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| The Parts of the World in which the Apostles preached Christ. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Book
III.
Chapter
I.—The Parts of the World in which the
Apostles preached Christ.
1. Such
was the condition of the Jews. Meanwhile the holy apostles and
disciples of our Saviour were dispersed throughout the world.563
563 According to Lipsius, the legends concerning the labors of the
apostles in various countries were all originally connected with that
of their separation at Jerusalem, which is as old as the second
century. But this separation was put at various dates by different
traditions, varying from immediately after the Ascension to twenty-four
years later. A lost book, referred to by the Decretum Gelasii as
Liber qui appellatus sortes Apostolorum apocryphus, very likely
contained the original tradition, and an account of the fate of the
apostles, and was probably of Gnostic or Manichean origin. The efforts
to derive from the varying traditions any trustworthy particulars as to
the apostles themselves is almost wholly vain. The various traditions
not only assign different fields of labor to the different apostles,
but also give different lists of the apostles themselves. See
Lipsius’ article on the Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles in
Smith and Wace’s Dict. of Christ. Biog. I. p. 17 sqq. The
extant Apocryphal Gospels, Acts, Apocalypses, &c., are translated
in the Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VIII. p. 361 sqq. Lipsius
states that, according to the oldest form of the tradition, the
apostles were divided into three groups: first, Peter and Andrew,
Matthew and Bartholomew, who were said to have preached in the region
of the Black Sea; second, Thomas, Thaddeus, and Simeon, the Canaanite,
in Parthia; third, John and Philip, in Asia Minor. | Parthia,564
564 Parthia, in the time of the apostles, was an independent kingdom,
extending from the Indus to the Tigris, and from the Caspian Sea to the
Persian Gulf. This is the oldest form of the tradition in regard to
Thomas (see preceding note). It is found also in the Clementine
Recognitions, IX. 29, and in Socrates, H. E. I. 19.
Rufinus (H. E. II. 5) and Socrates (H. E. IV. 18) speak
of Edessa as his burial place. Later traditions extended his labors
eastward as far as India, and made him suffer martyrdom in that land;
and there his remains were exhibited down to the sixteenth century.
According to the Martyrium Romanum, however, his remains were
brought from India to Edessa, and from thence to Ortona, in Italy,
during the Crusades. The Syrian Christians in India called themselves
Thomas-Christians; but the name cannot be traced beyond the eighth
century, and is derived, probably, from a Nestorian
missionary. | according to
tradition, was allotted to Thomas as his field of labor, Scythia565
565 The
name Scythia was commonly used by the ancients, in a very loose sense,
to denote all the region lying north of the Caspian and Black Seas. But
two Scythias were distinguished in more accurate usage: a European
Scythia, lying north of the Black Sea, between the Danube and the
Tanais, and an Asiatic Scythia, extending eastward from the Ural. The
former is here meant. | to Andrew,566
566 The
traditions respecting Andrew are very uncertain and contradictory,
though, as remarked above (note 1), the original form, represented
here, assigned as his field the region in the neighborhood of the Black
Sea. His traditional activity in Scythia has made him the patron saint
of Russia. He is also called the patron saint of Greece, where he is
reported to have been crucified; but his activity there rests upon a
late tradition. His body is said to have been carried to Constantinople
in 357 (cf. Philostorgius, Hist. Eccles. III. 2), and during the
Crusades transferred to Amalpæ in Italy, in whose cathedral the
remains are still shown. Andrew is in addition the patron saint of
Scotland; but the tradition of his activity there dates back only to
the eighth century (cf. Skene’s Celtic Scotland, II. 221
sq.). Numerous other regions are claimed, by various traditions, to
have been the scene of his labors. | and Asia567
567 Proconsular Asia included only a narrow strip of Asia Minor, lying
upon the coast of the Mediterranean and comprising Mysia, Lydia, and
Caria. | to John,568
568 The
universal testimony of antiquity assigns John’s later life to
Ephesus: e.g. Irenæus, Adv. Hær. III. 1. 1 and 3. 4,
etc.; Clement of Alex., Quis Dives Salvetur, c. 42 (quoted by
Eusebius, chap. 23, below); Polycrates in his Epistle to Victor (quoted
by Eusebius in chap. 31, below, and in Bk. V. chap. 24); and many
others. The testimony of Irenæus is especially weighty, for the
series: Irenæus, the pupil of Polycarp, the pupil of John, forms a
complete chain such as we have in no other case. Such testimony, when
its force is broken by no adverse tradition, ought to be sufficient to
establish John’s residence in Ephesus beyond the shadow of a
doubt, but it has been denied by many of the critics who reject the
Johannine authorship of the fourth Gospel (e.g. Keim, Holtzmann, the
author of Supernat. Religion, and others), though the denial is
much less positive now than it was a few years ago. The chief arguments
urged against the residence of John in Ephesus are two, both a
silentio: first, Clement in his first Epistle to the Corinthians
speaks of the apostles in such a way as to seem to imply that they were
all dead; secondly, in the Ignatian Epistles, Paul is mentioned, but
not John, which is certainly very remarkable, as one is addressed to
Ephesus itself. In reply it may be said that such an interpretation of
Clement’s words is not necessary, and that the omission of John
in the epistles of Ignatius becomes perfectly natural if the Epistles
are thrown into the time of Hadrian or into the latter part of
Trajan’s reign, as they ought to be (cf. chap. 36, note 4). In
the face of the strong testimony for John’s Ephesian residence
these two objections must be overruled. The traditional view is
defended by all conservative critics as well as by the majority even of
those who deny the Johannine authorship of the fourth Gospel (cf.
especially Hilgenfeld in his Einleitung, and Weizsäcker in
his Apostaliches Zeitalter). The silence of Paul’s
epistles and of the Acts proves that John cannot have gone to Ephesus
until after Paul had permanently left there, and this we should
naturally expect to be the case. Upon the time of John’s
banishment to Patmos, see Bk. III. chap. 18, note 1. Tradition reports
that he lived until the reign of Trajan (98–117). Cf.
Irenæus, II. 22. 5 and III. 3. 4. | who, after
he had lived some time there,569
569 Origen in this extract seems to be uncertain how long John
remained in Ephesus and when he died. | died at
Ephesus.
2. Peter appears to have
preached570
570 The
language of Origen (κεκηρυχέναι
žοικεν, instead
of λόγος
žχει or παρ€δοσις
περιέχει) seems to imply that he is recording not a tradition, but a
conclusion drawn from the first Epistle of Peter, which was known to
him, and in which these places are mentioned. Such a tradition did,
however, exist quite early. Cf. e.g. the Syriac Doctrina
Apostolorum (ed. Cureton) and the Gnostic Acts of Peter and
Andrew. The former assigns to Peter, Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia,
in addition to Galatia and Pontus, and cannot therefore, rest solely
upon the first Epistle of Peter, which does not mention the first three
places. All the places assigned to Peter are portions of the field of
Paul, who in all the traditions of this class is completely crowded out
and his field given to other apostles, showing the Jewish origin of the
traditions. Upon Peter’s activity in Rome and his death there,
see Bk. II. chap. 25, note 7. | in Pontus, Galatia, Bithynia,
Cappadocia, and Asia571 to the Jews of the
dispersion. And at last, having come to Rome, he was crucified
head-downwards;572
572 Origen is the first to record that Peter was crucified with his
head downward, but the tradition afterward became quite common. It is
of course not impossible, but the absence of any reference to it by
earlier Fathers (even by Tertullian, who mentions the crucifixion), and
its decidedly legendary character, render it exceedingly
doubtful. | for he had
requested that he might suffer in this way. What do we need to say
concerning Paul, who preached the Gospel of Christ from Jerusalem to
Illyricum,573 and afterwards suffered martyrdom
in Rome under Nero?574
574 See
above, Bk. II. chap. 25, note 5. | These facts are related by Origen in
the third volume of his Commentary on Genesis.575
575 This
fragment of Origen has been preserved by no one else. It is impossible
to tell where the quotation begins—whether with the words
“Thomas according to tradition received Parthia,” as I have
given it, or with the words “Peter appears to have
preached,” etc., as Bright gives it. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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