New Testament Apocryphal Writings
By James Orr
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The canonical Gospels stand very differently, as respects origin, character and reception, with the Gospels, Acts and Apocalpyses known as ‘Apocryphal.’ These apocryphal writings began to be produced (so far as known) in the second century, mostly in Ebionitic and Gnostic circles, and, with few exceptions, were repudiated and condemned by the Church. Only later, and in modified and expurgated forms, did their stories pass into the general Catholic tradition. The second century seems to have been a perfect hot-bed for the production of this class of writings. The heretical Gospel of the Egyptians is already quoted in 2 Clement (circa a.d. 140). Irenæus speaks of the sect of the Marcosians as adducing ‘an unspeakable number of apocryphal and spurious writings, which they themselves had forged, to bewilder the minds of the foolish,’ and instances the story, found in the Gospel of Thomas, of Jesus confounding the schoolmaster who sought to teach Him His letters (Adv. Haer. i. 20). Later tradition attributed the composition of many of the apocryphal writings (Pseudo-Matthew, Acts of Apostles) to a mythical Leucius, a disciple of the Apostles (cp. art. ‘Leucius,’ Dict. of Christ. Biog.). Eusebius gives a list of spurious and disputed books: ‘That we may have it in our power to know both these books (the canonical) and those that are adduced by the heretics under the name of the Apostles, such, viz., as compose the Gospels of Peter, of Thomas, and of Matthew, and certain others beside these, or such as contain the Acts of Andrew and John, and of the other Apostles, of which no one of those writers in the ecclesiastical succession has condescended to make any mention in his works; and, indeed, the character of the style itself is very different from that of the Apostles, and the sentiments, and the purport of those things that are advanced in them, deviating as far as possible from sound orthodoxy, evidently proves they are the fictions of heretical men; whence they are not only to be ranked among the spurious writings, but are to be rejected as altogether absurd and impious’ (H. E. iii. 25). Only a small part of this extensive literature remains to us, and in no case in its original form, but solely in later, and often much-altered recensions.
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New Testament Apocryphal Writings - James Orr
Anna.’
Introduction
The Canonical Gospels. As far back as we can trace them the four Gospels known as Canonical hold a place of honour and authority peculiar to themselves. Irenæus of Gaul (circa a.d. 175) recognises four, and only four, Gospels as the ‘pillars’ that uphold the Church (Adv. Haer. iii. 8). Origen, in the beginning of the next century (a.d. 220), speaks of them as ‘the four Gospels which alone are uncontroverted in the Church of God spread under heaven’ (Euseb., H. E. vi. 25). Justin Martyr, in the middle of the second century, narrates that the ‘Memoirs of the Apostles,’ which are called Gospels, were read every Sunday in the assemblies of the Christians (Apol. 66, 67). That these Gospels were those we now possess we can tell, not only from Justin’s description of them, and allusions to their contents (cp. Sanday’s Gospels in Second Century, chap. iv.), but from the harmony made of them by his disciple Tatian in his Diatessaron (now recovered in Arabic translations). Our four Gospels, and these only, stand at the head of the ancient Syriac (Peshitta), the Latin and the Egyptian versions (cp. Westcott and Hort), and of the old list known as the Canon of Muratori (circa a.d. 180). Within the Church, in short, our four Gospels, attributed by second-century writers to their present authors, had never any rivals.
Apocryphal Writings. It stands very differently, as respects origin, character and reception, with the Gospels, Acts and Apocalpyses known as ‘Apocryphal.’ These began to be produced (so far as known) in the second century, mostly in Ebionitic and Gnostic circles, and, with few exceptions, were repudiated and condemned by the Church. Only later, and in modified and expurgated forms, did their stories pass into the general Catholic tradition. The second century seems to have been a perfect hot-bed for the production of this class of writings. The heretical Gospel of the Egyptians is already quoted in 2 Clement (circa a.d. 140). Irenæus speaks of the sect of the Marcosians as adducing ‘an unspeakable number of apocryphal and spurious writings, which they themselves had forged, to bewilder the minds of the foolish,’ and instances the story, found in the Gospel of Thomas, of Jesus confounding the schoolmaster who sought to teach Him His letters (Adv. Haer. i. 20). Later tradition attributed the composition of many of the apocryphal writings (Pseudo-Matthew, Acts of Apostles) to a mythical Leucius, a disciple of the Apostles (cp. art. ‘Leucius,’ Dict. of Christ. Biog.). Eusebius gives a list of spurious and disputed books: ‘That we may have it in our power to know both these books (the canonical) and those that are adduced by the heretics under the name of the Apostles, such, viz., as compose the Gospels of Peter, of Thomas, and of Matthew, and certain others beside these, or such as contain the Acts of Andrew and John, and of the other Apostles, of which no one of those writers in the ecclesiastical succession has condescended to make any mention in his works; and, indeed, the character of the style itself is very different from that of the Apostles, and the sentiments, and the purport of those things that are advanced in them, deviating as far as possible from sound orthodoxy, evidently proves they are the fictions of heretical men; whence they are not only to be ranked among the spurious writings, but are to be rejected as altogether absurd and impious’ (H. E. iii. 25). Only a small part of this extensive literature remains to us, and in no case in its original form, but solely in later, and often much-altered recensions.
Authorities. The apocryphal literature is a study by itself, with the intricate details of which only specialists are competent to deal. Great attention has been bestowed on the collecting, editing and collating of such codices of Gospels, Acts, and other writings as were formerly known, or have more recently been discovered. The most important of the older collections was that of Fabricius (Codex Apocryphus, 1719). The collections and prolegomena of Thilo (1832) and Tischendorf (Acts, 1851; Gospels, 1853; Apocalypses, 1856) are of special value; much, however, has been done since their time. The articles by Lipsius in the Dict. of Christ. Biog. on ‘Acts of the Apostles (Apocryphal)’ and ‘Gospels (Apocryphal)’ are, like the author’s learned German work (2 vols., 1883) on the former subject, masterly in their discussions of the relations of the documents. Valuable light was thrown on the Syriac versions of the Protevangelium of James, the Gospel of Thomas, and the Transitus Mariæ (Passing of Mary), by the texts and fragments edited and translated by Dr. W. Wright in the Journal of Sacred Literature (January and April 1865), and his Contributions to the Apocryphal Literature of the New Testament (1865), and Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles (1871). In 1902 Mrs. Agnes Smith Lewis edited, with translations and other illustrative matter, new Syriac texts of the Protevangelium and Transitus Mariæ, obtained from a palimpsest she was fortunate enough to purchase at Suez in July 1895 (Studia Sinaitica, No. XI. 1902). An interesting fragment of the lost Gospel of Peter (second century) was discovered, with other MSS., at Akhmim, in Upper Egypt, in 1886, and was published in 1892 (see below). A translation of the Apocryphal Gospels was published in 1874 by Mr. B. H. Cowper, on the basis of Tischendorf’s edition; and Vol. XVI. of Messrs. T. & T. Clark’s Ante-Nicene Library is devoted to translations by Mr. A. Walker of ‘Apocryphal Gospels, Acts and Revelations.’ An ‘Additional Volume’ of the Library (1897) contains translations of works more recently discovered Lectures XI. and XIX. of Dr. Salmon’s Introduction to the New Testament, on ‘Apocryphal and Heretical Gospels’ and ‘Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles,’ may profitably be consulted. Hone’s catch-penny Apocryphal New Testament (1820) is critically worthless.
Character of Apocryphal Gospels. Of the purely heretical Gospels most have perished (for an account of some of the Gnostic ones, see Baring-Gould’s Lost and Hostile Gospels (1874), and Lipsius, as above). But apart from doctrinal reasons, sufficient motive always existed in persons of lax tendency to pander to the principle of curiosity and love of the marvellous in human nature by inventions of narratives on subjects on which the genuine Gospels were silent. An existing narrative, or traditions of sayings and doings of Jesus, might be, and frequently were, manipulated, recast, or embellished; but the grand opportunity came when the Gospels said nothing at all. Here was a space which imagination could fill up at pleasure. The stories might be puerile, demoralising, ridiculous to the last degree, but if they were only circumstantial and marvellous enough, and were backed up by names of Apostles, or others of repute, the narrator could always rely on finding readers greedy to receive them. This is precisely what happened with the Apocryphal Gospels. There are differences in degree of puerility and extravagance; but Bishop Ellicott did not exaggerate when he said of the spurious Gospels as a whole (and the same remarks apply as a rule to the Acts): ‘Their real demerits, their mendacities, their absurdities, their coarseness, the barbarities of their style and the inconsequence of their narratives, have never been excused or condoned. It would be hard to find any competent writer, in any age of the Church, who has been beguiled into saying anything civil or commendatory’ (‘On the Apocryphal Gospels,’ Cambridge Essays, 1856, p. 153). It is to be remembered, on the other hand, that the stories in these Gospels did ultimately very deeply influence Catholic tradition (see below).
Cycles of Narration. The stories in the Apocryphal Gospels will be found on examination to resolve themselves mainly into three groups, or to form three chief cycles, corresponding to those parts of the evangelical narrative where curiosity is most excited, and receives least satisfaction. These cycles relate (1) to the previous history of the parents of Jesus, especially of Mary, and to the Nativity; (2) to the boyhood of Jesus from His childhood to His twelfth year; and (3) to the passion of Jesus, and the interval between His death and Resurrection. These groups are represented in the present volume respectively by the Protevangelium of James, the Gospel of Thomas (with part of the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew), and the Gospel of Nicodemus, with the fragment of the Gospel of Peter. The Falling Asleep of Mary is added as exemplifying the later development of the Mary-legend, as well as for its connection with the group of writings which bear the title Transitus Mariæ.
A few words may be said on the cycles generally before passing to the special introductions.
1. Cycle on the Parents of Jesus and on the Nativity. Joseph and Mary are somewhat abruptly introduced in the genuine Gospels, while a long preliminary history is given in Luke of Zacharias and Elizabeth, the parents of John the Baptist. This was plainly something to be remedied, and the oldest cycle of stories, apparently without a scintilla of real tradition behind them, relate to the parentage and birth of the Virgin Mary, the wonderful circumstances of her early life, her betrothal to Joseph, the Annunciation, and the events of the Nativity. The stories grow in detail and in wonderful character as they advance from the Protevangelium of James (the oldest), through the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, to a third piece, not included in this volume, The Nativity of Mary (on the relation of these writings, see below). But the main outlines of the narrative are early fixed. They include such features as the following:—How Mary’s parents, Joachim and Anna, were rich, but childless; Joachim’s distress at being repulsed from the Temple because he had no seed; his flight and fasting, and the grief of Anna; the angelic promise to the godly pair; the birth of Mary, and her dedication to God; the marvellous incidents of her infancy; how she lived with other virgins at the Temple from her third to her twelfth (or fourteenth) year, behaving astonishingly, and being fed by angels; how an aged guardian of her virginity was sought for, and by a Divine sign was found in Joseph, to whom, accordingly, she was betrothed; the Annunciation to Mary; Joseph’s concern at her condition; the trial of Joseph and Mary by the water of jealousy at the Temple; the journey to Bethlehem, and birth of Jesus in a cave outside the city; the marvels attending the Nativity, etc. In the later versions of the legend the growing exaltation of Mary is very apparent. New stories arise also of the death of Joseph, and of the passing of the soul of Mary, and assumption of her body (Transitus Mariæ). Of the latter type of story one specimen is given (see below).
2. The Boyhood of Jesus. The entire silence of the Gospel history on the early life of Jesus naturally afforded scope for invention, and the legend-mongers of the second and later centuries did not miss their opportunity. The blank in the narrative of the childhood and youth of Jesus was early filled up with an abundance of prodigies of the crudest and most puerile kind. The parent of this class of Gospel, or rather the earliest form of it, was the so-called Gospel of Thomas, which had its successors in the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, and, still later, in the wildly-extravagant Arabic Gospel of the Infancy. The absurdity of the sayings and doings attributed to the boy Jesus in this cycle of stories is only equalled by their grotesque incongruity with His real character. The single effect of placing them alongside the narratives of the genuine Gospels must be, as Dr. Westcott has said, to impress the reader with the sense of ‘complete contrast.’ Time, place, propriety, even ordinary consistency, are recklessly disregarded. Jesus has and exercises from His cradle all Divine powers—is omniscient, omnipotent, etc.—yet plays with the children in the street, and amuses Himself by making pools of water and moulding clay sparrows. When challenged for breaking the Sabbath, He claps His hands and His sparrows fly away. He is the terror of the places in which He resides. If boy or man offends, or contradicts Him, He smites the offender dead, or otherwise avenges Himself. He confounds His teachers, and instructs them in the mysteries of the Hebrew letters. When His pitcher breaks, He carries home the water in His lap. He aids Joseph in his carpentry by lengthening or shortening the pieces of wood at pleasure. The Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew gives a special series of miracles wrought by Jesus as a chiId in Egypt (chaps. xvii. to xxv. These chapters only are included in this volume). The Arabic Gospel of the Infancy gives the rein to fancy in stories of marvels and transformations, which, in their bizarre extravagance, remind of nothing so much as of the Arabian Nights.
3. Cycle of Pilate and Nicodemus. The evangelists give full narratives of the events of the betrayal, trial, Crucifixion, and Resurrection of Jesus. The excuse of silence, therefore, cannot be pleaded here. The apocryphal narrators, however, saw room for embellishment, expansion, and sometimes modification (see on Gospel of Peter below). Later, apparently within the Catholic Church itself, they produced a series of fictitious writings, bearing on the parts taken by Pilate, Nicodemus, Joseph of Arimathea and others, in these scenes of the Saviour’s suffering and triumph. First came a number of alleged letters and reports from Pilate, doubtful in date and origin, but none in their present form early. Then appeared in varying recensions the so-called Acts of Pilate or Gospel of Nicodemus, which certainly is not older than the fourth, and is possibly as late as