THE NARRATIVE OF ZOSIMUS CONCERNING THE LIFE OF THE BLESSED
I. About that time there was in the desert a certain man named Zosimus,
who for forty years ate no bread, and drank no wine, and saw not the face of man.
This man was entreating God that he might see the way of life of the blessed,
and behold an angel of the Lord was sent saying to him, Zosimus, man of God,
behold I am sent by the Most High, the God of all, to tell thee that thou shalt
journey to the blessed, but shalt not dwell with them. But exalt not thy heart,
saying, For forty years I have not eaten bread, for the word of God is more
than bread, and the spirit of God is more than wine. And as for thy saying, I have
not seen the face of man, behold the face of the great king is nigh thee.
Zosimus said, I know that the Lord can do whatsoever he will. The angel said to
him, Know this also, that thou art not worthy of one of their delights, but arise
and set out.
II. And I, Zosimus, issuing from my cave with God leading me, set out not
knowing which way I went, and after I had travelled forty days my spirit grew
faint and my body failed, and being exhausted I sat down, and continued praying
in that place for three days. And, behold, there came a beast from the desert,
whose name is the camel, and placing its knees on the ground, it received me
upon its neck and went into the desert and set me down. There there was much
howling of wild beasts, and gnashing of teeth, and deadly poison. And becoming
afraid, I prayed to the Lord, and there came in that place a great earthquake with
noise, and a storm of wind blew and lifted me from the earth, and exalted me on
its wing, and I was praying and journeying till it set me upon a place beside
a river, and the name of the river is Eumeles. And behold when I desired to
cross the river, some one cried as if from the water, saying, Zosimus, man of God,
thou canst not pass through me, for no man can divide my waters: but look up
from the waters to the heaven. And looking up I saw a wall of cloud stretching
from the waters to the heaven, and the cloud said, Zosimus, man of God, through
me no bird passes out of this world, nor breath of wind, nor the sun itself,
nor can the tempter in this world pass through me.
III. And I was astonished at these words, and at the voice that spake
these things to me. And as I prayed, behold two trees sprang up out of the earth,
fair and beautiful, laden with fragrant fruits. And the tree on this side bent
down and received me on its top, and was lifted up exceedingly above the middle
of the river, and the other tree met me and received me in its branches and
bending down set me on the ground; and both trees were lifted up and set me away
from the river on the other side. In that place I rested three days, and arising
again I went forward, whither I knew not, and that place was filled with much
fragrance, and there was no mountain on either hand, but the place was level
and flowery, all crowned with garlands, and all the land beautiful.
IV. And I saw there a naked man sitting, and said in myself, Surely this
is not the tempter. And I remembered the voice of the cloud that it said to me,
Not even the tempter in tiffs world passes through me. And thus taking courage
I said to him, Hail, brother. And he answering said to me, The grace of my God
be with thee. Again I said to him, Tell me, man of God, who thou art? He
answered and said to me, Who art thou rather? And I answered and told him all
concerning myself, and that I had prayed to God and he had brought me into that place.
He answered and said to me, I also know that thou art a man of God, for if
not, thou couldst not have passed through the cloud and the river and the air. For
the breadth of the river is about thirty thousand paces, and the cloud reaches
to heaven, and the depth of the river to the abyss.
V. And having ended this discourse the man spoke again, Hast thou come
hither out of the vanity of the world? I said to him, Wherefore art thou naked? He
said, How knowest thou that I am naked? Thou wearest skins of the cattle of
the earth, that decay together with thy body, but look up to the height of heaven
and behold of what nature my clothing is. And looking up into heaven I saw his
face as the face of an angel, and his clothing as lightning, which passes from
the east to the west, and I was greatly afraid, thinking that it was the son
of God, and trembled, falling upon the ground. And giving me his hand he raised
me up, saying, Arise, I also am one of the blessed. Come with me, that I may
lead thee to the elders. And laying hold of my hand he walked about with me and
led me toward a certain crowd, and there were in that crowd elders like sons of
God, and young men were sanding beside the elders. And as I came near to them,
they said, This man has come hither out of the vanity of the world; come, let
us beseech the Lord and he will reveal to us this mystery. Surely the end is not
at hand, that the man of vanity is come hither? Then they arose and besought
the Lord with one accord, and behold two angels came down from heaven and said,
Fear not the man, for God has sent him, that he may remain seven days and learn
your ways of life, and then he shall go forth and depart to his own place. The
angels of God having said this ascended into heaven before our eyes.
VI. Then the elders of the blessed gave me over to one of the attendants,
saying, Keep him for seven days. So the attendant receiving me led me to his
cave, and we sat under a tree partaking of food. For from the sixth hour even to
the sixth, then we ate, and the water came out from the root of the tree
sweeter than honey, and we drank our fill, and again the water sank down into its
place. And all the country of those there heard of me, that there had come thither
a man out of the vanity of the world, and all the country was stirred up, and
they came to see me because it seemed strange to them. Therefore they were
asking me all things and I was answering them, and I became faint in spirit and in
body, and besought the man of God that served me, and said, I beseech thee,
brother, if any come to see me, tell them He is not here, so that I may rest a
little. And the man of God cried out saying, Woe is me, that the story of Adam is
summed up in me, for Satan deceived him through Eve, and this man by his
flattery desires to make me a liar while he is here. Take me away from hence, for I
shall flee from the place. For behold he wishes to sow in me seeds of the world
of vanity. And all the multitude and the elders rose up against me, and said.
Depart from us, man; we know not whence thou art come to us. But I lamented with
great lamentation, and my senses left me. and I cried out to the elders,
saying, Forgive me, my lords, and the elders stilled them and made quietness. Then I
related to them all from the beginning till that time, and said, I besought
the Lord to come to you, and he deemed me worthy. And the elders said, And now
what wilt thou we should do to thee? I said to them, I desire to learn of you
your way of life.
VII. And they rejoiced with great joy, and taking up tables of stone they
wrote on them with their nails, thus, Hear, ye sons of men, hear ye us who are
become blessed, that we also are of you; for when the prophet Jeremiah
proclaimed that the city of Jerusalem should be delivered into the hands of the
destroyers, he rent his garments, and put sackcloth upon his loins, and sprinkled dust
upon his head, and took earth upon his bed, and told all the people to turn
from their wicked way. And our father Rechab, the son of Aminadab, heard him and
said to us, Ye sons and daughters of Rechab, hearken to your father, and put
off your garments from your body, and drink no vessel of wine, and eat no bread
from the fire, and drink not strong drink and honey until the Lord hear your
entreaty. And we said, All that he has commanded us we shall do and hearken. So we
cast away our clothing from our bodies, and we ate no bread from the fire, and
drank no vessel of wine nor honey nor strong drink, and we lamented with a
great lamentation and besought the Lord, and he heard our prayer and turned away
his anger from the city of Jerusalem, and there came to the city of Jerusalem
mercy from the Lord, and he pitied its people, and turned away his deadly anger.
VIII. And after these things the king of the city of Jerusalem died, and
there arose another king. And all the people gathered to him and informed him
concerning us, and said, There are certain of thy people, who have changed their
way from us. Therefore the king summoned them, and asked them wherefore they
had done this; and he sent for us and asked, Who are ye and of what worship and
of what country? And we said to him, We are the sons of thy servant, and our
father is Rechab the son of Jonadab, and when Jeremiah the prophet preached in the
days of thy father the king, he proclaimed death to the city of Jerusalem,
saying, Yet three days and all the city shall be put to death. And the king thy
father hearing this repented of his sins, and issued a command to all to turn
aside from their wicked way. And our father thy servant hearing it charged us,
saying, Drink no vessel of wine, and eat no bread from the fire, until the Lord
shall hear your entreaty. And we hearkened to the commandment of our father, and
made naked our bodies, we drank no wine and ate no bread, and we prayed to the
Lord for the city of Jerusalem, and the Lord pitied his people and turned away
his anger, and we saw it and our soul was rejoiced, and we said, It is good for
us to be so.
IX. And the king said to us, Ye have done well. Now therefore mingle with
my people, and eat bread and drink wine, and glorify your Lord, and ye shall be
serving God and the king. But we said, We will not disobey God. Then the king
was enraged and set us in prison, and we passed that night there. And behold a
light shone in the building, and an angel uncovered the prison and laid hold of
the crowns of our heads, and took us out of the prison, and set us beside the
water of the river, and said to us, Whithersoever the water goes, go ye also.
And we travelled with the water and with the angel. When therefore he had
brought us to this place, the river was dried up and the water was swallowed up by
the abyss, and he made a wall round this country, and there came a wall of cloud,
and shadowed above the water; and he did not scatter us over all the earth,
but gave to us this country.
X. Hear, ye sons of men, hear the way of life of the blessed. For God
placed us in this land, for we are holy but not immortal. For the earth produces
most fragrant fruit, and out of the trunks of the trees comes water sweeter than
honey, and these are our food and drink. We are also praying night and day, and
this is all our occupation. Hear, ye sons of men; with us there is no vine,
nor ploughed field, nor works of wood or iron, nor have we any house or building,
nor fire nor sword, nor iron wrought or unwrought, nor silver nor gold, nor
air too heavy or too keen. Neither do any of us take to themselves wives, except
for so long as to beget two children, and after they have produced two children
they withdraw from each other and continue in chastity, not knowing that they
were ever in the intercourse of marriage, but being in virginity as from the
beginning. And the one child remains for marriage, and the other for virginity.
XI. And there is no count of time, neither weeks nor months nor years, for
all our day is one day. In our caves lie the leaves of trees, and this is our
couch under the trees. But we are not naked of body, as ye wrongly imagine, for
we have the garment of immortality and are not ashamed of each other. At the
sixth hour of every day we eat, for the fruit of the tree falls of itself at the
sixth hour, and we eat and drink our fill, and again the water sinks into its
place. We also know you who are there m the world, and who are in sins, and
your works, for every day the angels of the Lord come and tell them to us, and the
number of your years. But we pray for you to the Lord, because we also are of
you and of your race, except that God has chosen us, and has set us in this
place without sin. And the angels of God dwell with us every day, and tell us all
things concerning you, and we rejoice with the angels over the works of the
just, but over the works of sinners we mourn and lament, praying to the Lord that
he may cease from Iris anger and spare your offences.
XII. But when the time of the forty days comes, all the trees cease from
their fruits, and the manna that he gave to our fathers rains down from heaven,
and the manna is sweeter than honey. Thus we know that the season of the year
is changed. But when the time of the holy passover comes, then again the trees
put forth fragrant fruit, and thus we know that it is the beginning of the year.
But the feast of the resurrection of the Lord is performed with much watching,
for we continue watching for three days and three nights.
XIII. We know also the time of our end, for we have no torment nor disease
nor pain in our bodies, nor exhaustion nor weakness, but peace and great
patience and love. For our soul is not troubled by the angels to go forth, for the
angels rejoice when they receive our souls, and the souls also rejoice with the
angels when they behold them; as a bride receives the bridegroom, so our soul
receives the announcement of the holy angels, saying nothing more than only
this, he Lord calls thee. Then the sent quits the body and goes to the angels, and
the angels seeing the soul coming forth spotless rejoice, and spreading out
their robes receive it. Then the angels call it blessed, saying, Blessed art then,
O soul, because the will of the Lord is fulfilled in thee.
XIV. The time of our life is this. If one quits the body in his youth, the
days of his the here are three hundred and sixty years, and he that quits the
body in old age, the days of his life here are six hundred and eighty-eight
years. And the day of our completion is made known to us by the angels, and when
the angels of God come to take us, we go with them, and the elders, seeing the
angels, gather together all the people and we depart together with the angels,
singing psalms, until the angels arrive at the place of our abode. And because
we have no tools, the angels of God themselves make the grave for our body, and
thus he that is called by God goes down, and all salute him from small to
great, sending him on his way and bidding him farewell. Then the soul quits the body
and the angels receive it, but we see the shape of the soul as a shape of
light, perfect in all the body apart from the distinction of male and female.
XV. Then the angels taking it up sing a song and hymn, making melody to
God, and again other troops of angels come in haste to meet them, saluting the
soul that is coming and entering into the firmaments. And when it has come to the
place where it is to worship God, the son of God himself, together with the
angels, receives the soul of the blessed one and bears it to the undefiled father
of the ages, and again, when the angels sing above, we being below listen to
them, and again we sing and they listen in heaven above, and thus between us and
the angels there arises a giving of praise in hymns. But when the soul of the
blessed one, falling upon its face, worships the Lord, then we also falling
down worship the Lord in that same hour, and when the Lord raises it up then we
also arise; and when it goes to its appointed place, we also go into the church,
fulfilling the eucharist of the Lord.
Having written these things, and all the life of the blessed, we gave them
to our brother Zosimus, and escorted him as far as the place of trees beside
the river Eumeles.
XVI. And I, Zosimus, besought again the blessed ones to make entreaty for
me to the Lord that the trees might receive me to take me across. And they all
cried to the Lord and said, O God that hast shown us thy marvels and hast made
thy servant Zosimus to come to us out of the world of vanity, set him again in
his own place with peace, and command these trees to bow down and take up thy
servant and set him on the further side. And as they finished their prayer, the
trees straightway bent down before them, and received me as on the second day
before; and being set on the other side of the river I cried with a loud voice
and said, Men of righteousness, who are brothers of the holy angels, grant me
your prayer in peace, for behold I depart from you. And making prayer they all
cried out, saying, Peace, peace be with you, brother.
XVII. Then I prayed to the Lord, and there came to me a storm of wind, and
received me upon its wings, and carried me to the place where it found me
sitting, and left me there in peace. And raising its voice the wind said to me,
Blessed art thou, Zosimus, that thou hast been numbered with the blessed. And the
beast from the desert, whose name is the camel, came and received me upon its
neck and carried me eighty and five stations, and set me in the place where it
found me praying, and left me in peace, crying and saying, Blessed art thou,
Zosimus, that thou hast been numbered with the blessed.
XVIII. But seeing me thus praised, Satan desired to tempt me and throw his
dart at me from his station, but an angel of God came and said to me, Zosimus,
behold Satan is coming to tempt thee, but the Lord will fight for thee, for
the glory of thy faith must bind(1) Satan. And an angel of God appeared, crying
and saying, Welcome, blessed one of Christ. Come and I shall lead thee to the
cave that is the dwelling-place of thy body, for thy cave shall be a testimony of
the desert, a healing of the sick that come to it, a place of trial and
touch-stone of demons. And laying hold of my hand he strengthened me, and led me for
forty days to the cave where I had dwelt. And there was there a table of
righteousness, and I spent the night with the angels of God. And I placed the tablets
that were given me by the holy blessed ones on the step of the altar in my
cave.
XIX. And, behold, when the angels of God ascended, the Devil came, having
a fierce shape, and possessed with anger and gall, and said to me, I knew that
God would do with thee as with the blessed ones, and that they shall be free
from sin and be above the angels, and therefore I brought in an evil design, and
entered into the vessel of the serpent, an evil-doer added to evil-doer. And by
this I made the first man Adam to transgress and taste of the tree of life,
since God had commanded him not to eat of it, that he might remain equal in glory
to God and the holy angels; and thou again hast gone and brought this
commandment, but now that they may not be without sin, I shall show thee how I shall
destroy thee and all those that receive this commandment, so that they may not be
without sin, and the book that thou hast brought.
XX. Saying these things the Devil departed from me, and after eight days
he brought with him one thousand three hundred and sixty demons, and dragged me
from the cave as I prayed, and they beat me, tossing me about between them, for
forty days. And after the forty days the devil lamented before me and said,
Woe is me that through one man I have lost the world, for he has vanquished me by
his prayer. And he began to run from me, but I laying hold of him stayed him
and said, Thou shalt not run away and flee from me until thou swearest to me
never again to tempt man. And lamenting with great and violent lamentation he
swore to me by the firmament of heaven, So long as thy dwelling is here, and after
thee, I will not come upon this place. Then I let him go, sending him and the
demons with him into eternal fire. Then the angel came, who had companied with
me at the table, and led me into my cave with great glory.
XXI. After this I lived thirty-six years, and communicated the way of life
of the blessed to the fathers in the desert. But the Devil wept because of the
tables of the life of the blessed, saying, If this get abroad in the world, I
shall be mocked, and these will remain without sin and I alone in folly. And
after the completion of the thirty-six years, the angels of God came to me as to
the blessed.
And all the monks were gathered together and all who heard it, and this
testament was read to all of them, and in such life he gave up his soul to God.
XXII. And I, Cryseos,(1) being one of those in the desert, spread it
abroad and gave it to all that were willing to learn it and profit by it. Therefore
the angels of God helped to bury the body of Zosimus as a precious gift, and we
saw the soul of the blessed one shining seven times brighter than the sun. And
straightway upon that place there came up seven palm-trees and overshadowed
the cave. There came up also a fountain of water in that place, holy water, and
unto this day a healing and salvation to all the sick that come to it. Peace be
to all that have heard the memorial of the holy Zosimus; the Lord is the
advocate and helper of all to the endless ages of ages. Amen.