Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Preface. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
The
Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew.
————————————
Here beginneth the book of the
Birth of the Blessed Mary and the Infancy of the Saviour. Written
in Hebrew by the Blessed Evangelist Matthew, and translated into Latin
by the Blessed Presbyter Jerome.
To their well-beloved brother Jerome the Presbyter,
Bishops Cromatius and Heliodorus in the Lord, greeting.
The birth of the Virgin Mary, and the nativity and
infancy of our Lord Jesus Christ, we find in apocryphal books.
But considering that in them many things contrary to our faith are
written, we have believed that they ought all to be rejected, lest
perchance we should transfer the joy of Christ to Antichrist.1613
1613 [This introduction
is, of itself, an evidence of late origin.—R.] | While, therefore, we were
considering these things, there came holy men, Parmenius and Varinus,
who said that your Holiness had found a Hebrew volume, written by the
hand of the most blessed Evangelist Matthew, in which also the birth of
the virgin mother herself, and the infancy of our Saviour, were
written. And accordingly we entreat your affection by our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself, to render it from the Hebrew into Latin,1614 not so much for the attainment of those
things which are the insignia of Christ, as for the exclusion of the
craft of heretics, who, in order to teach bad doctrine, have mingled
their own lies with the excellent nativity of Christ, that by the
sweetness of life they might hide the bitterness of death. It
will therefore become your purest piety, either to listen to us as your
brethren entreating, or to let us have as bishops exacting, the debt of
affection which you may deem due.
Reply to Their Letter by
Jerome.
To my lords the holy and most blessed Bishops Cromatius
and Heliodorus, Jerome, a humble servant of Christ, in the Lord
greeting.
He who digs in ground where he knows that there is
gold,1615
1615 Lit., conscious of
gold. | does not instantly snatch at whatever the
uptorn trench may pour forth; but, before the stroke of the quivering
spade raises aloft the glittering mass, he meanwhile lingers over the
sods to turn them over and lift them up, and especially he who has not
added to his gains. An arduous task is enjoined upon me, since
what your Blessedness has commanded me, the holy Apostle and Evangelist
Matthew himself did not write for the purpose of publishing. For
if he had not done it somewhat secretly, he would have added it also to
his Gospel which he published. But he composed this book in
Hebrew; and so little did he publish it, that at this day the book
written in Hebrew by his own hand is in the possession of very
religious men, to whom in successive periods of time it has been handed
down by those that were before them. And this book they never at
any time gave to any one to translate. And so it came to pass,
that when it was published by a disciple of Manichæus named
Leucius, who also wrote the falsely styled Acts of the Apostles, this
book afforded matter, not of edification, but of perdition; and the
opinion of the Synod in regard to it was according to its deserts, that
the ears of the Church should not be open to it. Let the snapping
of those that bark against us now cease; for we do not add this little
book to the canonical writings, but we translate what was written by an
Apostle and Evangelist, that we may disclose the falsehood of
heresy. In this work, then, we obey the commands of pious bishops
as well as oppose impious heretics. It is the love of Christ,
therefore, which we fulfil, believing that they will assist us by their
prayers, who through our obedience attain to a knowledge of the holy
infancy of our Saviour.
There is extant another letter to the same bishops,
attributed to Jerome:—
You ask me to let you know what I think of a book held
by some to be about the nativity of St. Mary. And so I wish you
to know that there is much in it that is false. For one Seleucus,
who wrote the Sufferings of the Apostles, composed this book.
But, just as he wrote what was true about their powers, and the
miracles they worked, but said a great deal that was false about their
doctrine; so here too he has invented many untruths out of his own
head. I shall take care to render it word for word, exactly as it
is in the Hebrew, since it is
asserted that it was composed by the holy Evangelist Matthew, and
written in Hebrew, and set at the head of his Gospel. Whether
this be true or not, I leave to the author of the preface and the
trustworthiness of the writer: as for myself, I pronounce them
doubtful; I do not affirm that they are clearly false. But this I
say freely—and I think none of the faithful will deny
it—that, whether these stories be true or inventions, the sacred
nativity of St. Mary was preceded by great miracles, and succeeded by
the greatest; and so by those who believe that God can do these things,
they can be believed and read without damaging their faith or
imperilling their souls. In short, so far as I can, following the
sense rather than the words of the writer, and sometimes walking in the
same path, though not in the same footsteps, sometimes digressing a
little, but still keeping the same road, I shall in this way keep by
the style of the narrative, and shall say nothing that is not either
written there, or might, following the same train of thought, have been
written.
E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|