAMENT OF THE
and Pilate
is
VIRGIN
169
whitewashed."
It
might be equally well said that blame here we have, before the middle of
of the process of canonisation,
preliminary stage,
itself
may
Pilate Gospel merely accentuating the statement of the canonical. and from Herod from dissociates himself washes his hands, and Pilate
the Jews.
That
is
The
action of Pilate to
which
and
in Christian art.
and, to
come down
to
modern
times, the
window
of Kings' College,
sacred drama.
;
So much
of the tradition
the beginning for we find when we read the Apocryphal Acts of Pilate that special emphasis is laid on the fact that Pilate took water and washed his hands before the sun. This may have been derived
from the Gospel of Peter, for there must have been a reference to ' none of the Jews nor Herod Pilate's action before we can say that
'
and anyone can verify for himself Pilate the whitewash has been applied in a very
;
washed hands
that in the
liberal
Acts of
manner, and
is
as pronounced,
on
even suspect that he quotes actual Christian Testimonies against the Jews, however unsuitable that may be for a Roman governor. The elongation between them has now gone far beyond what the
We
Gospels
If
assert.
the
point
of
is
the
own
the verdict
hands
in public, as
if
to dis-
point for his wife Procula will be found in the story of her dream, in
consequence of which she sent a message of appeal to her husband not to countenance the attack which the Jews were making on Jesus. Here
also
the canonisation
first
obtains
She a gradual evolution of legendary ideas. she is a name, then a religion, and lastly a conversion
is
:
Procula,
Christian.
the
Jewess
she becomes,
as
in
our
book, Procula
the
There
of
is,
however,
this difference
Pilate. cannot be as sure of the historicity of the incident which Matthew records, and of the involved personality, as we can be
We
170
sure of
Pilate.
WOODBROOKE
If
STUDIES
should
blur
we
are
asked
why we
his
figure
canvas,
without unduly disparaging Matthew and his work, we must admit that Procula is not the only wife who has dreams and
made
that,
uses
them
husband on behalf
engaged
of the
abject
and the
For instance,
we were
in a recent
study of the
to her
Here we found
the
husband not
engage
in hostile
movement
on the ground that they are the people of God, and obtain at once whatever they ask from Him. With this we compared the story in 2 the Talmud, where the mother of the Persian King, Shapor II, says " Have nothing to do with those Jews, for whatever they to her son,
ask from their Lord,
is
He
gives
it
them."
The
queen-mother's
name
awakened out of sleep in order to intercede for the Jews, the parallel between Iphra-Hormiz and Procula becomes even closer than that So we must reserve the question with the wife of Nebuchadnezzar.
is
of Procula's historicity,
folk-lore
ask, in
Or, if we set that suspicion on one side, we may at least view of the sympathies which the Jews recognise on the part of Iphra-Hormiz with themselves, whether it is not natural to have relegends.
secretly.
At
all
her as such at
a very early
nor was there any improbability in the Roman Governor having have a similar case, and there must have been a Jewess for wife. date
;
We
many
here
"
more, in
Felix
and
Drusilla.
we
find
Pilate using
as
trying to
him
all
the Jews,
and
said unto
them
Ye know
of the
that
my
wife feareth
*
?
'
God, and favoureth rather the customs Yes, we know it.' They say unto him
'
Pilate
Lo
my
Have
nothing to do with this just man, for I have suffered many things But the Jews answered and said unto because of him by night.'
1
2
I.
Taanith,
xxiv., 2.
LAMENT OF THE
'
VIRGIN
is
171
?
Pilate
Said
we
a sorcerer
"
Behold, he
no difference
of opinion
Jews on the question whether Procula is a Jewess. They only If Matthew's differ on the point whether Jesus is a magician or not. account is genuine history, it must at a very early date have had
the
attached to
it
After
that the Christian story-teller has only to record her conversion to the
we
document before
Long
before the
in circulation, Christian
writers
had taken
and not
to the other.
his
contemplative and
mind
off
had
suffered
on account
Christ.
Was
He
will not
commit himself
"God
was
is,
many
things
Jesus
in
a vision.
It
however, so stated
in certain
writings
which are not among the authorised scriptures" (tamen continetur 1 etiam hoc in scripturis quibusdam non publicis). Here the conversion
is
is
made
to
to the
one that
we
are studying.
We
way
obtained a
rapid vision of
Church
In the
;
memorated together
evident
;
indeed
it
is
Procla
is
commemorated.
introduction,
notice of a saint
summed
"E^ci 77ape<T7CL>crai> ere, FTpd/cXa, AecrTrdr^s, O netXara* irpiv CTOJ Tra/aacrras <rv,vya).
It is
Lord stand by
make out the meaning of this how did the and how does the Lord have Procla standing
:
172
WOODBROOKE
?
;
STUDIES
;
by him
soon, in
a Christian
These are very bad verses they assume that Procla is do they make a similar assumption for Pilate ? How
case, did Pilate
"
"
any
According
to Tertullian, Pilate
by
his conscience.
Tertullian goes
thou persuadest
me
The problem
is,
how
"on
where the mere washing of hands seemed an inadequate demonstration of faith. So it occurred to some Christian that the to story-teller right way stage the conversion, and make it
historically incontrovertible,
was
to put
same
consequence Let the unjust judge become the criminal, and let him be scourged and spit on and finally crucified after the manner of Jesus. This is the main thread of the story of Pilate as we have it in our
sufferings
which,
in
were
inflicted
on
Jesus.
document.
As we
owes the
in tradition
it
is
to the
comes out
clearly
enough
in
in our
Arabic.
was
Egyptian.
belief that
The
Pilate
nucleus of
the mass of
legends
is
made some
sort of a report to
Pilate of which our existing eta Pilati are a clumsy caricature. Such a belief in such a document is found in the Eastern Church as
well as in the West.
For instance, that very early Syriac document title of the Doctrine of Simon
it
in a
and these
your
city.
and
on
more than
this
in
And
official
Tiberius
limited to
was common belief in the Church everywhere and not That our documents have a Coptic ancestry is Egypt.
M/.,
21.
LAMENT OF THE
bit of
VIRGIN
Here
is
173
a curious
to those
evidence which might easily escape notice, but will be significant who are expert in the study of ancient documents. When
is
Pilate
who
" What is the use of then say to the imperial envoy " a speaking to him while he insults you in the Coptic language ? but there is somesentence which will be perplexing to most readers
Tiberius, and asked to explain why he killed Jesus without consulting the Emperor, he expresses his willingness to die for the name of Christ
:
The Jews
Daniel (Dan.
ii.
same perplexity in the English Bible in the Book of 4), where we are told that the magicians said to the
What
really
happened was
from
that there
was a
or
in the
this
document
at this point
Hebrew
to Syriac
change has been noted on the margin and has In the same way the words
in the Coptic language have crept into our text. They only mean been a change of dialect, probably from Arabic to Coptic,
original
if
documents.
There
is
no need
to
make
Pilate talk
Coptic, even
elsewhere called an Egyptian. Other traces of Coptic in the tradition of our Pilate story will easily be detected. are not, however, limited to a study of our MSS. when
he
is
We
we
Egyptian elements
in the tradition.
As we
Coptic documents, chiefly preserved in fragments, which are of considerable age and occupy themselves with the very same theme as those here
presented.
number
of
The
principal of these
is
were published
Patrologia Orientalis. Although only a series of fragments, the major part of them form a part of a lost document, written in the name of Gamaliel, and forming what we may call the Gamaliel book
on Pontius Pilate and the Sorrows of the Virgin. same authorship that is suggested in our MSS.
recurring in
But
this is the
text,
very
Our
although
somewhat
diverse forms,
is
is
a Gamaliel book.
difficult.
The
of the
not
We have an account
way in which Barabbas, who is here called Barnaban, plotted with the Jews, using his wicked wife as an intermediary, in order to secure the arrest of the Saviour. Then we are told that " after this
company
of
the wicked
the
Jews resolved
to
kill
Pilate
and
his
wife
174
and
his
WOODBROOKE
children
STUDIES
'
and
to
plunder
their
possessions.
When
I
/,
Gamaliel,
wicked people,
did not
Here
then,
it
will
I hastened to Joseph of Arimathea, etc." be noticed that the indirect narration of the historian has
suddenly become
direct,
and Gamaliel
is
the speaker.
The
book,
may
rightly
Again,
we have
which they had in the burial of the Lord. The angel Gabriel comes to their aid, and then we are told that " those two blessed ones (i.e. Joseph and Nicodemus)
me in secret, me, Gamaliel, and narrated to me what the had The narration has now changed into angel spoken to them." oratio recta and Gamaliel is the speaker. Turn next to the second
sent for
section of our
of the Virgin
story,
that
which
relates
especially
:
to
the sorrows
and read the concluding paragraph Let us here end the discourse on the Virgin and her sweet wailing, and on the death and resurrection of her Son from the dead.
"
These words have been written by Gamaliel and Nicodemus, the venerable chiefs, and they placed them in Jerusalem, the holy
city."
Here we have an
hand
of Gamaliel.
;
profess to be
by the
But Gamaliel
in
I
colophon
we
"
have,
crowd
If
was
in the garden."
now we
by Dr.
M.
R. James
in his
and the Centurion, who go to the garden of Joseph, where the Jews The story moves say the body of Jesus lies at the bottom of a well. " into the direct narration, And I, Gamaliel, followed them among
the band."
have the assumed Gamaliel authorship, and an almost exact coincidence with our text.
here, also,
It
So
we
was not
difficult,
to
infer that
single book.
the major part of the Revillout fragments belonged to a Revillout, indeed, was wrong in calling this book by the
name of
corrected by
LAMENT OF THE
Baurastark,
VIRGIN
l
175
who
the fragments
numbered
have our
3,
Now
that
we
work
our
from,
it
is
text.
The
ment
is
easiest
way
substantially
book
of
which
Revillout and others have brought forward fragments, will be to take a single one of Revillout's published documents, translated below by
Dr. Mingana, for a closer study, and leave the remainder for reference
in
Dr. Mingana's foot-notes at the places where they naturally occur. Suppose, then, we take the thirteenth fragment (of which Dr. James
p.
1
of his
We premise
assigned to Gamaliel.
Centurion who, in the Gospel, has the oversight of the crucifixion of Jesus, and was so overwhelmed by what he saw and heard at that
time as to break out into an ejaculation of supreme faith and wonder.
It
was
natural enough,
that
legend should accumulate round the person of this Centurion. so in a manner that has some parallel with that of Procula.
all
does
First of
new
religion.
This
is
found by
who pierced the side of Jesus, after death, to assure himself of the same, with a
dentifying
soldier in
the
Fourth Gospel,
spear.
for
;
it
was
and
easy to christen
his
him Longinus
next thing was to christen him in a more him a primitive confessor and believer in Jesus, and this was almost ready to hand in the Gospel itself. It only remains, to use Dr. James' way of describing the manner of production
Greek armature.
of these Coptic
frill
on the
It
frock.
That
brings
was
written on a double
explanation
with an evident discontinuity between them, of which the natural is that another double leaf or more stood between the
way
of divination as to the missing pages and their contents, before Dr. Mingana comes to our aid with his Garshuni text.
Revue Biblique
176
WOODBROOKE
:
STUDIES
"
Dr. James puts the case thus It is a narrative connected with the resurrection.
We find
Pilate
body
of Jesus
;
was
the
;
(This
is
One
(the second
'
testimony of the
the fourth,
we were
'
asleep.'
They
are imprisoned, and Pilate goes with the Centurion and the
priests to the
tomb and
He
says,
If
the
'
had been
stolen, these
too.'
They
say,
body These
grave-clothes belong to
'
Pilate
of Jesus,
Great wonders must happen in my tomb,' and goes in and weeps over the shroud. Then he turns to the Centurion, who had but one eye, having lost the other in battle."
The
exact terms of
the
fragment at
:
this
according to Revillout's translation " II fixa son attention sur le centurion qui se tenait debout a
la
porte du tombeau et vit qu'il n'avait qu'un seul oeil (car on avail creve 1'autre dans le combat) et qu'il la cachait de sa main, tout le
temps, pour ne pas voir la lumiere." Then comes the gap, of which Dr. James not unnaturally says that in the gap no doubt stood the statement that the Centurion's eye
was healed by
let
Now
We
me
first
No.
"
Tell
the truth
'
who
:
carried
"
away
the
body
"
Jesus
of Jesus ?
and he answered,
visit of
Then we
look at the
Pilate to the
is
tomb
Then he looked at the Centurion who was standing at the entrance to the tomb, and who was with one eye only, as his other eye had
been put out in a war, and a considerable time had elapsed without Pilate then conceived the idea, his having seen anything with it.
through the greatness of his
to the Centurion's eye, etc."
faith, that
In this
way
lies
the miracle
The motive for Dr. James' conjecture was justified. be to Miracles were further back. expected, says
of Jesus
:
Pilate, at the
tomb
LAMENT OF THE
there
receive
their
sight.
VIRGIN
Longinus and
177
his
Hence
the one-eyed
recovery.
The
we have been
reader to see
how
our
new document
the Coptic fragments which had been collected by Revillout and others. It is interesting to notice that from another quarter, the literature of
the Ethiopic church, another fragment of the Gamaliel
to light.
This
may have
also
source, or perhaps
Magazine
the
for 1892, p.
Dr. James quotes it from the Newbery House In this fragment the "Jews explain to 641.
is
due
on
After a
gap
'
is a prayer of Pilate's in which he asks pardon for having put " another body in the place where they put Thy body.'
The reader will easily find out what is the reason of the how the body of the penitent thief came to be put into the
of Jesus in place of
gap, and
sepulchre
His own.
It is
quite
one
of the
most
interesting
it
is
All
who
doubt
Mingana has reduced to shape for us these difficult documents. if anyone else would even have attempted the task.
We
RENDEL HARRIS.
PREFACES, EDITIONS,
AND TRANSLATIONS.
BY A. MINGANA.
/.
PREFATORY NOTE.
GIVE
in the following
critical
companied by a
pages the text and the translation (acapparatus) of a new document dealing
mother over His body on the occasion of His crucifixion. The immediate author of the document is said to be Cyriacus, bishop of
Oxyrhynchus, but the
in the first person.
It
apocryphal author of
all
it
contains
is
Gamaliel,
who
often speaks in
link in the
It
apocryphal
has also the
chain of the
advantage
lished
by Revillout under the general but possibly inaccurate title of Evangile des douze Apdtres} In some respect it may also be brought
within the circle of the documents edited by Lacau in his
Fragments
d'Apocryphes Copies? and of the Coptic Gospel of Bartholomew 3 and then edited and translated by Budge. 4 first translated by Crum
I
MSS.
of
my own
collection
numbered Mingana Syr. 87 and Mingana Syr. 127 (henceforth M. 87 and M. 127). M. 87 has no date, but on palaeographic
ground may be ascribed to about A.D. 1450, and 1994 of the Greeks (A.D. 1683). I was unable to
containing the
M. 127
is
dated
find a third
MS.
document
in
Europe.
1
Pat. Orient.
ii.
123-183.
See about
this title
Baumstark
in
Revue
rightly refers the story to a Gamaliel apocryThe present documents bear out his opinion. phon. 2 Mhnoires de I'Institut Fran$ais d" Archfologie Orientale du Caire,
He
1904.
3
Apocrypha
in the dialect of
178
LAMENT OF THE
There are
sufficient variants in
VIRGIN
179
the
two MSS.
to justify us in hold-
but we should be infringing that they are independent of each other, criticism were we to assert that and textual ing the rules of philology
The story is they represent two distinct recensions of the same story. the MSS. are exhibited variant the and readings by undoubtedly one to a greater or lesser degree similar to those exhibited by more than
half of all the existing Oriental
I
MSS.
in the
M. 87
body
127.
of the
M.
As
the
number
of these
is not very considerable, I have not found it cumbersome to all of them with the exception of those which are exalmost register I have likewise referred in clusively of the domain of orthography.
variants
two
MSS.
text in
Garshuni (Arabic
in
in
Syriac characters)
as
it
have neglected
numer-
These are more ous grammatical mistakes committed by the author. or less similar to those to which I often drew the attention of the
reader in the notes found
in
the
first
volume
of
my Woodbrooke
Studies.
To show
will
69- 1 74), I shall give here a complete translation be seen at a glance that our new document is
derived from Coptic sources, and that in the case of fragment 1 5 it is a direct translation from such Coptic texts as the following. I indicate
the lacunae in the fragments
by three
dots.
FRAGMENT
"... The
their children,
14.
mothers
who
in these countries
when
those over
for
them.
whom they As to me
result
.
came out
a robber
like
with
all
these
her eyes, as they were closed in order not to look towards the earth because of its scandals. And she said to Him
with joy
Master,
my
Lord,
my God, my
13
risen,
WOODBROOKE
truly risen.'
STUDIES
and implored
her, sayit
But
He
restrained her
ing
is
the
"
my
He
I
raised
I
me
up.
It
is
me
until
go
to heaven.'
is
your womb.
tomb, and
Know
these things,
It
is
my
mother.
This
flesh
is
received in you.
my
before you.
one which rose to-day and which stands now Examine well my hands and my feet, Mary, my
also the
mother, and
doubt,
know
that
it
is
I
my
mother, that
nourished.
I
Do
not
into the
hands of John
at the time
"
to
Now,
. .
O
.
my
mother, go in haste
delivered you was hanging on the cross. and tell my brethren and say
who
them
Galilee
where you
according to His words which I uttered to you, go to Hasten because it is not possible for will find me.
me
is
my
Father.
suffered with
me
on the earth
(The
rest
missing.)
FRAGMENT
15.
"... And
'
and
said to
him
know
that
than
all
these.
Tell
me (how
many Apostles) took the body of Jesus in the tomb ? And he " Eleven of them came with their disciples, and took it by answered
:
stealth, and separated themselves only from this one' " And he summoned the third and said to him
(i.e.
' :
witness
the
more than
'
Who
him
'
:
tomb
"
And
he replied
to
And
him
'
:
You
them.
are the
let
them go
'
all of
Tell
me now
Jesus in
asleep.
(what happened) when they took from your hands the body of And he replied to him the tomb ? my lord, we were
'
:
We
it.
who
took
had forgotten ourselves and we were not able to know Then we rose up and looked for it but did not find it. ...
.
We have apprised
"...
people are lying in
.'
These Jews and to the centurion And are and words their contradictory.' way
:
'
LAMENT OF THE
that
VIRGIN
181
At he gave orders to secure soldiers until he had gone to the tomb. moment he rose up with the heads of the Jews, the Sanhedrin,
priests.
They found
'
on
the
And
Pilate said,
men who
hate their
own
souls,
if
they had
And they taken the body they would have also taken the wrappings.' are not his but that not see that Do you said to him they belong they
'
'
to
some
others ?
Pilate
'
of Jesus
It is
Pilate imperative that great miracles should take place in my tomb.' hastened then to enter into the tomb. He seized the wrappings of Jesus, which he pressed against his breast and over which he wept. He kissed
if
Jesus
were wrapt
in
them.
Then he looked
at
who was
standing at the
door
of the
war
light
he had one eye only because they had put out the other in a which he hid with his hand all the time in order not to see the
"
Then
. .
.
Pilate
The
in this
come on you.
'
And
they
acquiesced
condemnation, saying
'
!
And
Pilate said
to the centurion
my
brother,
do not
exchange
the Jews.
. .
which you have received for the lie and This is what he said in the presence of
to the well of
Pilate
water of the
in the
. . .
garden, which
And
crowd.
Is this
They
'
O Pilate
demus)
O
.
who died ? And (Joseph and Nicoour Lord, the wrappings which you hold are those
.
of Jesus.
As
.
to this
with Jesus
body it belongs to the robber who was crucified . Joseph and Nicodemus placed the wrappings
.
... And
dead
shall
rise in
Pilate
my
tomb.'
remembered what Jesus had said The And thereupon he summoned the
:
'
:
'
Do
this is the
Nazarene
'
And
It is
right then to
'
We
And
it
he said
in
His tomb, as
is
done
to all
the dead
There
is
182
WOODBROOKE
I
STUDIES
a translation, or at least a very
of
which
am
editing
and
translating
is
document
is
come down
notes that
In
to us.
That Egypt
to
many
other
made abundantly
to the narrative.
have ventured
add
my
Syriac literature or
It
opinion the present document has nothing in common with with the Syrian and Palestinian Church in general.
West Syrian
Egypt
it
and
right to the
two works
Life of John the Baptist which I edited and translated in the first volume of my Woodbrooke Studies and to the Martyrdom of Pilate
which
I I
give to the
work
the provisional
title
of
The Lament of
the
Virgin.
TRANSLATION.
In the
name
2
of the
Holy Ghost,
of the
3
we
of
town
Bahnasa, on the merits of the pure Virgin our Lady Mary, and her affectionate weeping on the day of the crucifixion of our Lord,
when on
risen
the day of His holy resurrection she went to the door of the
sepulchre of her
He
had
May
his
blessing be with
us.
Amen.
has
He
1
The weeping
This Cyriacus
of Jacob,
to
the
head
of
the
Patriarchs,
been
who
" Cyriacus, bishop of Bahnasa has two Arabic discourses on the history of the flight of Christ to
is
be
identified with
"
They are found in Paris Arab. 155 (pp. 160-188) and analysed in Egypt. He lived in the beginning of the 15th century. xv. 157-161. R.O.C., 2 a rather important town near the Lybian desert, and in our Formerly
In old Egyptian it is called Permezet, in days an insignificant village. It is better known to us by another Coptic Penje and in Greek ITe/ATTT?;. Greek name Oxyrhynchus. It was a bishopric, and constituted one of the it has been said that at one time it conchief centres of Christian Egypt
;
tained as
3 4
many
as
360 churches.
testifies to
The
the importance of the place as a Christian centre. See my note in Woodbrooke Studies, vol. Syr. Mart.
p.
243.
Bishop Cyriacus.
M. 127
LAMENT OF THE
renewed to-day,
VIRGIN
183
my
beloved
why
Mary weep
whom
Why
Mary weep
?
whom
she suffered
Why
Mary weep
whic^
is
virginal breast ? in
Why
Son
should
?
weep over
the manger,
Bethlehem
Why
weep
over
her beloved
whom
Why
should
whom she brought forth and suckled ? weep If Rachel weeps over children whom she has never embraced, why should not the Virgin weep over the one whom she carried in her If Rachel weeps over children for whom she arms like all babes ? did not run from place to place, why should not the Virgin weep If over her child with whom she ran from country to country ? Rachel weeps over children whose tombs she has not seen, why
over the one
'
The weeping
for
of
door of her only Son's sepulchre ? a venerable old man" has been renewed to-day
weep
at the
a young,
virgin
bound by
his
wood
of the cross.
threw him while hungry he might weep over him but the Virgin saw her Son hanging on the cross in the middle (of two maleJacob did not see Joseph
his brothers
;
when
factors),
before
all
the Jews.
of
his
in
brothers stripped
him
a naked state in the middle of Jews devoid of understanding. Jacob did not see Joseph being sold to Egyptian merchants for thirty denarii,
but the Virgin
silver.
sold
Him
Jacob wept over a foreign blood and over a robe that was not torn by wild beasts, but it is over a divine blood smeared on the rock
of the
Kranion
which
'"
robe
her
weeping, and over the foreign Son was wearing, since they had divided His
is
garments
1
among
themselves.
The
brothers
of
Joseph
wept and
Evidently the author does not believe in the painless birth of Christ. "
Lit.
like all
men."
The
D
'
Which
foreign robe ?
184
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
repented that they had sold their brother, but the Children of Israel 1 did not weep when they sold their Lord. The sons of Jacob rejoiced
when when
rejoice
Lord
rose
pure Virgin, your wailing over the tomb of your beloved Son is truly sweet and your voice is melodious in the middle of the angels, when they brought to you the sad news and said " Mary, what
:
are
and
" being judged and insulted by the High Priest of the Jews ? Mary, what are you doing sitting, while your Son is being stripped
is
you doing
sitting,
is
in the court of
His garment dyed (with His blood) ? daughter of what are while Son is Joiakim, you doing sitting, your carrying alone a cross in the streets of Jerusalem, and no one comes near Him ?
dove
of
Hannah what
sitting,
is
being
Kranion ?
?
O
2
seed of David,
why have
they
lifted
O
in
my
is
Oh, how bitter is this saying who came to He is more bitter than the me messenger to-day Israel. Oh, messenger of death who came to Job and to Jacob how cruel is the intelligencer who came to me to-day, O my Child He is more cruel than the one who announced to Lot the burning of his town. Oh, how painful is the news that came to me to-day, O
the
my
the
child
It is
more
of
news concerning
cruel
is
!
the death of
valiant
men
this
Israel.
brought
me
me
bad news, (This child) has comforted and He never furnished me with an occasion to
the messenger
who
chide
Him
one
(What adds
to
bitterness) to the
!
news
is
that the
who
!
brought
it
me
is
Salome
All
my
sorrow has
began again
"
have never been to a Governor, nor have I ever I stood before a judge. have never seen a robber being killed, nor
O
I
my
child,
have
Kranion, nor do
I
know
Golgotha.
O
;
my
I
child,
litigation so that
might
have never stood before a man engaged in wisdom (that has been applied
ever been present in a law court, so that
is
I
to
your case)
nor have
1
This sentence
missing in
sitting."
M.
127.
M. 127
"while
LAMENT OF THE
might
realise the injustice that
VIRGIN
185
am
has been done to you. my child, I inside the house of John, and you are in the house of the High-
Priest
Annas.
O
me
my
news
that concerns
you has
my
l
you
to
has to-day
me
of
I
my
joy.
The
angel
announced
this cruel
and
Your Annunciation occurred to me in the house of Joseph, and this bad news was brought to me in O my beloved, I was rejoicing in my heart and the house of John. saying constantly, To-morrow we shall have our passover, accomplish the passover has the ordinance of the feast and return to our home
news about you
' ' ;
come
feast
to
me,
my
"
My
my
The Virgin uttered this affectionate when they brought to her the sad news
to look for
wailing
of her
in the
house of John
she began
Son.
Then
one
of
find any,
because
all
His holy disciples to walk with her, but she did not had fled and forsaken Him from fear of the Jews.
Priest
She asked
for Peter to
accompany her, and she was informed that from " he had denied her Son, saying, I do not
himself from
Him.
seized.
he had
for
fled
and
left
Him
He
was
She asked
with
Him
to
Andrew, and she was informed that he had never come town at all. She asked for Thomas, and she was inTulmas,
4
She asked garments and fled. and she was informed that he was the first of
his
for Philip,
down
His brethren
to flee.
She asked
that
when he saw
even looked
that
was
terrified
She asked
that he never
Him.
She asked
he was afraid of the Jews more than all others, as they had a special grudge against him from the time he used to collect taxes from
1
-
M. 87
See on
omits
this
"
Woodbrooke Studies, vol. L, p. 1 53. omits "affectionate wailing." *I.e, Bartholomew. The author is dividing the word into two and
word my
to-day." note in
M. 127
translating the
3
M. 87 adds
186
WOODBROOKE
in the
all
STUDIES
darkness of the night. In short of them, and she did not find a single one of them
to the
except
Kranion and
the
Golgotha.
Then
was
the Virgin resumed her weeping and wailing, because she not able to find any of the Apostles, the disciples of her Son,
:
Woe is me,
O my Son
and
and disappeared. O my father Peter, I was thinking every day that you would not deny your Master. You have not been given and silver that Him denied so You have not been gold you quickly.
fled
why then did you deny to-day your You have not had the gift of a son or a
Peter, and you have not had daughter (as the price of your denial), the offer of exchanging Him for a brother or a friend, why then this
spiritless
weakness of yours
You
Peter, that
you were
so terrified
Peter, and you denied Him. He gave you a tongue of iron, it and it without fire or a smith. melted He bestowed spoiled you Peter, more than all men, and you did not bear grace upon you,
1
He bestowed on you, a single slap for your Master. Peter, two eyes the light of which does not fade, and you did not feel ashamed
now
to
deny
their light."
He
confided to you,
suffer
Kingdom
"
of
Him)
in
High
you,
Priest.
He made
Peter,
His deputy
3
and you
did not endure a single temptation for your Master. He made you, all and not act a father to the did in a brotherly Peter, world, you He imposed His divine love for a single short hour towards my Son.
and you did not agree to have a crown before you had denied Him. Even if you say,
Peter,
"
to
Lit.
"
he gave grace
your face
which
is
in
harmony with
the
"
slap
"
that follows.
2 y
The word should be in the dual form. M. 87 " temptation for a short time."
:
Book of the Resurrection of Christ by the Apostle Bartholomew N. T., p. 184) it is said that the Father, with the Son (in James' Apocryphal and the Holy Ghost, laid His hand on the head of Peter. 5 colloquial word is used here.
In the
187
it
my Son
is
did
Him
in this
way.
If
you had
to endure,
:
all the tribulations undergone with us by my father Joseph, to Herod with If Son.' have been should dragged my you had to you bear like him the pains of the journey to the country of Egypt, you
might not have been able to endure a single one of them. dew of heaven nurture your bones, my father Joseph, the
May
the
my
tribulations with
soul because
my Son
O
have
Peter,
they brought you placed you before the high tribunal that you denied your Master so
quickly."
Governor,
nor
When
in
her
weeping.
Then
Then John
my
my
who betrayed Him. heard what "my Master said at the evening meal and what Peter said 4 to Him, Be it far from you, Lord, this shall not be unto you,' but I
will
give
my
life
for you.
And
heard
'
you have become an offence to me, for you think not of the things that be of God, but of those things that be of men.' Now, my Lady and my mother, do not weep over my father Peter, because his denial
will
be (the symbol
of)
lie
to his
own words and corroborated the words of his Master." Then the Virgin gave herself to bitter weeping because
not seen her Son,
in the
she had
house of
to
and she reverted again to her painful lamentations " I John and said John, to show me adjure you,
:
the
way
the
Kranion.
I
to the
Golgotha.
John, to accompany me have never seen yet a robber being crucified, nor
I
adjure you,
in the
Lit.
4
"
Eastern parlance,
3
"a
with Him."
xvi.
Read
of
tnkit.
Matt.
22.
The
sentence
was
meal.
188
have
I
WOODBROOKE
stood near a robber
STUDIES
being beheaded.
1
when he was
shall
forsake
my town
and
my great freedom, and shall go bare-footed to my beloved Son has been crucified like common
is
He
is
standing
Him, and there is not here with you any of your friends who would say anything about you. my child, the sorrow of a mother
near
for her
beloved son
is
;
friend
is
another thing
is
another thing.
all
My sorrow, O my child,
and
bitter
is
to-day greater
2
than that of
the world,
is
of
all
and
my
more
than that of
who
shall
gather
When John noticed that she was not able to cease her weeping and wailing and that he on his part was unable to comfort her, because " If I do not see Him I cannot be comforted," he said she was saying
:
to her
"
:
Get
up,
and
will
accompany you
to the
Kranion,
so that
you may see Him." The Virgin, therefore, went out of the house of John and walked in the streets of Jerusalem. People who saw the
Virgin walking said to one another
"
:
From where
"
:
is
this
woman
"
"
wailing
And
We
have never
seen this
woman
it."
This
is
a foreign
Some others said buying anything from this bazaar." woman and she walks in this street as if she did
Jesus, said
not
know
The
Lord
may perhaps be His mother " This is the Some people said going to see Him on the cross." " The news of His conception wife of Joseph," and some others said 3 " Look at her, how was brought to her." Finally, some people said
disciple of the
:
who
This
" her face and her weeping," and yet some others said have not seen another one in this town like her, and her face resembles
beautiful
is
:
We
In short, every
one
in the
how
noticeable
And
her, while
some other
women
but she
was
The
text uses
Ke<pa\ri.
a
" " in feminine under the influence of here ra's head note in Woodbrooke Studies, vol. i., p. 249.
3
Read ma.
LAMENT OF THE
When
the Cross.
VIRGIN
189
people in groups of different tribes and clans looking at (her Son) on 1 People of various nationalities, from all districts had
assembled
in
lamb
Amgazites,' Balakites,
Moabites, Kabarites,
and
Ishmaelites.
All these were pressing in groups against one another for the great " and wonderful sight. Some people were saying They condemned
:
one to-day with injustice," and some others were saying Some were saying: have emptied their wrath on Him."
this
"
:
They
'They
were seeking the death of this one for many years," and some others " were saying They have killed a brave man to-day." Some were
:
saying
justice
in
this
been able to
is
this
"This
sent in order to make Him a King Some Herod ordered His death." why " The one who took people cursed Herod because of Him, saying his brother's wife while he was still alive and rendered him a poor and
whom
Emperor
is
over
Judaea, and
that
As
Son
to the
account of her weeping and humility, and she was not able to see her quickly because of her painful weeping and the thronging of the "
She
see
said, therefore, to
John
Where
is
my beloved Son
1
so that
may
Him
word lughat
The construction of the sentence with the languages-" here strange and denotes a Greek or a Coptic original. 2 M. 1 27 Magazites. I cannot identify this people without textual emendations. Can it be a copyist's error for A morites ? The graphic difLit
"many
is
:
ference between Avigazites and Amorites is rather slight in ancient and undotted Arabic characters from which the present Garshuni document appears to me to be derived
3 Are they descendants of Balak, King of Moab of Num. xxii.-xxiv. etc. ? The Moabites come immediately after as a separate people. The author
does not seem to be versed in Jewish history. I cannot identify this people without textual emendations.
Orient,
In the Coptic fragments edited by Revillout (Nos. 2 and 4) in Pat. ii., p. 132 sqq., it is said that the Emperor Tiberius ordered twice
that Jesus should be made The first occasion was when Carius sent King. the Apostle John to report to him about Jesus, and the second time was when Jesus was speaking to the Apostles on the mountain. See also Robinson's
Coptic Apocryphal Gospels, p. 176, and James' Apocryphal N.T., Cf. Johnvi. 15.
p.
146.
190
WOODBROOKE
:
STUDIES
And people against one another does not allow me to see Him." " said to her Lift head towards the of western side these John your
people, and you
will see
Him
And
the
Virgin looked towards all those multitudes of people, and she saw Him. She did not cease to wade with John through the multitudes
until
she
came and
Him
in
His
sufferings.
When God
to
him
"
: :
mother
looked towards John and said your mother," and then He said to His
is
He
this
your son."
And
Him,
Virgin's hand
mother, said
"O
John,
let
me weep"
over
He
has no
brother and no
would
that
I
that
sister, and do not deprive me of Him. my Son, had with you a crown of thorns on my head, and would
could
is
make
it
as painful as yours.
If
the penalty of
3
all
the
robbers
crucifixion,
why have
my Look at my
His
face to
John, wretchedness to-day in the middle of these multitudes. lowliness and at the pains of my heart. Let me look at
my
I
satisfaction.
Let
me
my
satisfaction, as
Him
except
to-day.
Let
me weep
His
let
Him, because my
sufferings are
all
to-day
is
greater than
sufferings.
The
lying-place of
the paupers
the dung-heap,
1
me
then look at
Him
to
my
satisfaction,
because
4
am
an orphan without father, without mother, and without relatives." This is the wailing indulged in by the Virgin while she was at the
Son.
a state of confusion owing to the intensity of her pain, and because of the greatness of her sorrow she She was only did not notice the great multitudes that were present.
in
She was
bent on weeping.
Now
there
of
Chuza, Mary Magdalene and Salome, and these got hold of the Lady (Mary) and lifted her up. Her wailing was truly sweet while
1
John
-
xix.
:
M. 87
John
26-27. "
6.
alone,
:
O
"
3
6
xii.
M. 87
writes this
is
more
the
name of Luke viii. 3, and xxiv. 0, as Yona or Greek Iwanna than the Syriac Yohan. John
this
the cross.
25 and Matt, xxvii. 56, do not mention From where did the author derive
this information ?
LAMENT OF THE
VIRGIN
191
she was surrounded by pure women, who were weeping with her Other Jewish women who because of the sweetness of her words. " Our vengeance has come heard her weeping scoffed at her saying is on because it and on through you that our your Son, you to-day
:
childless
in
Him
forth."
of the
The heads
hardened
Jews spoke then with the soldiers of Herod and They had informed Herod that
of
number
people
loved
Jesus,
added
"
:
We
Him,
raise against us
Pilate.
and snatch
Him
Give
us, therefore,
Him."
And
power
Pilate
is
why
did not go out with him conflict day Indeed Pilate and his wife loved (Jesus) between him and the Jews. like their own soul, and the flogging that he had ordered for Him
he feared an armed
was done
in
Him
from death. Had he known that they would crucify Him, if he were to die with his wife and his sons, he would not have laid hands on
Him
at all.
lied
if
to
Pilate saying
to
"
:
If
you only
he ceases
It is
heal
people on the
Sabbath day,
Pilate
we
will release
Him."
under
had ordered
Him
to
be flagellated.
stood at the
house.
The above conspiracy took place before the Virgin right side of Her Son and John wished to take her to his
She
then rose weeping and lamenting and returned to town, saying : " 4 I leave you in peace, my child, you and the cross upon which
you have been lifted up. I salute your face have insulted and at which they have railed.
King,
1
full of grace,
I
which they
salute
your nudity,
who
is
in the
middle
of robbers.
salute
?
From where
That
it
belief of the
was Herod and not Pilate who killed the Christ is also the " He (Paul) is a disciple of Jesus Christ Ethiopia Church
the son of
whom Herod
Archelaus slew in the days of Pontius Pilate." Budge's The Contendings of the Apostles, ii., 556. B The Arabic sentence is wrongly constructed as if Pilate himself had
flogged Jesus. 4 I.e., farewell.
5
Lit.
ask.
192
WOODBROOKE
child,
STUDIES
O
my
my
which
is
in the
hands
of
crown
of thorns
The
all this
while she
weep, nor did she but she kept weeping and wailing. After the house he did not neglect to go to the
the end
all
Kranion and
witness
2
till
gave up the ghost. Then great earthquake that occurred in When the Virgin the earth and the signs that took place in heaven. that the earth and noticed that darkness spread over all the quaked
all
When
the
the
had ceased
to function,
He
a sign that my Son has died." While she came the was saying this, lo, John And weeping. Virgin said to 3 him: "Is it not true that my Son died on the cross?" And he
"
This
is
inclined his
head and
4
"
said,
Yes,
He
died."
of the Virgin at
the weeping
With
wept and
said
"
Woe
to
is
me,
O
I
my
because of
this
have incurred.
me, nor a judge to gauge the pains of my heart. Governor, with to the the Son of the if you had judged law, justice according not have been killed while and would thirsty. High hungry King
done
Priest,
if
justice,
of crucifixion
decision,
6
O
If
nudity.
you had pondered over your not have would crucified my Son in His Governor, you you had judged with equity, O High Priest, you would
instead of
my
Son.
not have released a robber from death, and killed the Prince. had judged with equity, Governor, you would not have
If
you
a
killed
valiant
man
to
while war
is
looking you
in the face.
If
with equity,
O
"
High
Priest,
words
1
your Master.
2
Ps. oxxii. 4.
M. 87: "the
soul."
M. 127:
In cap. x. of the Recension B of the Greek text of the Acts of Pilate long quotations are also given from the lamentations of the Virgin when she was informed by John of the crucifixion of Jesus. Cf. James' Apocryphal
N.T.,
6
p. 116.
M.
27, omits
"
in
His nudity."
Which war ?
LAMENT OF THE
"
I
VIRGIN
if
it
193
happens
that
when people
are at war,
they capture the son of the King, they take great care of him and not kill him, but send him to his father as an honour, why then,
do
O
to
it.
High
Priest,
the truth
lie
and
He
told
it
Him
You
and put your trust on You do you not know then that the one who " truthful, nay truth and life ?
preferred a
is
holy Mary, you have met with injustice in than many of your generation, because more the town of Jerusalem they attacked the great one who was in it, and delivered Him to the
Truly,
Virgin,
still
hanging on the
all
cross,
and many
is
these deeds
the
Son
of
God."
who
the cross.
Then
to
summoned
Herod
wept while He was on who was sent by and he ushered him into his house
believed
the centurion
and said
an
him
"
:
Have you
seen,
O
my
my
brother,
killed
?
I
what
the
Jews
to this just
this
Him
tell
with such
you,
my
brother,
Herod.
wished
to
release
Him and
save
Him
when
was
Him to to God
:
for crucifixion.
whom we
Herod, 1 delivered See now, what ransom shall we give " have killed ? Then the centurion
together with the owner of the spear and Pilate began to weep bitterly " " May His blood be on Herod and on the High Priest saying
!
Then
before
Pilate
summoned
and
said
the
to
High
them
see
:
Priests
the public
"
haters
bodies
and
as a con-
sequence of the death of Jesus of Nazareth on the cross. May His " blood be on you and on your children And they struck at their
and at their faces saying man May the blood of this erring " a be on us and on our children for a thousand generations ! And
chests
:
"
1
3
John
xiv.
16.
M.
87,
"
About
I
all
the
incidents in the present story see the Coptic fragments the Prefatory Note.
5
which
translated in
194
Pilate said,
WOODBROOKE
"
STUDIES
He
showed
in
What
even
now
:
heaven and earth, you are not awestruck and amazed like all the " And they said " are not afraid because we have people ?
We
fulfilled
the law."
Pilate said
And
why
"
:
O
?
High
office."
Priest,
if
you have
if
fulfilled
the law,
The law
says that
High
:
Priest rends
his clothes,
1
he
falls
from
And
he answered
the
:
"
I
rent
my
clothes
because
2
the temple
another time
High
And
if
anyone
head."
tells
me
your
And
the
High
Priest said to
him
"
"
and has enjoyed a long term of office was under the jurisdiction of Herod.
He
he
And
far
Pilate said to
him
"
:
occurred
the
High
not then the signs that have so " And people ? " You are a young shoot in this town,
Are
Barmudah
and
in
it
and the
time the sorcerers give to the moon the moon takes place. At colour of blood and detract the ray of the sun by their spells. They
this
do
it
in order to exact
work from the husbandman and to prognostiThis is fruits, the crops, the wines and the oils."
and
said.
Priest lied
Pilate rose from his chair and scourged him with a rough he whip plucked also the hair of his beard, and tormented him and " You wish to bring the wrath (of God) on the earth on said Then the centurion and the account of your hatred for Jesus."
Then
; :
You prefer death to life." After having chastised of Pilate, they sent him to prison on the the recommendation him on advice of the centurion, until such time as they would send him to the
soldier said
:
"
Emperor.
1
2
3
M. 127
*
5
LAMENT OF THE
After
this Pilate
VIRGIN
"
:
195
Is
His
:
"
body
"
going to
"
And
Governor." in your hands, should take Him down from the cross that we wish you for man three days, in order that perto a reliable and confide Him chance He may rise as He Himself raised many people from the " When Pilate uttered these words the heads of the Jews dead ? " It is against the law to deliver a dead shouted suddenly and said the resting-place of the dead." The is to one. man grave any
Pilate said to
The power
:
And
him
Do
After this Joseph, who is from Arimathea, came to Pilate and asked permission to take down the body of Jesus Christ from the cross. And Pilate was pleased and he ordered it to be given to him and
;
it
down from the cross and buried it in conjunction with Nicodemus. The Jews, however, had an argument with him because they did not wish to bring down His body from the cross, but to leave it on the wood like that of all other robbers, because Jesus had made mention
:
of
His
resurrection.
Him
well in perfume,
for
linen wrappings,
another
man
at all,
ever been
laid,
they laid Him in a new tomb in which no other body had because it was newly made for Joseph himself, the
owner
went
of the garden.
They
"
:
then fastened
Him well
in
it is
"
till
When
to
the
Pilate
of Jesus
was placed
You know
that
and
they asked for four witnesses for His tomb, two from the soldiers of Herod, and two from the soldiers of the centurion. They confided
the
tomb
to
to
guard
till
it
till
And
the third
day
in order to
I
said
"If Jesus
of
rises
shall
of the
power
Herod."
:
in haste to the Virgin and said to her have laid in a good new tomb, and have shrouded They Him with new wrappings, good perfume, and myrrh of a high quality. And the Virgin enquired " Who was the one who did this good
:
thing to
my
"
if
beloved
Son
"
And
he informed her
chiefs.
that
it
was
Lit
M.
127
Read fa a Yamaha.
196
WOODBROOKE
they have placed
STUDIES
and
wailing,
And
"
If
and
I
said
my
I
life,
shall
Him.
If
Solomon over the body of my Son, I see His tomb. If they have poured the perfume
Aaron over
the
His burial-place. If they have laid my Son in the graves of the prophets, I shall not be comforted unless I see Him. If the grave in which my Son is lying is
body
of
my
Son,
see
that of Elisha,
shall not
be comforted unless
see
Him.
If
the place
in
which they have placed my son is Paradise itself, I shall not be comforted unless I see Him. May the dew of Heaven nurture you,
my
'
father Joseph,
mus,
and may the firmament nourish you, 1 Nicodework did to Son on the cross good you my
!
that I had been weeping under your cross, my Son could not find your body, I would have beloved, my grasped your blood, because although Jacob did not find the blood of Woe is me, my beJoseph, he wept over the blood of another.
!
Would
if
I
Even
have not seen your body and your blood. If I had found your blood, I would have Child, my purified my garment with it, and if I had found your garment, it would have been as a
loved Son, because
I
garment of Joseph
foreign
to me.
The
blood, and
If
that over
which
blood over which Jacob wept was a I weep is flowing from the side of
my
Son.
my
Son, as
it
is
have pushed the spear-head into your divine side. deed was left, my beloved, which they did not do to my beloved, you before they crucified you, and no injustice was left, beloved which they did not do to you. Woe is me, Son, my my
"
No
evil
You
I never saw a me. physician healing people 4 that they struck of beloved and in Son, you. my spite have been a physician to their diseases which you cured, and in
you
5
to the
a physician,
1
O
i.,
my
Child,
to their
wood of the cross. You have been men born blind, and you gave them
in
About
An Apocryphal Jeremiah,
my Woodbrooke
Studies, vol.
"
p. 159.
all this
M. 127
omits
sentence.
3 4
5
Presumably not her husband but the Patriarch. There is a slight difference in the meaning of the texts of the two
MSS.
M. 127:
"O
my
Son."
LAMENT OF THE
1
VIRGIN
Jews did not
197
feel
their
sight,
and
in spite
of
ashamed
to insult you.
have been a physician, my Son, and of that demons from them, and in spite they did
'
You
said,
You
You them out by Beel-Zebul.' from haemorthem and cured you my Son, not feel ashamed of you, but they did they
drive
I
"
adjure my beloved, with a spear-head. to of Son. me the tomb to come with O you, my implore John, you, O John, to accompany me to my only Son so that may pay a visit to am putting you to much trouble His cross. know, O John, that but have of with the sorrow patience with me and you will my heart,
I I
3
receive
much blessing from my beloved Son." The Virgin uttered these and similar words
5
in
her lamentations
see His tomb I shall not be comforted " Cease your used to comfort her saying John my weeping because they have buried Him with perfume, incense, and new wrappings, near a garden." The Virgin, however, wept, saying
and
said
"
O John,
if
do not
in
sorrow."
And
"
If
the ark of
Noah were
I
my
Son,
shall
not
be comforted unless
:
see
over
"
Him."
And
the
John
said to her
of
"How
Governor are lying on the sepulchre ? remained in this weeping and wailing over her Son
the
And
in the
Virgin
of
day
His
As
to the soldiers
whom
unknown
to
Jews had entered with them into a conspiracy the Governor and the Centurion, to the effect that if the
rise
this
and
for
their not
disclosing
silver.
this
The
Jews held
this
When, however
1
(Jesus) rose
and many
His
'
M. 127 omits this sentence. The author does not use the
Lit.
end.
"
"
So
that
on the cross."
M. 127
omits
all
this
sentence.
"M. 87 omits "from my beloved Son." M. 127 omits all this sentence.
'
198
resurrection,
WOODBROOKE
the soldiers
STUDIES
were frightened and terrified, and became like dead men. They entered the town early in the morning and the deceitful words of the Jews they went to them while remembering it was still dark before they went to the Governor and apprised them
of the fact that Jesus of
Nazareth
had
risen
He
had predicted. The Jews went then Priest the words of the soldiers to the
the dead
lives,
in haste
and
High
effect that
and they shouted saying because this day has more evil
; :
"
Woe
it
to
in
which
He
was
But
crucified.
What
rose
first
shall
He
it
We shall
all fall
into
us see
what
went
to the
tomb while
was
it.
still
And they really took place." in the and did not early morning,
they tore their garments, gave "
:
find the
silver
body
to
of Jesus in
Then
He
"
appear
everybody
2
Will
(in
their
As
the sepulchre
it.
Sunday morning. Mary Magdalene had, however, preceded her to 3 and noticed that the stone had been rolled away from
of
And the Virgin said "This is a sign that occurred in the case Who rolled away this stone from perplexes me my Son, and "
:
it
The
find in
the
body
it
of her Son,
and
:
she sat
down and
is
"
Woe
me,
my
beloved Son,
who
is
body and added to the sorrow of my heart ? I have not been at all when my father to the tomb of my father nor to that of my mother
;
died
was a young
of
girl
in the temple.
4
Nor have
so
5
grave
my
father Joseph
who endured
I
many
my
1
Son.
to inform myself
your tomb, my Son, in order another sorrow has been concerning your body,
to
of
came
M. 127
This
is
omits
Nazareth."
Lit.
"
A word."
Pilate which against the following document or Martyrdom of who went first to the sepulchre. that it was the asserts Virgin Mary wrongly
See below,
4
I.e.,
day
of the crucifixion.
1
On
In the following page Joseph dies on the " " in this connection father the use of the word
see above, p.
5
87.
these."
Lit.
"
all
LAMENT OF THE
added
Child,
to
I
VIRGIN
came
I
199
my
sorrow.
to
your tomb,
my
did not find your body 1 not did the On Son. in it, Golgotha they permit me to satisfy my my desire for looking at you to my satisfaction, and to-day they did
met with a
bitter disappointment, as
not allow
to
me
to satisfy
my
body
in the
grave
my
heart's desire.
On
the
day
of
your
birth, in
Bethlehem,
my
beloved Son,
when your
your
'
star shone,
Herod
on the day
eclipse, the
of
crucifixion,
my
in
Son,
when
Jews
my Son, your on order to and the in surrounded glorify you, day of your you angels forsook On the brethren resurrection, you. my beloved Son, your
the day
"
On
Bethlehem,
day
in
Bethlehem,
my
shepherds came
your death,
your body
O
in
my
it.
day-break and worshipped you, and on the day of beloved Son, I came to your tomb and did not find
brought you forth in Bethlehem, came to you with their offerings, and on the day of 4 my Son, a wicked robber insulted you. The day
On
the
day
my
of
Son, the
Magi
and on my Son, the animals praised with met my beloved, pain and day your crucifixion, On the day of your birth in Bethlehem, O my beloved Son, sorrow. served you, and on the day of your crucifixion, O my beloved, Joseph the same Joseph, my father, died. " Woe is me, O my beloved, there is no sorrow like my sorrow,
Bethlehem,
it,
the
nor
the
is
there any pain like the pain of a mother looking at her son on
of
wood
the cross.
O
my
my
Son,
went
'
to the
wood
of the cross
for you,
Woe
is
me,
my
I
beloved Son,
sorrow
because
the four
1
body on the wood so that did not find it in the tomb so that
soldiers
might worship
"
it.
adjure
to
who
"
M. 127
:
omits
:
4 M. 87 adds " with anxiety." M. 87 " O light of my eyes." " M. 87 with pain of the heart." "The author evidently believes that Joseph died on the day of the
:
O my
M.
127 omits
the Jews."
crucifixion of Jesus.
b
visit
by the Virgin
to the
Golgotha.
200
deliver your
I
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
1 body if perchance they have removed it through bribery. implore Joseph and weep before Nicodemus to reassure me concern-
ing your
body
it
it
on
their
own
responsibility
from Pilate
I
and
laid
in
tomb.
know
heart
of the intensity of
my
pain
let
my
This
is
tomb
of her Son.
She was
from her fear of the Jews and from the fact that she perplexed did not find the body of her Son in the tomb. While she was thinkin her soul
2
ing deeply
was perceived
3
from the
right
tree.
Virgin looked towards the direction of the scent and saw the good God standing, clad in a heavenly robe and His face greatly suffused with And He said to her " woman, what makes you burst into this joy. " affectionate wailing at this empty tomb which contains no body ? And she replied "It is my sorrow ; and this sorrow, my Lord,
:
The
arises
from the
fact that
it
over
satisfied in
this length of
time,
your Son
in the
tomb
:
you would have never ceased your lamentation." And she replied " my lord, if I had found it I would have been somewhat comforted
by
it."'
And
he said
to her
"
:
woman,
if
you would have had no comfort spear, at His hands and feet wounded by the driving of nails in them, and at His body smeared with blood. Now, woman, comfort yourself, because it was more advantageous for you not to have seen
in looking at
you had seen your Son dead, His side pierced with a
Him
all
the
Him
comfort did you alive on the cross, and dead with wrappings
What
Him
Truly,
in
all
this
The guards went from this great disturbance reigns in the town. here and are now conspiring with the Jews in lying terms concerning
your Son.
L
Does
Lit.
the tomb, in
of
laid
"by
silver."
3
M. 127
M. 27
1
omits the
last
sentence.
LAMENT OF THE
l
VIRGIN
the
201
called Joseph,
No,
woman,
"
:
know
man
and
that
in
this
garden
belongs to
him."
And
laying
2
him
my
lord,
happened
my
I
Him
in this
Son, and the love which they showed to Him I could not bear to tomb. stay in the house of
came
Him.
Now,
O my lord,
dresses
and the beauty of your garden you are the owner 3 and the sweet words with which you have answered me
if
testify to this
there
is
because
have no other
they did with His body since I the Jews carried it away because of their hatred for the Governor
concerning
it
me show it to me now, Disclose to me His secret and what Have did not find it in His tomb.
if
it
And
may
also,
it
O my lord,
there,
it.
is
hidden
in
your garden
its
have pity on
me and show me
just see
By your
"
life,
my
brother,
have
never seen
this
And
The
crucified
O
is
;
sufficiently.
who was now standing near you the one whom you are seeking is the one who is comforting you the one for whom you are asking is the one who is clad in this heavenly robe the one whose tomb you 5 are wishing to see is the one who smashed the doors of brass. O of lo I am with the words Mary, recognise my glory comforting you
living
is
one
is
the one
who
;
the one
life,
afraid.
It
Look
I
at
my
face,
O
I
my
in
is
who
and
raised
life.
Lazarus
It is
Bethany.
It
is
Jesus
who
is
resurrection
in
Jesus
the
It is
Kranion.
I
It is I
Jesus
who
Jesus over
whom
His
I
you are
resurrec-
weeping,
tion.
who
is
now
comforting you
at the beginning of
my body, O my mother, but rose according You came to-day to the tomb, O my my and I took up out of Hades all those who were fettered in mother, and saved those who had fallen into sin."
No
to the will of
Father.
it,
Lit.
"
If."
be used here as a
title.
It
is
one
of Christ.
5
202
WOODBROOKE
When
STUDIES
the Virgin heard this she received strength and comfort 1 and ceased her weeping and anxiety. She lifted up her eyes from the ground, filled her sight from Him, saw Him in the grace of His
divinity
and
said
"
You have
"
! :
truly risen,
O O
You
Him.
I
have
truly risen
And
"
And He
said to her
Enough,
my
resurrection.
Look now
of
Hades,
I
my
how
inmates
I
are.
shall
present them
as an offering to
my
Father before
take
them
to Paradise."
And
Him
:
He
at
had taken up from Hades, clad in white robes. She was amazed " Go in haste and announce my them, and Jesus said to her
from
this
resurrection
the dead to
my
brethren.
Go
in
haste,
mother, leave
at the right
side of
my my
tomb, because a company of the Jews will come with Pilate to find
out what took place, and see
sight to the blind
would
and give
and motion
to the lame."
After the Lord Jesus said this to His mother He disappeared from her sight. She then left the tomb with haste and went and told the
women
that the
Lord had
risen
The news
town
that Jesus of
He
had
said,
and
that
He told
High
His mother
I
"I
will precede
'
you
to Jerusalem,
you
me and
will bless
As
"
to the
Priests
if
Pilate, the
Governor, as
you and the Jews, they went in the morning to they had heard nothing, and said to him
there."
O our lord Governor, error has increased and scandals have multiplied
1
"
:
and comfort."
"
You have
truly risen,
O my father."
On
M.
James'
Fathers.
4
5
Hades
There
to the
Virgin
Mary
The same
by done
.
John the Evangelist (xx. 1-19) to Mary Magdalene. See by the author of the Martyrdom of Pilate.
.
as
of
He
had said
in
to
His mother.
will
precede
you
to Galilee."
This
is
course more
xxviii. 7.
LAMENT OF THE
to-day at the sepulchre.
they
VIRGIN
203
Summon
may
I
relate
His
any
of us goes
there."
I
And
believe
Pilate said to
them
"
I
heard that
He
of
what
life
saw
in
of the
I
Moses
do not
bed,
that
saw
Him
last
I
night while
laid
was
lying in
my
had
He may
be the Son
of
hands on Him, and thought that perchance God on account of the signs that appeared in
I
heaven when
He
saw
Him
All the town, except the gathering-place of the And He Jews, shone with His light more than the light of the sun.
said to
'
me
?
1
Pilate,
flogged
me, and
Jesus
why are you weeping because you ordered Jesus to be What is written about Him has been fulfilled. Return to am Jesus who died on the cross. will forgive you. am
I I
who
joy.
rose to-day
This
light
which you
see to-
day
with
is
the glory of
my
is
I
resurrection
Look
well,
Pilate,
which has enlightened all the world and see that this sign which shines on
the light of the sun
and
is
to
my tomb and you will see the wrappings lying in it guarded by angels. Kiss them and them. for resurrection and will witness many worship Fight my you
convince you that
rose from the dead.
Hasten
to
shall rise
by
my
power."
Pilate,
you
"
will shine
in the light of
my
:
resurrection,
will deny.'
When
voices
all this
'
words
in his
3
and said
"
is
to the people, as
is
The law
is
says,
'
At
the
mouth
of
two
word
established
the tomb.
4
;
who guarded
If
we
He rose, their words are true, and if they do not do you have nothing to do with dreams." Then Pilate summoned the four soldiers and said to them " What
that
shall
:
"
M. 127 omits "to-day." M. 87 " and the dead lo shall raise by my death." The word emir is here the translation of the Coptic word meaning
:
prases.
ut. xvii.
ii.,
171.
16.
15; Matt,
xviii.
204
WOODBROOKE
"
STUDIES
And they divided curse among happened to-day at the sepulchre ? themselves and lied and said that He did not rise but was carried away.
And
him
him
:
different places.
The
"
:
first
in,
and
Pilate said to
"
Tell
me
the truth
who
"
carried
away
And
Peter and John." And be removed to a place by himself. Then he summoned the second one and said to him "I know that you do not speak but
he answered
the
to
the truth,
tell
me which
"
?
z
And
he answered
"
:
away
the
body
of Jesus
The
eleven apostles
came
with His disciples and carried Him away by stealth." And Pilate ordered that this one also should be removed to a place by himself.
He
the
then
summoned
him
body
me who
And
he answered
"
:
away
Joseph
are the
and Nicodemus."
head of these
all
to
him
"
:
You
and
Disclose to
me now
place, and how they removed the body of Jesus from " tomb while you were guarding it." And he answered O our Lord the emir, we were asleep and we do not know who carried it away. When we woke up we looked for it and found it below the
what took
the
water which
fear."
is
in the garden,
and
we
Then
words
Jews and
to the centurion
"
:
Are
these
he by ordered that the soldiers should be kept under guard until he had Then he arose with the high priests and gone himself to the tomb.
consistent ?
Are
"
lies ?
And
and went
4
to the
tomb.
They found
the
:
wrappings
"
lying in the
O men
who
:
5 And Pilate said without the body. hate their own life, if they had taken away the body
tomb
"
would they not have taken the wrappings with it ? " answered See, these wrappings do not belong
some one
else."
And
to
(the Jews)
to
Him, but
him
And
words
of Jesus to
that
*M. 127 omits: "with His disciples." 2 M. 87 adds " And the rest of their relations."
:
3 4
M.
"
87,
soldiers."
5
M. 127
omits
tomb."
Lit.
"
LAMENT OF THE
entered into
linen
VIRGIN
205
that is to say the pieces of it, and took the wrappings, with which Jesus was shrouded, wept over them and embraced
joy.
them with
Then he
of the tomb,
who was
and who was with one eye only as his other eye had been put out in a war, and a considerable time had elapsed without him having seen anything with it Pilate then conceived the idea,
through the greatness of
to the centurion's to
his faith, that these
this
him and
said
my
do you not perceive the exquisitewrappings and see as if they were sprinkled
brother,
"
And the Jews said " O Pilate, you know that Joseph placed on Him much perfume and incense, and that they shrouded Him with
myrrh and sweet
spices of aloe,
and
this
And
only,
Pilate said to
them
"
:
If
why
is
all
this
And
they answered
"
:
The
scent
is
And Pilate replied to them "You have trodden by the winds."' on the path of perdition for yourselves, have walked in it and fallen in And they a place from which you will have no deliverance for ever."
said to
to
him
"
:
Nothing
is
due
man.
to
you from
us,
right
3
come
to the of this
tomb
tomb.
of this
You
and not
Lo, the High Priests and the heads of the Jews affair, and it does not behove you to fight the Jews
"
:
dead man."
And
brother,
We
have acted according to their desires and have crucified Him, and all the world was on the brink of ruin and destruction on account
of their injustice.
They want
us
now
to
stumble on their
sin
and
aver that
1
He
has not risen from the dead, in order that His wrath
M. 87 omits " and incense." M. 127 omits the last sentence. 3 M. 87, " to those who are in need
the
in
it
Governor
of this
tomb."
206
WOODBROOKE
back on us
1
STUDIES
may come
Pilate uttered these words to the centurion while holding the wrap" I believe Then he said pings with his hands and embracing them.
:
that the
And
body which has been wrapped in you rose from the dead." the centurion also had faith like Pilate, and seizing the wrappings
he embraced them, and when they touched his face he immediately saw with the blind eye as before, as if Jesus had laid His hand on it
as
He
blind.
How
to the
was
who had
also
gone
They were from all countries, and they had come to Jerusalem for the Passover, and seen (Jesus) on the cross on the day of the crucifixion. When they had heard that Pilate had gone to the
sepulchre to see whether Jesus
tomb
had
risen,
expectation
that
He
might
rise
This
is
the reason
why
great
and appear to them like Lazarus. multitudes had come to the tomb of
they beheld the great miracles and
at
Him.
And
how
what
(Jesus)
had done.
And
at
my
miracles of Jesus in
And
his
show
"
of
which he had
said
The power
He
faith
is
truly
God, and
have believed
Him.
My
:
dead.
He
God
my God
and gave up his military career. While the wrappings were twisted round his hands he ran to this And Pilate was greatly place and that place and embraced them. amazed and glorified God.
he
threw away
his
And
sword
And
1
the
Jews
"
"
:
You
M. M. 4 M.
5
us." that may send His wrath against " 3 M. 127 adds, Christ." the grace." 87, "and the shield of his military career." " And the See my note above and compare the following
127,
So
He
87,
"
all
"
Jews
He
and
1
it
is
in the
name
of Beelzebub,
in
p. 96.
Migne's This
of
103 and 106; James' Apocr. N.T., course inspired from Matt. xii. 24, Luke xi. 15.
i.,
LAMENT OF THE
What He
they added
his
VIRGIN
207
did in His
:
life
He
is
now
"When
a sorcerer
dies,
These deeds grave and they deceive many people through them. And Pilate said to are indeed those of sorcerers and conjurers."
them
have never heard that sorcerers and conjurers performed 2 lies out of your own mind on Since you are heaping such miracles.
:
"
We
the "
life
We O
And they said : Lord, His wrath will come on you." 3 us and deliver our souls to judgment, may His blood be on
of the
And Pilate said to the centurion : our children for ever and ever." " my brother, do not exchange cheaply the great gift which you
have received
for the lie of the
Then
the dead
Jews and
said to
?
It
them
is
"
:
Where
is
said,
was
Jesus
perchance He."
Jews preceded Pilate and the centurion to the well which was in the garden, and it was a deep well. And I Gamaliel was And they went down to the bottom of following with the crowd.
the
And
it
the
laid in a separate
And
the
Jews shouted
trouble "
!
Here
is
the
Nazarene sorcerer
rose,
who
gave us so
much
You
say that
He
and
to
He
"
:
is
at
And
Pilate ordered
them
draw him
Are up, and summoned Joseph and Nicodemus and said to them " these the wrappings with which you shrouded the body of Jesus ? And they answered " The wrappings which you are holding in
:
As to this corpse it is that of the your hands are those of Jesus. And the company of the robber who was crucified with Jesus." 4 Jews threw themselves on Joseph and Nicodemus wishing to cast
depth of the well because they had spoken the truth. They would have done it were it not for the fact that Pilate and his soldiers shielded them.
them
into the
This word seems at first sight to denote a post-Islamic author. It must, however, be remembered that the word Jinn is found in Ethiopia in " " the sense of evil spirit." Further, the word in the mind of the demon," author may have been "demon, evil spirit" and the translator in case the
document
is
a translation
by Cyriacus
that
was
prophesying." "But they delivered their souls to judgment saying: " His blood and His death be on them.' " 4 M. 127, All the Jews."
a
Cod.
"
M.
87,
'May
208
WOODBROOKE
When
Pilate noticed their confusion
to be quiet.
STUDIES
and
their cry
he beckoned
to
them
He
had
full
him by the Lord Jesus to the effect that dead men would rise from He summoned, therefore, the heads of the Jews and said His tomb. " We do not believe at all that this is Jesus of Nazareth." to them
:
And
it
or
do not
is
believe
it,
do believe
should "
And
him
in
he said
his
them
like
"It
we we
he
:
leave
tomb
other dead
men."
And
Shroud him with these wrappings as before." And the Jews " 2 shouted do not accept Joseph, and Nicodemus has no portion
We
with
us,
because
his
'
portion
is
with Jesus."
And
Pilate said
"I
have greater
right."
they took the wrappings that belonged to the Lord Jesus 5 and shrouded the body of that dead man with them. And Pilate
Then
and
it and placed it in the tomb in which Jesus lay. he ordered the people to place the stone at the entrance of the tomb as they had done in the case of Jesus. Then Pilate stretched
And
his
hands and prayed at the door of the sepulchre and said thus Lord Jesus. You are the resurrection "I implore you to-day,
:
and the
life,
the giver of
life
to all
and
to
to the dead.
believe that
me.
Do
my
in
am
doing
this.
test
your resurrection.
in the miracles
my
Lord,
have confidence
which you have wrought. You are many dead men. Now, >O my Lord, do
I
placed a foreign corpse in the place in did this to put to shame and confusion those
them belong shame and confusion for ever and ever, and to you are due glory and honour from the mouth of your servant Pilate for ever and for ever and ever."
your resurrection.
l
who deny
To
*M. 127
-
omits
M. 127:
"We
"or do not believe it." do not accept Joseph and Nicodemus because they
4
Under
M. 1 27 adds: "than they." the influence of Syriac the text places the pronoun before the immediately after the verb, which is contrary to the genius of the
LAMENT OF THE
When
open
to
VIRGIN
"
I
209
tomb, a voice
came from the dead man saying me the door of the tomb in order that
to
my
lord Pilate,
out.
I
may come
of
was
lord
the
first
of
Paradise.
my
Pilate, so that
may come
out
by
the
power
my Lord
of
Jesus
Christ
who
And
on account
the joy
and
his heart
and
an extent that
his voice.
lift
And
were standing
to
mediately the dead man came out walking, and he bowed before As to the Jews who were present, they were Pilate, the Governor.
seized
with
panic,
ran
away
wailing
secretly from their fear of the Governor. And Pilate ordered all the soldiers to pursue the Jews and strike them with the swords which they were holding, and they wounded many of them. Then Pilate turned to the dead man and said to him
:
"
my
son,
who
raised
that
you
in
this short
time
It is
only
in case
Jesus
He
to raise
you so
quickly."
And
the dead
praying,
and spoke
3
to
man said to him Did you not see the The Lord Jesus raised me while you were me saying, Tell my beloved Pilate to fight for
:
'
"
my
resurrection because
his portion in
Paradise
'
as
appointed to you.
as they have
condemn him
head.'
And
you
in
Pilate said to
him
From where
"
this
are you,
well ?
And
am
the
robber
who
worthy of all favours and gifts before my Lord Jesus Christ because the few comforting words that I uttered while He was on the wood
the cross.
lord Pilate,
I
of
was
the
first
one
to rise
of
Jesus,
my
and as you opened to me the door of His sepulchre, so He opened to me the door of Paradise. I recognise this high perfume as it is from the tree of life which my soul is enjoying."
1
M. 27 omits " door." M. 87, " and he." M. 87, " to appoint him his portion from the tree of life." " 4 M. 127, " From which tribe are you ?
1
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Gamaliel, walked
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my
Lord
Jesus,
2
and the
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district
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"
own who
you saw with your own the heard and ears) great number of people (with your eyes believed in Jesus Christ on account of the resplendent miracles
my
brother,
witnessed also by the wicked and accursed Jews, who did not believe." Let us here end the discourse on the Virgin and her sweet wailing, and on the death and resurrection of her Son from the dead. These
in Jerusalem, the
holy
5
city,
and
in all the
districts that
of our
Jesus Christ to
ever.
whom
and
May God
and
all
the believers
Amen.
Amen.
1
Amen.
M. 127 omits "of my Lord Jesus." -M. 127 adds "the accursed." " 4 3 M. 87 omits O my M. 27, " they." " M. 87, and the love of men which belongs to." " M. 87 omits " power and honour."
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ADO
//.
Martyrdom of
Pilate.
PREFATORY NOTE.
I
and the
translation (ac-
companied by a
apparatus) of
Martyrdom of
Pilate.
to Cyriacus, bishop of
historical narrative
is,
Oxyrhynchus, but the real author of all as we learn from the beginning and the end
in the
it
of
the story
himself.
middle
a
of
it,
Gamaliel
We
may,
therefore,
consider
as
second Gamaliel
apocryphon.
I
text
MSS.
Two
of
them belong to my own collection of MSS. and are numbered Mingana Syr. 127 and Mingana Syr. 355 (hereafter M. 127 and M. 355), The third MS. is Paris Arab. 152 1 (hereafter P.). M. 127 and
M. 355
in
and P.
is
Arabic
From notes
it
that
have ventured
I
to write at the
believe that
transcribed
from a
Arabic characters.
M. 355 The
M.
127.
I
have placed the text of M. 127 in the body of the page and the variants of M. 355 and P. in the footnotes. I have transcribed each
MS.
in
in the characters in
which
it
was found,
I
viz.
M.
127 and
all
M. 355
the variants
of
[
355, but in order not to render the text of the notes very bulky have noted only the most important variants of P. In the final
M.
section,
to
his
I
voyage
to
Rome
nearly
completely
missing in
there
M. 27
1
registered
also
the variants of P.
As
MSS.
be dealt with, the footnotes did not appear to the of such a method. bulky by adoption
P. 35 in Baron
"
me
to be abnormally
number
In the
-About Cod:
242
I
WOODBROOKE
have also read Cod,
I
STUDIES
is
in
Garshuni
like
my own MSS.
M.
I
noticed that
M.
27 or
agrees with P. adopted also the above method for another and a more cogent
it
reason.
The
by the three
MSS.
are so
numerous, so varied in character and so important that I have come to the conclusion that they represent three more or less different recensions of the story, and that P. was executed with an eye on the interest of
Egyptian Christians.
Now
to
better solved
had edited
I
separately the
M.
127,
all
M.
355, and
all
P. as
Apocryphal Jeremiah*
such importance as to
me
to
be of
M.
27
is
dated
994
of the
Greeks (A.D.
683), and
it is
the
same MS.
which contains the above documents dealing with the Virgin Mary and the death and resurrection of Christ or the Lament of the Virgin as I have called it. M. 355 has no date,
as that
but
may be
800.
P.
is is
it
assigned by Baron
de Slane
sole
to the
reservation
am
tempted to place
1
6th century.
important variants
which seemed
Further,
me
likely to
throw
light
on the
MSS.
for reasons
document.
The document
1
appears to
me to
be, like
its
predecessors, exclusively
The
me
MS. were kindly communicated too late to be utilised for the text. To
give the reader a fairly accurate idea of the peculiarities of the MS. I placed at the end of the edition the important variants of the first half of the story,
have done this only in cases in which V. 99 as we may call the MS. from the other three MSS. which I have utilised for my edition. It will be useful here to remark that V. 199 contains (against M. 127) the final part of the story which deals with the Apostle John and his voyage to
but
I
1
differs
Rome.
2
In
my Woodbrooke
Studies, vol.
i.,
pp.
48-233.
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
Coptic
in origin.
243
it is
Among the
only
the Coptic
his
Church
and holds a
feast in
honour.
The
West
name Pilate?
That the document
the
falls
Ada
Pilati and
The Anaphora seems 'Avafopd UL\O.TOV goes without saying. to presuppose the Ada, itself later than the TrapaSocris HtXarov
which
relates, like the present
Pilate to
Rome
to
to
answer
demned him
emanate
also
death.
In
my
opinion
all
these
Greek documents
from Egypt, and Egypt alone. do with Syria and Palestine, and have very
little
The
my
have
compared the present document with the Syriac, Coptic, and Ethiopic apocrypha so ably edited and translated by Budge, and also with
some other
parallel
documents.
TRANSLATION.
In the
name
of the
and
of the
Holy Ghost,
to
4
we
will
3
God
write the
history
Governor
May
his
Amen.
tradition of the Ethiopic
ii.
325.
The
Church
is
to the effect that Pilate reported Longinus (one of the soldiers who had crucified Jesus) to Tiberius, who had him brought and tortured. See Book
1
of the Saints of the Ethiopian Church (edit. Budge), iv. 146. 2 The two redactions of these two documents are edited by Tischenodorf in his Evang, Afocr., p. 433 sqq. (2nd edit). All these Greek documents are either analysed or translated in M. R. James* useful and handy work
:
The Apocryphal
3
New
Testament.
P.
calls
the
story:
"Martyrdom
of
doxology. 4 P. and
M. 1 27 often write the word Jerusalem with a yodh at the beginning in the Hebrew way instead of an Alapk according to the Arabic and Syriac mode of writing. This tends to prove their Egyptian origin. See my note in Woodbrooke Studies, TO!, i., p. 153.
244
WOODBROOKE
treatise
2
STUDIES
1
composed by the holy Cyriacus, bishop of the town of Bahnasa, on the resurrection of our Lord from the dead, and on the
undergone by Pontius Pilate in the holy city, at the time of the crucifixion. In it he makes mention also of Joseph of Arimathaea
tribulations
3
and Nicodemus, the venerable chiefs, and of the persecution suffered by Pilate at the hand of the Jews for the name of Christ to whom
be glory and worship and before he was sent by the
of the torments inflicted
latter to
off
on him by Herod
Rome, where
his
and
his
martyrdom completed.*
5
The
God.
story
is
told as
They wrote
life,
it,
Christ which
became the
related that
and His
6
glorious resurrection.
after the prodigies
They
they wrote
this
martyrdom
our
Saviour, Jesus
Christ, consequent
upon
with
His
and
us.
and
at the
end
of the machinations
wicked Jews.
May
the peace of
God be
Amen.
When
Kranion?
1
our Lord Jesus Christ was crucified in the place called which being interpreted means a row of stones and it is
about him
'
P. has Hyriacus or Horiacus and so also M. 355 prima manu. See in my note above, p. 182, About the child Horus or Harpokrates
see Budge's Coptic Apocrypha, p. 184. 2 See the previous document, p. 1 82.
An unusually bad error has been committed by Baron de Slane in his Catalogue des Manuscrits Arabes (de la Bibliotheque Nationale), p. 35. Having read the word Bitnti as Nabati (in Arabic characters the simple
3
transposition of the dot of nun and " " le Nabateen instead of Pontius
4
'"
ba\
"
Pilate
M. 127
has
"
where Andrew
name as Anaius (Anayos). This Anaius appears to me to Aeneas in the Coptic fragments of the Gospel of Nicodemus " Apocryphal N. T., p. 95), where he states that he was the Protector
law
"
into
and avers that he translated from Greek, in the time of the Emperor Theodosius, the memorials See Aeneas' concerning Jesus, which were deposited with Pontius Pilate. own preface to the Coptic Acta Pilati in Pat. Orient., ix., p. 65 sqq.
Hebrew
Or
"this confession."
in the
is
preceding
treatise, the
author
MARTYRDOM OF
1
PILATE
245
the venerable chiefs Joseph and Nicoderaus got His body and placed it in a new tomb. The Virgin possession of Mary began then to weep and to show a keen desire to go to the tomb of her Son, but she could not do so from fear of the Jews,
the Golgotha
because
it
was
the Sabbath
in
it
no
to proceed
When
women
which
the morning of
'
who
carried
anywhere Sunday arrived Mary took with her other with them sweet spices and perfumes with
of the
to anoint the
tomb
Saviour.
And Mary
preceded
the other
women who
she
it,
morning.
When
away from
place in
reached the sepulchre she found the stone rolled and while in a state of amazement, she looked into the
lay the
which
body
it
she found,
however, the linen clothes lying there, and the napkin that was over the head separated from the linen clothes and wrapped together in a
place by
itself.
She saw
also
two
3
angels in white
sitting,
the one at
feet.
herself
'
He
said
to
her
Woman, why
She, supposing Him to be the gardener answered Him weeping " Sir, if you have borne Him hence tell me where you have saying will go and take Him away. laid Him, and And the Saviour said "O Mary." And she answered and said " Rabboni " to her 'You rose, O my Son and my God, -which is to say My Master.
:
and your
salvation
1
resurrection
to
is
magnificent,
kind, but
the
human
my Son
and
my God,
am
The author has used the Greek and the Semitic form of the Calvary. " can find no probable support for his interpretation Row of Stones." 2 M. 355 and M. 127 mention here their names which are Mary Magdalene and Salome. " 3 M. 355 adds here Magdalene" which seems to contradict the trend
of the narrative of the story. There is no doubt that the document, against it was the xxi. that believes 18, John Virgin Mary and not Mary Magdalene
that
went
4
5
first
of the so-called
M.
Cf.
This error is also committed by the author Gospel of the Twelve Apostles (Pat. Orient., ii., p. 130). 127 uses here the plural form They reached, they found.
to the sepulchre.
:
John
xx. 7.
'
M. 127 and partly M. 355 add here: "And What ails thee and why seekest thou the living among
the
the
dead?
(Luke
xxiv. 5).
246
amazed
all
WOODBROOKE
at
STUDIES
inflict
these sufferings."
And
it
"
told
you
it
all
this before
happened."
And when
that
was He, she rejoiced and wished ardently to go near Him and She was indeed so overjoyed that she thought she was worship Him. " But He said to her Do not come near Me, because I dreaming.
:
corporeal being is able to approach you rather to brethren and announce to them this joy which you have witnessed, and 2 tell them to go to Galilee where they shall see Me. Lo, I have told
My
Father.
This
is
the reason
why no
Me
Go
My
you."
Then
the Virgin
Mary began
when
cerning the events that took place at the hands of the wicked Jews on the day of the Crucifixion,
He was hanging on the wood of the Him and weeping, and He explained
She
Master
'
said to
of
Him
"
:
O my
why
also
Life of
my
'
spirit
and
my
'
soul
and body, why did you cry and say on the wood
hast thou forsaken
'
of the Cross,
Eloi, Eloi,
me ?
"
:
And
I
also,
Scripture
is fulfilled,'
and
Father, into
"
Thy hands
commend
to
my
spirit.'
I
And He
Him
to her
O my beloved
Son
His
the
mother,
Me
to die,
sin
in order to
redeem with
My
Adam whom
Him
to look
had
killed
and
whom
I
Yes,
O mother,
I
cried to
and implored
thirst
I
upon
6
My humiliation
And when
and have
Adam and
grace.
remembered
his
hunger and
When behalf to quench his thirst from the water of the eternal life. 7 8 all I the which with a and drank spear, cup my side was pierced
men
was
1
are
bound
to drink,
I
rising
asked the Father that on the day of my might raise Adam from the death of sin, since I
I
pierced in
1
my
follow here P.
There are
in these sentences
profound discrepancies
MSS.
4
3
6
Cf. Matt, xxviii. 7 ; Mark xvi. 7. Matt, xxvii. 46 ; Mark xv. 33.
1
Luke
John
xxiii.
46.
follow P. and
xix.
M.
27.
e
'
xix.
28.
John
34.
MARTYRDOM OF
"
PILATE
scoffed at
247
my
Heaven
'
Adam
and
to
complained about him to the Father saying, your only Son because of an earthly man on
breath of
is
life.'
All
this
happened
'
whom
The
them and
This
the creation of
l
my hand and
love
Him
'
Hades
into the
about him to
pit,'
Me
seize
and
it
said,
Let
'
me
cast
him
but
rise
rebuked
and
said
cast
you
will
no more
and
Adam
and
him
I came you single hour. now to break up and smash your doors and throw you to the lowest depths, and to raise Adam to the heights.' The tormenting angels of Hell whose habit is to turn towards the
He
now
to be with
for
one
'
west began then to vociferate, and they kindled fires which they inflamed with pitch and sulphur and shouted concerning the sin of Adam and
'
said
the
fire
Let us destroy him and throw him to the great sufferings of of Hell.' Further, when they heard my conversation with
I
him
to
at the time
' :
was
it
lifted
is
on the wood
of the
Cross and
my
saying
him
'
Adam,
for
'
all this
has happened to
sir,
me
and we him as
if
will
do
to
him what he
existed.'
rightly deserves,
I
and
we
will destroy
he had never
them, and
I
rebuked them, however, and sternly reproved disclosed to them the fact that I have shed My precious
I
My
that
Kingdom.
"
fell
my
mother,
recalled,
it
O my mother, the
mournfulness
of
Adam was
fixion
I
meant
was empty from the time in which it. Through My Passion and My CruciAdam to Paradise. Did you not know,
remained nine months
of
in
then,
my
mother,
why
my coming you not know that the events about which the ancient prophets have Did you not realise that all this had prophesied had to take place ? to happen and that I had to deliver the rest of the captives from the
into this
hands
of the
of the prison of
Hades
and
The future tense is generally used in the following M. 355. For some of the above details cf. the
in
sentences in
M. 127
248
"
I
WOODBROOKE
suffered all
STUDIES
what
I
heights of
1
Heaven.
only by words but by the shedding you, in order to deliver them and
My
I
Adam
from the
evil
consequences
of
his
transgression.
therefore,
Me
answerable
for
My
thirst, for
the
crown
of thorns
on
my
my body
on the wood
and
for the
death which
accepted
all
for him.
On
the contrary
asked
him
his sins.
Have
patience,
O my mother,
the
utility
and
slavery of
Adam.
of
my
of this
shedding
My
this
body
to
Heaven
In this
terrestrial ones.
the dead.
I
day the heavenly beings will be reconciled with the now, in joy, my mother, because I rose from 2 have demolished the wall of partitions of Hades, and
Go
have opened the door of Paradise for the thief at My right. I have 3 also opened the door of Heaven before the angels and they flapped their wings, the archangels girded their loins with their shining and
majestic girdles, the heavenly
the
Cherubim
desired to
powers danced with hymns and canticles, and Seraphim began their glorifications, the Dominions contemplate intensely the glory of My divinity, and the
4
{
told
of the
tomb by way
He further said
I
"
:
No corporeal
man
can touch
Me
till
because
am
immortal robe,
shall
ascend to
My
Father."
When He
uttered these
to
tell
words
His
the
He
disciples to
When
women
words which they had heard from the Saviour, they did not believe them, but fear did not allow them to show themselves to
anyone
1
until
3 4
follow P. in this sentence. Cf. Ephes. ii. 1 4. " The doors of heaven are to-day open before me." P., See my remark in P. writes the word with a shin instead of a Kaf.
1
the
Woodbrooke Studies, vol. i., p. 188. 5 There are some discrepancies here between the
verbs
MARTYRDOM OF
When
Pilate noticed all the miracles
PILATE
and
prodigies that
his
249
emanated
so in the case of Procula/ his wife, because she loved the Saviour
dream concerning Him. She had already made preparations to go and see the tomb in which the Saviour was placed in order to worship Him and know the precise spot in which His body was laid. company of Jews,
intensely
on account
of
in her
however, became cognisant of her plan and went and apprised their chiefs and told them that the wife of Pilate was in that very night
proceeding to the tomb.
circulated the
lie
news
among
themselves,
and
after
a conference, decided to
Pilate.
and
They,
therefore,
summoned Barnaban, 2
to
him
"
:
We
do not need
remind you of
all
we
set you free and delivered you from have showered on you. the wish of the Governor, and we crucified Jesus of prison against
We
Nazareth
to the
in
your place.
of Jesus
to-night
tomb
and
do your
It
knowledge that that wicked foreigner, called his wife and his children to the tomb of Jesus
Pilate, wishes to
in
go with
order to worship
Him.
We
will
lie
in wait for
them, destroy
Pilate
and plunder
affair
their possessions."
The
He desired
to possess
appealed to Barnaban and pleased him exceedingly. something as he had come out of prison a pauper
When he heard, therefore, of possessions to plunder he was glad because he loved gold and silver. He was the brother 3 of the w*ife of Judas who is from the wicked and perverse stock. The
and a mendicant.
1
Procula or Procla
Abrukald)
is
also the
name
of the wife
Gospel of Nicodemus in Migne's Diet, des Apocryphes, i., 1105. See James* Apocr. New Testament, p. 155. That she became a Christian is a tradition confirmed by an author as early as Origen (Horn. on Mt., 35). She is considered a saint in the Greek Church where she has a feast on October 27th. Some writers have even identified her with Claudia of 2 Tim. iv. 21. This, however, is a pure fiction. ' There seems to be no doubt that this Barnaban is the robber Barabbas of Matt. xvii. 7-26, etc., who has been preferred to Christ. 3 Does he mean the stock of Herod or that of the Jews ?
of Pilate in the
1
250
WOODBROOKE
sister of
1
STUDIES
Master
to intervene
and
Judas
asked
heed to
the
his
saying
and neglected
it,
who, however, did not pay any because He was aware of what
When the sister noticed that He did not going to be. on of her This behalf she forsook Him completely. brother, speak 2 was also on account of what her husband used to steal from the bag.
man was
She began then
After
to
pay
visits to
and
incite
them
wicked company
of the
Jews resolved
to
kill
Pilate
with his wife and his children and to plunder his possessions. When I Gamaliel learned the of these wicked not I did conspiracy people
neglect the matter, but
I
who had
disclosed to
court
Jews and their evil plot. When he heard it he hastened to the and informed Pilate, the Governor, of what the Jews had plotted and were about to do to him. Whereupon Pilate summoned a comand pany of his troops and revealed to them what had taken place he informed also the sentinels of the town and told them to be on their
;
guard.
Then
took with her her maid- servants, her ladies-in-waiting and a number 3 of private attendants and proceeded to the tomb of the Saviour.
She worshipped
scent.
in the
also
on the wood
spices of exquisite
incense therein.
lit up many lamps in the tomb and burned much While they were standing near the tomb the servants 4 of the Jewish priests and a band of men and officers with attendants, and a great company from the party of the elders arose and proceeded with the robber Barnaban to the tomb of the Saviour and to the spot where the womenfolk of Pilate were praying. Then the soldiers of Pilate sprang on them with swords, spears and stones, put them to
She then
the sword,
fetters
and
I.e.
the Christ.
Cf.
John
to
xiii.
29.
P. and
thefts of
M. 355
"
:
On
that
accrued
8
her husband."
maid-servants."
6
M. 355
Cf.
"
3.
Her
John
MARTYRDOM OF
When
Barnaban
Pilate
PILATE
"
:
251
the robber
whom
Are you
instead of
whose blood
we
shed innocent
wreak vengeance on the one who acted To-day will redound on you all the evil, theft, robbery by violence, and homicide which you have perpetrated in this town, the inhabitants of which chose to release you
unjustly shed will not
in
to
towards him
an iniquitous way.
and ransom you with the blood of miserable one, God will show His
Jesus.
justice
Now,
wretched and
which they ransomed Then your own blood will not be slow in avenging itself on you." to the place where the Pilate ordered that they should take Barnaban
robber, the shedding of the blood of Jesus with
Saviour was crucified, that they should crucify him there head downwards, that they should pierce him with a spear before he expired,
that they should break the bones of his legs in order that
he might die
quickly,
on
by
his people.
The
soldiers of Pilate
and
killed him,
five
days
When
Pilate
this
" 3 and began to say to one another Comrades, Barnaban has Come, let us write a report about gone from us and Pilate is left. Pilate from King Herod to the Emperor Tiberius Caesar, and ask
him
in
to kill
him
for us
we
of gold to
Herod
order that he
may
tore
Many
Jews, then,
their heads,
up
their clothings,
threw ashes on
and repaired to King Herod in Galilee. They began to vociferate, and their clamour reached such a pitch that the town was in a state
of
commotion.
said
"
:
How
is
is
it
that
we have
no king to-day except Pilate the foreigner, 5 And they clamoured and said Egypt ?
1
who
"
:
He
127 adds here And he went to hell, and an This last sentence is from Kur, ii., 120, etc. 2 M. 355 " five months." 3 P. has "Jesus," which seems to be a better text.
M.
"
journey
it
is."
'
A Kintar in
is
worth one thousand dinars (denarii). 1 have not come across a good authority
Coptic fragments referred to
in
for this statement apart from the note Crum adds in Journal below, my p. 254. of Egyptian Archeology (1927, p. 23), that the Ethiopic translation has
252
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
despised the injunctions of the King, changed our habits and customs, and destroyed the laws of our fathers in conjunction with Joseph and
Nicodemus.
How
is it
that all
We
has
in his
He
Barnaban
account of his
whom
to
King and
all
endeavour
to defeat
He
did
this
without
consulting the
Now
to write
and
he did to
Herod became
many
with
his
lying things
which he sent
and despatched
order to render
his report
men
of high standing
It
among
the
that
Jews
in
report
more
effective.
happened
the letters of
Herod
Emperor with
contained,
all
the slanders
by one day. The Jews read them to the and iniquitous testimonies which they
to kill
Pilate
and
his confederates.
2
In
the
morning the letters of Pilate reached the Emperor, and in them was an account of all the deeds of Jesus, His crucifixion, His death, His
resurrection from the dead, the quaking of the earth, the eclipse of the
sun,
of the idols
and
their falling
from
their thrones
crucifixion.
When
done
to the
the
sorrow that
Emperor Tiberius read and heard what the Jews had Saviour at His crucifixion, he wept on account of the deep he felt and when he reached the place in which were
;
who were
Jesus, he found that some of them were among those who had come to him in order to vent their grievances about Pilate. He,
of
Pilatos
Masari (B.M. 690, fol. 99*), "Pilate the Magician," which would " the Egyptian." The simply be a mistranscription of the Arabic masri
Melchite Eutychius (in C.S.C.O., i., 91) contends that Pilate was of Italian Pontah and situated near Rome. origin, from an island named 1 This sentence is found in P. only. 2 That Pilate wrote a report to Tiberius concerning Jesus is suggested by Justin (I Ap. 35), Tertullian (Ap. 21), and Eusebius (H.E. ii. 2). I
cannot decide with certainty if there is any historical value in this suggestion, but the report cannot be the one implied in the present document nor those reports preserved in Greek and Syriac and printed by Tischendorf and
Rahmani
respectively.
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
therefore,
253
"
:
summoned them
is
before
him and
said
is
to
them
O chiefs
you
of iniquity, here
and he
testifying against
1
that that
it
Jesus of
Nazareth.
will order
now
none
you be
left alive in
He ordered, therefore, that they should be killed and deeds to Jesus. their bodies be hung on the heights that surmounted the gates of the Then he sent a messenger after Pilate and summoned him city.
before
him
in order that
he might
the
tell
him the
miracles that
of the Saviour.
When
of the
the messenger of
chiefs of the
Emperor for the purpose of Nicodemus. and They spoke to him out summoning Pilate, Joseph of their spite and jealousy and told him that they would bribe the
arrival of
messenger if he would kill Pilate, but he said to them that he was In the morning unable to do so without the sanction of the Emperor. Herod came to Jerusalem to have a word with Pilate on the affair. When Pilate heard this he went to his wife and said to her " my
:
a place on account of what Herod is Procula, The mob, the heads of the Jewish people and the going to do to me. of the messenger Emperor have come. I do not know if they have
sister
arise
and hide
in
come
to take off
my
head or to torment
me
for the
Arise you, take your children and go out of this town. Watch, howGive ever, over my body if they are bent on taking off my head. silver to the soldiers and redeem my body from them, shroud it, and
place
it
near the
tomb
of
my Lord
if
overtake me.
the purpose."
Do
this
even
you have
my
wife heard these words she tore up her garments, and " What are these words began to pluck the hair of her head, saying,
his
When
Have I not sufficient pain you are uttering to me, my lord Pilate. in my heart on account of what you did with Jesus in crucifying Him ?
To
tell
you the
truth,
brother,
my
heart to-day
in apprising
me
of
God
I
Him
up
for us,
1
neither
from
This sentence
differently
is
somewhat
~
worded
32.
Cf.
Rom.
viii.
254
death for Him.
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
l
What utility shall we have from our nation ? O brother, if you love me more than you love Him, it is blameworthy. God knows that we are both of us one body, and as we did not separate from each other in this world, neither we nor our children
should be separated
the one from the other in
the
Kingdom
of
Heaven."
While Procula, the wife of Pilate, was saying this, the troops came and surrounded him and took him to the court of Herod, in
the presence of the messenger of the Emperor,
Pilate
who
2
said
"
:
Are you
did you
who
'
said
There
is
no hand over
my
hand
"
?
:
How
kill this
Emperor
" him any answer to this question but only said My lord, if these have had so little fear of God as to crucify His beloved Son, I am
have
faith that
if
die for
His
name
His
life,
and you
will not
impede me from
glory."
The
"
Emperor
you
What
Jewish people said then to the messenger of the is the utility of speaking to him while he insults
"
?
in the
Coptic language
and the Jewish people said Pilate all the sufferings you inflicted on Barnaban have now come back on You prided yourself and said that you were the your own head.
incited
to flog
well,
:
Immediately after (the envoy of the Emperor) gave orders that he should be stripped of his clothes, that a napkin should be tied round his loins, and that he should be flagellated with a rough whip. Herod "
them
him
Now
no power
of
to
you
while he was being flogged with the whip, and his innocent blood flowed profusely on the ground before them like flowing water. Then his wife Procula hastened and came to him and began to " urge and encourage him, saying, martyr, my brother Pilate,
how
wish to die with the death with which you will die The seized her her her with hair and threw before her immediately Jews
I
!
"
Found only
That
Pilate
in P.
I.e.,
am.
was
of
Egyptian origin
fragments edited by Revillout (No. 4) in Pat. Orient., ii., p. 151, seqq. and Robinson, Copt. Apocryphal Gospels, p. 176. Cf. James, Apocr. N.T., See also my note abore p. 251 and Crum in J.E.A., 1927, p. 148.
P 23.
.
MARTYRDOM OF
husband
in
PILATE
1
255
The holy order to intensify his affront and indignity. " to and heart in her was say Procula, however, began jubilant
:
O
1
my
first
:
to
me
offer to Christ
and
to
The Jews
which
is
then said
Pilate
"
:
Know
inflicted
on you
not for
Jesus of
them
And he replied to Nazareth, but for your murdering of Barnaban." " Would that I could be found worthy to be crucified with
:
my
name
of Jesus,
I
and
that
He
all
could be
left alive to
me
but
believe, rather
life,
am
He is
alive
in
is
and
that
He
has eternal
which
He
said
Him."
like
imparts to "
:
believers
Pilate,
His
and your
life is
:
lot
is
similar to
His
lot."
And
"
Amen.
My
and your children." them slapped him, some others struck him on the
others insulted
until
with Him, and His judgment will be on you The Jews then sprang upon him, and some of
face,
and
some
him and
reviled
like
him saying
your
"
:
We will
you
die on the
wood
God
Jesus."
When
'
hatred against
Emperor noticed the intensity of their him he took him from their hands and said to them
:
The Emperor has not permitted me to do this, nor has he ordered me to torture him and to kill him, until I have brought him before The Jews, however, satisfied him with much money and said him."
to
him
"
:
Kill
him and
the ears
of
the
Emperor."
in the streets
And
;
of the
they asked him to give them permission to drag him town bound with fetters and accompanied by his
bare-headed wife
was granted to them. How bitter was the weeping in Jerusalem, when people saw Pilate and his wife with their hands bound with fetters behind their back and dragged in the
and
this
streets,
"
:
This
is
like
the
crucifixion of Jesus of
Nazareth
When
Sic P., but M. 1 27 "in order to insult her" and M. 355 : " in order to burn her." slight graphic error arising in Arabic characters between YaJikiruha and Yahrukuha.
1
:
'
Sz'c P.,
but
"
:
it
to
3
..."
Sic
P., but
27 and M. 355
19
"
:
My
judgment
is
their children."
256
the
WOODBROOKE
of dragging they
STUDIES
while
still
work
threw them
in prison
bound with
of error sat
lies
This
is
Pilate
who
me.'
'
said,
over
my
This
Pilate
who
ab-
the one
who
the one
who
killed the
indomitable Barnaban."
l
When
they wrote
this they
began
they brought them bound with fetters He ordered them to be flogged and their possessions with Pilate.
plundered, like Pilate's, and they were so much weakened by scourging and so impoverished that they resembled Job at the time of his
poverty.
and conspired together to burn the tomb of the Saviour on account of the prodigies and miracles that they saw emanating from it, and they asked for the wood of the cross to be burnt likewise. Joseph, however, had taken it and placed it in a
the iniquitous
Then
Jews
sat
hidden place in the sepulchre. The Jews, which they kindled round the sepulchre, but
kind to
it,
therefore,
it
brought
fire
did no
harm
of
'
any
the
nor did
it
reach
it
and
in order that
no
one might penetrate into it. The Jews did all this. When Pilate and his wife, and Joseph and Nicodemus, were
prison,
in
Herod asked
Emperor
to
empower him
to
kill
to send Joseph
therein, but the
so.
and Nicodemus
them
Then
the
messenger of the Emperor did not allow him to do Jews asked Herod to secure for them from the mes-
senger of the
he delivered
kill
Emperor a permit which would allow them to crucify and when they bribed him with much money Pilate to them in order that they might crucify him and
thus to
kill
him.
and
his
came
to Pilate shaking
and
trembling.
They began
"
saying
:
to implore the messenger of the Emperor, our lord the Vizier, either do with Pilate what you have
1
"
Bound with
"
fetters
is
only found in P.
Or "they
sealed."
MARTYRDOM OF
intended to do with him, or take him
PILATE
1
257
away from
is
us.
From
the time
to
be imprisoned with
his wife,
spiritual
man
whose
more dazzling even than that of the sun. We saw him comlight ing down from Heaven and embracing them, after which the fetters
and shackles with which they were bound were torn up, and their iron melted like water from their feet further, the column to which they
;
were
even
tied
bent
and
it
is
now in that bent state, inclining to the ground." What is the description of Then they asked them and said that man ?" And they answered " He is a Galilean by appear:
ance,
and
his
hair
is
beautiful
and flowing
in curls
round him."
to him,
like
He
'
spoke
Pilate,
at a great length
his wife,
and said
Cross
you
shall
be crucified on the
wood
of the
me, and
place a crown of thorns on your head like me, but they will not be able to kill you here they will take you to the Emperor
they shall
Tiberius, before
whom
you
will stand
and
who
will order
you
to
be
They were
also having
much
intimate con-
When
seized
the Jews heard these words from the gaolers an intense fear them and their hearts palpitated. They began to say to one
"
:
another
Even
if
they
kill
us
and
kill
our children
we
will kill
and
crucify Pilate."
Then Herod
words before anybody else until Pilate was these words he was greatly pleased.
When
Pilate heard
Meanwhile
Emperor
and
the
it
Jews advanced much silver to the messenger of the amounted to such a quantity that it carried conviction,
to crucify him.
Then
they rushed
like
mad
dogs
him out and crucify him.3 When they entered the gaol they found him smiling and joyful, while the fetters were loosed from him and from his wife, and the column was leaning
towards the ground
The
open
a tree bent by the force of the wind. Jews took then Pilate and his wife and brought them to the
like
court.
They
1
'
stripped
him
round
all
his waist to
the
Do not take him from us." " He is Jesus of Nazareth." 127, All these sentences are only found in P.
M.
"
258
city
until
WOODBROOKE
and they
crucified
STUDIES
they reached the spot where they had crucified the two
malefactors,
him
there.
mercy, inculcated forgetfulness into that none of them stretched an evil hand
Indeed, she
:
full of
and encouraging him, saying " One who comforted you and came
was standing near him urging my brother Pilate, remember the to you in this very night. Endure
and bear your tribulations for His name." And when they were intending to lift him on the cross, they remembered the Cross of the Saviour, and
for this
wood
on
of the cross
it
and
crucified Pilate
on
it.
They
fastened
him
tightly
nails, placed on his head a crown of thorns, arrayed him in 1 a purple garment, and began to pierce his side with a spear while
with
'*
:
Nazareth,
if
your
Master has
risen
we
and
will believe in
Him." 2
The
said
my Lord, have polluted your holy cross by the hanging of my body on it, because it is a pure wood and my body is an impure 3 body your blood is an innocent blood, and my blood is carnal. I do not weep now, my Lord, because I have been crucified for your
:
"
name, but
I
weep
because
cross.
do not
all
sigh,
O my
borne
because they have crucified me. servant, who has been lifted up on your holy cross, as I am not worthy of all these benefits. I do not sigh because of my nudity, but I Weep
for
Now
rest
"
ask you,
my
lot
Lord Jesus Christ, not in my own name, but Majesty and the honour of your Cross, to grant
1
your
and a happy
where
? 3
Note how the author is at some pains here and elseCf. John xix. 2-5. to reproduce in the case of Pilate all the incidents of the Passion of
Cf. Matt, xxvii. 43. The three other follow V. 199.
Christ.
MSS.
have
"
"
body
for
"
blood."
sentences are only found in P. 5 In the above sentences I have taken the best wording represented by the three MSS.
6
The preceding
Syr. niyaha.
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
to
259
Grant rest to me, your servant Pilate, to your poor soul. maidservant Procula, and to my children, in the day in which you will
my
come
This
what
and
Pilate
said,
approached
of the cross,
"
:
Why
God-loving wife Procula he was hanging on the wood are you weeping on the wood of the
his
and
Cross
You
You
lamp
at the
wedding
of
your
Lord Jesus
You
my
brother Pilate, in
You
lifted
are ahead of us in
of
in the dignified
law court
Judgment.
of
in
O
this
Pilate, for
lifting
having been
up on the wood
of
sitting
will
the
Kingdom
This
of
Heaven."
under the
"
cross,
is
while
all
further said
You
have preceded us
lit
and
Now you
have
your lamps
in the
scoff
wedding of your Master." And the Jews began to rail and at her and at Pilate. Then two crowns came down from
Heaven, equal to each other in glory and majesty, and a voice from " Heaven was heard saying Pilate and Procula, that you Know,
:
will
Heaven, because
your great
faith in
Him."
down to you from have for your God and borne you Then the two crowns disappeared and
this
went up
brought
to
Heaven.
the multitudes
When
noticed
miracle,
they hastened
and
down
Pilate from the cross alive, then they heated water for
his
body with it, after which they put on him his garments, and brought him and his wife Procula to the messenger of the Emperor and said "If the Emperor has sent you to destroy this 3 You do not know his great cunning city, listen to the cruel Herod.
:
P.
to
"
rest
and comfort
in the
day
in
which she
shall
come
is
The
sentence
The
was
3), 2).
the son of
author apparently identifies this Herod with Herod Antipas, who Herod the Great by Malthace (Josephus, Ant. Jud., xvii. i.
of
xviii. v.
260
and machinations.
WOODBROOKE
He
became
killed
STUDIES
thirst, through the not see what he did in you
Do
He killed a just man because of his own the city in these days ? with the and God wishes to destroy us all because of Jews sympathy
him.
Pilate,
What
its
advantage will ever come to Jerusalem if you allowed Truth to tell it is Herod Governor, to be murdered in it.
If
the deeds of
this city
Herod he would
Pilate
not have
his wife.
and torment
and
After
all
word
When
Now
It happened that the he loved tenderly more than all his kingdom. 2 boy went into a bath to wash, and an evil spirit entered there into
His father him, strangled him and threw him to the ground dead. and mother came then to him with intense grief, in order to take him
and bury him, and they buried him near them and wailed and wept One day when over him night and day for three complete months. the Emperor was sitting wailing and weeping over the loss of his son, " his wife came down to him, bowed before him and said to him
:
my
lord,
our brain."
And
sorrow and our bereavement has affected " And how has our the Emperor said to her " "
:
And
my
recalled that
of Jerusalem sent to
you a letter concerning a certain Jesus of Nazareth whom the Jews had crucified, and they reported that He had raised dead men while He was alive. And Pilate also, the Governor of the town, wrote to you a
letter
in
Herod
which
1
with
I
Herod Agrippa
In the
i.
"
New
"
of the
Woodbrooke Studies
stroke.
25
),
Herod Antipas is said to have died of a sudden M. 127 has no reference to the wife.
2
M.
P.
"
prophet"
MARTYRDOM OF
He
had wrought.
:
PILATE
had
raised
261
He
told
us that
sick,
He
and the
the
deaf.
He
further
were taking
I
place even
now
at
His tomb.
is
been stupid, that we have been struck why with forgetfulness and our brain has been affected. Indeed, if we had sent our son, when he died, to His tomb, he would have been
reason
said that
we have
alive
now."
the
When
ness
Emperor heard
his
these
his forgetful-
and remained
~
immediately summoned his faithful servants and enjoined them to fill vessels with gifts to be sent to Jerusalem. He also despatched brave and courageous men to the
over the words of
wife.
Then he
tomb
of his son,
coffin that
to the father.
When
and
he saw
that
had
suffered
his
putrefaction
disappeared and that nothing was left from he and his wife wept bitterly for a long time. 3 and papyrus, and wrote as follows
:
Then he
'
Tiberius the Emperor of the earth and the servant of the King
asks you and implores your love, do not know at all, whom I did not
of
Heaven
I
my Lord
perceive,
Jesus Christ,
to
whom
I
and
whom
to speak.
A man named
;
which you wrought, and reported that you rose from the dead, and I believed his words he told me that you gave sight to the blind, and I believed this about you he mentioned to me that you made wine out of water, and I did not
Pilate bore witness to the miracles
;
from you he wrote also to me that you raised from the dead a man called Lazarus four days after he had died, and I became convinced in my mind that you had done it. He also testified and
doubt
it
in
which your
body
is
laid
was
also
working them.
was con-
Son
of
God.
tomb.
As
;
you are
in
heaven so also
and
in the
Now,
*M. 2 M.
3
127, "those possessed by demons." 127, "his agent," P. "the agents of his property."
also
Kirtas means
"
parchment."
262
grace,
WOODBROOKE
whom
God.
I
STUDIES
of Caesar,
my
son and
your servant,
Lord and
"
life
to your tomb. Grant him life, my that heard were the resurrection and the my you to all the dead from Adam till now. I believed that you have
the enemy.
If you will, let your grace After the Emperor had written this
of
letter
it
to
4
:
his
"
He also said to messenger in Jerusalem. Inform yourselves about the tomb of Jesus
whom
the
Jews have
crucified, in
third day,
son
to
whom
which they placed His body and from which He rose the I and lay the body of my son in it. have faith that my I am sending dead in a coffin to Jerusalem will come back
me
alive."
And
letter of the
Emperor and
to the
body
of his son,
accompanied by
;
and they
went
to
Herod and
At
and
were
in prison.
Lord Jesus Christ appeared to them a second time and said to Pilate " Peace be with you, you whose name Pilate Peace be with you,
It is be pronounced by the Father's mouth of life. inevitable that you should be judged in the court of the Emperor 6 Tiberius. Now is the word of the Father fulfilled, because I stood
was the
first
to
Be
not grieved,
Pilate,
because they have crucified you for me, since this has saved you from You have been your sin and from the act of your scoffing at me. be redeemed of the sin in that order Pilate, you might flagellated,
of
my
flagellation,
shed,
Pilate, in order
of
shedding
1
my
blood.
P. add
:
you might be purified from the sin of the You have been lifted up on the wood of the
"
M. 355 and
Cf. John
xi.
And
raise
in
order that
may
believe in you
2 3
and
25.
in
your miracles."
you is glory due with your good Father and the Holy " Have pity on me with your and M. 127 is here : and forever ever," Spirit This last expression is from the most merciful of the merciful." grace,
P. adds
:
"
To
Kur'an (Surah
4
5
vii.,
verse
50).
Here
as above
M.
27
"
his agent,"
P. however
"
;
his soldiers."
Or "by
the
mouth
:
of
life,
the Father."
altogether.
M. 355 and P
MARTYRDOM OF
cross,
PILATE
263
you might be saved from the sin of your 1 They have saying to (the Jews) Take ye Him and crucify Him.' that in order of Pilate, you might be your garments, stripped you absolved from the sin of the stripping of my garments. They have
Pilate, in order that
'
Pilate, in order that you placed a crown of thorns on your head, of the crown of thorns that your might be saved from the punishment
soldiers placed
on
my
head.
You
the town,
have been dragged in the streets of you might be saved from the sin of
in
my
that
carrying of
the cross
the seat of
judgment.
happened
sin of
to
you
is
my
death.
tell
"As
to
my own
mother
Mary was
rendered bare-headed
death.
fices
tell
Jerusalem on the day of my All the inhabitants of 'the earth with their offerings and sacrithe
of
town
me
a single hair of
my
mother's head.
Pilate,
fact
of her palace
of the
Mary, my mother, took me also town to town and experienced the pains
"
O
to
Pilate, as
at the time of
your wife Procula comforted you with her words your crucifixion, so my beloved mother comforted me
I
was hanging on
the
wood
of the cross
and
of
me
3
'I
my
light
my
eyes.'
Now,
Pilate,
do not be
afraid because
inevitable
mountain of Kuskam."
This Kus-
the place in which the holy family took refuge at the time of the flight of Christ from Herod, according to the Syriac vision of Theophilus, Patriarch of Alexandria. See Mingana, Syr. 5 ff 1 - 1 8^ and Mingana, Syr.
is
.
kam
39 ff. 56^-70^, and cf. my note in \Voodbrooke Studies, vol. i., p. 255. See also R.O.C., xv., 128-132. The place was afterwards called Muharrak, and in due course a church was built in it to commemorate the event. See Pat. Orient, iii., 255. The place is also referred to in Ethiopic litera" ture Joseph rose up and took our holy Lady, the Virgin Mary, and came unto the country of Egypt and went to Mount Kues Kuam." Budge's One
:
Hundred and Ten Miracles of Our Lady Mary, p. 145. modern Kus about sixteen miles north of Luxor, but some it near the Red Sea. The last clause is found in P. only.
Kuskam
is
the
authorities place
264
that
WOODBROOKE
you should enter
is
STUDIES
near Tiberius Caesar, Caesar, the son of the Emperor,
of his great faith.
me
and here
His
father sent
They
the
will soon
in
you from
prison, take
life
him
to
tomb
which
and
this
to the son of
my body was laid, and as I gave the widow in the town of Nain, so I
faith.
to
Lazarus
life
will give
to
Grow
cheerful,
Pilate,
and
fight for
my
resurrection."
Saviour spoke these words to Pilate and disappeared from his sight. When they brought the son of the Emperor, and the
vizier
The
saw
that he
that he
all
considerable
army
he and
were
frightened, because they believed that he had died on the way. They were terrified lest the Emperor should order the town to be
its
burnt and
of the
when
by the depth
and
much
astonished.
this
When Herod
live
who were
body Emperor, and gave them much gold and silver in order that they might allow them to take his body stealthily and hide it and the wicked community accomplished what they
the
;
had conceived.
When
body
of
Pilate
was
the son of
the
Emperor
in
the
tomb
of
the Saviour, in
company with Joseph and Nicodemus, a Jew came by stealth in the darkness of the night and stole the body of the son of the Emperor In the from the coffin, at the command of Herod and of the priests. of the son of the when the Emperor and morning they sought body did not find it, all the city was thrown into confusion, and the heads
Jews assembled and went to the messenger of the Emperor and told him that no one could have done this but Pilate, Joseph
of the
and Nicodemus.
When
the
vizier
heard
these
words
he
took
Joseph
and
Nicodemus and scourged them, but no one laid harmful hands on Pilate, because, the people who had witnessed his crucifixion had
1
This
last
clause
is
only found in P.
MARTYRDOM OF
noticed the crowns that had
PILATE
265
come down from heaven for him and his were bound with fetters and in and Nicodemus While Joseph wife. the power of Herod, Gabriel the head of the angels, came down from
wings over them, and all the place shone " I am the with light, and he began to speak to them saying angel Gabriel who took the head of John away from the wicked Herod,
heaven and extended
his
:
and proclaimed
the world
of
wicked Herod, and he will die destroy the pains and hunger which he will experience, and vermin will
]
;
will
now
this
2 As to you, O Joseph and body like his father. Your sufferings resemble Nicodemus, here is what the Lord says It is I and became I, too, was a martyr.' martyrs, my sufferings you
breed
in
his
'
who
and
from
delivered
it is I
at the
hands
of the
wicked ones,
who
their
hands.
As
however, imperative, that you should stand to the body of the son of the Emperor
in
of the
made
manifest,
shall
hiding-
what the angel Gabriel told the venerable chiefs Joseph and Nicodemus. And these two blessed ones sent for me, in secret, me Gamaliel, and narrated to me what the angel had spoken to them,
This
is
because,
the
left
When
town where
and that
coffin containing the body had been discovered in a Jewish house, Emperor the reason for stealing the body was to inculpate Pilate and
Lord.
The news
town
that
Herod and
body
the
High
Priests of the
stolen the
1
Emperor.
See
of
Cf.,
vol.
i.
New
this
in
23.
It
appears from
Herod with Herod Agrippa who died in A.D. 44 (Josephus, Ant. Jud. xix. viii. 2) and who was the son of Aristobulus, son of Herod the Great by Mariamme, granddaughter of Hyrcanus. There is some confusion in the
author's
identified
mind concerning the dynasty of the Herods. He had apparently him with Herod Antipas. M. 127 has instead: "And I comforted them and strengthened them."
266
In the
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
son of the
it
meantime the archangel Gabriel removed the body of the Emperor from the place in which it was hidden, and brought
it
and placed
At
that very
was incensed against Herod, and he threw an arrow at him, which caused him much pain. His body bred worms, and 1 he died from the intensity of his pain. As to the Jews who had
the vizier
moment
hidden the body of the son of the Emperor, their houses were burnt together with their sons and daughters, and in this way they died an ignominious death, more ignominious than that of all men.
The
handed
Joseph and
Nicodemus from
prison
;
and
them the body of the son of the Emperor and his coffin he 2 handed also to them the letter of the Emperor, and they read it and
to at his
lifted
were amazed
they
their
wisdom, his deep humility and great faith. Then " Lord our God, eyes to heaven and said
:
and the dead, make manifest your power in the son of the Emperor Tiberius and accept the supplications of his father and have pity on him as you had pity on the son of the widow
in
the
town
of Nain.
With your
great
power
order that he
may
Accept,
Lord, the
Martha and
him,
raised for
you accepted the strong faith of Mary and them their brother Lazarus. Have pity on
and comfort the heart
life,
O
live
Lord Jesus
Christ,
;
of the father
by the
him
the
rest,
your holy sepulchre make again, in order that his faith in you may be strengthened like and in order that he may ascertain your resurrection from the
give him
and
let
dead."
The
of the Saviour,
Emperor while dead then they took him and placed him in the tomb and adjusted the stone to the door of the tomb. And the son of the Emperor remained four days in the tomb with a closed door, and they experienced deep sorrow at his long stay in the tomb and at his not having risen quickly. On the fourth day, however, he rose from the dead, the stone that was at the door of the tomb rolled
and
the guards, terrified at the sight, went in haste to " Come, our lord Pilate, and began shouting and saying
:
M. 127 adds
last
here
"
:
And he went
1
"
to hell,
etc.
and an
evil
journey
is it
This
sentence
is
also:
MARTYRDOM OF
see
PILATE
in the
267
of
how
who was
away
tomb
Jesus, has
risen,
and how
human
and
hand."
Pilate then
bowed
then they all of them with Nicodemus, and worshipped in great joy all the and army repaired to the tomb of Emperor
the Saviour, and they observed that Caesar, the son of the Emperor,
had
risen
and was
sitting
over
He
appeared bewildered with eyes fixed on the royal garment which he " was wearing. They cried to him, saying Caesar, come out with
:
the
power
of the
One who
in
raised you.
in this
that day very moment he jumped and came out of the tomb and sat on the Then the vizier of his father approached him, bowed down stone. " and worshipped before him and said to him my lord, what
day
as in the
At
"
to
in
a state of stupefaction
And
kingdom and power of my Lord Jesus who raised me from the dead, and I do not see the like of Him in any one of the men that are standing here,' nor
bewildered
at
am
do
see in
them anything
this
is
like
His Majesty.
is
His
glory
and His
comof
What
This
of
?
the honour of
my
father in
Lords.
glory
What
the
King diadem
is
Lord
and the
3
light of
His Cross
my What
His
my
perfume
Jesus ?
this
of
No one fears any powerful ruler, Jesus, has the power to do it. but this of after he all dies, Jesus, King king Kings, angels, human His and demons fear and the of doors hell tremble from name, beings
All the tormenting spirits who take the souls of the wicked ones, and who are more wicked than the beasts of prey,
their
dread
of
Him.
dragons and
vipers,
saw
' :
that
they were
terrified
when
a voice
came
to them,
saying
amongst you, because He wants it.' They did not see only heard the one who pronounced His name.
1
Him, but
M. 355
"
:
in."
P.
"
In all the
in the
world."
MSS.
268
"
I
WOODBROOKE
was then taken forthwith
and
STUDIES
I
was
;
lying,
I
He
called
to
me by my name
fight for
"
saying
:
O
my
Caesar, rise
their faith in
up Me, and
might
My resurrection."
I
Then
His
to
on the
coffin in
which
was
lying,
its
and
my
I
soul recognised
body.
When my
was
united to
my
is
body experienced a great joy, but fear overtook He should deliver me again to them."
of the
me
This
stone that
was placed on
"
?
the
on the
those
this
who were
Saviour. "
town
alive
And
"
:
What
is
him
that they
were
and
that they
were
Empire.
After
Honour and glory Joseph and Nicodemus cried and said Lord You our who to have be revived dead Jesus Christ, you, " bones and given life to those who love You
this Pilate,
When
place,
his
he went
to a
dung-
head
in sign of the
deep sorrow that he felt at his treatment of Pilate and his wife. Then he kissed the head of Pilate and asked forgiveness from him and his companions, and wept bitterly on the tomb of the Saviour on account
of the
in the
person of
the dead
began
Immediately Emperor, and informed him that his son speaking to him, and announced to him the
alive.
great joy of the resuscitation of his son Caesar, and his resurrection 2 Then the vizier handed also papyrus to his master, from the dead.
own
I
handwriting.
And
he wrote as follows
Tiberius,
"
Emperor
was dead
like
the rest of
mankind, and my body was decomposed and became earth in the The greatness of your faith grave, in which it lay for three months.
sent
me
to
will rise
power
of the
Lord Jesus
"
3
Christ.
have
now
2
My
in the flesh
which
He
P. adds
the
Holy City."
is
This sentence
missing in
Or parchment. M. 27.
1
MARTYRDOM OF
Virgin Mary, and
called
alive,
PILATE
now and
269
He
is
in
He
!
me by
He
my
then took
me
out of the
hand
of death,
life
to
my life, body. because of your great confidence and faith in Him, and He has raised me in order that you might increase in the glorification of His Majesty.
this great gift of
2
He bestowed
on you
O my father,
greet you,
Emperor,
my
father.
My
l
suffered
into
and the
fingers of
writing to
letter
The
father,
greeting."
to a courier
who
his
reached the
and announced the great joy to him. When the missive Emperor he read it, and when he reached in it the
your son who was dead is writing this and the Omnipotent Lord raised me from hand, Jerusalem," he was immediately bewildered and confused,
it
passage in which
to
was
"
said,
own
the
like
dead
in
Jacob when he received the intelligence that his son was alive and he began to say to himself, "Is it possible that my son is alive ?
;
"
Is
this
news
true ?
Then he went
in
to his wife
and read
to her the
letter of
which
it
was
The Queen threw then from kings, when she heard that her
lioness.
her the dignity of the wives of the son was alive, and became like a
They
:
who
earned the
letter
and they
said
to
him
"Be
and
happened.
If
you
we
we
will
crown you with the crown of the kingdom and give you if we do not see the face of our son, your only
Go now
to prison until
we
outcome
of
your words."
did not neglect the affair of his son, but despatched
The Emperor
immediately other couriers to ascertain whether what had been said The couriers of the Emperor concerning his son was true or not.
1
Cf, Colos.
i.
18.
Lit.
"
I
P. adds
"
And
is
Be
in
good
health in the
Lord.
*
Amen,"
This clause
missing in
M.
27.
270
took the
WOODBROOKE
way
to
STUDIES
The
couriers of the
and
his
Emperor.
Emperor
what they saw they proceeded to the Capital which they reached one day before the entry of the son of the Emperor, and
Astonished
early next morning the son of the
Emperor
arrived.
of
Who
that
!
would describe
day Emperor heard of the presence of his son he went out to meet him with so much haste that all the town was in a
the
When
commotion, especially when its inhabitants noticed the Emperor walking on his feet to go to his son, and exultant with joy When he saw his face he began because he was going to meet him.
state
of
to cry,
"
joy, saying
:
Glory be
to you,
Jesus of
Nazareth,
God
of earth
had
you Lord and
suffered dissolution.
and heaven, who vivified the bones that Your grace overtook me to-day, because
I
raised
Jesus,
in
my
am
to-day as
if
and although
shall confess
and
believe every
my
in
heart
is
you more
intense.
"The
days
dead
was not
;
so wonderful,
my
is
the great
wonder
that
you
is
raised
my
months
This miracle
also greater
than that you wrought for the son of the widow in the town of Nain, because you were before the bier and you raised him before his
descent into the grave.
The
my
which you granted Jacob when he was told that his son Joseph was alive, and he went to him and saw him. My son remained three months in the grave and by your power you
Lord,
is
raised
This
brimming with
"
:
joy,
Then he
if
I
O
I
Caesar,
my
son,
am
and
as joyful to-day as
raising
I
rising
from
the dead
my
The
miracles
which
heard
the
He
was working,
1
see
my own
eyes."
Then
This sentence is only found in P. M. 127 has: "This is what the Emperor said concerning the resur-
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
father ordered that his son should ride in a
1
271
cried saying
'
litter,
and he
"
Who
me
"
!
was
crucified,
Who
was the joy of the town when they saw that the one who was dead had risen from the There was also much singing dead after a death of three months and jubilation before and after him while he was riding. Then Caesar began to narrate to his father and mother all what
great
!
How
all
that Jesus
to
Whom
"
:
be glory
had done
in
to
it.
He
"
told
Then
him
2
:
his father
me
characteristics,
features
and image
is
of
in
this
man."
Father,
what
is
your glory
likeness of
great King.
There
no
His glory in all the world, and the diadem of His Kingdom. His
3
The light of the sun cannot speech is life and His rancour is wrath. reach the brightness of His splendour, and the dignity of His garment is not to be found with any other king of the earth. His throne is
a burning
fire,
and His
cross
is
the light
of
of
His
Him
before
His
crucifixion
Pilate, the
know His
of
portraiture
and His
features, but
summon
Governor
His physical
characteristics,
and image."
the
And
who who
presented to him,
Emperor immediately summoned Pilate who was " and he asked him Are you the Governor Pilate
:
"
crucified Jesus ?
God, the Jews did not Annas and Caiaphas who decided
And he replied " Yes, it is your servant As to the crucifixion of Jesus, our living listen to my words on the matter, and it is
:
judicially
on His
all
crucifixion."
And
the
Emperor
Tiberius said
"
:
You saw
the miracles
and
prodigies which He wrought, and I have been informed that time of His crucifixion you were sitting and judging His case.
at the
Now
describe to
me His
image, His portraiture, His picture, His majesty, And Pilate said to him "I bear witness before
:
M.
27 adds
"
:
of
marching
soldiers."
2
M. 127
omits
all
Rather unseemly.
20
272
you,
court,
WOODBROOKE
O
I
STUDIES
has been three times,
1
Emperor,
I
my
lord,
that
He
in
my
:
and
once
like
saw
3
did not ascertain His portraiture and His characteristics 2 that was of the colour of fire, and once 1 saw Him
He
Him
their
my
I
wife,
and
my
children
saw
Him
in
me
hand towards
Jews
in order
Him.
my
lord,
by your
gave
my two
children to the
on His behalf
Him, and
Him until I had brought His case before my but Emperor, they did not listen to my words they released a robber from prison and murder, and they took and crucified Jesus.
that they might release
lord the
Let
of
it
O my
lord, that
He
His own
And
He
is
Emperor Tiberius said to him "Tell me from where and from what place He comes, and how and when He came
the
:
'
down
from Heaven so that the Jews found Him, seized Him, crucified
And
is
Pilate said
to
him
"
:
They
me
that
His mother
the
He
and
that her
name
The
angel of
bring forth a
be called Emmanuel."
And
the
Emperor
said to
"
said to
him
And
time
this man, noticed the miracles and the prodigies that He was performing, and you did not inform me of His affair." And Pilate replied to him "By your life, O my lord the Emperor, in all this length of time I did not see Him nor did I perceive His face
:
except on the day of the crucifixion, when the Jews brought Him to me and crucified Him." And Tiberius said to him " You have
:
me
of
His
affair.
They
to
127 "three days." M. 127 omits this sentence. " And worshipping Him." 4 The answer is given succinctly in M. 27 as follows " And he narrated him His descent from heaven, His dwelling in a virgin, and His thirty years
3
M.
P. adds
stay
"
:
You
ate
M.
27 omits
all
MARTYRDOM OF
delivered
PILATE
273
and you did not remember His miracles and the prodigies, and you did not feel awestruck in His presence, and and now kill I will not did of His you frighten you. divinity glory
to you,
Him
do
to
to
Him."
thus and immediately after
in
The Emperor
soldiers seized
Tiberius spoke
the
him out
order to cut
off
his head,
but the Emperor ordered that he should be crucified another time And they crucified him outside the city, before he was beheaded. struck him on the head with a reed-stick, and nailed him to the wood,
pierced his side with a spear, tormented
and
after that
proceeded
And
little
respite so that
he might pray.
:
he immediately knelt down and began to pray, saying " my Lord Jesus Christ who took away all the sins of the 3 world, have pity on your servant Pilate and forgive all my stumblings,
And
Guard my poor soul and deliver it from torments. I beseech O you, my Lord and my God, do not separate my soul from that of your maidservant Procula, but make her worthy to be
omissions
and
sins.
with
me
in
the place of
I
rest.
Do
for
not forget
your servants,
I
my
was
let
in the
world,
Lord,
delivered them
ransom
your
crucifixion,
refused them.
Do
not
to
I
judge you,
O just
I
me
have committed, because you are a merciful and compassionate God, and I am a created being, and I dared to
'
which
say to you
Who
are
You
'
'
implore you,
O
I
my
Lord, not to
put
me
to
to rebuke
' :
me
because
your cross
to the
this
judgment my Lord, my God, and my Saviour, I beseech you not to remove me from your glory but to grant me your mercy. To you be glory and honour for ever. Amen."
1
And
they did
Him.'
'
M. 127 omits all the above sentences. M. 355 adds here " to take him down
:
8
* 5
"
:
Syr. niyaha.
'
following."
John
xix- 6-
M-
From where are you ? 127; 127 omits all the above sentences-
"
274
WOODBROOKE
Pilate uttered these
STUDIES
I,
words while kneeling on the ground. And Gamaliel was not able to restrain my tears when I saw the weeping
when he began
body to his servants after they had cut off his head. Then he 1 turned and noticed one of his servants, Basil ius with a number of " 2 Do not weep over my friends, all weeping, and he said to them
:
death, because
my
off
Lord has
my
to Jerusalem
me
my Lord
and
my
He may
have pity on
fifteenth of
it
me."
'
this
they cut
off his
head on the
month
it
of June.
Then we 8
and
c
took
to Jerusalem, as
he had wished.
When we
all
we
found that his wife Procula and her two children had died
on
the very
day
of our arrival,
and
we
placed them
in
As
Emperor Tiberius
He
also sought
Herod
7
he
was informed
After
that
Pilate.
this the
and
1
said to
P. "
him
of
wife of the Emperor Tiberius spoke to her husband " 8 my lord Emperor, you knew and saw what
one
his servants
and Phasilius,
his
majordomo."
M.
27
omits this sentence altogether. 2 M. 127, " and this is what Pilate said to his relatives and his friends." 3 There are differences in the MSS. in the wording of this sentence. 1
followed
4
M.
27
in
my
translation.
M. 355 and P. use here the Coptic Syrian month hezlran (old style). month Bawunah. There are many discrepancies here in the wording of the
I followed M. 127 which has the shortest text The Copts three MSS. honour Pilate and his wife on June 25 (new style). Cf. G. A. Miiller, Pontius Pilatus der funfte Prokurator, p. 7. 5 M. 127 and P. use for all these verbs the 3rd pers. plur. 6 M. 355, and P. use here tanayyahu from the Syr. ittnih. 7 M. 127 ends here with the colophon by Gamaliel, which comes later, " and the following colophon This book is finished in 994 of the Greeks, on a Friday, 13th October, in the time of our Fathers: Patriarch 'AbdalMasih, and Mar Basil Maphrian of the East, and Mar Gregory the servant It was of the See of the Holy City. copied by the hand of the weakest of I men, Joseph, a priest by name but a sinner by works." give in the in M. 355 and P. of as found the continuation the story following pages " 9 knew and / saw." P.
: 1
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
O
275
the Saviour Jesus did in resuscitating to us our son from the dead, and we, my lord Emperor, feel much sorrow because we did not see
Him, and
killed
because
we were unworthy
1
of perceiving
Him.
Him
to
for
kill
them
send
Him.
If
it
pleases you,
His mother
in
order that
is
has
come
the
to our
knowledge
that she
living at
moment
in Jerusalem,
We will
that
kingdom and send her back to her country in order honour her, and in order that no wicked Jew may stretch may a harmful hand towards her, as they did with her son." When the
crown
all
of the
Emperor heard
despatched
these
words from
his
many
in
soldiers,
to
Jerusalem
Mary
to
them
so that they
might crown her with the crown of the kingdom. Before this, our Saviour, King of Kings, appeared to His mother
and
to
the Apostles,
His
elect,
and
He
disclosed to
them many
secrets,
that the
Emperor
Virgin Mary.
Then
after
"
Emperor
Tiberius,"
He
having laid upon John to repair to the turned to Mary, His mother, and said to her :
I
my
beloved mother,
shall take
you
to
My
you a great glory, greater than all the perishable glory and kingdom of this world. I am aware, mother, of the fact that you were for
many days
sake,
in pains for
in travelling
I
Me, and that you endured tribulations for My from country to country and from town to town
;
now
in order that
you
4
Me
with
God.
You
have
toiled
O mother,
toiled
come
Me,
abode
of joy
You have
O
'
Crucifixion,
mother, in the sorrow that overtook you on the day of the come now and I will take you to the comfort of
My
kingdom.
You
have
toiled,
O mother,
suffered for
Me,
and accompany Me to the eternal hymn of joy and to a You have toiled, mother, in your weeping repose that has no end. at the door of the sepulchre, come now and see My glory and the
make
haste
This
last
:
sentence
is
not found in
M.
355.
receive good rewards from him." 4 P. omits these sentences. This sentence is not found in P.
P. adds
"
To
276
majesty of
WOODBROOKE
My
1
STUDIES
in the
throne,
sitting as
am
myriads of angels.
You have wept for Me, mother, on the and Golgotha, make haste and come to the eternal heihtgs. mother, your feet were tired in the streets of the earthly Jerusalem, come now and see the beauty of the heavenly Jerusalem. mother,,
Kramon
thirsty for
My
for
sake,
in
heaven
My
kingdom.
3
mother,
house of John
My
sake,
melodies of the exultations of the Cherubim and Seraphim Father and the Holy Spirit." Me,
who
glorify
My
This
is
said to
His mother
to comfort her.
Then-
she passed
away and
Cherubim.
worshipped sorrow that you have prepared and in separating her from us
disciples, since the
Him on the wings of the sorrowed Apostles, they greatly, bowed down, asked Him saying: Lord, what is this
sent her before
He
"O
for
?
us, in taking
She used
to
your
4
day you
left
us
To-day
and
we became
:
and the
sight
of
teaching."
And
your virgin mother, and deprived of her salutary " my beloved and
my
members, do not be sad on account of the passing away of mother from you. She has not died, but she has gone to the dwellings
My
of rest, joy
and
eternal
life.
6
She
toiled
much with
Me in
this
world,
and now
have taken her up to heaven, and you will soon see her and she will see you, because you are bound to face the death imposed on mankind. I shall take her and travel with her in the dwellings of
I
Kingdom
8
of
My
Did
"
Did
to the third
P.
"
:
I.e.,
3
Calvary.
That you may see in the glory of See the beginning of the
My
Father."
4
story.
P. omits. exhibit slight differences here. She has not gone from the world for pain, but she went in order to P. rest in the dwellings of rest, life and eternal joy." " 8 : You saw her ascending to."
6
The MSS.
"
:
P.
P.
"
In rest
and
eternal
life.
this in
order that
she
may know my
8
:
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
not the Father call you children because you
disciples ?
277
became
My
I
beloved
in
How
I
could
My
virgin
mother
whose
womb
could
1
sucked
babes ?
whose lap
in this
How
the
the sadness
world
for
My
sake ?
Lo
wish to
summon
?
of the
thrown open before her. The greeting of the Father has reached her, Mary the habitations of Heaven will submit saying, Be welcome, * The sea of fire to you, and the seven trumpets will sing before you.
'
will serve
feet.
before you, and the sun and the moon will be at your All the choirs of heaven will sing before you, and heaven and earth will dance with canticles on the day of your Assumption.'
'
This
mother.
'
is
Then He
You
shall
His holy turned to John, His beloved, and said to him stand before Tiberius Caesar, and bear witness to
said to
disciples concerning
:
His
him about what you saw the Jews doing to Me on the wood of the cross." The Saviour said these words to His holy disciples and disappeared from
their sight.
later the troops
Some days
to Jerusalem arrived,
which the Emperor Tiberius had sent accompanied by Palace officials and female at-
They
of
and precious and princely the land of Judaea in search of the Virgin, but they did not find her because she had left this world and ascended
They
4
scoured
all
to heaven.
1
They
to
About
of
of
Blessed
Virgin,
120-121
heayen see the Syriac History of the the text (edit. Budge). Each door
As to the seven doors they are the symbolised an Apostle of Christ. ordinary doors of the traditional seven heavens. " M. 355 " the lions at the gate." The seven trumpets are, however, mentioned in the Mysteries of St. John the Apostle, edited and translated by
:
Budge in the Coptic Apocrypha, p. 247. They are said there to be appointed over the heavenly dew. 3 P., "will be quenched." 4 P : " and did not find her at all because she had gone to heaven."
278
the
"'
WOODBROOKE
Emperor
Tiberius.
STUDIES
:
When
:
the
Are you
am,
Emperor saw him he said to him " the Lord and the friend of Jesus ?
the will of
And
I
"By
grace,
O
is
my
lord
who
is
called
name.
And
now,
my
of
who
is
worthy
Who
-of
The judgments
truth
God
light
condescended
come
to us
humbling Himself,
He
called us
His
brothers, friends,
and Apostles.
By
your
life,
my
lord
Emperor,
J
He
"
:
Then
miracles
the
Emperor
and
prodigies,
Having performed all these how could the Jews pierce His heart with a
said to
:
him
spear ?"
"The life of all of us conJohn replied sists of water and blood, and both of them sprang from His holy side. Before His crucifixion His virgin mother nudged Him at His side in
the blessed
And
Cana
of Galilee,
'
Him
ding.'
O my beloved
And
in
because people were in need of wine, and said to Son, they have no wine to drink at the wed'
woman, you
have placed
pierce
My
advance your finger on the spot at which they will 4 side. You have asked Me, mother, to make wine
order that the guests of the wedding might drink in this you have placed in advance your hand in the spring of
in
jet forth
from
my
side,
It is not good, Emperor, that you should study too deeply the greatness of His divinity, that is to say of God and His works which the intelligence of men is unable to com-
prehend."
And
replied
:
the
Emperor
said to
him
"
:
Are you
all
standing near
"
Him
I
who was
at the time of
His
Crucifixion ?
Yes,
was present
there
and saw
And
wood
of the cross."
And
Emperor
tthe
by His will and His love He called me by this name." came down to us, poor people, and called us His brothers, friends of His Father, on account of His love for men." 3 P. adds: "of His Father." 4 M. 355 adds; "in order to give the faithful to drink-" 5 M. 355 omits the last sentence.
1
M. 355
"
He
MARTYRDOM OF
said to
PILATE
to paint
279
His image for me in the figure which He had on the cross, exactly as He was crucified " And the And John replied for us." Yes, I will paint Him."
him
:
"
You
will then
know how
Emperor ordered a
slab of
good
3
stone,
the figure of the Saviour on it according to the order of the Emperor. When it was finished the blessed John bent his head over it in order
to kiss
it
lips of
the Saviour
turned to the
lips
and they
all
The Emperor
of our
Tiberius witnessed
this,
Then
"
:
and
said
It is
enough,
O John,
part,
my
day
figure of
It
my
crucifixion, as
fair
of the crucifixion.
was not
on your
my
beloved,
to crucify
me
if
after
my
dead
it
would have
image you
been
better
of
my
saw
hand
me
of
The Jews crucified me once at the ' Herod, why do you crucify me again at the hand of Tiberius ?
after
my
resurrection.
The soldiers divided my garments among themselves in Jerusalem once, do not allow the inhabitants of Rome also to see my nudity. My side was pierced with a spear on Friday,' do not pierce me, O John, my
beloved, another time after
my resurrection.
;
called Judas
my friend,
and he delivered me
because
John, more than all the world, do not leave me, therefore, in the sufferings of the crucifixion,
to death
but
love you,
You know,
my virgin
of the cross.
Know,
'
John, that
my
resurrection
was
joy
and glad-
ness to
all
the earth."
this
to
" I take this to be a mistake for hat ah, dignity." This shows "image, figure." clearly that the original from which the MS. was transcribed was written in undotted Arabic characters in which there is
no graphic difference between the two words. I believe that the variant could not have arisen otherwise. " 2 P. omits stone." 1 M. 355 " on this slab of marble." P. omits " marble." " 4 5 P. Adhered to the lips." M. 355 omits this sentence.
;
There are considerable verbal differences here M. 355 adds here "which was passover day."
in the
two
MSS.
M.
355,
"
John."
P. omits
this sentence.
280
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
When
to
the Emperor heard these wonderful words, his mind came back, him and he rose on his feet, kissed the head of John and said
:
'You
are
His
And
and yoit the Emperor took the image and embraced it,,
loved,
at that place, like the
1
whom He
then he placed
on a high pedestal
to
image
the
of the
Son
of
God
Emperor bestowed benefits on but he and him, John many take anything. Then he went out of the city, and a column
him away and brought him
all
Then
to the
Mount
of Olives.
He
them what he
did in
"
Rome, and
this the
what happened
to
After
we
shall not
the Virgin
this, lo
Mary,
They
first,
fell
She came
to
them
rest of the
them about a part only of the heavenly glory found in the abode of rest, and informed them that she saw Pilate, his wife and his children in a great glory while the cross of Her Son was shining on them.
After having told them this she disappeared from their sight. And I Gamaliel had learnt the art of writing, the science of
4 3
Judaism
and that
of the
and
the
vizier
Lord
Christ,
and
the
miracles
of the
which
He
happened
1
to
Emperor, and
Armenians, down to our own day." On the and Cheetham's Dictionary I do not -5 8 and 874-880. of Christian Antiquities, i. 5 precisely know to which image the author refers as found in Asia Minor or Armenia. There seems to be no relation whatever between the picture of our Lord as drawn by John the Apostle and the account of the History of the Likeness of Christ, edited and translated by Budge in 1899, pp. 157-210 (of the text). " There are here verbal differences in the narration.
P.
:
"
M. 355
P.
"
:
4
5
And
"
:
His
M. 355
Lord
MARTYRDOM OF PILATE
Emperor
memorial
l
281
it
Tiberius,
of the
and
put
all
to writing
and composed
as a
holy resurrection.
of the story in
:
(The
I
final
words
are)
M. 127 which
weak
will,
.above on p.
274
beseech you,
brethren,
forgive
the
me
in order that
Christ
God may
my mistakes
(through) His
Son
Jesus
who
suffered for us
by His
and
who
with
fetters of sin.
We ask Him
life,
and
all
which
we have committed
knowledge or without knowledge. As He has rendered us here worthy of His knowledge, may He assemble us all in His heavenly Kingdom, through the grace and mercy of our Saviour Jesus Christ
to
whom
be glory for ever and ever. (The final words of the story in
Amen.
:
And
Hyriacus.
me,
me the weak
He who
with the
is
suffered for
for
me
so that the
Christ,
Lord may forgive me my mistakes, the Son of the living God, who
are
bound
bad
fetters of sin,
!
He who
ask
and the
the
Saviour of
We
Him
and
all
of our past lives, which we committed with knowledge or which we committed without knowledge. May He forgive them all And as He has assembled us here may in the greatness of His mercy
deeds
He
Jerusalem
May
be with
us.
To Him
Spirit,
be glory
in conjunction
God
the
now, always and for ever and ever, Amen. 2 Lord of the worlds. It has ended by the help
God.
(The
. . .
cross,
words and the colophon of P. are) Because He, the men-loving God, who saved us by His will also save us and forgive us in His divinity. As He has
final
:
rendered us worthy of the joy of His resurrection may He render us also worthy to assemble in His eternal kingdom, in order that we may
all these to you and placed it as a memorial." As stated 127 places this colophon of Gamaliel after the crucifixion of Pilate Avhere he ends the story.
1
:
"I wrote
-aboYe
2
M.
Kur'anic expression.
282
bless
WOODBROOKE
and
glorify
STUDIES
are due glory, honour,
To Him
and worship in conjunction with His good Father and the Holy Here ends by Spirit, now, always and for ever and ever, Amen.
the help of
God
the
Martyrdom of Pilate,
be with
all
of his wife
and children.
May And
their intercession
tne
weak
life,
copyist,
who
those
is
across this
and
all
who read it and hear it to ask for the He who says a bad word shall be met with
and
corrects
it,
equal, but he
for
who
this
finds a mistake
the
Lord
will
improve
him
Amen.
MARTYRDOM OF
ffii .
PILATE
283
;n")
Vn
^jQ
-T
-^
O1
.on
5 f
.^n
jo-^mlL
rn . Vnn*
^CT1
<-i
.jlm
13
"ouoiX]]!
i
ai!>ol
n^vo OLi^*la^
^o)])]]
1o>oi|o
15
V^VQ aiSo^o
^^
>o
oi1oi*lL oioi u
Omiu.
3
P
as
A**,.
Adds \ZU\
P P>
it
JSj
^/*
.<7io
8
u-i-*^
^H
name
j-j\i^, and
.
M 355 writes
OT*S ^O^iO
prima manu
-ff>n
.
as
CDQOU>OO1
in
Adds
.
rn Vn]
ft
^]l
^eon^i.^o.
-Ojppn,
.Vv
consequently
And P
omits CTli,V>
for
!O;-^ says
pilp*^
writes
s^A
for
^-^Q-^
7
writes
JJ^
and
8
.
for
^2O
writes
^fclj.
a
Ann.
P omits.
is
Both omit.
jj'lj
1
10
Jj^l
is
u-^ ^ J^ ^ u^^1
^ O J1
oli
J
18
12 le
13
omits.
Omits.
far^CD
21
284
2
[,
WOODBROOKE
m ^\] ou*^
1
STUDIES
*+s>
l
]-,^
n n^v
^v^
Vnr>
^.
^010
.o\
OI
2Li.5
>
mrt.
6 r
.Vnj
Vnvl
onft*
^ocn m
rt\
v]
^oiAZ
AJ]DO
innZ
[ ]
wiirllL
^^vr2
r^r
,)
OO1O
'>
>
^QSo]
^010 -^1
oio
*^
oi^o
Au
10
^QJQJ
ixL.-r.io
Zpl
A *^-^
^
16
An n
12
[ ]
JXLI^
^|o
13
"
|>oZ]
]ai
n\
m
20
..
i^oZ
^olo
19
18
[AO
oiio .oSo
21
j"
.<^>] jOlQoa
1
Oljj-O
Both add
^40
and
P
4
writes
U^ill
after
5
'^0^
*
7
Both OljSoloiOO
adds
t
Both
*Q*A
^QOLi ^H^m
Adds
^^^'r^
Omits.
P
12
s^
.
J^ c^ 8-^
9
il
but omits
10
.v^^
\
(
Omits.
^^ ^
13
rd-.
l^*-
u Both
^-^if* (SjJ
.
Adds OUj]]pi-iQ^
P
17
is
only
j^* oJ^lj>-l
j~i
.
ZpOO
*
P U^ o^i
U-i.
ZZ]
16
Z^O
a fter
16
*Q|O
Omits.
L^bi"
A\J
*-<=
18
p
19
^JDo
20
proceeds
Omits.
Olr^
21
^lAQ^O
OHCL^QiiD
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MARTYRDOM OF
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