Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| The Forged Acts. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
V.—The Forged Acts.
1. Having therefore forged Acts of Pilate2731
2731 These Acts are no longer extant, but their character can be
gathered from this chapter. They undoubtedly contained the worst
calumnies against Christ’s moral and religious character. They
cannot have been very skillful forgeries, for Eusebius, in Bk. I. chap.
9, above, points out a palpable chronological blunder which stamped
them as fictitious on their very face. And yet they doubtless answered
every purpose; for few of the heathen would be in a position to detect
such an error, and perhaps fewer still would care to expose it if they
discovered it. These Acts are of course to be distinguished from the
numerous Acta Pilati which proceeded from Christian sources (see
above, Bk. II. chap. 2, note 1). The way in which these Acts were
employed was diabolical in its very shrewdness. Certainly there was no
more effectual way of checking the spread of Christianity than
systematically and persistently to train up the youth of the empire to
look with contempt and disgust upon the founder of Christianity, the
Christian’s Saviour and Lord. Incalculable mischief must
inevitably have been produced had Maximin’s reign lasted for a
number of years. As it was, we can imagine the horror of the Christians
at this new and sacrilegious artifice of the enemy. Mason assigns
“the crowning, damning honor of this masterstroke” to
Theotecnus, but I am unable to find any proof that he was the author of
the documents. It is, of course, not impossible nor improbable that he
was; but had Eusebius known him to be the author, he would certainly
have informed us. As it is, his statement is entirely indefinite, and
the Acts are not brought into any connection with
Theotecnus. | and our Saviour full of every kind of
blasphemy against Christ, they sent them with the emperor’s
approval to the whole of the empire subject to him, with written
commands that they should be openly posted to the view of all in every
place, both in country and city, and that the schoolmasters should give
them to their scholars, instead of their customary lessons, to be
studied and learned by heart.
2. While these things were
taking place, another military commander, whom the Romans call Dux,2732 seized some infamous women in the
market-place at Damascus in Phœnicia,2733
2733 Damascus, from the time of Hadrian (according to Spruner-Menke),
or of Severus (according to Mommsen), was the capital of the newly
formed province of Syria-Phœnice, or
Syro-Phœnicia. | and by threatening to inflict
tortures upon them compelled them to make a written declaration
that they
had once been Christians and that they were acquainted with their
impious deeds,—that in their very churches they committed
licentious acts; and they uttered as many other slanders against our
religion as he wished them to. Having taken down their words in
writing, he communicated them to the emperor, who commanded that these
documents also should be published in every place and city.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|