Acts of John
From "The Apocryphal New Testament"
M.R. James-Translation and Notes
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924
Introduction
The length of this book is given in the Stichometry of Nicephorus as 2,500 lines: the
same number as for St. Matthew's Gospel. We have large portions of it in the original, and
a Latin version (purged, it is important to note, of all traces of unorthodoxy) of some
lost episodes, besides a few scattered fragments. These will be fitted together in what
seems the most probable order.
The best edition of the Greek remains is in Bonnet, Acta Apost. Apocr. 11.1, 1898: the
Latin is in Book V of the Historia Apostolica of Abdias (Fabricius, Cod. Apoer. N. T.:
there is no modern edition).
The beginning of the book is lost. It probably related in some form a trial, and
banishment of John to Patmos. A distinctly late Greek text printed by Bonnet (in two
forms) as cc. 1-17 of his work tells how Domitian, on his accession, persecuted the Jews.
They accused the Christians in a letter to him: he accordingly persecuted the Christians.
He heard of John's teaching in Ephesus and sent for him: his ascetic habits on the voyage
impressed his captors. He was brought before Domitian, and made to drink poison, which did
not hurt him: the dregs of it killed a criminal on whom it was tried: and John revived
him; he also raised a girl who was slain by an unclean spirit. Domitian, who was much
impressed, banished him to Patmos. Nerva recalled him. The second text tells how he
escaped shipwreck on leaving Patmos, swimming on a cork; landed at Miletus, where a chapel
was built in his honour, and went to Ephesus. All this is late: but an old story, known to
Tertullian and to other Latin writers, but to no Greek, said that either Domitian at Rome
or the Proconsul at Ephesus cast John into a caldron of boiling oil which did him no hurt.
The scene of this was eventually fixed at the Latin Gate in Rome (hence the St. John Port
Latin of our calendar, May 6th). We have no detailed account of this, but it is
conjectured to have been told in the early part of the Leucian Acts. If so, it is odd that
no Greek writer mentions it.
Leaving for the time certain small fragments which may perhaps have preceded the extant
episodes, I proceed to the first long episode (Bonnet, c. 18).
[John is going from Miletus to Ephesus.)
Text
18 Now John was hastening to Ephesus, moved thereto by a vision. Damonicus therefore,
and Aristodemus his kinsman, and a certain very rich man Cleobius, and the wife of
Marcellus, hardly prevailed to keep him for one day in Miletus, reposing themselves with
him. And when very early in the morning they had set forth, and already about four miles
of the journey were accomplished, a voice came from heaven in the hearing of all of us,
saying: John, thou art about to give glory to thy Lord in Ephesus, whereof thou shalt
know, thou and all the brethren that are with thee, and certain of them that are there,
which shall believe by thy means. John therefore pondered, rejoicing in himself, what it
should be that should befall (meet) him at Ephesus, and said: Lord, behold I go according
to thy will: let that be done which thou desirest.
19 And as we drew near to the city, Lycomedes the praetor of the Ephesians, a man of
large substance, met us, and falling at John's feet besought him, saying: Is thy name
John? the God whom thou preachest hath sent thee to do good unto my wife, who hath been
smitten with palsy now these seven days and lieth incurable. But glorify thou thy God by
healing her, and have compassion on us. For as I was considering with myself what resolve
to take in this matter, one stood by me and said: Lycomedes, cease from this thought which
warreth against thee, for it is evil (hard): submit not thyself unto it. For I have
compassion upon mine handmaid Cleopatra, and have sent from Miletus a man named John who
shall raise her up and restore her to thee whole. Tarry not, therefore, thou servant of
the God who hath manifested himself unto me, but hasten unto my wife who hath no more than
breath. And straightway John went from the gate, with the brethren that were with him and
Lycomedes, unto his house. But Cleobius said to his young men: Go ye to my kinsman
Callippus and receive of him comfortable entertainment -for I am come hither with his son-
that we may find all things decent.
20 Now when Lycomedes came with John into the house wherein his wife lay, he caught
hold again of his feet and said: See, lord, the withering of the beauty, see the youth,
see the renowned flower of my poor wife, whereat all Ephesus was wont to marvel: wretched
me, I have suffered envy, I have been humbled, the eye of mine enemies hath smitten me: I
have never wronged any, though I might have injured many, for I looked before to this very
thing, and took care, lest I should see any evil or any such ill fortune as this. What
profit, then, hath Cleopatra from my anxiety? what have I gained by being known for a
pious man until this day? nay, I suffer more than the impious, in that I see thee,
Cleopatra, lying in such plight. The sun in his course shall no more see me conversing
with thee: I will go before thee, Cleopatra, and rid myself of life: I will not spare mine
own safety though it be yet young. I will defend myself before Justice, that I have
rightly deserted, for I may indict her as judging unrighteously. I will be avenged on her
when I come before her as a ghost of life. I will say to her: Thou didst force me to
leave the light when thou didst rob me of Cleopatra: thou didst cause me to become a
corpse when thou sentest me this ill fortune: thou didst compel me to insult Providence,
by cutting off my joy in life (my con- fidence).
21 And with yet more words Lycomedes addressing Cleopatra came near to the bed and
cried aloud and lamented: but John pulled him away, and said: Cease from these
lamentations and from thine unfitting words: thou must not disobey him that (?) appeared
unto thee: for know that thou shalt receive thy consort again. Stand, therefore, with us
that have come hither on her account and pray to the God whom thou sawest manifesting
himself unto thee in dreams. What, then, is it, Lycomedes? Awake, thou also, and open thy
soul. Cast off the heavy sleep from thee: beseech the Lord, entreat him for thy wife, and
he will raise her up. But he fell upon the floor and lamented, fainting. [It is evident
from what follows that Lycomedes died: but the text does not say so; some words may have
fallen out.]
John therefore said with tears: Alas for the fresh (new) betraying of my vision! for
the new temptation that is prepared for me! for the new device of him that contriveth
against me! the voice from heaven that was borne unto me in the way, hath it devised this
for me? was it this that it foreshowed me should come to pass here, betraying me to this
great multitude of the citizens because of Lycomedes? the man lieth without breath, and I
know well that they will not suffer me to go out of the house alive. Why tarriest thou,
Lord (or, what wilt thou do)? why hast thou shut off from us thy good promise? Do not, I
beseech thee, Lord, do not give him cause to exult who rejoiceth in the suffering of
others; give him not cause to dance who alway derideth us; but let thy holy name and thy
mercy make haste. Raise up these two dead whose death is against me.
22 And even as John thus cried out, the city of the Ephesians ran together to the house
of Lycomedes, hearing that he was dead. And John, beholding the great multitude that was
come, said unto the Lord: Now is the time of refreshment and of confidence toward thee, O
Christ; now is the time for us who are sick to have the help that is of thee, O physician
who healest freely; keep thou mine entering in hither safe from derision. I beseech thee,
Jesu, succour this great multitude that it may come to thee who art Lord of all things:
behold the affliction, behold them that lie here. Do thou prepare, even from them that are
assembled for that end, holy vessels for thy service, when they behold thy gift. For
thyself hast said, O Christ, 'Ask, and it shall be given you'. We ask therefore of thee, O
king, not gold, not silver, not substance, not possessions, nor aught of what is on earth
and perisheth, but two souls, by whom thou shalt convert them that are here unto thy way,
unto thy teaching, unto thy liberty (confidence), unto thy most excellent (or unfailing)
promise: for when they perceive thy power in that those that have died are raised, they
will be saved, some of them. Do thou thyself, therefore, give them hope in thee: and so go
I unto Cleopatra and say: Arise in the name of Jesus Christ.
23 And he came to her and touched her face and said: Cleopatra, He saith, whom every
ruler feareth, and every creature and every power, the abyss and all darkness, and
unsmiling death, and the height of heaven, and the circles of hell [and the resurrection
of the dead, and the sight of the blind], and the whole power of the prince of this world,
and the pride of the ruler: Arise, and be not an occasion unto many that desire not to
believe, or an affliction unto souls that are able to hope and to be saved. And Cleopatra
straightway cried with a loud voice: I arise, master: save thou thine handmaid.
Now when she had arisen seven days, the city of the Ephesians was moved at the
unlooked -for sight. And Cleopatra asked concerning her husband Lycomedes, but John said
to her: Cleopatra, if thou keep thy soul unmoved and steadfast, thou shalt forthwith have
Lycomedes thine husband standing here beside thee, if at least thou be not disturbed nor
moved at that which hath befallen, having believed on my God, who by my means shall grant
him unto thee alive. Come therefore with me into thine other bedchamber, and thou shalt
behold him, a dead corpse indeed, but raised again by the power of my God.
24 And Cleopatra going with John into her bedchamber, and seeing Lycomedes dead for her
sake, had no power to speak (suffered in her voice), and ground her teeth and bit her
tongue, and closed her eyes, raining down tears: and with calmness gave heed to the
apostle. But John had compassion on Cleopatra when he saw that she neither raged nor was
beside herself, and called upon the perfect and condescending mercy, saying: Lord Jesus
Christ, thou seest the pressure of sorrow, thou seest the need; thou seest Cleopatra
shrieking her soul out in silence, for she constraineth within her the frenzy that cannot
be borne; and I know that for Lycomedes' sake she also will die upon his body. And she
said quietly to John: That have I in mind, master, and nought else.
And the apostle went to the couch whereon Lycomedes lay, and taking Cleopatra's hand he
said: Cleopatra, because of the multitude that is present, and thy kinsfolk that have come
in, with strong crying, say thou to thine husband: Arise and glorify the name of God, for
he giveth back the dead to the dead. And she went to her husband and said to him according
as she was taught, and forthwith raised him up. And he, when he arose, fell on the floor
and kissed John's feet, but he raised him, saying: O man, kiss not my feet but the feet of
God by whose power ye are both arisen.
25 But Lycomedes said to John: I entreat and adjure thee by the God in whose name thou
hast raised us, to abide with us, together with all them that are with thee. Likewise
Cleopatra also caught his feet and said the same. And John said to them: For tomorrow I
will be with you. And they said to him again: We shall have no hope in thy God, but shall
have been raised to no purpose, if thou abide not with us. And Cleobius with Aristodemus
and Damonicus were touched in the soul and said to John: Let us abide with them, that they
continue without offence towards the Lord. So he continued there with the brethren.
26 There came together therefore a gathering of a great multitude on John's account;
and as he discoursed to them that were there, Lycomedes, who had a friend who was a
skilful painter, went hastily to him and said to him: You see me in a great hurry to come
to you: come quickly to my house and paint the man whom I show you without his knowing it.
And the painter, giving some one the necessary implements and colours, said to Lycomedes:
Show him to me, and for the rest have no anxiety. And Lycomedes pointed out John to the
painter, and brought him near him, and shut him up in a room from which the apostle of
Christ could be seen. And Lycomedes was with the blessed man, feasting on the faith and
the knowledge of our God, and rejoiced yet more in the thought that he should possess him
in a portrait.
27 The painter, then, on the first day made an outline of him and went away. And on the
next he painted him in with his colours, and so delivered the portrait to Lycomedes to his
great joy. And lie took it and set it up in his own bedehamber and hung it with garlands:
so that later John, when he perceived it, said to him: My beloved child, what is it that
thou always doest when thou comest in from the bath into thy bedchamber alone? do not I
pray with thee and the rest of the brethren? or is there something thou art hiding from
us? And as he said this and talked jestingly with him, he went into the bedchamber, and
saw the portrait of an old man crowned with garlands, and lamps and altars set before it.
And he called him and said: Lycomedes, what meanest thou by this matter of the portrait?
can it be one of thy gods that is painted here? for I see that thou art still living in
heathen fashion. And Lycomedes answered him: My only God is he who raised me up from death
with my wife: but if, next to that God, it be right that the men who have benefited us
should be called gods -it is thou, father, whom I have had painted in that portrait, whom
I crown and love and reverence as having become my good guide.
28 And John who had never at any time seen his own face said to him: Thou mockest me,
child: am I like that in form, thy Lord? how canst thou persuade me that the portrait is
like me? And Lycomedes brought him a mirror. And when he had seen himself in the mirror
and looked earnestly at the portrait, he said: As the Lord Jesus Christ liveth, the
portrait is like me: yet not like me, child, but like my fleshly image; for if this
painter, who hath imitated this my face, desireth to draw me in a portrait, he will be at
a loss, the colours that are now given to thee, and boards and plaster (?) and glue (?),
and the position of my shape, and old age and youth and all things that are seen with the
eye.
29 But do thou become for me a good painter, Lycomedes. Thou hast colours which he
giveth thee through me, who painteth all of us for himself, even Jesus, who knoweth the
shapes and appearances and postures and dispositions and types of our souls. And the
colours wherewith I bid thee paint are these: faith in God, knowledge, godly fear,
friendship, communion, meekness, kindness, brotherly love, purity, simplicity,
tranquillity, fearlessness, griefiessness, sobriety, and the whole band of colours that
painteth the likeness of thy soul, and even now raiseth up thy members that were cast
down, and levelleth them that were lifted up, and tendeth thy bruises, and healeth thy
wounds, and ordereth thine hair that was disarranged, and washeth thy face, and chasteneth
thine eyes, and purgeth thy bowels, and emptieth thy belly, and cutteth off that which is
beneath it; and in a word, when the whole company and mingling of such colours is come
together, into thy soul, it shall present it to our Lord Jesus Christ undaunted, whole
(unsmoothed), and firm of shape. But this that thou hast now done is childish and
imperfect: thou hast drawn a dead likeness of the dead.
There need be no portion of text lost at this point: but possibly some few sentences
have been omitted. The transition is abrupt and the new episode has not, as elsewhere, a
title of its own.
30 And he commanded Verus (Berus), the brother that ministered to him, to gather the
aged women that were in all Ephesus, and made ready, he and Cleopatra and Lycomedes, all
things for the care of them. Verus, then, came to John, saying: Of the aged women that are
here over threescore years old I have found four only sound in body, and of the rest some
. . . . (a word gone) and some palsied and others sick. And when he heard that, John kept
silence for a long time, and rubbed his face and said: O the slackness (weakness) of them
that dwell in Ephesus! O the state of dissolution, and the weakness toward God! O devil,
that hast so long mocked the faithful in Ephesus! Jesus, who giveth me grace and the gift
to have my confidence in him, saith to me in silence: Send after the old women that are
sick and come (be) with them into the theatre, and through me heal them: for there are
some of them that will come unto this spectacle whom by these healings I will convert and
make them useful for some end.
31 Now when all the multitude was come together to Lycomedes, he dismissed them on
John's behalf, saying: Tomorrow come ye to the theatre, as many as desire to see the power
of God. And the multitude, on the morrow, while it was yet night, came to the theatre: so
that the proconsul also heard of it and hasted and took his sent with all the people. And
a certain praetor, Andromeus, who was the first of the Ephesians at that time, put it
about that John had promised things impossible and incredible: But if, said he, he is able
to do any such thing as I hear, let him come into the public theatre, when it is open,
naked, and holding nothing in his hands, neither let him name that magical name which I
have heard him utter.
32 John therefore, having heard this and being moved by. these words, commanded the
aged women to be brought into the theatre: and when they were all brought into the midst,
some of them upon beds and others lying in a deep sleep, and all the city had run
together, and a great silence was made, John opened his mouth and began to say:
33 Ye men of Ephesus, learn first of all wherefore I am visiting in your city, or what
is this great confidence which I have towards you, so that it may become manifest to this
general assembly and to all of you (or, so that I manifest myself to). I have been sent,
then, upon a mission which is not of man's ordering, and not upon any vain journey;
neither am I a merchant that make bargains or exchanges; but Jesus Christ whom I preach,
being compassionate and kind, desireth by my means to convert all of you who are held in
unbelief and sold unto evil lusts, and to deliver you from error; and by his power will I
confound even the unbelief of your praetor, by raising up them that lie before you, whom
ye all behold, in what plight and in what sicknesses they are. And to do this (to confound
Andronicus) is not possible for me if they perish: therefore shall they be healed.
34 But this first I have desired to sow in your ears, even that ye should take care for
your souls -on which account I am come unto you- and not expect that this time will be for
ever, for it is but a moment, and not lay up treasures upon the earth where all things do
fade. Neither think that when ye have gotten children ye can rest upon them (?), and try
not for their sakes to defraud and overreach. Neither, ye poor, be vexed if ye have not
wherewith to minister unto pleasures; for men of substance when they are diseased call you
happy. Neither, ye rich, rejoice that ye have much money, for by possessing these things
ye provide for yourselves grief that ye cannot be rid of when ye lose them; and besides,
while it is with you, ye are afraid lest some one attack you on account of it.
35 Thou also that art puffed up because of the shapeliness of thy body, and art of an
high look, shalt see the end of the promise thereof in the grave; and thou that rejoicest
in adultery, know that both law and nature avenge it upon thee, and before these,
conscience; and thou, adulteress, that art an adversary of the law, knowest not whither
thou shalt come in the end. And thou that sharest not with the needy, but hast monies laid
up, when thou departest out of this body and hast need of some mercy when thou burnest in
fire, shalt have none to pity thee; and thou the wrathful and passionate, know that thy
conversation is like the brute beasts; and thou, drunkard and quarreller, learn that thou
losest thy senses by being enslaved to a shameful and dirty desire.
36 Thou that rejoicest in gold and delightest thyself with ivory and jewels, when night
falleth, canst thou behold what thou lovest? thou that art vanquished by soft raiment, and
then leavest life, will those things profit thee in the place whither thou goest? And let
the murderer know that the condign punishment is laid up for him twofold after his
departure hence. Likewise also thou poisoner, sorcerer, robber, defrauder, sodomite,
thief, and as many as are of that band, ye shall come at last, as your works do lead you,
unto unquenchable fire, and utter darkness, and the pit of punishment, and eternal
threatenings. Wherefore, ye men of Ephesus, turn yourselves, knowing this also, that
kings, rulers, tyrants, boasters, and they that have conquered in wars, stripped of all
things when they depart hence, do suffer pain, lodged in eternal misery.
37 And having thus said, John by the power of God healed all the diseases.
This sentence must be an abridgement of a much longer narration. The manuscript
indicates no break at this point: but we must suppose a not inconsiderable loss of text.
For one thing, Andronicus, who is here an unbeliever, appears as a convert in the next few
lines. Now he is, as we shall see later, the husband of an eminent believer, Drusiana; and
his and her conversion will have been told at some length; and I do not doubt that among
other things there was a discourse of John persuading them to live in continence.
37 (continued.) Now the brethren from Miletus said unto John: We have continued a long
time at Ephesus; if it seem good to thee, let us go also to Smyrna; for we hear already
that the mighty works of God have reached it also. And Andronicus said to them: Whensoever
the teacher willeth, then let us go. But John said: Let us first go unto the temple of
Artemis, for perchance there also, if we show ourselves, the servants of the Lord will be
found.
38 After two days, then, was the birthday of the idol temple. John therefore, when all
were clad in white, alone put on black raiment and went up into the temple. And they took
him and essayed to kill him. But John said: Ye are mad to set upon me, a man that is the
servant of the only God. And he gat him up upon an high pedestal and said unto them:
39 Ye run hazard, men of Ephesus, of being like in character to the sea: every river
that floweth in and every spring that runneth down, and the rains, and waves that press
upon each other, and torrents full of rocks are made salt together by the bitter telementt
(MS. promise!) that is therein. So ye also remaining unchanged unto this day toward true
godliness are become corrupted by your ancient rites of worship. How many wonders and
healings of diseases have ye seen wrought through me? And yet are ye blinded in your
hearts and cannot recover sight. What is it, then, O men of Ephesus? I have adventured now
and come up even into this your idol temple. I will convict you of being most godless, and
dead from the understanding of mankind. Behold, I stand here: ye all say that ye have a
goddess, even Artemis: pray then unto her that I alone may die; or else I only, if ye are
not able to do this, will call upon mine own god, and for your unbelief I will cause every
one of you to die.
40 But they who had beforetime made trial of him and had seen dead men raised up, cried
out: Slay us not so, we beseech thee, John. We know that thou canst do it. And John said
to them: If then ye desire not to die, let that which ye worship be confounded, and
wherefore it is confounded, that ye also may depart from your ancient error. For now is it
time that either ye be converted by my God, or I myself die by your goddess; for I will
pray in your presence and entreat my God that mercy be shown unto you.
41 And having so said he prayed thus: O God that art God above all that are called
gods, that until this day hast been set at nought in the city of the Ephesians; that didst
put into my mind to come into this place, whereof I never thought; that dost convict every
manner of worship by turning men unto thee; at whose name every idol fleeth and every evil
spirit and every unclean power; now also by the flight of the evil spirit here at thy
name, even of him that deceiveth this great multitude, show thou thy mercy in this place,
for they have been made to err.
42 And as John spake these things, immediately the altar of Artemis was parted into
many pieces, and all the things that were dedicated in the temple fell, and [MS. that
which seemed good to him] was rent asunder, and likewise of the images of the gods more
than seven. And the half of the temple fell down, so that the priest was slain at one blow
by the falling of the (?roof, ? beam). The multitude of the Ephesians therefore cried out:
One is the God of John, one is the God that hath pity on us, for thou only art God: now
are we turned to thee, beholding thy marvellous works! have mercy on us, O God, according
to thy will, and save us from our great error! And some of them, lying on their faces,
made supplication, and some kneeled and besought, and some rent their clothes and wept,
and others tried to escape.
43 But John spread forth his hands, and being uplifted in soul, said unto the Lord:
Glory be to thee, my Jesus, the only God of truth, for that thou dost gain (receive) thy
servants by divers devices. And having so said, he said to the people: Rise up from the
floor, ye men of Ephesus, and pray to my God, and recognize the invisible power that
cometh to manifestation, and the wonderful works which are wrought before your eyes.
Artemis ought to have succoured herself: her servant ought to have been helped of her and
not to have died. Where is the power of the evil spirit? where are her sacrifices? where
her birthdays? where her festivals? where are the garlands? where is all that sorcery and
the poisoning (witchcraft) that is sister thereto?
44 But the people rising up from off the floor went hastily and cast down the rest of
the idol temple, crying: The God of John only do we know, and him hereafter do we worship,
since he hath had mercy upon us! And as John came down from thence, much people took hold
of him, saying: Help us, O John! Assist us that do perish in vain! Thou seest our purpose:
thou seest the multitude following thee and hanging upon thee in hope toward thy God. We
have seen the way wherein we went astray when we lost him: we have seen our gods that were
set up in vain: we have seen the great and shameful derision that is come to them: but
suffer us, we pray thee, to come unto thine house and to be succoured without hindrance.
Receive us that are in bewilderment.
45 And John said to them: Men (of Ephesus), believe that for your sakes I have
continued in Ephesus, and have put off my journey unto Smyrna and to the rest of the
cities, that there also the servants of Christ may turn to him. But since I am not yet
perfectly assured concerning you, I have continued praying to my God and beseeching him
that I should then depart from Ephesus when I have confirmed you in the faith: and whereas
I see that this is come to pass and yet more is being fulfilled, I will not leave you
until I have weaned you like children from the nurse's milk, and have set you upon a firm
rock.
46 John therefore continued with them, receiving them in the house of Andromeus. And
one of them that were gathered laid down the dead body of the priest of Artemis before the
door [of the temple], for he was his kinsman, and came in quickly with the rest, saying
nothing of it. John, therefore, after the discourse to the brethren, and the prayer and
the thanksgiving (eucharist) and the laying of hands upon every one of the congregation,
said by the spirit: There is one here who moved by faith in God hath laid down the priest
of Artemis before the gate and is come in, and in the yearning of his soul, taking care
first for himself, hath thought thus in himself: It is better for me to take thought for
the living than for my kinsman that is dead: for I know that if I turn to the Lord and
save mine own soul, John will not deny to raise up the dead also. And John arising from
his place went to that into which that kinsman of the priest who had so thought was
entered, and took him by the hand and said: Hadst thou this thought when thou camest unto
me, my child? And he, taken with trembling and affright, said: Yes, lord, and cast himself
at his feet. And John said: Our Lord is Jesus Christ, who will show his power in thy dead
kinsman by raising him up.
47 And he made the young man rise, and took his hand and said: It is no great matter
for a man that is master of great mysteries to continue wearying himself over small
things: or what great thing is it to rid men of diseases of the body? And yet holding the
young man by the hand he said: I say unto thee, child, go and raise the dead thyself,
saying nothing but this only: John the servant of God saith to thee, Arise. And the young
man went to his kinsman and said this only -and much people was with him- and entered in
unto John, bringing him alive. And John, when he saw him that was raised, said: Now that
thou art raised, thou dost not truly live, neither art partaker or heir of the true life:
wilt thou belong unto him by whose name and power thou wast raised? And now believe, and
thou shall live unto all ages. And he forthwith believed upon the Lord Jesus and
thereafter clave unto John.
[Another manuscript (Q. Paris Gr. 1468, of the eleventh century) has another form of
this story. John destroys the temple of Artemis, and then 'we' go to Smyrna and all the
idols are broken: Bucolus, Polycarp, and Andronicus are left to preside over the district.
There were there two priests of Artemis, brothers, and one died. The raising is told much
as in the older text, but more shortly.
'We' remained four years in the region, which was wholly converted, and then returned
to Ephesus.]
48 Now on the next day John, having seen in a dream that he must walk three miles
outside the gates, neglected it not, but rose up early and set out upon the way, together
with the brethren.
And a certain countryman who was admonished by his father not to take to himself the
wife of a fellow labourer of his who threatened to kill him -this young man would not
endure the admonition of his father, but kicked him and left him without speech (sc.
dead). And John, seeing what had befallen, said unto the Lord: Lord, was it on this
account that thou didst bid me come out hither to-day?
49 But the young man, beholding the violence (sharpness) of death, and looking to be
taken, drew out the sickle that was in his girdle and started to run to his own abode; and
John met him and said: Stand still, thou most shameless devil, and tell me whither thou
runnest bearing a sickle that thirsteth for blood. And the young man was troubled and cast
the iron on the ground, and said to him: I have done a wretched and barbarous deed and I
know it, and so I determined to do an evil yet worse and more cruel, even to die myself at
once. For because my father was alway curbing me to sobriety, that I should live without
adultery, and chastely, I could not endure him to reprove me, and I kicked him and slew
him, and when I saw what was done, I was hasting to the woman for whose sake I became my
father's murderer, with intent to kill her and her husband, and myself last of all: for I
could not bear to be seen of the husband of the woman, and undergo the judgement of death.
50 And John said to him: That I may not by going away and leaving you in danger give
place to him that desireth to laugh and sport with thee, come thou with me and show me thy
father, where he lieth. And if I raise him up for thee, wilt thou hereafter abstain from
the woman that is become a snare to thee. And the young man said: If thou raisest up my
father himself for me alive, and if I see him whole and continuing in life, I will
hereafter abstain from her.
51 And while he was speaking, they came to the place where the old man lay dead, and
many passers-by were standing near thereto. And John said to the youth: Thou wretched man,
didst thou not spare even the old age of thy father? And he, weeping and tearing his hair,
said that he repented thereof; and John the servant of the Lord said: Thou didst show me I
was to set forth for this place, thou knewest that this would come to pass, from whom
nothing can be hid of things done in life, that givest me power to work every cure and
healing by thy will: now also give me this old man alive, for thou seest that his murderer
is become his own judge: and spare him, thou only Lord, that spared not his father
(because he) counselled him for the best.
52 And with these words he came near to the old man and said: My Lord will not be weak
to spread out his kind pity and his condescending mercy even unto thee: rise up therefore
and give glory to God for the work that is come to pass at this moment. And the old man
said: I arise, Lord. And he rose and sat up and said: I was released from a terrible life
and had to bear the insults of my son, dreadful and many, and his want of natural
affection, and to what end hast thou called me back, O man of the living God? (And John
answered him: If) thou art raised only for the same end, it were better for thee to die;
but raise thyself unto better things. And he took him and led him into the city, preaching
unto him the grace of God, so that before he entered the gate the old man believed.
53 But the young man, when he beheld the unlooked-for raising of his father, and the
saving of himself, took a sickle and mutilated himself, and ran to the house wherein he
had his adulteress, and reproached her, saying: For thy sake I became the murderer of my
father and of you two and of myself: there thou hast that which is alike guilty of all.
For on me God hath had mercy, that I should know his power.
54 And he came back and told John in presence of the brethren what he had done. But
John said to him: He that put it into thine heart, young man, to kill thy father and
become the adulterer of another man's wife, the same made thee think it a right deed to
take away also the unruly members. But thou shouldest have done away, not with the place
of sin, but the thought which through those members showed itself harmful: for it is not
the instruments that are injurious, but the unseen springs by which every shameful emotion
is stirred and cometh to light. Repent therefore, my child, of this fault, and having
learnt the wiles of Satan thou shalt have God to help thee in all the necessities of thy
soul. And the young man kept silence and attended, having repented of his former sins,
that he should obtain pardon from the goodness of God: and he did not separate from John.
55 When, then, these things had been done by him in the city of the Ephesians, they of
Smyrna sent unto him saying: We hear that the God whom thou preachest is not envious, and
hath charged thee not to show partiality by abiding in one place. Since, then, thou art a
preacher of such a God, come unto Smyrna and unto the other cities, that we may come to
know thy God, and having known him may have our hope in him.
[Q has the above story also, and continues with an incident which is also quoted in a
different form (and not as from these Acts) by John Cassian. Q has it thus:
Now one day as John was seated, a partridge flew by and came and played in the dust
before him; and John looked on it and wondered. And a certain priest came, who was one of
his hearers, and came to John and saw the partridge playing in the dust before him, and
was offended in himself and said: Can such and so great a man take pleasure in a partridge
playing in the dust? But John perceiving in the spirit the thought of him, said to him: It
were better for thee also, my child, to look at a partridge playing in the dust and not to
defile thyself with shameful and profane practices: for he who awaiteth the conversion and
repentance of all men hath brought thee here on this account: for I have no need of a
partridge playing in the dust. For the partridge is thine own soul.
Then the elder, hearing this and seeing that he was not bidden, but that the apostle of
Christ had told him all that was in his heart, fell on his face on the earth and cried
aloud, saying: Now know I that God dwelleth in thee, O blessed John! for he that tempteth
thee tempteth him that cannot be tempted. And he entreated him to pray for him. And he
instructed him and delivered him the rules (canons) and let him go to his house,
glorifying God that is over all.
Cassian, Collation XXIV. 21, has it thus:
It is told that the most blessed Evangelist John, when he was gently stroking a
partridge with his hands, suddenly saw one in the habit of a hunter coming to him. He
wondered that a man of such repute and fame should demean himself to such small and humble
amusements, and said: Art thou that John whose eminent and widespread fame hath enticed me
also with great desire to know thee? Why then art thou taken up with such mean amusements?
The blessed John said to him: What is that which thou carriest in thy hands? A bow, said
he. And why, said he, dost thou not bear it about always stretched? He answered him: I
must not, lest by constant bending the strength of its vigour be wrung and grow soft and
perish, and when there is need that the arrows be shot with much strength at some beast,
the strength being lost by excess of continual tension, a forcible blow cannot be dealt.
Just so, said the blessed John, let not this little and brief relaxation of my mind offend
thee, young man, for unless it doth sometimes ease and relax by some remission the force
of its tension, it will grow slack through unbroken rigour and will not be able to obey
the power of the Spirit.
The only common point of the two stories is that St. John amuses himself with a
partridge, and a spectator thinks it unworthy of him. The two morals differ wholly. The
amount of text lost here is of quite uncertain length. It must have told of the doings at
Smyrna, and also, it appears, at Laodicca (see the title of the next section). One of the
episodes must have been the conversion of a woman of evil life (see below, 'the harlot
that was chaste ')-]
Our best manuscript prefixes a title to the next section:
From Laodicca to Ephesus the second time.
58 Now when some long time had passed, and none of the brethren had been at any time
grieved by John, they were then grieved because he had said: Brethren, it is now time for
me to go to Ephesus (for so have I agreed with them that dwell there) lest they become
slack, now for a long time having no man to confirm them. But all of you must have your
minds steadfast towards God, who never forsaketh us.
But when they heard this from him, the brethren lamented because they were to be parted
from him. And John said: Even if I be parted from you, yet Christ is always with you: whom
if ye love purely ye will have his fellowship without reproach, for if he be loved, he
preventeth (anticipateth) them that love him.
59 And having so said, and bidden farewell to them, and left much money with the
brethren for distribution, he went forth unto Ephesus, while all the brethren lamented and
groaned. And there accompanied him, of Ephesus, both Andronicus and Drusiana and Lycomedes
and Cleobius and their families. And there followed him Aristobula also, who had heard
that her husband Tertullus had died on the way, and Aristippus with Xenophon, and the
harlot that was chaste, and many others, whom he exhorted at all times to cleave to the
Lord, and they would no more be parted from him.
60 Now on the first day we arrived at a deserted inn, and when we were at a loss for a
bed for John, we saw a droll matter. There was one bedstead lying somewhere there without
coverings, whereon we spread the cloaks which we were wearing, and we prayed him to lie
down upon it and rest, while the rest of us all slept upon the floor. But he when he lay
down was troubled by the bugs, and as they continued to become yet more troublesome to
him, when it was now about the middle of the night, in the hearing of us all he said to
them: I say unto you, O bugs, behave yourselves, one and all, and leave your abode for
this night and remain quiet in one place, and keep your distance from the servants of God.
And as we laughed, and went on talking for some time, John addressed himself to sleep; and
we, talking low, gave him no disturbance (or, thanks to him we were not disturbed).
61 But when the day was now dawning I arose first, and with me Verus and Andronicus,
and we saw at the door of the house which we had taken a great number of bugs standing,
and while we wondered at the great sight of them, and all the brethren were roused up
because of them, John continued sleeping. And when he was awaked we declared to him what
we had seen. And he sat up on the bed and looked at them and said: Since ye have well
behaved yourselves in hearkening to my rebuke, come unto your place. And when he had said
this, and risen from the bed, the bugs running from the door hasted to the bed and climbed
up by the legs thereof and disappeared into the joints. And John said again: This creature
hearkened unto the voice of a man, and abode by itself and was quiet and trespassed not;
but we which hear the voice and commandments of God disobey and are light-minded: and for
how long?
62 After these things we came to Ephesus: and the brethren there, who had for a long
time known that John was coming, ran together to the house of Andronicus (where also he
came to lodge), handling his feet and laying his hands upon their own faces and kissing
them (and many rejoiced even to touch his vesture, and were healed by touching the clothes
of the holy apostle. [So the Latin, which has this section; the Greek has: so that they
even touched his garments).]
63 And whereas there was great love and joy unsurpassed among the brethren, a certain
one, a messenger of Satan, became enamoured of Drusiana, though he saw and knew that she
was the wife of Andronicus. To whom many said: It is not possible for thee to obtain that
woman, seeing that for a long time she has even separated herself from her husband for
godliness' sake. Art thou only ignorant that Andronicus, not being aforetime that which
now he is, a God-fearing man, shut her up in a tomb, saying: Either I must have thee as
the wife whom I had before, or thou shalt die. And she chose rather to die than to do that
foulness. If, then, she would not consent, for godliness' sake, to cohabit with her lord
and husband, but even persuaded him to be of the same mind as herself, will she consent to
thee desiring to be her seducer? depart from this madness which hath no rest in thee: give
up this deed which thou canst not bring to accomplishment.
64 But his familiar friends saying these things to him did not convince him, but with
shamelessness he courted her with messages; and when he learnt the insults and disgraces
which she returned, he spent his life in melancholy (or better, she, when she learnt of
this disgrace and insult at his hand, spent her life in heaviness). And after two days
Drusiana took to her bed from heaviness, and was in a fever and said: Would that I had not
now come home to my native place, I that have become an offence to a man ignorant of
godliness! for if it were one who was filled with the word of God, he would not have gone
to such a pitch of madness. But now (therefore) Lord, since I am become the occasion of a
blow unto a soul devoid of knowledge, set me free from this chain and remove me unto thee
quickly. And in the presence of John, who knew nothing at all of such a matter, Drusiana
departed out of life not wholly happy, yea, even troubled because of the spiritual hurt of
the man.
65 But Andronicus, grieved with a secret grief, mourned in his soul, and wept openly,
so that John checked him often and said to him: Upon a better hope hath Drusiana removed
out of this unrighteous life. And Andronicus answered him: Yea, I am persuaded of it, O
John, and I doubt not at all in regard of trust in my God: but this very thing do I hold
fast, that she departed out of life pure.
66 And when she was carried forth, John took hold on Andronicus, and now that he knew
the cause, he mourned more than Andronicus. And he kept silence, considering the
provocation of the adversary, and for a space sat still. Then, the brethren being gathered
there to hear what word he would speak of her that was departed, he began to say:
67 When the pilot that voyageth, together with them that sail with him, and the ship
herself, arriveth in a calm and stormless harbour, then let him say that he is safe. And
the husbandman that hath committed the seed to the earth, and toiled much in the care and
protection of it, let him then take rest from his labours, when he layeth up the seed with
manifold increase in his barns. Let him that enterpriseth to run in the course, then exult
when he beareth home the prize. Let him that inscribeth his name for the boxing, then
boast himself when he receiveth the crowns: and so in succession is it with all contests
and crafts, when they do not fail in the end, but show themselves to be like that which
they promised (corrupt).
68 And thus also I think is it with the faith which each one of us practiseth, that it
is then discerned whether it be indeed true, when it continueth like itself even until the
end of life. For many obstacles fall into the way, and prepare disturbance for the minds
of men: care, children, parents, glory, poverty, flattery, prime of life, beauty, conceit,
lust, wealth, anger, uplifting, slackness, envy, jealousy, neglect, fear, insolence, love,
deceit, money, pretence, and other such obstacles, as many as there are in this life: as
also the pilot sailing a prosperous course is opposed by the onset of contrary winds and a
great storm and mighty waves out of calm, and the husbandman by untimely winter and blight
and creeping things rising out of the earth, and they that strive in the games 'just do
not win', and they that exercise crafts are hindered by the divers difficulties of them.
69 But before all things it is needful that the believer should look before at his
ending and understand it in what manner it will come upon him, whether it will be vigorous
and sober and without any obstacle, or disturbed and clinging to the things that are here,
and bound down by desires. So is it right that a body should be praised as comely when it
is wholly stripped, and a general as great when he hath accomplished every promise of the
war, and a physician as excellent when he hath succeeded in every cure, and a soul as full
of faith and worthy (or receptive) of God when it hath paid its promise in full: not that
soul which began well and was dissolved into all the things of this life and fell away,
nor that which is numb, having made an effort to attain to better things, and then is
borne down to temporal things, nor that which hath longed after the things of time more
than those of eternity, nor that which exchangeth those that endure not, nor that which
hath honoured the works of dishonour that deserve shame, nor that which taketh pledges of
Satan, nor that which hath received the serpent into its own house, nor that which
suffereth reproach for God's sake and then is [not] ashamed, nor that which with the mouth
saith yea, but indeed approveth not itself: but that which hath prevailed not to be made
weak by foul pleasure, not to be overcome by light-mindedness, not to be caught by the
bait of love of money, not to be betrayed by vigour of body or wrath.
70 And as John was discoursing yet further unto the brethren that they should despise
temporal things in respect of the eternal, he that was enamoured of Drusiana, being
inflamed with an horrible lust and possession of the many-shaped Satan, bribed the steward
of Andronicus who was a lover of money with a great sum: and he opened the tomb and gave
him opportunity to wreak the forbidden thing upon the dead body. Not having succeeded with
her when alive, he was still importunate after her death to her body, and said: If thou
wouldst not have to do with me while thou livedst, I will outrage thy corpse now thou art
dead. With this design, and having managed for himself the wicked act by means of the
abominable steward, he rushed with him to the sepulchre; they opened the door and began to
strip the grave-clothes from the corpse, saying: What art thou profited, poor Drusiana?
couldest thou not have done this in life, which perchance would not have grieved thee,
hadst thou done it willingly?
71 And as these men were speaking thus, and only the accustomed shift now remained on
her body, a strange spectacle was seen, such as they deserve to suffer who do such deeds.
A serpent appeared from some quarter and dealt the steward a single bite and slew him: but
the young man it did not strike; but coiled about his feet, hissing terribly, and when he
fell mounted on his body and sat upon him.
72 Now on the next day John came, accompanied by Andronicus and the brethren, to the
sepulchre at dawn, it being now the third day from Drusiana's death, that we might break
bread there. And first, when they set out, the keys were sought for and could not be
found; but John said to Andronicus: It is quite right that they should be lost, for
Drusiana is not in the sepulchre; nevertheless, let us go, that thou mayest not be
neglectful, and the doors shall be opened of themselves, even as the Lord hath done for us
many such things.
73 And when we were at the place, at the commandment of the master, the doors were
opened, and we saw by the tomb of Drusiana a beautiful youth, smiling: and John, when he
saw him, cried out and said: Art thou come before us hither too, beautiful one? and for
what cause? And we heard a voice saying to him: For Drusiana's sake, whom thou art to
raise up-for I was within a little of finding her -and for his sake that lieth dead beside
her tomb. And when the beautiful one had said this unto John he went up into the heavens
in the sight of us all. And John, turning to the other side of the sepulchre, saw a young
man-even Callimachus, one of the chief of the Ephesians-and a huge serpent sleeping upon
him, and the steward of Andronicus, Fortunatus by name, lying dead. And at the sight of
the two he stood perplexed, saying to the brethren: What meaneth such a sight? or
wherefore hath not the Lord declared unto me what was done here, he who hath never
neglected me?
74 And Andronicus seeing those corpses, leapt up and went to Drusiana's tomb, and
seeing her lying in her shift only, said to John: I understand what has happened, thou
blessed servant of God, John. This Callimachus was enamoured of my sister; and because he
never won her, though he often assayed it, he hath bribed this mine accursed steward with
a great sum, perchance designing, as now we may see, to fulfil by his means the tragedy of
his conspiracy, for indeed Callimachus avowed this to many, saying: If she will not
consent to me when living, she shall be outraged when dead. And it may be, master, that
the beautiful one knew it and suffered not her body to be insulted, and therefore have
these died who made that attempt. And can it be that the voice that said unto thee, 'Raise
up Drusiana', foreshowed this? because she departed out of this life in sorrow of mind.
But I believe him that said that this is one of the men that have gone astray; for thou
wast bidden to raise him up: for as to the other, I know that he is unworthy of salvation.
But this one thing I beg of thee: raise up Callimachus first, and he will confess to us
what is come about.
75 And John, looking upon the body, said to the venomous beast: Get thee away from him
that is to be a servant of Jesus Christ; and stood up and prayed over him thus: O God
whose name is glorified by us, as of right: O God who subduest every injurious force: O
God whose will is accomplished, who alway hearest us: now also let thy gift be
accomplished in this young man; and if there be any dispensation to be wrought through
him, manifest it unto us when he is raised up. And straightway the young man rose up, and
for a whole hour kept silence.
76 But when he came to his right senses, John asked of him about his entry into the
sepulchre, what it meant, and learning from him that which Andronicus had told him,
namely, that he was enamoured of Drusiana, John inquired of him again if he had fulfilled
his foul intent, to insult a body full of holiness. And he answered him: How could I
accomplish it when this fearful beast struck down Fortunatus at a blow in my sight: and
rightly, since he encouraged my frenzy, when I was already cured of that unreasonable and
horrible madness: but me it stopped with affright, and brought me to that plight in which
ye saw me before I arose. And another thing yet more wondrous I will tell thee, which yet
went nigh to slay and was within a little of making me a corpse. When my soul was stirred
up with folly and the uncontrollable malady was troubling me, and I had now torn away the
grave-clothes in which she was clad, and I had then come out of the grave and laid them as
thou seest, I went again to my unholy work: and I saw a beautiful youth covering her with
his mantle, and from his eyes sparks of light came forth unto her eyes; and he uttered
words to me, saying: Callimachus, die that thou mayest live. Now who he was I knew not, O
servant of God; but that now thou hast appeared here, I recognize that he was an angel of
God, that I know well; and this I know of a truth that it is a true God that is proclaimed
by thee, and of it I am persuaded. But I beseech thee, be not slack to deliver me from
this calamity and this fearful crime, and to present me unto thy God as a man deceived
with a shameful and foul deceit. Beseeching help therefore of thee, I take hold on thy
feet. I would become one of them that hope in Christ, that the voice may prove true which
said to me, 'Die that thou mayest live': and that voice hath also fulfilled its effect,
for he is dead, that faithless, disorderly, godless one, and I have been raised by thee, I
who will be faithful, God-fearing, knowing the truth, which I entreat thee may be shown me
by thee.
77 And John, filled with great gladness and perceiving the whole spectacle of the
salvation of man, said: What thy power is, Lord Jesu Christ, I know not, bewildered as I
am at thy much compassion and boundless long-suffering. O what a greatness that came down
into bondage! O unspeakable liberty brought into slavery by us! O incomprehensible glory
that is come unto us! thou that hast kept the dead tabernacle safe from insult; that hast
redeemed the man that stained himself with blood and chastened the soul of him that would
defile the corruptible body; Father that hast had pity and compassion on the man that
cared not for thee; We glorify thee, and praise and bless and thank thy great goodness and
long-suffering, O holy Jesu, for thou only art God, and none else: whose is the might that
cannot be conspired against, now and world without end. Amen.
78 And when he had said this John took Callimachus and saluted (kissed) him, saying:
Glory be to our God, my child, who hath had mercy on thee, and made me worthy to glorify
his power, and thee also by a good course to depart from that thine abominable madness and
drunkenness, and hath called thee unto his own rest and unto renewing of life.
79 But Andronicus, beholding the dead Callimachus raised, besought John, with the
brethren, to raise up Drusiana also, saying: O John, let Drusiana arise and spend happily
that short space (of life) which she gave up through grief about Callimachus, when she
thought she had become a stumbling block to him: and when the Lord will, he shall take her
again to himself. And John without delay went unto her tomb and took her hand and said:
Upon thee that art the only God do I call, the more than great, the unutterable, the
incomprehensible: unto whom every power of principalities is subjected: unto whom all
authority boweth: before whom all pride falleth down and keepeth silence: whom devils
hearing of tremble: whom all creation perceiving keepeth its bounds. Let thy name be
glorified by us, and raise up Drusiana, that Callimachus may yet more be confirmed unto
thee who dispensest that which unto men is without a way and impossible, but to thee only
possible, even salvation and resurrection: and that Drusiana may now come forth in peace,
having about her not any the least hindrance -now that the young man is turned unto thee-
in her course toward thee.
80 And after these words John said unto Drusiana: Drusiana, arise. And she arose and
came out of the tomb; and when she saw herself in her shift only, she was perplexed at the
thing, and learned the whole accurately from Andronicus, the while John lay upon his face,
and Callimachus with voice and tears glorified God, and she also rejoiced, glorifying him
in like manner.
81 And when she had clothed herself, she turned and saw Fortunatus lying, and said unto
John: Father, let this man also rise, even if he did assay to become my betrayer. But
Callimachus, when he heard her say that, said: Do not, I beseech thee, Drusiana, for the
voice which I heard took no thought of him, but declared concerning thee only, and I saw
and believed: for if he had been good, perchance God would have had mercy on him also and
would have raised him by means of the blessed John: he knew therefore that the man was
come to a bad end [Lat. he judged him worthy to die whom he did not declare worthy to rise
again]. And John said to him: We have not learned, my child, to render evil for evil: for
God, though we have done much ill and no good toward him, hath not given retribution unto
us, but repentance, and though we were ignorant of his name he did not neglect us but had
mercy on us, and when we blasphemed him, he did not punish but pitied us, and when we
disbelieved him he bore us no grudge, and when we persecuted his brethren he did not
recompense us evil but put into our minds repentance and abstinence from evil, and
exhorted us to come unto him, as he hath thee also, my son Callimachus, and not
remembering thy former evil hath made thee his servant, waiting upon his mercy. Wherefore
if thou allowest not me to raise up Fortunatus, it is for Drusiana so to do.
82 And she, delaying not, went with rejoicing of spirit and soul unto the body of
Fortunatus and said: Jesu Christ, God of the ages, God of truth, that hast granted me to
see wonders and signs, and given to me to become partaker of thy name; that didst breathe
thyself into me with thy many-shaped countenance, and hadst mercy on me in many ways; that
didst protect me by thy great goodness when I was oppressed by Andronicus that was of old
my husband; that didst give me thy servant Andronicus to be my brother; that hast kept me
thine handmaid pure unto this day; that didst raise me up by thy servant John, and when I
was raised didst show me him that was made to stumble free from stumbling; that hast given
me perfect rest in thee, and lightened me of the secret madness; whom I have loved and
affectioned: I pray thee, O Christ, refuse not thy Drusiana that asketh thee to raise up
Fortunatus, even though he assayed to become my betrayer.
83 And taking the hand of the dead man she said: Rise up, Fortunatus, in the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ. And Fortunatus arose, and when he saw John in the sepulchre, and
Andronicus, and Drusiana raised from the dead, and Callimachus a believer, and the rest of
the brethren glorifying God, he said: O, to what have the powers of these clever men
attained! I did not want to be raised, but would rather die, so as not to see them. And
with these words he fled and went out of the sepulchre.
84 And John, when he saw the unchanged mind (soul) of Fortunatus, said: O nature that
is not changed for the better! O fountain of the soul that abideth in foulness! O essence
of corruption full of darkness! O death exulting in them that are thine! O fruitless tree
full of fire! O tree that bearest coals for fruit! O matter that dwellest with the madness
of matter (al. O wood of trees full of unwholesome shoots) and neighbour of unbelief! Thou
hast proved who thou art, and thou art always convicted, with thy children. And thou
knowest not how to praise the better things: for thou hast them not. Therefore, such as is
thy way (?fruit), such also is thy root and thy nature. Be thou destroyed from among them
that trust in the Lord: from their thoughts, from their mind, from their souls, from their
bodies, from their acts) their life, their conversation, from their business, their
occupations, their counsel, from the resurrection unto (or rest in) God, from their sweet
savour wherein thou wilt share, from their faith, their prayers, from the holy bath, from
the eucharist, from the food of the flesh, from drink, from clothing, from love, from
care, from abstinence, from righteousness: from all these, thou most unholy Satan, enemy
of God, shall Jesus Christ our God and of all that are like thee and have thy character,
make thee to perish.
85 And having thus said, John prayed, and took bread and bare it into the sepulchre to
break it; and said: We glorify thy name, which converteth us from error and ruthless
deceit: we glorify thee who hast shown before our eyes that which we have seen: we bear
witness to thy loving-kindness which appeareth in divers ways: we praise thy merciful
name, O Lord (we thank thee), who hast convicted them that are convicted of thee: we give
thanks to thee, O Lord Jesu Christ, that we are persuaded of thy which is unchanging: we
give thanks to thee who hadst need of our nature that should be saved: we give thanks to
thee that hast given us this sure , for thou art alone, both now and ever. We thy
servants give thee thanks, O holy one, who are assembled with intent and are gathered out
of the world (or risen from death).
86 And having so prayed and given glory to God, he went out of the sepulchre after
imparting unto all the brethren of the eucharist of the Lord. And when he was come unto
Andronicus' house he said to the brethren: Brethren, a spirit within me hath divined that
Fortunatus is about to die of blackness (poisoning of the blood) from the bite of the
serpent; but let some one go quickly and learn if it is so indeed. And one of the young
men ran and found him dead and the blackness spreading over him, and it had reached his
heart: and came and told John that he had been dead three hours. And John said: Thou hast
thy child, O devil.
'John therefore was with the brethren rejoicing in the Lord.' This sentence is in the
best manuscript. In Bonnet's edition It introduces the last section of the Acts, which
follows immediately in the manuscript. It may belong to either episode. The Latin has: And
that day he spent joyfully with the brethren.
There cannot be much of a gap between this and the next section, which is perhaps the
most interesting in the Acts.
The greater part of this episode is preserved only in one very corrupt
fourteenth-century manuscript at Vienna. Two important passages (93-5 (part) and 97-8
(part)) were read at the Second Nicene Council and are preserved in the Acts thereof: a
few lines of the Hymn are also cited in Latin by Augustine (Ep. 237 (253) to Ceretius): he
found it current separately among the Priscillianists. The whole discourse is the best
popular exposition we have of the Docetic view of our Lord's person.
87 Those that were present inquired the cause, and were especially perplexed, because
Drusiana had said: The Lord appeared unto me in the tomb in the likeness of John, and in
that of a youth. Forasmuch, therefore, as they were perplexed and were, in a manner, not
yet stablished in the faith, so as to endure it steadfastly, John said (or John bearing it
patiently, said):
88 Men and brethren, ye have suffered nothing strange or incredible as concerning your
perception of the , inasmuch as we also, whom he chose for himself to be apostles, were
tried in many ways: I, indeed, am neither able to set forth unto you nor to write the
things which I both saw and heard: and now is it needful that I should fit them for your
hearing; and according as each of you is able to contain it I will impart unto you those
things whereof ye are able to become hearers, that ye may see the glory that is about him,
which was and is, both now and for ever.
For when he had chosen Peter and Andrew, which were brethren, he cometh unto me and
James my brother, saying: I have need of you, come unto me. And my brother hearing that,
said: John, what would this child have that is upon the sea-shore and called us? And I
said: What child? And he said to me again: That which beckoneth to us. And I answered:
Because of our long watch we have kept at sea, thou seest not aright, my brother James;
but seest thou not the man that standeth there, comely and fair and of a cheerful
countenance? But he said to me: Him I see not, brother; but let us go forth and we shall
see what he would have.
89 And so when we had brought the ship to land, we saw him also helping along with us
to settle the ship: and when we departed from that place, being minded to follow him,
again he was seen of me as having rather bald, but the beard thick and flowing,
but of James as a youth whose beard was newly come. We were therefore perplexed, both of
us, as to what that which we had seen should mean. And after that, as we followed him,
both of us were by little and little perplexed as we considered the matter. Yet unto me
there then appeared this yet more wonderful thing: for I would try to see him privily, and
I never at any time saw his eyes closing (winking), but only open. And oft-times he would
appear to me as a small man and uncomely, and then againt as one reaching unto heaven.
Also there was in him another marvel: when I sat at meat he would take me upon his own
breast; and sometimes his breast was felt of me to be smooth and tender, and sometimes
hard like unto stones, so that I was perplexed in myself and said: Wherefore is this so
unto me? And as I considered this, he . .
90 And at another time he taketh with him me and James and Peter unto the mountain
where he was wont to pray, and we saw in him a light such as it is not possible for a man
that useth corruptible (mortal) speech to describe what it was like. Again in like manner
he bringeth us three up into the mountain, saying: Come ye with me. And we went again: and
we saw him at a distance praying. I, therefore, because he loved me, drew nigh unto him
softly, as though he could not see me, and stood looking upon his hinder parts: and I saw
that he was not in any wise clad with garments, but was seen of us naked, and not in any
wise as a man, and that his feet were whiter than any snow, so that the earth there was
lighted up by his feet, and that his head touched the heaven: so that I was afraid and
cried out, and he, turning about, appeared as a man of small stature, and caught hold on
my beard and pulled it and said to me: John, be not faithless but believing, and not
curious. And I said unto him: But what have I done, Lord? And I say unto you, brethren, I
suffered so great pain in that place where he took hold on my beard for thirty days, that
I said to him: Lord, if thy twitch when thou wast in sport hath given me so great pain,
what were it if thou hadst given me a buffet? And he said unto me: Let it be thine
henceforth not to tempt him that cannot be tempted.
91 But Peter and James were wroth because I spake with the Lord, and beckoned unto me
that I should come unto them and leave the Lord alone. And I went, and they both said unto
me: He (the old man) that was speaking with the Lord upon the top of the mount, who was
he? for we heard both of them speaking. And I, having in mind his great grace, and his
unity which hath many faces, and his wisdom which without ceasing looketh upon us, said:
That shall ye learn if ye inquire of him.
92 Again, once when all we his disciples were at Gennesaret sleeping in one house, I
alone having wrapped myself in my mantle, watched (or watched from beneath my mantle) what
he should do: and first I heard him say: John, go thou to sleep. And I thereon feigning to
sleep saw another like unto him [sleeping], whom also I heard say unto my Lord: Jesus,
they whom thou hast chosen believe not yet on thee (or do they not yet, &c.?). And my
Lord said unto him: Thou sayest well: for they are men.
93 Another glory also will I tell you, brethren: Sometimes when I would lay hold on
him, I met with a material and solid body, and at other times, again, when I felt him, the
substance was immaterial and as if it existed not at all. And if at any time he were
bidden by some one of the Pharisees and went to the bidding, we went with him, and there
was set before each one of us a loaf by them that had bidden us, and with us he also
received one; and his own he would bless and part it among us: and of that little every
one was filled, and our own loaves were saved whole, so that they which bade him were
amazed. And oftentimes when I walked with him, I desired to see the print of his foot,
whether it appeared on the earth; for I saw him as it were lifting himself up from the
earth: and I never saw it. And these things I speak unto you, brethren, for the
encouragement of your faith toward him; for we must at the present keep silence concerning
his mighty and wonderful works, inasmuch as they are unspeakable and, it may be, cannot at
all be either uttered or heard.
94 Now before he was taken by the lawless Jews, who also were governed by (had their
law from) the lawless serpent, he gathered all of us together and said: Before I am
delivered up unto them let us sing an hymn to the Father, and so go forth to that which
lieth before us. He bade us therefore make as it were a ring, holding one another's hands,
and himself standing in the midst he said: Answer Amen unto me. He began, then, to sing an
hymn and to say:
Glory be to thee, Father.
And we, going about in a ring, answered him: Amen.
Glory be to thee, Word: Glory be to thee, Grace. Amen.
Glory be to thee, Spirit: Glory be to thee, Holy One:
Glory be to thy glory. Amen.
We praise thee, O Father; we give thanks to thee, O Light, wherein darkness
dwelleth not. Amen.
95 Now whereas (or wherefore) we give thanks, I say:
I would be saved, and I would save. Amen.
I would be loosed, and I would loose. Amen.
I would be wounded, and I would wound. Amen.
I would be born, and I would bear. Amen.
I would eat, and I would be eaten. Amen.
I would hear, and I would be heard. Amen.
I would be thought, being wholly thought. Amen.
I would be washed, and I would wash. Amen.
Grace danceth. I would pipe; dance ye all. Amen.
I would mourn: lament ye all. Amen.
The number Eight (lit. one ogdoad) singeth praise with us. Amen.
The number Twelve danceth on high. Amen.
The Whole on high hath part in our dancing. Amen.
Whoso danceth not, knoweth not what cometh to pass. Amen.
I would flee, and I would stay. Amen.
I would adorn, and I would be adorned. Amen.
I would be united, and I would unite. Amen.
A house I have not, and I have houses. Amen.
A place I have not, and I have places. Amen.
A temple I have not, and I have temples. Amen.
A lamp am I to thee that beholdest me. Amen.
A mirror am I to thee that perceivest me. Amen.
A door am I to thee that knockest at me. Amen.
A way am I to thee a wayfarer. .
96 Now answer thou (or as thou respondest) unto my dancing. Behold thyself in me who
speak, and seeing what I do, keep silence about my mysteries.
Thou that dancest, perceive what I do, for thine is this passion of the manhood, which
I am about to suffer. For thou couldest not at all have understood what thou sufferest if
I had not been sent unto thee, as the word of the Father. Thou that sawest what I suffer
sawest me as suffering, and seeing it thou didst not abide but wert wholly moved, moved to
make wise. Thou hast me as a bed, rest upon me. Who I am, thou shalt know when I depart.
What now I am seen to be, that I am not. Thou shalt see when thou comest. If thou hadst
known how to suffer, thou wouldest have been able not to suffer. Learn thou to suffer, and
thou shalt be able not to suffer. What thou knowest not, I myself will teach thee. Thy God
am I, not the God of the traitor. I would keep tune with holy souls. In me know thou the
word of wisdom. Again with me say thou: Glory be to thee, Father; glory to thee, Word;
glory to thee, Holy Ghost. And if thou wouldst know concerning me, what I was, know that
with a word did I deceive all things and I was no whit deceived. I have leaped: but do
thou understand the whole, and having understood it, say: Glory be to thee, Father. Amen.
97 Thus, my beloved, having danced with us the Lord went forth. And we as men gone
astray or dazed with sleep fled this way and that. I, then, when I saw him suffer, did not
even abide by his suffering, but fled unto the Mount of Olives, weeping at that which had
befallen. And when he was crucified on the Friday, at the sixth hour of the day, darkness
came upon all the earth. And my Lord standing in the midst of the cave and enlightening
it, said: John, unto the multitude below in Jerusalem I am being crucified and pierced
with lances and reeds, and gall and vinegar is given me to drink. But unto thee I speak,
and what I speak hear thou. I put it into thy mind to come up into this mountain, that
thou mightest hear those things which it behoveth a disciple to learn from his teacher and
a man from his God.
98 And having thus spoken, he showed me a cross of light fixed (set up), and about the
cross a great multitude, not having one form: and in it (the cross) was one form and one
likenesst [so the MS.; I would read: and therein was one form and one likeness: and in the
cross another multitude, not having one form]. And the Lord himself I beheld above the
cross, not having any shape, but only a voice: and a voice not such as was familiar to us,
but one sweet and kind and truly of God, saying unto me: John, it is needful that one
should hear these things from me, for I have need of one that will hear. This cross of
light is sometimes called the (or a) word by me for your sakes, sometimes mind, sometimes
Jesus, sometimes Christ, sometimes door, sometimes a way, sometimes bread, sometimes seed,
sometimes resurrection, sometimes Son, sometimes Father, sometimes Spirit, sometimes life,
sometimes truth, sometimes faith, sometimes grace. And by these names it is called as
toward men: but that which it is in truth, as conceived of in itself and as spoken of unto
you (MS. us), it is the marking-off of all things, and the firm uplifting of things fixed
out of things unstable, and the harmony of wisdom, and indeed wisdom in harmony [this last
clause in the MS. is joined to the next: 'and being wisdom in harmony']. There are of the
right hand and the left, powers also, authorities, lordships and demons, workings,
threatenings, wraths, devils, Satan, and the lower root whence the nature of the things
that come into being proceeded.
99 This cross, then, is that which fixed all things apart (al. joined all things unto
itself) by the (or a) word, and separate off the things that are from those that are below
(lit. the things from birth and below it), and then also, being one, streamed forth into
all things (or, made all flow forth. I suggested: compacted all into ). But this is not
the cross of wood which thou wilt see when thou goest down hence: neither am I he that is
on the cross, whom now thou seest not, but only hearest his (or a) voice. I was reckoned
to be that which I am not, not being what I was unto many others: but they will call me
(say of me) something else which is vile and not worthy of me. As, then, the place of rest
is neither seen nor spoken of, much more shall I, the Lord thereof, be neither seen .
100 Now the multitude of one aspect (al. of one aspect) that is about the cross is the
lower nature: and they whom thou seest in the cross, if they have not one form, it is
because not yet hath every member of him that came down been comprehended. But when the
human nature (or the upper nature) is taken up, and the race which draweth near unto me
and obeyeth my voice, he that now heareth me shall be united therewith, and shall no more
be that which now he is, but above them, as I also now am. For so long as thou callest not
thyself mine, I am not that which I am (or was): but if thou hear me, thou, hearing, shalt
be as I am, and I shall be that which I was, when I thee as I am with myself. For from me
thou art that (which I am). Care not therefore for the many, and them that are outside the
mystery despise; for know thou that I am wholly with the Father, and the Father with me.
101 Nothing, therefore, of the things which they will say of me have I suffered: nay,
that suffering also which I showed unto thee and the rest in the dance, I will that it be
called a mystery. For what thou art, thou seest, for I showed it thee; but what I am I
alone know, and no man else. Suffer me then to keep that which is mine, and that which is
thine behold thou through me, and behold me in truth, that I am, not what I said, but what
thou art able to know, because thou art akin thereto. Thou hearest that I suffered, yet
did I not suffer; that I suffered not, yet did I suffer; that I was pierced, yet I was not
smitten; hanged, and I was not hanged; that blood flowed from me, and it flowed not; and,
in a word, what they say of me, that befell me not, but what they say not, that did I
suffer. Now what those things are I signify unto thee, for I know that thou wilt
understand. Perceive thou therefore in me the praising (al. slaying al. rest) of the (or
a) Word (Logos), the piercing of the Word, the blood of the Word, the wound of the Word,
the hanging up of the Word, the suffering of the Word, the nailing (fixing) of the Word,
the death of the Word. And so speak I, separating off the manhood. Perceive thou therefore
in the first place of the Word; then shalt thou perceive the Lord, and in the third place
the man, and what he hath suffered.
102 When he had spoken unto me these things, and others which I know not how to say as
he would have me, he was taken up, no one of the multitudes having beheld him. And when I
went down I laughed them all to scorn, inasmuch as he had told me the things which they
have said concerning him; holding fast this one thing in myself, that the Lord contrived
all things symbolically and by a dispensation toward men, for their conversion and
salvation.
103 Having therefore beheld, brethren, the grace of the Lord and his kindly affection
toward us, let us worship him as those unto whom he hath shown mercy, not with our
fingers, nor our mouth, nor our tongue, nor with any part whatsoever of our body, but with
the disposition of our soul -even him who became a man apart from this body: and let us
watch because (or we shall find that) now also he keepeth ward over prisons for our sake,
and over tombs, in bonds and dungeons, in reproaches and insults, by sea and on dry land,
in scourgings, condemnations, conspiracies, frauds, punishments, and in a word, he is with
all of us, and himself suffereth with us when we suffer, brethren. When he is called upon
by each one of us, he endureth not to shut his ears to us, but as being everywhere he
hearkeneth to all of us; and now both to me and to Drusiana, -forasmuch as he is the God
of them that are shut upbringing us help by his own compassion.
104 Be ye also persuaded, therefore, beloved, that it is not a man whom I preach unto
you to worship, but God unchangeable, God invincible, God higher than all authority and
all power, and elder and mightier than all angels and creatures that are named, and all
aeons. If then ye abide in him, and are builded up in him, ye shall possess your soul
indestructible.
105 And when he had delivered these things unto the brethren, John departed, with
Andronicus, to walk. And Drusiana also followed afar off with all the brethren, that they
might behold the acts that were done by him, and hear his speech at all times in the Lord.
The remaining episode which is extant in the Greek is the conclusion of the book, the
Death or Assumption of John. Before it must be placed the stories which we have only in
the Latin (of 'Abdias' and another text by 'Mellitus', i.e. Melito), and the two or three
isolated fragments.
(Lat. XIV.) Now on the next (or another) day Craton, a philosopher, had proclaimed in
the market-place that he would give an example of the contempt of riches: and the
spectacle was after this manner. He had persuaded two young men, the richest of the city,
who were brothers, to spend their whole inheritance and buy each of them a jewel, and
these they brake in pieces publicly in the sight of the people. And while they were doing
this, it happened by chance that the apostle passed by. And calling Craton the philosopher
to him, he said: That is a foolish despising of the world which is praised by the mouths
of men, but long ago condemned by the judgement of God. For as that is a vain medicine
whereby the disease is not extirpated, so is it a vain teaching by which the faults of
souls and of conduct are not cured. But indeed my master taught a youth who desired to
attain to eternal life, in these words; saying that if he would be perfect, he should sell
all his goods and give to the poor, and so doing he would gain treasure in heaven and find
the life that has no ending. And Craton said to him: Here the fruit of covetousness is set
forth in the midst of men, and hath been broken to pieces. But if God is indeed thy master
and willeth this to be, that the sum of the price of these jewels should be given to the
poor, cause thou the gems to be restored whole, that what I have done for the praise of
men, thou mayest do for the glory of him whom thou callest thy master. Then the blessed
John gathered together the fragments of the gems, and holding them in his hands, lifted up
his eyes to heaven and said: Lord Jesu Christ, unto whom nothing is impossible: who when
the world was broken by the tree of concupiscence, didst restore it again in thy
faithfulness by the tree of the cross: who didst give to one born blind the eyes which
nature had denied him, who didst recall Lazarus, dead and buried, after the fourth day
unto the light; and has subjected all diseases and all sicknesses unto the word of thy
power: so also now do with these precious stones which these, not knowing the fruits of
almsgiving, have broken in pieces for the praise of men: recover thou them, Lord, now by
the hands of thine angels, that by their value the work of mercy may be fulfilled, and
make these men believe in thee the unbegotten Father through thine only-begotten Son Jesus
Christ our Lord, with the Holy Ghost the illuminator and sanctifier of the whole Church,
world without end. And when the faithful who were with the apostle had answered and
said Amen, the fragments of the gems were forthwith so joined in one that no mark at all
that they had been broken remained in them. And Craton the philosopher, with his
disciples, seeing this, fell at the feet of the apostle and believed thenceforth (or
immediately) and was baptized, with them all, and began himself publicly to preach the
faith of our Lord Jesus Christ.
XV. Those two brothers, therefore, of whom we spake, sold the gems which they had
bought by the sale of their inheritance and gave the price to the poor; and thereafter a
very great multitude of believers began to be joined to the apostle.
And when all this was done, it happened that after the same example, two honourable men
of the city of the Ephesian sold all their goods and distributed them to the needy, and
followed the apostle as he went through the cities preaching the word of God. But it came
to pass, when they entered the city of Pergamum, that they saw their servants walking
abroad arrayed in silken raiment and shining with the glory of this world: whence it
happened that they were pierced with the arrow of the devil and became sad, seeing
themselves poor and clad with a single cloak while their own servants were powerful and
prosperous. But the apostle of Christ, perceiving these wiles of the devil, said: I see
that ye have changed your minds and your countenances on this account, that, obeying the
teaching of my Lord Jesus Christ, ye have given all ye had to the poor. Now, if ye desire
to recover that which ye formerly possessed of gold, silver, and precious stones, bring me
some straight rods, each of you a bundle. And when they had done so, he called upon the
name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and thev were turned into gold. And the apostle said to
them: Bring me small stones from the seashore. And when they had done this also, he called
upon the majesty of the Lord, and all the pebbles were turned into gems. Then the blessed
John turned to those men and said to them: Go about to the goldsmiths and jewellers for
seven days, and when ye have proved that these are true gold and true jewels, tell me. And
they went, both of them, and after seven days returned to the apostle, saying: Lord, we
have gone about the shops of all the goldsmiths, and they have all said that they never
saw such pure gold. Likewise the jewellers have said the same, that they never saw such
excellent and precious gems.
XVI. Then the holy John said unto them: Go, and redeem to you the lands which ye have
sold, for ye have lost the estates of heaven. Buy yourselves silken raiment, that for a
time ye may shine like the rose which showeth its fragrance and redness and suddenly
fadeth away. For ye sighed at beholding your servants and groaned that ye were become
poor. Flourish, therefore, that ye may fade: be rich for the time, that ye may be beggars
for ever. Is not the Lord's hand able to make riches overflowing and unsurpassably
glorious? but he hath appointed a conflict for souls, that they may believe that they
shall have eternal riches, who for his name's sake have refused temporal wealth. Indeed,
our master told us concerning a certain rich man who feasted every day and shone with gold
and purple, at whose door lay a beggar, Lazarus, who desired to receive even the crumbs
that fell from his table, and no man gave unto him. And it came to pass that on one day
they died, both of them, and that beggar was taken into the rest which is in Abraham's
bosom, but the rich man was cast into flaming fire: out of which he lifted up his eyes and
saw Lazarus, and prayed him to dip his finger in water and cool his mouth for he was
tormented in the flames. And Abraham answered him and said: Remember, son, that thou
receivedst good things in thy life, but this Lazarus likewise evil things. Wherefore
rightly is he now comforted while thou art tormented, and besides all this, a great gulf
is fixed between you and us, so that neither can they come thence hither, nor hither
thence. But he answered: I have five brethren: I pray that some one may go to warn them,
that they come not into this flame. And Abraham said to him: They have Moses and the
prophets, let them hear them. To that he answered: Lord, unless one rise up again, they
will not believe. Abraham said to him: If they believe not Moses and the prophets, neither
will they believe, if one rise again. And these words our Lord and Master confirmed by
examples of mighty works: for when they said to him: Who hath come hither from thence,
that we may believe him? he answered: Bring hither the dead whom ye have. And when they
had brought unto him a young man which was dead (Ps.-Mellitus: three dead corpses), he was
waked up by him as one that sleepeth, and confirmed all his words.
But wherefore should I speak of my Lord, when at this present there are those whom in
his name and in your presence and sight I have raised from the dead: in whose name ye have
seen palsied men healed, lepers cleansed, blind men enlightened, and many delivered from
evil spirits ? But the riches of these mighty works they cannot have who have desired to
have earthly wealth. Finally, when ye yourselves went unto the sick and called upon the
name of Jesus Christ, they were healed: ye did drive out devils and restore light to the
blind. Behold, this grace is taken from you, and ye are become wretched, who were mighty
and great. And where as there was such fear of you upon the devils that at your bidding
they left the men whom they possessed, now ye will be in fear of the devils. For he that
loveth money is the servant of Mammon: and Mammon is the name of a devil who is set over
carnal gains, and is the master of them that love the world. But even the lovers of the
world do not possess riches, but are possessed of them. For it is out of reason that for
one belly there should be laid up so much food as would suffice a thousand, and for one
body so many garments as would furnish clothing for a thousand men. In vain, therefore, is
that stored up which cometh not into use, and for whom it is kept, no man knoweth, as the
Holy Ghost saith by the prophet: In vain is every man troubled who heapeth up riches and
knoweth not for whom he gathereth them. Naked did our birth from women bring us into this
light, destitute of food and drink: naked will the earth receive us which brought us
forth. We possess in common the riches of the heaven, the brightness of the sun is equal
for the rich and the poor, and likewise the light of the moon and the stars, the softness
of the air and the drops of rain, and the gate of the church and the fount of
sanctification and the forgiveness of sins, and the sharing in the altar, and the eating
of the body and drinking of the blood of Christ, and the anointing of the chrism, and the
grace of the giver, and the visitation of the Lord, and the pardon of sin: in all these
the dispensing of the Creator is equal, without respect of persons. Neither doth the rich
man use these gifts after one manner and the poor after another.
But wretched and unhappy is the man who would have something more than sufficeth him:
for of this come heats of fevers rigours of cold, divers pains in all the members of the
body, and he can neither be fed with food nor sated with drink, that covetousness may
learn that money will not profit it, which being laid up bringeth to the keepers thereof
anxiety by day and night, and suffereth them not even for an hour to be quiet and secure.
For while they guard their houses against thieves, till their estate, ply the plough, pay
taxes, build storehouses, strive for gain, try to baffle the attacks of the strong, and to
strip the weak, exercise their wrath on whom they can, and hardly bear it from others,
shrink not from playing at tables and from public shows, fear not to defile or to be
defiled, suddenly do they depart out of this world, naked, bearing only their own sins
with them, for which they shall suffer eternal punishment.
XVII. While the apostle was thus speaking, behold there was brought to him by his
mother, who was a widow, a young man who thirty days before had first married a vvife. And
the people which were waiting upon the burial came with the widowed mother and cast
themselves at the apostle's feet all together with groans, weeping, and mourning, and
besought him that in the name of his God, as he had done with Drusiana, so he would raise
up this young man also. And there was so great weeping of them all that the apostle
himself could hardly refrain from crying and tears. He cast himself down, therefore, in
prayer, and wept a long time: and rising from prayer spread out his hands to heaven, and
for a long space prayed within himself. And when he had so done thrice, he commanded the
body which was swathed to be loosed, and said: Thou youth Stacteus, who for love of thy
flesh hast quickly lost thy soul: thou youth which knewest not thy creator nor perceivedst
the Saviour of men, and wast ignorant of thy true friend, and therefore didst fall into
the snare of the worst enemy: behold, I have poured out tears and prayers unto my Lord for
thine ignorance, that thou mayest rise from the dead, the bands of death being loosed, and
declare unto these two, to Atticus and Eugenius, how great glory they have lost, and how
great punishment they have incurred. Then Stacteus arose and worshipped the apostle, and
began to reproach his disciples, saying: I beheld your angels vveeping, and the angels of
Satan rejoicing at your overthrow. For now in a little time ye have lost the kingdom that
was prepared for you, and the dwellingplaces builded of shining stones, full of joy, of
feasting and delights, full of everlasting life and eternal light: and have gotten
yourselves places of darkness, full of dragons, of roaring flames, of torments, and
punishments unsurpassable, of pains and anguish, fear and horrible trembling. Ye have lost
the places full of unfading flowers, shining, full of the sounds of instruments of music
(organs), and have gotten on the other hand places wherein roaring and howling and
mourning ceaseth not day nor night. Nothing else remaineth for you save to ask the apostle
of the Lord that like as he hath raised me to life, he would raise you also from death
unto salvation and bring back your souls which now are blotted out of the book of life.
XVIII. Then both he that had been raised and all the people together with Atticus and
Eugenius, cast themselves at the apostle's feet and besought him to intercede for them
with the Lord. Unto whom the holy apostle gave this answer: that for thirty days they
should offer penitence to God, and in that space pray especially that the rods of gold
might return to their nature and likewise the stones return to the meanness wherein they
were made. And it came to pass that after thirty days were accomplished, and neither the
rods were turncd into wood nor the gems into pebbles, Atticus and Eugenius came and said
to the apostle: Thou hast always taught mercy, and preached forgiveness, and bidden that
one man should spare another. And if God willeth that a man should forgive a man, how much
more shall he, as he is God, both forgive and spare men. We are confounded for our sin:
and whereas we have cried with our eyes which lusted after the world, we do now repent
with eyes that weep. We pray thee, Lord, we pray thee, apostle of God, show in deed that
mercy which in word thou hast always promised. Then the holy John said unto them as they
wept and repented, and all interceded for them likewise: Our Lord God used these words
when he spake concerning sinners: I will not the death of a sinner, but I will rather that
he be converted and live. For when the Lord Jesus Christ taught us concerning the
penitent, he said: Verily I say unto you, there is great joy in heaven over one sinner
that repenteth and turneth himself from his sins: and there is more joy over him than over
ninety and nine which have not sinned. Wherefore I would have you know that the Lord
accepteth the repentance of these men. And he turned unto Atticus and Eugenius and said:
Go, carry back the rods unto the wood whence ye took them, for now are they returned to
their own nature, and the stones unto the sea-shore, for they are become common stones as
they were before. And when this was accomplished, they received again the grace which they
had lost, so that again they cast out devils as before time and healed the sick and
enlightened the blind, and daily the Lord did many mighty works by their means.
XIX tells shortly the destruction oi the temple of Ephesus and the conversion of 12,000
people.
Then follows the episode of the poison-cup in a form which probably represents the
story in the Leucian Acts. (We have seen that the late Greek texts place it at the
beginning, in the presence of Domitian.)
XX. Now when Aristodemus, who was chief priest of all those idols, saw this, filled
with a wicked spirit, he stirred up sedition among the people, so that one people prepared
themselves to fight against the other. And John turned to him and said: Tell me,
Aristodemus, what can I do to take away the anger from thy soul? And Aristodemus said: If
thou wilt have me believe in thy God, I will give thee poison to drink, and if thou drink
it, and die not, it will appear that thy God is true. The apostle answered: If thou give
me poison to drink, when I call on the name of my Lord, it will not be able to harm me.
Aristodemus said again: I will that thou first see others drink it and die straightway
that so thy heart may recoil from that cup. And the blessed John said: I have told thee
already that I am prepared to drink it that thou mayest believe on the Lord Jesus Christ
when thou seest me whole after the cup of poison. Aristodemus therefore went to the
proconsul and asked of him two men who were to undergo the sentence of death. And when he
had set them in the midst of the market-place before all the people, in the sight of the
apostle he made them drink the poison: and as soon as they had drunk it, they gave up the
ghost. Then Aristodemus turned to John and said: Hearken to me and depart from thy
teaching wherewith thou callest away the people from the worship of the gods; or take and
drink this, that thou mayest show that thy God is almighty, if after thou hast drunk, thou
canst remain whole. Then the blessed Jolm, as they lay dead which had drunk the poison,
like a fearless and brave man took the cup, and making the sign of the cross, spake thus:
My God, and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whose word the heavens were
established, unto whom all things are subject, whom all creation serveth, whom all power
obeyeth, feareth, and trembleth, when we call on thee for succour: whose name the serpent
hearing is still, the dragon fleeth, the viper is quiet, the toad (which is called a frog)
is still and strengthless, the scorpion is quenched, the basilisk vanquished, and the
phalangia (spider) doth no hurt -in a word, all venomous things, and the fiercest reptiles
and noisome beasts, are pierced (or covered with darkness). [Ps.- Mellitus adds: and all
roots hurtful to the health of men dry up.] Do thou, I say, quench the venom of this
poison, put out the deadly workings thereof, and void it of the strength which it hath in
it: and grant in thy sight unto all these whom thou hast created, eyes that they may see,
and ears that they may hear and a heart that they may understand thy greatness. And when
he had thus said, he armed his mouth and all his body with the sign of the cross and drank
all that was in the cup. And after be had drunk, he said: I ask that they for whose sake I
have drunk, be turned unto thee, O Lord, and by thine enlightening receive the salvation
which is in thee. And when for the space of three hours the people saw that John was of a
cheerful countenance, and that there was no sign at all of paleness or fear in him, they
began to cry out with a loud voice: He is the one true God whom John worshippeth.
XXI. But Aristodemus even so believed not, though the people reproached him: but turned
unto John and said: This one thing I lack -if thou in the name of thy God raise up these
that have died by this poison, my mind will be cleansed of all doubt. When he said that,
the people rose against Aristodemus saying: We will burn thee and thine house if thou
goest on to trouble the apostle further with thy words. John, therefore, seeing that there
was a fierce sedition, asked for silence, and said in the hearing of all: The first of the
virtues of God which we ought to imitate is patience, by which we are able to bear with
the foolishness of unbelievers. Wherefore if Aristodemus is still held by unbelicf, let us
loose the knots of his unbelief. He shall be compelled, even though late, to acknowledge
his creator -for I will not cease from this work until a remedy shall bring help to his
wounds, and like physicians which have in their hands a sick man needing medicine, so
also, if Aristodemus be not yet cured by that which hath now been done, he shall be cured
by that which I will now do. And he called Aristodemus to him, and gave him his coat, and
he himself stood clad only in his mantle. And Aristodemus said to him: Wherefore hast thou
given me thy coat? John said to him: That thou mayest even so be put to shame and depart
from thine unbelief. And Aristodemus said: And how shall thy coat make me to depart from
unbelief? The apostle answered: Go and cast it upon the bodies of the dead, and thou shalt
say thus: The apostle of our Lord Jesus Christ hath sent me that in his name ye may rise
again, that all may know that life and death are servants of my Lord Jesus Christ. Which
when Aristodemus had done, and had seen them rise, he worshipped John, and ran quickly to
the proconsul and began to say with a loud voice: Hear me, hear me, thou proconsul; I
think thou rememberest that I have often stirred up thy wrath against John and devised
many things against him daily, wherefore I fear lest I feel his wrath: for he is a god
hidden in the form of a man and hath drunk poison, and not only continueth whole, but them
also which had died by the poison he hath recalled to life by my means, by the touch of
his coat, and they have no mark of death upon them. Which when the proconsul heard he
said: And what wilt thou have me to do? Aristodemus answered: Let us go and fall at his
feet and ask pardon, and whatever he commandeth us let us do. Then they came together and
cast themselves down and besought forgiveness: and he received them and offered prayer and
thanksgiving to God, and he ordained them a fast of a week, and when it was fulfilled he
baptized them in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and his Almighty Father and the Holy
Ghost the illuminator. [And when thev were baptized, with all their house and their
servants and their kindred, they brake all their idols and built a church in the name of
Saint John: wherein he himself was taken up, in manner following :]
This bracketed sentence, of late complexion, serves to introduce the last episode of
the book.
[James gives two additional fragments that do not fit in any other place. These
fragments are very broken and are not of much use for this present project. However, if
there is intrest in them, they can be found on pages 264-6 of the text.]
The last episode of these Acts (as is the case with several others of the Apocryphal
Acts) was preservcd separately for reading in church on the Saint's day. We have it in at
least nine Greck manuscripts, and in many versions: Latin, Syriac, Armenian, Coptic,
Ethiopic, Slavonic.
106 John therefore continued with the brethren, rejoicing in the Lord. And on the
morrow, being the Lord's day, and all the brethren being gathered together, he began to
say unto them: Brethren and fellow-servants and coheirs and partakers with me in the
kingdom of the Lord, ye know the Lord, hovv many mighty works he hath granted you by my
means, how many wonders, healings, signs, how great spirital gifts, teachings, governings,
refreshings, ministries, knowledges, glories, graces, gifts, beliefs, communions, all
which ye have seen given you by him in your sight, yet not seen by these eyes nor heard by
these ears. Be ye therefore stablished in him, remembering him in your every deed, knowing
the mystery of the dispensation which hath come to pass towards men, for what cause the
Lord hath l accomplished it. He beseecheth you by me, brethren, and entreateth you,
desiring to remain without grief, without insult, not conspired against, not chastened:
for he knoweth even the insult that cometh of you, he knoweth even dishonour, he knoweth
even conspiracy, he knoweth even chastisement, from them that hearken not to his
commandments.
107 Let not then our good God be grieved, the compassionate, the merciful, the holy,
the pure, the undefiled, the immaterial, the only, the one, the unchangeable, the simple,
the guileless, the unwrathful, even our God Jesus Christ, who is above every name that we
can utter or conceive, and more exalted. Let him rejoice with us because we walk aright,
let him be glad because we live purely, let him be refreshed because our conversation is
sober. Let him be without care because we live continently, let him be pleased because we
communicate one with another, let him smile because we are chaste, let him be merry
because we love him. These things I now speak unto you, brethren, because I am hasting
unto the work set before me, and already being perfected by the Lord. For what else could
I have to say unto you? Ye have the pledge of our God, ye have the earnest of his
goodness, ye have his presence that cannot be shunned. If, then, ye sin no more, he
forgiveth you that ye did in ignorance: but if after that ye have known him and he hath
had mercy on you, ye walk again in the like deeds, both the former will be laid to your
charge, and also ye will not have a part nor mercy before him.
108 And when he had spoken this unto them, he prayed thus: O Jesu who hast woven this
crown with thy weaving, who hast joined together these many blossoms into the unfading
flower of thy cormtenance, who hast sown in them these words: thou only tender of thy
servants, and physician who healest freely: only doer of good and despiser of none, only
merciful and lover of men, only saviour and righteous, only seer of all, who art in all
and everywhere present and containing all things and filling all things: Christ Jesu, God,
Lord, that with thy gifts and thy mercy shelterest them that trust in thee, that knowest
clearly the wiles and the assaults of him that is everywhere our adversary, which he
deviseth against us: do thou only, O Lord, succour thy servants by thy visitation. Even
so, Lord.
109 And he asked for bread, and gave thanks thus: What praise or what offering or what
thanksgiving shall we, breaking this bread, name save thee only, O Lord Jesu? We glorify
thy name that was said by the Father: we glorify thy name that was said through the Son
(or we glorify the name of Father that was said by thee . . . the name of Son that was
said by thee): we glorify thine entering of the Door. We glorify the resurrection shown
unto us by thee. We glorify thy way, we glorify of thee the seed, the word, the grace, the
faith, the salt, the unspeakable (al. chosen) pearl, the treasure, the plough, the net,
the greatness, the diadem, him that for us was called Son of man, that gave unto us truth,
rest, knowledge, power, the commandment, the confidence, hope, love, liberty, refuge in
thee. For thou, Lord, art alone the root of immortality, and the fount of incorruption,
and the seat of the ages: called by all these names for us now that calling on thee by
them we may make known thy greatness which at the present is invisible unto us, but
visible only unto the pure, being portrayed in thy manhood only.
110 And he brake the bread and gave unto all of us, praying over each of the brethren
that he might be worthy of the grace of the Lord and of the most holy eucharist. And he
partook also himself likewise, and said: Unto me also be there a part with you, and: Peace
be with you, my beloved.
111 After that he said unto Verus: Take with thee some two men, with baskets and
shovels, and follow me. And Verus without delay did as he was bidden by John the servant
of God. The blessed John therefore went out of the house and walked forth of the gates,
having told the more part to depart from him. And when he was come to the tomb of a
certain brother of ours he said to the young men: Dig, my children. And they dug and he
was instant with them yet more, saying: Let the trench be deeper. And as they dug he spoke
unto them the word of God and exhorted them that were come with him out of the house,
edifying and perfecting them unto the greatness of God, and praying over each one of us.
And when the young men had finished the trench as he desired, we knowing nothing of it, he
took off his garments wherein he was clad and laid them as it were for a pallet in the
bottom of the trench: and standing in his shift only he stretched his hands upward and
prayed thus:
112 O thou that didst choose us out for the apostleship of the Gentiles: O God that
sentest us into the world: that didst reveal thyself by the law and the prophets: that
didst never rest, but alway from the foundation of the world savedst them that were able
to be saved: that madest thyself known through all nature: that proclaimedst thyself even
among beasts: that didst make the desolate and savage soul tame and quiet: that gavest
thyself to it when it was athirst for thy words: that didst appear to it in haste when it
was dying: that didst show thyself to it as a law when it was sinking into lawlessness:
that didst manifest thyself to it when it had been vanquished by Satan: that didst
overcome its adversary when it fled unto thee: that avest it thine hand and didst raise it
up from the things of Hades: that didst not leave it to walk after a bodily sort (in the
body): that didst show to it its own enemy: that hast made for it a clear knowledge toward
thee: O God, Jesu, the Father of them that are above the heavens, the Lord of them that
are in the heavens, the law of them that are in the other, the course of them that are in
the air, the keeper of them that are on the earth, the fear of them that are under the
earth, the grace of them that are thine own: receive also the soul of thy John, which it
may be is accounted worthy by thee.
113 O thou who hast kept me until this hour for thyself and untouched by union with a
woman: who when in my youth I desired to marry didst appear unto me and say to me: John I
have need of thee: who didst prepare for me also a sickness of the body: who when for the
third time I would marry didst forthwith prevent me, and then at the third hour of the day
saidst unto me on the sea: John, if thou hadst not been mine, I would have suffered thee
to marry: who for two years didst blind me (or afflict mine eyes), and grant me to mourn
and entreat thee: who in the third year didst open the eyes of my mind and also grant me
my visible eyes: who when I saw clearly didst ordain that it should be grievous to me to
look upon a woman: who didst save me from the temporal fantasy and lead me unto that which
endureth always: who didst rid me of the foul madness that is in the flesh: who didst take
me from the bitter de |