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| The Bishops of Jerusalem from the Age of our Saviour to the Period under Consideration. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
V.—The Bishops of Jerusalem from the
Age of our Saviour to the Period under Consideration
1. The
chronology of the bishops of Jerusalem I have nowhere found preserved
in writing;994
994 In
his Chron. Eusebius also gives the names of these bishops of
Jerusalem, without assigning dates to more than two or three of them.
But in Nicephorus Callisti the dates are given. From what source
Nicephorus drew we do not know. He is, at any rate, too late to be of
any worth as an authority on such a subject. In fact, these men were
not regular monarchical bishops, holding office in succession (see note
4), and hence Eusebius is quite excusable for his ignorance in regard
to their dates. See Ritschl’s Entstehung der alt-kath.
Kirche, p. 246 sq. | for tradition says that they were
all short lived.
2. But I have learned this much
from writings,995
995 Reuterdahl (De Fontibus Hist. eccles. Euseb., p. 55)
conjectures that these “writings” were found in the church
of Jerusalem itself, and compares a passage in the Dem. Evang.
III. 5: “The first bishops that presided there [i.e. at
Jerusalem] are said to have been Jews, and their names are preserved by
the inhabitants of the country.” Had Hegesippus or any other
known author been the source of his information, he would probably have
mentioned his name. | that until the siege of the Jews,
which took place under Adrian,996
996 In
135 a.d. See below, chap. 7. | there were fifteen
bishops in succession there,997
997 From Hegesippus (see above, Bk. III. chap. 32) we learn that
Symeon, the successor of James, was martyred during Trajan’s
reign. As was seen in note 6 of the chapter referred to, the martyrdom
probably occurred early in that reign. Eusebius, in his Chron.,
refers the martyrdom and the accession of Justus to the tenth year of
Trajan (107 a.d.). This leaves thirteen
bishops to be inserted between 107 (or, if this date is not reliable,
98+) and 135 a.d., which is, to say the least,
very suspicious. The true explanation appears to be that, after the
death of Symeon, the last prominent relative of Christ, the presbyters
took the lead, and that they were afterward made by tradition into
successive monarchical bishops. Closs and Gieseler suppose that there
were bishops of a number of churches in Palestine at the same time,
whom tradition made successive bishops of Jerusalem. But the fact is,
that the episcopate is of Greek, not of Jewish, origin, and in the
strictly Jewish Christian churches of Palestine no such person as a
bishop can have existed. Only after the church there came under the
influence of the Gentile church, and lost its prevailingly Jewish
character, was it possible for a bishop, in the general sense of the
term, to exist there. The Jewish Christians assumed for their church
government the form of the Jewish Sanhedrim, though while James and
Symeon were alive, they were naturally leaders (according to the common
Oriental custom, which exalted the relatives of the founder of a
religion). The Jewish character of the Jerusalem congregation was very
marked until the destruction of the city under Hadrian (note that all
but two of the fifteen bishops have Jewish names), after which all
circumcised Jews—Christians as well as unbelievers—were
excluded, and a heathen Christian congregation took its place (see the
next chapter). According to Stroth, followed by Closs, Stigloher, and
Heinichen, the church of Jerusalem remained in Pella after 70 a.d., and was called the church of Jerusalem because
it was made up of Christians from Jerusalem. This is possible; but
Eusebius evidently did not understand it so (compare, too, his Dem.
Evang. III. 5), and Epiphanius (de Mensa et Pond. chap 15)
says expressly that, after the destruction of the city by Titus, the
church returned again to Jerusalem, and there is no good reason to
doubt the report. | all of whom are
said to have been of Hebrew descent, and to have received the knowledge
of Christ in purity, so that they were approved by those who were able
to judge of such matters, and were deemed worthy of the episcopate. For
their whole church consisted then of believing Hebrews who continued
from the days of the apostles until the siege which took place at this
time; in which siege the Jews, having again rebelled against the
Romans, were conquered after severe battles.
3. But since the bishops of the
circumcision ceased at this time, it is proper to give here a list of
their names from the beginning. The first, then, was James, the
so-called brother of the Lord;998
998 On
James, see above, Bk. II chap. 1. | the second,
Symeon;999
999 On
Symeon, see above, Bk. III. chap. 11, note 4. | the third, Justus;1000
1000 Of
Justus and the following named bishops we know nothing more. Justus is
called Judas by Epiphanius, Hær. LXVI. 20. | the
fourth, Zacchæus;1001
1001 Zacchæus is called Zacharias by Epiphanius. According to
Jerome’s version of Eusebius’ Chron. he became
bishop in the fifteenth year of Trajan; according to the Armenian
version, in the twelfth year. Dates are given by the Chron. for
this bishop and for Seneca, but no confidence is to be reposed in the
dates, nor in those given by Epiphanius and Eutychius. The former, when
he gives dates at all, is hopelessly at sea. The latter gives exact
dates for every bishop, but quite without the support of ancient
tradition. | the fifth, Tobias;
the sixth, Benjamin; the seventh, John; the eighth, Matthias; the
ninth, Philip; the tenth, Seneca;1002
1002 The
name Seneca is Latin, the only Latin name in the list. But there is
nothing particularly surprising in a Jew’s bearing a Latin name.
It was quite common even for native Jews to bear both a Latin, or
Greek, and a Hebrew name, and often the former was used to the
exclusion of the latter. The name therefore does not disprove
Seneca’s Hebrew origin. | the eleventh,
Justus; the twelfth, Levi; the thirteenth, Ephres;1003
1003 ᾽Εφρῆς. Epiphanius
calls him ᾽Ου€φρις. The
Armenian version of the Chron. calls him Ephrem; Jerome’s
version, Ephres. Syncellus calls him ᾽Εφραΐμ, which is
the Hebrew form of the name. | the fourteenth, Joseph;1004
1004 ᾽Ιωσήφ. He is
called ᾽Ιωσίς
by Epiphanius, and Joses by Jerome. | and finally, the fifteenth, Judas.
4. These are the bishops of
Jerusalem that lived between the age of the apostles and the time
referred to, all of them belonging to the circumcision.
5. In the twelfth year of the
reign of Adrian, Xystus, having completed the tenth year of
his episcopate,1005
1005 On
Xystus, see chap. 4, note 3. | was succeeded by Telesphorus,1006
1006 Telesphorus was a martyr, according to Irenæus, III. 3. 3
(compare below, chap. 10, and Bk. V. chap. 6), and the tradition is too
old to be doubted. Eusebius here agrees with Jerome’s version of
the Chron. in putting the date of Telesphorus’ accession
in the year 128 a.d., but the Armenian version
puts it in 124; and Lipsius, with whom Overbeck agrees, puts it between
124 and 126. Since he held office eleven years (according to Eusebius,
chap. 10, below, and other ancient catalogues), he must have died,
according to Lipsius and Overbeck, between 135 and 137 a.d. (the latter being probably the correct date), and not
in the first year of Antoninus Pius (138 a.d.), as Eusebius states in chap. 10, below. Tradition
says that he fought against Marcion and Valentinus (which is quite
possible), and that he was very strict in regard to fasts, sharpening
them and increasing their number, which may or may not be
true. | the seventh in succession from the apostles.
In the meantime, after the lapse of a year and some months, Eumenes,1007
1007 We
know nothing more about Eumenes. He is said in chap. 11 to have held
office thirteen years, and this brings the date of his death into
agreement with the date given by the Armenian version of the
Chron., which differs by two years from the date given by
Jerome. | the sixth in order, succeeded to the
leadership of the Alexandrian church, his predecessor having held
office eleven years.1008
1008 His
predecessor was Justus. See the previous chapter. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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