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| About the Dragon and the Young Man. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
About the Dragon and
the Young Man.
And the apostle went forth to go where the Lord had
bidden him. And when he came near the second milestone he turned
a little out of the way, and saw the body of a beautiful youth lying;
and he said: Lord, was it for this that Thou broughtest me out to
come here, that I might see this trial? Thy will therefore be
done, as Thou purposest. And he began to pray, and to say:
Lord, Judge of the living, and of those that are lying dead, and Lord
of all, and Father—Father not only of the souls that are in
bodies, but also of those that have gone out of them; for of the souls
that are in pollutions Thou art Lord and Judge—come at this time,
when I call upon Thee, and show Thy glory upon him that is lying down
here. And he turned and said to those that followed him:
This affair has not happened idly; but the enemy has wrought and
effected this, that he might make an assault upon him; and you see that
he has availed himself of no other form, and has wrought through no
other living being, but through his subject.
And when the apostle had thus spoken, behold, a
great dragon came forth from his den, knocking his head, and
brandishing his tail down to the ground, and, using a loud voice, said
to the apostle: I shall say before thee for what cause I have put
him to death, since thou art here in order to reprove my works.
And the apostle says: Yes, say on. And the dragon:
There is a certain woman in this place exceedingly beautiful; and as
she was once passing by, I saw her, and fell in love with her, and I
followed and watched her; and I found this young man kissing her, and
he also had intercourse with her, and did with her other shameful
things. And to me indeed it was pleasant to tell thee this, for I
know that thou art the twin-brother of Christ, and always bringest our
race to nought. But, not wishing to harass her, I did not at this
time put him to death; but I watched him passing by in the evening, and
struck him, and killed him, and especially as he had dared to do this
on the Lord’s day.2350
2350 In this passage we
have one of the data for fixing the date of the writing. | And the
apostle inquired of him, saying: Tell me, of what seed and of
what race art thou?
And he said to him: I am the offspring of
the race of the serpent, and hurtful of the hurtful; I am son of him
who hurt and struck the four brothers that stood; I am son of him who
sits on the throne of destruction, and takes his own from what he has
lent;2351
2351 Or, from those to
whom he was lent. | I am son of that apostate who encircles
the globe; I am kinsman to him who is outside of the ocean, whose tail
lies in his mouth; I am he who went into paradise through the hedge,
and spoke with Eve what my father bade me speak to her; I am he who
inflamed and fired Cain to kill his brother, and through me thorns and
prickles sprang up in the ground; I am he who cast down the angels from
above, and bound them down by the desires of women, that
earth-born2352
2352 And, by
implication, gigantic. | children might
be produced from them, and that I might work my will in them;2353 I am he who hardened the heart of
Pharaoh, that he should murder the children of Israel, and keep them
down by the hard yoke of slavery; I am he who caused the multitude to
err in the desert when they made the calf; I am he who inflamed Herod and incited
Caiaphas to the lying tales of falsehood before Pilate, for this became
me; I am he who inflamed Judas, and bought him, that he should betray
Christ; I am he who inhabits and holds the abyss of Tartarus, and the
Son of God has wronged me against my will, and has gathered his own out
of me; I am the kinsman of him who is to come from the east, to whom
also power has been given to do whatever he will upon the earth.
And that dragon having thus spoken in the hearing of all
the multitude, the apostle raised his voice on high, and said:
Cease henceforth, O thou most unabashed, and be ashamed and altogether
put to death; for the end of thy destruction is at hand, and do not
dare to say what thou hast done through thy dependants. And I
order thee, in the name of that Jesus who even until now makes a
struggle against you for the sake of His own human beings, to suck out
the poison which thou hast put into this man, and to draw it forth, and
take it out of him. And the dragon said: The time of our
end is by no means at hand, as thou hast said. Why dost thou
force me to take out what I have put into him, and to die before the
time? Assuredly, when my father shall draw forth and suck out
what he has put into the creation, then his end will come. And
the apostle said to him: Show us, therefore, now the nature of
thy father. And the dragon went up, and put his mouth upon the
wound of the young man, and sucked the gall out of it. And in a
short time the skin of the young man, which was like purple, grew
white, and the dragon swelled. And when the dragon had drawn up
all the gall into himself, the young man sprang up and stood, and ran
and fell at the apostle’s feet. And the dragon, being
swelled up, shrieked out and died, and his poison and gall were poured
forth; and in the place where his poison was poured forth there was
made a great chasm, and that dragon was swallowed up. And the
apostle said to the king and his brother: Take workmen, and fill
up the place in which the dragon has been swallowed up, and lay
foundations, and build houses-above it, that it may be made a
dwelling-place for the strangers.
And the young man said to the apostle, with many
tears: I have sinned against the God proclaimed by thee, and
against thee, but I ask pardon of thee; for thou art a man having two
forms, and wherever thou wishest there art thou found, and thou art
held in by no one, as I see. For I beheld that man, when I stood
beside thee, who also said to thee, I have many wonders to show by
means of thee, and I have great works to accomplish by means of thee,
for which thou shalt obtain a reward; and thou shalt make many to live,
and they shall be in repose and eternal light as the children of
God: do thou therefore bring alive—he says, speaking to
thee about me—this young man who has been cast down by the enemy,
and in all time be the overseer of him. Thou hast, then, well
come hither, and again thou shalt well go away to him, he being not at
all forsaken by thee. And I am without care and reproach, for the
dawn has risen upon me from the care of the night, and I am at rest;
and I have also been released from him who exasperated me to do these
things: for I have sinned against Him who taught me the contrary,
and I have destroyed him who is the kinsman of the night, who forced me
to sin by his own practices; and I have found that kinsman of mine who
is like the light. I have destroyed him who darkens and blinds
those who are subject to him, lest they should know what they are
doing, and, ashamed of their works, withdraw themselves from them, and
their deeds have an end: and I have found Him whose works are
light, and whose deeds are truth, of which whoever does them shall not
repent. I have been set free also from him in whom falsehood
abides, whom darkness as a covering goes before, and shame conducting
herself impudently in idleness follows after. And I have found
also Him who shows me what is beautiful, that I should lay hold of it,
the Son of the truth, who is kinsman of concord, who, driving away the
mist, enlightens His own creation, and heals its wounds, and overturns
its enemies. But I entreat thee, O man of God, make me again to
behold and see Him, now become hidden from me, that I may also hear His
voice, the wonders of which I cannot declare: for it is not of
the nature of this bodily organ.
And the apostle said to him: If, as thou hast also
said, thou hast cast off the knowledge of those things which thou hast
received, and if thou knowest who has wrought these things in thee, and
if thou shalt become a disciple and hearer of Him of whom, through thy
living love, thou now desirest the sight, thou shalt both see Him, and
shalt be with Him for ever, and shalt rest in His rest, and shalt be in
His joy. But if thou art rather carelessly disposed towards Him,
and again returnest to thy former deeds, and lettest go that beauty and
that beaming countenance which has now been displayed to thee, and if
the splendour of the light of Him whom thou now desirest be forgotten
by thee, thou shalt be deprived not only of this life, but also of that
which is to come; and thou shalt go to him whom thou hast said thou
hast destroyed, and shalt no longer behold Him whom thou hast said thou
hast found.
And when the apostle had thus spoken, he went into the
city, holding that young man by the hand, and saying to him: Those
things which thou hast beheld, my child, are a few out of the many
which God has: for it is not about these things that appear that
the good news is brought to us, but greater things than these are
promised to us; but inasmuch as we are in the body, we cannot tell and
speak out what He will do for our souls. If we say that He
affords us light, it is seen by us, and we have it; and if riches, they
exist and appear in this world, and we name them, since it has been
said, With difficulty will a rich man enter into the kingdom of the
heavens.2354 And if we
speak of fine clothing, which they who delight in this life put on, it
has been said, They that wear soft things are in kings’
palaces;2355 and if costly
dinners, about these we have received a commandment to keep away from
them, not to be burdened by carousing and drunkenness and the cares of
life;2356 as also in the Gospel it has been said,
Take no heed for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink;
nor for your body, what ye shall put on: because the life is more
than food, and the body than clothing.2357 And if we speak of this rest
lasting only for a season, its judgment has also been ordained.
But we speak about the upper world, about God and angels, about
ambrosial food, about garments that last and become not old, about
those things which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath there
come into the heart of sinful men what God has prepared for those that
love Him.2358 Do thou
also therefore believe in Him, that thou mayst live; and have
confidence in Him, and thou shalt never die. For He is not
persuaded by gifts, that thou shouldst offer them to Him; nor does He
want sacrifices, that thou shouldst sacrifice to Him. But look to
Him, and thou shalt not look in vain, for His comeliness and desirable
beauty will make thee love Him; and neither will He allow thee to turn
thyself away from Him.
And when the apostle was thus speaking to that
young man, a great multitude joined them. And the apostle looked,
and saw them lifting themselves up that they might see him; and they
went up into elevated places. And the apostle said to them:
Ye men who have come to the assembly of Christ, and who wish to believe
in Jesus, take an example from this, and see that if you do not get
high up, you cannot see me, who am small, and cannot get a look of me,
who am like yourselves. If, then, you cannot see me, who am like
yourselves, unless you raise yourselves a little from the earth, how
can you see Him who lives above, and is now found below, unless you
first raise yourselves out of your former behaviour, and unprofitable
deeds, and troublesome desires, and the riches that are left behind
here, and create things that are of the earth, and that grow old, and
the garments that are destroyed, and the beauty that ages and vanishes
away, yea, even out of the whole body in which all these have been
stored past, and which grows old, and becomes dust, returning into its
own nature? for all these things the body itself sets up.2359 But rather believe in our Lord
Jesus Christ, whom we proclaim to you, in order that your hope may be
upon Him, and that you may have life in Him to ages of ages, that He
may be your fellow-traveller in this land, and may release you from
error, and may become2360
2360 Or, and that there
may be. | a haven for you
in this troublous sea. And there shall be for you also a fountain
welling out in this thirsty land, and a fold full of food in the place
of the hungry, and rest for your souls, and also a physician for your
bodies.
Then the multitude of those assembled that heard,
wept, and said to the apostle: O man of God, as for the God whom
thou proclaimest, we dare not say that we are his, because our works
which we have done are alien from him, not pleasing to him; but if he
has compassion upon us, and pities us, and delivers us, overlooking our
former doings; and if he set us free from the evil things which we did
when we were in error, and shall not take into account nor keep the
recollection of our former sins, we shall become his servants, and we
shall do his will to the end. And the apostle answered and said
to them: He does not reckon against you the sins which you did,
being in error; but He overlooks your transgressions which you have
done in ignorance.2361
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