Woodbrooke Studies Christian Documents in Syriac, Arabic, and Garshuni (1927) Vol. 1
Woodbrooke Studies Christian Documents in Syriac, Arabic, and Garshuni (1927) Vol. 1
Woodbrooke Studies Christian Documents in Syriac, Arabic, and Garshuni (1927) Vol. 1
VOL.
I
STUDIES
WOODBROOKE STUDIES
CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS IN SYRIAC, ARABIC,
A.
MINGANA
WITH INTRODUCTIONS
BY
RENDEL HARRIS
VOLUME
1.
BARSALlBI'S TREATISE
2.
3.
4.
5.
CAMBRIDGE
W. HEFFER & SONS LIMITED
1927
TO
MR.
EDWARD CADBURY
INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
The
"
Woodbrooke
documents
"
Studies
in Syriac,
and
translations
of Christian
my own
collection,
time being,
is
in
Oak, Birmingham.
These Studies
the
will
appear
first
in serial
form
in
is
the columns of
"
Bulletin of the
John
Ry lands
Library," which
published twice
during the course of the year, in the months of January and July.
At
the end of each year they will be issued in a separate volume uniform
initial issue.
find
it
my
feelings of grateful
finan-
these studies
him
generous encouragement.
the
To my colleague, Dr. Henry Guppy, the editor of offer my sincere thanks for his painstaking interest in
"
Bulletin,"
A.
THE JOHN RYLANDS
MANCHESTER.
LIBRARY,
MINGANA.
The history
it,
be dealt with
engaged.
catalogue of
upon which
am
at present
vii
CONTENTS.
PAGE
Introductory Note
vii
Introduction
Text
in
Facsimile
Index of Proper
2-9
17-63
64-92
Names
93-96
9-16
Garshuni Text
.......
:
96-109
110-120
121
Facsimile of the First Page of the Paris MS. Facsimile of the First Page of the Mingana MS. Facsimile of the Canon of Ignatius
122
123
Jeremiah Apocryphon
Introduction
........
Mingana Syr. MS. 240 Paris Syr. MS. 65
: .
125-138
148-191
Text Text
in Facsimile of
in
192-216
Facsimile of
217-233
A New
Life of
Introduction
138-145
.
234-260
261-285
Garshuni Text
Facsimile of Page from Mingana Syr. Facsimile of Page from Mingana Syr.
286
.
287
145-147
288-292
.
Text
in
293-294
viii
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES.
CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS IN SYRIAC, ARABIC AND GARSHUNI EDITED AND TRANSLATED WITH A CRITICAL APPARATUS
BY A. MINGANA.
WITH INTRODUCTIONS
BY
RENDEL HARRIS.
FASC.
1.
(i)
(ii)
Treatise of Barsalibi against the Melchites. Genuine and Apocryphal Works of Ignatius of Antioch.
WE
no
may,
we
among
thistles
his
and
it
be asked whether
it
is
and churches
Hebrews would say, in view which came under his own observation).
Epistle
to
the
of
the inveterascence
We
have before us a
life
treatise
by one
who was
in the religious
and thought
of the Syrian
Church
but his
name
INTRODUCTIONS
is
3
of
scarcely
known
in the
literature
the dryest of dry persecution has accomplished a disintegration was insufficient to prevent. which many people know, or
piety
How
know, about Bar Salibi and his writings ? Why should we of his literary remains try to recall the author or search the dust heap
care to
for grains of possible gold ?
When we
in
is
one direction
Bar Salibi which we immediately receive an encouraging response. was not only a great ecclesiastic in a church that had passed its zenith,
he was also a great scholar
in the time of decline of the Syriac literature,
and being a scholar as well as an administrator, he had a great library, which he knew how to use as well as to value. Alas that it has It had many ancient works of great worth, not only the perished
!
!
made from
Greek
is
which have disappeared in the West. instance, it almost certain that he had a copy of the Diatessaron or Gospel
writers
of Tatian, to
For
Har?nony
which he
refers
he had also a copy of a work of Hippolytus of Rome, called Heads against Gaius which was lost in the West its value can be inferred
;
from
its
There was a
his critical
who in
gives us
this
of the Apocalypse. Bar Salibi from the lost and us to see that Gaius, many quotations helps early devotee of Higher Criticism was not, as Lightfoot supposed,
a mere phantom, a creation by Hippolytus of a straw-man for subsequent demolition, but a real man of flesh and blood, with a powerful
intellectual apparatus attached to his
anatomy.
Bar Sahbi's works, both in compass and in variety is his on the Scriptures covering the whole space from commentary Genesis to Revelation, and filled with patristic matter both Eastern
greatest of
The
and Western.
Complete copies are very rare, and we have the good whole in one of our Woodbrooke MSS. It
first
was
this
;
drew the
attention of
Western
scholars
seventeenth
4
century, from a
WOODBROOKE
MS.
in Trinity College,
STUDIES
Dublin
;
and
in recent times
the commentary on the Apocalypse, Acts and Catholic epistles, and in part the Gospels has been edited by Sedlac.ek in the series of Scriptores
Syri.
If
we may
German
be many
The
value of
treatise
which
;
we
no special
it
scriptural interest
its
it is
but
has a
own, inasmuch as the controversy which it reflects throws a good deal of light on the relations of the Greek and Eastern churches
in
Bar
Salibi's
own
day.
It
Roman
made
We
shall
have before
doctrine
Church with
God-and-Man
and
to
its
noble protest against the deification of the Blessed Virgin, next unparalleled record in the Mission fields of the far East
;
them
we
its
shall
its
God- Man
theology,
Christology, or as
called
by
the wise,
its
missionary zeal.
believers
lies
by the acceptance of the decrees of the Council of Chalcedon, which made other Syrian churches excommunicate on one side or the other, and at the same time obtaining protection as well as patronage by attachment to the State church and the Imperial city. They are known as Melchites, or Royalists, and if few in number and confined to
Palestine
for the
most
part, are
an aggressive minority
with the Ruling State and Dominant Greek Church at their back. shall not hear much of the Nestorians in our tract they are
We
it is
the
in
little
Melchite
the following
its
trying to put
arms round
its
big brother,
and
to
annex him
in reality
a half-anonymous monk,
to
one Rabban
'Isho',
its
who
the
Greek
Church and
Salibi in his
theology and rituals, and who will have the great Bar embrace, and will prove to him that he is both insignificant
INTRODUCTIONS
and wrong, a
terrible combination.
;
5
see presently the chief
We
shall
but
it
is
appointment ensue.
of
The
their
the
monly
little
in ecclesiastical
Probably the reader will say, as he watches bone of contention (as indeed happens comstrife), that, if this is Christianity, then I have
The
trivialities of
ritual will
have
proper attention, the supposed decencies of liturgical usage and the like we shall know all about the war, and what they killed (or exWhen we have finished our study, communicated) each other for.
;
we
Bar
infinitely little
on one
side,
of
what
We
still
shall
Salibi, but
more with
probably be impressed with the adroitness of his noble Christian spirit and temper,
East
;
worthy
and, even
if
we do
not feel
it
drawn
to his
Monophyite
doctrine,
we
shall
by
church, which he
political corruption.
knew
to
Now let
portion
is
which Bar
Salibi's
before us.
Rabban
'
Isho
union
tract to
which the
is
The
first
condi-
tion of re-union
must learn
;
how
to cross themselves
with two
fingers, as
and they must give up themselves with one finger, which is a dangerous
direction in
from
left to
Monophysite doctrine. They must also change the which the crossing is exhibited, and no longer operate Further, in making such changes, Bar Salibi will right
he has gone over to the majority. The suggestion provokes '* a noble protest from Bar Salibi we not be in the right with May t
find that
:
two
"
or three ?
The
tedium
discussion
is
fingers,
and
right-to-left
is
or
left-to-right crossing.
becomes very
relieved
made
to the question
two natures
in Christ.
Whether
they believe in
in serving
two natures
masters,
most assuredly
Salibi's point
two
is
From Bar
of view, that
He tells
6
like the
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
Vicar of Bray in the popular English song, changed his faith with every successive king. But, at last, unlike the profane Vicar, he realized that one must not change one's faith with the colour of the " " times, and besought people to Pity the salt that has lost its savour ! The argument over the two natures is resumed. Rabban 'Isho' is at
his best
when he
in
did not the Apostle tell us not to judge " another man's servant ? Did he not say Pray for one another," " " and not Anathematize one another ?
Bar
that the
he points out
Court Party
;
at
Constantinople do not
which they invoke they expel our people from their city, burn their and our books, suppress Meeting-places. Away from the city, they rebaptize our people as heretics whom Rabban 'Isho' proposes to annex
as believers. to
And
is
such
is
whom
it
Moslems
to build a
Mosque
in the city.
One may
It judge the value of their charity, by the range of its application. the Christian and embraces the Moslem unbeliever. passes by Syrian
Bar
Salibi goes
on
it is
inconsistent
on
the part of the Melchites and their friends to curse and bless in this
way, yet
it
power and
on the
faculty of
judgment
is
Christian,
and
is
also in the
Church a power
anathema.
of
excommunica-
tion.
is
Paul
is
clear
right of
A spirited defence
proceeds in favour of his doctrine that Christians are not to judge Christians, but that it is better to live at peace with every-
he discloses adversary the state of morals in the Imperial City and in the prominent church
body.
Salibi
now
on
his
of the city,
He
and shows what peace with anybody and everybody means. has now taken the Puritan position, and refuses fellowship with
liars,
murderers, adulterers,
and
thieves.
is
The
and
light that is
fierce
light indeed.
He
talks
an emasculated
clergy,
and
of adulterous
ventions of
Like
priest,
like
people
the city
is
full
of
INTRODUCTIONS
quisite
arrangement
made by
to
universal order
how
Bar
Salibi has a
was antecedent
to
its
was
had only the reading and interpretation of the Scriptures. The use of The Sirens had not come into the lustful melodies had not arrived. It was better to preach, teach, and convert, than to invent church.
melodies
like
sing
like
nightingales
or
up the
The
glory of the
new Rome
now emphasized by
of
quotes an apocryphal prophecy Jeremiah House, and the Latter City. This prophecy, he says, Bar Salibi disputes his text, and denies his stantinople.
He
about
Latter
refers to
Con-
interpretation.
?
Who
and
New
Jerusalem to worship
They go
sanctities
laid,
there to grub,
relics,
buy and sell. Do they boast of their the rod of Moses and the ark in which it was and
to
of
the
picture of Christ
the right
etc.
hand
Bar
Salibi
John the Baptist, which they use in consecrations, makes short work of these relics and the use to which
passes over to the question of authority in the
'Isho',
according to
Rabban
there
by God
just
as there
against heretics.
We were
displaced.
this
He
three in the
name
turns
on the power
has given to the Greeks, Mammon being called in as the chief witness to the divine election of the Greeks, and
God
per contra
of
the
divine
poverty-
stricken Syrians.
Bar
"
Gold and Grace did never yet agree " Religion always sides with poverty
!
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
into the
social
Mammon
crowd
Bar Salibi comes of poor folks occupy it. and holds up the Gospel. The case for the
box himself
and wealthy
wealth
Edessa,
Mammon
collapses.
The argument
is
varied
;
now from
to numbers.
You
few
a handful in
the
Greeks,
who
are
Bar
Greeks.
Is
it
Salibi wishes to
have a further
In
what
The
true rose
is
Does
the
further discussion
is
made on
which the Syrians make to the Trisagion of the words "who was crucified for us." The Greeks interpret the Trisagion of the Trinity,
the Father), Sanctus es omnipotens ( = the Son), Sanctus es immortalis ( = the Spirit) ? The Syrians refer all three
Sanctus es Deus
and can,
therefore, properly
add
"
which Bar
Salibi
makes
for the
how
the Trisagion
came
to
be
qui crucifixus es pro nobis. In the first instance it was Jesus and his Glory that were sought for in the sixth chapter of Isaiah, while the same chapter yielded the convincing anti- Judaic testimony in
regard to the blinded eyes and hardened hearts of the chosen people. Of the antiquity of this testimony there can be no doubt, seeing it is
Gospel
of
Mark (Mark
iv.
2)
Luke (Acts
his
xxviii.
26, 27).
we
have
this
"
when he saw
a sense that
common
in the
Thus
it
was
not the Trinity that the early Christians looked for in the
INTRODUCTIONS
Trisagion, but Jesus in Glory.
In that sense
it
9
was
quite proper to
add
"
The
addition
could
be made
without any
of belief
But what might be good theology in the first stratum of the deposit might be quite the opposite when a further plane of theological Bar Salibi retains what appears to be definition had been reached.
an early position
to Ignatius,
in
Christology
it
Liturgy attributed
supposed to have
Sanctus enim es, Deus Pater, Sanctus etiam unigenitus Filius tuus Sanctus etiam Spiritus tuus.
We cannot,
We
will
however,
hand Bar
will
and see
said
what they
make
There
to the
is
no doubt more
to cease
to
be
on
we know
less.
Greeks
from persecuting
whom
more harm
and
like
spirit
concludes by a challenge to his opponents generally to meet him in a public discussion, when he proposes to clear up any remaining difficulties. do not know whether this
He
We
off
a priori
we
its
many
cases the
Nothing so much narrows and dries up the heart as controversy does it must be admitted, however, that no controversial writer shows less sign of the threatened narrowness and
actual good resulting.
;
The above
profess
to
treatise is in
be related
some way
to
the
person of
Ignatius
his
of
city.
Around
name,
10
as in
WOODBROOKE
the parallel case of
STUDIES
Rome,
if
Clement
in
of
there
accumulated
so
much
spurious matter,
it
the
shape of
at,
interpolations
and ad-
ditions, that
is
not to be wondered
doubts should have arisen whether any of In the Ignatian matter could be referred to his time, place, or person. our own time the author of Supernatural Religion, Mr. W. R. " the whole of the literature ascribed Cassels, declared roundly that that to Ignatius is, in fact, such a tissue of fraud and imposture,
Renaissance of Criticism,
.
even
if
any small
original
element
exist
"
referrible to Ignatius,
it
is
impossible to define
statement.
it
his
We
we
are making to
Ignatian literature will have to be classed with the Ignatian Apocrypha, rather than with what Lightfoot shows to be canonical
Ignatiana.
Our
first
document,
is
be an actual
epistle of Ignatius,
who
carefully defined,
against misunderstanding
or possible confusion with later Patriarchs of his name, by the titles which belong to the first of the line, the designation of him as the
God-bearer
title
of
Nurana,
or the
Fiery
Even if the epistle should be condemned contemptuously Ignatius. as an obvious product of a later rhetorician, we shall be able to show
that there are traces of genuine Ignatian expressions in the text.
This
assuming
letter,
it
to
be
undoubted
letter,
fact that
from Ignatius
is
a genuine to the
Church
and
Antioch,
complete.
is
actually missing.
The
proof of this
interesting
fairly
In writing to the
Church
at
turn in report has reached him that matters had taken a favourable he begs the Philadelphians to appoint an the Church at Antioch
:
ambassador to take a message of congratulation to the Antiochenes. This must mean a written communication either from Ignatius or
from the Philadelphian Church.
passage
:
The
following
is
Ign.,
ad
Pkilad.,
c.
10.
"Seeing that in answer to your prayer and to the tender sympathy which ye have in Christ Jesus, it hath been reported
INTRODUCTIONS
to
me
that the
Church which
for
is
in
Antioch
of Syria
hath peace,
it is
becoming
to go thither as
God's ambassador,
that
he
may
congratulate
glorify the
together,
and may
Name."
Ignatius goes
on
Cilicia
good news had been brought to and by Rhaius Agathopus, who Lightfoot suggests, from the language
at
Smyrna, that he had already left Smyrna when the messengers from Antioch arrived, and that they then followed him to Troas. Assuming this to be the case, it is
Church
almost unthinkable that Philo and his companion should have had no letter to carry back from Ignatius himself, or that Ignatius should have
advised the churches to which he
was
and congratulatory messages on their own account, while he himself remained silent. There must be a letter or letters from Ignatius to Antioch, whether the Philadelphians and Smyrnaeans assisted and
joined in the correspondence or not.
The
natural thing to
happen
would be
Philo and Rhaius should immediately turn back and with them the felicitations of the bishop to his own Church. carry
that
special
is
official
messengers
:
The
message
to the
as follows
Ign.,
ad Smyrn.,
"Your
of Syria
unto the
Church which
is
in
meet that your Church should appoint for the honour of God, an ambassador of God, that he may go as far as Syria, and congratulate them because they are at peace,
it is
Antioch
their proper stature, and their proper bulk hath been restored to them. It seemed, to me, therefore, a fitting thing that ye should send one of your own people with a
letter, that
which by God's
join with them in giving glory for the calm had overtaken them, and because they were already reaching a haven through your prayers."
he might
will
Similar advice is given to Polycarp, as the bishop of Smyrna, and the suggested ambassador from Church to Church is described playfully
as
God's courier
the following
is
the passage
12
Ign.,
WOODBROOKE
ad. Polyc., "
c. 7.
STUDIES
through your prayers, I myself also have been the more comforted, since God hath banished my care. ... It becometh thee, most blessed Polycarp,
us,
is
in
Antioch
of Syria hath
and
to elect
you, who
to
is
who
shall
be
fit
bear the name of God's courier, to appoint him, I say, that he may go to Syria, and glorify your zealous love unto the glory
of
It
God."
letters are
embasssies, and two separate out of the question to suppose that he had himself nothing to say to the Church at Antioch. What
two separate
It is
Now
at
Antioch, for
it it
is
which made
central object,
had
Church.
In consequence
of
many
less
of the
members had
relapsed,
their return.
" Philo and his companions were, says Lightfoot, doubtthe bearers of the good news that the persecution at Antioch had
ceased."
things
This
may be
as outside
at
which suggest that there was trouble inside the Church as well it and around it. Lightfoot further remarks that the Church
"
had been previously weakened and diminished by the That would and defections consequent on persecution." dispersion of the Church but we explain the reference to the restored dimension
Antioch
;
for
an alternative reason
Church membership.
priests
an exhortation to
and
than a general exhortation addressed to all passages in it which seem to suggest an individual priest who has fallen the supposed letter suddenly becomes in the highest degree into sin An appeal is made which begins with and personal. eloquent
; ;
:
"
Who
"
envied you,
made you a
forni-
cator ?
INTRODUCTIONS
and the supposed
faithless priest is
13
addressed as
"You
"
who became
the prey of a
wolf
The person addressed has become a pagan, and is now "a " and so on, with much eloquence and force of mediator to idols
:
If it personal appeal, which the reader must estimate for himself. should be judged that the supposed faithless priest to whom the appeal
is
made
with that there has been a factious and perhaps an immoral person among the leadership of the Antiochene Church, who may even be a
rival
and contemporary of Ignatius himself. This is, of course, a In that case we should fall speculation which may not find support.
back upon Lightfoot's theory, that the persecution under Trajan had been general, as well as personal and particular.
Now
let
document and
and
see
what we can
pick up in the
First of all in a
way
of Scriptural references
we
Gospel
the salt
harmonized form.
is
At
salt
priest
compared
to
the
its
savour.
?
It
is
"
If
has
wherewith
be seasoned
thenceforth
land nor the dung, but it is cast out good and trodden underfoot by men." This is a harmonization of Matthew
for nothing, neither for the
and Luke.
If
we examine
the Tatian
Harmony,
either in the
Arabic
Dutch
we
we have
The
we
notice
is
that
he
is
"
wipe
This
is
off
Ode
of
Solomon
"
Wipe the dirt from off your faces, And love his holiness and clothe yourselves
There
is
therewith."
one expression
:
in
is
distinctly Ignatian
14
"
care
;
WOODBROOKE
We cannot
the souls redeemed
STUDIES
avoid answering for all those he confided to our by the innocent blood of God, and he
we
At
first
we
re-
member
Church
"
that
is
also Ignatian.
Ignatius
to the
Ephesians,
as
in the
"
"
(so Lightfoot)
fire
by the blood
of
God."
There
"
is,
blood of God," as Ignatian. It is well known that it is implied in the language of St. Paul to the elders of the Church at Ephesus (Acts " feed the Church of God, which He xx. 28) who are admonished to
" hath purchased with His own blood and on comparing the language " " to of our tract, we see the reflection of the shepherds of the flock
;
which
St.
Paul
refers.
So
it is
just
is
we
where Christians are spoken of as partakers the pure and precious blood of the Great God, This has a very Monophysite appearance, and
the term
"
shows, at
"
Blood
of
God
"
is
not theologically
colourless.
The next point that interests us, is that our supposed Ignatius is made responsible for the Wednesday and Friday fasts of the early
Church, and the question must be asked whether there
truth in the suggestion.
It is
is
an element of
not negatived by the observation that our document has the week-day fasts in an accentuated form, at least
for the clergy the
possibly of
problem is to determine if the fasts in question are Of their antiquity there is no doubt, Antiochian origin.
denied that they are " Let not your fasts be with the hypocrites, for they
Teaching of the Apostles : nor can it well be originally anti-Judaic, since the Teaching says
:
fast
Monday and
fast
Wednesday and
Jews and
Judaisers.
No
INTRODUCTIONS
of the particular
15
letters
days
any
displacement of the
as
what does appear, however, Sabbath by the Sunday, as Christians are described
;
"
living
Day
in place of
its
the Sabbath."
Thus
Teaching has
parallel in Ignatius.
At this point a curious parallel comes to light, for which we must now turn to our second document, the supposed Canon of Ignatius.
In this
Canon
fasts,
there
is
weekly
it
with an
For
instance,
we have
we observe the night of Friday, because in our Lord was seized by the Jews? It is further stated that on the night of Saturday they broke the legs of the robbers, in order that the
"
Sabbath might not begin for them (which must mean the Jews), and that they might not be condemned in the eyes of the law (which must
mean
Our Canon
is,
Ignatian
letters.
It
cannot,
Nor can it be however, be derived directly from the Teaching. derived directly from the seventh book of the Apostolical ConstituFor here tions, which works over the instructions of the Teaching.
the anti-Judaic reference has disappeared, and the fast-days are kept
in
There is, Betrayal and the Crucifixion. treatment has each writer the problem of however, some similarity of the fastfrom the in the days Jewish customs, but change explaining the explanations are not the same. conclude that the Canonist
commemoration
of the
;
We
is
working on an independent
line,
his reference
Now let
by
the night of
us see
the Canonist.
of all
we
our Lord
Wednesday in the Passion week next we are told was seized by the Jews on the night of Friday then
;
that
that
he descended into Sheol on the night of Saturday. (which must in this connection mean, we are to
night and Friday night,
to fast)
We are
fast)
is,
to observe
on Wednesday
and
"
we
is
we
are not
on Saturday.
"
There
much
"
got rid of
by reading vigil for night," and making the vigil anticipate the next day. For the Last Supper cannot be put on Thursday, in
without putting the arrest on Saturday, and the descent
this hypothesis,
16
into
WOODBROOKE
Hades on Sunday.
STUDIES
his
The
arrest of
binding by
the
Jews must take place the same day as the Last Supper. the Last Supper on Wednesday by the Oriental hypothesis
To
of
date
making
the day begin at sunset, would require that the Supper took place before sundown on Thursday, which is absurd. cannot make the " " " of into the afternoon of night Wednesday Thursday." So we
We
;
lost
his reckoning
The
and John
Church
of Antioch, to
apostles, Peter
which
Ignatius
is
supposed to
be writing.
These two
invited to join
have
It is certainly peculiar to an apostate priest. John associated with St. Peter in the presidency of the Church at Antioch. But there can be no mistake as to the intention of the
St.
writer, since,
little
later,
is
addressed as a
Where
shall
we
connecting these
two
While
these pages
press
two more
The
;
first is
the second
a genuine fragment of
the Epistle to the Ephesians, which does not appear in the collection of Lightfoot. So we have one more fragment of the lost Syrian
Version recovered.
PREFACES, EDITIONS
AND TRANSLATIONS.
BY A. MINGANA.
(i)
PREFATORY NOTE.
GIVE
accompanied by a
I
1171.
critical
the well-known
apparatus, of a very rare treatise of Dionysius Barsalibi, West Syrian or Jacobite writer who died in A.D.
treatise is
1
The
in
it
Baumstark, and no acquaintance with its existence is shown is by the early Syrian bibliographer who wrote a complete list of 2 Barsalibi' s works.
found
The
address
treatise is in
to,
Rabban 'Isho', a West Syrian monk of some had evidently shown some leniency towards the importance, who Melchites, and was about to leave, or had already left, his own community to join them. He had written a long letter to Barsalibi
a certain
on
this subject,
treatise.
it.
and
it
is
this lost
letter that
present
and
his
refutes
As
where
have
own
adversary begins,
believe that
experienced some difficulty in following his argumentation ; but I I have succeeded in overcoming the obstacles thrown in
our
way
I
in this matter,
clearness
my
have,
Rabban
text,
'Ish6''s text
by
the words
I
to
mark
"
in
the translation
in the
You
write
the
phrases in order to make it easier for the English reader to follow author's too concise, too disconnected, and sometimes obscure
reasoning.
1
Gesch. der Syr. Lit., pp. 295-298. Assemani, Bibl. Orient., ii, 210-21
17
1.
18
"
WOODBROOKE
" "
STUDIES
the
are
The Greeks assailed by Barsalibi are better known to us under name of Melchites, who in the West Syrian Orthodox Church
the
appellation
Chalcedonians," although generally styled " " Melchites is also very often ascribed to them.
The
Syriac
tegral part of
the treatise
of Syriac
is
found constitutes an
in the
in-
MSS.,
1
custody of the
Rendel Harris Library, Birmingham, where it has the class-mark Syriac MS. Mingana 4. It was copied in A.D. 895 by Deacon Matthew, from a very ancient MS. preserved in Tur Abdln, near the monastery of
'
Because of the
complete
tion to
first
rarity of the
MS.
and
have deemed
it
advisable to give a
facsimile of
its text,
errors
made
either
will
by the
or
by
An index of
proper names
be found
at the
end
work.
TRANSLATION.
We
will further write the ten chapters composed by Dionysius, metropolitan of Amed, who is the illustrious Jacob Bar
Salibi, against
Rabban
Rabban
'
Isho'.
The humble
and
his
God,
offers
you
his greetings
prayers,
!
'Isho*
may you be
in the
keeping of
Providence
Any work
from which spring good and gain for the souls of both
the speaker and the attentive hearer, is not to be hindered or silenced. These words we write at the beginning of our discourse to you, as we have read your conciliatory treatise which stands between truth and
In another place
we
it
raises.
So
far as the
it is
spiritual
more
advantageous to strive after undiluted truth and avoid ambiguity, those people who twist the facts and especially in our dealings with mix straw with corn, water with wine, and all kinds of impure alloys " Prove all things, The Apostle of the Gentiles has said with gold. See hold fast that which is good, and abstain from any form of evil."
:
'
how Paul
Thes.
Y.
21-22.
BARS ALIBI
that
19
all
which
is
teaching, as
flee
from
false
We are
truth lies
:
where
acknowledged to be wise and learn little by little from him, as Philip taught the eunuch of the Queen of Sheba, or he must read studiously the Books of the them the knowledge of truth. He who Spirit and acquire from
is
1
who
believes that he has attained truth from hearsay, or from the ravings
a seducer, or from the sight of an occurrence that happens to be in harmony with his beliefs, does not lean on truth but on a broken reed,
of
on a shadow
only.
But
it is
time
now
to
embark on our
subject.
CHAPTER
I.
On
You
you
in this
wrote
to us that neither
learn to cross
who cross themselves with two fingers. This, in the answer manner we will 'Isho', following An intelligent man like you should weigh his words in
:
Rabban
the balance
If you have not acquired a uttering them. subject from a book, nor learned it from nature, the two sources which
of justice before
embrace
all
the universe,
how
says
:
The Book
is
"
Remove
now
if
the landmark
them both we
naturally trespass
on the boundaries
3
fulfilled
it,
and
we
contend that
we
!
nature and the law, but to step in strange paths Do we not fear " then a rebuke from David who says When thou sawest a thief, then
:
thou consentedst with him, and hast been partaker with adulterers."
Among
1
'
the peoples
viii.
whom
The
xxiii-
is
injustice,
See Acts
Prov.
.
27.
Sheba with
5
Ethiopia.
xxii.
28 and
1
Cf Matt
v.
7.
Ps. L
8.
20
WOODBROOKE ESSAYS
;
many other abominations should we follow Sound judgement forbids it. Even those people whom you have mentioned, if they do not prove the truth they hold from nature and book, no one will ever induce himself to listen to them,
murder, immorality and
them
in
these ?
and
their
own
we who are right and we are walking in you is why we make the sign of the
But
that
one finger only. nature teaches us that the cross to which Christ was attached
was not composed of double pieces of wood stretched in its perpendicular and horizontal side, as a symbol to the two fingers used by the
Greeks
each
cross,
in crossing themselves,
side.
but had only one piece of wood on Further, the rod of Moses which was a symbol of the
that
brass
was one and not two like Finally, the crosses made of silver,
symbolized
on the walls are not fashioned by the peoples you mentioned in double perpendicular and horizontal lines, but in one line only as the symbol of one finger. These arguments from nature will suffice, and we will
now enumerate
That
"
universal Doctor,
John Chrysostom,
clearly
"
shows
this in
:
commentary on Matthew
l
Ye are bought with a price,' signifies the price on and it does not fit to be the servants of any your behalf, paid you " " man. (Paul) alludes by the word Price to the cross you should
(Paul's saying)
;
not
make
it
the sign of the cross with the finger in a simple way, but you
with will and with great faith and then if you on no be able to vile demon will way your forehead, print See how the Doctor speaks of one finger only prevail against you." and not of two or three. If we were to cross ourselves with two " " " or with two fingers." with the fingers fingers he would have said
should
first
it
;
make
in this
Further,
the
when the Apostle Thomas wished One who was crucified, he only desired
1
1
Cor.
vii.
23.
numeratum, Cogita, inquit, pretium pro neque enim simpliciter illam digito pretium vero crucem vocat Si hoc modo illam in efformare oportet, sed prius voluntate et multa fide. facie tua depinxeris, nullus impurorum daemonum contra te stare potent."
eris servus
;
:
Here hominum.
is
the
whole passage
"
:
ne
sitis
servi
Pat. Gr.
Iviii.
557.
BARSALIBI
print of the nails, because
print of the nails,
I
21
I
he said
"
"
:
Except
put
my
:
And when
first
Himself
to him,
He
Reach
several.
From
cross
fingers but
these
we may
upon
oneself or
The
Greeks, however,
who
believe in
two
We
make
two
Christ."
wrote
them
suffice us to
say
If
other as two fingers are, they have no unity, and the Doctors of the
that the
Word was
two
united to
His
flesh as fire is to
Further,
fingers,
one
in substance (ovcri'a),
and
Son
is
of the
and
this
blasphemy.
We will
divinity
Greeks as follows
to
it
was attached
in
His
He
was
you show
natures.
that
He
cross
and
His two
nature
one, and
You are thus Theopaschites, because with you crucify God also. As to us, we believe that as
the cross
is
the
human
is
Christ
only
the
and this we You write The sacrament of the sign of the cross of Word God who became flesh and came down from
; :
be made with one finger have learned from both nature and book.
is
to
consists in
heaven to
to the
earth,
right
left
hand and
We
light, as
you
write, because
we make
up
the sign of the cross from right to left ; everyone knows that darkness is the very antithesis of light, and that if the latter is mixed
in the
former
it
becomes swallowed up
little
2
in
it
in
3
the same
of
way
as
the bitterness of a
1
sweet water, or
for
22
that of
WOODBROOKE
a
little
STUDIES
in
myrrh or wormwood
the right ?
honey.
left
Let
hand
drive
away
Our Lord
He will
set
the sheep on His right hand and the goats on His left Saviour demonstrated that the right cannot expel the
in this our
left,
but those
left, move, out of their from the right hand to the left which is that of the goats, and are counted with the robber who was on our Lord's left. But see how in the consecration of the elements and in the final
from right to
make
us,
from
left
to right,
and
"
in this
way
twenty-four peoples use two fingers," but your number did not reach even ten. Do not listen, therefore, to some
You
wrote
have with us twenty-four peoples. Further, truth is not always with the majority. Consider that there are seventy different peoples, and that those who follow the gospel are less numerdeceivers
that
who say
we
who
are
still
pagan
we
have.
In the time of
of the
Abraham and Moses there was Hebrews, who worshipped God, and the
worshipped This
idols,
had
suffices for
CHAPTER
II.
A /so
You
others ?
wrote
one
"
:
What
cross with
finger ?
Could we
2
word should be
in
established at the
mouth
three."
of
two
or three witnesses,
and
your words are true, it follows than wherever there are several people holding an opinion, they have more truth than one people and this leads us, as we wrote in the first chapter, to the assumption that
If
;
the Gentiles had more truth than the Jews, and that
Abraham was
^att.
xxv. 33.
Matt,
xviii.
16.
BARSALlBI
in
23
error because
Our
it
Lord's sentence
is
"At
the
two witnesses or
three every
to
it
;
word
he should be
and
rightly.
You write
"
:
Is it
man
should cross
light,
which
it
is
the side of
and
then pass away darkness, than " to cross himself from the side of darkness and pass it over his face ?
drive
If
darkness and
tell
light
are
is
defined
by the
right
horizontally,
ourselves,
me what
consists in
which
You
means
light
light and the bottom one darkness, and that a man first takes and comes down to darkness, and then takes light again to another
darkness.
thus
two
lights
not a
happy
it is
both of
end
of all our
it is
works should
be on the
to say, good,
and
the sign of the cross with the side of the right hand, and not with the side of the left which is, according to the words of our Lord, that of
the goats.
Further,
we
two
lines in its
maintain that the cross of the Greeks has not only horizontal side, but four lines. In the first act of cross-
ing themselves they form their cross from top to bottom with two fingers, and then in making the horizontal part of the cross, they form it, also
with two
fingers,
from right to
horizontal
left,
and
backwards
to the right.
The
part
two
lines,
nay, even four lines, in counting the two fingers. put it, had driven away the darkness of the left
right, return
its
Those who,
as
you
by
now
left,
darkness which they carry to the right, so that they become involved
24
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
in thick darkness in
both their right and left. If they were consistent form their cross from right to left, they
left
hand, because
in this
way
would have been more natural and it would not have been necessary for them to move their hand twice over.
Our
ecclesiastical
what they wrote concerning the Emperor Constantine, day in which the sun was hottest, he saw in heaven a column of light in the shape of a cross, on which there were " the words By this sign thou shalt conquer," and after the pattern
historians in
cross.
Now
of
?
Was
it
in the
shape
like the
two
fingers, or in the
in the
shape of double
columns, two
why
is
which stretched perpendicularly and two horizontally, not the fact mentioned in any ecclesiastical history ? If the
of
column
Greeks
of light
finger,
was
in the
with one
?
why
shape of one column only, corresponding 1 should we not have greater right than the
And why
do
?
should
2
we
not
make
only,
and from
left to right as
on the child with a collyrium-pencil which has one point only and not two points, which would correspond with the two fingers, and
move
from
left to right as
we
do,
right to
Had
*'
:
You
write
I
As we heard and
saw,
all
whose names
Greek, make
two
fingers
and
we have
never heard that any of them has made it with one finger." You have not attained yet the age of seventy years, and consequently you could not have seen Athanasius the Great, Basil, Gregory
Nazianzen, John Chrysostom, Cyril of Alexandria, and others. might believe you when you say that you heard, but who can believe
We
should not, therefore, have written that you that you saw their books, how did you then write
(copyist's inadvertence).
You
BARSALIBI
nature
25
previously that you had not learned this either from book or from
?
Is
it
you
assert
now
If
because you forgot what you wrote previously that that all of them made the sign of the cross with two
seen, tell
fingers ?
us in which
book and
in
which
treatise ?
So
far
as
we
are
concerned
us.
You
why
only ?
Since the Armenians profess one nature in Christ, are they not ordered to make the sign of the cross with one finger "
write
:
"
Some
some
of
like the
of the
with two
fingers,
and some
them with
all their
hand,
only those
who make
to
two
fingers
who
except those
Further, the
who wish
throw
after
dogma
went
belief
;
of
one nature
in the
Word
are
that
became
flesh,
us
and
after their
own.
They
somewhat
in
on the one hand they believe in one Lord, and in one nature the Word who became flesh, and on the other they believe in two
natures in
Him,
would
readily reject,
were
You
fingers,
write
"
:
We
who make
two
do we
believe in
God
two natures
how
then do
believe something,
with two fingers ? In your mouth you and with your hand which makes the sign of the The Greeks at any rate assert that something else.
in Christ.
If this is
not
so,
show us then the sacrament of the two fingers. How can you mix up two incompatible propositions in saying "We believe like the ** orthodox Syrians, and we make the sign of the cross like the Greeks ?
1
Remove
mtddaim.
26
This amounts
WOODBROOKE
to saying,
;
STUDIES
and untruth."
us,
"
1
We accept
if
truth
No man
;
we
we
are liars
?
you
who will
believe you
How
of
who
believes in
in
two
natures,
them
who makes
makes
it
the sign of the cross with one finger and the other
fingers,
who
be
in
equally right ?
You
believe in
write
"
:
We
should
two
few Franks,
It is
all
Christians believe in
two natures
rising king.
When
it
was
:
not good to forsake truth and change with the times, he wrote " brother, no one in your Pity the salt which has lost its savour." if they are position should say that he does not reject the Greeks
right
rejected,
;
your own
if
people
are,
therefore,
you
;
also,
tell
and the Syrians are rejected, no one because you are a Syrian from us and not from
us now,
if
our enemies
in
but
you know, which are the two natures The Franks and some others call
natures the Word God and the body with a soul which to Himself, but the Greeks think otherwise, and their story on
;
He
united
this subject
if it ever becomes clear, is a long one, and not even yet quite clear I know and I am convinced that you will never accept any Melchite.
Further,
how
all
Christians believe in
two natures
except us and the Armenians, while the Egyptians, Nubians, Abyssinians, the majority of the Indians, and the country of Libya which
13
in the
time of Dioscorus
3
was composed
of
five
hundred
parishes,
and
St.
Dioscorus,
and
Matt,
vi.,
24.
in
the
mouth
of
West
Arabs.
See
my Spread
of
refers to episcopal
in
sees, but
who
500 bishoprics
Libya
BARSALIBI
Even the Greeks when brought
Athanasius the
believe like
is
27
words
l
of
them
Wise
it
are put to
shame and
flesh
;
who became
this
and
they believe in
like ourselves,
but they
explain
away
the expression
"
"two
and give a meaning natures of their own to the words used by Cyril the Great, and pretend that he really meant two natures, and this in spite of the fact that those
contrary to the teaching of the Doctors,
of
the East
'
Word who
and
fact that they are not versed in any other language but Arabic
Let
now
the subject
<
end
here.
CHAPTER
III.
On
he
is
You
write
Why should we
in
all ?
We
do not agree with them not reject them and consider them
See how
from us
this
the matter of
two
natures, but
we
should
as heretics."
discloses
I
who
differ
in their faith.
will
now
Are
the Syrians
wrong
?
If
?
if
If
them completely
Chalcedonians
?
And
you
refuse to believe in
you should
opposed
to
orthodox Syrians.
in
As
that
darkness, and good health to illness, so repellent and cannot remain concomitantly
one
who
believes in
two natures
in
opposed
flesh.
to the one
who
You
two are opposed to each other, how you do not believe in two natures like them,
in in
Neither in the fifth nor presumably in one Christ, in one Son. had the Christological terms of person and nature both Greek and in Syriac the fixed meaning that we give them in our days.
I.e.,
and a
of
Monophysites
in
West
Persia,
the Arabs.
28
and
at the
WOODBROOKE
same time not
reject
STUDIES
?
them
You
who
holds the two ends of a rope and is unable to climb up with any of them. You write " should we not accept them ? The Apostle ' said art thou that judgest the servant of another ? To his
:
Why
Who
2
Pray for one and he did not say anathematize.' Your words would have been very true, if only the Chalcedonians would listen to you. For your sake we shall compromise and accept them but come now to Melitene which is not under their power
falleth.'
'
own
lord
he standeth or
He
'
also said
'
another,'
and
see
how
like
falls
wolves.
Anyone who
through
(and joins them), they 3 heretics and untruthful, and baptize again, and they openly call us out of their own free will they do not allow anyone to enter their
churches.
I
his unstability
and weakness
Were it not for a reason that I will arrogance they did not desist. not disclose, and for the fact that they would have been sneered at by
outsiders,
I
their falsehood,
been despised by
Now
no church
of their
repair in
it
your imagination to the city of their pride. contains a mosque for the Mohammedans, but
You
it
has
out
Do
?
is
they do
this
wickedness
By
their actions
they show
of the
Mohammedans
orthodox
faith of ours.
years ago, in the time of Ignatius of Melitene, we had a church in Constantinople, but impelled by Satan they took possession of it, and their Patriarch of that time ordered our books that were in it and the church vestry, and the holy chrism, to be burnt
in the middle of the bazaars.
In that very night that
lost his life.
About a hundred
Patriarch
was
4
struck
by a sudden
illness
and
What do you
say about
!
deprived them of their power not have left a single Christian would If they had the power they alive, as their fathers did in the times of yore. " As to the quotation that you brought forth to the effect Who
these ?
who
Rom.
xiv. 4.
Cf. Col.
i.
3,
9;
iii.
Heb.
xiii.
18.
3
*
Through
the
Salju^s.
BARSALIBI
art thou that judgest the servant of another,"
it
29
has not the significance
If it
that
you
attribute to
it,
and
it
were,
should not be allowed to bring an accusation against the Jews and the pagans, or to reprove the immoral people and the
we
in these cases
and
tell
"
:
Who
"
?
are
of
but for the tranquillity of your conscience disclose for you the mind of the Apostle.
another
am
going to
Moses, and not to eat the food that that law considered to be but the Gentiles who had believed in Christ used to eat unclean
everything.
Christians
disturbance arose on
this
account
between Jewish
and
Christians.
Paul then
Jews who had believed, and he maintained that food does not bring men nearer to God nor farther from Him why do you force, there;
fore,
added
He meant by these words that as weak eateth herbs." He you Jews are weak in faith you distinguish between this and that food (as a weak stomach does) with regard to herbs, but he who is strong
in faith eats everything
"
and despises
distinctions
between foods
"let
not him which eateth not judge the Christian that eateth, for God " ~ that is to say, He has made him to be related hath received him
;
to
Him
?
and not
to the
law
3
;
you, therefore,
Jew,
why do you
judge him
him
not to
? He is the servant of God, how dare you then judge he standeth, that is to say by faith, he is to his Lord and you and if he falleth, as you believe, because he does not
If
;
observe the legal distinction between the foods, he is also to his own Lord. This is in short terms the meaning of the sentence of the
Apostle.
we are commanded to pray for one another, it does not mean that we are commanded to pray for a man to go astray from the truth of the faith and walk in error nor are we
to your other point, that
;
As
commanded
call all
O
"
God,
Paul
men and
1
bring them
xiv. 2.
to Thyself.
'
As
2
to
your saying
xiv. 3.
Rom.
Rom.
30
:
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
" did not say anathematize ;" but Paul did say : If somebody should unto that other than which we you preach preached unto you, let What answer do you want us now to give to him be anathema." " Paul ? He said Let him be anathema," and you say that we should not anathematize.
:
Credo
"
And
in the
anathematized
"
Arms and
Sabellius.
and
one Holy Ghost the Lord and vivifier of all, who said, proceeds from the Father," etc., till the end of the Credo ; and they anathematized the Macedonians. Then again two hundred and fifty
in
And
Emperor Theodosius
and
faith
new
profession of
nor did they add anything to the Credo in unum Deum, but they said that the faith of the two previous Councils was sufficient ; and they enacted in the Synod a Canon of anathemas and curses
against
anyone
it,
who would
2
introduce a
new
it
;
faith,
or
thing to
and
after anathematizing
Then
Council of Chalcedon.
the steps of the
pressure brought upon them by the wicked Emperor, and by his accursed wife, Pulcheria, and by other heretics who were present
there, such as Theodoret, they trespassed against the
anathema
begins
:
of the
"
We
;
and
in the
They
thus
made
and then they defined the two natures. Now if the Greeks are anathematized,
first
it
is
Council
it
us from
who anathematize them what blame Where did you hear in the faith of
;
then attaches to
the ancients the
?
mention
Cetera.
of
the
two
natures,
Et
1 2
Gal.
i.
8.
Diodore
of
of Mopsuestia.
BARSALIBI
CHAPTER
IV.
the Greeks.
'
31
On
and Habits of
this subject
We
of them (Syrians) constitute ourselves the judges of Christians ; some we make pagans and some others heretics. What would be better for
to live in peace with everybody." honourable a very beautiful and praiseworthy thing, this is known from the sentence uttered by one, but not all peace " I am come not to cast our Saviour peace on the earth but sword ; for I am come to set a father at variance against his son, and a
us to
do would be
is
Peace
Learn, therefore, that peace with daughter against her mother." immoral passions and with the enemies of truth drives us away from
God.
The
'
theologian
says
"A
just
war
is
Examine well
is
who
not advantageous.
Now who
A
4
pagan is much better than a Christian who forsakes the true faith and follows strange religions, and is unjust, immoral, adulterous, a
murderer, a
liar,
Go now
to the Capital
of
which you are so proud and see how much immorality prevails in it, " and what is still more terrible, how they call immorality father."
with you foodstuffs of any kind and see how they will steal them from you and swear that they have not done so. " Let it be also known to you that the word Greek" is expressed " in their language by Hellenics," which further means "pagan." What blame attaches to us from a fact to which they themselves bear
Bring also to
it
6
witness that their true names are "Hellenes" and "Hellenism," which mean "pagan" and "paganism" respectively? The name " " Romans does not belong to them but to the Franks, and it is
'
name
of
"
Rome"
their
Matt.
x.
35.
Gregory Nazianzen.
Here
Deo
Melius enim est the whole passage Pat. Gr., xxxv. 487. disjungente."
is
:
"
Read aina
for
aikanna.
this
An
lance of
6
kind
still
Read meddaim
Cf. Arabic
rum.
32
ancient king
;
WOODBROOKE
and the Greeks
STUDIES
it
unjustly stole
from them.
What
does the word "heresy "mean except heterodoxy," or holding of another theological opinion ? He, therefore, who adds to, or subtracts
from, the theological opinion of the ancients
is
"
an
heretic.
So
far as
we
are concerned
we
good habits and good laws which they have now what good habits do the Greeks possess ? Is it the habit of eating fish and drinking wine in Lent ? Or is it that other habit of theirs by which they rebel
against
defile
like
women,
in emasculating them,
?
and
many
abominations
What
is
still
more
terrible is that
said
Paul has they ordain such men priests and bishops. l "I permit not a woman to teach," and what is the difference
between a
is
woman and
a neutered
man
we
Not
wrote
at length elsewhere.
is
Which
one.
strong in
it
There
in
it
the
beat the weak, and the rich plunder the poor their soldiers enter anywhere they fancy, plunder and rob and misconduct
themselves with the wives of other men,
who
them.
You
Gospel
Easter
;
wrote
"
:
They have
arranged
rites of
prayers, canons
and
lessons to
and what they read here is read in every other Church of theirs. They have also composed Canons and Cathismata and 2 stickera, and have written a book which turns on eight echadia.
If
one
is
rites
which
rites
;
similar
indeed the Torah was not read by everybody, but only by the elders and the priests, and the prophetical Books were only read on some
special days,
in
in
every
in
were offered
one
place.
David
ii.
in his
days
set
two
H
2
Tim.
12.
i.e.
tones, tunes.
The
Further, Canons, Cathismata and Stichera are well-known prayers same community. 3 Read bhadh for biyadh.
BARSALlBI
of
33
whom
be
others.
to
used to sing two hours and were followed by a relay of two Coclions ( = Cyclii) and various kinds of tones never ceased
in use in the
Temple
and
rites of
a similar kind.
and the Jews possessed other enactments Why then we Christians do not follow
the Jews ?
their
tunes and
For crucifying the Son they were humbled in spite of It is not through catechismata and stichera rites.
Kingdom
:
of
of
"The
was
fear of
God
is
the beginning of
different
one,
no harm and wrong can possibly attach that lesson from it on a special occasion.
anyone who
reads this or
Muhammad,
their
munddis
or
same words here and anywhere else, and none of them adds anything to them or subtracts anything from them, but no Christian praises them
for this rite.
Lo
tones,
are
devoted
of
to
prayers
for
repentance
Wednesdays
;
the
God, Thursdays to the to the of and Mother to the Doctors, God, Apostles martyrs, and to to Cross the and the dead Fridays Saturdays to the Mother of
; ;
Mother
to the martyrs
God,
to the martyrs
The
Greeks
;
month the eight echadia like the Kabbelai Mar^ with the rest of the
M^irane with the rest of the iidakhraith are even and it was only the wealth of the devotions of the
rite in this
way.
See now
how
from what
night,
the Greeks have no special prayers for the night, apart they regularly recite in the morning and in the evening, at
;
and in the day-time but the Syrians who are endowed with wealth of devotions Kdla which was have also the Shuhlaph great
recited
by the
ancients,
the Madhrashe",
the
Ma'nyatha,
the
KaU of itdakkraith,
prayers in the
^ror. ix
2
10.
This and
the following
of
West
Syrian breviary.
34
WOODBROOKE
1
STUDIES
Canons,
and the 'Inyant. The fact that and have something which
first
rest,
because
it
in-
spiritual vigour,
and secondly
to
because
it is
be
glorified in different
ways
in different countries
and towns.
: if
you
tell
them mistakes or
heresies,
but
if
they
why
bat 2 and
Klnatha ?
The Greeks
have
different
Canons,
Stichera, and
Cathismata
in different countries,
and
myself saw in
for
at
Antioch recited
the
saints,
were
in other countries, as
and the same thing happens with them happens also with the Franks, the Armenians
;
and other
persons.
Christians,
countries
and
What harm
"
is
Maksa ?
It
contains
mul turn
in parvo,"
Now
and has been arranged for the sick, and at one that it has been established everywhere you
and
of
fulfils all
see that
it
the requirements of
Mother
God,
and
to the
dead.
into the
"
Not everyone
:
that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter that doeth the will of
Kingdom, but he
it
my
Father which
is
in heaven."
Let
also be
and the
This
is
rest
known to you that the Canons, the Cathismata have entered into the Church as something supererogatory.
the fact that in the days of the Doctors, there
known from
was
only reading and interpretation of the scripture in the Churches, and there were not found in it melodies and harmonious modulations which
create lust in the hearers.
When
St.
madhrasha 6
;
The West
"
some
are called
2
Syrian" and some others "Greek." Penkitha is the name of the West Syrian Breviary.
Matt.
vii.
:
3 4
5
Here Here
21. musical tunes and melodies with metrical compositions. didactic composition in poetry.
BARSALlBI
35
And Mar through which he destroyed Bardaisan's lustful Kinatha. the Severus recited ma'nyatha against the poets and against 'onyatha 1 And John Chrysostom arranged the stichera of the Greek Sustius.
against the Arians
used to deceive
who had composed 'onyatha through which they The same may also be said of the the simple folk.
Canons, etc., which really did harm to the Church, since they have " been in it the cause of the cessation of the reading and interpretation
of scripture
and the
art of preaching.
Show me
and the
if
in the time of
the
readApostles there were musical tones and 'onyatha, apart from the
ing
and
interpretation
of
scripture
3
art
of
teaching
and
In the
penkiyatha
;
Lent
it is
said
Moses,
Elijah
and
"
in
the office
etc.
is
;
of
Palm
in the
Sunday
office
it is
written
The
children glorified
Him,"
and
of
the
Passion
Week
there
is
Blessed
Thy
passion,
Lord."
Let
mystery
it
of every festival
be known to you that the Syrian writers showed the in the words of the office which they wrote
for it, and they wove all its history in the Kinatha, in order to teach It was quite legitimate for them the hearers the mystery of the festival. to have written the office of the festivals and commemorations in a
prayers were directed only to penitence, but they wished to put variety in the ritual. If, for instance, the Fathers had not said in the breviary of the time of Lent that so-and-so had fasted, others
way
that
its
imitated
the
ancients
and
fasted
if
they had
how
of sin
the
wound
if
of the sinners
was
healed, those
who
treat-
to
any medical
ment and
they had not told how our Lord entered and was Jerusalem praised by children, the children would not have striven to emulate their praise if they had not concerned themselves
to penitence
;
with Zechariah, David, Ezechiel and the Prophets, one would not have known who prophesied about the Christ that he would ride on a she-ass
and
his
enter the
Holy City
if
Sic Cod. Is he the neo-Platonic bishop Synesius (375-430) wrote several hymns in Greek ? or is he Methodius the hymn-writer died about 311 ?
-
who who
Read
36
of the Father,
for us
;
WOODBROOKE
and Isaac
that of the Son,
figure of the
;
STUDIES
who was
offered as a sacrifice
figure of
that
Christ
of
Now
has been said by St. Ephrem, " and he derived it from the prophet who said Rejoice and be glad because your Saviour is mighty." The Train Talmldhe s is derived
ing of all these.
'
The Hdhau
'Amm^
from the Gospel. You say that these two prayers have no driving power and no savour. If there is no driving power in the prophets
and
Apostles whose very words have been borrowed by the Fathers in the composition of these prayers, we will admit that the
in the
;
former have not got them either are believed in and accepted by
but
if
all
Christians,
we must
cetera.
Et
CHAPTER V.
On how
tones
melodies do not bring any profit and those who hear them. them sing
and
to those
who
Now
subject
of
:
let
us
come
"
To-day
that
...
you encomium
is
not
quoteall
of
Octoechus*
What you
Fathers in
have mentioned has been arranged by the ancient 6 the matter of Ma'niyatha and the service of nocturns, as
we
and
The
Church, however,
is
in
no need
of them,
would
of canticles
profit to
suggest to you and to every God-fearing man that instead and prayers containing musical melodies which bring no the singer nor to the hearer, to make use of the Books of the
Testaments and the writings of the Fathers, and to Both the read a chapter from each one of them at every festival. Be reader and the hearer will derive profit from these lessons.
Old and
New
2 3
Beginning of a prayer which means Cf. Is. Ix. 16 and Ixv. 18, etc.
"
:
Peoples rejoice."
"
Two
Read bsharba
BARSALlBI
concerned with
Peter said
:
37
this
"Be
good work rather than Canons. The Apostle ready to give answer to every man that asketh you
"
l
;
had
transgression,
And
'
their sins."
It is
not good to
forsake the
words
God and do
good worldly
You
interpret,
see
how
one
who
against us,
and not
to sing
and
to contrive musical
like sirens,
nor to bray like asses, nor to utter sweet sounds like nightingales, nor to sing like swans, nor to coo like doves, nor should
institute
we
for so-and-so,
and
in
this
to excessive food,
and
broaden our gullets to drink, and thus pander to the proclivities of our " alimentary desires and minister to occasions of sin and say To-day is a feast, we must therefore eat and drink." To pagans belong
:
festivities,
and
drink,
and
to Christians fasting,
scripture.
In
their
festivities
the
Greeks
who
be also known to you that musical tunes and melodies with Canons, stichera and the rest of them have come down to the Greeks from outsiders, that is to say from the pagan Odysseus who having
Let
it
experienced the sweetness of the song of sirens which dwelt in the sea of Scylla, perceived a desire to learn it and because these sirens sang men used frequently to throw themselves into the sea, bewitched as
;
they were by their song, and were eaten by them. Odysseus, however, resorted to a stratagem he plugged with wax the ears of the sailors, and
:
some men
floated
of iron, and they saw them they began to sing songs of various melodies, but those men whose ears were plugged did not hear the sweetness of the song, and those who were attached with
tied
his
him and
sea.
on the
When
chains of iron could not throw themselves into the sea because of their
being strongly tied, and so they little by little learned the melodies 4 and introduced them to mankind. Examine, then, the origin of the
M
3
Peter
iii.
1 .
15.
2
1
Cor.
xiv. 19.
Is. Iviii.
Change
4
the
yodh
into
waw.
38
melodies.
It is
WOODBROOKE
really the sirens
STUDIES
to take pride rather than
which have
the Greeks.
You
"
say
:
It is
not
fair to
make
orthodox people." If Christians were such as they, what would you be If yourself ? are a answer that rise and to them and see Christian, you you up go
call ourselves
what they
If
If
you
they are not heretics, then the Syrians are. no one from either side will
believe you, neither from our side nor from the side of the adversaries.
They
call
us heretical Jacobites,
and we
call
them Chalcedonians,
you have enough power in you like your Nun, to reconcile them with one another, we ourselves will help you in everything. But what union is there between light and darkness ? Many believed that it would be good
Nestorians,
heretics.
1
and
If
of
and
When Ahab
2
saved
his life,
God
:
his people,
and he
was
rejected from power, and Hazael killed him. You write " heart does not allow me to anathematize
My
If I do not accept anyone, not even Nestorius and his companions. them it is solely because they are alien to, and rejected from, the
Church
I
of
God."
to
am tempted
easily
be amazed at your simplicity, brother, how it You contended that your heart 4 does not contradicts itself.
allow you to anathematize Nestorius and his companions, and you have Anathema is a at the same time unknowingly anathematized him.
God, and when you have separated them from the Church and rejected and denounced them, you have anathematized Do you then believe that anathema means anything else ? them. " " The word anathema is used in two meanings. The first meaning
separation from
is
"
:
'
'
every
anathema
which
is
In Syriac Isho
2 3
For Samuel
Cf.
1
of the
MS.
;
4
5
Read
2 Kings
viii.
15.
"Him"
means Benhadad.
same word hirma is used in the Scriptural passages used "anathema" and "offering, vow, sacrifice." This both means and below, See Pseudodistinction is a favourite theme of some Jacobite writers.
In Syriac the
Philoxenus in
p. 61.
my Early Spread
BARSALlBI
*
'
39
"
anathematized
by a man."
:
Here
"
anathema
means
"
vow
"
:
The second kind of anathema is i.e. every vow vowed by a man. "He who does not love our Lord Jesus that spoken of by Paul " " " The first " anathema means vow Christ let him be anathema."
:
and
"sacrifice,"
God
"
and
is
"
and the second anathema means "separation from This last kind of rejection from the Church of God."
anathema
by the Doctors
Greeks have a heavenly King, and God gave " them also an earthly king, how can they not be proud ? 3 If brother. It is written that we cannot serve two masters,
You
write
"The
they
if
call
God
their
and
is
they seek the earthly one, they forsake the heavenly one.
This
also
Samuel
have not rejected thee, but they have rejected me," You see Creator and God, "that I should not reign over them."'
king, the Jews
who
if
has an
God, and do not contend that a man has two " love the one and hate the he would be bound to
it
was
so
to
and hold
one and despise the other." Every pride in an earthly kingdom is from the evil one it is he who overcomes the passions and lays the body under the power of the
;
soul
who
is
a king.
and they do not for that take pride in their souls, and the Persians and the Arabs have all kings, and we could not say that they have The true kingdom is that which is greater right than we have.
established in orderliness
and
of Constantine,
rest of the
Franks.
Now
Roman kings, that is to say the kings look back at the kings of the Greeks of our
days,
kings.
how
them.
they commit adultery and fornication more than the pagan to take two wives, they take
money, which
1
the root of
1
all
evil,'
xvi.
of
is
Num.
1
xxx. 2.
viii.
Cor.
Matt.
vi.
24.
4
6
Sam.
7.
is at
The
calls
author
"
he
7
Franks
vi.
"
some pains
between
"
Romans
"
"
whom
(Arab.
Rumamyun,
Syr.
Romaye), and
he
calls
"
(Arab.
1
Rum,
Tun.
Syr.
Romaye, Yaunaye)
whom
"
Byzantines
Greeks."
10.
40
1
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
and unbounded adultery, not only among laymen and No king, no head, and no lay women, but also among the clergy.
idolatry,
wear
they pile up gold like stones, and they enjoy material things, and 2 fine linen and purple instead of wool. They ride also on
powerful mules and bathe in the public baths like women, and relish different kinds of food. Faith without works and good conduct is
dead.
3
El
cetera.
CHAPTER
VI.
Against the Pride of the Chalcedonians, and on the Building of their Capital.
Let us proceed now with haste and examine the fallacy Greeks on this subject.
of the
You
foreseen
write
'
The
beautiful
has
God
showed him her towers, her beauty, her ramparts, and her buildings and said to him Do not weep over Jerusalem, lo I have found a
house better than
tongues to
its
Jerusalem, and
people and
all
glory
shall
and
it
happened
as
he said."
we now speak, and on whom shall we pour our wrath ? On those who foolishly utter fallacies like these, or on In what passage did Jeremiah prophesy people who listen to them ? about Constantinople, and who is the commentator who understood
5
To whom
it
in that sense ? and according Jeremiah was taken to Egypt some people, he even composed his Lamentations over Jerusalem
;
to
in
Lamentations that he prophesied Egypt. about the Metropolis, nor about a town that would stand on its site.
It
is
If
like this,
is
how much
more
hair ?
be so on the
subject of faith
which
thinner that a
Col.
\ 2
iii.
5.
Or
sackcloth.
Cf. the
wool garment
from
is
penitence.
3
Mohammedan
Sufis,
and
Suf"
wool."
17.
Lamentations.
BARS ALIBI
They raved
Euphemia
their faith their
41
to
also
another
falsehood
it
was
the
the martyr
the articles of
that they
of
Council of Chalcedon.
show
have received
from a dead
woman
and
to this effect
is
unreal.
The
fact
is
that
assembled
in
the temple of
Euphemia, and
the
Tomos
of faith
were
unholy Leo and the other book containing the articles but it is nowhere written
; ;
of the powerful pillars, pure such as and Theodore of truth, Joannes Damascenus, Theophilus, Harran did not write these lies, I mean the untruth concerning Jeremiah and Euphemia, because they knew that they were lies. their
in writing that
and
Damascenus, however, indulged in another falsehood a child rose up to heaven and heard the angels say
"
:
Sanctus es
Deus, Sanctus
addition:
length (in
Omnipotens, Sanctus es Immortalis" without the Qui crucifixus es pro nobis? Against this we wrote at " another book) and we reproved him and showed that no
es
man
We
his
down
to
them from a
in
woman, and
full
senses,
and not from an angel or a man in his full senses. 3 that they have uttered against
built in the time of
Manasseh by the brothers Byzantion, and it was a pagan town, which had no fame till the days of Constantine who repaired to it and enlarged it.
Constantinople was
You
say that
it
is
written
"I
will bring to
will
it
all
peoples and
tongues for
to
which
we
answer
went
to Jerusalem for
for
have heard that peoples and tongues and to the town you are mentioning worship
;
We
Further, when worship, but only on business. did Christians ever repair to it for the sake of honour ? They went
it
Persians, Arabs,
1
sell.
It
is
See the
p.
story in Joannes
(edit.
1
Damascenus,
3
De
HT.,
Tol.
i.,
219
iii.
Lequien).
John
3.
Which
untruth
42
and Hungarians,
stones.
WOODBROOKE
who have
enriched
STUDIES
it with gold, silver and precious and other towns of the kingdom of the Lo, Bagdad, Cairo, Arabs are richer in gold, silver and precious stones, and we do not say that they have more truth than we have.
how he rebukes those who are rich in who have gold gold and silver, we have a pure those who have churches, we possess the One who against speech those who have temples, we possess God and dwells in them against we are His living temples and against those who have multitudes, we have angels." You write " God has gathered together and brought to it
Listen
now
to Gregory,
"
;
Against those
prophets, apostles,
and martyrs,
so that none of
them
is
outside
is
it."
This
also is untrue.
buried in
Jerusalem, and James, son of Zebedee, is in the west, south of the Peter and Paul are in Rome, and John, son of city of Rome Zebedee is buried in Ephesus, where also is the mother of God. The Apostle Thomas was buried in India, and his bones were transferred
;
are in Babylonia with Isaiah is in and the The rest of the Daniel, prophet Jerusalem. prophets and apostles are likewise in all directions, and all are not in
to Edessa.
the Metropolis.
his
As
Emperors strove
'
to transfer
The
bones from Caesarea to the Metropolis, but they did not succeed. 2 great Meletius was transferred from the Metropolis to Antioch.
to the
As
wood
it was in Jerusalem, and in the was carried to Persia, and in their was brought back and sawn in the middle, and half of it
of the
Holy
Cross,
it
You
write
And
Moses and
the
staff of
Aaron,
and the
ark."
deceivers
and
liars
How
!
their teaching
In the ark
they deceive the simple folk to were the rod, the staff,
all
:
the
contained Jeremiah took out and hid in a cave and from that day up to now no one has ever known their exact place. know this from the Book of Maccabees and from other Doctors.
We
Lit.
Companions
of Hananiah.
Meletius of Antioch
who
died in 38 1
BARSALlBI
You
From
write
43
and the veronica,
"
:
And
of the
mother
God."
of Christ to that of Constantine,
Economy
years,
and
in that
;
who, therefore, pagan, and Christianity was not yet in plain light So for the Greeks ? collected the above sacred objects they are also liars in this matter ; they have neither the baskets, nor the crown of
thorns
for
of nails
true,
but
who
mother
Fie,
of
God and
madness
!
brought it to them, and left the Virgin naked ? All the sacred objects were in Jerusalem, but
the
the
when
Jews transgressed the commandments and the law, they were taken in the ark also and the tables captivity, and Jerusalem was destroyed
;
of the
Philistines
their pride,
of
intelligent
therefore,
that of
men.
As
Tell
to the right
hand
of
sanctify
!
me
1
this
do not follow blindly after children, brother when Herodias took the head of John the Baptist in a
charger,
what
Was
it
not a loss
the
good
actions of a
man
that give
him the
be worthy
of
care.
To
a pig pearls
Many
profit
whatever.
Concerning John the Baptist, Theodoret, the helper of the Greeks, wrote that in the days of Julian the Apostate, pagans took 2 his bones
from the urn and burned them.
3
John
of
Asia
who was
like a
pagan
Mark Here
vi.
is
2S.
the
Add
whole passage
ipsa ejusdem est gentis, Pat. Gr., Ixxxii. 1091. combustis, cinerem dissiparunt." 4 It is the I failed to see this Syrian historian John of Ephesus. passage in the fragments that have come down to us from the great historical work of this Syrian writer, as published by Land (Anecdota Syriaca, ii., 289-329, and
Theodoret Sebastae vero, quae et Joannis Baptistae arcam aperuerunt, et, ossibus
of
;
385-391) and by Cureton (The Third Part of Ecd. Hist, of John Bishop of Ephesus, 1853).
44
in his conduct,
WOODBROOKE
sent a right
STUDIES
Metropolis and said that
it it
hand
to the
was John
it
the Baptist's.
It
1
Many were
suspicious about
and
said that
was, however, accepted by the Emperor and Where is it written that the holy chrism should
right
John ? The Greeks that are amongst us rave that they mix the blood of Christ with the holy The Apostles and the Doctors have ordered that the holy chrism. be
sanctified
by the
hand
of
and the people, and these pretend that it Christ which is untrue. This would make
;
said
"
:
children."
If
And
they are being baptized by this same blood is sanctified by a dead right hand, they are,
by a dead man
because although
St.
John
be living to God, he is so in his soul, while in his body he is so far How can the right hand of a dead, and he has not yet resuscitated.
dead man
Why
this is
not a great
!
affair,
emanates from a dead man Indeed they used to receive for some time their bishops from Rome, but when trouble arose between them and the Franks, Rome did not give them
since their ordination also
any bishop and it was after many frays and bickerings that they gave them a bishop, but when the messengers who were bringing him
;
reached the
city of
Heraclea
in
Thrace, he
fell
ill
and
lest
died.
were then
in
fearing
the
They Romans
them, they
dead bishop on
in future
it is
his
and brought a man and laid the hand of the head and ordained him. They decreed also that
hand on
of the
new Museum
the correspondent of the Manchester Guardian writes, under the date of " Some interesting reliquaries are displayed, 24 January, 1927, as follows : from Byzantine times a gold and jewelled section of the cranium including of the traditional head of St. John the Baptist, and a gold forearm showing back of the Saint's hand. They were taken from a part of the bones of the Christian Church by Mohammed the Conqueror, and have been preserved in
BARSALlBI
down
to our
45
written
own
:
days,
and on
it
we have
elsewhere in
several places.
You
write
"So
far as
we
are concerned
whom
have
we
but SS.
"
?
mind glued to earthly things ? we have our beloved, the Lord of heaven and earth it Lord of heaven and earth and holy sacraments who said
shall
What
we
say to a
1
As
is
: '
to us
He,
I
the
Where
in
two
my
name, there
am
:
the
midst of them
and
who
"
I do not spoke through the prophet " where is the house ye build unto me ?
'
:
To whom shall we and who proclaimed in the mouth of Isaiah look and in whom shall I dwell except him who is peaceful and 4 You will see, if you reflect, whom humble," and fears my word.
we
have
!
He
is
indeed
St.
Barsauma
John
;
Chrysostom how he rises against those he said in the eighty- second chapter of
who
his
commentary on Matthew " How many men there are now who say wish to see the face of Christ, His image, His dresses, and His shoes but lo you are
:
We
'
seeing
are holding
Him
you
His dresses
He
in order that
Him,
in yourself."
quotation ?
it
Did
it
not confute
all
and destroy
pride of the
that
you wrote
?
Did
cetera.
the
Greeks
your
Do
not
in the steps of
fathers.
Et
!
1 -
Or
possibly
xviii.
our beloved
Isa. Ixvi. 1 with slight changes. with slight changes. Here is the whole passage " Quot sunt qui modo dicunt vellem ejus formam, typum, vestimenta, calceamenta, videre? Ecce ilium vides, ipsum
,
Matt,
20.
"
Isa. Ixvi. 2,
et tu quidem vestimenta videre cupis ipsum comedis ipse vero tibi dat, non videndum modo, sed tangendum, comedendum, intus Pat. Gr. Iviii. 743. accipiendum."
tangis,
seipsum
46
WOODBROOKE
CHAPTER
STUDIES
VII.
On
made
with
Let
writer
zeal
*
go
see
on
our investigation
the
words
of
this
and
how he
and how he
possesses
these to be.
You
is
write
"
:
Why should we
3
blame them
they blame us
It is
it
:
because
"
The
did not obey them when they were right. 2 superiors of the peoples are their superiors."
well has Esau
we
written
How
his
you have propounded you have shown that you are not holding your faith from conviction but out of hypocrisy. On the one hand you persuade us not to blame those who out of their
In everything that
will have trampled on the anathemas of the Synod of and On the other hand you gave decreed another canon. Ephesus them authority to blame us on the score that they are our superiors
own
free
and
directors.
Show
that precedence of
where you get the information that they have us which would entitle them to blame us, and be
us
our superiors. If you say that it is because they were evangelized 5 before us, we demonstrated in our previous letter to you that their not If that did ours. evangelization precede you pretend they are our
superiors because
some
of their
all
books have been translated by us, we the Doctors of the Church are not
As
the Jews
Books
do not scorn the Christians because it is from their of the Prophets and Apostles have emanated,
If
as
right to
because
throats
we
and say
;
listen to
We
and
(l
we
and
directors
1
I.e.
2
Rabban
:
Or
25.
those
who blame
their
superiors.
Cf.
Luke
xxii.
3
4 5
He
Eliminate the
waw
to
This
letter
seems
be
lost.
Read minnan
for
minkhon.
BARSALlBI
us
;
47
;
if
we
blame you,
it
is
our duty to do so
we
is
What
are
women's
"
:
tales,
and what
Chalcedon) which had six hundred which two were driven out." and thirty- six Fathers, and from as true the falsehood I am amazed at the way you have accepted
You write
That Council
(of
of liars.
Who
saw
read their unofficial proceedread everything in books and ings and deliberations ? we know what was done and spoken there, and how long the Council lasted ; we have also written with us the names of all the bishops
as amounting to such a
?
number
Who
we
As
for us
who
assembled
of all
in
it,
number
To
lie
They
believe that
is
it is
by the
magnitude Three hundred and seventy bishops assembled in the town of Made2 l to cohnus subscribed to the wickedness of Anus, and wished
number
made
manifest.
throw away Athanasius the Great, because he did not agree with
them.
Now
Had
?
the high
number
of
men
in this
them
had
was
right
Picture,
therefore, in your
mind
wise
and know that Dioscorus and the bishops who were with him had like3 greater right than the other three hundred who out of their fear and
for the love of their sees
4
of the king
Tomos
God,
of Leo.
Abraham was
:
in his
who
the
served
But
listen to
Theologian
are
says
gather together
name
of
more numerous before His eyes than several myriads who God, Would you honour all the Canaanites more deny His Godhead. than one Abraham, or the Sodomites more than one Lot, or the Midianites more than one Moses?" And he added afterwards:
1
Sic cod.
it
is
Mediolanum (Milan).
Read Sbau
for
Sba.
3 4
Read aph
;
for aphain.
Gregory Nazianzen.
48
"
WOODBROOKE
;
STUDIES
God was
not pleased with a
No
this
great
number
who
are saved
count the myriads, but God counts those the earth that cannot be measured, but I you (count)
]
You
You
further write:
are called
Koklia
by the Jews." Canon which was invented by the Jews. It is said that the Jews invented not the Kanond but the tishbhatha to the tunes of which the Kanvn.4 have been invented, and which serve as the
are invented
Show
us the
As
is
to
the Hebrews,
heard that
it
to say the
mazmbre, that they sing with different melodies. what you write, and then begin to discuss.
You
of the
Romans by
did
it
happen that a kingdom has been stolen ? It is God who removes kings and raises up kings. He removed the kingdom 3 from the Franks and bestowed it on the Greeks. That a kingdom,
however,
that
is
When
God
is
known from
the fact
Absalom
kingdom from his father David, and the people That a king does rise without the order of God
"
:
by the prophet who testifies and says but not by me, and he governed but not by my will."
also borne out
reign
He
reigned
kings
Wicked
by
is
God
when
iniquity
God gave
is
the kingdom
to the Greeks,
follows that
it is
however,
us.
not
so,
and the
different
You
1
write
"
:
The
foreign
merchants
who
go
in
and out
of the
Here
is
apud Deum
tres in nomine Domini congregates the whole passage tu censeri quam multos divinitatem abnegantes.
:
"...
An
Abrahamo
.
.
uni antepones ?
est ita,
x.
;
An
Sodomitas uni
ita est.
Lot ?
An Madianrtas Moysi ?
beneplacitum
est
Non
(1
non, inquam
Non
in pluribus numeras, at
"
Deo
Cor.
5).
Tu quidem
Deus eos
electionis vasa."
tu infinitum pulverem,
myriades ego
Names
i.e.
of ritual prayers
Canons.
4
3 5
the
Romans.
Hos.
viii.
4.
BARSALIBI
Metropolis
testify that there is
49
and no
them
as nothing."
Your
Christians
prophetical
we mean by
and
Turks.
praised
The Greeks
are not
by
just,
pious,
bing merchants.
that there
is
And
and orthodox people, but by grubbing and robin what do these praise them ? In the fact
like theirs.
Alexander has not been praised in any (sacred or ecclesiastical) book because his government embraced three ends of the inhabited
globe,
and
his
kingdom extended
and
his
wealth
of
The kingdom
was
what did
kingdom and government ? Is it in their There is no man of sound judgment who thinks
Greeks
for
Do not
something that
is
shameful
God.
There is no charity like theirs." This is also untrue. You say Where is the one who has been fed in the bazaars of their Capital ? Indeed how many needy and destitute people walk in its bazaars ? Some Christians who had gone there because of their poverty told us
:
"
and Apostles, have their government, kingdom and wealth, but for poverty and wants.
ancients, prophets
l
The
no mercy at all, and that when they wish to eat bread they close their doors and bolt them, and the poor man hoarsens his voice in crying and sighing from hunger, and no man gives him bread.
that they have
Here we
will
end
this subject.
CHAPTER
VIII.
On
hov)
He
Blames His
Co-religionists
and
is
Proud of
the
Greeks.
You
tion
1
(Syrians) were the first in our evangelizathe and Greeks the last, and God gave us kingdom, power,
write
:
'
We
Read
Add
waw
to the verb.
Read dsakh
for
nsakh.
50
1
WOODBROOKE
and honour, because
STUDIES
we were
the
first
ecclesiastical see,
to believe in
Him, but
you
now He
brother,
listen,
and
much
"
to earthly things.
mud, but He promised them Seek the that are above, and set your things heavenly things. 2 that are above the where Christ is." It is the mind on things pagans who glory in an earthly kingdom and have earthly possessions if we
Christians earthly things sticking with
;
My
kingdom
fight for
'
is
not of
this
latter, by what would we be Have you not heard your Lord say if it were then would world my ser-
on the
vants
me."'
If
And: "Where
am, there
shall
also
my
servant be."
we
we
should
prepare ourselves for our journey to His heavenly kingdom, and not seek to reign here like other people who have no hope.
On world, kingdom, government, and wealth ? the contrary, they toured the world in want, privation, poverty, and
did
this
the Apostles,
who were
the
first
to
be evangelized,
Himself plainly declared that He Peter and John said to the hath not where to lay His head." " Silver and gold have we none, but in the name man that was lame
need. "
not the
Son
of
God
of Jesus
rise
and walk."'
The Lord
of
all
nothing,
If
on
all
these saints
who
every
if it
despised
before
in his faith,
and
would have been high time for you to despise Lazarus, the poor, full " clothed in purple and of sores, and to extol the rich man who was " it would have also been fine linen and faring sumptuously good
*
who opportunity for you to praise the faith of the sons of Hagar reigned in the earth from end to end, and are prosperous in the world,
while the Christians are lowly, wretched, under subjection, and poor. "If the world hateth you, know Listen to your Lord who says
:
10
2
5
Col.
Allusion to the Patriarchal See of Antioch. 3 iii. -2. John xviii. 36.
1
John
8
xii.
26.
to tiau.
Matt.
Cf.
viii.
20.
Acts
s/ilt.
iii.
6.
7 9
Remove
Luke
the
xvi.
waw
1
before
Add
waw
1IJ
sq.
The Arabs.
BARSALJBI
ye that
me,
it
51
hath hated
me
before you."
its
own."
5
'
And " If ye were of the And " If they persecuted Ye shall weep and And " Love of this world is And
:
:
'
What do you say against all these ? Your is the one who possesses neither kingdom nor He who is here in subjection accepted by Him.
to
rejoice in the
kingdom
of
heaven which
You
and
write
in Edessa.
no Syrians except with you There are very few of them with us."
are
'Isho'
"There
in
Melitene
mighty teacher, and believing that the Syrians are uprooted more than any other people, he asks us why.
Now Rabban
comes back
to us like a
If
is
their condition
because of their
sins,
we
will
of
many pagans and Jews who have kindled God more than the Syrians, yet they are
power and prosperous in wealth, and their number is so high Tell me also why are the prophets that cannot be reckoned.
world
still
rose in this
now
who
crucified
the
just
Son
is
prosperous everywhere.
pontiffs ?
Where
the
Where
the
all
rooted because of their sins or for a similar reason,' so also consider the
Syrians
but
if
it is
because
God
He
took them to
same
says
:
Now that the just have gone and the prophets have died, and we have left the land, we That just king have nothing but the mighty one and His law."* Now listen
to
what Jeremiah
to their rest,
and
it
"
The
just
is
man
You
is
wheat
1
always gathered
abandoned.
John xv.
9.
Rom.
viii.
6 '
s
Remove
the
waw
is
7 (Syr.).
before
'th'idh.
Add
Is.
the
This quotation
Ivii. i.
1230).
52
WOODBROOKE
You
write:
STUDIES
we
last
'
-"Why
first ?
first
should
we
"
The
Many
shall
be
but
that are
We did
from them
their
we were
!
evangelized
first
we
why
superiors
and
directors
language
is is
Lord Jesus
"
there
Christ
no Greek, no barbarian, no bondman, and no freeman, but He who works with Him is accepted by all and in all."
:
Him.
in the
The
:
what you
intended
you same sequence you added Syrians who in your sentence were the
:
say that
we who
are
but see how " " and the last shall be first the
first
became the
last,
last
became the
first
in relation
to the Greeks.
You
can
its
It
is
write
"A
for
how
master uproot
sufficient
that
its
name
is
"
prickly shrub."
There
are many prickly shrubs which have no roses but are full of thorns, and Before the Council of Chalcedon the Greeks were their end is fire.
After they tore the not prickly shrubs, but a tree that bore fruits. robe of Christ and divided it into duality of natures, the rose of the
"first"
in
way
Jews from
whom
;
The Jews were like the fig tree of a people that would yield fruits. 4 as long as they kept the commandments and tender branches discarded sin, they were planted in the angle of the heavenly abode,
but
yard, that
its
they sinned and transgressed the commandments, the vineis to say, the people, was uprooted, and the vine and branches were burnt, and the fig tree was cut to pieces from its
when
roots
by the axe
of
fire
of dispersion.
Why
1
did you
have done:
2
let
Col. iii. 11. Matt. xix. 30. The author is playing here on the Syriac word sanya which means a " " vile and despicable rose-tree," and as a participle of the verb sna, a
3
person."
4
The
is
somewhat
corrupt.
BARSALIBI
watered, in order that
rose of the Greeks ?
it
53
But which
is
may
the
Please
tell me. If you say that the rose is the and the stichera, intelligent people do not because both our Church and theirs have
been meditating
true rose
is
for
man
The
meditation,
interpretation,
teaching,
wisdom
through these that the Apostles and Doctors the ends of the earth to the truth. second rose
it is
and
acts of perfection.
through the scent of this rose that one can convert his
also.
own
soul
now
of
to
which you are proud. The poets and the composers of Kinatka, Kinatha, call sometimes a Kinta angelic, and some other times they compare the singers to Moses and to the three children. They
confined
1
their
Biblical
references
concerning
those
who
fasted
in
repentance
to the Ninevites,
and
to the publican.
We
his
are
commanded
is
"
spirit
and
a
with the
understanding."
mind
difficult for
Greek
to do, since
God
of
and
He knew that the Israelites could He also permitted the use by them
in order that they
cymbals and other musical instruments, indulge in profane glees and in banquets.
put an end to
offerings,
sacrifices in saying sacrifices of
:
may
not
At
whole burnt
'
and the
God
He
also
:
put an end to songs and melodies by saying through the prophet Take thou away from me the noise of thy songs ; for I will not hear the melody of thy viols." is it that you who have been
'
How
ordered to sing spiritual songs endeavour to mix with the Church songs those relaxing Klnatha and loose tones, and thus weaken with these
same Klnatha the vigour of the souls which have hardened themselves against the passions, and mortified their bodies by ascetic works, and
begun
to sing
1
with angels
a
?
J
1
Add
Ps.
waw
16-17.
to the verb.
Cor.
xiv.
5.
li.
Amos
xv. 23.
54
If
WOODBROOKE
:
STUDIES
1
somebody says that these Kinatha are spiritual, let him show " me their fruits, and I will agree By their fruits ye shall know them."
You do
not see any poet making repentance from the depth of his
on
his breast to
On
the
contrary he stands
thither,
gesticulates with
;
hands and
his fingers
he often also strikes with his foot against the together with noise ground, but he does not exhibit a single fruit of penitence to the hearers
who
are bewitched
is
by the sweetness
this,
of
his
Kinta
melody).
Church music
to sighing
not like
but
it is
quiet, lugubrious,
and inducing
and weeping.
did not penetrate into the Churches except
Kinatha
when
these
were deprived of the gifts of teaching. When there was nobody to Look, impart sound teaching, chanted hymns invaded the Churches.
3
therefore,
at
this
Doctor,
how
he disliked
the
not despise, therefore, the Kabbelai Maran^ and the 'al 'itra dbisme, and the Dukhranah cC yam. Very often one gets
Do
Mar
Kale
lost
or not caught
falls, elevations,
of the of the
voice.
Let
this subject
end
here.
CHAPTER
IX.
On
Let us examine
a Christian
finger that
now your
You
is
write
"
:
Show me
one
5
who
the same.
What
if
you wish,
fingers."
one
and
if
you
wish, do
1
it
with two
vii.
Matt.
20.
The author's description of a chanting poet is rather interesting. 3 Which Doctor ? A sentence may have possibly been missed
preceding
*
in
the
lines.
These and
first
words
of
West
5
Add
BARSALIBI
Lo
Indians,
55
is
to say the
and
have shown Abyssinians) cross themselves with one finger. with that the Book and nature us on this but agree you above point now that you have become the advocate of the Chalcedonians, show
;
= (
We
whom
they
have received the meaning of the habit of which the two the emblem, and where it is written.
If
fingers are
two
fingers
chapters.
How could
?
If,
it
it, they crucify, already written in the previous be good to make the divine nature suffer and
Greeks has
we have
is
be crucified
selves with
however, there
one finger or with two, why do you then forsake the habit of crossing yourself with one finger, practised by your fathers, and
make
you
two
fingers against
your fathers
If,
as
you are not a stumbling block to your children and to the and it is more advantageous that one should not be a stumbling block and a boulder when your people, with the
say,
presbyters, elders,
is
dead and living bishops warn you that the practice a stumbling block and a scandal, how is it that you do not heed
?
them
see
my
will eat
evermore."
We
we add
follow
to the
all
trisagion
Qui
crucifixus es
pro
;
nobis,
and
we
the
canons of the Syrians we do not reject those of the Romans but we respect them, as a son respects his father, but in the matter of the two natures we do not agree with them." The Book says " How long will you limp on your two hams ? " 3 Now in which camp shall we see and count you ? In that of the
ecclesiastical
:
Syrians with whose faith you agree, according to your own words, or 4 in that of the Greeks whom you do not reject, and what is more
difficult,
whom
fathers ?
Our
first
father
is
God,
MS.
Franks
what he had previously stated) confuse the Franks with the Nubians. Does the addition emanate from a It is probable that the word Franks copyist ?
stands here for Indians.
1
Cor.
viii.
13.
la.
3
\
Kings
xviii.
56
from
the
WOODBROOKE
whom we are flesh, is Adam
born
as
;
STUDIES
our second father, and that in
born
;
in the spirit
he
is
the
name
each one of us also has a carnal father of whom " " extends also to the holy Fathers, of father
who,
have previously shown, were not all Greek. The great the Alexander, promoter of the Council of three hundred and eighteen
we
Fathers,
and Athanasius,
his
disciple,
were Egyptian
and so
also
town
;
of
Viton with Vincentius, the priests of Rome, and Hosius Cordova, and the rest of the Western bishops were
his disciple,
2
Franks
of
and Ith-Alaha
of
Persia,
were
Syrian.
Show
us
how
The
kind of pride
you are taking belonged to the Jews who used to have pride in " 3 4 have Abraham to our father," but Christ Abraham and say
:
We
is
answered them
unto
those
"
:
God
up children
rebukes
Abraham."
how he
and
who
in
and
of
fathers
friends
Why
while
v/ould
command you
be a stranger
And
if
why do you
Christ
laid
in
take pride in earthly possessions, you man, who, " all the world unworthy of you ?
in
you
was brought up
in
Bethlehem, and
a manger.
What
to In
profit
?
of
Samuel
in not
?
conduct
And
Moses
father ? pagan parents Children do not always help their parents, nor parents their children indeed no help came to Esau from Isaac, nor to the Jews from
;
Timothy from the fact that he was the what was Canaan helped by Noah, his
child of
Abraham.
1
From
these
That
Matt.
It
of
Nicaea.
9.
A town in Osrhoene.
iii.
was John the Baptist. The writer's or the copyist's inadvertence. " Cur enim de patria altum sapis, quando Here is the whole passage te in toto orbe peregrinum esse jubeo ? Quando licet tibi talem ego, inquit, Much of esse, ut totus mundus te non sit dignus?" Pat. Gr., Ivii. 181.
5
:
what follows
is
also taken
(ibid., 181,
182).
BARSALIBI
children, nor the children their parents, but each one
is
57
justified
by
his
works and
his deeds.
Neither the Greeks are our fathers nor the Romans, nor are the
fathers of Christians
2
all
expressions
and old
If Yawan, the father of the Greeks, was born before tales. Aram, our father, there might have been occasion for discussion, but when this is not the case, how did you then glory in the not very
It is written in weighty words of those haughty and arrogant people. the prophets son honours his father, and a servant his master
:
"A
if
you do not honour me, and if I am a not fear me, saith the Lord Sabaoth." how is it that do master, you What do you say about this ? God says that He is the Father and the Lord of us and them and of all peoples, and you establish them as
I
am
a father,
how
is it
that
our fathers, our lords, and our superiors because of some of their Canons that happened to be translated in our Service-books This
!
is
five
books
of theirs that
we have
in case
Lord
their
translated
all
His teaching
into
and
lo all the
Melchites
teaching of St.
we pretended to be their fathers, we might say that who resemble them take great pleasure in the The Greeks take also great pleasure in the Jacob.
teaching of the great Athanasius and Cyril, both of whom Egyptians, while the Franks take great pleasure in the teaching of Xystus, and the
Let they in that of Hippolytus, Julius and others. These will suffice them, therefore, not show arrogance against truth.
Franks,
for this point.
we and
CHAPTER X.
On
You
that the
the
Trisagion.
also discuss with us the trisagion in which you have written Greeks say Sanctus es Deus, Sanctus es Pater omnipotens. Let it be known to you that the Chalcedonians do not refer all the
: 1
a feminine tau to the adjective. Syrians call the Greeks Yawnay/ and they believe that they are descended from a first father called Yawan or Yavan.
2
Add
Mai.
The
i.
6.
58
trisagion to the Father, as you write, but to the Trinity, because they " Sanctus es Deus Pater\ Sanctus es omnipotens Filius, Sancsay tus es immortalis Spiritus Sancte, miserere nobis" Syrians,
:
We
with the Armenians, the Egyptians, the Abyssinians, the Nubians, and the Indians, refer the trisagion to the Son.
There are some who say that when Joseph brought down the body of our Lord from the Cross, people saw that angels had set up three " Sanctus es Deus" and the choirs, the first of which saying
:
Sanctus es omnipotens" and the third " Immortalis ; then Joseph and Nicodemus were moved by the Spirit " and said Qui crucijixus es pro nobis i.e. for mankind miserere
second
:
"
Sanctus
es
"
nobis"
tius
in
the
established
in
the Churches.
Some
had been
said that
crucified,
The
Fathers
was
with the
human
nature which
was
to
become
who, although God, omnipotent and immortal, wished and not another kind of nature.
say that the trisagion
is
The Chalcedonians
Sanctus found
in Isaiah.
As
Against them
follows
Isaiah
is
the Son.
This
These
we know from John the Evangelist who Him when he saw His glory."
'
Cyril,
Son, the
John Chrysostom, and other Doctors teach us that it was the Word, that Isaiah saw on the throne and not the Father.
it
We
if
is
Him
Father.
that
it
is
through
;
the door
by
"
me
'
we
refer the
:
trisagion to the
Son we may go up
and say
Our
Son
Father
who
art in heaven."
And
in
The
mention of a fourth Person in connection with the Incarnation by is somewhat strange. Does he refer to Nestorian
3
Johnxii. 41.
Johnx.
9.
BARSALIBI
We
speak in the
"
59
can say
"
: ' :
Holy
'
Spirit
No man
Jesus
is
Lord,
but in the
Holy
Spirit.'
We
"Thou
of
His
glory,"
God, Thou
art holy
art
If the Doctors have explained the thrice repeated Immortal." holy " " the as referring to the three persons (of the Trinity), and if holy " Sanctiis of the liturgy also Sanctus, Sanctiis, Sanctus Dominus
:
etc., refers
one
of
them
only,
let
"
"
Sanctus es Deus
The
the
words
"Deus,
Omnipotens,
Immortalis"
have
been
added
afterwards.
That
known
art
because
He became flesh although remaining God and we say " Holy Thou O Omnipotent," because He put on our weak body although
;
trisagion refers to the Son to whom it " Holy art Thou by the following we say
this
:
is
appropriate
is
God
the Son,"
:
" and we say Holy art Thou remaining omnipotent in His divinity He in the flesh because died Immortal," although remaining immortal
; :
like
God.
What
passage
is
it
Macedonius or
of
any
other
who
attributed mortality
when
they say
O immortal
They have really no apology to offer. The words of Holy the trisagion have been attributed by the Doctors to the Son because He became flesh, put on the weak and mortal human body, and was
addressed by them as
let
them only say Holy art Thou Holy, holy, holy," and not God," and the remaining "Omnipotent" and "Immortal." The Nestorians and the Chalcedonians, in order to take from the middle
:
:
they refuse this and say that the trisagion refers to the Trinity, " "
and
natures,
and count
in Christ
in order not to
admit that
we
powers, and wills, and crucify the Son in the flesh, avoided the
attributes,
two
Son and
attributed
it
to the Trinity,
Cor.
xii. 3.
Ms.
VI
60
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
said
what Paul
"
:
God
forbid that
l
should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ." John " the evangelist also said glory to the cross." The theologian said in his discourse on the passover " had need of a God becoming flesh and dying in order that we may live
5
We
with Him.
We
died that
we may
be
purified,
:
Him.
Many
sun suffered eclipse and then shone again. creatures should suffer with the Creator."
It
3
was
Now
where does
this
in Christ ? Where does he say that man died or human nature was crucified ? He openly declared that God became flesh, died and was crucified. Let it be also known to you that if, as the Greeks believe, the
that
trisagion refers to the Trinity, and the sentence Qui crucifixus es pro nobis is taken away from it, it would not only refer to the Trinity,
as they say, but also to angels
and demons
"
say
:
which
The
angel or the
;
am
"I
5
will ascend
above
:
will
be
like
God,"
and Paul
e
also said
"
Whose minds
"
Satan
calls
omnipotent," because he is constantly watchful in his war against the saints, and he even made bold and fought the Christ. " He is also " immortal because he does not die.
also himself
Consider well, therefore, where the trisagion might lead, if we it Qui crucifixus es pro nobis ; indeed the trisagion
!
When, however,
to
it,
the words
Qui
"
no one can
refer
"
crucifixion
;
this
would be impossible nor could " " a mere man, because immortality
i.
tence
which passage? At the end of the senThe Text is probably corrupt. " 3 Here is the whole passage Opus habuimus Deo, qui carnem acciCommortui sumus, ut purgemur; simul peret ac moreretur, ut vivamus. simul glorificati sumus, quoniam resurreximus, quoniam simul mortui sumus autem simul resurreximus. permulta illius temporis miracula Quamvis
Or: "to
is
the crucified."
In
fuerint
Deus nempe
Is. xiii.
nam
creaturas
4
in cruce pendens, sol obscuratus ac rursus mflammatus. Pat. Gr. t xxxvi. 662,
Cf.
Ms.
xiii.
12-14.
2 Cor.
iv. 4.
BARSALIBI
which
is
61
expressed in
to
it is
The
:
trisagion
is,
therefore,
be truly referred to the Son, and Word mortal is both mortal and immortal
in
God who
in the
and immortal
He
was
crucified
on our
behalf.
You
and
at
one thing
the
thing,
some other
This, however, does not matter, since they refer the As we say in the Passion week " Christ, trisagion to Christ.
:
who by His
of the
and
as at the beginning
or
"
Gospel we
say
"At
"
at the time of
His Baptism,
it
as the case
may
be,
according to circumstances.
trouble for your salvation, not yours
We
said
:
gave ourselves
all
this
many
others
who
will listen
to us.
The
vile
"He who
mouth."
]
from the
shall
prophet be
as
my
Do
habit.
abandon an old
his
Who
is
the
man who
?
can be so forgetful of
being but the schisms which they brought into which they introduced into the Church.
years
I
own
self
as to hate a
human
We
number
of
had
disclosed at length
all
the disturbances
they had caused, they would have been ashamed of themselves, because not all of them are aware of what happened to them. I
warned them
no
desire
to
several
own way
without
showed
habits,
and
also
that
we
their churches,
I
and be allowed
other
to pray for
many chapters the disturbance that they would be causing in the Church if For several they did not desire to live in peace and concord.
to
also
wrote
rebuke
reasons, however,
among which
and head,
at.
I
sponsible director
the fact that they have no rekept my tongue and did not disclose
is
62
Because,
little
if
God
gives
me
life,
of exposing
by
little all
their teaching
and comparing
and
own
teaching
and
interpretation
and those
of the Doctors.
We have
we
written the
we have
confidence that
subject,
and that
you
will
rather
constitute
and that of the many who fell like you. In case you remain stubborn in your old ideas, and in case light and darkness are on the same footing with you, it is your own business,
possess your
soul
own
but there
secrets of
is
make
manifest
all
the hidden
mankind. be also known to you that it is very pleasing and agreeable be no divisions in the Churches of Christians
;
Let
to
it
it
God
would have been also more just that the Greeks should have torn and pulled at their own flesh, but they are so steeped in iniquity as
l
no other Christians but themselves, and they more harm on our community and on that of the Armenians
As
said above,
warned
Greeks
Melitene that they and the Syrians and Armenians should love
one another and not to growl at one another like wolves and lions, but their madness reached such a pitch as to say like their fathers "
'
You
I
and other
words
which are
keeping with their iniquity. to sow peace in the camp of the hostile parties, and to convince them from the books of the Apostles and Doctors that it is
wished
not good that they should contend with one another, but that they
Churches, and pray with love, and if come nearer to one another and remember one another
each one
may
follow his
own
When
and believe
examined
I
their
it
was
that of
insolent people,
retorted
and
them
since
is
you are
so incurable,
first
that truth,
which you do
not know,
the testimony and the signature of your bishop, priests and notables, and I on my part shall also bring those of our Patriarch, our bishops,
1
Read nbasbsum
for nnaskiston.
BARSALIBI
priests,
63
which
and
we
will hold on religious questions) either party shall be pleased with the truth which shall there be revealed, and that either of them shall
it
embrace
when
revealed
him and
to extraneous subjects.
By
the
help of
God I shall on that day disclose everything to the sun with and justice equity, in spite of the fact that the affair requires labour, time, helpers and promoters.
Here end
the ten chapters.
64
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
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66
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STUDIES
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92
WOODBROOJCE STUDIES
Canaanite, 47.
saint),
Aaron (Monophysite
Abel, 36.
45.
Chalcedon, 30, 41. Chalcedonian, 27, 28, 38, 52, 55, 57, 58, 59.
Chosrau, 42.
Constanrine, 24, 39, 43.
Ahab,
38.
Amed,
18.
D.
Daniel, 35, 42. David, 19,32,35,48.
Aram,
Arius,
57.
3.0,
35, 47.
E.
B.
Edessa,
42,51,56.
Barsauma (Monophysite
Basi'l,
45.
Euphemia, 41.
Ezechiel, 35, 42.
Bethlehem, 56.
Byzantion, 41.
F.
Caesarea, 42. Cain, 36.
93
94
G.
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
John (of Damascus), 41. John (the evangelist), 42, 50, 58, 60. Greek (mainly), 19, 21, 23, 26, 31- John (of Persia), 56. 32,39,44-45, 46-47, 48-49, 51- Joseph, 58.
53, 56, etc.
60.
57.
Justinian, 43.
H.
Hagar, 50.
Harran, 41.
K.
Kumanians, 41.
Kushites, 55.
.
Lazarus, 50.
Leo, 41.
Libya, 26. Lot, 47.
1.
Iberian, 19.
M.
Maccabees, 42. Macedonians, 30. Macedonius, 59.
Macedonopolis, 56. Madecolinus (Milan), 47.
Isho'
Israelite,
J-
Jacob
(of Nisibin),
Jacobite, 38.
John (of Asia), 43. John (the Baptist;, 43-44. John (Chrysostom), 20, 24, 25, 35,
45, 56, 58.
N.
Nazareth, 56.
Nebuchadnezzar, 49.
BARSALIBI
Nestorius, 30, 38.
95
Nicodemus, 58.
Ninevite, 53.
Nisibin, 56.
Noah, 65.
Nubian, 26, 55, 58.
49,51-52,56,57,61-62.
o.
Odysseus, 37.
Theodore, 4 1
Paul,
18,29,30,39,42,55,60.
Persia, 42. Persian (people), 27, 39, 41, 49. Persian (language), 27.
Pharaoh, 49.
Philip, 19.
Philistine, 43.
Pulcheria, 30.
R.
57.
X.
Xystus, 57.
Y.
S.
Yawan,
57.
Sabellius, 30.
Zebedee, 42.
Zechariah, 35.
(ii)
PREFATORY NOTE.
A.
The
panied
extant
following pages contain the text and the translation, accom" exhortation to priesthood," by a critical apparatus, of an
I
text
as P.
and
MS.
and
M.
indicates a
M. MS.
my own
collection
in
marked Syr.
MS. Mingana
223.
Both
MSS.
grounds can be ascribed to about the sixteenth century. While the two MSS. come near each other in point of date, they are totally different as to the country of provenance. There are stylistic peculiarities in P.
it
was copied
in Syria,
linguistic
to indicate that
M. was written
Mesopotamia.
The orthography
is
offers considerable
from a single prototype the immediate successors of which had begun to exhibit some variants at the time when our MSS. were copied. That the Arabic style used in the text is a translation from Syriac
is
made abundantly
clear
by the
fact
words and
There
prose.
is,
If
however, a passage which in both MSS. is worded in rhymed such a passage is to be considered also a translation from
Syriac,
we shall
a great amount of freedom in his work. the foot will assist the reader to form his
A note that
own
have added
at
The Arabic
is
full
of
indeed it represents the grammatical and lexicographical mistakes lowest type of Christian Arabic used in Church services, but it can be
1
me
in
North Mesopotamia.
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
illustrated
97
by scores of similar tracts written in the same non-Arab I have collated the two MSS. and placed in the footnotes Arabic. The the various readings which appeared to me of some importance.
variants
clearly
which were
slip
of purely orthographical
order, or
which were
due to a
I
on the part
this
of the copyists, in
ignored.
my
transcription
To
does not imply that that orthography is save space 1 had simply to follow one of the
M.
given to
Syriac characters),
the
its
MSS., and a
palaeographical
facsimile of each
peculiarities.
MS. The
is
translation
which
literal
have adopted often gives only the meaning rather than a rendering of the original, and always follows the text that is
printed in the main page to the exclusion of that found in the footnotes.
B.
I
treatise
a Syriac
Canon
Antioch and evidently culled from a Canons used by the West Syrian Church.
,
taken from Syr. Cod. Mingana 1 the Rendel Harris Library, Brimingham.
fol.
94b
in the
custody of
The
date of the
MS.
is
27 March, 1884, of the Greeks (A.D. 1573). facsimile of all the page on which the Canon is written accompanies the translation.
TRANSLATION.
A.
In the
name
of
God, we
to priests.
God
of the holy
Mar
May
:
be with us
Amen
priests
He
said
my
brethren and
to
O
;
my
beloved
bishops, listen
me and
hear
my
words
to you.
You
Wipe
wish to be
purify, therefore,
may
from
98
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
your hearts, put your accounts in order, and clean out of your consciences
envy, deceitfulness, and other iniquities, so that Jesus Christ may not put an end to you as He did to the priests who preceded you. my brethren, open your hearts in order that the Christ may
cause love, quiet, peace, and safety to abide in them, and everything l to the Lord in order that you may have pleasure that is congruous
with Him, and rejoice in His grace, and sit for ever at His right. my beloved, because the first Adam did not stand by his birth-
right, that is to
command
came a
say his chastity and his holiness, but transgressed the of his Lord, he was separated from his kingdom, and be-
inheritance.
The Lord
fire,
then decreed
and ordered death against him and struck him with the sword of the
in the
dark
city of
death where he
became
and because
same
my
man
because the
jealousy he
murdered
5
his brother,
was refused, and out of and became separated from God and
from
accursed and anathematized, and was a vagabond and a fugitive in this world, and was the first man to enter hell.
his fathers,
O my brethren.
who
"
cried with his
6
. .
Moses, the head of the prophets, 7 voice and said to the priests and the deacons
:
f
priests
who have
1
their priesthood,
in
rules of
their
M.
The
Syr. gzar.
3 4
Has this date a literal and historical meaning, or does it refer to a ? It is useful here to remark that the era mysterious and mystical number of the Syrian Greeks and Melchites began 5508 years before Christ
(Angelo Mai,
Script.
Vet Nova
If
the
number 7000
is
here to be taken literally the date of the composition of the document would be A.D. 1492. In this case the document would be of Melchite origin, but then what about the Syriac words and expressions that it contains ?
Melchite of A.D. 492 would not have inserted Syriac words and expressions in an Arabic document of which he was the author.
1
Which
fi
fathers ?
8
Levites?
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
99
Master, obey the prescriptions of your Master and do not neglect His Do not make light of the offices of the Church of God and word.
do not despise
the majesty
which belongs
and
to the
One who
kings
is
offered
on
it.
high-ranked
priests,
do you not
how
washing
similarly
their
who serve the earthly and how careful they are in are, their clothes clean. Examine how
see those
2
kept
the
utensils
which are
and wine
as
utensils
nor feculence of any also the no dregs how neat and clean everything is, ordinary bread and thin bread 4 or defect. without any deficiency People line up erect to honour earthly kings who are human beings like ourselves and mortals sons
there
are
in
which
of mortals
therefore,
my
brethren, with
table,
efficiently
in
with
faithfulis
and holiness and with an outward appearance no defect and imperfection of any kind.
ness
which there
woe be to the priests who do not keep their The Church and its children weep priesthood with good works. over the priest who sins, and give also woe to the deacon who does
'
my
brethren, great
How
who
It is
acts
badly penetrate
house of
God
and God, nor is it right that his unclean " in the blood holy body, and be dipped
the Lord.
How
can a priest
who
is
sacrifice that holy body which was lifted up on the Cross, and before which the companies of angels stand in awe and the choirs of heaven
in fear,
while they are unable to contemplate its splendour ? who is impure and immoral dare handle it with his dirty hands ? can also any one who is an occasion of scandal to
How
How
Have you
Scandal
not heard
then what
1
He
"
Read al-ladhln. The Persian dard. 5 Read muluk (in plural). 7 Read al-ladkln.
3
Read
al-lali.
"
8
An
unclassical
Arabic word.
Here ends
the lacuna in
M.
100
WOODBROOKE
to
STUDIES
'
woe
'
the
man
it
through
whom
;
scandal comes."
He
also
its
says
Ye
but
It
if
savour
wherewith
thenceforth good for nothing, neither for the land nor for the dung, but it is cast out and trodden
?
is
be seasoned
"
3
under foot
example.
by men
and
it
also
becomes a
vile
object
and an
my
brethren, there
is
no
is
more
of a priest, for
which there
no
forgiveness.
priest
my
lament
who
:
The
the
him,
inhabitants of heaven
weep of whose
also over
him
whom
sanctification
he
fell.
is
The
blessed
Cherubim weep
melodious tunes.
silent of their
The
angels and
the
High Companies
(of
the
Archangels) weep over him, because through his bad works the voice of his praises has ceased to praise with theirs.
All those
him.
who
fell
out of his
command weep
over
The weeping of
for him,
and the
terrestrial,
set
accursed priest
Weep
weep
companion
who has been wounded by who by his bad actions has become my brethren, who is the man who does
?
the not
over a priest
Simon, head
the shepherd
who, after having been like you and after having taken from his 6 Master like you that talent in order to trade with it, has lost all the my brethren, who will not weep sheep, and his soul is drowned.
who
and who
will
not
weep
Read tandas for tansad in M. combination of the text of both Luke xiv. 34, and Matt. v. 13. Matthew and Luke. Literally the sentence may mean It is thenceforth good
1
Matt,
xviii. 7.
nor as manure.
Is. vi.
i.e.
5
saying
3.
This sentence
wholly
in
Syriac
in P.
generally a great
sum
of
money.
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
over a shepherd
101
not
who becomes
a wolf ?
Who
will
thief,
and who
will
who becomes
and has no remedy ? Weep, Church, over your priest. Simon and John, over your companion who left your Weep, companionship and became a stranger to you.
Who envied you, O chaste one, and made you a fornicator ? Who envied you, O pure one, and made of you an immoral man ? Who envied you, O fasting man, and made of you a gluttonous man Who envied you, O just one, and made of you a given to excess ? companion of the ignorant ? Who envied you, O devout and pious Who envied you, O one, and made you a wretch with the sinners ?
l
man
filled
with sanctity,
sink
in
the sinfumess of
Who envied you, O fair one, and filled you with unholiness ? Who envied you, O just man, and placed you in the company Who envied you, O child (of the house), of sinners and enemies ? Who and made you a stranger to your father and your brothers ?
iniquity ?
envied you, near relative, and made you a stranger to your relations ? celestial one, and made you terrestrial ? envied you, truthful one, and made of you a liar, and filled you with envied you,
Who
sins
Who
who became
!
O hart who in the snare O you agile eagle who in the net O warrior who was beaten and ran away O athlete who took to O mariner whose ship has sunk O husbandman whose com has perished O steward who squandered his treasures O who his place at the table O bridegroom table-companion whose bridal chamber did not please him O mighty King whose
!
flight
left
Read hasadaka for hadasaka in M. and note the rhymed prose of the if, however, it following few sentences, possibly due to a free translation could be proved from this that the document was originally written in
;
Arabic, its date could not have preceded the ninth century but we must admit that such phenomena occur sometimes in Arabic translations from free translation of this kind has even affected the sacred text of Syriac. the Gospels. I saw in Jazirat b. 'Umar, on the Upper Tigris, a MS. which contained the Arabic translation of the Gospels by the very famous
;
Ebedjesu
2 3
of Nisibin,
Read mubariz
for
in
rhymed prose.
4
word parnasa.
Syr. hrifha.
102
WOODBROOKE
fell
STUDIES
condemned
for his ignorance
! !
crown
from
his
head
O judge
!
O chieftain who lost the greatness of his headship O sun whose rays who became poor by his will
moon whose
light
has suffered eclipse seed of pure wheat with tares beautiful and lovely flower up
! !
which has been smitten by the blighting wind rose the beauty of which has perished in the
3
of sin
frost of
O admirable O ignorance
!
pomegranate-flower
which withered
in
the
midday heat
of sin
and
iniquity.
Where
ings,
are you
Paul and Timothy ? Where are your warnconditions, which to-day your companions
?
not utter the cry of vengeance against the priests ? punishments and Thy zeal against the ancients ?
Thy
that
How
silence.
Thou
is
art silent
now
Heaven
it
is
amazed
at
such a
Where
everyhis
my
brethren, that
left
just
O my brethren,
because
5
let
God
we
those
He
God, and we
a pact to the
shepherd His
the souls redeemed by the innocent blood of He gave us have to return them as we received them.
effect that
6
we
shall
flock.
my
remedy.
those
brethren,
wound which
sins,
has no
my
sadness overtakes
say concerning
What
shall
we
who
believed that
they
had no
sins,
while
Satan robbed
and plundered them ? They asserted that God is forgiving and merciful, and they did not know that God is also a just and equitable my brethren, let the story of Ananias and his wife inspire judge.
Syr. shauba.
that the author
It
is
somewhat strange
Was
Syr.
In P. zuhirat.
Markka.
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
you with fear, and take fright were burned for small sins.
at the spectacle of those priests
103
who
O my brethren,
Korah and Abiram, because all of them have become a mirror to us and do not so that we may hear what happened to them and fear
;
sin
like
them.
who
is
the one
who
1
will not
one and
been
laid
is
confidential steward,
brother of
down
that
who
blameless, and lo there is to-day shame and dishonour in your exiled one, and we do not find it difficult to cover you up bed who has been separated from his service," and his high office, we weep
;
office of
and we do not
priesthood which you have besmirched by your feel any sorrow at the beauty of your statself,
ure
we weep
over the
!
which you have dishonoured by your bad deed The Lord had established you as a mediator between Him and His
crown
hood
in order to
induce people to
sin
you did not approach priestand detach them from God, but
;
to uplift
Woe
thrones
s
your
spirit
sit
on the twelve
Lo shame
you make
and you are driven out like the one who wore dirty garments. is in your bed and it pleases you to dishonour your bed, and
light of
4
it.
zeal to your
Master
for a zeal to
another master,
is
Him, and
that
why
and you have become a stranger to will consume your body without getting
mercy in the day and he will not be
like
satiated with it
my
of judgment and decision for an unchaste priest, allowed to approach his throne, but he will be driven out
foolish virgins.
the five
said
"
:
If
It is for this reason that the Apostle Paul cried and a person desire priesthood he desireth a good desire." Lo
;
to-day the priests of the different peoples desire the office of headship while they are far from real priesthood 6 and remote from its works.
1 -
Arab, mutahakkik, evidently a translation of the Syr. sharrira. 3 Matt. xix. 28. Syr. Tishmishta. Here as above the author seems to allude to immoral acts of a private
'
.
character.
The
of
which has
"episcopacy."
Read Kahnutihim.
104
WOODBROOKE
brethren, listen to
STUDIES
against those
:
my
who
bear the yoke of priesthood but make light of it or neglect it they 1 shall burn with those two hundred and fifty priests who were burnt
deacon, any deacon who approaches 4 his wife in the time of the fast that the Saviour fasted will not find
brethren,
priest,
mercy
day
of
landmark and
finality
this will
happen
also
if
festival,
or on a
Friday, or on a
Wednesday.
his wife in
one
of
Sodom.
This does
it
is
ad-
also
for
them
to
abstain
my
brethren,
but should be
and
and the belongings of the Church. my brethren, any priest who makes light of them or neglects them, and serves with them in this
state the holy
lifted
up on the wood
of the cross
say
to
him
who cast
lots
of Christ
who
to
it
steal
also the priests with such shall his share be without pity and from what pertains from the belongings of the Church,
in
them on behalf
priests,
the matter of the ex-votos of orphans and widows who gave of their sins heaven and earth shall weep over such
:
and
their sin
is
who became
the
5
companions
of
Ananias and
my
rancour against his brother, is like Cain the murderer. priest who sees a needy person and does not or a thirsty person in want of a drop of water and does help him,
with a heart
which there
is
thirst,
and a
priest
who
and turns
is
from him, will have no share who does not know his own self,
;
paradise.
Accursed
the
who
such
1
sins
his
Num. xvi. 35. M. " any priest or deacon who approaches." " 5 to Syr. Kaddesh which commonly means
2
is
yalakaddas
"
to
make
himself holy."
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
priesthood, and the Father will rebuke
office rightly
105
and
justly
having served his the Son of the Father will not accept him ;
for not
him
the
Holy
and
all
and
Because he did not perform the duties of his priesthood with piety 1 devotion, the angels will take away from him the imposition of
2
the hands
of priesthood,
which had
fallen
on
his
to hell in
company
and ignorant
there he will
The
however, who
piety,
tion
and
and
offers
God
before
Him
;
God
and by the multitudes of angels, who will exalt his office and his and he will live in pleasure in the company of Simon, priesthood
the head of the Apostles, and he will be placed among all the 4 Fathers, the Saints, the Prophets, and the Doctors of the Church.
3
who leave the office of Stephen and of those who serve the will go and serve Satan and his armies. church, preachers What shall I say about them ? On the one hand if I keep silence, such
Similarly the deacons
silence
may
if I
speak
my
allow
me
sits
in
vouched
for
men
and
6
who
having no witnesses
vouch
and
uprightness.
(The
liars, transgressors,
and
prayers, insolent,
Those who are addicted to such vices commandments and the law of God and do not turn
from
1
this
Is it
The
This
'
work of ecclesiastical Canons (Syr. 36a, in the custody of the Rendel Harris Library, Birmiugham) that three witnesses of high integrity are required to testify to the piety of the man who is to be ordained deacon. 6 Syr. Tishmishta as above.
We
in Syriac.
MS. Mingana 32
106
WOODBROOKE
God
:
STUDIES
;
The deacon
he
is
not to
piety.
prayer, holiness,
and
my beloved (deacon), you should not neglect your soul on the pretence that you have not the yoke of priesthood. my brother,
and punishment and the furnace of fire. the injunctions of God, and lend your neck to the my brother, obey 2 yoke of Christ be sweet-tempered and humble towards your brethren,
fear the
day
of reckoning
my
brother,
when you go to the altar educate yourself and the people of Christ 3 in order to perform your duties take care and pains to do it in good order so that you may please your Lord let us examine our accounts
;
and see whether we have any hatred towards our neighbours, and whether we have only love and peace.
who neglects prayers will be judged 4 with Satan, and the deacon who disregards the duties of his service will be in a place where there is no praise of God and where he will be ministered to by the furnace of fire the deacon who frequents the company of drunkards, the worm that does not die will be intoxicated from him the deacon who leaves the Church on the night of Sundays
the deacon
5
;
O my brother,
and
festivals,
and wishes
to
Church
;
of
heaven
will
drive
him out
where she
is
the deacon on
account of
existed
will
;
whom God
mocked
alive
would
to
God
that he
had never
the deacon
who
fire
the deacon
who
;
fails
to control his
will
be
far
from heaven
the deacon
7
who makes
use of marriage and comes to perform his duties, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost will be angry with him the deacon who goes to
;
spirit
him
the
deacon
who commits
and
ment
will
O my brethren,
suffer
this
you
will not
with Satan
but
if
^yr. Shalhaibitha.
8
Syr.
makkekh.
4 Again the Syr. Tishmishta. Syr. shamli. 5 Shalhaibitha as above. Syr. 6 The text is obscure and the sense doubtful. 7
Syr. Shamli.
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
Lord who was
Satan.
crucified
107
of
1
my
and
are
3
gluttony,
which
a sign of the sad unbelief of the world. my brethren, have "neither fornisaid Paul the divine heard what Apostle you not themcators, nor adulterers, nor thieves, nor drunkards, nor abusers of
:
selves with
inherit the
kingdom
of
heaven and
beloved, keep your soul from sin, and purify your body from bad passions so that you may not suffer. my brethren, the
my
deacons
God, keep His Commandments, way serve the Church with piety, serve the people of God, and long for fast and prayer, the angels will long to meet them, and will also accompany them and take them to heaven on their wings in order that they may enjoy bliss and happiness with the priestly Fathers, and
who walk
in the
of
kingdom
of
and be
"
Where
am
there
"
:
my Come ye blessed
7
my
prepared
for
You
will also
8
be
you
and along with martyrs (and) evangelists and you will serve and rejoice with receive ample reward
;
Stephen.
We who are
plunged
in sin ask
but the above grace and virtue. majesty, and power, with His Father, and His Holy
every time, and for ever and ever.
God not to make us deserve hell, To Him are fitting glory, honour,
Spirit,
now,
at
Amen.
(Colophon.)
(Here recite) Pater Noster. May the grace of God be with the weak and miserable scribe, with the pious readers, and with the blessed
hearers
!
May we
of the
1 '
kahraman.
The
1
author uses the feminine pronoun hiya under the influence of the
Syriac word Kaddabutha which he was rendering. 4 Cor. vi. 9, with some changes.
5
John
7
xii.
26.
in
Read malaikah
M.
Read mubashshirin
in
M.
108
mother
WOODBROOKE
of Fire, the
STUDIES
Mother
the
all
!
queen
of
God, hoping
of
!
that the
Lord
will
deliver us
from
fire
in
day
judgment
Amen
May
the grace of
God be
with us
2
Amen
Amen
TRANSLATION.
B.
"
Of
3
(Canon) 38.
We
Wednesday
disciples,
because in
our Lord announced His passion to His were troubled with sorrow 4 we observe
it
;
our Lord was seized by the Jews ; we do not observe the night of Saturday, because in it there was rest to all the dead of Sheol, at the descent of our Lord to them. He
it
who
does not observe the night of Friday and Wednesday, will be condemned with those who bound our Lord on the night of Friday, and those who observe the night of Saturday, will be condemned with
those
who
Sabbath day
not begin for them and that they eyes of the law."
may
may
C.
When
MS.
all
was
in the
press
1450
Library, Birmingham).
of Jacobite origin. sentence of the text and the colophon are as follows in P. "And there you will receive ample reward with the angels and the with Stephen. And we who are 'evangelists, and you will serve and rejoice in us but (to make us to torment hell Lord not in sin the pray plunged
2
:
Reserve?)
that grace, virtue, and piety. May honour, glory, majesty, and thanks be to the Holy Trinity, now, at every time, and for ever and ever, and It has ended by the help of God." on us all be His grace [This last sentence is in Syriac.] 'The ecclesiastical day begins in the East in the afternoon of the
!
previous day.
4
Or
moved by
affliction.
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
1
109
The
form on
of
Ignatian
fol.
Canon
"
:
translated
above
is
:
given in the
following
44*
Ignatius the
in
it
Fiery says
We
Wednesday because
and
disciples,
He
our Lord announced His passion to His was moved by affliction. observe the night of
We
our Lord was seized by the Jews and struck on 1 the face by the servant of the High Priest, and was tied to a column. do not observe the night of Saturday because in it there was rest
Friday because in
it
We
to
all
dead
in Sheol
by the descent
of
our Lord to
them."
On
and
fol.
MS.
there
is
by Cureton
lit
11*
V
/ll
-4M^-I
"Ignatius: Where is the disputer ? Where is the wise man ? Where is the boaster of those who are called intelligent ? For our God Jesus the Christ was conceived by Mary according to an
economy." Epkes. xviii. This is an exact translation
t
Ad
of the
iL,
Greek
of Ignatius as edited
by
Lightfoot
(Apostolic Fathers,
74) with
the
exception
that
is
the wise man" is placed before "where is the boaster" " " " " instead of boaster there is in Greek boasting Kai^cris.
The
1
Cor
1
31.
idea of our Lord having been tied to a column seems to be time of Ignatius.
The
much
Fasting on
Wednesdays and
(fol.
is
in the
Apostolic Constitutions
110
WOODBROOKE
A/Jo
Oil]]
STUDIES
GU012
?]
Vr>
*"
ij
loJ
.mi
A**
^onnoXn loMA^l
wkZoo]
.
1*
.am\,Zo
.o
oixs
oiol^
.
oio
.4^010
OT]ID>O
nV> .mno >L.O ^D ^yto Soau A^jQ^A^ >U^ .^imo ^-^ CTJO J^N
.^Vfr>7o
n/ri^Vv
))]]
rci^nV^^n^
ZoSfl^v
Ai
Vn
.<?>
OTICD
ai
.m.
oio
JQlCilD
.O
OUT)]
,
M omits.
P
10
omits.
6
omits.
7
M omits.
omits.
8
and
9
so
prima manu.
M ZoJOialL.
M.
M 2aao.
Here
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
1 1 1
w,
-V
|1
OUO12
^oasiaj} lajXpO
JoaiZojaia
A)OO mm^nlVn^^n
'^-<^ ouoia
A,Ao
-i
,
.
^
t
]ou]
p*!
-^^
**>
Z]_oAL"^
n n
7]
-
m]
^
Uo
nj ^oau)
^.
.mA
t
Zoo]
Uo
A lacuna in
also.
112
WOODBROOKE
OlliO
STUDIES
001
>o
,\i
Aaij>
.i
*-*
>
J
.
oj^jj
t]
oil
t-t
IA
AA.LDO
oil
ooi
J]
^ij
^
8
*^
.Oual^olk
[OLiAl
_
auAl
ti
_.
^^
ai
\ i\ai2 2o.
J*ooA*Aoi2
Aoo
.
vVt..!
"
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122
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
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}>f
CANON OF IGNATIUS.
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES.
CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS IN SYRIAC, ARABIC AND GARSHUN1 EDITED AND TRANSLATED WITH A CRITICAL APPARATUS
BY A. MINGANA.
WITH INTRODUCTIONS
BY
RENDEL HARRIS.
FASC.
2.
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
Baptist.
INTRODUCTIONS.
BY
RENDEL HARRIS.
I.
A
is
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON.
Apocryphal
literature that
is
well
known
to students of
a whole
IT
covered by
works assigned to Jeremiah and his companions, in which the fortunes of an exiled nation are depicted and their hopes of resuscitation and of return are affirmed, with a guarded language and obscure
intimations for
which Apocalypse
is
the proper
and recognised
or such as
vehicle.
Old Testament,
become
were by
common
when he wishes
the depth of
of
approaching consolations
reigned from
Israel.
We
:
in
Jewish
not
Apocalypse
limit is
Adam
to
Bar Kochba
125
but even
lower
10
126
;
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
low enough for there are Apocalypses produced right down to the Middle Ages, whenever days were dark enough to require, or a
and brightening horizon to suggest them. The rise of Islam is good ground for an Apocalyptic literature as the various sieges of Mohammed can be as suggestive as Vespasian or Titus. Jerusalem
distant
as
And when we
find
as in
new member
his friends,
of the
the
names
Jeremiah and
we
need
not be surprised that the tradition has lasted so long ; we may say of and as a matter of fact, he Jeremiah that he being dead yet speaketh
;
just as
many
times as he
may be wanted
must
try
to speak
so
and
as
we
I
and
think
said
somewhere, within
the penumbra of the Canonical literature, some of them being actually canonised. Jeremiah and his disciple Baruch will supply us with
illustrations.
Biblical
is
also
edited by
a recent publication of Bar Salibi's reply to a Melchite proselytiser, this Syriac Apocalypse was clearly a and the reference to it here may illustrate part of Bar Salibi's Canon
;
As we
Canon fluctuates from time to time and from country to country. somewhat similar illustration be found in the Greek may Apocalypse which I re-edited in 1889 under the title of the Rest of the Words of Baruch, and which I
the
way
in
which the
frontier of the
136
A.D.,
for
here
we
day when fall the the of the beloved We with commemorate Jews city. they must admit that the Rest of the Words of Baruch has crept up very When I was editing this work (of which close to canonical dignity.
Service Books actually appoint this book to be read on the
more
presently)
made
"
which
we
have
been
Apoca-
Christian Baruch) it is very likely that lyptic Baruch, and and Jeremiah books which have Baruch there are other
perished"
books coming to light for its disappearagain, nearly forty years after the published lament
interesting to find
lost
How
one of these
INTRODUCTIONS
ance
:
127
and
to myself,
how
new
what
volume (as
hands
friend
to
we
shall
was included
in the Christian
it
my
my
good
and colleague
reader will
to light
where
The
come
a glance, that
am
It is a Christian Arabic from an unexpected quarter. book, which we distinguish from the actually translated works of Christian fathers in the Arabic tongue, by the term Garshuni ; that
is,
it is
the said
a book written in Syriac characters, but in the Arabic language, language being commonly popular speech rather than the
We
may
which an author speaks in one tongue and writes in another, was sometimes due to the desire to escape Moslem criticism. There was a kind of protection, a guarantee of free speech, about a book written in
the Syriac character.
this
Apocalypse
of
Such a protection was appropriate to books like ours, which could add to the obscurity inherent in
Popular
a
and
veiled writings
medium
:
of Garshuni.
it
Our document
affects
is
good
see a
illustration
of this
has prevented
which
it is
found.
will
We
make
number
of
similar
of
documents,
is
and
we
expect to a personal
confession, in
future, as
is
view
what
to
be found, that
we
written
we have done in the past, despise a document in what we have called Christian Arabic.
let
because
it
Now
us
make
We
will give a
summary
contents,
and
sources from
relation of the
book
Apocalyptic literature generally. premise that Garshuni literature to which we have been referring is translated from Syriac into the the present book is popular Arabic
to
the
We
much
of the
no exception to the general rule it is a Syriac book whence the We shall probably find out Syriac text came from is another matter.
:
that there
is
true Biblical
a Greek text underlying the Syriac. The story begins in manner and often in the very terms of the Old Testament
with the messages of Jeremiah the prophet to King Zedekiah and to the
128
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
They have abandoned Jahweh and gone after people of Jerusalem. Baal and Zeus(!) Judgment is threatened to prince and people. Thereupon Jeremiah is thrown into a muddy prison, as in the Old
Testament, after a dramatic dispute with a false prophet, Hananiah, whom again we recognise as an ancient Biblical friend. Jeremiah is rescued from the mire by his servant Ebedmelech, who now becomes
as in the Bible a leading character in the Passion
The
Play of Jeremiah. under Divine a second time to King prophet compulsion goes Zedekiah and renews the vision of approaching judgment, chains and
slavery for the king, captivity
and massacre
Jeremiah
sends his disciple Baruch to the king with a letter in which the word of the Lord is contained (apparently an Apocalypse of some sort). Baruch gets a flogging. Jeremiah is sent for he utters further
;
Biblical
announcements
of
the coming of
the
Chaldeans.
He
is
promptly sent back to prison, where he would have died, if it had not been for the friendly offices of his servant Ebedmelech, who bribes the
and keeps alive the saint. After twenty-one days he is to is Ebedmelech that he shall not see the it and released, promised
gaoler
ruin of the city nor taste death until the calamity of the people
is
past
its
of
God
removed.
whole Act
;
of the sacred
Meanwhile Zedekiah goes from bad to worse he desecrates the sanctuary, which he transfers to Baal and Zeus, and does many impious deeds (which remind one in some details of Herod the
drama.
Great).
At
last
now
to
only
a limited acceptance.
on
to the scene.
Babylon and
find that the
incites
him
of
war
To
our surprise
we
King
Babylon
not want
special
he
is
He does
gifts
to hurt the
people of God.
He
sends great
and a
embassy
to Jerusalem.
is
Babylon
Cyrus
reluctant,
(sic
For some reason not very clear the King of enraged with the reception of his embassy, and he calls on But he is still very his general, to prepare war. !),
and only moves forward under a sign from heaven. The Chaldeans approach Jerusalem. In the interim Ebedmelech is sent into the country to fetch fresh fruits and to sleep a long sleep through
The writer now begins to use the the approaching captivity. Words of Baruch, as we shall see more clearly presently.
Last
INTRODUCTIONS
When
Nebuchadnezzar,
of
129
whom the writer has a kindly feeling, whom he, strange to say, has no affection, for Jeremiah whom he recognises as a true
for
his
last
if
Jeremiah makes
is
and
see
appeal to the Most High, but he he can find a single honest man, for
Abraham
may be spared. Jeremiah is now playing the the Patriarch and Diogenes the Cynic, but cannot
Knowing
Holy
the city to be doomed, he makes
of the sanctuary,
man.
and
He
The
until
and the
toils
and privations
his general
of the
So matters go on
dies
Nebuchadnezzar
the lot of
and
is
succeeded by
Cyrus,
who makes
At
will
increasing cruelties.
this point of the story
who
of
be wanted
He
is
one
the children of the captivity, and naturally suffers with the rest of the
Israelite
The youth from the over-lordship of the Babylonian boys. Ezra from the Gospel of
the Infancy. Like Jesus, he breaks his pitcher at the well, and when the boys deride him, he folds his cloak into a water-tight carrier. Then incensed in heart, and grieved with their contempt, he pours out
supplication to the
Most High.
The
who
companions thereupon separate Babylonian boys, and Ezra works another miracle and raises a flood of water which well-nigh drowned the world, and would indeed have
themselves
done
so,
if
God had
now on
not already
made
contract
against
such
disaster.
Cyrus
is
the throne.
;
He
when
insists
refugees of
the
people
the earth
heard
in
Jerusalem.
Evidently the
day
of
hand. Ezra and Daniel and Ezekiel then lay their redemption heads together and go out into the wilderness to offer a sacrifice to God and to seek a sign from heaven. Michael is sent down and
at
consumes
their sacrifice
by
fire
his
wand.
130
WOODBROOKE
Now
let
STUDIES
left
the
city,
us return to Jeremiah, who appears after all not to have but remained in a sepulchre. (There seems to be some
confusion here.)
Here Michael
as in Egypt,
and bids him assemble the people, who are busy making bricks and promises him that if Cyrus hardens his heart like
Cyrus takes the hint, and then the thunder clouds of divine wrath
appear in the
sky.
:
Let
my
;
Yes, do
and away they go with their hearts full of joy and go, says Babylon their pockets full of money and they sing a song in a strange land,
because they are exchanging
it
to the gardens to fallen has figs, grapes. asleep in the heat, with the basket under his head, while over him a cave or rock had made fetch
fruit,
Now we
come
to the sleeper
and
He
is
shelter.
This part
of the story
Words of Baruck,
the
It is a fine situation when latter. Still it is not wholly lacking. one wakes from a sleep of seventy years and finds everything changed
except himself and his basket of figs, which are as fresh as if they too had slept. The old man whom he meets, with whom he has a
chronological dispute,
captivity,
like the
tells
him
jubilating
and the
flags
flying,
and
it
is
Feast of Tabernacles, or the Triumphal Entry, for which the Diatessaron of Tatian. Ebedmelech has a great
great
who
has
occurred.
The
lost
restoration of the
vessels of
place,
while on
all
hands a
new covenant
final
assented
to,
desertion of Baal
of Jeremiah,
and
of Zeus.
to
The
what
became
tion in
who
to
the
Epistle
Words of
Baruch.
gloom
So he only says that of a tragedy to the joys of the Return. while Jeremiah lived, the people were faithful to their covenant.
INTRODUCTIONS
131
We
may now
when
our
Apocrypha was produced, which depends in part on The simplest method of proceeding
is
the sources
will
whose date
an incident
carries
more
For example,
in the
we
water
may
be asked
Infancy.
how we know
Gospel of the
May
?
apocryphal
for
not Jesus' miracle have copied Ezra's, since both are The answer to this is very simple we know the reason
;
stated,
excludes
the
is
The Gospel of
the Infancy
concerned with the proofs of the Divine Nature of Christ, especially of Christ as Creator, fulfilling his own statement that the Son does the
same works
as the Father.
Now
at the
burst
asked
"
Who hath
Who
Who
is
Who
hath established
the ends of
if
What
"
is
his
thou canst
tell ?
The
passage
was supposed
to
Son
of
God
in
of a miraculous carrying of
water
irresistible.
it is
We
in
Infancy Gospel :
not borrowed from the Apocryphal Jeremiah, but conversely. The date of the Infancy Gospel has never been closely fixed, but it occurs
many
versions
MS.
tradition, so that
1
it is
hardly
likely to
1
be as
late as the
fourth century.
Its
bids them
most popular story is the one where Jesus makes mud sparrows, and It will be fly away, a tale which caught the fancy of Mohammed.
noted that
this story, also, is designed to prove Christ's creative power, in accordance with the dictum of the Almighty in the first chapter of Genesis, which caused fowl to fly upon the face of the firmament. It is curious in this
132
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
the reference in the text of Jeremiah to the rejoicings of the people on their return from captivity, which are cast in the mould of the
Triumphal Entry of Jesus to Jerusalem and expressed in the terms of the Arabic Diatessaron of Tatian. The matter is so interesting from various points of view, that we may devote a little space to it.
When Ebedmelech comes back from his long sleep at Jerusalem, and has been convinced of the reality of that portentous ecstasy by an
old
man whom he
11
is the month of Nisan, and this day is the first which the day prophet Jeremiah reached Jerusalem, after a The words that you utter stay of seventy years in captivity.
This month
in
Lo
with them branches of palm trees, and holding in their hands twigs of aromatic bushes and olive trees."
It is
is
the Triumphal Entry, and the reference to the carrying of palm branches shows that it is the Gospel of John that is being idrawn on.
The
or
*
language
pith of
itself
is
peculiar
'.
'
hearts of
palm
trees
palm
trees
Now
an early
Irish
Gospel (known as
Cod. r
John
or
xiii.
Armachanus) we get a similar rendering of the yScua of 2 (medullas palmarum). Comparison with other attempts
to render the
ing,
word
is
the
first
Latin render-
and
since
Lev.
xxiii.,
get a similar translation in the Syriac version of 40, where the feast of Tabernacles is described, as well
'
we
Arabic Diatessaron, we may say that it is a Syriac Gospel of John, which has furnished the both to East pith of the palms and West. This must then be Tatian's translation, made under the
as in the
'
influence of
the Peshitta of
is
the
Old Testament.
Since
then our
Apocryphal Jeremiah describing a Jerusalem situation, it is John xiii., 2 that has influenced him, and not the prescriptions for the Feast
of Tabernacles.
superior limit
date of production of Diatessaron, then, is a reference to the margins of time to our Apocryphon.
The
and footnotes
will
show
that
the
Christ as a Christian
Perhaps
Kur'an (ix, 30) maintains the divinity of and the divinity of Ezra as a Jewish belief. dogma either case on account of the argument from Prov. xxx. and its
note
that
the
illustrated miracle.
INTRODUCTIONS
under the influence
Luke.
o{
133
Matthew and
in
With
almost equal
confidence
He
also
knows the
For the matter of that, it would be seven archangels of Enoch. difficult to find a writer of this period, whether canonical or apocryphal, who is not under the influence of Enoch.
We come now
our writer
is
;
to the
most obvious
employed by
a large part of his story, viz. the adventures of Ebedmelech, This work acquires a taken from the Last Words of Baruch.
view
I
of
its
partial
found Apocalypse
publications,
and, as
said above,
is
one
of
my
earliest
which
am
re-editing
of
his
name
it
was due
find
and
disciples.
For
instance,
when
was
trying to
Abimelech, the good man had been sent to the market of the Gentiles, according to one of my principal MSS., I consulted Dr. Hort as to the meaning of the term, which was too striking to be
other than
original.
He
say
asked
?
me what was my
best
MS., and
'
what did
stick to
my
best
MS.
Then
a characteristic advice,
at the time, but next
always
morning on the breakfast- table a closely-written post-card with references for the fair that was set up, when the last Jewish revolt
there
Nothing further
lay
was
Abraham. In that identification which promptly worked out, I was certainly a jay in peacock's feathers. When the book appeared, it was received rather coldly by
over,
at the
Oak
of
certain school of
critics,
because
and involved
the earliest
known
quotation.
of the document, from the Gospel of John, This would hardly provoke resentment
I
when
it
Fourth Gospel as the product of the latter half of the second century. Critics are not so positive on that point as they were in Dr. Samuel
Davidson's day
better.
;
in other
know
134
WOODBROOKE
In the working out of the
STUDIES
Abimelech
in
theme
or Ebedmelech,
fell
Reading
Maracci the
account of the
Moslem
of
figs,
appropriation of the story of the long sleep and not being sufficiently adroit in the Kuran
I
and
its
commentators,
name
of the
Arabic
Maracci as Alchedrum, taking the Latin accusative as the proper name. Only two letters in excess, but those two letters a me brought prompt correction from my friend Robertson Smith,
sleeper in
who was
Orientalist than
and
a thousandfold better
I
me
that
similar
me
New
some Talmudic
I
parallels,
which
was not disposed to accede) that I would edit the article on Apocrypha in the Jewish Encyclopedia. Dr. Robertson Smith's letter was so interesting, and so like himself, that I am going to subjoin
it
to
my
story.
CAMBRIDGE,
Mth
October, 1890.
MY
DEAR HARRIS,
In your Baruch, p. 41 your Alchedrum whom you is of course Al-Khadir or Al-Kkidr, a very
,
sometimes regarded as the Moslem St. to be the person alluded to George. in Sura ii., 261 Maracci has (no doubt) from Baidawi's note on the I think you must be right in supposing that Sura ii., 261 passage. but did the comcontains an allusion to the story of Abimelech
is
who
mentators, who say that Al-Khadir, is the person referred to, say this at a guess, or had they some knowledge of their own about the
Christian legend ?
I have to remark first of all that the identification of Al-Khadir with the man who slept for 100 years might be suggested by the legend (Tabari i., 4 1 2) that Al-Khadir, a companion of Alexander, drank of* the water of life (which has a prominent place in the Alexander Romance) and is still alive. Nevertheless it is notable that Tabari also connects him with Abraham and with the dispute Abraham is said to about the possession of the well of Beersheba.
have brought this dispute to Alexander (Dhu '1-Karnain is Alexander, tho* Tabari mentions that some take him to be a different person) and This looks as if Al-Kh. were the well was adjudged to Al-Khadir. mixed up with Abimelech, king of Gerar. That your Abimelech
INTRODUCTIONS
135
and the Philistine king should be mixed up will surprise no one who knows the Arab way of using Biblical stories. That great liar the Jew Wahb b. Monabbih identified Al-Khadir with Jeremiah. This or it may the city being Jerusalem too might be a mere guess indicate some confused acquaintance with your story. Finally AlKhadir is commonly taken to be son of Malkan. The patronymic Ibn-Malkan does suggest Abimelech. Of these points the only one That that seems to me important is the association with Beersheba. knew of the Kuran the that far to story your expositors goes prove and connected it with Sura ii., 261. Yours ever, W. R. SMITH. (Signed)
Rabbi Kohler,
to
whom
alluded above,
was
as quick as Dr.
;
Robertson Smith to correct my slip over the Moslem sleeper but he also sent me a mass of Talmudic references, which were marked by the usual Hebrew diversity in dealing with a supposed historical event He regarded the Last Words as an with a possible chronology. original Hebrew book from an Essene writer, and that the victim of popular anger who was stoned in Jerusalem was not Jeremiah, but an
Essene hero named Onias, of
chapter
3.
whom
the
Talmud
tells
in
Taanith,
was Rabbinical Baruch tradition for actually identifying Ebedmelech and (see Pirke was Rabbi Eliezer, ch. 53), and that Ebedmelech actually made (as
also pointed out to
He
me
that there
in
servant of King Zedekiah the Rabbi nor myself was able to Neither the Distinguished One. the Talmudic treatment of what the of anachronisms in series explain was evidently a favourite subject and as to the existence of a
our
into the
;
new Apocryphon)
original for all these various forms of legend, I am content to leave the matter in the hands of those who are better skilled in detect-
Hebrew
ing
Hebrew
As
Baruch
it
is
Rest of the
Words of
it
has been have hardly looked at it since, possible for me to regard it dispassionately, and to say that it really was not a bad book, and might have had a more favourable reception. There is still a good deal to be learned from its pages by the student
appeared, and
of
to
the relation
priority of the
One
of the
I was able geography of the writer. Last Words, like its predecessor the Syriac Apocalypse of Baruch, was a Jerusalem book, in which one could see
most
to
show
that
the
136
WOODBROOKE
rise to
STUDIES
way
thither
Hebron
The
of the
modern
tourist in
Palestine
writer at once.
But
it
was
very exactness of
locality
which
He wanted figs, but saw no reason perplexed the later Apocalyptist. why the gardens of Agrippa should supply them ; and as for the
mountain road,
drops
all
well have been the Milky Way. He these identifications, including the Fair at the Terebinth
it
might
just as
where the Jews were sold cheap, as slaves, after the Hadrianic war in fact he had no geography and wanted none. All that his story needed was a cave for the sleeper and a basket of fruit. The other
details
have evidently been excised. The hand hand as in the case of the earlier documents.
In passing,
is
not a Jerusalem
we
ought, perhaps, to
add
to
what we
said previously
about the acquaintance of our writer with Christian Gospels. spoke of Matthew and Luke, but ought not Mark to be also on the
horizon ?
We
For when
we read
that this
man
month Nisan and Nisan (April) figs is not the season for figs, we are reminded that the very same expression is used in Mark, when Jesus, on His way from Bethany to
over his
and says
the
fig-tree.
If,
however,
this is
a Marcan
set
trait,
it is
also
found
in the
Last Words,
Just as
down
as a first-hand quotation.
the
classical,
but
sixty- six
meaningless.
Here
evident.
was Last
into
Words was
The
later
MSS.
of the
Last Words
fell
We must
was
raised
now
regard to the
it
was
Gospels.
new
text
we
by have also passages which look like the same time there are other passages
the Christian
which require the Talmud, or at least the folk-lore traditions embedded The most interesting case is that in the Talmud, for their elucidation.
INTRODUCTIONS
in
137
of
What king is informed of her husband's designs, this with warfare in that there,' says she, people, and was engaged saved ? Dost thou not know that this is the people of God, and that
when
she
is
'
queen's
name
cast,
is
The they obtain it forthwith ? Hilkiah, which, whether masculine or feminine, has a
that the lady
God
'
Hebrew
pervert
and suggests
a captive or a
Now
if
we
turn to the
Talmud, Taanith,
of
xxiv. 2,
we
find
:
mother
II.
we
it
is
the mother
that
makes the
appeal
'
Iphra Honniz, the mother of King Shapor, said to her son, Have nothing to do with those Jews, for whatever they ask
their
"
from
'
Lord, he gives
'
it
to them.'
for
He
says to her,
How
so ?
She
replied,
'
They asked
rain came.'
He
said to her,
rain came.
time of the
she sent a
;
summer
solstice,
and
let
Whereupon
messenger to
Rabbah and
said,
"
implore
mercy and
have seen, was Iphra Hormiz, is Talmud, so that it has been suspected
we
was a Jewish
proselyte.
Evidently
we have
stumbled, in our
the
same
story
Talmud.
We
must
not,
however,
conclude that there has been direct Jewish influence on our Apocalypse, for the tradition of Iphra Hormiz and her Jewish sympathies
in the
between
we
Matthew
of
of Pilate's wife
is
Persia
with her
husband's
anti- Jewish
we
of Pilate sending to
just as
much
for Jesus in
a dream ; and
the
mother of King Shapor appeals to him to have nothing to do against those good people the Jews, so we have Pilate's wife appealing
138
against his doing
WOODBROOKE
anything unfriendly
STUDIES
to the
has before him for judgment. Is it possible that she also may have had secret sympathies with the Jews or with Jesus, or an actual
acquaintance with
Him
?
it is
As
to
in the highest
and Nebuchadnezzar
A NEW
The
is
LIFE OF
in the
in
main twofold.
There
will
works
which the Apocryphal writer is dominated by an Apocryphal situation, some concurrence of misfortunes which threaten his nation, or
of misfortunes
which have
left
their
mark
is
who
become a
He
primitively equivalent)
in lurid colours
when he
on the flaming patches Nor will he always be a mean artist, even the Divine Judgments. or dialect writing in a half cipher (' he that readeth, using popular
for his palette
when he
lays
let
him understand ') for along with the moving tale of disasters in the sun and perplexities on the earth, there will rise in his imagination the story of storms succeeded by calm, and a lovelier city to replace the one
that
in the
second class of Apocrypha is due, not to any peculiar strain environment of the writer, but to a desire to fill up a deficit in literature, and to complete a story that has been imperfectly told, or
The
all.
Every
it
;
history,
whether personal,
local
or
in
if
we
know or we shall pretend to know person or people, we shall want to The pretence to know is of be filled. how those empty spaces may
the very essence of a whole line of Apocryphal works. For instance, the Gospel knows nothing or next to nothing of areas
in
our Lord's
spirit,
I
life,
where we would
like
to
know much.
It
is
our
modern
suppose, that
INTRODUCTIONS
rion as
139
might be gathered from a Family Bible or a genealogical tree : but those of us who have family Bibles of any age, or ancestral
are well
;
records,
aware
in
to
Apocryphal
insertions
and even
'
the scriptures
'
we
could be produced because they were wanted, as occurs even to-day in Arab circles. Abraham begat Isaac may be historical, at least we
hope
so,
and make
it
almost creedal
Aminadab
It all turns on the does not provoke belief so readily. begat his point whether master Aminadab and progeny were produced
Aram
them.
Now
the
Biblical
story
may
;
have supplied these genealogical matters, because the self-respect of a and in that case they are Apocrypha but family required them
;
even
if
that
were the
case, the
if
modern
spirit of history
would not be
satisfied
they were flaunted in our face in the foresensible of a wider area of lacunae than
We are
the person
who
Now we
the
life
at
for
of Christ
began asking
what point the hungry student of more history or for earlier history.
St.
Such hungry sheep might look up to fed. They would get something from
from
St.
Luke
our Lord's
visit at
might we, for instance, say that St Luke's account of twelve years of age to the Temple was a historian's
an uncharted area
Luke's
It
may be
so,
and
will
But
on
his
map
credit, which credit already stands did he leave that great Terra Incognita why between the life-parallels of twelve and thirty ? If he was
in that case,
as interested in a child
who
and
surprise
whom
beginning to close
It is in
cannot, however, fail to be surprised that, with such a canvas lying idle, no artist had seized it for some three centuries after it had been exposed. The Gospels of the Infancy, and the Gospel of the Boyhood are lacuna-Gospels. So are the
stories
We
which
tell
of the
whose
140
with
difficulty.
WOODBROOKE
From
Jesus
STUDIES
and
The existing history is only vocal about Forerunner, John the Baptist. the two lives of John where John and Jesus overlap, or where one
personality (either of
them
will
do) bears testimony to the righteousAnd even here it is the Birththat take most of the space.
Who
a papyrus should turn up, to do for John the rejoice, So, without raising our hopes too Baptist what Mark did for Jesus ? we turn to a found high, recently Life of John the Baptist in an
would not
Arabic MS. to see if we can gather anything further with regard to the Baptist, beyond what can be picked up, in the shape of fragments, from the Gospel itself.
premise that there are numerous indications in Christian literature of the desire to fill in what might seem to be deficiencies in
the
We
known
One
of the
most
interesting
was caused
would teach them to was natural to ask what John was the form of prayer which was displaced by the Oratio Dominica. The answer was supplied by some early Christian and is even now extant in a Syriac form. It runs as follows in the MS. Add. 12, 138
by the request
pray as
Lord's disciples that
also taught his disciples.
It
He
of the British
Museum
The Prayer which John taught his disciples me thy Son Son, show me thy Spirit Holy
; ;
"
Spirit,
Father,
show make me
it
was
like this
sanctify
me by
make me
to
me
The
with
thy greatness, and show me thy Son, and fill thy Spirit, that I may be illuminated with thy
knowledge."
next increment to our supposed knowledge
is
our sense that Divine Justice had not been her daughter were allowed to go scot free.
literature will find this
satisfied, if
by Herodias and
a
called for
The
of
student of English
in
poem
of
is a verse from this poem, with an explanatory be required by the ignorance of the reader as would such footnote,
Herodias.
Vaughan Here
the Silurite
on the theme
The Daughter of
:
INTRODUCTIONS
Leave then, young Sorceress the Ice Will those coy spirits cast asleep,
;
141
Which
Who
teach thee now to please his eyes doth thy lothsome mother keep.
: :
The note runs as follows Her name was Salome in passing over a frozen river, the ice broke under her, and chopt off her head.
It
may be
asked where
Vaughan
to
found
It
this
Apocryphal addition
the
New
of
Testament
record.
is
thing of the kind in the commentaries of the legend is more difficult to determine.
in the document before us.
We
shall find
is
one form
that the
All that
we
say at present
Apocryphal
satisfied.
story
was
But now
let
us
come
where we
shall find
in the first place the author a curious mixture of history and legend has Worked over the Biblical account in a very accurate manner ;
next,
we
it
an amount of Apocryphal
the
writing
itself
detail,
sufficient
;
to
us
in
classifying
as
Apocryphal
gives us the
and
last of all,
when he comes
he
reverts
from legend to
and
means
that
of
of high
He
tells
us that his
name was
Serapion, and
episcopal centres by
A.D.
380
to
385.
in
text has of a
name
Serapion
tells us, in
fact,
that at a
church was
built
to receive them,
where a and a magnificent celebration was the month Baouna. The document, then,
by provenance Egyptian, and it is historical and can be dated at the close of the fourth century. The miracles wrought at the tomb of the saint are also historical, so far as miracles can be, which are
evidently
made
newly enshrined.
other cases of
We
in so
many
1 1
142
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
miracle-loving people believed and the benevolent saint operated, soon subsided into a normal good feeling without supernatural attestations.
No
need
they might be
compromising
names
in
the church.
Now
let
it
follows
closely the scriptural account, but with explanatory additions, mostly of an Apocryphal character. can easily see the genesis of these.
We
saint.
festival of
the
The body of the holy John the Baptist, the saint whose feast we are celebrating to-day, remained in Sebaste which is
Nablus
of
Samaria
for four
hundred years."
What more
day, should have added to his narrative such current stories as might make the lessons for the day more interesting. It is a practice which
still
prevails.
One may
"
say of
it,
apology
vintners
what Mistress Quickly says, in mutton in her Tavern in the do it." Coming, then, to those
Infancy Gospel where the people would have and perhaps did ask them, one would like to
know whether
sanctity has a
the good
man
and whether
further,
his
shadow
cast over
from
his diet.
And
how
was
it
possible for a child of tender years to live in the desert all the
as a prophet to Israel ?
St.
years which intervened between his leaving his home, and his return It is well known that the difficulty over
John and
is
as early as
the time of Tatian and the Eucratites the biblical text was subject to correction by the substitution of a diet of milk and honey for the
offensive locusts.
Even
in Palestine, the locusts (d/c/DtSes) had been replaced by pancakes Those who held to the milk and honey diet for
(ey/cptSes).
the youthful
saint,
had
to
employ
their
imagination
in a
further
direction, in order
to explain
how
the necessary
supply was
to
be obtained
in the desert.
They
settled
by sending
Bar
maternal function was discharged for a period of fifteen years, at Now the close of which time we may assume that Elizabeth died.
INTRODUCTIONS
that our writer
fact that
143
is
knows something
of this tradition
clear
;
(i)
from the
Elizabeth actually takes her son into the desert (ii) that he is not unusual in
(iii)
which he
story
dilates as
he has a special death in the desert for Elizabeth, over Browning might have done if he had known the
of
the theme.
similar
explanations of St.
may
refer to
my
book,
The Apocryphal
we
Our
writer oscillates
between a carnivorous
and a vegetable diet. First he will have the locusts, and then again he disowns them. We are told that the blessed John wandered in
'
the desert with his mother, and God prepared for him locusts and wild honey as food. But after the death of his mother, when John was only seven years and six months old, the writer says that John
'
and devotion.
another
wild honey*
St.
Here
is
!
His only food was grass and solution of the problem how to keep
John a vegetarian The next problem for the thoughtful mind was the question of the burial of the sainted mother by her seven-year-old child. The situation demanded celestial assistance, a theophany, an angelophany,
as well as the aid
which
women
Our Lord appears on a cloud, accompanied by His mother and Salome, and with attendant 'angels and archangels. This cloud-flying
motive was familiar to the Apocryphal mind. Not only had they Christ's promise that the Son of Man should be seen on the clouds of
heaven, but the descent into Egypt had been explained by the language of the prophet that the Lord should mount on a white cloud and come
into Egypt,
was Mary. So there was no difficulty adest Deus, adest Machina. Jesus, at the age of seven years, orders the obsequies and makes appropriate predictions.
said the white cloud
;
where some
Really the desert which our writer describes was not a very formidable or distant affair. He combines it with the location of
near Jerusalem, which could be reached in a very short The New Testament student space of time without an aeroplane !
will notice that our text interprets
in Luke i. 39, as being a town called Judah, for which the authorities may be consulted on one side or the other. Coming now to the somewhat
15
Ain Karim
iroXw 'lovSa
diffusely
144
WOODBROOKE
we
find ourselves in
It is
STUDIES
between the Baptist and the Herodian a folk-lore atmosphere with an independent
that Herodias,
development.
commonly supposed
when
she had
her bodkin the reproving tongue. In our tale she proposes to cut out the tongue, place the eyes in a dish, and use his long hair to stuff her bolster.
These
incidents,
threatened
in biblical
but
not occurring,
came
and
and
semi-biblical tales,
down
that
about her
ears,
left
It
their sockets.
Then
the
of the Baptist
had been
insulted,
fate
the head
whose
it
And
tell
:
it
was
he
it
for
near him
it
when he was
preaching
the people
knew
of great saints.
Now
the most
difficult
of hagiology.
a long series of volumes running parallel to the history of the church itself. On the other side it is not to be denied that martyrs and holy men had
it is
On
one side
a history of
ecclesiastical lying,
bones,
itself
have a permanence to which the body and which lends themselves to pious remembrance. lays Why should not some of them be genuine ? One reason, of course,
that these bones
claim,
and
no
is
the tendency of the relic to multiply, to become ubiquitous. John is a case in Our writer says it was prepoint.
served at Sebaste, which he wrongly identified with Nablus. It is still said to be there. But then it was also preserved in the great Mosque at Damascus, and again in the town of Horns (Emesa).
Our
writer says
it
was preserved
for
400
there in peace
till
Then
in a time of
the imperial rage against the Christians, the churches were desecrated,
in the
coffins
was
were
the
Baptist
and
for
of
Elisha,
the
by
the design of
providence
by
side that
in adjacent
tombs.
and
secretly sent
them
to Alexandria.
it
that the
head was
there.
In fact
was a very
and had
INTRODUCTIONS
been
its
145
years and crying out
many
condemnation of
From
which we may infer, if we please, that no one knows what really became of it There are always various solutions for the history of a it would relic but this does not mean that all relics are unhistorical
:
be more
of
them cannot be
which are
say,
for
example,
all
the
eight-day
clocks
said to
in the
Mayflower.
It is
But
now
we
modern
to
illustrations.
historical to
supposed Bishop Serapion in the church consecrated at the end of the fourth century.
say that
some
relics
be
were deposited by
memory in Alexandria
III.
Uncanonical Psalms.
The
if
wide extent
of the early
hymnology, whether
that of the
Hebrew community
and assigned to King David or imitated in the early Christian Church under the authorship of King Solomon and the title of his Odes. There is a literary bridge between the two collections in those Psalms
of the Pharisees
of
our Lord, and are also dignified with a Solomonic authorship. The most elementary criticism of the Psalter as the term
is
commonly used will show that it is an edited volume, made to order, and limited in its content to 1 50 songs. Even a child of the present age can see, what the prophets and kings of previous critical ages failed
to apprehend, that
it
cannot be
his.
It
all
of
it
Davidic
in origin,
and that
probably
of
perhaps none of
it is
and
is
made
mere
up, like a
of previous
handbooks
The
mis-
numerical limitation
is sufficient
to
show
that
it is
cellaneous in character,
and
hymn-
books,
that
it
many
has
things
which ought
have been
left out,
left
out a good
many
146
WOODBROOKE
sets the
STUDIES
in Oriental lore
watchman
is
on the look-
Indeed, as
if it
There
Perhaps
it
and higher
Septuagint,
who
first
whom we
Psalms, and searched the story of David, in order to make him sing the right thing at the right time. There were musical critics, too, as we can see from the head-lines in Moffatt's translation, to tell
us what kind of instruments and
Hebrew
what range
of voices
were proper
for
fellows, no doubt, who did not object to using a hymn-book ascribed to the sons of Korah, because Korah had
Good
as to authorship
;
left
the
David wrote them, the words expressed popular opinion unchanged his thought and the tunes answered to his harp.
As
"
a Greek
sat
MS.
expresses
it,
which
is
once saw
after
in
Jerusalem
David
named
him
in Jerusalem,
and elegantly composed his Psalms." burdensome belief but then the Psalter
itself is
a burdensome
legacy, from which both the Christian Church and individual believers have suffered much, and from whose dominance the Christian Church
is
made
The observation which we slowly beginning to shake itself loose. as to the over- Davidized head-lines, shows that premature
to theological disaster
;
criticism leads
take,
for instance,
the
Oth
whose Davidic authorship Jesus found himself committed, which becomes the basis for the Session at the Right Hand of the
Psalm, to
Father, and the priesthood after the order of Melchizedek Our reason for referring to these matters lies in the little collection
!
which
is
the first Psalm in the group is not new : it here published sometimes printed as an Appendix to the Psalter, and is known as
is
:
the
for
st.
The reason
for
it is
obvious.
Among
all
the
odd
situations
earlier collectors
triumphal ode over Goliath. Ziphites told Saul that David was
among
them, another
INTRODUCTIONS
1
147
Joab had defeated 2,000 Edomites in the Valley of Salt, while the lovely 34th Psalm is said to be the work of David when he escaped
arrest
by pretending
it
to
be
mad
but no
The
Sunday
parently
schools of that
Apday must have resented the omission that rectified it and put it as an
!
Appendix
Not
that
it is
ever going to be
main purpose is to deep enough We do not rectify an omission, which it does awkwardly enough. Greek into think it has a Hebrew original from it passed probably
said or sung.
for that.
Its
;
Syriac, as
we
have
it
before us.
it
In the
West
it
may
interest
it
some persons
antiquarian
know
was rendered
into
Lowland
Scottish
Jeremiah Apocryphon.
PREFATORY NOTE.
the following pages
I
IN
critical
apparatus)
of
a rather
strange
by a work purporting to
in
the deportation of
edition
the
Jews
:
to Babylon.
have followed
my
two manuscripts
Paris
65
in the
custody of the Rendel Harris Library, Birmingham, designated hereafter by the letters P. and M. respectively. P. is dated 905 of the
1
Greeks (A.D. 1594), and M. has lost its colophon, but on palaeoThe former graphical grounds may be ascribed to about A.D. 1650.
was
written at
Hamat, and
attention
all
the latter
was
recently acquired
to
to
by
2
me
in
3
Kurdistan.
No
has
been
paid
Paris
238,
273,
the above
MSS. seem
contain only
two
specimen of each recension. I have added to the following pages the reader will conclude that I believe that P. which is now in Garshuni was
From
footnotes that
transcribed from a
MS.
The same, however, could not be said of M. This fact Egypt. induces us to suppose that the two recensions of the story referred to
above may provisionally be divided
Syrian, Palestinian, or
into
Mesopotamian
recension.
two
and unmistakeable.
I
first
tried to establish
from
all
the above
MSS.
the body of the story and relegate the numerous variants to the foot1
(The MS.
is
dated
1785
of the
P.
214
in
(The MS. is of the sixteenth century.) (The MS. is of the seventeenth Zotenberg's catalogue.
148
century.)
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
notes, but in the course of
149
my
transcription
was impracticable, and I was driven to the conclusion that the method to give an adequate idea of each recension would be to
separately
all
the text of
its
best
specimen, and
this is the
reason
why
set of
work a complete
and
of all
M.
note
The same
all
to
me
in the translation.
To
seemed
the
to
me
to
be cumbersome and
useless, so
confined myself to
two MSS.
In a
tion of both P.
and M. and the purely verbal discrepancies and variants have been completely ignored.
in the story
is
edited
is
still
If it standard of what a good piece of classic Arabic should be. comes to be established that the Arabic text is a translation from a
foreign language
an opinion to which
cannot subscribe
tempted
was
originally written in
which
it
was
and
recension represented by
M.
As
it
was
Greek
or
till
very
in
R.O.
to
The MS.
has
however,
The
either in
story
itself
appears to
me
who
lived
TRANSLATION.
We
Israel to
Babylon
at the
hand
3
King Nebuchadnezzar
in the
days
1
of the
prophet Jeremiah.
we
of
..."
3
the most important mistakes have been corrected in the footnotes. In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, one God, will begin by the assistance of God and His help to narrate the history
Only
P.
:
"
P. adds
"
:
May
his
Amen."
150
WOODBROOKE
And
the
STUDIES
x
:
word
of
God came
"
Say
Israel,
to the
'
King Zedekiah and to the people of the Children of 2 Why do you add sins to your sins, and iniquity to your
iniquity ?
My
If
sayings.
if
eye has seen your deeds, and my ear has heard your you had fasted, I would have been merciful to you ; and
I
would have
listened
to you,
says the
Lord
You have not fasted to me, nor have you stretched hands towards me, but you have fasted to Baal and prayed to your Zeus, and you have forgotten the Lord God of Abraham and said,
Omnipotent
'
Who
is
the
God
'
of Israel ?
You
all
my
goodness to you when I took you out of the land of Egypt, delivered 3 you from the servitude of Pharaoh, and smote the inhabitants of
cared for you like a tender mother cares for her virgin daughters until she delivers them up to the bridegroom, in order that no harm may befall you in all your ways. "
have
glorified
you above
I
people,
full of
O Children of Israel.
scorpions
and
vipers,
you my have brought you out of a wilderness and made you dwell in the desert forty
all
nations,
and have
called
years while your dresses did not wear out, your shoes were not torn
up,
and the
bread of angels from heaven, while a column of light by night, and a cloud protected you by day. I guarded you with my right hand and my holy arm, and delivered you from the hands of
your enemies and made you possess that for which you had not toiled. I took you out of the depth of the sea, and you beheld your enemies I sent down behind you standing by the sea like statues. angels from
heaven to
assist
you
in crossing the
its
middle of the
6
sea,
and drowned
I ordered depth with promptitude. the abysses to cover them, and made you enter a land for which you had not toiled, a land that flows with milk and honey, and put your
"
After
all
these things
'
which
is
my name and
1
said,
There
did for you, you have forgotten no God but Baal and Zeus.' You
I
Note
J 3
5
Read
taziduna
in
M. and dhunuban
*
in P.
P. omits the proper name. " her sons and her ..." P.
P. omits
"
mother."
See Exodus,
XV,
sqq.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
have returned
Baal,
to
151
me
evil for
and
turned
and daughters to Zeus. You have you, old and young, and have committed
injustices
The
no
just
I
my
of
wrath
to flow
like
thirst
a flowing river with the sword, and your old men your children will be deported while you look
city
will
be destroyed.
Your
land shall
become a deserted waste, because I lost patience with you, says the Lord Omnipotent. I bore with you so that perchance you may But now I have turned repent and return to me, and I return to you.
my
O
to
away from you. While you were doing my will and were calling me, O Lord, but now were you Lord,' I was listening to you with promptitude and answer Here I am,' nor say, you cry to me I would not
face
"
'
'
would
send
down
to
you dew
in time
and
rain in season.
In the
days when you were obedient to me, all the nations were trembling Each one of you used to chase a thousand, and two put before you.
ten thousand to
halted.
2
flight,
and
my
anywhere you
;
But when you offended me, and the sun and the moon mourned
idols,
and
all
the iniquity
which
4
is
within you, and which you perpetrated before the idol of Zeus.
You
my wrath and" did not return to me, says the Lord OmniGod of Israel.' potent, The prophet Jeremiah rose up then and went to King Zedekiah.
He
saw him
sitting in
the Sun-Gate,
of false prophets,
who were prophesying falsely to him. When King Zedekiah saw the prophet Jeremiah, he stood up before him and " received him and said to him seer, hast thou the word of God
:
in thy
mouth
"
"
in these
is
days
;
And
him
Here
the
word
page
"
and he narrated
here torn in
s
of
About a
Deut.
third of a
is
M.
Syr. akhri.
xxxii. 30.
4
5
Shemesh "
sun."
152
WOODBROOKE
before
all
STUDIES
God
the people.
When
prophet Jeremiah he waxed very angry, and asked the people and the false prophets who were round him whether that young man was
mad.
iron,
And
Hananiah,
the
liar,
'
head horns
'
of
:
and began to speak and say, This is what the Lord God says and Thou, king, shall triumph over thy enemies and over these he made a sign to north, south, east, and west and proceeded thus " No one will be able to contradict thee, king, nor dwell in the
"
land."
And
there
of
God
in
the mouth of
When
he said
to
liar
and
his -servants
Jeremiah and
full of mire,
4
him
in
order that he
may
die
him apart from a little bread and water in order that we may know whether the word of God is with him or not." Then they threw
to
When
up and inquired after the place where King Zedekiah was staying, and went to him. When the king saw the servant approaching him,
he
"
said to
him
;
"Be
is
welcome,
to-day to us
what
O "faithful
?
servant
thy request
And
king what has the prophet Jeremiah done, that you should have acted with him in this way ? Do you not fear God, O king, in castthe of into the Lord ing prophet prison and in extinguishing the lamp " of Israel which shone on the people of God ? Then King Zedekiah
said to
6
him
Ephti,
1
take
Thou hast done well in reminding me to-day of him, O some men with thee, and go and take him out of prison."
"
Or
P.
:
3
5
Cf.
P.
See
Jer. xxxviii. 6.
He
is
The name
(Jer. xxxviii. 7), an Ethiopian eunuch in the king's given in P. seems to be of Coptic origin and emanates
from a
MS. the archetype of which was written in Egypt. 8 The first half of the name of Ephtimelech, the reading
name
in this sentence.
of P.
M.
does
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
Then Abimelech
and repaired him the old
"
did as he
freedom.
rags,
153
1
to the prison in
and
let
down
which Jeremiah was lying he threw to to him the strong ropes and said
:
Attach these
to your
armholes so that
up."
He
his
you whom I have elected and honoured, arise and go for the second time to " Zedekiah and say to him, Thus says the Lord God of Israel, How
Then
Lord
'
shed innocent blood, cause pregnant women to miscarry, and take the fruit of their wombs and burn it with fire before the statue of Baal. The blood of those whom you have
long will you
irritate
my
spirit,
my glory,
of the
trodden
in
went up to the gates of heaven. Why have you the path of Manasseh and forsaken the ways of David,
If
you persist before me in these deeds, 1 will bring down my wrath and anger on you, and strip you of your glory I will overthrow your throne and give your kingdom to your enemy
your father ?
;
your eyes and place them in your hands, and slay two children and place one at your right hand and the other at your and put a chain round your neck like a dog. In this way your left
will put out
;
who
you
be deported into Babylon, tied to the chariot of the king 2 Nebuchadnezzar, and you will die there while driving the mule that
will
3
into
captivity with you, and Jerusalem foundations, because you have dishonoured
of foreign gods
fathers."
of Israel."
my name
I
by your worship
my
covenant which
utter
of the children
See
P. reads
Cf. 2 Kings xxv. 6-7 ; Jer. xxxix. 4-7. 3 In early times (and occasionally also in the present day) the stone that ground the corn in a flour-mill was tied to a chain pulled by a horse or a
mule.
4
zyodh
Curiously enough the name of Jerusalem is generally written in P. with at the beginning, in the Hebrew fashion, instead of an Alaph, in the
fashion.
to the arche-
M.
154
WOODBROOKE
The
prophet Jeremiah then said
"
:
STUDIES
No,
;
my Lord
and
my God,
Lord
of
of the universe
is
no,
man who hates Thy pious ones, and he will wax angry if I mention Thy name before him, and his anger will be brought to the highest pitch if I mention the name of Thy saints who have been slain and of Thy holy ones who have been stoned.
me
to
He
my
destruction,
and
if I
throw
there."
and
:
shall die
and go
afraid."
" then to the prophet Jeremiah Rise up who send you in my name, and be not
Then
and
and went
to
He
all the words of God. King Zedekiah became exceedingly angry, and ordered the prophet Jeremiah to be thrown for the second time in the lowest cistern, the cistern of
imprisonment of the prophet x Jeremiah, he went to King Zedekiah and saved him like the first time
mire.
When
him
Abimelech heard
of the
and
set
free.
Then
to
the
word
"
:
of
Jeremiah saying
Israel."
have elected,
arise
and go
of the Lord,
God
:
of
Then
to
down
No, because if I mention to Zedekiah, King my him Thy holy name he will wax angry and kill me." Then the Lord ordered the prophet Jeremiah to write down in a book all
his
hands
Him,
worshipped before
Him
and
Him
me
to
that
to
was revealed
to
him and
deliver
it
King Zedekiah. The prophet Jeremiah did what God ordered him to do, and he wrote a letter and sent it to King Zedekiah with his him to read it before him and before the disciple Baruch and ordered
company
1
And
Baruch went
to the palace
and the second rime." M. omits it. name as Yaruth throughout with a ya (instead of a ba) This could have happened only in case the Paris MS. at the beginning. which is now written in Garshuni was emanating from an original which was written in Arabic characters, because it is in Arabic characters only that the letters ba and ya have graphically the same form and are only distinguished by a small dot which is generally omitted in old MSS.
P. adds
2
P. writes the
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
of
155
the king
whom
he saw
sitting
with his
God.
with
When
became exceedingly angry, took the letter from him, and burned it He also fire that he made there before all the children of Israel.
ordered at once Baruch, the disciple of the prophet Jeremiah, to be 1 and asked him where (his and he was cruelly lashed flogged
master) lived.
The
The
servants
went out
to look for
in
and
They
seized
him
to do,
When he stood before King Zedekiah. the king, Satan filled the latter's heart and he began to gnash his teeth " I will shed at him and said to him your blood and pour it in the
and they presented him
:
plate from
which
eat,
will deliver
your
heaven
words
What
4
is
between
Jeremiah, that
against
my kingdom and
be taken from you and your throne shall be overthrown, and the people shall be deported ' and Jerusalem shall be destroyed to its foundations ? I swear to you
say,
shall
Your kingdom
by the
shall
but shall cast you into you and see whether your words will apply to
off quickly,
me
truly or not."
The
thrown
and
feet
no bread and water should be given to him, in order that he may die of hunger and thirst. The prophet Jeremiah turned then towards the
king and said to
"
May God
out of
3
.
prophesied for
many
come
3
my
me
omits.
M.
omits the
last
two
sentences.
M.
Read/mz
(or fay a in P.
156
in
WOODBROOKE
wishing
STUDIES
me
to die there.
Thou
hast
who
prophesy
to thee falsely.
This
*
:
being the case listen to the words of God which are in my mouth " Thou hast angered me with thy iniquitous deeds, 2 and I shall turn my face away from thee and from the people of the children of
Israel.
king of
wrath and anger against this land, and the the Chaldeans shall come with men as numerous as locusts,
I
shall kindle
my
and
shall dismantle
Jerusalem
and
fix
foundations the rampart of the city of his throne in its midst. And thou, King
to
its
thou seest these things with thy eyes, pangs of travail 4 will take possession of thee like a woman who gives birth to a child.
Zedekiah,
when
Thou
shalt
extend on thy bed and cover thy face with thy mantle
as with a shroud, and thy servants will carry thee on their necks like a corpse and run with thee towards the Jordan in order that they may God then will move the hearts of the servants cross it and save thee.
who
and and thee to Nebuchadnezzar, the present strip king of the Chaldeans, and thou shalt see his eyes with thy eyes, and He will put a chain round thy mouth shall speak with his mouth. thy neck like a dog, bring thy two sons to thy presence, and slay one
Karmlis
;
they will
at thy right
at thy
left.
He
Babylon,
head.
Thou
and carry thee with him to the countries 6 with mud, mire and ashes on thy eat bread, weeping and sighing, and shalt drink
shalt die there while driving the
water with
grief
mule that
When
to
And
the prophet
P.
into
Change
ar-radlyah.
3 5
the
ya
"
rot.
The
M.
"
Read sur in M.
of Greek origin. Written as Karlis in M. in the document should referred to be the that It is somewhat strange Jordan was of course overtaken in the plain o Zedekiah word. this uncommon by
Jericho.
6
P. wrongly
"
mud."
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
:
157
Leave him until he utters all that he King Zedekiah said While the prophet Jeremiah was left alone he turned has to say." " Listen to what to all the people standing before the king and said
:
:
" Have a little patience Jeremiah said to the servants of Zedekiah with me until I finish the words of God which are in my mouth." "
And
Lord Omnipotent says protected your fathers when I took them out of the land of Egypt, but because you have forgotten the
the
:
'
great goodness
with a
much
did to your fathers in the desert, you shall be requited When I took your fathers out of the land greater evil.
I
and they dwelt forty years in the desert, their not wear out, their shoes were not torn up, and the hair of
of Egypt,
dresses did
their
heads
in the
You, however,
"
shall
be deported and
shall
be
way
to
your destination
of palm-tree fibres,
and palm-tree
your shoulders the hair of women, and instead of the column of light which shone
to
shall
The
come down
upon your
you
the night,
day and night and went before them in their way, be deported and walk in the heat of the sun and the cold of
fathers
and you
*
summer and
that
moon and
you may be
You
shall
groping your way, and shall stumble on one another with vehemence,
intense pains,
'
and
bitter
weeping.
after bread,
You
shall
hunger
'
and
thirst
after water,
and you
Thou art just, O Lord, and Thou hast done say, Thou hast acted towards us according to everything with wisdom our merits.' Instead of the manna and the quails which God sent to
shall sigh
and
5
your
fathers,
He
caused to
6
jet forth
for
on you
and a
sores,
fiery
wind
bodies and
heal.
I
on
them
do not
shall
render
bitter in
your mouths,
in order to
Lit as
we
acted.
12
158
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
and dry up your bones. Instead of the light of the sun that (God) caused to shine on your fathers, you shall have You shall remain seventy lice and vermin to consume your bodies.
desiccate your bodies
and servitude
of the
Chaldeans
until the
Lord
When
Jeremiah finished
Zedekiah and
to the elders
surrounding him, they cried Zedekiah.' The king then ordered the prophet to be cast into the in the place where the cistern of mire was found. The dungeon,
description of this
King and princes of the people who were one and all, saying, Long live thou King
'
all
these
words
to
dungeon
until
is
that people
it
;
in the
;
dark
they reached
to of mire
sides
were as
thin as a
it
was
full
and
pitch
armpits
of a
man.
And
days 2 Abimelech, the servant of the king heard the story of the prophet Jeremiah, he visited him every day, by giving a denarius to
in great pains.
When
let
him
enter,
He
did
this
for to
him
"I
felt
sake of the prophet Jeremiah. Was it not sufficient for you, king, to imprison the prophet of God a first time and a second time, that you
should have thrown him a third time into prison ? You have extinguished the lamp of the children of Israel, which was shedding light on the and he did not speak before thee except what God people of God
;
had revealed
take
in
to him." in
Then
"
Abimelech,
up, go
reminding
me
of
him to-day
rise
and
men
a house
with thee and draw him out of the dungeon, and place him until we ascertain if his words are true or not, and test the
;
M.
P.
the hands.
P.
the boon-companion.
8
4
And
and
The
his master had eaten. parts of the fruits of which " " is to persuade verb akna'a used here for kafa
this
is
"to be
sufficient,"
Arabic version
is
5
induces us to suppose that the original from which the The particle of the interrogative alam derived was Greek.
missing in P. but is
found in
M.
worded
in the
The above
MSS.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
159
1
Abimelech went then immediately and took with him two servants from the palace of the king, and drew up the prophet Jeremiah from the dungeon, after he had spent there twenty-one days,
in
to
Abimelech
rest.
Then
the prophet
be thou,
me
in the time of
my my
child
trials.
Thus
His
says the
trouble, or in
He who does good to those in Lord Omnipotent, prison, and to the poor, God will remember him with
'
grace,
assistance.
child,
Thou
shall
not see
O my
and thou
die,
shall not
go to the
Lord
lurns
away His
wrath.
The
firmamenl
shall
rear ihee,
until
and ihy soul shall be in joy ihou seest Jerusalem in its glory
King Zedekiah returned to sin before ihe Lord, and he enlered ihe house of ihe Lord and look oul ihe Iwo columns of marble which gave lighl in il wilhoul a lamp and placed ihem in ihe
4
temple
lo ihe place
where he used
lo
sil
and drink
6
He
pulled
il
down
were
offered,
and he made
belongs lo
a lable lo himself in ihe lemple which He broughl oul also the ark of the
7
he made a crown
which he placed on ihe head of ihe idol. He ordered lhal oxen should be offered lo Baal ihe idol, and summoned ihe pregnanl
women
in travail
and commanded
sacrificed
oul of iheir
wombs and
"
on the
fire
to
He
should
P. omits
two."
Abimelech."
in
M.
"
says
:
idols Baal
and Zeus."
5
Read
P.
the
instead of a sin in P.
8
6
7
See Matt
ii.
16.
160
WOODBROOKE
and
their
1
STUDIES
likewise be sacrificed
Zeus.
In that very day the earth shook and and the Lord thundered from heaven and
its
his
all
He ordered the angel of anger to come down to it with fury, and had it not been for the intervention of the angels and the holy ones who knelt down before the Lord and besought Him to
the earth, and
turn
people,
all
would have
and
their
perished.
The Lord
tions,
holy lamenta-
had mercy upon the people of Abraham, 3 removed His wrath and did not destroy them.
Isaac,
And
'
the
word
of
God came
:
saying,
Here Jeremiah, Jeremiah,' and he answered, And the Lord said to him "I have sworn that I
am,
Lord.'
my
told
wrath, and
it
say to
you
that
to you.
Were
it
not for
shall not remove do anything before I have 4 your prayers that have surrounded would have been alive, and I would
I
shall not
my eyes
'
Avenge our
blood.'
Lo, concerning
this
people
:
among whom you live examine the three following punishments do 6 you wish me to order Satanael, the angel of wrath, to destroy them
and exterminate them from
old
their
them and
young ones to their adults, with their Or do you wish me to inflict famine on
is
above them
to
become
brass
iron, so that
no dew
;
may
I
fall
and
shall destroy
the trees
eat
and annihilate
full
so that they
may
fall in
last
sentence.
in P.
the sentence
It is
is literally
"
:
He who
is
:
(sic).
altogether missing in
M. and
P. adds further
is in it
And
8
down
to hell that
we may know
that there
grievous
Charles'
livre des
torment?"
About Satanael see the Book of the Secrets of Enoch in Apocrypha and Pseud, ii. 439 and passim, and the Ethiopic Le
Mysteres
in
in Pat. Or.
iii.
See
Refutation
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
from hunger and
zar
thirst ?
161
Or do you wish me
to
to allow
who
of
it
slaves of the
destruction,
in
"
may know
am
the
God who
hold their
spirits in
my
hands
When
he
"
fell
the prophet Jeremiah heard these words from the Lord, down in worship on his face before Him and wept and said :
of all
God
mercy
Look,
Thou
to
art the
God
of gods
and Creator
of
the universe.
Thy
servants
Abraham,
shall
Isaac,
and Jacob
let
whom Thou
:
;
be
heaven
no,
one and
and
because he will not leave a single one of them. oath that Thou sworest to our father Abraham,
'
Where
is'
the
Thy
beloved, in
if
saying to
Him,
Thy
Thou
sendest against
from sending
children of
down
them famine and dearth, and Thou restrainest heaven its dew, and the earth from yielding its fruit, the
servants will perish from the surface of the earth,
Thy
shall
and where
Israel in
Thou
gavest to
Thy
servant
saying to him,
Thy
and ever/
I
And
do not be angry,
at
receive
the hands of
Thy
servants
3
:
Thy
people
who
sinned
If Thou orderest for them, Lord, a deportation by against Thee. Nebuchadnezzar and a captivity to Babylon, verily a father chastises
his sons
and a master
the
his servants."
Then
long of
of the angels,
Lord summoned forthwith the angel Michael, the head " and said to him Arise and go to Nebuchadnezzar,
:
Go to Judea, to the city of Babylon and say to him and hand and the hand of the Chaldeans who Jerusalem, spread thy
*
:
its
land,
it
and bring
enslave
them there
for
seventy
years.
Their
do brickwork and clay work, and their old men shall hew water, and their women shall spin and weave
1
Gen.
Lit.
xxii.
is
7.
A word "
:
P. exhibits
missing at the beginning of the sentence in P. because of the affair that I have with Thy servants." " Do not be angry with me."
Further,
162
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
wool, and they shall show thee their work every day, and thou shall make accounts with them as if they were slaves. Act, however, with
mercy and
justice
"
(in the
end)
shall
have pity
upon them.' Michael worshipped then the Lord immediately and went in haste to Babylon, which he reached in that very night. He nudged
Nebuchadnezzar the king in the right side and said to him " Nebuchadnezzar, arise quickly so that I may speak with you." When Nebuchadnezzar awoke from his sleep and saw the angel of
:
with shining eyes like the star of the morning, with a spear in his hand, with loins girded with a sword, with feet covered with hot 1 " Woe polished brass, and with a terrifying speech, he said to him
:
God
is
me,
my
Are you
the
God who
Or perchance are you heaven and established the earth, and fashioned spread " And the angel answered him saying " I am not
:
am
one
who
stand
Lord God, and here is what the Lord God your might and with the Chaldeans, and
the land of Judea
all
and deport
and
its
inhabitants
And
they shall
be slaves to
their
adults shall
work
at
clay
and
bricks,
men
and weave wool, and they shall bring in their work every day like slaves, and you shall settle their accounts, but show mercy towards them. I
shall
women
have delivered them to you for punishment, and " pity on them for ever and ever.'
after that
shall
have
And Nebuchadnezzar said to the angel Michael " Woe is me, O my master, the Lord has perchance waxed angry with me because of the great number of my sins, and He wishes me to go to foreign lands in order to destroy my life in them do destroy me with your
:
hand
this
for
me
than that
and
all
who
are with
me
Who
is
the king of
of
God
the
M. which god are you ? See about the seven angels the Book of Enoch in Charles' Apocrypha and Pseud, ii. 201.
P.
:
hot.
Read maskul
M.
M.
omits
"
for erer."
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
Most High
fight the
?
163
And who am
God
?
Is it
that
people of
whom
Pharaoh
fought,
?
Is
and
it
him
Amorites
fought,
and they
all
perished ?
were destroyed before them." Who am I Lord, that I should fight a just people and conquer it, a then, them any material people who when they go to war do not take with out their of war, but, if they stretch hands, angels help them from
In this
heaven and
fight
on
their behalf ?
the angel Michael said to Nebuchadnezzar : Every thing 4 of the commandments who is true. said keep Every people you 5 but if forsake His them overcome to able is ; they God, no one
And
"
commandments and His law, He delivers them into the hands of their Now, this people have enemies, and they perish at their hands. " arise thou, then, and sinned, prevaricated, and increased their iniquity
;
destroy them that they may know that God is the only one that lasts When the angel Michael finished his words to for ever and ever." his hand, anointed him, and fortified stretched he Nebuchadnezzar,
him
against the (Jewish) people, and went up to heaven. After the angel Michael had gone, Nebuchadnezzar arose and 7 went to his wife Hilkiah whom he awakened from her sleep. He
narrated to her
all
had
told him.
8
When
and
she heard
greatly perplexed
:
fell
down 9
" Woe is me, my lord, and weeping, and said to Nebuchadnezzar 11 my brother take me with thee wherever thou goest, because I
llj ;
shall not
Who
is
the king
who
fought this
Dost thou not know that this is the people people and was saved ? of God, and that everything that they ask from God they obtain it
forthwith
?"
12
And
Nebuchadnezzar
said to her
"
:
It is
their
God
Read Amoraniun.
It is
M.
omits
all this
sentence.
quickly Nebuchadnezzar became versed in the Jewish history and in the knowledge of the true God. 4 5 Read sha bin in P. Read ahadun in P.
surprising
l
how
6 7
The
In
last
in
M.
s
M. Helkenah.
Read
P.
"
idtarabat in P.
9
II
12
P. wrongly
10
when."
The knowledge of the Queen Helkenah or Hilkiah concerning the Jewish people is as accurate and perplexing as that of her husband
!
164
that has delivered
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
"
:
them up to me." And she said to him my if thou goest lord, listen attentively to what I am going to say to thee to fight them, take with thee a ram, and when thou art near the city of
:
Judea
3
alight
that
is
in thy
hand on
ram and
let it
go
if it
Judea, follow it, and know that the Lord has delivered them up to thee but if the ram does not proceed forward to Judea but turns its face
towards Babylon, return thou with it and fight not the people of God if you are like the number of the sand of the sea not a single soul will
;
When
from
her,
5
words
to the king,
he accepted them
Isarus,
and narrated
them
all that
God
:
His
It
angel.
And
"
May
you
live
for ever
is their God that is This people has sinned angry with them. send therefore at once a messenger to Zedekiah, king of Jerusalem, to convey to him words of conciliation, and despatch gifts with him, and
;
make
listen
inquiries
whether
his
forsaken the words of the Lord, and whether they have refused (to
to) the prophets
who were
who
interceded with
the Lord on their behalf. If not, do not proceed to their land, as He has destroyed others who fought them, and fire will come down on us from heaven and consume us along with our land."
(
sent forthwith
from
his generals,
letter to
a great quantity of carmine, gold, and frankincense. The general departed then for Jerusalem with his party. When he reached it, King Zedekiah was informed that the messenger of
to
him
He at once went out Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had arrived. to meet him, surrounded by the women of the children of Israel
dancing
before their king.
received the general of the king (of Babylon) and accepted the
1
P. omits P.
"
"
of gold."
M.
omits
"
let
it
3 5
7
Read biwajhihi
in
go." P.
M.
Sharus.
last
A leaf
is
here missing in
ii.
M.
named
gifts
with Matt.
11.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
from him.
165
He
it
as to the frankincense he burnt it placed on the head of the idol He was also pleased with the letter of the before Baal and Zeus.
to
him
to
Babylon an answer to
"
of
Zedekiah, King of Judea, writes to Nebuchadnezzar, King This peace exists Peace be with you. Babylon, thus
' :
My
are
my
gods.'
letter,
He
sealed the
handed
it
to
When the priests of Baal, the with him gems and precious stones. " 1 Where is Jeremiah who idol, heard (this) they said to the king
:
'The land?'"
said,
king of
Babylon
shall
come and
who
like
answer
to his letter.
When
meaning perfectly
he roared
and
said to
Cyrus and
"
:
Prepare
in
forth
him
were
were
six
all
the Chaldeans to
six
the
number
hundred thousand
horsemen and
sixteen
hundred thousand
in
all
chariots,
horsemen,
1
six
hundred thousand, with spears, weapons, and leather and they marched on the right hand of the king and on
until
his
left,
Jerusalem.
There Nebuchadnezzar alighted from his chariot, stripped removed the crown from his head, brought
the sceptre of his kingdom, and put it on the head of the ram. The ram took immediately the road of Judea, and the direction of Jerusalem. The king then said to all who were with him " I am very much
:
me."
1
Then
There
has delivered the (Jewish) people to 4 the king ordered that his ram should be brought to him
God
Read sami'a.
all
'
these numbers,
if
we
under-
Read
muta'ajjibun.
Read kabshahu.
166
and placed
l
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
;
on the sceptre of his kingdom pitched in the ground and then he placed his robe at his right hand, and removed his crown and laid it under his feet, and he turned his face towards the direction of " 2 God whom I do not know, God of the pious the east, and said
:
Hebrews, and
I
of
Abraham,
4 I
Isaac
am
8
and Jacob, God whose name that mouth has sinned and my my
I
lips
have deceived.
am
me
because
am
a sinner.
My
sins
and those
of my people have perchance increased before Thee." Then he " 5 God of Israel and God of heavens and earth, whose proceeded 6 has reached name me, the unworthy servant, God who has power
:
beseech thee,
Lord, to
tell
me whether
angel,
whether
Thy
7
Thy
I
and
implore
Thee
me and
to these
men who
are standing
before Thee,
because
hast,
am Thy
servant,
Nebuchadnezzar, King of
in the times of
Babylon.
Thou
If
I
Lord, hardened
yore the
who were
with him.
my
land
destruction, destroy
me
while
am
;
still
in the borders of
my own
with
i*
all
those
who
are with
me
let
but,
Lord,
if
Thou
truly deliverest
the shade of
my
me.
And
moved and
his head.
liver of
(The
8
and the
and
"
:
Lord
fortify
my
heart."
And
Why
M.
P.
this
The
Christians, as
3 4
5
we
all
know, turned
shafataiya.
east.
Readfiya and
"
for
my
"And
Here ends the lacuna in lips are dirty." he turned his face towards the east, and
M.
he prayed and
said."
8 7
MSS.
Thee." There are many between the text of the two MSS paragraph " All this P. has erroneously kibarior kabid liver."
that is standing before
is
somewhat obscure.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
and bravery, and he ascertained that people who had delivered them to him.
1
167
of the
it
Jewish
mercy remembered Abimelech and his kindness towards the prophet Jeremiah in the days in which King
is
God
of
Zedekiah had imprisoned him in the dungeon. And the Lord did ~ not wish him to be in the captivity of Babylon and in the servitude of
Nebuchadnezzar.
daily habit
3
And
to the
the
servant
his
went
of
garden of
Zedekiah,
filled
in order to bring
figs,
him
fruits.
He
took a
with grapes,
and other
fruits
from the
of his master,
them
still
in order to
and covered them with green foliage, and carried While he was bring them to the house of his master.
the words which
on the
He
spoke
to the
of Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon." under the yoke While he was walking and looking towards heaven, and while the
be
(walk), he
saw a
cave
in
said to
which there was shade and much refreshing humidity, and he " I have himself gone out before my time, and have not taken
:
to-day bread to the prophet, the man of God, my father Jeremiah ; so I shall sit here awhile and sleep for an hour in this refreshing
shade."
He
and
slept
figs,
and he
peaches,
was
full
of grapes,
The earth gave him rest, and the pears, covered with foliage. rock of the cave expanded over him and covered him like the roof of
and
a house
;
the
dew
fortified
thirst,
him and the sun nurtured him, and he did and he was not affected by the cold of the winter
till
the time
this
destroyed
and then
rebuilt
afresh
(all
happened
God, which protected him. this King Nebuhcadnezzar reached Judea, with all his Chaldean generals, and he subjugated all Judea and all the towns round His troops spread over the land of Israel like locusts, and Jerusalem.
power
of
After
Here
It is
Read yurid in P. begins a short lacuna in M. curious that P. should make of Ebedmelech the servant of a boon-
companion of Zedekiah, instead of Zedekiah this boon- companion is given below. 4 See Jer. xxxix. 16-18.
himself.
Even
the
name
of
168
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
they clapped with their hands and danced with their feet and said : " Let us go and fight the Hebrews, plunder their possessions and
destory them, because
people of Israel
to this day.
their
arms against the whom nobody has dared approach and subdue down Their rod was over all the nations by the power of God,
all
now
in
God who
fights for
them."
Nebuchadand all their nezzar, power was weakened, and the people of Israel became before him like pregnant women at the time of their travail.
of the children of Israel fell before
ordered them to gather together before him bound in fetters of iron. He who was on the roof did not come down except with and he who was in the sown field did not enter the city except bonds,
1
He
with
fetters,
of
in the spot
where he
was, and none was left who did not come to King Nebuchadnezzar who had fixed his throne at the gate of Jerusalem, the ramparts of
to be demolished instantly.
this
When King
on
his
Zedekiah heard
him
like
woman
in labour.
He
stretched
his
dead man.
His
servants took
him with
the intention of crossing the Jordan with him and fleeing to save him.
King Nebuchadnezzar gave orders that King Zedekiah be brought before him, and Cyrus, his general, went to the residence of Zedekiah, and saw it ornamented with silk, gold, and silver, and his
sleeping
in
it
And
chamber perfumed with incense and was the idol which he used to worship.
Zedekiah,
fine
aloes-wood, put
in
and
the
And God
King
1
on
They threw
Here ends the second short lacuna in M. There are some verbal discrepancies in the above
two MSS.
of the
3
M.
"
omits
"
So we
translate sakir of P.
is
still
which
in
is
obscure.
M.
has safir
"
falling
text
which the
letters
only distinguished by an extraneous dot. 5 This Karmlis in P. and Karlis in M. is given above (p. 1 56) as a river and not as a sea or a lake. What is referred to here may possibly be the Dead Sea or the Lake of Tiberias.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
him from
their shoulders,
169
that
presented him
to
Cyrus the
first
general
of the
King Nebuchadnezzar.
that Zedekiah's eyes
The
latter
summoned
the Chaldeans
and ordered
be put out and placed in his hands, and that his two children be killed and placed one at his right side and the other at his left, and
that a collar
be
tied
round
his
neck
in
order that he
may be
led like a
dog.
in this state to
King Nebuchadnezzar,
tail
who
attached to the
pulls the
stone of the flour-mill, and be given for food a small quantity only of
all
and
that their
necks
should be tied to their feet until the bones of their necks were broken,
and that the pregnant women should have stones placed on their wombs until they aborted. The heart of Nebuchadnezzar was hardened against them like the horses which neigh under the wheels, and he said to the Hebrews " Where is Jeremiah, the prophet of God, that I may ask him whether
:
should return to
my
country and to
my
land,
and
inquire of
him
concerning the ark of the Lord, in which are the tables written with
the finger of the Lord, and which,
I
have been
told,
proceeds before
you."
And
with
weeping and
The prophet has been imprisoned by King Zedekiah, who ordered prophet Jeremiah that no bread and no water should be given to him until he dies."
:
"
Where
can
we
While
the
Hebrews
were saying
this,
lo
spirit
carried
Jeremiah and placed him before King Nebuchadnezzar, and he informed him that the ark was no more because it was on the mountains
of Jericho
that
was heaped on
of
to the great quantity of dust 6 the effect of the winds. As to the through
it
tabernacle
the ark
Zedekiah placed
and allow us
to
under the
idol
of
Baal.
Then
"
:
Live,
and
ever,
And
Arabic the Grasco-Roman batarikat, " adds by their necks." P. "blesses God whose sons have been imprisoned." 4 5 Read 'ibraniyun. P. he could not find. " 6 P. only And dust was heaped on it by the winds."
In
~
M.
170
Nebuchadnezzar
WOODBROOKE
said to
STUDIES
l
;
them
;
"
:
Speak
it
is
your
God who
"
has
humbled and dejected you who is there to save you ? And they " This prophet whom you have summoned is young, do said to him not listen, therefore, to his words, and be not deceived by his personality,
:
nothing to distinguish him from the other men of his own here there is a congregation of the children of Israel standing age hand to them staves of olive-trees he whose staff comes before you
as there
;
is
hand
is
The
summoned
and
their
before
2
him
all
the
young men
In
number
them
to
staves of olive-trees.
the angel carried Jeremiah and presented him to King Nebuchadnezzar, while the staff which was in his hand had come into leaf. When the king saw this, he was greatly astonished
moment
and
to the
"Thou
God
land
go, therefore,
if
if it is
He who
me
to this
not,
shall
And
the prophet
Jeremiah said to
give
him
rest
Loosen the
fetters of these
them a
little
until
King Nebuchadnezzar loosened their bonds, and the prophet Jeremiah went to the temple of the Lord, and saw it sprinkled with
the blood of the young children, and he wept bitterly and said
:
And
God, King
of all kings,
and Lord
of all lords,
3 I
beseech
Thee and
from the height of heavens and show mercy towards Thy people who are under the yoke of Nebuchadnezzar, and deliver them from the hands of their enemies and their
to look
haters.
of
pity."
And
he
in adoration,
interceding in
And a whom
came
to
sufficiently
4
for
this iniquitous
nation and
I
people.
am
This people numbers more than eight hundred thousand ful God ? 5 thousand souls, and in this sixth hour of the day take a lamp in thy
1
M. adds " what you wish." M. omits. 5 M. " eight hundred thousand and
:
Read wa'adadahum
in P.
M.
omits
all
these adjectives.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
hand and walk
in all
171
if
among them
go with
servitude
in
whom there is
;
if
thou canst find a single man thou findest such a one, 1 shall
the people,
findest
shall
and
them
is
Nebuchadnezzar
if
thou
I
unpolluted
by and
but
sacrifices
shall
to
deliver
findest a single
man who
if
or his friend,
shall
save
them
all
burning lamp on the candlestick, and years have elapsed, when the people
thou findest no one, enter the temple and place the it will not burn out until seventy
shall
where they
years."
the burning lamp in its place, remove the from thee, and accompany the people into captivity shall be under the power of Nebuchadnezzar for seventy
When
Lord he went
Some men from the people out with a burning lamp in his hand. " : father dost thou walk with a burning said to him Jeremiah, why " And he answered "I am in search of a man lamp in daylight ?
in
not able to find any." Some justice " others said to him father Jeremiah why dost thou walk with a
there
is
whom
and
am
"
in daylight ?
is
And
he answered
"I
am
in search of a
man
unpolluted by sacrifices to idols, and I am not able to " Yet some others said to him Father Jeremiah why
:
am
dost thou walk with a lamp in daylight ? And he answered : "I in search of a man in whom there is love for his friend or his
neighbour,' and
I
"
am
And
to
Jeremiah searched
among
all
was unable
any man (with the above qualifications). Then he wept and went into the temple of God and placed the lamp to itself on the candlestick and he entered the place 8 in burning which the holy vestments are kept, and brought out the garment of
find
bitterly,
;
1 -
M. omits the second part of the sentence. Read akhahu in P. M. omits it. 4 M. omits the two last sentences. M. "of prophecy." " 6 P. Read birrun. you." " M. omits " friend and " neighbour."
P. "the house of the Lord."
172
the
WOODBROOKE
High
Priest,
STUDIES
terrace of
the temple
1
:
and
thee
2
"To
all
and thou
:
Son
the
of
God who
of the
I
shall
come
into the
world
Lord
two
for
this
reason
temple
5
shall only
is
to the place of
the corner-stone
this
Open now
it
High
Priest
and keep
God
wishes
hand
of the
Then he
name
to
of the
Lord Sabaoth,
Aaron and
7
his
heads
sun
:
at
and
lifted
"
I
To
say,
owner
and
hidden
chief,
like of
thee in
the creatures of
sides of
God, be which is
written the
which
place."
1
God
God the Omnipotent, keep it till the day in from captivity the children of Israel to this back brings And he threw the mitre towards it, and a ray of the sun
name
of
xxi.
CI.
Matt
"to
42.
Put
P.
in the feminine
all
form
that
all
the verbs
(sic)
those
sin
against
hast
saved
them."
These sentences are to be ascribed to a Christian hand. Luke xxi. 6; Mk. xiii. 2. The corner-stone of the temple seems to be referred by the author to Christ. 6 In the Apocalypse of Baruch (Pat. Syr. ii. 1076-1078) it is the In the Second Book of the Maccabees, Angels who hide the sacred vessels.
5
Cf.
however,
incense.
Jeremiah who hides the ark, the tabernacle, and the altar of See also See Charles, Apocrypha aud Pseud. i. 133-134. In the Words 23. the The Rest Baruch, of p. following pages Harris, of our author seems to be more constantly under the influence of the Last Words of Baruch, and there is no necessity to refer on every occasion to Harris's edition which should be consulted by every reader of the present
it is
is
M.
heating or protecting.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
took
1
173
it
up.
And
Jeremiah hid
When
bowed down
his
head
to
the
ground
O threshold of
Lord, receive these keys until the Lord brings back the people from And immediately the high door-post received them from captivity."
the hand of the prophet Jeremiah. After this Jeremiah presented himself to the king of the Chaldeans.
4
When
was wearing
all
sackcloth,
and and
that his
head was
full
of
earth,
they
weeping, and threw earth on their heads, because they had ascertained that the Lord had not forgiven them. They were aware of the fact
that
when Jeremiah
if
the people,
and
his intervention
on
their behalf,
them and had accepted his prayer he came out to them wearing a
down
to his
beard
of his robe.
When
"
Ride on thy
J
Jeremiah finished these things, he said to Nebuchadnezzar : chariot and proceed to Babylon, because the Lord has
'
and no harm
shall
And
Nebuchadnezzar arose
like
He
army
1
Jews
in front of
Here as below (p. 89) it is very difficult to ascertain what the author had precisely in mind when using the words lailasan, kalansuah, isar, mandil, and rida.
1
verb.
(Ta'ariith,
c.
M.
"
"
of
prophecy
it
as above.
4, fol.
was
the priests
who
threw the keys towards heaven. So also The Rest of tfte Baruch (edit. Harris), p. 51. See Harris (ibid.), pp. 18-19.
5
6
Words of
M. ashes. M. adds
: :
"
And when
that
his
God had
M.
omits
"
Read
punishment." al-yahttd in P.
M,
omits
this sentence.
13
174
them.
WOODBROOKE
And
"
:
STUDIES
1
the prophet Jeremiah walked in front of them weeping, 2 When the king noticed him he said with bare feet and a bare head.
to
him
ride with
hast thou,
not
fitting to ride
prophet of God ? Come and with the king while thou art
And the prophet Jeremiah answered him and wearing sackcloth." "I have sinned before the Lord more than all the people by said the living Lord, my God, I shall not remove this garment from me
: ;
until the
Lord
turns
of
His people."
away His wrath and puts an end to Then King Nebuchadnezzar ordered
the captivity
his generals
to
make
4
The Hebrew
pain,
and
in less than a
month
were
spoiled,
and became
their feet,
like old
skins,
and
to their shoulders
like that of women, and the sun scorched their bodies to the point of destruction, and mud and muck mounted their bodies and stuck to
rise to blisters,
moon and
of
wounds, and sores in their flesh and the stars affected them by night until they
;
down on
their faces,
and they
lost
their
way
fell
in the intensity of
upon one
; :
another,
and were on the point of dying from hunger and thirst with a sigh and lifted their eyes towards heaven and said
difference
to
in
gave Moses, and the spring of sweet water that jetted forth from a rock Instead of this God caused dust to come on them the desert."
between
this
God
from heaven, and changed the sweet water into a brackish and bitter water, until they were affected with a mange and scab for which there
was no remedy.
The
pregnant
women
aborted
their
from the fatigue of the journey, young ones from their shoulders
P. omits
It is
"
weeping."
made
ii.
to
go
485,
Gainyyot
R
(edit. Griinhut,
iii.
4).
These sentences are not in M. in the place assigned to them by P, and the two MSS. exhibit here considerable verbal differences.
4 5
Read d'ikin and sharrin in P. and dikin only in M. Read tarahna and put all the other verbs and' pronouns
in fern. plur.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
175
because their breasts dried up from the hunger and thirst that overtook them, and could not give suck to their infants, and they cried with " bitter weeping and great grief and said Lord, Thy judgments
:
are
just,
to us
is
because
Thou
hast requited
us according to
and Thou
ing
to
our works.
Because
have revolted against Thee and calamity has befallen us, and we deserve
"
we
this."
And
his palace
filled
Nebuchadnezzar brought them to Babylon, and he entered 3 and kissed the faces of his children and his wife. He was
4
with joy in seeing them, and he narrated to them all that happened to them from the day he left them and went out of the
f country of the Chaldeans to the day he came back to them.
Then
counted
Hebrews, and
6
work and
hire.
He
that they
fifty
souls
had diminished by two hundred and these had perished in the way from
;
hunger, and
thirst,
who had
died on
King Nebuchadnezzar ordered that the adults should do claywork and brickwork, that the old men should hew wood and draw water, and that the women should spin and weave wool he
;
show
their
like
of
and that every day they should be given a bread and water. And the Hebrews served
8
food consisting
many
villages,
in Babylon under and King Nebuchadnezzar built through them 9 towers, houses, granaries, and forts on the shores of
10
the sea which surrounds Babylon. The Chaldeans used to go every to the river with their and day harps, guitars, and used to ask the " Show us how you sing to your Lord and your Hebrews, saying :
is missing in M. sentence is missing in P. " * P. omits "wife." P. when he saluted them." " P. the king did not take a rest but sat." " ?
This sentence
last
"
The
6 8
M.
toil."
Rea(j k
Read
kattiirah.
omits
10
Which
sea?
176
WOODBROOKE
And
can
the
STUDIES
l
God."
"
Hebrews used
to
answer
sing the praise of the Lord in a strange land ? The people of the Lord were greatly subdued and they cried while " The Lord has justly inflicted upon weeping and sobbing, and said 3 4 us this calamity, according to our deeds. Now, Lord, look
:
How
we
"
upon us, with mercy, because our faces have been put to shame before us Thou our Lord and our God, do not requite us according to the 5 iniquity of our deeds, because it is we who have kindled Thy wrath,
;
and not
listened to
Thy
7
prophets in Jerusalem."
for the king in
6
Babylon, and his servants drove them about, and greatly tormented them. And Jeremiah the and in and interceded with God prophet prayed night day Babylon,
toiled
The Hebrews
in
when he saw
their
tribulations
and
their
painsi
As
to
Zedekiah he was
Nebuchad-
nezzar until he reached Babylon, and there he was appointed to drive the horse of the flour-mill for forty years 9 in captivity. He
was
and bodily exhaustion that he felt more than other people. And Nebuchadnezzar showed mercy towards the Hebrews all the time
of his
10
life.
Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon died, he was succeeded by Cyrus the Persian, who greatly tormented the Hebrews with hunger and thirst, and reduced the rations of the food which they were
When
He gave to each one of them one loaf of bread once in two days, and diminished the quantity of water to be given to them. He also increased their labours, and inflicted
given in the time of Nebuchadnezzar.
their
number began
2
to dwindle.
After
Ps. cxxxvii. 4. Readfaj/akulu al'ibrdnlyun, This iwad seems to be a translation of the Syriac heldf, * 5 This phrase is obscure in M. Read al-ladhln in P. " 6 P. and the Chaldeans." 7 The verb sahata used in this sense by P. is colloquial. M. omits
3
l
it.
consistent with himself in placing in of Jeremiah, see above, p. 1 74. 9 This date seems to be improbable.
is
10
The
author
It is
the role of a
remarkable that Nebuchadnezzar is made in the document to play good monarch acting under the orders of God. This reminds
one of the Romance of Alexander in which the Macedonian conqueror is made in Syriac and Arabic literature to play the role of a pious man guided by Divine Providence.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
they had numbered one
2
177
l
hundred
thousand
thousand
and eighty
Some Hebrew
Chaldean
3
children,
children.
seventy in number, used to learn with Among them was a young boy called Ezra.
to the scribes
evil.
while he was
the
spirit
good from
And
And
Hebrews and
teachers.
When
down and
5
they went one day to carry water, the jar of Ezra Then the children of the Chaldeans turned broke.
fell
6
to
Hebrews and
"
!
said to
them
"
:
Fie
O miserable,
hands and
there
is
And
at
they clapped
in
their
"
:
O
'
whom
my
no
energy."
And
they laughed
Ezra,
who
lifted
his eyes
towards
heaven,
"O
Lord, and
God
Omnipotent, turn towards us and have mercy upon us for the sake of Abraham Thy beloved, and Isaac Thy servant, and Israel Thy holy
one.
Do
Thou
Thy Thy
in
Thy
face
and
mercy.
We
are hated by
this nation.'
Now,
from Thyself.
and
merciful,
We have O Lord.
Thou
art forgiving
Thou
forgivest
sins
and Thou
desirest not
When
1
Ezra
eight
he took
off
his
M.
It is
"
surely exaggerated.
-
who
is
in such a
"
good
light
should here have such a black character. Jaweh's anointed " 3 P. under Chaldean masters." 4 " Put the verb in the singular. Lit scribes." " 5 M. adds in the sea." All this mention of the sea in Babylon where there is no sea seems to suggest that the author was living in a place where there was sea. This place is either west of Palestine or preferably Egypt.
See, however, Philostratus vit. Apol. Tyan., \. i, c. xx. " There are many verbal differences in this paragraph between the two
"
and
is
therein called
MSS.
7
P. adds
"
:
Amidst Thy
creation."
M.
178
into the sea,
it
WOODBROOKE
and
filled it
STUDIES
were a
jar
;
then he placed on his shoulder and walked with his fellow- students, and not a
with water as
if it
single
drop
fell
from
it.
When
he reached the
;
scribes,
When the teacher saw him, immediately, and it was as dry as before. he rose up and bowed down to the ground before him and said
:
Ezra, say unto thee, Verily from deliver thy people captivity."
I
"
my
child,
it
is
thou
who
shalt
Ezra was growing every day in grace before God, and men, he and the other children of the Hebrews. few days later the
And
draw water
as
was
their
wont.
"
:
The
Let
said to
one another
us separate ourselves from the children of the Hebrews, and not have
any intercourse with them, and not eat and drink with them, because And they seceded from them, beat they do not worship our gods."
4
When
Ezra saw
his
Then he
sea,
and
if
it
increased in
companions and implored God to and water sprang volume until it reached the feet of
7
the Chaldeans as
to
drown them.
The
teacher rose
up
instantly
and
to
knelt
:
down
"
before Ezra and kissed his hands and his feet and said
is
him
What
wish to destroy all the town because of Then Ezra had pity on his teacher, when he noticed his weeping, and he repaired to the spot where the rock was found and laid his
Dost thou
open thy mouth and swallow this water, because the Lord has said, No second flood of water shall 9 come unto the earth, but that fire shall come which will consume the
foot
on
it
and
said
"O
earth,
'
In the Gospel
of the Infancy (Cowper's the Apochryphal Gospels, p. See also ibid., pp. is attributed to Christ.
453-454.
2 3
P. "the school."
Cf.
Luke
ii.
40.
P. omits
is
"
and men."
4
5
MSS.
sentence.
6
7
P. omits the
two
sentences.
P. omits the
it
last
"
:
until
8
became
like a flood."
P. omits.
Cf.
Gen.
II.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
earth to
its
179
it,
The
earth
And the water. opened then its mouth at once and swallowed all and removed of the Hebrews, Ezra rose up and took all the children
them from the school
After
all
"
of the
Chaldeans.
King Cyrus summoned the people of the Hebrews " before him, and said to them Bring me all your harps through And they which you praise your God, and play them before me. " We fear to play them in a strange land, said to King Cyrus
this
:
:
because our
God
:
it."
And
Cyrus
said to
them
"As
you praised your God in Jerusalem so do here." And they answered " The sons of Levi whom God has chosen take precedhim saying
And King Cyrus summoned the ence of us and play the harps." and ordered that they should Hebrews all the before of Levi tribe
begin and sing to
the accompaniment of the harps.
3
They came
before them and played the harp, and while shouting in unison they Then the clapped their hands and beat the earth with their feet.
ground
lifted
4
upwards,
immediately those who were standing on it, and mounted as if to cause the children of Israel to descend upon their
a
own land, and their voices were heard that day in Jerusalem. The Chaldeans feared then and became disturbed, and a cloud 6 came down from heaven, and overshadowed the temple in Jerusalem. All those who were in Jerusalem ascertained in that day that the Lord
had mercy upon the people deliver them from captivity.
noticed
greatly
of Israel,
and that
He
was
willing to
When
:
Cyrus,
king of
the Chaldeans,
what had happened through the play on the harps, he feared " Do not move the strings of your and said to the Hebrews
'
as long as
you are
praise
go
to
your
own
countries
and
your
God
in the
you town of
were
Jerusalem."
When
1
:
had
elapsed, there
Read yutahhiruha
"
P.
M. 3 M. 4 M.
5
and brought them to." " and play the harps." " And immediately the ground upon which they stood shook and
:
mounted upwards."
Read fakhafa.
P. omits
6
'
M.
in Jerusalem." not take out your harps." " as was your wont." P. adds
"
"
Do
180
three young
WOODBROOKE
men
:
STUDIES
1
Ezra son
3
of Yaratha,
of Betariah,
of
Buzi,
to
whom God
:
Babylon.
They
"
sacrifice to the
God
of Israel, as
sins,
and
God
down
to
of fire
and receive
their
sacrifices after
because
8
the grace of
will
us,
from us."
And
this.
Then Ezra
ebony, turned his
took
wood
of nard,
wood
of styrax,
and wood
of
wood, placed a ram on the wood, 11 12 face towards the sunrise, and looked towards Jerusalem,
to
and prayed
fathers, the
13
God
of Israel, saying
"
:
Lord God
of our pious
One and
Eternal God,
who
first
murdered
man,
1
and took
his revenge
who
created the
Yaratha may P. Neriah. confusion with the father of Baruch. be a mistake for Seraiah (Ezra vii. 1). The mistake may have arisen through Arabic characters which do not differ considerably in the two names this graphic difference is still slighter with Betariah, the father of
;
Daniel,
"
be a mistake
in the letters of
Betariah may anything about this man. Seraiah (Ezra vii. ) caused by the very slight difference the Arabic script of the two names. See the following and
1
The difference between Buzi and Baradi is very slight Arabic script, and here and elsewhere it shows that the original from which the Garshuni MS. of Paris emanates was written in Arabic characters. The mistaken reading Baradi could hardly have arisen otherwise. 4 The verb as ada seems here to be a translation of the Syriac assek
in
l
"
offer
sacrifice.
tf
P. adds
to
"
to
God."
of
seems
be an echo
the
Syriac
The MSS.
atraphis (arpafyafys).
also as
11
There is no ebony in Babylon. Note that the author makes mention here
of the direction of the
above
in the case of
Nebuchadnezzar,
12
East
Jerusalem is not East of Babylon. sentence that the author of the document
We
was
this
writing in a
country situated
?
West
13
of Palestine.
Could
this
Can
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
;
181
image of Seth beforehand according to His own image, and removed from him the power of darkness who caused Enoch to ascend to
with his body on account of the purity of his heart, and him the secrets of heaven and what is to take place at the end taught
heaven
of the to
world
*
;
who
of
is
delivered
Noah
:
because of his
fall
justice,
and granted
of
Adam
before his
I
under heaven
pray
prayer,"
Omnipotent God, my supplication and listen to my and to my tears. Remember the covenant which Thou hast
to hear
made with
sons keep
I
our father
'
saidst to him,
4
If
thy
My covenant,
Thee
to visit
Now,
of
O Lord,
5
implore
Thy
who
Thy
holy name.
Thy
heaven,
and
to
odour, and
show
pity
and forgiveness
Thy
people."
When
Ezra finished
his prayer with his brethren who were with reached the throne of the Lord, and their words
penetrated the hearing of the Lord Sabaoth, who sent His angel, in the Michael, the figure of a man, to take up their offerings to the Lord.
head
of the angels,
and burned
his
the
wood and
came down from heaven, and stood on their altar, the lamb with a rod of fire that he held in
fire
there,
he
ascended to heaven.
He
air,
looked at
blessing,
the three
young men, and blessed them with the heavenly heaven opened and received him.
and then
As
to the prophet
Jeremiah
He
Lord
in favour of the
"
:
O
to
Lord,
God
Thy
of
my
and
of
my
10
body,
listen
now
the supplication of
1
Was
P.
P. omits
P.
Gen.
."
We are
7 the final aliph in P. P. adds "in the firmament." " " " P. or to." purified appeared Here also the author is consistent with himself in placing Jeremiah in
Remove
Babylon.
1J
M.
182
people against
liverance of
WOODBROOKE
whom
the days of
STUDIES
Fulfil
Thy
(Thy
Thou
Thy people." And the Lord summoned the angel Michael Make haste and go down to the land of the Chaldeans,
of their captivity.
If
the in-
and
shall cause
impede them, I shall make heaven stick to the earth My wrath to dwell in them until they allow them to go
from under
one,
their hands.
this
Go also
to
My elected
and impart
I
news
him
and
from him.
them
him with
his people as
who
While
was
weeping
over the sins of the people, lo the angel Michael came to him and " 3 said to him Peace be with you, elected prophet of God. Grow
:
cheerful because
And the prophet Jeremiah " looked at Michael, the angel of God, and said to him Here I am,
it is
strengthened
to
my
bones.
in
Where wast
I
me
till
this
" a father with his children ? And the angel said to the prophet " Here I am to-day before you in order to deliver your Jeremiah I have been sent because people, by God for this purpose, on account
:
day
which
am
thou that thou didst not appear in great trouble with this people, like
of your prayer
6
'
Thus
says the
Lord
whom
have mercy on this people and I wish to send them back to serve, their land and their country in order that they may serve Me there.
1
I
'
If
to go,
shall
wax angry
them
I
them
to send
did
with Pharaoh, the king of Egypt.' After the angel Michael had said this to the prophet Jeremiah, he " You remain here until I go and summon all the addressed him thus
:
The word
?
used
is
the
Greek vaos.
What
'
this
term
2
P. omits
this sentence.
3 5 7
P. omits
4
6
"
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
183
1
And the angel Michael went out and took the form people to you." of a Hebrew man, and assembled all the people of Israel in one place
as
if
bricks
said to
them
You
have worked
go
now to your father Jeremiah, because the Lord has saved you from this toil." And he went to those who were hewing wood and drawing
water, and said the
same thing
the
to them.
And
You
have had
deliverance.
left,
Lord has saved you from your work, and Come on and go to your father Jeremiah.'
all
And
none was
but
gathered together.
The
-
angel Michael
gathered them
all
and
all
went
to
King Cyrus and to the first general of the Chaldeans. And Jeremiah " 3 Listen to the words said to Cyrus and to Emesis his first general.
of the
Lord,
God
to
of Israel."
And
"
:
he began to repeat
to
them the
words uttered
said
to the
And
is
prophet Jeremiah
to
And who
the
God
of
Israel ?
You,
Hebrews, return
from you."
before them
;
And
and
was done
of
a cruel way.
And
King Cyrus
and torment
work
of the
Hebrews
them
until
And
big earthquake occurred, wind became fierce, the sun suffered in the middle of the day, and darkness covered the earth.
inhabitants of the earth
The
mixed
pell-mell,
and the
like
feet of
;
the horses that were ridden sunk deep into the earth
pegs
Chaldeans cried
6
to
to
Emesis
and
the
said to
them
"Is not
as
Lord
to
do with us
from
He did
and
"
?
;
Cyrus he
first
fell
his horse
fell
backbone broke
general Emesis
1 ~
and
his right
arm broke
to the elbow-joint.
Read skubh
In P.
it is
in P.
Jeremiah
who
3
c
M.
P.
vizier.
"
with you."
184
Then
and God
the
God
;
of Isaac
of Israel,
God
of the
we
Hebrews, have pity on us we have have not allowed Thy people to get
Lord, to pray Thee and beseech Thee, have mercy upon us and not to punish us for our sins. Pity us and and heal us, we shall let them go to their land in joy and peace." And the prophet Jeremiah had pity on them when he heard their
out of our land.
We
and he approached King Cyrus and raised him up from the ground and healed his bone which was broken he did likewise heal the arm of the first general of the Chaldeans.
their sobs,
;
words and
had turned away from He gave orders l and the earth and all the inhabited globe became quiet, and the sun shone on the surface of the earth. Then King Cyrus and Emesis summoned the Hebrews,
the
that their hearts
When
Lord noticed
reckoned their working days, and paid them their wages in full, and 2 The king 3 helped then the prophet gave them much gold and silver.
own
steed,
in royal garments,
and placed
horses,
further
crown upon his head, and delivered to him many 4 He mules, and camels, laden with provisions for the journey. wrote letters to all the land of the Chaldeans ordering (its
his
inhabitants) to
welcome the prophet Jeremiah and his people (when they passed by them), and wish them Godspeed in joy and merriment, and to honour them and render service to them until they left them.
And
slaves.
the
king presented
also the
prophet
And
all
left
The number
Hebrews who
went out
8
diminished
captivity.
eighty thousand thousand they had thus by a hundred thousand thousand during their stay in
Babylon was
When
1
they "
:
left
tions, saying
Rise,
Babylon they began with prayers and supplicarise, Jerusalem, and rejoice, and wear thy
M.
omits
"
silver."
M.
In all the following sentences the subject in P. is " the subject is the indefinite they."
4
in
Read jimal in P. for himal. This variant could not have arisen except through Arabic characters in which the letters jtin and ha are distinguished only by an extraneous dot. " c 5 M. " ten." P. adds in Babylon."
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
diadem
with
in joy
1
185
tears,
and gladness, because thy children who had left thee 3 2 have come to thee with joy, and fear, and sadness,
jubilation."
And
4
went out
and gladness, and all the towns of the Chaldeans honoured him, and horsemen were riding before him up to Jerusalem in order to praise it and to honour it with the people and in this state they reached
;
Jerusalem.
As
to the servant
Abimelech, he awoke from his sleep and went which he was sleeping, and the stone that was
5
moved away.
He
of grapes, figs,
on them, and noticed and other fruits and saw that their dust was that the green foliage with which they were covered had become And Abimelech said to himself "I have not longer and broader.
:
overslept
and
and
my
rise
head
is
still
heavy with
sleep
it
shall get
some
to
in
more
take
rest
up and go
to town, because
is
time for
some food
my
blessed father,
me who is
prison."
When
8
had
elapsed.
He
of grapes,
10
figs,
and other
fruits,
which were
as fresh as
its
when
When
rampart was demolished and the town itself destroyed, and when he noticed that vines and fig-trees were just
he saw that
showing
inside the
their buds,
trees their
sprouts,
When
he went
its
streets
walls
had
in
it
either altered or
were reconstructed, and the reconstructed buildings in it destroyed, and when he did not find in it anyone whom he could recognise, his
mind became confused, and he stood and said u God, what is this delusion that has overtaken me
:
"
O" my Lord
?
and
my
3 5 7
P. adds "
"
in subjection."
Put a
"
waw
before the
word
in
P.
P.
peace."
in P.
M. 6 M.
R&Afakihah
In 4 Baruch (Charles' Cf. the story of the "Seven Sleepers." Apocrypha and Pseud, ii. 533), Abimelech falls asleep in the garden of Agrippa and does not awake for sixty-six years and not seventy. See 3. Harris, The Rest of the Words of Baruch, p.
1
M.
"
baskets."
10
P. omits
"
figs."
Read
al-lati.
186
WOODBROOKE
old
STUDIES
and he went
for
man
collecting firewood,
to
said to
him
"
:
What
free
can
do
"
And And
he
said to
him
"
:
my
son ?
What
?
father, the
prophet Jeremiah
Did he
"
:
the old
man
?
is Jeremiah ? Seventy from the in which Nebuchadnezzar day day destroyed Jerusalem, and carried the people into captivity to Babylon, and the prophet Jeremiah was among them." And Abimelech said
uttering,
my son
him
my "
this
"Had you not been an old man I would have said to you 2 mad. I went a little while ago to the garden of my were you 3 master and brought him fruits, but my eyes being somewhat heavy, 4 Is it in this short time that the I slept for a short time. people were
to
him
that
Is
it
has overtaken
Or
moon
:
am unable to see any of them ? The old man answered then and said man, and God spared you the sight of the
the great tribulations of the road
7
"
You
destruction of Jerusalem,
to
Nebuchadnez-
zar.
He
has brought
8
down
of
sleep
upon you
:
in
may
you wish
in
my
words
this
is
the
first
day
which
;
this the prophet Jeremiah arrived accompanied by all the people that a for returned to its former has should be Jerusalem proof you
state.
You
man
of the Lord,
who had
pity
on you
to
my
is
son,
these grapes
and
holy
year,
1
man
of
God
how
they are at
this
time of
fruits.
M.
"
and he went
to
him and
said to
him
"
Father,
is this
the town
Jerusalem?" 2 Read, innama ana in P. for anakama. 3 P. names here the master Hermis and distinguishes him from King Zedekiah whose servant Ebedmelech was. See above, p. 167. 5 4 M. "the darkness of the night." Read na'astu in P.
6 9
of
P.
"
M.
P. omits. P. omits the name. the firmament." has here asjar the vulgar Arabic for ashjar (a sin instead of a
"'
shin).
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
This month
is
187
the
first
the
month
of April,
and
this
day
is
day
in
which the prophet Jeremiah reached Jerusalem, after a stay of seventy The words that you have uttered square with one years in captivity.
another.
now and
palm-trees,"
olive-trees."
and holding
in their
hands
and
him and bowed down him saw he dismounted from his horse, before him. Jeremiah "Be welcome, be embraced him, cried aloud to him and said Look at Abimelech the honour that God beloved welcome, my
king and shining like the sun, and he hastened to
When
bestowed on you.
my
tribulations,
anyone who is merciful and pity on me in the day of and the Lord has overshadowed you with His holy
does
this
He
to
You had
arm and placed you in a refreshing sleep till you saw Jerusalem reYou have not tasted constructed and glorified for the second time.
of the
food of subjection,
spared you great hardship Let all those who hear your story because of your charitable deeds. 4 do acts of charity and mercy with everybody, and God will spare
we
spent in
God
them
the
all
trouble."
When
town
Jeremiah finished
his
address to him,
they
all
entered
Abimelech did not cease to be held in together. honour by the prophet Jeremiah and by the rest of the people all the time of his life. When the prophet Jeremiah entered the town
r'
And
he
glorified
God
with
this canticle
M. Ntsan (the Syriac and Hebrew month), but P. Barmudah, which seems to prove the Egyptian origin of the MS. from which the prototype of P. was derived. Barmudah extends from March 27th to April 25th. -In Arabic Kulub an-nakhl "the pith of palm-trees." The same expression is used in the Arabic Diatessaron of Ibn at-Tayib published by Ciasca (p. 49) to express John xii. 3. I believe that the word emanates from the Peshitta Old Testament (Lev. xxiii. 40) in which the Syriac words are exactly libbawatha d-dhikle. The Arabic expression seems to be a literal translation of the See further Bulletin of the Bezan Club, Syriac.
1 1
No.
iii.
3
'
P.
"
M.
4
6
Read ahadin
in
P.
188
"
Rejoice,
WOODBROOKE
O
*
!
STUDIES
Arise and wear thy diadem. Thy Jerusalem sons had gone out of thee with tears and sadness, and have now come to thee in joy and jubilation. Let heaven rejoice and
earth jubilate over the children of
Abraham,
Isaac
and Jacob,
2
who have
harps
take their
in their hands,
and
God
has
into
carried
3 which they had almost perished Let Cherubim and Seraphim sing and praise with us over the sons of Abraham,
and
let
them
who
have returned
and
their country."
When
:
Jeremiah entered the door of the Temple, he said to the " * To thee I say, threshold of the house of God, bring
I had confided to thee." And it immediately out the them to and delivered the brought keys prophet Jeremiah.
And
the
of the
into
it
with
all
And
he entered
where he saw the lamp burning as if it was fresh, was light shining, in the way in which he had left it, without It was with it that he had searched Jerusalem to discover diminution. if there was in it a man in whom there was mercy, and he did not
Holy
its
and
find any.
God
all
"
saying
:
Thou
art,
Lord, a
just
Lord, in
Thy
actions,
Thou
sins,
this in
order
in
measure of our
"
Arise
The prophet Jeremiah called the sons of Aaron and said to them now and offer sacrifices to the Lord, and be pure according to
;
and
said
:
"
:
To
thee
say,
And he also went up to the and he stood on the corner-stone, stone, Open thy mouth and bring out
Priest,
thy trust
1
High
because
we
are in need of
"Arise, arise." Let our fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob take their harps." " " 3 The first letter of the word Cherubim is a shin instead of a kaf'm
2
M.
P.
"
P.
This also denotes the Egyptian (Coptic) origin of the prototype of P. 5 Read al-lati. Read aiyyatuha in P.
M.
"
lord
and
just in all
Thy
actions."
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
it."
189
it
And
"
it
to the
High
it
:
Priest.
And
I I
after that
said to
To
l
thee,
say,
O
of
the mitre
which
name
of the
Lord, the
Holy
in
and
we
are
Then
the
it,"
hand towards the rays of the sun and and he handed it to the High Priest.
he handed also to the High Priest the rest of the vestments of 3 the house of the Lord which he had taken with him to Babylon. [And the head of the priests who came with them from captivity
And
wore the
priestly robe,
written the
name
garment of
until
garment and the mitre on which was Lord, and the prophet Jeremiah put on the the prophetic office which God had ordered him to
the
of
the
into captivity
to
The
latter
was
of the
Israel
God, which spread over all the Temple and the people, and the glory Lord increased upon them with His mercy. And the God of
dwelt among them with the Cherubim
they performed 6 rank and order, and shouted with their horns, and offered
the sons of
his
Aaron
their
to
to
own
sacrifices,'
of
the
the the
house.
And
*
holocaust.
April
All the people observed as a feast the twenty-fifth day of and glorified the Lord with great joy."
as
the author's
above (p. 173) it is very difficult to ascertain what was in mind in using such terms as tailasan, kalansuah, tzar, mandil,
Jeremiah spread
"
and ridd
3
'.
M.
"
And
his
fell in it."
Read 4 Here
al-lati.
again P. writes
Cherubim
"
with an
is
initial
an Egyptian origin. 5 All this paragraph between brackets 6 P. adds "and harps."
7
missing in
M.
Arabic hamalu "they lifted" which denotes the Syriac assek " " " to lift and to offer sacrifice." (See above p. 80.) & Here again M. has the Hebrew-Syriac Ntsan and P. the Coptic Barmudah which indicates its Egyptian origin. 9 " Mingana 240 ends here with the following colophon Glory, praise, honour, and worship be to the Lord of hosts for ever and ever, Amen Here
In
meaning
14
190
WOODBROOKE
[And
"
:
STUDIES
said
the prophet Jeremiah worshipped before the Lord and Blessed be the Lord, God of Israel, and blessed be His name
ever.
for ever
and
He
to our father
Abraham
He
looked
He
saw
their
heirs of
His
their hearts,
them with His mighty arm and powerful hand, and brought them back to His holy Temple. To Him be glory, honour, majesty,
delivered
He
is
the
God
it
of
Israel,
who
God,
destroyed His
who
service,
and
sacrificed
and worshipped
their
Lord, and
made with
walking
delivered
in
heaven and to demons, and impeded them from For this reason God the way of God, their Lord.
to
their enemies
in
they may wreak They uprooted their memory from the earth, vengeance upon them. and destroyed their seed from among the children of Israel, His
them
order
that
people."
[Then the prophet Jeremiah arose and turned his face towards the people, and congratulated them on their safety and beautiful He blessed them and made a covenant with them that deliverance.
they shall not relinquish the service of God, their Lord, and worship And they offered in that day the idol of Baal for a second time.
numerous
sacrifices,
burnt-offerings,
holocausts,
and
they
rejoiced
greatly in the
God
immensely, and
Blessed be the name of the Lord, God glorified His name, saying of Israel, who visited and delivered His people, and saved them from who took them out of Babylon and the hardships of the Chaldeans
;
Israel
and glory be
!
to the
Lord
to the
of lords,
and King
the worlds,
Amen
And
praise be
Lord
of
the story of the deportation of the children God have pity on the weak of Israel from Jerusalem into Babylon. " ! Amen ! Amen hearers. and the on reader the scribe, pious
!
Amen
Here ends
May Amen
above between brackets the translation of the give end of the story in the Paris MS. This end seems to be a later addition and is much under the influence of the Gospel of St. Luke i. 67-73. 1 There is much resemblance between these words and the hymn of
I
in
the
lines
Zacharias in Luke
"
i.
67, 72-73.
Read
amala.
JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
brought them to His land and His inheritance, which
191
He
granted to
them
hood
to them their kingdom, prophecy, and priestallow His wrath to dwell with them for ever,
but had pity on them and delivered them." [And the people did not cease to serve
perfect service,
God
and with
offerings
and
sacrifices, in all
the prophet
Jeremiah.
And
glory,
praise,
and thanks be
the
!
[Here
Holy Ghost, now and for evermore, Amen Holy Trinity, this great story children of Israel into Babylon. Remember,
1
O
this
it,
Lord,
of
Thy
sinning
servant,
Cyriacus,
who
it
is
unworthy
of
the
name
man, because
of the great
number
finds in
its
of his sins.
who
God
him
his sins,
because
of all the
scribe
(men)
of the world.]
The
copyist.
192
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JEREMIAH APOCRYPHON
193
194
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196
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198
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200
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St
V}
4^'3
210
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H-M
226
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233
(it)
A New
PREFATORY NOTE.
I
and the
translation (aclife
companied by a
the
Baptist.
I
apparatus)
of
an unknown
of
John
MSS.
of
1
my own
collection, numbered Mingana Syr. 22 and Mingana Syr. 83, in the custody of the Rendel Harris Library, Birmingham. (Hereafter M. 22 and M. 183). In spite of a thorough search I have failed to
MS.
Europe
the catalogues of which are at my disposal. The MSS. exhibit short lacunae, but fortunately these lacunas do
not affect identical passages, and by collating the two establish a complete, continuous, and unbroken text.
in
many
places in a
bad
state of preservation,
occasionally whole lines have disappeared from it, apart from the This deficiency lacuna of one leaf referred to in the present edition. has, however, been supplied from M. 183 and the words that are
missing in
the
former
MS.
and
marked (a M. 22 is dated 1838 of the Greeks (A.D. 1527) a). and M. 183 has no colophon, but on palaeographical grounds it may
be ascribed to about A.D. 1750.
there
is
In spite of
some important
variants,
MSS.
M. 22 may
Christians.
If
we
it
was
written by
Serapion,
bishop of
Patriarchate of
But Theophilus who governed the sea of Alexandria in 385-412. some Great in connection with from the mention of Theodosius the
events of
be affirmed with a good deal of probability that Serapion was writing in one of the years falling within
the narrative,
it
may
A.D. 385-395.
If
the story
is
many
passages
it
235
appears to be, the translator must have used his proper names such as Ain Karim, Assuan and Horns in the form in which they were
known
state,
in
his
day.
Without entering
into
minute
details,
may
date
however, that the text seems to contain sentences that have been
interpolated
by authors or copyists
than that of Serapion.
I
who
at a
much
to
later
Some
in
have ventured
add
own
domain
of history, exegesis,
22 and
in the translation
appeared
to
the text in
I be more genuine and archaic. have transcribed Garshuni (Arabic in Syriac characters) as it is found in the
me
to
MSS., and
correctness "
MS.
to
show
the reader
is
its
palaeographic peculiarities.
The Arabic
of diction
style
in
about equal to that used in the " Apocryphal Jeremiah published above.
and excellency
TRANSLATION. With
write the
the assistance of
life
divine guidance
Baptist,
!
we
begin to
:
of the holy
may
his intercession
be with
son of Zacharias
l There was an aged priest- Levite from the tribe of Judah, whose name was Zacharias. He was a prophet who rose among the children of Israel in the days of Herod, King of Judaea. He had a God-loving wife, called Elizabeth, 2 and she was from the
had no
children,
They were both righteous and pious people, guiding their steps by all the commandments and ordinances of God. And Zacharias was
officiating constantly in
1
the
Temple
of the
Lord.
When it
fell
to him,
How
could Zacharias have been at the same time a priest, a Levite, tribe of Judah? Can Judah be a mistake for Abia t and can
the preceding
word Kabllah be
1
translated
i.
5,
and
Chron. xxiv.
2
M.
0) ? 22 uses the
Greek form
of the
throughout.
236
WOODBROOKE
his
STUDIES
division,
to
Temple according
and the angel
of the incense,
of the
Lord appeared
When standing on the right of the altar. the But startled. and angel said to him frightened
afraid, but rather rejoice,
"Do
not be
Zacharias
God
and your wife Elizabeth shall conceive and bear you a son, who shall be called John you shall have joy and delight, and many shall He shall be great before the Lord, and he rejoice over his birth.
;
shall
be
filled
with
the
reconcile
shall
Holy many
Spirit while
in
the
womb
of his
of the children of
Israel to the
Lord
God.
He
go before
Him
in
the spirit
of
Elijah, in
order to
him." make ready for the Lord a people prepared Zacharias was astonished at these words, and doubt overtook him,
He
whom God
after
who
his
own
"
wife.
to
Zacharias
How can
this
happen
me while
am
him
my
wife
is
advanced
in years ?
:
And
Gabriel.
"I am
the angel
this
news.
And from now you shall be silent and unable to speak until the day when this takes place, because you did not believe my words, which And he disappeared from his sight. will be fulfilled in due course."
Meanwhile the people were waiting for Zacharias wondering at When he came out he was his remaining so long in the Temple. unable to speak to the people, and they perceived that he had seen a
vision in the
soon as
his
And as Temple, and he kept making signs to them. And term of service was finished, he returned home.
(from God). Elizabeth conceived, and lived in seclusion
felt
affair
till
the
to
fifth
month,
1
because she
and
somewhat ashamed.
She
feared
Many
of these data
of those
less faithfully
taken from the first chapter of Luke. 2 M. 183 has the " sixth month."
The
This appears to be against Luke i. 24. discrepancy between the two texts can, however, be accounted for by
237
She
her old age while pregnant and milk dripping from her l of her own house, and lived in a secluded room
at all to
When she reached her sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a town in Galilee called Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed
to a
man named
:
David
of
the virgin
was Mary.
When
the angel
came
he
said to her
"
Rejoice,
from God.
You
Mary, because you have been favoured with a grace shall be with child and shall give birth to a son,
who
1
shall
be called Jesus.
He
I
shall
be great and
shall
Son
of the
Most High.'"
to
And Mary
be called "
:
How
can
this
happen
have not known any man ? And shall descend Spirit upon you, the Most High shall overshadow you, because the
me
:
"
while "
The Holy
is
'
Son
of
God,' and
who related to you is also expecting a child in her old now the sixth month with her who is called barren, because with God there is nothing impossible." And she had no " doubt on the matter but said to the head of the angels I am the servant of the Lord, let it be with me as you have said." He then
Elizabeth
is
age,
and
it
is
Mary was
great, Omnipotent, because Thou hast given descendants to an old and barren woman. I shall not cease walking until I have met her and beheld the wonderful miracle which God has performed
in our times
3
:
God
woman
suckling."
up
in
haste
and went
town
of
The
to
the
end
of the
fifth
month.
may
M. 22
either the beginning or the end of a designate " " takes this till to imply all (or the end of) the fifth
fifth.
month, and
sixth
1
M.
183 uses the same "till" to mean only the beginning of the
*
Presumably
Mary
herself.
17
238
greeted Elizabeth.
WOODBROOKE
The
:
STUDIES
and
delight,
latter
went
and greeted
is
"
her, saying
blessed
womb."
holy and pious virgin embraced then the true turtle-dove, and the Word baptised John while still in the womb of his mother. And David appeared in the middle and said " Mercy and truth
:
The
have met together, and righteousness and peace have kissed each
immediately after John moved in the womb, as if After they had finished wishing to come out and greet his master. their mutual greetings, the Virgin stayed with Elizabeth three months,
other."
until the latter's
1
And
When
great joy
was a
and
and
after eight
circumcise him,
and wished
"
:
to
call
him Zacharias.
His mother,
to her
:
however,
"
said
No,
call
him John."
that name."
of
his
And And
they said
she said to
for
them
name."
is
And
he asked
a writing-
tablet
this
"
:
His name
his
When
he had written
God
who had
this great
mercy, and uttered prophecies conand was cognisant of the gift that he
in
years.
The
Spirit.
grace of
God was on
by the
When
" behold magians came from the East saying : Where is he that is born, the King of the Jews ? for we have seen his star in the East
to
worship Him."
When Herod
words he was troubled by what he had heard from the magians that (that child) was the King of the Jews, and he immediately desired to
kill
him.
Then
said to
him
"
:
Lord appeared forthwith to Joseph and Arise and take the child and his mother and flee into
and be thou there
2
until
Read abahu.
in the East.
less faithful
This was, and often is now, a general habit 4 Many of the above sentences are a more or second chapter of Matthew.
rendering of the
239
sought the Master in order to destroy Him, but he did not find Him, and he began to kill all the children of Bethlehem.
And
Elizabeth feared, 'that her son John might be killed like them,
and she took him immediately to Zacharias in the Temple, and she *' said to him My lord, let us go with our son John to some other
:
unbeliever,
who
is
to the land of
Egypt.
1
Get up quickly
joy
may
of the
not
kill
our
son,
and change
:
our
And
service
Temple
of the
Lord and go
which worship
idols."
And
What
should
do
in
order to save my infant child ? And the old man answered and said " 2 Arise and go to the wilderness of Ain Karim, and by the to her
'
be able to save your son. him, they will shed -my blood instead of his."
will of
God you
great
will
If
How
when
was
the
amount
of
grief
!
that occurred
at
that time
The holy Zacharias took the " is me, him, kissed him and said
:
Woe
my son John, They have impeded me glory of my old age from having any access to your face which is full of grace." He then took him and went into the Temple, and blessed him, saying "May
!
:
God
"
Immediately after Gabriel, the head of the angels, came down to him from heaven holding a raiment and a leathern girdle, and said to " him God sent Zacharias, take these and put them on your son. them to him from heaven. This raiment is that of Elijah, and this
:
girdle that of
Elisha."
And
and fastened on
Read yarji.
Dr. C. Schick (Zeitsch. des Deut. Pal. Vereins, 1899,
Tradition
half
ist
"
Nach der
'Ain Karim,
ein
Dorf
4-
Taufers." He further identifies an hour west of 'Ain Karim, where there is a small spring of water called Ain al-Habs, with the "wilderness" of Matt. iii. I, in which John preached (ibid., Schick discusses also the antiquity of p. 90). the tradition on pp. 88-90 of his article (q-v-\ The wilderness of Judaea in which John dwelt is generally understood to mean the wild was** whirl h'es to the west of the Dead Sea.
Jerusalem, der Geburtsort Johannes des
wadi s-Sardr,
240
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
of camel's hair with the leathern girdle. " then brought him back to his mother and said to her Take him and bring him into the desert, because the hand of the Lord is with
He
him.
God
till
the
day
also
of his
showing unto
Israel."
The
"I know
shall
not see
you again peace. Elizabeth walked then away with her son, and went ness of 'Ain Karim, and stayed there with him.
It
kill its
the
flesh.
Go
in
May God
guide you."
happened
that
1
children, they
when King Herod sent troops to Jerusalem to came and began to kill children till the evening.
2
When
How
He
is
hidden with
not spare him but kill him in order that Temple. Go for him, and if you do with the king may not wax angry you. not find the son, kill the father in his place."
Do
The
early in
troops did
what Satan taught them, and went to the Temple the morning, and found Zacharias standing and serving the
: :
" Where is thy son whom thou hast Lord, and they said to him " And he answered them "I have no child hidden from us here ? " to him : You have a child whom you have hidden said here." They And he answered and said " cruel ones whose from the king."
:
how
"
long will
to
you shed
"
the blood
of
innocent people ?
They
;
said
him
to
so that
we may
kill
him
if
not,
we
I
shall kill
you
And
the prophet answered and said : his mother to the wilderness, and
"As
my
son,
his
do not know
a
:
Now when
delivered
1
to Elizabeth
priest,
and
his son
made him
said to
and afterwards
him
to his mother,
who
him
"
Pray over me
my
Read ajnaduhu.
7//,
this
logium or Orient, x.
Marty rologium
1
month corresponds with September (old style). Inino Menoof the Eastern Churches as printed in the Pat.
is
-343
Holy
is
writing here in a purely historical apparently September. without any reference to the ecclesiastical commemorations of saints.
3
The author
way
Read
tasfikuna.
241
God may
"
:
render
my
And
he said to her
May He who
Then
"
is
'
truly
to
worthy.
You
You did not care to provide way You did not say to his food nor a little drinking water for the child. father Zacharias To whom are you sending me in the wilderness ? At that time there was neither a monastery in the desert nor a congregaknew
neither the
'
tion of
monks
son.'
'
so that
shall
with
my
Tell me,
blessed
Elizabeth
testifies to
without having had any child, and now you have been suckling " this child of yours for three years ? Listen now to the answer of the blessed Elizabeth : " are you astonished at me that I am going alone into the What should I fear while a kinsman of God is in my wilderness ?
Why
arms
Behold Gabriel
me."
And
she said
is accompanying me and paving the way for "I have confidence in the kiss that Mary, His
mother, gave me, because when I greeted her the babe leaped with joy in my womb, and I heard both babes embracing each other in our " I went and put on wombs." And Elizabeth added : my son a
raiment of camel's hair and a leathern girdle in order that the mountain
of the holy wilderness
may
in
(in future)
be inhabited, and
increase in
in order that
it
monks may
and that
may
be offered
it
in the
God
assisted
Jesus Christ.
in the desert,
He
not apply to us the precedent slaves, " has himself established beforehand ?
how will He
In the
above words
Let
holy Elizabeth."
1
we have described to you the merits of the us now proceed and commemorate the holy
-
that John sucked probably refers here to the beginning of the third year. 5 Read wa-yarfa'u. 6 All the above lines are therefore a literary digression on the part of the author. The same thing happens below with regard to Zacharias.
his
;
Read
kabiran.
242
WOODBROOKE
1
STUDIES
you a few
of his
and
relate to
numerous
I should wish to praise your true life, but I fear to hear a reproof from you, similar to that you made to the blessed Elizabeth. I am full of admiration for you, In the time when the pious Zacharias " soldiers of Herod came to you and asked you saying Where is
"
You did not deny the your infant son, the child of your old age ? fact and say "I have no knowledge of such a child," but you simply
:
"
answered
*'
:
into
the
desert."
And when
Zacharias uttered these words to the soldiers concerning his son, they killed him inside the Temple, and the priests shrouded his body and
placed
it
fear of the
wicked (king)
and
on the earth
for fifty
years, until
Titus son of Vespasian, the Emperor of the Romans, came and destroyed Jerusalem and killed the Jewish priests for the blood of
Zacharias, as the Lord ordered him.
2
he wandered
locusts
in the desert
ance with what his mother was told about him not to
any unclean
After
five
3
mother Elizabeth passed away, and the holy John sat weeping over her, as he did not know how to shroud her and bury her, because on
the day of her death he
And Herod
with His eyes sees heaven and earth saw His kinsman John sitting and weeping near his mother, and He also began to weep for a long time, without anyone knowing
Jesus
The Lord
Christ
who
When the mother of Jesus saw Him " she to : said Him Whay are " you weeping ? Did the old weeping, And the mouth that was man Joseph or any other one chide you ? " the real reason is that your full of life answered : No, mother, my
the cause of His weeping.
2 3
is
missing in
M.
22.
Chronology on which the See the Encyclopedias and " Can any historical value the Dictionaries of the Bible under Chronology." be attached to our author's statement concerning the year of the death of
Christian era
based
is
of course erroneous.
Herod?
243
my
is
He
is
now weeping
When
you
kins-
woman, and
speaking with his mother, behold a luminous cloud came down and placed And Jesus said " Call Salome and let us take itself between them.
:
"
my
virgin mother,
still
he was
And
the wilderness of
they mounted the cloud which flew with them to 'Ain Karim and to the spot where lay the body of
the blessed Elizabeth, and where the holy John was sitting. " Leave us here at this side The Saviour said then to the cloud
:
of
the spot."
Its
departed.
immediately went, reached that spot, and : noise, however, reached the ears of Mar John, who,
it
And
left
the
to
body him
I
of his mother.
"
:
Do
not be afraid,
John.
I
am
to
am
in
came
you with
my
beloved mother
is
my
mother's kinswoman."
When
this,
he turned back, and Christ the Lord and His virgin mother embraced " him. Then the Saviour said to His virgin mother Arise, you and
:
And they washed the body of the Salome, and wash the body." blessed Elizabeth in the spring from which she used to draw water for
herself
and her
son.
Then
Mart
"
Mary
got hold of
and wept over him, and cursed Herod on account numerous crimes which he had committed. Then Michael and
Gabriel came
said to
a grave
them
Go
3
soul
of
in order that they may sing while you bury the Michael body." brought immediately the souls of Zacharias and Simeon, who shrouded the body of Elizabeth and sang for a long
And
it.
time over
And
made
1
two
priests
it
three times
of saints
names
and
of ecclesiastical dignitaries. Feminine of Mar explained in the previous note. 3 The man spoken of in Luke ii. 25 sqq.
4
means
"
to imprint."
244
before they laid
it
WOODBROOKE
to rest in the grave
;
STUDIES
then they buried
it,
and sealed
And
places Jesus Christ and His mother stayed near the blessed
at the death of
to their
own
his mother,
and the holy John seven days, and condoled with him and taught him how to live in the desert.
And
the day
1
was
the
;
Then
place
His mother
where
"
may
proceed with
my
"
work."
We will
Vis,
:
since
he
is
one."
This
My
till
who
is
He
shall
remain
in the wilderness
the
day
Instead of a desert full of wild beasts, he showing unto Israel. 4 will walk in a desert full of angels and prophets, as if they were
of his
multitudes of people.
Here
is
head
of the angels,
whom
from heaven.
as sweet
have appointed to protect him and to grant to him power Further, I shall render the water of this spring of water
delicious to
and
him
Who
who
and
I
all
the world
not
after him,
because
although his body is buried in the earth, his soul is alive. " As to Elizabeth his mother, she will constantly visit him and
comfort him, as
if
all.
Blessed
is
she,
O my
will
my
beloved.
Her mouth
;
you and
said
"
:
Happy
is
she
who
believed that the promise that she " 5 nor will her womb be fulfilled ;
In
fixed
on the
1
to the
= 23 September). See Pat. Menologium her feast is on the 26th Tut ( In the Ethiopia Menologium (Smith's Orient, x. 189, 233 (index) and 253.
Diet,
a Jacobite Menologium (Pat. Orient, x. 36) the feast of Elizabeth is In another Menologium her death is assigned 1 6th of December. In a Coptic- Arabic 0th of February (Pat. Orient, x. 1 40 index).
= (
of Christian Antiquities, i. 606) her feast is on the 16th Jakatit I do not believe that any of the above dates (including 10 February). that given by our document) has any historical value. 3 2 Read ahadin. Read saghiran. 8 4 Luke i. 45. Read yasir (with sin).
245
like
putrefaction.
And my
and he will
and be comforted." These words the Christ our Lord spoke to his mother, while John was in the desert And they mounted the cloud, and John looked at 1 them and wept, and Mart Mary wept also bitterly over him, saying
:
"
Woe
is
me,
O John,
anyone.'
Where
?
your mother
And
my
is Zacharias, your father, and where is Elizabeth, 3 Let them come and weep with me to-day." "
:
mother.
shall
Nazareth.
except
sin.
And He
John dwelt
fulfilled
And
with him.
in the desert,
and
angels
were
was was
his
grass
He lived in great asceticism and devotion. His only food and wild honey. He prayed constantly, fasted much and
the
And Herod
Younger
who
second
reigned over Judea, lived with He did not year of his reign.
6
marry her openly, but he used to find an opportune moment to send after her and usher her in his bedchamber which was full of corruption,
their abomination.'
At
head
;
no
right to live
King, you have with the wife of your brother, while he is still alive."
John
"
And
him.
he repeated
this,
In the night people could hear his voice, and Herodias used to a light lamp and search the bedchamber, believing that somebody may have intruded into it, but found nobody, and only heard the voice.
~ Read ahadin. 447. Read in the dual form yatia and yabkia. " 4 The author seems to identify the " locusts used in the Gospel in This is also the connection with the food of John, with a kind of grass.
See note
of p.
I.e.
Herod
Antipas.
This epithet
is
tinguish
him from Herod the Great, son 'RmdyifrniAnt. 8 Mark vi. 8. Read hayyun.
1
of Antipater. "
Read nifdkahuma.
246
ing,
WOODBROOKE
and Herodias
said to
STUDIES
Arise and despatch troops to
Herod
"
:
the desert of
the voice
delivered
'Am Karim, in order that they may kill John, because we hear is his." God, however, was with the lad, and him from their hands. When she ascertained that through
:
him there would be no peace for her in her (iniquitous) act, she "If persuaded the wicked king who gave her the following promise
we happen
we
shall
kill
summon
him
the magicians
John and
said
secretly."
And
a
is
And
wanderer
not
fit
the
wicked
Herodias
"
:
How
can
this
John,
in the desert
and
in
the wilderness, a
to
of
of camel's hair,
own
country, whose
own
region ?
Then Herodias
"
:
openly, and do not believe that anyone in blame you for it, except John, and when opportunity
to do,
it
do
offers itself
we
l
It
is
in this
way
heart of
to death,
Herod on
their sin,
And
until
John did not cease to rebuke Herod every day in the desert he was thirty years old. As to Jesus, He increased in wisdom,
men, and did not show any deeds And when of His Divinity, but acted with humility towards all men. He was twelve years old, He began to rebuke the Teachers and
stature,
God and
And
after
in the fifteenth
who reigned
Augustus,
and when Annas and Caiaphas were high priests, in that year the word of God came unto John, son of Zacharias, in the wilderness. He came into the countries that surround the Jordan 3 preaching and
"
saying
:
Repent ye
all
for the
people from
In those
the region of
And
to
him
in the
to him from Galilee to the Jordan When John saw God standing me." and Baptize before him and wishing to be baptized by him, he was seized with
came
him
"
Read akhahu.
Matt.
iii.
2 5
2.
52.
5,
Cf.
Luke
iii.
-3.
Matt.
iii.
5-6.
247
He who made the children of Israel Red Sea and drink sweet water from a solid rock, stands before His servant who is in need to be baptized with His Divine '" And he began to turn away from hands, and says Baptize me " Him. But (Jesus) said to him Stop now it is thus that we must
and
said to
him
"
walk
in the
'
fulfil all
righteousness."
of
Then both
baptized
Him,
saying
3
Whom
sent to establish a great sacrament." And immediately after the heavens opened and the Holy Spirit descended upon Him, like a dove. And John saw it face to face, and the Father cried saying "This is my
:
beloved Son in
whom
delight,
obey Him."
all
And
our Saviour
came
he
As
to John,
those
who came
"
:
to him.
Herod
to
and
intrigued
against
have appointed
"I shall not pay tribute to the king governed your region, and said because I am also a king." Cassar waxed greatly angry and ordered
Herod
and
to dispossess
him
of his region
and
Herod pity, not even on his soul. acted on the orders of the Emperor and plundered the region of his
his house,
and
all his
possessions,
And
the
Philip
same
had a wife called Herodias, who had a daughter by 6 The mother was even more Philip, called Arcostiana.
When
Philip
body
else,
greatly,
remain with you any more, but shall go to your new lord Herod who is better than Then she wrote immediately to Herod saying : you." " Herodias writes to Herod as follows Now that you have all Syria
' :
Matt.
iii.
5.
in
M. 22
filled
putations
4
5
Or
given below as Uxoriana, which by its connection with the Latin uxor seems to be more accurate. M. 1 83 has, however, Orcostiriana.
is
It
The name
is
remarkable that
the
traditional
this
uncommon name.
246
WOODBROOKE
all
I
STUDIES
the earth, you have not taken
all
me
as your wife.
I
am
the
women
of Judaea.
in all
have also a daughter the like of whom I have never seen the world for beauty and stature. I wish to be I your wife.
l
your kingdom.' When these cunning words reached the wicked (king), he was pleased with them, and he immediately gave orders that she and her
very
much
"
in order to strengthen
When Philip saw that daughter be taken out of the house of Philip. his wife was being taken from him by force, he wept bitterly and said " to his daughter You stay with your father in case your mother is " taken from me." But the adulteress said to him I shall not stay
: :
shall
accompany
2
my
They
who was
They performed
them
in adultery.
of
Some
people,
how-
John the Baptist on John was considered by all as a prophet, and everybody praised him because he was teaching " the people and saying Bring forth fruits meet for repentance, because
ever, brought their story to the
knowledge
Now
fruit is
cast
When
the perdition of
John heard the news from Philip he was much afflicted at Herod and Herodias, and he immediately sent a
that
"
these
words he was much frightened and perplexed, and he went to Herodias " It is the end of and said to her Herodias, what shall we do ?
:
it
Woe
:
to us,
because our
have increased greatly and reached the ears of the prophets." " The wicked woman said then to him Long live you, king
Who
1 2
John, the wearer of camel's hair, to contradict and rebuke a He surely deserves that somebody should mighty monarch like you ?
is
place
all
249
"
:
and cut
off
his tongue."
And
:
he said to her
What
I
can
we do
We
we
And
kill
Summon him
here and
will
him, and
shall continue
And
she
and immoral
artifices,
l
and Satan
the Baptist,
cast
and he dispatched
in prison.
who
him and
him
What is your business with me, O chaste man, that you wish to separate me from the king ? conjure you by the God of father not to do this with me To tell you the truth, if your again. you are silent concerning me and do not rebuke me another time, I
him
:
"
shall
deliver
And
the holy
Mar John
live
the
"
say to you,
Herodias, not to
When
against
I
the
Herod while your husband Philip is alive." wicked woman heard this, she was incensed with anger
with
said to
him and
him
"
You
my
hands, and
~
shall put
which
lay
my
I
shall
in
the place
where
wash
her
:
after
"
The Lord
It
having enjoyed myself with the king." will allow you to kill me but
will
not see.
remain
after
Woe
me, and proclaim your iniquity and shame to you for my unjust murder, because your end
"
at hand."
with
Take him and keep him in prison he shall lose your souls." fetters, And the escapes, you soldiers took him and kept him in prison with chains. And Herodias
said to his keepers
if
:
She then
and
tried to
induce Herod to
kill
"I cannot
out,
kill
him
from
in this
way.
People
me, drive
me
and bring
accusation against
me
to the
Emperor,
who
will
take
me
as
he took that of
my
brother Philip."
~
And
allati.
1 z
See note
of p.
447.
Read
text uses constantly the word ras head in feminine, which is absolutely contrary to the This genius of all the Semitic languages. proves that the work is of Egyptian origin, and that it emanates from a Greek or a Coptic original, or at least that it was written by a Copt who was under
The Arabic
"
Homer
in
which
K6<f>a\TJ is feminine.
250
"
to
WOODBROOKE
better
STUDIES
And
she said
Show me a
him
"
:
method
of doing
you a word, and if you listen to it, you will " an opportunity of killing him." And he said to her Tell it to " 2 And she said to him : Behold the envoys of the king are with arise and prepare a dinner for them, to which you will invite all
I
will tell
have
me."
you,
your
high
and your birthday falls also in these days. When people become hilarious and begin to get drunk with wine, I shall send in my
officials
;
daughter dressed in her best clothes, and she will dance before you, When she has done this ask her, saying, king, with her sweet face. Desire of me whatever you like,' and you will swear to her by the
O
'
life
of the
Emperor
that
you will give her whatever she wishes. She head of John, and you will have an opportune
the reasoning of the adulteress, and
day he prepared the dinner, and the When they messengers of the Emperor were sitting next to him. to drunk the accursed Uxoriana entered the began get room, and on her were strings of gold and silver, perfumes and jewellery of high
diabolical artifices.
and presented herself to all the company. She danced with a diabolical passion, and Satan filled the hearts of the guests with evil
value,
and passion through her iniquitous artfulness. 4 her, and Herod was proud and said to her you
like,
"
:
and by the
if
life
of the
Emperor
of
Tiberius Caesar,
will give
it
5
to you, even
kingdom and my possessions." And she said what she was taught by her mother "I wish here 6 to have the head of John the Baptist, on a dish." The king began to be
it
be the half
my
very sad, on account of the oath he had taken by the life of the Emperor, and he owned to the guests that he was unable to break his
oath.
He
who went
to the prison
This sentence
is
missing in
M.
122.
Read rusul, 3 Read surra. 4 Or: thought. 5 The story is in many places 6 Read hadha in M. 22.
a faithful rendering of
Mark ,iv.
7-29.
251
it
to
Herod,
and the
girl
handed
it
to her mother.
the king and the executioner had gone to him, to behead him, John " Behold the king has sent men to cut off had said to his disciples :
my
this
head.
They have
already
left
As
What is happening in lamps, and weapons." the night in which Christ will be betrayed.
off
and be shown on a
going to
off
;
up on the
;
He may
purify all
as to
me am
to
my
place, but
woe
to
my
head
be cut
many
calamities will
and the people of Israel will be scattered because of him. As to you, do not be afraid, because no one will be able to do you He then opened his mouth and blessed and glorified any harm."
God
Thee,
"I
bless
Thee and
comforting
praise
invisible
Father,
visible
Son,
and
Holy
Spirit."
Let us
now proceed
the Baptist.
head
of the blessed
Mar John
4
When
it
was brought before Herodias, the his ears were hearing as in his
before the head as
The
"
follows
accursed one,
who were
I
shall
my
in
twenty-ninth of the month of August Pat. Or. v. 454 fixes also the feast
of the Decollation of the Baptist on the 1 9th of Navasard ( So also is the case with the Syrian Menologia and
29th August).
Pat. Or.
x. pp. 45, 85, 101, 106, 1 printed ibid, on p. 53 this feast is assigned to the 15th of December. same feast is assigned to the 7th of January on pp. 54, 69, 94, 103, 1 09,
The
1 1
7,
and 129. In a Greek life of the saint printed in Pat. Or. iv. 527-541 the head is reported to have been cut off on the 29th of the month of Dystros, which in Graeco-Arab calendars of Gaza corresponds with 5th or 25th of March. None of the above dates seems to me to have any historical value. In the Greek Synaxarium of Constantinople printed by the Jesuit Delehaye in 902 (Col. 934) the Baptist is also murdered on the 29th of August. For
1 1
churches of the West, see Smith's and Cheetham's Dictionary of Christian Cf. Acta SS. for June 24th, pp. '701-702. Antiquities, i. 882-883.
-
Cf John
.
xviii. 3.
Read
ru'iya.
Read
alladhi.
252
WOODBROOKE
dish,
STUDIES
shall cut off the
and
tongue which
it
was unlawful
feet of
for
him
to
marry Herodias,
of
As
to the hair of
it
your beard
pluck
it
and place
all this
under the
my bedstead."
do with
it
She said
hand
she had said.
the locks of
convivial
to hold the
head
Mar John
dish,
what
let
its
after the
head
it
of the blessed
John
and
room before
In that very
moment
floor
in the air.
As
to
was opened and the head of John flew Herodias her eyes were put out and fell on the of her room fell upon her, and the earth opened
l
her
to her neck,
alive to
all
As
In her
to the icy
pond and danced on it, and by order of the Lord the ice broke under In vain did the soldiers endeavour to her and she sank to her neck.
pull her up, because the
deliverance.
Then
they cut
off
the Baptist.
her head with the very sword that was used to kill John 2 Then a fish cast her out of the pond, dead. May God
!
moment Herod
body
also
had a sudden
When
of the saint and gave it to his disciples, who took 3 Sebaste where they buried it, near the bodyi of the it As to his head, it flew over Jerusalem, and cried for prophet Elisha. " It is not lawful for you, three years to the town, saying Herod, After it to marry the wife of your brother while he is still alive."
prison, took the
to the
town
of
had
2
it
went
to all the
From
In
Herod
to
it
written:
"My
and fell in up to daughter Herodias was playing upon the water (i.e. the ice) And her mother caught at her head to save her, and it was cut her neck. My wife is sitting with the head off, and the water swept her body away. on her knees weeping." James' The Apocryphal New Testament, pp. 55The Syriac text of the letter has been edited by Rahmani, Studia 1 56.
1
Syriaca,
3
ii,
17-18.
in the time of
Even
of
was shown
Yakut, the well known Muslim geographer, the grave at Sebaste (Mu jam al Buldan, iii. 33, edit.
l
Wiistenfeld).
253
" It the words : claiming the horrible crime of Herod, and repeating is not lawful for you, Herod, to marry the wife of your brother
O
it
while he
is still
alive."
off
it
ceased proclaiming,
and
town
town
of
it
Horns.
The
faithful
who were
in that
took
it
and buried
on
it,
was
built
which
a church
was buried
and
it
remained there
down
to our
own
days.
to the
As
we
of
body
of the holy
3
John the
whose
is
feast
it
remained
years.
in
Sebaste
which
Nabulus
Samaria
for four
hundred
Then
name
He had been a Christian at the Julian, reigned over the world. beginning of his reign, but after that Satan filled his heart and he forwas
sook the faith of our Lord the Christ and worshipped
fire.
He ordered
temples and places of worship to be built in every place where idols could be worshipped, and intimated that such a temple should be erected in
where lay the body of the holy Baptist. People, to comply with the order and to worship idols unable were however, in that place, on account of the (holy) bodies that were buried there.
the
town
of Sebaste
and informed the Emperor that as bodies of holy men were buried there, they had been delayed in their 1 The well known north Syrian town. Hims would be a more exact The same Arab geographer, Yakut, tells us pronunciation of the word. (ibid. ii. 335) that a fourth part of the Church of St. John at Horns was turned into a mosque at the time of the Arab conquest. According to the Coptic MS. No. 97 of kef.R.L. (Crum's Catalogue, p. 50) the relics of the Baptist were discovered near Emesa by the brothers Gesius and Isidorus. See further parallels in Acta SS. June 24th., pp. 712 sqq.
They,
therefore, assembled
2
The
author
was
which a head supposed to be that of John the Baptist was sent to Constantinople. See Barsalibi's Treatise against the Melchites and my notes on it (pp. 43In the author's time of 44). writing, which according to the present story is, a within A.D. 385-395, the head of the saint was still at Emesa. by necessity, year
3
The
present
history
is,
therefore,
a kind
of
homily or panegyric
pronounced or written by Bishop Serapion. * The clause "which is Nabulus of Samaria," only found in M. 183 and not in M. 22, is apparently an addition of a late copyist. In a preceding where the text of M. 22 has no lacuna the same clause is missing in passage it although found as in the present case in M. 83, which on the whole seems
1
to represent a
of the story.
18
254
WOODBROOKE
Then he
STUDIES
them
"
:
said to
Go
The Lord, however, did not allow the fire to come bodies) with fire." near the place where lay the coffins of the prophets, but the same fire
consumed a great number of the pagans who had kindled it, and great treasures were brought to light there. Above one of the coffins was
seen a vessel containing a leathern girdle, a raiment of camel's hair, a
frock,
belts.
The
faithful
who were
l
in that place
and
to the prophet Elisha, and they wished to but from fear of the wicked Emperor they were not able to do
so.
When, however, God destroyed him with a death more wretched than that of any other, pious men assembled there and carried the two coffins to the sea with the intention of bringing them to Alexandria,
because they said There is in these days no one in the world worthy to take care of these except Father Athanasius, the Patriarch of Alexandria."
to the holy
'
When they reached the sea they found a boat bound for Alexandria, and they boarded it with the coffins. They journeyed on the sea and landed on the shores of Alexandria, but as they weri
unable to disclose their
affair
to
convenient for that, they went direct to the Patriarch and related to him all that had occurred, and how they were moved by the Holy
Spirit to bring the coffins to him.
He
was
them
to the boat with his brother, and they took the remains in a kerchief and brought them with them, and (the Patriarch) placed them with him in a place in his dwelling, and ;he did not
disclose their
whereabouts
to anyone.
And
this
Father wished to
to
build a church to
John the
Baptist,
do
so
because of the troubles caused by the wicked ones. The bodies remained therefore hidden in the place
in
which
his
Read hiya for hum. The construction of the Arabic sentence denotes a Syriac or a Greek original. 2 This is against the statement of Theodoret who relates that the coffin of the saint was broken and his remains were burnt and their ashes scattered. Pat. Gr. Ixxxii. 1091. See above p. 43. 3 Athanasius was Patriarch of Alexandria from 328 to 373.
4 5
Arians ?
The word
Can
it
refer
to
baptismal font ?
255
death.
After his death he was succeeded by Father Peter, whose 2 who throne was occupied after his death by Father Timothy,
ordained
merits
my humble on my part
his death,
self,
who the see, In his time on the now is grace of (Patriarchal) sitting God increased, and the faith was strengthened through the pious 5 Theodosius and God united the Emperor and the Patriarch with ties of love. The former threw open the temples in which were
After
treasures,
and
Alexandria, in which
there
was
great
quantity
of
gold
and
silver.
And
the
pious
Theodosius honoured the Patriarch, made him superintendent of all " the treasures, and said to him Father Theophilus, take these
:
and enrich the churches with them, from this town to Aswan, for the After this he began to build churches. glory of God and His saints."
The
first
name
of the holy
Mar
it He John the Baptist in the great city of Alexandria. and made it a great church and wished to place in it the body of the When he had finished it completely, he holy Mar John the Baptist.
adorned
thought of consecrating it,' and he sent immediately to all the bishops under his jurisdiction to congregate for the consecration of the church. The invitation was also sent to my weakness, and I went with
the rest of
1
the bishops
to
the
Pope,
the
Father
Theophilus of
Peter
ii.
1 cannot ascertain the identity of this Serapion, who was evidently a For chronological reasons he cannot apparently bishop of a town in Egypt. be identified with Serapion Scholasticus, bishop of Thmuis, nor with Serapion,
bishop of Tentyra.
4
He is credited
and
flight of
mode
,
Syr. Lit. p. 70, and Syr. MS. Mingana, No. 5 ff. 70 b both in the custody of Rendel Harris Library, Birmingham. Theodosius died in 395.
6
Or
Assuan.
town
in
district
antiquity
it,
The
island of Elephantine
included in
and
in
Greek times
was called Syene. 7 Read bitakrisiha. 8 The word "Pope" was Alexandria and not of Rome.
256
WOODBROOKE
STUDIES
When it came to his knowledge that all the bishops Alexandria. were nearing the city of Alexandria, he was pleased with us, like one who had found much booty. He came out to meet us accompanied
by
all
the (clergy)
who were
in the city.
We entered
"
the city
:
and
the
it
After
this
2
it
:
in
O my children,
whom
:
this is
the
And
I
them while
And when
he came
if
purpose by Athanasius, Father Theophilus added "I was walking with was a simple acolyte at that time and serving him. "
to this place,
he
said to
me
my
son,
Theophilus, you can find opportunity, build in to Mar John the Baptist and place his bones in
built
this place,
I
this
it,
place a church
after
I
and
had
of the
was
bethought prophet David, who wished to build a house to God, but was not favoured with it, on account of wars in which he was " Thou shalt not build a continually engaged, and God said to him : house for me, but the one who comes out of thy loins shall build it for
like the
when
me,"* and
which
is
this
was Solomon.
I
Since
considered myself worthy of building this church under the name of the holy Mar John the Baptist, the
the second of the
morning
star."
When
month
of
to the
place where the body was placed, and we did not know the right And when spot, but after praying nocturns God showed it to him.
he brought
it
out,
he called
all
and lamps so that the night He let the bishops carry the coffin on their heads shone like day. and the Patriarch preceded them, and the deacons were singing with
many
majesty and splendour, until we brought the coffin to the church in When we entered the church, the Patriarch took hold great pomp.
of the coffin,
embraced
it,
and allowed
all
by
the church on a
He
Read arana.
1
Sam.
Tii.
Kings
v. 3.
257
of us received the
of the
day, and
we
said mass,
it
and
all
month
Baouna?
After
2
this
left
the town,
own
country,
the peace of
God.
Amen.
And
the
miracles, prodigies,
of the holy
Mar John
will
the
Baptist
wrought Lord
Jesus Christ.
The
miracles (which
we
witness to
Praise,
this.
glory,
Holy
and
l
Spirit
and power are due to you, Father, Son, and who is one in nature, now, always, and for ever
ever.
183 heziran (June). The second day of the Coptic month with our 27th of May. In the Arab Coptic Menologia (Pat. Or. x. 204), the feast of the finding of the bones of the Baptist actually falls on the second day of Baouna or the 27th of May. That a church was built in Alexandria in order to contain the supposed relics of the Baptist sent from Sebaste to Athanasius is attested by Rufinus, Hist. Eccl. xi. 28 Theodoret, Hist. Eccl. iii. 3 Theophanes, Chronographia, i. 1 7 (edit. Classen). It seems therefore to be historical that a church was built in Alexandria under the name of the Baptist by Theodosius the Great on the site of the On the other temple of Serapis, and finished under the reign of Arcadius. hand it seems to me false to assert that the church contained any bones of the saint. See Barsalibi's Treatise against the Melchites on p. 43, and for further details see Smith's and Cheetham's Dictionary of Christian Antiquities, i. 881-884. The Ada SS. for June 24 (pp. 71 1-808) contain a full repertory
ln
M.
Baouna corresponds
of traditions concerning the history of the Baptist's relics. ' The story ends here. What follows appears to be
by a
later
hand.
258
WOODBROOKE
God, one in and by the help and
of
STUDIES
In the
attributes,
name
nature,
and three
in persons
and
assistance of
God we
2
will narrate
1
God
of the consecration
of his Church.
Amen.
in the
town a
girl of
been delivered
of
was her
:
babe.
present
to her parents
live."
"
The babe
cannot
loved by them.
Mar
singing,
"
:
What
They answered
of
"A
was martyred
his
the
name
Jesus Christ,
feast
Now
them
**
:
the
girl
And
she said to
Carry
me
window
so that
may
And
had
desired.
When
this
she looked
cried aloud
:
down
"
saw a
great
and indescribable
for
whose
name
man
this
calamity
may know
was
man, in order that all While she are the only God."
in her
who was
womb came
alive.
out
found to
be
People
of
this
saying
Jesus Christ,
all of
the
God
them believed and gave to the martyr, is the only God." infant the name of John, and were baptised in the Church of Mar John the Baptist, and remained Christian till the day in which they
passed
And
away
1
in the
Amen.
As
Read
ash-shah'td.
259
town had a daughter betrothed to a man. ~ for her because she was very rich. great wedding was prepared On the night in which her husband was to be with her, the holy
*
A rich
official
of the
to her in John, the servant of the Lord Jesus Christ, appeared " Do you : to her great glory, and she was frightened, but he said " " And she answered know who I am ? No, my lord." And
:
Mar
When the Baptist, the precursor of Christ you rise to-morrow go to my church, and take the sign and abundance
he said
:
"
am John
what you
will see
on
my
sat
grave where
my body
And he disappeared from her sight. And she rose in the night and went and When the door of church till the morning.
she made haste and entered and went
the church
to the place in
was
buried.
of
Mar
veil.
and a
When
is
"
This garment
to
that
be a
grave,
She then threw immediately in the church the garment was wearing, and put on that which she saw on the and went out glorifying God and His saint, Mar John the
and she became a
virgin
till
Baptist,
the
day
May
this intercession
be with
town a
cripple
who worshipped
one
knew
When
tightly
on them a piece of
fro.
move
to
and
He
used to
sit
every day at the door of the church in order to receive alms from the
church-goers.
One day
his feet
in order to
put
oil
on
from the lamp of the martyr Mar John the Baptist. purpose he loosened the leather that was wrapped on his
1 -
For
feet
this
and
Or
he prepared.
Read ahadin.
260
oiled
WOODBROOKE
them from the
strong.
oil
STUDIES
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true
till
When
"
:
of the lamp. Immediately after his limbs he noticed the miracle he raised himself up
cried,
saying
God."
He
in the
The God of Mar John the Baptist is the one then received the baptism and became a Christian
peace of the Lord.
he died
Amen.
There was
and
While she was asleep her body was torn open and all the foul matter went out of it, and she awakened from her sleep sound and in good health. And she went home glorifying God to
whom
be everlasting glory
Amen.
blind
men
in the
friendly to each
to the
and
3 They went
Mar John
the
one
of
heart,
lamp that burns over the body of the saint. The eyes of them saw but not those of the other. The latter had a heavy " stood up and confessed to God, saying my Lord Jesus
:
my
faith,
and give
light to
my
eyes as
Thou
glory,
gavest to those of
my
friend,
because to
and honour
for
ever and
ever.
.prayer to the
Mar John
the
Baptist,
glorified
the onlookers
Glory, power, and majesty be to the Father, the Son, and the
Holy
Spirit
who
!
is
consubstantial,
Amen.
"Read liba'dihima.
Read ahadun.
261
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lines the
269
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1
M. 22
287
(iii)
Uncanonical Psalms.
PREFATORY NOTE.
I
and the
translation of five
of the Syriac
uncanonical Psalms.
Psalter
x
Psalm
is
found
cli.
in
many MSS.
it is
where
"
:
it is
known
as Ps.
and where
often introduced
as follows
fought Goliath."
This Psalm was said by David on himself, when he It is a translation from Greek, but I have remarked
its first
in a footnote that
"
Hymn of
the Soul."
If this
we would
itself
be allowed
Hymn
is
was under
Psalm"
this,
however,
question on which
we
it is
beyond
the scope
The
of the
work entitled
"
Centuries,"
Durrasha,
work
is
"
Discipline," or
Nestorian writer Elijah of Anbar who died about 940. The 2 of some other MSS. all which are, however, represented by
much
custody of has unfortunately lost a few of its final leaves and is consequently undated, but on palaeoIt formerly graphic grounds it may be assigned to about A.D. 1 340.
1
later
in the
The MS.
belonged to the Nestorian writer Isho'yahb bar Mukaddam who died about 445, and who in an inscription on fol. 90b informs us that he collated a large part of it with an autograph of the author
1
himself.
There
is
other
MSS.
in existence are
mere
transcripts of this
Mingana
Syr.
31.
1
pp. 35,
124,
d.
140,405
of
It
was lately acquired by me in Kurdistan. See about him Baumstark, *ibid. p. 329,
,
288
UNCANONICAL PSALMS
translation.
I
289
51
have also compared the translation with Syr. MS. a (ff. 100M05 ) of about A.D. 1550, in the custody of
Library, Birmingham.
is
The
unknown
no doubt
that
is
There
in the matter of
and
between
all
these un-
that
we
itself.
Hebrew
1 ,
parallelism
perfect
for believing
translation
less
1
Hebrew
or
Aramaic
Psalms
Sam.
34-36.
TRANSLATION.
The Five Psalms of David, which are not written in the Series
of the Psalms.
1.
Thanksgivings of David.
I
was
1
the youngest of
I
2
my
brothers,
and a
my
and
father.
my
father,
and met a
lion
also a wolf,'
and
My
hands made an
organ, and
my
fingers fitted
He,
my
4
Lord, became
my God.
father,
me
my
of
unction.
brothers,
idols
insult
1
;
went
to
meet the
his
Philistine,
my who
elder
and handsome
cursed
me by
his
but
unsheathed
sword, cut
off his
of Israel.
Compare
of the Soul
:
this
"
While
verse with the beginning of the Edessene Gnostic hymn I was a small child, and dwelling in my kingdom in
the house of
"
my
1
father."
Bedjan's Acta,
iii.
110.
Sam. xvii. 34-36 we know that David was met by a lion and a bear and not a wolf. The variant may be explained by the graphic resemblance that exists in Syriac between the words bear and wolf. This verse is missing in Greek.
3
From
The Greek
The Greek
is
"
Who
will
show
it
to
He
my Lord ?
He
is
the Lord,
heareth me."
4
is
"Of
His unction."
290
WOODBROOKE
'
STUDIES
2.
God
of
in
the
His magnificence in the congregation many people. assembly of the just, and make known His majesty in the company
of the pious.
Extol His praise, and narrate His exalted dignity in l unison with the righteous. Unite your souls with the good and with
Gather together in magnify the Most High. order to proclaim His might, and be not tired in showing forth His
the
in order to
meek
His power, and His glory to all the children. It is in order that the majesty of the Lord may be made manifest that Wisdom has been given, and it is in order that it may proclaim His works that it
salvation,
has been
the
those
doors.
made known
and
are
to
men
for the
among
glory
:
children,
instructing
the
its
weak-hearted
His
who
remote from
its
all
His
servants.
shall
who
magnifies
Him
who
pure
flour,
who
offers
who makes
3
many
holocausts,
His voice
is
admonition from the voice of the pious, and true satisfaction from their food and their drink, when taken in fellowship.
is
and there
is
in the
His might.
is
law of the Most High, and their speech How remote is His word from
for all evildoers to
the wicked,
and how
difficult it
understand
it
of the
righteous,
and
He
will
the time of
He
who
delivered
the needy from the hand of the strangers, and saved the meek from the 4 hand of the evildoers, who raises power from Jacob, and the judge of
the Gentiles from
Israel, in
order that
He may
all
Or
I.e.
yourselves.
Or
Lit.
Wisdom
"
(fern.).
UNCANONICAL PSALMS
3.
291
When
turn
from Cyrus
I
to
Re-
to their
Country.
have cried to Thee
:
O
hands
grant
Lord,
listen
:
to
me
have
lifted
my
soul,
to the habitations of
Thy
holiness
incline
Thy
me my
request,
and do not
refuse
my
prayer.
Build
my
Remove from me
just judge.
and do not expose it before the unrighteous. it, those who would requite me with evil, Lord,
Do
not judge
me
according to
my
sins,
because
all
flesh
Make
1
me,
Lord, understand
will
Thy
Thy
hear
Thy
works
and the Gentiles will bear witness to Thy majesty. Remember me, and do not forget me, and do not inflict on me calamities more than I
can bear."
not
4
me
the sins of
my
youth,
and
let
them
evil
remember
and
let
my
chastisement.
Purify me,
to
leper,
me.
and
that
let
is
Lord,
Dry up Thou
should
I
from me,
art great,
and
why my
answered.
the
Whom
implore to give
before Thee,
me
anything,
and what
trust ?
I
is
power
of the sons of
men
Lord,
my
cried to the
of
Lord, and
I
He
answered
me and
slept,
I
made whole
the
wound
my
heart.
lay
down and
They have wounded my heart, but I shall receive (joy) because the Lord has delivered me let me rejoice now in their confusion I trusted in Thee and I shall not be confounded grant honour for
:
ever,
and
for ever
Israel,
Thy
elect,
of
Jacob,
Thy
chosen.
4.
took
Said by David when Fighting the Lion and the Wolf which a Sheep from his Flock.
O
me.
Deliver
help.
Let
me
not go
down
not.
to
Is
and
let
me
Or:
Lit.
make me
am."
Cf.Ps.xxY.
Or:
leprosy.
292
it
WOODBROOKE
and took out a lamb from the
destroy
STUDIES
my
wish
not sufficient for them that they lay in wait for the flock of
flock of
father,
my
now
elect
his
to
my
soul ?
Have
pity,
Thy
hast
moments, and glorify the name of delivered him from the hands of the
Thy
praises in all
which devours, and Thou hast returned the booty from the hands of the beasts. my Lord, send speedily a deliverer from before Thee, and pull me out of the open abyss that wishes to secure me in its
depths.
5.
Said by David when Thanking God who saved him from the Lion and the Wolf both of which he Killed.
Praise the Lord, ye all the peoples magnify Him and bless His name, because He has delivered the soul of His elect from the hands of death, and saved His chosen from destruction. And He
;
delivered
me
my
unfathomable
Because
if it
my
salvation
I
did come,
sent,
had not come from Him would have been cut into
two
the
pieces for
two
beasts.
He
to
however, His angel who closed devour me, and saved my life
from destruction.
my
soul magnify
is
Him
me.
and
exalt
Him
for all
He
did and
ir
doing
for
UNCANONICAL PSALMS
293
294
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CAMBRIDGE:
LIMITED
LIBRARY
(A.D. 847-861).
unique
By Ali
Tabari.
John Rylands Library by A. Mingana, D.D. 8vo, pp. xxiv, 174. Cloth. Arabic Text, 8vo, pp. 144. 5s. net. %* Hitherto, as far as we have been able to ascertain, no such apology of Islam, of so early a date, and of such outstanding importance, by a learned Muhammadan doctor, has been known to The work is of first-rate importance to the Muslim, and not of less importance to every exist.
in the
MS.
the Court and with the assistance of the Caliph Mutawakkil Translated with a critical apparatus from an apparently
oriental scholar, whilst to those interested in theological questions it cannot fail to be of interest. It " " Apology of the Christian Faith of Al Kindi, which the author probably
intended to refute.
It
contains about 130 long Biblical quotations to prove the divine mission
of the prophet, which follow the Syriac version of the Bible, said in the MS. to have been trans" Marcus the Interpreter," who may probably be identified with " Mark the Evangelist," lated by who is credited by a Syriac authority with having made a translation of the Old Testament into
Aramaic or
Syriac.
life
SOME EARLY JUD/EO-CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS IN THE JOHN RYLANDS of Clement of Rome LIBRARY. A new 2. The Book of Shem, Son of Noah
I.
; ;
Fragment from the Philosopher Andronicus and Asaph, the Historian of the Jews. Syriac 1917. 8vo, pp. 62. Texts edited with translations by A. Mingana, D.D. Boards, 2s. net.
3.
Facsimile in collotype of the original Syriac manuscript in the John Rylands Library, accompanied by a typographical reprint or transliteration of the text, a revised translation in English Versicles, and an exhaustive introduction dealing with the variations of the fragmentary manuscripts in the British Museum, the accessory patristic testimonies, and a summary of the most important criticisms that have appeared since its first publication in 1909. By J. Rendel Harris, M.A., D.Litt., etc., Hon. Fellow of Clare
College, Cambridge, and Alphonse Mingana,
D.D.
vols.
4to.
Vol. 1 Vol. 2
pp. 140.
with facsimile reproductions. 10s. 6d. net. 1 Translation and introduction. guinea net.
text,
The
By
J.
etc.
Demy
8vo,
5s. net.
%* reprint, with corrections, expansions, justifications, and additional illustrations, of the four articles on Greek Mythology, Aphrodite, Apollo, Artemis, and Dionysos, which have appeared " " from time to time. Bulletin in the
By G.
Elliot Smith,
1919. Demy 8vo, pp. xx, 234, with 26 plates and 10s. 6d. net.
many
elaboration of three lectures delivered in the John Rylands Library on "Incense and " Dr i<i< ns and Rain Gods," and "The Birth of Aphrodite". Libations,"
%* An
AILRED OF RIEVAULX AND HIS BIOGRAPHER, WALTER DANIEL. 1922. F. M. Powicke, M.A., Litt.D. 3s. 6d. net. 8vo, pp. vi, 12, with facsimile. ** the Compiled, translated, and edited from a twelfth century MS. acquired
1
By
John
recently
by
MS.
in Jesus College,
Cambridge.
IN
LIBRARY.
in facsimile.
Folio.
Ten
With an
16 pp. of
%* Two exceptional interest and importance, and have been known and celebrated for a century and a half, but have not hitherto been reproduced in a satisfactory manner by any of the modern photo-mechanical processes. The two woodcuts referred to represent "St. Christopher" and "The Annunciation," the former of which has acquired a great celebrity by reason of the date (1423) which it bears, and which, until recently, gave to it the unchallenged position of the first dated woodcut.
IN
xii,
E. Crum,
M.A.
1909.
4lo, pp.
273.
2 guineas net.
collection includes a series of private letters considerably older than any in Coptic in addition to many manuscripts of great theological and historical interest. Many
%* The
hitherto
of the texts are
known,
reproduced in extenso.
THE MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PRESS, 33 Lime Grove, Manchester, and LONGMANS, GREEN & CO., LTD., 39 Paternoster Row, London, B.C., New York, Toronto, Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras. They may also be obtained from the Librarian of THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY, Manchester.
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