Read Lost scriptures: books that did not make it into the New Testament Online
Authors: [edited by] Bart D. Ehrman
Tags: #Biblical Reference, #Bible Study Guides, #Bibles, #Other Translations, #Apocryphal books (New Testament), #New Testament, #Christianity, #Religion, #Biblical Commentary, #Biblical Studies, #General, #History
also plant others through him. I will not
the same, for he has alienated my conobject so long as the Lord will keep me cubines.” And Albinus said to him, “Why
alive; and again if he will take me away
are you waiting, Agrippa? Let us seize
I shall be glad and rejoice.”
him and kill him as a trouble-maker, so
While Peter was speaking the brethren
that we may get our wives back and
wept and four soldiers arrested him and
avenge those who cannot kill him but
brought him to Agrippa. And being enwhose wives he has also alienated.”
raged he ordered that he be crucified for
godlessness. And the whole multitude of
And as they made plans to35
the brethren came together, rich and poor,
gether, Xanthippe heard of the
widows and orphans, able-bodied and
conspiracy which her husband had with
disabled alike; they wished to see Peter
Agrippa, and she sent word to Peter and
and rescue him. And the people cried
asked him to leave Rome. And the other
unceasingly with one voice, “What harm
brethren, together with Marcellus, rehas Peter done, Agrippa? What evil has quested him to leave. But Peter said to
he done to you? Tell the Romans.” And
them, “Shall we act like deserters, brethothers said, “We must be afraid lest the ren?” And they said, “No; but by going
Lord destroy us also, should he die.” And
you can still serve the Lord.” He obeyed
when Peter came to the place he appeased
the brethren, and went away alone, saythe multitude and said, “You men who ing, “Let none of you go with me, I will
are in the service of Christ, men who
go alone in disguise.” When he went out
hope in Christ, remember the signs and
of the gate he saw the Lord come into
wonders which you saw through me;
Rome. And when he saw him he said,
think of the compassion of God, how he
“Lord, where are you going?” And the
performed healings for your sakes. Wait
Lord said to him, “I go to Rome to be
for him, till he comes and rewards every
crucified.” And Peter said to him, “Lord,
man according to his works. And now,
are you being crucified again?” And he
do not be angry with Agrippa, for he is
said, “Yes, Peter, again I shall be crucia servant of the power of his father. And fied.” And Peter came to himself; and he
that which happens takes place as the
saw the Lord ascending to heaven. Then
Lord has told me that it should happen.
he returned to Rome, rejoicing and prais
And why do I delay and not go to the
ing the Lord because he had said, “I am
cross?”
being crucified.” This was to happen to
Peter.
And when he had come to the
37 cross he began to say, “O name
36 He went again to the brethren of the cross, hidden mystery; O unspeakand told them of the vision able mercy, which is expressed in the
which he had. And their souls were sorname of the cross; O nature of man, rowing, and they wept and said, “We
which cannot be separated from God; O
entreat you, Peter, have regard for us, the
ineffable and inseparable love, which
young ones.” And Peter said, “If it be the
cannot be shown by impure lips; I seize
Lord’s wish it will be, even if we would
you now I am standing at the end of my
not have it so. The Lord is able to
earthly career. I will make known what
strengthen you in his faith, and he will
you are. I will not conceal the mystery
establish you in it and increase it in you
of the cross once closed and hidden to
whom he has planted, so that you may
my soul. You who hope in Christ, think
THE ACTS OF PETER
153
not this to be a cross which is visible; for
beloved, who now hear, and those who
my passion, like that of Christ, is entirely
shall hear it, must renounce the first error
different from that which is visible. And
and turn again. For you ought to come to
now especially, since you who can hear
the cross of Christ, who is the extended
can hear it from me who am in the last
Word, the one and only, concerning
and parting hour of life, listen. Keep your
whom the Spirit says, ‘For what else is
souls from everything which you can per
Christ than the Word, the sound of God?’
ceive with the senses, from all that seems
The Word is this upright tree on which I
to be, and is not truly real. Close these
am crucified; the sound, however, is the
your eyes, shut these your ears; withdraw
crossbeam, namely the nature of man;
from actions which are seen outwardly
and the nail which holds the crossbeam
and you shall perceive the facts about
to the upright in the middle is the con
Christ and the whole mystery of your
version and repentance of man.
salvation. But the hour has come for you,
Peter, to deliver your body to those who
are taking it. Take it, whose business it
39 Since you have made this
is. Of you, executioners, I ask to crucify
known and revealed these
me with head downwards, and not oththings to me, O Word of life, which is erwise. And the reason I shall explain to
now called tree, I thank you, not with
those who listen.”
these lips which are nailed, neither with
this tongue, through which comes forth
After they had hanged him up
38
truth and falsehood, nor with this word,
as he wished he began to speak
which is produced by the skill of earthly
again, “Men, whose calling it is to hear,
nature, but I thank you, O King, with that
listen to what I, being hanged, am about
voice which is heard through silence,
to tell you now. Understand the mystery
which is not heard by all, which does not
of the whole creation and the beginning
come through the organs of the body,
of all things, how it was. For the first
which does not enter the ears of flesh nor
man, whose image I bear, in falling head
is heard by corruptible substance, which
downward showed a manner of birth
is not in the world or sounds upon earth,
which did not formerly exist, for it was
which is also not written in books, nor
dead, having no motion. He, having been
belongs to one, nor to another, but with
drawn down, he who cast his origin upon
this voice, Jesus Christ, I thank you: with
the earth, established the whole of the
the silence of the voice with which the
cosmic system, suspended after the man
Spirit within me intercedes, who loves
ner of his calling, whereby he showed the
you, speaks with you, and sees you. You
right as the left and the left as the right
are known only to the Spirit. You are to
and changed all signs of nature, to behold
me, father, mother, brother, friend, serthe ugly as beautiful and the really evil vant, steward. You are all, and all is in
as good. Concerning this the Lord says
you; and you are Being, and there is
in a mystery, ‘Unless you make the right
nothing that is except you. To him, brethas the left and the left as the right, and ren, you also take refuge and learn that
the top as the bottom and the front as the
your existence is in him alone, and you
back, you shall not know the Kingdom.’16
shall then obtain that of which he said to
I explain this information to you, and the
manner of my suspension is symbolic of
that man who was first made. You, my
16Cf. Acts of Philip 140; Gospel of Thomas 22.
154
NON-CANONICAL ACTS OF THE APOSTLES
you, ‘Eye has not seen, nor ear heard,
and he remained with those who had been
neither has it entered into the heart of
strengthened by Peter in the faith of
man.’17 We now ask undefiled Jesus for
Christ, strengthening himself even more
that which you promised to give us; we
till the arrival of Paul at Rome.
praise you, we thank you, we confess you
in glorifying you, though we are weak,
41
because you alone are God and no other,
When Nero heard that Peter
had departed this life, he
to whom be glory now and for ever,
blamed the prefect Agrippa for having
Amen.”
him killed without his knowledge; he had
intended to punish him the more cruelly
When the multitude surround40
and severely because Peter had made dising him cried Amen, Peter, durciples of some of his servants and aliening this Amen, gave up his spirit to the ated them from him. Therefore he was
Lord. When Marcellus saw that the
angry, and for a long time he would not
blessed Peter had given up the ghost,
speak with Agrippa. He sought how to
without communicating with anyone,
destroy all those brethren whom Peter
since it was not allowed, he took him
had instructed. And one night he saw a
down from the cross with his own hands
person striking him and saying, “Nero,
and bathed him in milk and wine. And
you cannot now persecute or destroy the
he ground seven pounds of mastic and
servants of Christ. Keep your hands from
also fifty pounds of myrrh and aloes and
them.” And in consequence of this vision
spice and anointed his body, and filled a
Nero became greatly afraid and left the
very costly marble coffin with Attic
disciples alone from that time in which
honey and buried him in his own tomb.
Peter had died. Thereafter the brethren
And Peter came to Marcellus by night
continued with one accord, rejoicing and
and said, “Marcellus did you not hear the
glorying in the Lord, and praised the God
Lord say, ‘Let the dead be buried by their
and Saviour of our Lord Jesus Christ with
own dead’?”18 When Marcellus said,
the Holy Spirit, to whom be glory for
“Yes”, Peter said to him, “What you spent
ever and ever. Amen.
on the dead is lost. For though alive you
were like a dead man caring for the
dead.” When Marcellus awoke he told of
171 Cor. 2: 9; cf. Gospel of Thomas 17. 18Matt. 8: 22
the appearance of Peter to the brethren,
and parallel.
NON-CANONICAL
EPISTLES AND
RELATED WRITINGS
156
NON-CANONICAL EPISTLES AND RELATED WRITINGS
There are more epistles in the New Testament than any other genre: four Gospels, one book of Acts, and one apocalypse, but twenty-one epistles. It is somewhat ironic that relatively few
apocryphal
epistles exist. There are some, of course, and these still make for fascinating reading. They include a set of correspondence allegedly between the apostle Paul and the greatest philosopher of his day Seneca (the historical Seneca, of course, knew nothing of Paul) and an anti-heretical piece called “3 Corinthians” (to match the 1 and 2 Corinthians of the New Testament).
Other epistles that were not forged in the name of an apostle are included in this collection because they were revered by one group or another as bearing sacred authority. This is true even of “orthodox” productions such as the Epistle of Barnabas, which is an anonymous piece later attributed to Paul’s traveling companion Barnabas, and the letter of 1
Clement, later assigned to a person thought to be a bishop of Rome. Both Barnabas and 1 Clement were considered by some orthodox Christians of later times to be canonical authorities and so were included in some manuscripts of the New Testament. Yet other non-canonical letters embody
“heretical” concerns, including several that are clearly gnostic creations—which try, in fact, to convince proto-orthodox readers that a gnostic point of view is correct (e.g., Ptolemy’s Letter to Flora and the Letter to Rheginus).
Some of the books included here are not typical letters, but are addresses to communities providing instruction on how to conduct their communal lives (e.g., the “Didache [i.e., the “Teaching”] of the Apostles”).
As is true of other writings found throughout this collection, some of these books have long been known by scholars (e.g., the Letter to the Laodiceans), whereas others—both orthodox and heretical—have been discovered just in modern times, often to much fanfare (e.g., the Didache and the Letter to Rheginus). Taken as a group, they show just how wide ranging the early Christian movement was in terms of belief, communal life, liturgical practice, and ethics.