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| The Death of John and Philip. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXXI.—The Death of John and
Philip.
1. The
time and the manner of the death of Paul and Peter as well as their
burial places, have been already shown by us.853
853 See Bk. II. chap. 25, §§5 sqq. |
2. The time of John’s
death has also been given in a general way,854
854 See
chap. 23, §§3, 4. |
but his burial place is indicated by an epistle of Polycrates855
855 Upon
Polycrates, see Bk. V. chap. 22, note 9. | (who was bishop of the parish of Ephesus),
addressed to Victor,856
856 Upon Victor, see ibid. note 1. | bishop of Rome.
In this epistle he mentions him together with the apostle Philip and
his daughters in the following words:857
857 This epistle is the only writing of Polycrates which is preserved
to us. This passage, with considerably more of the same epistle, is
quoted below in Bk. V. chap. 24. From that chapter we see that the
epistle was written in connection with the Quarto-deciman controversy,
and after saying, “We therefore observe the genuine day,”
Polycrates goes on in the words quoted here to mention the “great
lights of Asia” as confirming his own practice. (See the notes
upon the epistle in Bk. V. chap. 24.) The citation here of this
incidental passage from a letter upon a wholly different subject
illustrates Eusebius’ great diligence in searching out all
historical notices which could in any way contribute to his
history. |
3. “For in Asia also great
lights have fallen asleep, which shall rise again on the last day, at
the coming of the Lord, when he shall come with glory from heaven and
shall seek out all the saints. Among these are Philip, one of the
twelve apostles,858
858 Philip the apostle and Philip the evangelist are here confounded.
That they were really two different men is clear enough from
Luke’s account in the Acts (cf. Acts vi. 2–5, viii.
14–17, and xxi. 8). That it was the
evangelist, and not the apostle, that was buried in Hierapolis may be
assumed upon the following grounds: (1) The evangelist (according
to Acts xxi. 8) had four daughters, who were virgins and prophetesses.
Polycrates speaks here of three daughters, at least two of whom were
virgins, and Proclus, just below, speaks of four daughters who were
prophetesses. (2) Eusebius, just below, expressly identifies the
apostle and evangelist, showing that in his time there was no separate
tradition of the two men. Lightfoot (Colossians, p. 45)
maintains that Polycrates is correct, and that it was the apostle, not
the evangelist, that was buried in Hierapolis; but the reasons which he
gives are trivial and will hardly convince scholars in general.
Certainly we need strong grounds to justify the separation of two men
so remarkably similar so far as their families are concerned. But the
truth is, there is nothing more natural than that later generations
should identify the evangelist with the apostle of the same name, and
should assume the presence of the latter wherever the former was known
to have been. This identification would in itself be a welcome one to
the inhabitants of Hierapolis, and hence it would be assumed there more
readily than anywhere else. Of course it is not impossible that Philip
the apostle also had daughters who were virgins and prophetesses, but
it is far more probable that Polycrates (and possibly Clement too; see
the previous chapter) confounded him with the evangelist,—as
every one may have done for some generations before them. Eusebius at
any rate, historian though he was, saw no difficulty in making the
identification, and certainly it was just as easy for Polycrates and
Clement to do the same. Lightfoot makes something of the fact that
Polycrates mentions only three daughters, instead of four. But the
latter’s words by no means imply that there had not been a fourth
daughter (see note 8, below). | who sleeps in
Hierapolis,859
859 Hierapolis was a prominent city in Proconsular Asia, about five
miles north of Laodicea, in connection with which city it is mentioned
in Col. iv. 13. The ruins of this city are quite extensive, and its site
is occupied by a village called Pambouk Kelessi. | and his two aged virgin daughters,
and another daughter who lived in the Holy Spirit and now rests at
Ephesus;860
860 The
fact that only three of Philip’s daughters are mentioned here,
when from the Acts we know he had four, shows that the fourth had died
elsewhere; and therefore it would have been aside from
Polycrates’ purpose to mention her, since, as we see from Bk. V.
chap. 24, he was citing only those who had lived in Asia (the
province), and had agreed as to the date of the Passover. The separate
mention of this third daughter by Polycrates has been supposed to arise
from the fact that she was married, while the other two remained
virgins. This is, however, not at all implied, as the fact that she was
buried in a different place would be enough to cause the separate
mention of her. Still, inasmuch as Clement (see the preceding chapter)
reports that Philip’s daughters were married, and inasmuch as
Polycrates expressly states that two of them were virgins, it is quite
possible that she (as well as the fourth daughter, not mentioned here)
may have been a married woman, which would, perhaps, account for her
living in Ephesus and being buried there, instead of with her father
and sister in Hierapolis. It is noticeable that while two of the
daughters are expressly called virgins, the third is not. | and moreover John, who was both a
witness861
861 μ€ρτυς; see chap. 32, note 15. | and a teacher, who reclined upon the
bosom of the Lord, and being a priest wore the sacerdotal plate.862
862 The Greek word is πέταγον, which occurs in the LXX. as the technical term for the plate or
diadem of the high priest (cr. Ex. xxviii. 36, &c.). What is meant
by the word in the present connection is uncertain. Epiphanius
(Hær. LXXVII. 14) says the same thing of James, the brother
of the Lord. But neither James nor John was a Jewish priest, and
therefore the words can be taken literally in neither case. Valesius
and others have thought that John and James, and perhaps others of the
apostles, actually wore something resembling the diadem of the high
priest; but this is not at all probable. The words are either to be
taken in a purely figurative sense, as meaning that John bore the
character of a priest,—i.e. the high priest of Christ as his most
beloved disciple,—or, as Hefele suggests, the report is to be
regarded as a mythical tradition which arose after the second Jewish
war. See Kraus’ Real-Encyclopædie der christlichen
Alterthümer, Band II. p. 212 sq. | He also sleeps at Ephesus.”863
863 Upon John’s Ephesian activity and his death there, see Bk.
III. chap. 1, note 6. |
4. So much concerning their
death. And in the Dialogue of Caius which we mentioned a little
above,864
864 Bk. II. chap. 25, §6, and Bk. III. chap. 28, §1. Upon
Caius and his dialogue with Proclus, see the former passage, note
8. | Proclus,865
865 Upon Proclus, a Montanistic leader, see Bk. II. chap. 25, note
12. |
against whom he directed his disputation, in agreement with what has
been quoted,866
866 The agreement of the two accounts is not perfect, as Polycrates
reports that two daughters were buried at Hierapolis and one at
Ephesus, while Proclus puts them all four at Hierapolis. But the report
of Polycrates deserves our credence rather than that of Proclus,
because, in the first place, Polycrates was earlier than Proclus; in
the second place, his report is more exact, and it is hard to imagine
how, if all four were really buried in one place, the more detailed
report of Polycrates could have arisen, while on the other hand it is
quite easy to explain the rise of the more general but inexact account
of Proclus; for with the general tradition that Philip and his
daughters lived and died in Hierapolis needed only to be combined the
fact that he had four daughters, and Proclus’ version was
complete. In the third place, Polycrates’ report bears the stamp
of truth as contrasted with mere legend, because it accounts for only
three daughters, while universal tradition speaks of four.
How Eusebius could have
overlooked the contradiction it is more difficult to explain. He can
hardly have failed to notice it, but was undoubtedly unable to account
for the difference, and probably considered it too small a matter to
concern himself about. He was quite prone to accept earlier accounts
just as they stood, whether contradictory or not. The fact that they
had been recorded was usually enough for him, if they contained no
improbable or fabulous stories. He cannot be accused of intentional
deception at this point, for he gives the true accounts side by side,
so that every reader might judge of the agreement for himself. Upon the
confusion of the apostle and evangelist, see above, note 6. | speaks thus concerning the death
of Philip and his daughters: “After him867
867 I
read μετὰ
τοῦτον with the
majority of the mss., with Burton, Routh,
Schwegler, Heinichen, &c., instead of μετὰ
τοῦτο, which occurs
in some mss. and in Rufinus, and is adopted by
Valesius, Crusè, and others. As Burton says, the copyists of
Eusebius, not knowing to whom Proclus here referred, changed
τοῦτον
to τοῦτο; but if we
had the preceding context we should find that Proclus had been
referring to some prophetic man such as the Montanists were fond of
appealing to in support of their position. Schwegler suggests that it
may have been the Quadratus mentioned in chap. 37, but this is a mere
guess. As the sentence stands isolated from its connection,
τοῦτον
is the harder reading, and could therefore have more
easily been changed into τοῦτο than the
latter into τοῦτον. |
there were four prophetesses, the daughters of Philip, at Hierapolis in
Asia. Their tomb is there and the tomb of their father.” Such is
his statement.
5. But Luke, in the Acts of the
Apostles, mentions the daughters of Philip who were at that time at
Cæsarea in Judea with their father, and were honored with the gift
of prophecy. His words are as follows: “We came unto
Cæsarea; and entering into the house of Philip the evangelist, who
was one of the seven, we abode with him. Now this man had four
daughters, virgins, which did prophesy.”868
6. We have thus set forth in
these pages what has come to our knowledge concerning the apostles
themselves and the apostolic age, and concerning the sacred writings
which they have left us, as well as concerning those which are
disputed, but nevertheless have been publicly used by many in a great
number of churches,869
869 ἱερῶν
γραμμ€των,
καὶ τῶν
ἀντιλεγομένων
μὲν, ὅμως…δεδημοσιευμένων. The classification here is not inconsistent with that
given in chap. 25, but is less complete than it, inasmuch as here
Eusebius draws no distinction between ἀντιλεγόμενα
and νόθοι, but uses
the former word in its general sense, and includes under it both the
particular classes (Antilegomena and νόθοι) of
chap. 25 (see note 27 on that chapter). | and moreover,
concerning those that are altogether rejected and are out of harmony
with apostolic orthodoxy. Having done this, let us now proceed with our
history.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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