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
to you, observe, worshipping God
the Greeks . . . showing that we and the
through Christ in a new way. For we have
notable Greeks worship the same God,
found in the Scriptures, how the Lord
though not according to perfect knowlsaid, ‘Behold, I make with you a new edge for they had not learned the tradicovenant, not as the covenant with your tion of the Son.” “Do not,” he says,
fathers in mount Horeb.’1 He has made a
“worship”—he does not say “the God
new one with us: for the ways of the
whom the Greeks worship,” but “not in
Greeks and Jews are old, but we are
the manner of the Greeks”: he would
Christians who worship him in a new
change the method of worship of God,
way as a third generation.”
not proclaim another God. What, then,
is meant by “not in the manner of the
Greeks”? Peter himself will explain, for
Clement
of
Alexandra
Strom.
6.5.43
he continues, “Carried away by ignorance and not knowing God as we do, 3
according to the perfect knowledge, but
Therefore Peter says that the Lord
said to the apostles, “If then any of
shaping those things over which he gave
Israel will repent and believe in God
them power for their use, wood and
through my name, his sins shall be forstones, brass and iron, gold and silver, given him: and after twelve years go out
forgetting their material and proper use,
into the world, lest any say, ‘We did not
they set up things subservient to their
hear’.”
existence and worship them; and what
things God has given them for food, the
fowls of the air and the creatures that
Clement
of
Alexandria
Strom.
6.6.48
swim in the sea and creep on the earth,
wild beasts and four-footed cattle of the
4
field, weasels too and mice, cats and
For example, in the Preaching of
Peter the Lord says, “I chose you
dogs and apes; even their own foodtwelve, judging you to be disciples worstuffs do they sacrifice to animals that thy of me, whom the Lord willed, and
can be consumed and, offering dead
thinking you faithful apostles I sent you
things to the dead as if they were gods,
into the world to preach the gospel to
they show ingratitude to God since by
people throughout the world, that they
these practices they deny that he exshould know that there is one God; to ists. . . .” He continues again in this
fashion, “Neither worship him as the
Jews do for they, who suppose that they
alone know God, do not know him,
1Jer 31:31–32
238
NON-CANONICAL EPISTLES AND RELATED WRITINGS
declare by faith in me [the Christ] what
John
of
Damascus,
Parall.
A 12
shall be, so that those who have heard
and believed may be saved, and that those
6
who have not believed may hear and bear
(Of Peter): Wretched that I am, I
remembered not that God sees the
witness, not having any defence so as to
mind and observes the voice of the soul.
say, ‘We did not hear.’ . . .”
Allying myself with sin, I said to myself,
And to all reasonable souls it has been
“God is merciful, and will bear with me;
said above: Whatever things any of you
and because I was not immediately smitdid in ignorance, not knowing God ten, I ceased not, but rather despised parclearly, all his sins shall be forgiven him, don, and exhausted the long-suffering of
if he comes to God and repents.
God.”
(From the Teaching of Peter): Rich is
the man who has mercy on many, and,
Clement
of
Alexandria
imitating God, gives what he has. For
Strom.
6.15.128
God has given all things to all his creation. Understand then, you rich, that you 5 Peter in the Preaching, speaking of ought to minister, for you have received the apostles, says, “But, having
more than you yourselves need. Learn
opened the books of the prophets which
that others lack the things you have in
we had, we found, sometimes expressed
superfluity. Be ashamed to keep things
by parables, sometimes by riddles, and
that belong to others. Imitate the fairness
sometimes directly and in so many words
of God, and no one will be poor.
the name Jesus Christ, both his coming
and his death and the cross and all the
other torments which the Jews inflicted
Origen,
de
Principiis
i,
prol.
8
on him, and his resurrection and assumption into the heavens before Jerusalem 7
was founded, all these things that had
But if any would produce to us
from that book which is called The
been written, what he must suffer and
Doctrine of Peter, the passage where
what shall be after him. When, therefore,
the Saviour is represented as saying to
we gained knowledge of these things, we
the disciples, “I am not a bodiless
believed in God through that which had
demon,” . . .
been written of him.”
And a little after he adds that the
prophecies came by divine providence, in
Gregory
of
Nazianaus,
these terms, “For we know that God com
epp.
16
and
20
manded them, and without the Scripture
we say nothing.”
8 “A soul in trouble is near to God,”
as Peter says somewhere—a marvellous utterance.
Pseudo-Titus
The Letter now known as “Pseudo-Titus” is later than most of the other apocrypha included in this collection. It was unknown until discovered late in the nineteenth century in a very badly translated Latin manuscript produced some time in the eighth century, probably from a Greek original.
The author claims to be Titus, the companion of Paul, to whom one of the letters of the New Testament itself is addressed. This alleged connection with the apostle provides the writer with the authority he needs to set forth his clear agenda: to promote chastity for all Christians, urging even those who are married to abstain from the pleasures of sex as detrimental to salvation. “Why,” asks the pseudonymous author, “do you strive against your own salvation to find death in love?”
The author quotes numerous sources, including the books of the Old and New Testaments, in support of his views. In particular, though, he appears to be familiar with the Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles, which, as we have seen, are themselves ascetic and world-denouncing in their orientation.
It is difficult to date this strident attack against the pleasures of the flesh, but most scholars place it some time in the fifth century.
Epistle
of
Titus,
the
Disciple
of
Paul
race incomparable and incomprehensible.
Great and honorable is the divine
Blessed then are those who have not
promise which the Lord has made with
polluted their flesh by craving for this
his own mouth to them that are holy and
world, but are dead to the world that they
pure: He will bestow upon them “what
may live for God! To whom neither flesh
eyes have not seen nor ears heard, nor
nor blood has shown deadly secrets, but
has it entered into any human heart.” And
the Spirit has shone upon them and
from eternity to eternity there will be a
shown some better thing so that even in
Translation by Aurelio de Santos Otero, in Wilhelm Schneemelcher,
New
Testament
Apocrypha,
vol. 2 (rev. ed.; Cambridge/ Louisville: Lutterworth/Westminister/John Knox, 1991) 55–63; used with permission.
239
240
NON-CANONICAL EPISTLES AND RELATED WRITINGS
this � . . . � and instant of our �pilgrim-
with thee. Thou despisest God, whilst
age on the earth� they may display an
striving to please a man.
angelic appearance. As the Lord says,
Wherefore contemplate the footprints
“Such are to be called angels.”1
of our ancestors! Consider the daughter
Those then who are not defiled with
of Jephthah: willing to do what had been
women2 he calls an angelic host. Those
promised by her father and vowing her
who have not abandoned themselves to
own self as a sacrifice to the Lord, she
men, he calls virgins, as the apostle of
first manifested her connection with God
Christ says: “the unmarried think day and
and took other virgins with her “that in
night on godly things,”3 i.e. to act propthe mountains throughout sixty days they erly and to please Him alone, and not to
might bewail her virginity.”7 O luminous
deny by their doings what they have
secrets which disclose the future in adpromised in words. Why should a virgin vance! Virgin is joined with virgin, and
who is already betrothed to Christ be
in love to her she bewails the peril of her
united with a carnal man?
flesh until the day of her reward comes!
It is not lawful to cling to a man and
Rightly does he say “sixty days,” since
to serve him more than God. Virgin!
he means the sixtyfold reward of holiness
Thou hast cast off Christ, to whom thou
which the ascetic can gain through many
wert betrothed! Thou has separated thypains, according to the teaching of the self from Him, thou who strivest to reapostle: “Let us not lose courage, he says, main united to another! O beauteous
in the hardest labours, in affliction, in
maidenhood, at the last thou art stuck fast
grief, in suffering abuse: we suffer perin love to a male being! O (holy) ascetic secution, but we are not forsaken, bestate, thou disappearest (when) the saints cause we bear in our body the passion of
match human offences!
Christ. Wherefore we are by no means
O body, thou art put to the yoke of the
overcome.”8 And again the same apostle
law of God, and ever and again commit-
left an example behind him, describing
test fornication! Thou art crucified to this
his own disasters and saying: “I have
world,4 and continuest to act up to it! If
labored much, I have frequently been imthe apostle Paul forbade communion to a prisoned, I have suffered extremely many
woman caught in an adulterous relation
floggings, I have often fallen into deadly
with a strange man,5 how much more
peril. Of the Jews, he says, I have five
when those concerned are saints deditimes received forty stripes save one, cated to Christ! Thou art caught in the
three times have I been beaten with rods,
vile fellowship of this world, and yet
once have I been stoned; thrice have I
regardest thyself as worthy of the blood
suffered shipwreck, a day and a night I
of Christ or as united with his body! But
have spent in the depth of the sea; I have
this is not the case: if thou eat of the flesh
often journeyed, often been in peril of
of the Lord unworthily, then thou takest
rivers in peril of robbers, in peril among
vainly instead of life the fire of thine
everlasting punishment! O virgin: if thou
strivest to please (another), then thou hast
already committed a sin of volition, for
1Mark 12: 25 par. 2Rev 14:4. 31 Cor 7:34. 4Cf.
the Evangelist says: “one cannot serve
Gal 6:14. 5This happening is recorded in detail in the
two masters, for he obeys the one, and
Actus Petri cum Simone. The name of the woman
concerned is there given as Rufina. 6Matt 6:24.
despises the other.”6 O virgin! so is it also
7Jdg. 11:38. 82 Cor 4:8ff.
PSEUDO-TITUS
241
unbelievers in manifold ways, in peril in
the following account informs us: “A
cities, in peril among Gentiles, in peril in
peasant had a girl who was a virgin. She
the wilderness, in peril among false
was also his only daughter, and therefore
brethren; in trouble and labor, frequently
he besought Peter to offer a prayer for
in sorrow, in many watchings, in hunger
her. After he had prayed, the apostle said
and thirst, in many fastings, in cold and
to the father that the Lord would bestow
nakedness, in inward anxieties, besides
upon her what was expedient for her soul.