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| Symeon rules the Church of Jerusalem after James. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XI.—Symeon rules the Church of
Jerusalem after James.
1. After the martyrdom of James691
691 61 or
62 a.d. See above, Bk. II. chap.
23. | and
the conquest of Jerusalem which immediately followed,692
692 See
ibid. note 40. The date of Symeon’s accession (assuming
that he did take charge of the Jerusalem church as James had done)
cannot be fixed. Eusebius himself, as he informs us in Bk. IV. chap. 5,
although he had a list of the Jerusalem bishops, had no information as
to the dates of their accession, or the length of their incumbency. He
puts Symeon’s accession after the destruction of Jerusalem, but
he evidently does that only because he supposed that it followed
immediately upon the death of James. Some (e.g. Lightfoot) think it
probable that Symeon was appointed immediately after James’
death, therefore before the destruction of Jerusalem; others (e.g.
Renan) suppose that in Pella they had no bishop and appointed Symeon
only after the return of the church to Jerusalem. | it is said that those of the apostles and
disciples of the Lord that were still living came together from all
directions with those that were related to the Lord according to the
flesh693
693 λόγος
κατέχει.
Hegesippus (quoted in Bk. IV. chap. 22, below) says that “Symeon
was appointed the second bishop, whom all proposed as the cousin of our
Lord.” Upon what authority Eusebius’ more definite account
rests we do not know. He introduces it with the formula λόγος
κατέχει,
and we know of no other author who has put it as he does. It may be
that the simple statement of Hegesippus was the sole ground of the more
detailed tradition which Eusebius repeats in this chapter. The reason
of Symeon’s appointment as given by Hegesippus is quite
significant. It was the common Oriental custom to accord the highest
honors to all the members of a prophet’s or religious
leader’s family, and it was undoubtedly owing chiefly to his
close physical relationship to Christ that James enjoyed such
prominence and influence in the Jerusalem church, apparently exceeding
even that of the apostles themselves. | (for the majority of them also were still
alive) to take counsel as to who was worthy to succeed
James.
2. They all with one consent
pronounced Symeon,694
694 This
Symeon is to be distinguished from the apostle Simon, the Canaanite,
and also from Simon, the brother of our Lord (mentioned in Matt. xiii. 55 and Mark vi. 3).
It is noticeable that Hegesippus nowhere calls him the “brother
of the Lord,” though he does give James that title in Bk. II.
chap. 23. Clopas is mentioned in John xix. 25, as the husband
of Mary, who is without doubt identical with Mary the mother of James
(the little) and of Joses; mentioned in Matt. xxvii. 56; Mark xv.
40,
&c. If Hegesippus’ account be accepted as trustworthy (and
there is no reason for doubting it), Symeon was the son of Clopas and
Mary, and therefore brother of James the Little and Joses. If, then,
Alphæus and Clopas be the same, as many claim, James the Little is
to be identified with James the son of Alphæus, the apostle, and
hence the latter was the brother of Symeon. This identification,
however, is entirely arbitrary, and linguistically difficult, and we
shall do better therefore to keep the men separate, as Renan does (see
above, Bk. I. chap. 12, note 14). Upon the martyrdom of Symeon, see
below, chap. 32. | the son of Clopas,
of whom the Gospel also makes mention;695 to
be worthy of the episcopal throne of that parish. He was a cousin, as
they say, of the Saviour. For Hegesippus records that Clopas was a
brother of Joseph.696
696 Hegesippus, quoted below in Bk. IV. chap. 22, calls Clopas the
uncle of the Lord, which would make him of course the brother or
brother-in-law of Joseph. Eusebius evidently considered them own
brothers. Whether Hegesippus elsewhere stated this directly, or whether
Eusebius’ opinion is simply an inference from the words of
Hegesippus already referred to, we do not know. There is no objection
to the conclusion that Clopas and Joseph were own brothers, although it
cannot be proved from Hegesippus’ words that they were more than
brothers-in-law. From John xix. 25 it is at any rate
plain that their wives cannot have been own sisters, as was formerly
maintained by so many commentators. With the remaining possibilities of
relationship we do not need to concern ourselves. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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